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Word: gap (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...hacked out an "agreement in principle" to hold the lease open while talk continues. The airbases are no longer essential, but Rota is an important base for Polaris submarines. Bargaining broke down with Spain wanting $700 million in military aid and the U.S. offering $140 million. Lately, however, the gap has narrowed. Spain is believed to be asking near $300 million, the U.S. going nearer $200 million. Nixon would like to keep the bases. And naturally, the Franco regime likes both the protection and the spending of 25,000 Americans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Talk Around the Bases | 4/4/1969 | See Source »

Between the formal, intricate patterns of ballet and the exuberant disarray of folk dance lies a vast artistic chasm. Some attempts to bridge this gap have been notably successful-the cowboy ballets of Agnes de Mille, for example, or the large-scale ethnic dance companies sent around the world with in creasing frequency by almost any nation anxious to make its own culture known. One of the most dazzling of these troupes is Mexico's Ballet Folklorico, which just completed its seventh U.S. tour with a one-week stand at Manhattan's City Center. Once again it convinced...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Folk Ballet: High-Class Hybrids | 4/4/1969 | See Source »

...Pusey's statements Tuesday concerning ROTC seem to be the clearest expression so far of the alienation of administration from student body. There's clearly a gap somewhere in this best-of-all-possible academic communities when the president talks about "a long, friendly, happy experience" with ROTC while students are concerned with the immediacy of the Vietnamese...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MILITARY TIES ... | 3/28/1969 | See Source »

...OTHER HAND, rent control were to be envisioned and presented as only a short term, stop-gap measure clearly subordinated to a drive for more low-cost housing, it might well aid the overall housing situation in the City. A four year period of rent control, for example, might protect to some extent the elderly, and others hardest hit by rent increases without doing irreparable damage to Cambridge's housing supply. If rent control were instituted, and a pledge was made not to try to renew it if a given number of low-income housing units were constructed...

Author: By Jerand R. Gerst, | Title: Another Strategy | 3/27/1969 | See Source »

...Perhaps enthusiasm for the idea of coed living will carry a few pioneers up to the inferior quarters at the 'Cliffe and the first two male freshmen stuck in a double in Briggs won't know what hit them. But already a number of House Masters sense a large gap between the number of Harvard students who support coeducational living in theory and the number who would be willing to move out of their relatively posh suites...

Author: By Richard R. Edmonds, | Title: Getting Together | 3/24/1969 | See Source »

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