Word: succeeding
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...that there is something intrinsic in modern American society that causes on occasion the sort of senseless mayhem practiced last week in Austin. Some of the violence of the frontier still lingers in the American character, they believe, aggravated to extremes in a few individuals by the pressure to succeed and the social and economic mobility of American society. Perhaps, as many psychiatrists insist, the American mother's increasingly powerful position in the family has weakened the ego of American men, who are with rare exceptions responsible for mass murder in the U.S. All, or none, of this...
Ousted Executioner. The army's elevated role has moved Defense Minister Lin Piao, 59, into favored position to succeed the 72-year-old Mao. Lin's position was buttressed by last week's announcement that Marshal Lo Juiching, chief of the army general staff and leader of the massive executions in the mid-1950s (TIME cover, March 5, 1956), had been replaced by a Lin protégé and thus presumably purged. Lo made the mistake of arguing that the army should stay out of politics...
...payments unless the meeting were held. In the end, only Jordan rallied to Feisal's side, and the Arab League had no choice but to postpone the meeting. Undaunted, Feisal began pressing even harder for his Islamic summit next spring. "Perhaps," sighed one Saudi Cabinet member, "Allah will succeed where Arabs have failed...
...odds favor a yes answer. But if it is no, Prisoner Sobell may conceivably succeed in his current bid for freedom. Indeed, two ex-Manhattan Project scientists are prepared to back Sobell's claim that the sketch was false, inaccurate and incomplete. Whatever the outcome, the case has already supplied a crucial bit of historical fallout. Last week a Manhattan federal court released the long-impounded alleged sketch of the Nagasaki bomb-the first time it has ever been seen in public...
...William of Orange. Presiding as host, Dutch Finance Minister Anne Vondeling toasted his colleagues with an old French proverb: "Point n'est besoin d'esperer pour entreprendre ni de réussir pour persévérer [One need not hope in order to undertake, nor succeed in order to persevere]." Next day, by a 9-1 vote, with France's Michel Debré the only holdout, Ministers of the Group of Ten agreed to persevere some more...