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Word: benefited (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...light-skinned in order to increase South Africa's white population as a bulwark against the huge black majority. De Klerk explained that in issuing white identity cards to the 300 Cape families, his officials were only trying to "act humanely" and give borderline cases "the benefit of the doubt...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: CROSSING THE COLOR LINE | 5/24/1963 | See Source »

This is a fine year to be a farm-equipment maker. Good crops, good weather and a record cash farm income of $37.5 billion in 1962 have sent the farmer on a buying spree, to the benefit of the $2 billion farm-equipment industry. Deere's domestic sales, which reached $541.5 million last year, are already up 25% for 1963's first fiscal half, and are expected to top $600 million for the year; first half earnings are 59% higher than last year. Deere's 24 factories and 30,000 employees make some 300 different machines, plus...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Corporations: Green, Yellow & Gold | 5/24/1963 | See Source »

...basis of this volume, Gold's growth has been minimal. The characteristic note is of the sensitive outsider ruminating on his own alienation. The landscape abounds in psychological booby traps; the interior monologues meander without benefit of punctuation marks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Change in Gold | 5/24/1963 | See Source »

...teachers, also, can benefit from the milieu of the university. In colleges such as Yale, where art is taught, the faculty members of the art department enter into the intellectual life of the community: they can provide important humanistic influence and learn from contact with faculty of other disciplines. Scholars in the social sciences find it useful to mix with men from other fields; the artist and his students are no different in this respect...

Author: By Joseph M. Russin, | Title: The Case for Creativity | 5/22/1963 | See Source »

...university is fully to benefit by the presence of creative arts, however, and if the artist is to be comfortable in the university, the university must not treat the arts as a peripheral concern. An artist-in-residence now and then, and a few course offerings, do not constitute a meaningful or even useful creative arts program. Yet that1

Author: By Joseph M. Russin, | Title: The Case for Creativity | 5/22/1963 | See Source »

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