Word: affluently
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Defending the Pound. In office, Wilson has proved to be a man of the middle-and that is where the votes are in today's affluent Britain. To be sure, Wilson's government has raised pensions, liberalized the national health-insurance scheme, and instituted long-range national economic planning. But the steel industry has not been nationalized. He has kicked the unions far harder than any Conservative would have dared, castigating Britain's raise-happy workers for "sheer damn laziness." And he has dared to defend the pound with the simple old-fashioned remedy of deflating demand...
...clothing center, a men's club that works for better relations with the police, an after-school tutoring program, a young adults' coffeehouse. Another idea is a club where periodic dialogues take place between "the losers"-neighborhood down-and-outers-and "the thrivers," a group of more affluent parishioners...
...More than 6,000,000 Americans are now divorced or separated, and divorce seems to breed divorce: probably half of all divorced Americans are the children of divorced parents. Divorce or separation occur most among the poor, the least educated and Negroes, least among the affluent (who usually get most of the publicity), the well-educated and couples with three or more children. Increasingly, it is a problem of the young: 46% of all divorces involve girls who marry in their teens, and 74% those who marry under 25. Conversely, an estimated 85% of Americans who marry...
...roil in perjury and mudslinging. In uncontested cases, New Yorkers can get divorced by hiring a professional "other woman," but many childless couples prefer to seek annulments based on phony claims of refusal to bear children; New York has more annulments than any other state. Whatever their other disagreements, affluent couples usually agree to flee to divorce in easier states. A strong drive is being conducted in the New York legislature to reform the state's 1787 divorce law, a reform that has long been opposed by spokesmen of the Catholic Church. This time, though church spokesmen have asked...
...demands of the draft have produced both apprehension and opposition among the nation's young men. For the first time, the draft is touching in a major way the post-World War II generation-the most affluent, the best-educated, the most articulate and rebellious group of potential draftees in U.S. history. In pre-World War II days, when the nation was still suffering the aftereffects of the Depression, there were fewer young men in college than now, fewer with jobs so good that it was a great sacrifice to leave them for the service. Today, many draftees...