Word: accomplishing
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...classified at least three types of failing executives: >The Early Flameout. Dr. Herbert Klemme, a psychiatrist at the Menninger Foundation, has found that many men go through a "midlife crisis" at about age 35. Just around then, says Klemme, a man often faces the jolting realization that he cannot accomplish all his early dreams, and, more important, begins to think seriously for the first time about the inevitability of death. Some flameouts simply sink into depression, others start to drink heavily. In any event, their work and their careers suffer. >The Climacteric Man. Executives in their late 40s or early...
Francis H. Burr '35, the Corporation member who signed the letter, said, "We want people to focus on what course of action the University should take in the next ten years, and then decide what type of leadership will be needed to accomplish such action...
...black man has always known how to organize time in a joyous manner," says Oscar Brown Jr., black man and joyous organizer of time. "The rhythmic beat of black music is what has gotten us through all our troubles. White people can accomplish anything they can put to words. Black people have always been able to accomplish anything they can put to the beat...
...mistreatment "puts you and me and the next him in jeopardy." Buckley urges him to support McCarthy publicly. Chambers acknowledges that he fought in the same war, but refuses. "For the Right to tie itself in any way to Senator McCarthy is suicide . . . What did he really accomplish? I would say: very close to nothing but noise...
...FEBRUARY 9 at the Harvard Law School Forum, Senator Charles McC. Mathias, a freshman Republican from Maryland, argued for the repeal of the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution. His own measure (SJ 166) would accomplish this as well as repeal "the mortmain of past Congressional resolutions that have been interpreted as relinquishing broad authority to the executive to intervene militarily around the world." Mathias was voicing the growing eagerness of the Senate to restrict the sway of the President in foreign affairs...