Word: benefited
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Taking the Cue. As Registrar Hood appeared last week, Harvard Law School Dean Erwin Griswold, a member of the commission, leaned toward him and said: "I hand you a copy of Section 182 of the Mississippi state constitution. For the benefit of the commission, would you give us a reasonable interpretation of it?" Hood read silently, then said, "Well, it means that the power to tax corporations and their property . . ." Interrupted Griswold: "I didn't ask you to read it-I asked you to interpret...
Delano disagrees that the experience of volunteers abroad is merely a "fringe benefit." Young Americans acquire a perspective in foreign societies that is "fed back" to the entire society, broadening its values and preparing it for international responsibility. Delano argues that Sevareid underestimates the importance of social development--health, education and community organization--in economic development. The volunteer acts as a kind of "human catalyst." He emanates the idea: "We can do something about this.' " He initiates the process of organizing resources and assigning priorities. "The photographs show the same village, physically unaltered before and after," says Delano (referring...
...Levine. But what? For one thing, not to bring in even a musical with such a predictable, progressionless plot. Nor one with such woeful gags or sappy lyrics ("I'll take you where it snows and talk poetic prose"). Among other liabilities: no name star to sell the benefit fringe...
More Fun. The new rivalry is very much the doing of Journal Publisher and President Victor Irwin ("Dutch") Maier, 65, who felt that competition would benefit both papers. After the merger, the Journal hands who crossed over-among them Assistant Managing Editor Harvey W. Schwandner, now the Sentinel's executive editor-were told that the last thing Dutch Maier wanted was a morning edition of the Journal. "No other two-paper operation that I know about," says Lindsay Hoben, Journal editor and vice president, "grants the autonomy that our papers have." The facts bear him out. Last year...
...American Tobacco Co.'s querulous George Washington Hill made his company famous with a classic slogan that urged women to "reach for a Lucky instead of a sweet." Whichever way they reach from now on, American Tobacco stands to benefit. Last week the nation's second largest cigarette maker (after R.J. Reynolds) moved to acquire Chicago's Consolidated Foods Corp. Consolidated is a vast (1964 sales: $634 million) packer, distributor and retailer of foods whose sweets range from Sara Lee bakery products to Union Sugar and Shasta beverages...