Word: benefits
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...that increased facilities for physicians' education have been stricken from the President's health bill. The Association has never proposed a new, constructive program of its own, yet it has consistently denied that special study commissions have the knowledge or indgment to set up a health program that can benefit the nation...
Although the amendment is aimed at taking redistricting out of politics as far as possible, the issue is almost certain to arouse bitter partisan argument in the legislature. But obstruction for the sake of possible short-term political gains can hardly benefit either party. Massachusetts should welcome the opportunity to make the gerrymander extinct...
...refuse to buy a dollar ticket for the year--is valid only so long as the calibre of the forums is poor. If the organization plans its programs in advance and is persistent in asking speakers, it should have little trouble in presenting an attractive program. The University could benefit from the possible improvement of college forums as well as from the resolution of a recurrent economic problem...
...distinguished between major and minor sports, on the basis of outside popularity rather than that of participant contribution. This emphasis upon the spectator contradicts the College's overall policy, implicit in its intramural program, that if sport not for sport's sake, it is at least for the benefit of its participants...
...good for hanging. But all he may accomplish is that reformers will propose some more efficient or humanitarian substitutes for the gallows-such as the neat old guillotine, the quick bullet in the back of the neck, or the concentration camp, where prisoners may die unhurriedly and without benefit of rope...