Word: successful
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...question of fasts was brought up by an upcoming Oxfam fast set for November 16. The organizers of the Oxfam movement at Harvard agree that not enough education has been made available to students in the past, hampering the success of previous fasts...
Krueger is also a former professor, whose specialty is Shakespearean literature. He quickly climbed the success ladder at Duke University to become dean of arts and sciences, just as he has scaled it in Texas politics. And he makes no bones about the fact that he wants to be President someday. Bob Krueger, to say the least, is an ambitious...
Perhaps one key to Krueger's success is his unctuous style. He has never been much of a hell-raiser. John Womack '59, professor of History, who was with him at Oxford, recalls that Krueger "kept very clean, never swore, never complained, never raised his voice, kept to his room and his studies, said hello pleasantly, and fairly radiated that he wanted no trouble. If the rest of us got drunk and let the cows into the Master's garden, to eat his roses and tramp his poppies, Krueger hid for a week in the library...
Milton Katz, Stimon Professor of Law, said yesterday that the success of the Times' appeal will depend on whether the court feels the significance of the issues involved justifies further action, since they are no longer germane to the Jascalevich case...
Nevertheless, the technical competence of this production cannot compensate for the actors' stiffness in a play whose success depends on skillful performances. Acting workshops and classes all over the country use scenes from Hellman's play to train budding thespians. For her play is a true actor's play, crying out for sophisticated character interpretation, development, and execution. It just isn't there...