Word: benefited
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...down South Rampart Street, and Louis Armstrong, 65, felt like doing a little swinging himself. "These are my old stomping grounds," graveled Satchmo. "Everybody was blowin' good stuff here when I was a kid." Louis came back to his home town on Louis Armstrong Day to play a benefit concert for the New Orleans Jazz Museum. "I used to stand on the corners and play until the cops came along and ran us away," recalled' Louis, fingering the cornet he first learned to toot 52 years ago at the old Waifs Home. Then he grinned at Peter Davis...
Though some members of the American Bar Association fret about "solicit- ing," which A.B.A. canons of ethics sternly forbid, the association has voted to aid such efforts (TIME, Aug. 20). The trend may particularly benefit law schools. The University of Detroit Law School, for example, recently promoted a new state ruling permitting law students to try cases in court-a boon to the legal-aid clinic that the university is setting up with a $242,000 Government grant. The University of Michigan Law School is following suit. As one student puts it: "We're hungry for bread-and-butter...
What has made it endure? A black-tie benefit audience in Phoenix's new Theater Center last week got an answer from the playwright herself. "It seems," she said in a curtain speech, "that women haven't changed. The wise women in the audience will know that is so. If they don't tell you why on the way home, I'll tell you now: it's because-alas-men haven't changed...
...living. Here again, Uncle Sam stands ready with a helpful hand. In one year some 345,000 high school seniors received counseling from the U.S. Employment Service, and more than 113,000 were placed in permanent jobs; although their need is not so great, graduating collegians receive the same benefit, and the employment service has offices set up on many campuses. As further aids, the service puts out a Dictionary of Occupational Titles, which describes and classifies some 22,000 jobs, and an information kit that includes sample letters to prospective employers. The high school dropout gets even more solicitous...
...interest of the employee does not, in either the long run or short run benefit by the capitalist relationship. However, there are segments who can be co-opted by the capitalist system. Thus there ensues the comedy of former Steelworker's President MacDonald proposing perpetual harmony between labor and management, or the charade of George Meany supporting a war which cannot but hurt the working people of this country. Never, however, can the entire working class be bought off for any period of time. Not only the external pressures of a world more and more unsusceptible to exploitation...