Word: treatments
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Cinema Hard Guy George Raft, who had been getting the full treatment from Columnist Westbrook Pegler (who disapproved of Raft's associates and felt that Raft was just about as black as the movies painted him), suddenly had a little trouble with a 50-year-old attorney named Edward Raiden. Back before Christmas of last year, charged Raiden, he had been sent to Raft by 19-year-old Betty Doss to recover some finery which Raft had given her and then yanked back. While one of Raft's friends held him, the attorney complained, Raft gave...
...assistance. Federal subsidization always raises the specter of Federal control; but it seems likely that if both educators and non-educators agree that Washington should have no voice in educational matters, a satisfactory plan could be evolved. Only this way can educators, students, and public receive fair and equal treatment...
...spectator at the downtown sports palace finds himself competing with subway alumni, basketball addicts and Garden habitues for even the most mediocre seats. H.A.A. officials might well have done the undergraduate a service by exacting from Garden officials guarantees of decent seating, or at least the same kind of treatment that student fans could expect at the Cambridge floor...
...other warriors also won awards of a sort. General Dwight D. Eisenhower got a month's leave of absence-his first in eleven years, except for one week last July and two days last May. He would spend it in Miami, getting hospital treatment for bursitis (inflammation) in the shoulder. And Fleet Admiral William F. ("Bull") Halsey, 64, who had long wanted it, was finally allowed to be "relieved of active participation in the Navy."** The dog-jawed Pacific hero, recovering in a Manhattan hospital after a hernia operation, was not retired, because fleet admirals are just not retired...
...Absent Treatment. For its past 21 years, Town & Country has been unobtrusively owned by William Randolph Hearst. Slight, worldly-wise Editor Harry Bull, like Hearst, went to St. Paul's School and Harvard, won fame of a sort in 1924 when he bested the then Prince of Wales in a pillow-fight aboard the Berengaria, returning from Europe. He worked briefly for TIME, moved to Town & Country from the late International Studio in 1931, became editor in 1935. Owner Hearst has never darkened Bull's editorial door, or given Town & Country's small staff of 13 anything...