Word: successful
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...sort that verges on self-parody. Its complicated plot lacks both adequate motivation and suspense, and its moral is that the end justifies the means. One can sympathize with the magnitude of the challenge that director Allen King accepted. Even if the result cannot be considered a success, individual performances, a few scenes, and much of the technical side of the production are surprisingly good...
...some orchestras have done, it would cultivate it. The result is the Boston Symphony Chamber Players ("The Boschaps"), organized a year ago and made up of the orchestra's first-desk players. It is the first such group ever sponsored by a major U.S. orchestra, and the resounding success of its opening season has established what promises to be a trend-setting precedent...
Future confidence in the success of an expansionary economic policy actively pursued by federal tax cuts and deficit spending will depend on Johnson's ability to cope with the threat of inflation caused by the rising U.S. commitment to the war in Vietnam, Heller said...
Interviews with teaching fellows indicate that this hostility may be limited to one or two department officials. Their influence so far has probably been minimal, and the damage inconsequential. Full support and cooperation, however, are vital to the success of the interdepartmental programs. Indeed, the legislation creating History and Lit and Social Studies specifically requests assistance from the departments...
Chalmers' impeccable British reserve doesn't entirely conceal a man who is wreaking a revolution upon Harvard's House system. This year's experiment with a "House course," Nat Sci I, an acknowledged success. Master Chalmers hopes to add another course to the House curriculum next year--a lower level Soc. Sci on current problems in American government, economics, and sociology...