Word: benefited
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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While table varieties accounted for only 20% of U.S. wine sales 30 years ago, they are now up to 40%, and industry sources expect that they will reach 75% before long. New York producers plan to benefit most-and they archly dismiss the lushly productive vineyards of their California rivals. Says Ernest I. Reveal, president of Widmer's Wine Cellars, Inc., the No. 2 New York vintner (after Taylor): "We like the fact that the vine has to hustle its bustle a bit to give us the required grape...
...ways of doing business in the Bahamas are deeply entrenched, and Pindling's unproven party will have to win the confidence and respect of investors. A quiet, Nassau-born barrister who earned an LL.B. at the University of London, Pindling promises full-scale reforms that will benefit all instead of just a select minority. "There will be change in direction and emphasis on many fronts," he vowed last week in his drab little law office in downtown Nassau. Among the first changes will be a bill to provide salaries for members of the government...
...strong reasons can justify discriminating between one eligible man and another in the distribution of this burden. No such justification can be found for the present deferment (and often, ultimate exemption) of col- lege students and teachers. It requires no special expertise to see that speculative reasons of social benefit are not strong enough...
Klingsiek's victory is likely to benefit many another ex-Nazi. Sentenced to 14 years in 1965, for example, Auschwitz Adjutant Robert Mulka was sprung for health reasons five months later. In a widely published picture, Mulka was recently shown puttering in his Hamburg garden. Since the picture was sneaked without his permission, Mulka may feel that he now has a good privacy case. On the other hand, the statute of limitations has not run out on crimes committed by still uncaught Nazis. If and when they are found, the press may be entitled to publish their pictures...
...ground, and bang! - scratch one hunter. Last fall a nervous Texan tried to club a wounded opossum to death with the butt of his rifle and shot himself in the stomach on the first swing. In October, a Colorado hunter tried to demonstrate a fast draw for the benefit of his buddies, only to discover that his trigger finger was faster than his draw. He drilled a hole right through his foot...