Word: succeedings
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Fogarty said that if they succeed in meeting with the representatives they will ask why companies should not exercise some discretion over what they sell...
...largely bosom and thigh and not especially distinguishable from other girlie slicks. But he added more substantial content as he went along; today's Playboy is a well-stuffed product, bulging with intellectual ambitions and self-confidence. It even includes some tips from John Paul Getty on how to succeed in business. The humor, however, remains on a fairly primitive level. A typical cartoon shows a playboy in bed with a bunnyesque girl, asking: "Why talk about love at a time like this...
...ivory tower atmosphere stifling, not exciting enough for an avowed activist. Yet in late 1964, reports began to circulate that Goldberg had gotten used to his new job, and was beginning to enjoy his role in determining long-term Constitutional principles. Yet he left abruptly in July, 1965, to succeed the late Adlai Setvenson as U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations...
...know I'm the only coach in the Ivy League who considers control more important than speed, and we have had many arguments about it. Just say I'm a nut on racquetwork. I guess, but as long as we succeed we must be doing something right." Harvard has already cinched a share of its eighth Ivy title in the last nine years...
Hamlet, as the theatrical cliché has it, is the play in which the title actor cannot fail. It might be truer to say that he can never wholly succeed. The part demands the range of a concert virtuoso, for Hamlet is both gentle and brutal, passionate and detached, slow to act yet violent in action-a volatile tangle of will, thought, word and deed. Hamlet is also the first supremely self-conscious hero to tread the stage. This is where Richard Pasco's failure is most manifest. He portrays a computer's Hamlet, mechanically feeding himself punch...