Word: benefited
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...insurance-have had some effect. So far this year, only eight small non-Communist tramps have made the run to Haiphong (v. 32 in the same period last year), mostly under British registry out of Hong Kong. Moreover, the British contend that this trade, while economically negligible, may actually benefit the U.S. "After all," said an English official in Saigon last week, "there are certain intelligence advantages in having a British skipper going into Hanoi now and then...
...even resembles Ky. Thi, who was exiled by Diem after an abortive 1960 coup, could probably take the job any time he chose. Among his other assets, he can count his hand-picked head of the nation's 50,000-man police force. So far, to the benefit of South Viet Nam, which needs stability in Saigon as much as victories on the battlefield, Thi has not made his move...
...restore its full bore. Under any circumstances, he said, the heart-lung machine is needed during the operation, and the surgeon has to use "microsurgical instruments, magnifying lenses, tiny sutures and great care." Of six Santa Monica patients followed for up to three years, five have derived major benefit from the procedure...
...Hanover move, like other mergers of the time, was cleared with three regulatory agencies, the Federal Reserve, the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. The three agencies, following Congressional dictates set down in the bank merger act of 1960, approved any linkup in which community benefit seemed to outweigh the diminishing of competition. But in 1963, reviewing the case of a Philadelphia merger, the Supreme Court ruled that, regardless of economic benefit, a bank merger could still be a legal violation of the Clayton Antitrust...
Waiting for President Johnson to sign the bill last week, some Congressmen were afraid that something worse might still be ahead. The bill bars monopolies, re-establishes the principle of community benefit, allows the Justice Department 30 days to object to mergers it dislikes. But the wording is so vague that it will almost certainly end up in the courts again for definition. If the Supreme Court stands by its earlier Clayton antitrust opinion, the whole commotion could start all over again...