Word: benefited
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...last is probably the most important benefit of a constitutional monarchy, which separates the office of the head of state from the head executive. One can say that the office of the U.S. president, a combination of both offices, gives the president both enormous powers and enormous liabilities. It is very difficult to have a president who can play both the role of the head of state and the head executive well. Usually, the president is one or the other. And in this age of photo-ops and soundbites, the charismatic person with the witty aside comes across much better...
...ever a long-term international environment of peace. China's foreign policy is peace-oriented. We will establish and develop friendly relations and cooperation with all countries in the world on the basis of the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence, especially the principles of mutual respect, equality and mutual benefit, and non-interference in each other's internal affairs. We will never impose upon others the kind of sufferings we once experienced. A developing and progressing China does not pose a threat to anyone. China will never seek hegemony, even if it is developed in the future. It is always...
Explaining that the two countries and their "complementary markets" had the potential to benefit from one another, Jiang said he and President Clinton agreed during their meetings "to promote the lofty cause of world peace and development...
...suggesting that ginkgo will cure dementia or prevent Alzheimer's. At best, the benefit is limited to a third of patients. But the effect was most pronounced on the subjects who were the least impaired, suggesting that if Alzheimer's is treated early enough, dementia might be postponed...
...interesting thing, of course, will be to see how both the Guggenheim and the Getty "break in"--how these ambitious projects will be used, how they will function in (and benefit) the social matrices of their cities. And that will be as much up to the public as it ever was to their architects...