Word: treatments
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...self-respecting nation can act under pressure from abroad to change her treatment of the Jews within her borders. . . . Russian experience has been that the presence of Jews within her borders is a perpetual menace not only to the integrity of the country, but to law and order. . . . Not cynically, but seriously, while Russia cannot abandon her restrictions on Jews we are prepared to consider an arrangement by which the United States might cooperate for the transfer of all Jews from Russia to the United States...
Amid all this international finance Nathan Rothschild is not too preoccupied with his moneybags to observe a subplot which Producer Darryl Zanuck is hatching under his nose. His pretty daughter Julie (Loretta Young) has become attached to Wellington's aide. Captain Fitzroy (Robert Young). When his treatment in the matter of the loan convinces Nathan Rothschild that even in England Jews have an inferior social status, he forbids their marriage, sends Julie off to visit her grandmother (Helen Westley) in Frankfort. When he arrives there for a visit, there are riots in the Ghetto, instigated by sulky Baron Ledrantz...
...case of measles, be henceforth immune. Should this be neglected and a child grow very ill it must have blood from someone who has just recovered from the disease. Last week Washington's Children's Hospital, announcing that ten children in its care faced death without such treatment, sent out a call for boy & girl convalescents willing to volunteer their blood...
...devising a quick method of identifying these bodies, Dr. Williams cut diagnostic time from days to a few hours. Up to 1914 New York City's Health Department reported 15,000 cases of trachoma per year. Each year the city spent thousands of dollars on investigation, clinical treatment, deportation of infected aliens. In 1915 this eye disease disappeared from the Health Department's reports after Dr. Williams perfected a method of diagnosis which showed that many suspected cases were not trachoma...
...Cheyenne airport, died in flames. Nevertheless, with the weather generally clear, mail flights were resumed on schedule and the first day passed without mishap. Meanwhile even with the Army grounded all week, the Administration's position on the airmail controversy continued to be anything but comfortable. The cavalier treatment accorded Col. Charles Augustus Lindbergh by the White House had done President Roosevelt no popular good. Millions of citizens insisted on viewing the differences between these national heroes as something of a personal encounter. By last week the situation plainly called; for diplomacy. As a peace offering Secretary...