Word: succeeding
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Regardless of the personalities and vintages of the probable candidates, however, the second half of the campaign year will doubtless be as unorthodox as the first. Kennedy and McCarthy may eventually succeed only in canceling each other out, but together, their challenge of party discipline and the response it has evoked have had a rippling effect in which Lyndon Johnson's departure is merely one large circle. Political leaders hear all too loudly the bubbling of events, and sense the need to respond...
Harvard coach Norm Shepard has returned from Florida to coach the team in tomorrow's game. Loyal Park, who will succeed Shepard as head coach next year, has been running the drills for the past week...
...present-day writer seems likely to succeed at smashing the "Fitz-Omar cult," it is Robert Graves. At 72, he is established as a leading British poet, an adroit translator and an iconoclastic critic and scholar. He does not read Persian, but worked from an annotated crib prepared for him by Persian Poet Omar Ali-Shah, who claims that the manuscript has been in his family for 800 years. Yet this new Rubaiyyat suffers from Graves's apparent inability to decide whether he was writing more as a translator or as a poet. He may well have failed...
...tension is internal. "Black athletes sometimes feel that it is more necessary to succeed and be better," Winfild said. This kind of problem bothered Williamson in high school, and although he finds little such pressure at Harvard, he said that "the basic mentality of society is 'We're doing you a favor and so you've got to earn...
McGeorge Bundy, former Dean of the Faculty and now president of the Ford Foundation, will announce Trottenberg's appointment as administrative vice-president of the Foundation in New York today. Trottenberg will succeed Verne S. Atwater, who resigned early this month, on July...