Word: benefited
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...private Stockholm elementary school; shy Désirée, 22, is duly qualified to teach kindergarten. A highlight of their visit, conveniently timed with the 50th anniversary of the American-Scandinavian Foundation, will be a Tribute-to-Sweden Ball at Manhattan's Hotel Plaza-a smorgasbord benefit to raise funds for a new youth cultural center in Jerusalem. On his 74th birthday Nationalist China's Generalissimo Chiang Kaishek chose to underscore one of the hottest issues in the U.S. election by journeying to the Nationalist-held island of Quemoy within easy range of the Red Chinese coast...
...that is only half the story. In addition to the team, the individual managers benefit from their own work. They receive major and minor Varsity letters, according to their sports, in their junior and senior years. They also receive complimentary tickets to the games. But, most important of all, the managers receive valuable training in executive-type duties in handling details, people, and organization in general. In their freshman year, too, they learn the laws of competition first hand...
...women who joined with her in the movement. "It was an enormous privilege to campaign for the amendment," she affirms, "because I met all of those fine, sometimes very simple women who were devoted to a cause larger than themselves, who gave of their time and money to benefit all the women of America. The leaders were brilliant capable, inspiring womn. It was the greatest privilege of my life to associate with them--and with the men who backed them...
...circulation's main stem. "The rest," says Sones, 'requires only a little bit of simple dexterity." The catheter is successively slipped into both coronary arteries, and small injections of dye (2 cc. to 5 cc.) are sufficient to silhouette the arteries' full course for the benefit of a movie camera attached to the image intensifier...
...what? For more schools, yes; for reducing unemployment, yes; but for more of all the consumer goods that are epitomized by the catch-phrase "tail-fins," emphatically no. As John Kenneth Galbraith wrote in The Liberal Hour, "There is no assurance merely from expanding output per se that the benefit will accrue to those at the bottom of the pyramid who need the goods the most." Kennedy's call for growth for growth's sake, or merely to out produce the Russians, is, for some, another grave weakness in his campaign...