Word: benefited
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Paying the Price. Ironically, Los Angeles' indifferent newspaper readers also stand to benefit from the loss of two papers. In the last ten months, the fat and lethargic Times, which had the habit of substituting sheer bulk for journalistic merit, has begun to show new life. It is even bulkier than before, but it is a far better newspaper. The Times has beefed up its Washington coverage and joined hands with the Washington Post in the organization of a news service. It has also added four fulltime political editors, two of them stolen from Hearst. Foreign coverage has grown...
Accepting the gift, Berry said that "the opportunities to create and exploit new advances in the basic medical sciences are unparalleled. Medical education must have the resources to utilize fully for the benefit of mankind the present explosion in medical knowledge...
...believed that the great foreign oil companies were determined to keep Italy from developing sources of her own so that they could charge higher prices. "The policy I am following," he boasted, "has permitted me not only to free my country from the grip of the cartel, but to benefit from prices lower than those which our neighbors...
...almost killed him. Weeks later, Heney reappeared with a hideous scar, only one eye, and plenty of public sympathy. But Rogers won his case by proving that some of Heney's associates in the prosecution were in the pay of a rival street railway company, which would benefit by a conviction...
Unlike other departments, which often make tutorial a formal academic requirement, the Biology Department insists the program exists mainly "for the enrichment and benefit of tutor and tutee." The organizers of the new Biology tutorial were enthusiastic about the response from both students and tutors...