Word: successors
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...time to time, made compensatory payments to selected executives where the corporation would benefit as, for example, by the early retirement of an executive from a position which would provide an opportunity for executive succession planning." Senior Vice President Lawrence G. Rawl, 56, has been nominated as Kauffmann's successor. Exxon has not yet named Cox's replacement...
Despite the expansion of its collections, the museum experienced a general decline after Eliot's death in 1926. His successor, A. Lawrence Lowell, displayed a general coolness toward the museum and refused to provide any funding beyond what was necessary for maintenance, said Janet Tassel, an historian of the museum and life of photographer Daniel Tassel...
Once again the sad music, followed by the ritual, seen before, only speeded up and muted this time. The surviving leaders seemed so impatient to bury the departed one that they were almost rude to his memory. They were even more impatient to name his successor. In particular, this successor. Here, finally, was a General Secretary who could go on vacation to his native Northern Caucasus without the world wondering whether he was on a dialysis machine or a respirator. There would be no more jokes about George Bush having a season ticket to Kremlin funerals, and the programmers...
...again--a Soviet leader had died. The suspicion was all but confirmed when regularly scheduled broadcasts during the following six hours were replaced by nature films and classical music. Having mastered the macabre code used to signal the death of Leonid Brezhnev in November 1982 and that of his successor Yuri Andropov only 15 months later, millions of Soviet citizens were fully prepared for the announcement, which was finally broadcast simultaneously on radio and television at 2 p.m.: "Konstantin Ustinovich Chernenko, General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and President of the Presidium...
Then there is the matter of Shawn's successor. Shawn attempted to anoint one several years ago, but he dropped the idea. Now the matter will be in Newhouse's hands. It seems plain that a succession of some kind will have to be devised, even though Shawn has displayed no desire to depart 43rd Street. How Newhouse handles Shawn, still very much a revered figure in the halls of The New Yorker, will go a long way toward determining how the New Yorker family feels about the new proprietor...