Word: gulf
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Yawning Gulf. On the other hand, many of Britain's most talented young citizens feel that their country today is the most stimulating environment in the world. Says Author-Critic (The Uses of Literacy) Richard Hoggart, 44: "England today is the most exciting country in all Europe. We're facing ourselves, beginning to be honest." Echoes David Frost, 24, a recent Cambridge graduate who presides over the BBC's socko satirical television show, That Was the Week That Was: "We can be the first nation in history that's both a great nation and a totally...
...most influential art gallery directors in Britain: "The intelligence of the people over the past ten years has vastly outstripped the intelligence being meted out to them by their leaders. They're way, way ahead of the politicians. And there's a yawning gulf between young people and the lingering Edwardian business type...
Because of labor stoppages, there were no newspapers to speak of in New York or Cleveland last week, no shipping of consequence on the Atlantic or Gulf coasts. In Philadelphia, a bus, trolley and subway strike was making life miserable for commuters, and only a federal court order prevented Southern Railway workers from hitting the bricks. In all, federal mediators were wrestling with more than 20 major strikes last week...
...marine, the slow erosion of union membership was at best a point of academic interest last week. A four-week-old strike by the International Longshoremen's Association had laid off 62,000 dockworkers from Maine to Texas, left 600 ships lying useless at anchor in Atlantic and Gulf Coast ports, and backed up some 14,000 freight cars under a pier embargo...
...central issue raised by the newspaper strike cannot be settled by the ordinary processes of negotiation. It is the same issue that is at stake in the East and Gulf Coast dock-workers' strikes and the Philadelphia transit workers' strike: how to deal with men whose jobs are imperiled by the introduction of new machinery. The I.T.U.'s automation policy is extremely conservative; the typographers have rejected even the most reasonable management offer on technological unemployment. The publishers are willing not to fire any men to make room for advanced machinery, but to leave unfilled vacancies created by death...