Word: sharing
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...between the riots and the much-discussed dissatisfactions of youth with the soullessness of a materialistic culture. I wonder if these riots are entirely the fruit of discrimination, if these Negroes are indeed those who dream of job and suburban serenity. It seems to me, rather, that the rioters share the bored frustration and inarticulate revulsion against society that erupts in riots of young whites on vacation or in orgies of vandalism by elite young partygoers-or in the less sensational but more disturbing apathy of many of my fellow college students. The ghetto explosions differ because they have...
White Rock Girl. All share a common problem: what to put in the new building once it is completed. Few discriminating collectors leave their best paintings to universities, and acquisition funds are piddling compared with those of any big-city museum. St. Louis' Washington University, however, has found a good way to solve the problem. Though the school receives only $11,300 a year in income from bequests for the acquisition of painting and sculpture, it has built its collection into one unmatched by any school in the Midwest. The school simply shops in the contemporary art market, where...
...chubby California housewife, "Jillie Bean," as friends call her, is the No. 1-ranked woman player in the world -but at home last year she had to share the U.S. Lawn Tennis Association's No. 1 ranking with Texas' Nancy Richey, who had never won a major grass-court tournament. Billie Jean had. Last year at Wimbledon, she beat Australia's Margaret Smith and Brazil's Maria Bueno to give the U.S. its first All-England ladies' singles title in four years. Afterward, Martin Tressel, then president of the U.S.L.T.A., stated publicly that...
...Certain Disquietude. Major labor contracts, covering 3,100,000 workers, expire in the U.S. this year (the figure was only 980,000 in 1966), and the biggest wave of strikes since 1959 seems only too likely. Not surprisingly, most labor leaders share Reuther's belief that workers deserve a bigger slice of last year's record corporate profits. Few major contracts expired in 1966, however, and corporate profits are off this year. As University of Chicago Labor Specialist Arnold R. Weber puts it, "Now that the unions are able to get to the bargaining table, the pickings...
Many brokers share Saul's alarm. "The high jinks on the Amex," maintains Vice President Bradbury K. Thurlow of Winslow, Cohû & Stetson, constitute "classic symptoms of irresponsible overspeculation in 'cats and dogs.' " Adds Research Director Stanley A. Nabi of Schweickart & Co.: "It's not only crazy but also unsustainable...