Word: benefited
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...which, either because of their interdisciplinary character or because of other special circumstances, did not fit beneath the umbrellas of particular departments; it has inspired a special enthusiasm in a small, dedicated group of faculty members who have thrown themselves wholeheartedly into this kind of teaching to the great benefit of their students...
...EDUCATED EYE-Perls, 1016 Madison Ave. at 78th. Paintings and sculptures from the private collections of alumni and parents of the Dalton School, lent to benefit the alma mater. They include Cezanne's Under the Trees, Klee's Landscape with Signs, Picasso's witty Nude and Woman Washing her Feet, Hofmann's The Conjurer (a painter mid his pots), Calder's 1963 mobile, Yellow Flower. Through...
...MASTERS-Silberman, 1014 Madison Ave. at 78th. Another benefit, this time for the Rudolf Steiner School, shows some of the little-known but distinctive pieces owned by the Washington County Museum of Fine Arts in Hagerstown, Md. Paintings by Old Masters Pellegrini and Veronese and works attributed to Caravaggio, Titian, Campagnola and Rembrandt are on loan. Through...
...first place, the Elis had the benefit of an "optimum" tailwind, of fierce competition from a surprised Cornell, and of rowing with what current there is at Princeton, where the course is almost always very fast...
...there was still the question of a defense request for a sanity hearing for Ruby, and Judge Brown seemed more sympathetic toward that. After he had heard Dr. West's report, Brown said: "I would like some real disinterested doctors to examine Ruby for my own benefit. I want to get the truth of it. If the man is insane he should not be executed. If he is sane, he should be amenable to the law." Later Brown assigned Dallas Psychiatrist Robert L. Stubblefield, who had found Major General Edwin Walker mentally competent after the Oxford, Miss, riots...