Word: successful
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...looked upon by His Majesty's Government at that time as a sensible compromise . . . [but] the Communist process goes ruthlessly on. . . . You have only to look at your maps. . . ." With a sort of elephantine perversity, Bevin droned over the old ground of Greece, Trieste and Lake Success. His audience fidgeted. He said: " [The] policy on the part of the Soviet Union [is] to use every means in their power to get Communist control in Eastern Europe and . . . in the West as well." What did the British government propose...
...organization, not purposefully representative of the majority opinion of any student body. As it is by students, so is it certainly for them. Its aim is to give the news completely and without prejudice, to work in its medium for the interests of the College and the University. Its success, like every newspaper's, must be judged by its readers. The CRIMSON of 1948 echoes the Magenta of 1873: "I won't philosophize. I will be road...
Competition and the fight for existence made life precarious for the editors of the Magenta and the early CRIMSON. Operating on the proverbial financial shoestring and publishing papers with only the President's rooms for a newsroom, imagination and resourcefulness were the prime requisites for success in the 1880s and 1980s...
Encouraged by the success of the Salzburg Seminar, representatives of nine American colleges will meet here this weekend to discuss plans for similar projects throughout Europe...
...reply to the gentleman who wanted to know what was wrong with attending Mr. Cramer's tutoring school, and whether, in fact, Mr. Cramer should not be encouraged, in view of his ultra-rapid success in teaching University courses, and whether the various professors should not make exams such as to prevent this sort of study, I would like to put in a few words in condemnation of Mr. Cramer...