Word: benefited
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...extent could be justified as an anti-inflationary measure, it could roundly be criticized on grounds of equity. And the Republicans deserved censure for similar reasons for their failure to provide an adequate housing bill, subsidies for education and science, an extension of coverage and a rise of benefit rates for the social security program, adequate appropriations for conservation...
...their jackets away, altered them, pressed them neatly and delivered them back with inconceivable politeness and promptness. They were told all about their eight-week training course (to prevent a feeling of strangeness); they were informed that the old "obstacle course" had been renamed the "confidence course" (for the benefit of their morale...
...spread the work." Sir Stafford Cripps, Britain's economic boss, was well aware of all this last summer when he and ECAdministrator Paul Hoffman cooked up the idea of an Anglo-American Council on Productivity. The main purpose was to give Britain-as tactfully as possible-the benefit of the best U.S. practice. The first British reaction was one of outraged pride and suspicion (TIME, Aug. 9). But British industry and trades unions have decided, in the main, to string along with Cripps and the council...
...understand labor organizations, such as the requirements for union shop elections. Other sections, the ban on the closed shop, were interpreted by the labor unions as clearly anti-union. The authors of the Act, and the Republican party in the campaign, insisted that the Act was for the benefit of the individual worker; it would free him from the labor boss. It was this attempt to drive a wedge between the labor leader and the rank and-file which probably explains more than any other single factor the intensity of the reaction of labor leaders. The Taft-Hartley...
Council, PBH Benefit...