Word: productive
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Mormon concept that the family should share the father's business, the Bensons have made the U.S. farm problem their problem. As the result of long discussions at home, the Secretary's wife once got him to publicize milk-dispensing machines to help relieve the dairy-product surplus. Flora Benson attends many of his press conferences, and occasionally finds time from her duties at home (she has no maid, does her own housework) to make a speech. In Toledo last week for a speech at a Republican women's meeting, she said: "I've enjoyed working...
Jones outlined three main advantages to the new program; students will get full credit for their ROTC courses, which means they will need only 16 1/2 courses to graduate instead of the present 17 1/2; the program will turn out a better product for the Air Force; and the program will take full advantage of the talents of the University...
...product of helping underdeveloped areas, the establishment of a worldwide trading corporation centered in and operated by Western Europe could spark the sagging economics of industrial European states by opening up for them new markets and sources of raw materials. In addition, cooperative economic aid activity in Western Europe would bind even more closely together the countries of the North Atlantic area, enhancing that solidarity which is the most potent obstacle to Red political inroads in Western Europe. It might also reduce the fierce export rivalries between the nations of Western Europe...
...with aspirations and talents. Their political organizations must reflect this truth. Therefore, the Republican Party must be inspired by a concern for the rights of every citizen . . . Under God, we espouse the cause of freedom and justice and peace for all peoples. The peace we seek will be the product of understanding and agreement and law among nations...
...fall. Though he is active politically, Schlesinger does not believe that the historian as such affects society appreciably. "The Primary motive of the historian is curiosity," he believes, "and his greatest contribution to society is in satisfying that curiosity in others. Anything else is merely a by-product. The historian does not change society so much as he reflects...