Word: successful
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...matter how Upadhyaya died, the case pointed up the growing tensions between the Jana Sangh party and its opponents. In India's bitterly divisive political life, the Jana Sangh is one of the few success stories. Organized 17 years ago by the remnants of a militant pro-Hindu party that had been outlawed, the Jana Sangh started out as an archconservative, urban-based organization. Over the years, the leadership turned more moderate and began wooing voters in the countryside and in non-Hindu states of the south. In an attempt to win over Indians of all language communities...
...million campus since 1960, pushed the pay of full professors from a top of $7,000 to an average $11,000. It draws 86% of its annual $2,000,000 operating budget from private gifts -highest rate in the nation. While President Howard prefers to credit this success to donors' excitement over academic innovations at his school, his anti-aid stance has created wide publicity that appeals to some wealthy donors. Shunning federal money is about the only way in which Rockford is different from hundreds of other colleges. Officials at Hanover College concede that they gain more...
...Little Foxes, written by Miss Hellman in 1938, will open Monday at the Colonial Theatre in Boston. The revival of the play is now a Broadway success. Margaret Leighton will play the lead in the Boston production, following Tallulah Bankhead and Anne Bancroft in the role...
There is no panacea for solution in Vietnam; there is no dramatic reversal of policy that can assure immediate success...
...success in several Democratic primaries in 1964 proves that blue-collar workers will vote for him. Naturally, explosive riots this summer would reinforce racial antagonisms and create instant converts to the Wallace banner. But he also received substantial support from Republican suburbs in his 1964 primary races, and Nixon's calculations ignore the possibility that middle-class suburbanites might desert the Republican nominee for Wallace almost as readily as blue-collar workers dump Johnson...