Word: benefited
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Berry added, however, that Harvard would probably not receive the full benefit of the funds for new buildings. The money would be given on a matching basis, and schools with increasing enrollments would have to pay 33 per cent of the costs, while schools whose enrollments remained the same would be required to put up 50 per cent...
Those who fear governmental participation in the economy insist that maintaining a margin of unemployed fellow-citizens is "the price we have to pay for prosperity." This readiness to degrade a minority for the benefit of a prosperous majority implies moral acceptance of the breadline as a way of life (for others). To advocate a margin of unemployment as if it were static or intermittently fluctuating is to ignore the dynamics of technological unemployment in America. Moreover, it is not only the jobless who suffer. People in mills and factories and offices throughout the country today live in fear that...
...probably won't be the AL champion, but they won't be the League doughnut either. A lot depends, of course, on the results of the trades the Sox made over the winter. Most of the newcomers are from the National League, though, and National players often tend to benefit from the switch...
...consequences of state support for the University of Illinois are far reaching and entail much more than misplaced educational egalitarianism. For example, in addition to producing the skilled graduates and the practically oriented research that will benefit the State, the University is also expected to provide a number of miscellaneous services for the general public. These may vary from advice on problems of agriculture and home economics to medical care for crippled children. The Administration boasts that its tripartite commitment to "education, research, and service" makes it a "new and American contribution to the idea of a university...
Into the Cure Column. First patient to get the benefit of Dr. Conn's aldosterone research was no tropic-bound G.I., but a 34-year-old Michigan woman whose high blood pressure (170 over 100) was accompanied by unusual features. She had muscular weakness and cramps, had to drink and urinate frequently; her low-salt sweat and abysmally low level of potassium in the blood indicated an excess of aldosterone. A medical team traced her trouble to a small tumor on her right adrenal gland, which was pumping out a flood of aldosterone although there was no excess...