Word: successful
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...recipients are chosen for literary and scholastic achievement, good citizenship, and "physical vigor, as shown by fondness for and success in sports...
Research doctors have had some, but by no means complete, success with X rays, and with two classes of drugs-the anti-cancer chemicals and cortisonetype hormones. They have devised increasingly complex methods of matching white blood cells to reduce antibody formation, and of making antilymphocyte serum in horses to reduce the white cells' activity. This partial success has been sufficient to give today's recipient of a kidney transplant (from close kin or even an unrelated cadaver) at least a 65% chance of surviving...
Mass for the Present Time is the latest production-and most spectacular success so far-of France's far-out choreographer Maurice Bejart, 40 (TIME, Nov. 6, 1964). Bejart admits that Mass may not be quite the mot juste for the work. "Part of it, though, is a sort of liturgy," he says. "Another part is something more frivolous and more fun-a joke in the middle of a prayer. If you can joke about something very important, you have achieved freedom." Free or not, Paris audiences enjoyed the joke, and so did the critics. "There is a little...
Thomas J. Shields '69, member of the HUC's Committee on Restructuring, said, "The only way to keep the HUC alive is to narrow its goals. HUC success in non-academic affairs will provide a base of respect for the organization...
...owes at least a part of his success to his lust for anti-establishment humor. When the Avatar was banned in Cambridge for obscenity, its next issue contained a purposely filthy editorial, loaded with all the foul language the writer could muster. Uncle T promptly asked Avatar's editors to visit his show, and they conducted a reading of the article--with T inserting a whistled be-boop for every fourletter word...