Word: successful
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Another problem is Ford's campaign chairman, Rogers Morton, who remarked on TV as the grim results rolled in from Nebraska: "I'm not going to rearrange the furniture on the deck of the Titanic." The genial Morton has not had conspicuous success in organizing Ford's campaign; in general, he remains the glad-handing front man while decisions are made by Political Director Stuart Spencer...
...literary part of Diaspora, it is by no means an unqualified success. College literati generally ropewalk their readers over deep pits full of slobbering metaphors and toothless symbols--all juicily anticipating being able to gum us to death down below. The freshness of youth too often translates as poetry into tired old cliches, because students usually have a naivete about what has come before...
...also said in a statement this week he is not criticizing performance of minority students as a group and recognizes the fundamental success of minority programs in medical schools...
...backer, U.S. policy in Chile and Indo-China or the consistent support of the American government for South Africa and Rhodesia. Moynihan's reason for third world hostility toward this country sounds like something from the American right's glory days of the early 50s: "Such has been the success of Communist arms, Communist intrigue, Communist treachery in Asia and Africa that the reputation of democracy in those regions has all but collapsed...
...into its own court. But the battle by District 65 is far from won. Harvard should recognize the right of its workers to determine the union representation of their own choice. The battle has languished in the halls of the NLRB far too long; there is no guarantee of success for the union there. The University should relent in its opposition to the union, and should instead come to grips with what is already a de facto union in the Med area...