Word: benefited
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...programs is being conducted for the benefit of both sick and well children as the researchers are interested in compiling complete statistics on the health and medical care needed by a group of infants and children...
Things have been humming ever since. Last winter, Serkin and his father-in-law, Violinist Adolf Busch, gave a benefit concert in nearby Brattleboro and raised $3,800 to start the money-raising ball rolling. All summer, carpenters and masons have pounded nails and poured concrete to convert the colonial farmhouses for college use. For weeks an advance party of prospective Marlboro students has been working too. That is part of the Hendricks idea: at Marlboro, city-bred students will learn to use their hands: raise pigs, tap maple trees, make their own skis...
Planners figured that the scheme would more than double present commercial production, would also mean development of new planes capable of handling heavy bulk loads. The services would benefit directly by tagging all federal-subsidized planes as part of the military reserve...
Once the restaurants are operating, they will get the benefit of another Johnson technique, the follow-up program. A Johnson agent, who looks like just another customer, makes periodic visits to each restaurant to make sure that the food is cooked and served in the prescribed manner. He reports to Johnson, who uses his information to give sound advice to the owner...
...Freudians could derive benefit from a host of Catholic doctrines and practices, many of which turn directly on central psychoanalytic preoccupations. In connection with neuroticism they might look into the relationships between anxiety and the despair about which theologians have much to say. Theologians also have much to say about confidence and hope and the means of cultivating these good habits. ... In connection with Freud's capital concept of repression, which consists of the violent submergence of undesirable stimuli in the unconscious, they might look into its conscious counterpart, a defect of prudence which the classic moralists called inconsideratio...