Word: succeeded
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...laden productions, the Fine Arts' latest offering is a program more in keeping with its name. The job of compressing 1000 pages of Feodor Dostoevsky's two best novels in to four hours filmfare is almost impossible, but the two features, one in French, the other in German, nearly succeed in their task...
...resignation of Richard N. Swift '44, of Adams House, as head of the sale of War Bonds and Stamps was announced yesterday. At the same time John W. Ellison '44, also of Adams House, was named to succeed Swift at the post. Swift had been in charge of the sales since they began last year...
Under Argentine law a President is ineligible to succeed himself. But Argentines suspect that because Castillo came to office through a vacancy and not by a vote (TIME, July 6) he will claim the right to stand for election in 1943. It would be a neat trick and, the way ballots are counted in Argentina, it might work...
...have a "name."* "The history of former wars is replete with instances of the man with a name being chosen, and the selection turning out to be a mistake. . . . The supreme commander should know enough for his task, but he must possess judgment, particularly of men, determination to succeed, stamina . . . and COMMON SENSE...
Carefully combing the room for subject matter, he unanimously chose Sue Hagler '46, of Springfield, as the girl most likely to succeed at Harvard...