Word: labor
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...childish pronouncements on the draft [June 3] of those who would enjoy the harvest without the labor are empty and redundant. Joe College '66 is a sad, disgusting example for my children to have to follow. He tempts me to resign to avoid contributing to the security in which he is free to demur and complain...
Britain's Queen Elizabeth is certainly getting gear. Last year, at the behest of the swinging Labor government, she put the Beatles on her birthday list as Members of the Order of the British Empire, an honor the shaggies won for all the cash that their noise had contributed to the empire's balance of payments. This time, for rather the same reason, Her Majesty named fab Fashion Designer Mary Quant, 32, doyenne of the Chelsea group's knee-baring, hippy styles, as an officer of the O.B.E. Her fad is siphoning so much loot into Albion...
Britain's Labor Prime Minister Harold Wilson, 50, must have been feeling like a bigger monkey than the melancholy thane. The Oxford University Liberal Club, in which he'd enjoyed honorary membership "for his past and present services to the Liberal Party," decided in its elections this time that 'Arold had moved too far left of Liberal. "We felt his continued membership would be a blot on the club's escutcheon," sniffed the group's secretary-elect. Their replacement was sufficiently weird: Mrs. Eleanor Bone, High Priestess of the Worshipful Coven of London Witches. Croaked...
...torn between the exhaustion of overwork and the guilt of not fulfilling what he believes are all his obligations. He often works at a pace incompatible with home life, a life in the community apart from medicine or in fact any opportunity to enjoy the fruits of his labor. His anxieties which arise from this state of affairs are compounded by the feeling that he is not keeping up with medicine. a recent medical advance reported in Life or Time which he has not heard about, since he did not read Life or Time first! He has little time...
...spite of the rigidity which the professions have built into the system of delivering medical care, change is occurring and will continue to occur at an accelerated rate. The impetus for change is from the public and the news media, the Government, and labor and management organizations are all instruments of this force. What the public wants of course is somewhat contradictory. It wishes to have the practical general practioner of the 18th and 19th centuries but endowed with all the knowledge and skills of the 20th century specialist. It wants the comfort of the home visit combined with...