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<title>On Success Panelists</title>
<link rel="alternate" type="application/xhtml+xml" href="http://views.washingtonpost.com/on-success/panelists/"/>
<link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://views.washingtonpost.com/on-success/panelists/atom.xml"/>
<updated>2010-12-22T03:41:06Z</updated>
<subtitle>Views on success from our panel of experts.</subtitle>
<id>tag:views.washingtonpost.com,2011:/on-success/panelists/97</id>
<rights>Copyright (c) 2010, WashingtonPost.Newsweek Interactive</rights>

<entry>
<title>Repackage your act</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://views.washingtonpost.com/on-success/panelists/ginny_mathis/2010/12/repackage_your_act.html" />
<updated>2010-12-22T03:41:06Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2010-12-21:/on-success/panelists2010/12/repackage_your_act.html</id>
<summary type="text"> Q: Sure, Bob Dylan is &quot;the age&apos;s iconic singer-songwriter and rock&apos;s poet laureate.&apos;&apos; All the same, the Wall Street Journal suggests, he should hang up his hat. The Journal caught Dylan, 69, at a bare ballroom in an Atlantic City casino, his voice a &quot;laryngitic croak&apos;&apos; as people walked out to play the slots. Are there age limits on success? Do you go out at the top of your talents, or do you soldier...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name>Virginia Bianco-Mathis</name>
</author>
<category term="Success and age" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>Chasing the dream</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://views.washingtonpost.com/on-success/panelists/nicola_goren/2010/12/convention_in_our_society_pushes_1.html" />
<updated>2010-12-20T03:37:25Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2010-12-20:/on-success/panelists2010/12/convention_in_our_society_pushes_1.html</id>
<summary type="text"> Q: Sure, Bob Dylan is &quot;the age&apos;s iconic singer-songwriter and rock&apos;s poet laureate.&apos;&apos; All the same, the Wall Street Journal suggests, he should hang up his hat. The Journal caught Dylan, 69, at a bare ballroom in an Atlantic City casino, his voice a &quot;laryngitic croak&apos;&apos; as people walked out to play the slots. Are there age limits on success? Do you go out at the top of your talents, or do you soldier...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name>Nicola Goren</name>
</author>
<category term="Success and celebrity" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>The grace of age</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://views.washingtonpost.com/on-success/panelists/jenny_tucker/2010/12/the_grace_of_age.html" />
<updated>2010-12-20T03:25:39Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2010-12-20:/on-success/panelists2010/12/the_grace_of_age.html</id>
<summary type="text">Q: Sure, Bob Dylan is &quot;the age&apos;s iconic singer-songwriter and rock&apos;s poet laureate.&apos;&apos; All the same, the Wall Street Journal suggests, he should hang up his hat. The Journal caught Dylan, 69, at a bare ballroom in an Atlantic City casino, his voice a &quot;laryngitic croak&apos;&apos; as people walked out to play the slots. Are there age limits on success? Do you go out at the top of your talents, or do you soldier on,...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name>Jennifer Tucker</name>
</author>
<category term="Success and age" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>Age is what you make it</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://views.washingtonpost.com/on-success/panelists/jan_scruggs/2010/12/age_is_what_you_make_it.html" />
<updated>2010-12-20T02:16:46Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2010-12-20:/on-success/panelists2010/12/age_is_what_you_make_it.html</id>
<summary type="text"> Q: Sure, Bob Dylan is &quot;the age&apos;s iconic singer-songwriter and rock&apos;s poet laureate.&apos;&apos; All the same, the Wall Street Journal suggests, he should hang up his hat. The Journal caught Dylan, 69, at a bare ballroom in an Atlantic City casino, his voice a &quot;laryngitic croak&apos;&apos; as people walked out to play the slots. Are there age limits on success? Do you go out at the top of your talents, or do you soldier...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name>Jan Scruggs</name>
</author>
<category term="Success and age" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>The real deal</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://views.washingtonpost.com/on-success/panelists/seth_kahan/2010/12/the_real_deal.html" />
<updated>2010-12-20T01:52:15Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2010-12-20:/on-success/panelists2010/12/the_real_deal.html</id>
<summary type="text"> Q: Sure, Bob Dylan is &quot;the age&apos;s iconic singer-songwriter and rock&apos;s poet laureate.&apos;&apos; All the same, the Wall Street Journal suggests, he should hang up his hat. The Journal caught Dylan, 69, at a bare ballroom in an Atlantic City casino, his voice a &quot;laryngitic croak&apos;&apos; as people walked out to play the slots. Are there age limits on success? Do you go out at the top of your talents, or do you soldier...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name>Seth Kahan</name>
</author>
<category term="Success and age" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>His real fans understand </title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://views.washingtonpost.com/on-success/panelists/cleve_francis/2010/12/his_real_fans_understand.html" />
<updated>2010-12-20T01:38:02Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2010-12-20:/on-success/panelists2010/12/his_real_fans_understand.html</id>
<summary type="text"> Q: Sure, Bob Dylan is &quot;the age&apos;s iconic singer-songwriter and rock&apos;s poet laureate.&apos;&apos; All the same, the Wall Street Journal suggests, he should hang up his hat. The Journal caught Dylan, 69, at a bare ballroom in an Atlantic City casino, his voice a &quot;laryngitic croak&apos;&apos; as people walked out to play the slots. Are there age limits on success? Do you go out at the top of your talents, or do you soldier...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name>Cleve Francis</name>
</author>
<category term="Success and age" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>Age irrelevance</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://views.washingtonpost.com/on-success/panelists/pat_mcguire/2010/12/age_irrelevance.html" />
<updated>2010-12-20T01:02:31Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2010-12-20:/on-success/panelists2010/12/age_irrelevance.html</id>
<summary type="text"> Q: Sure, Bob Dylan is &quot;the age&apos;s iconic singer-songwriter and rock&apos;s poet laureate.&apos;&apos; All the same, the Wall Street Journal suggests, he should hang up his hat. The Journal caught Dylan, 69, at a bare ballroom in an Atlantic City casino, his voice a &quot;laryngitic croak&apos;&apos; as people walked out to play the slots. Are there age limits on success? Do you go out at the top of your talents, or do you soldier...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name>Patricia McGuire</name>
</author>
<category term="Success and age" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>Not Dark Yet </title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://views.washingtonpost.com/on-success/panelists/hile_rutledge/2010/12/dylan_not_dark_yet.html" />
<updated>2010-12-20T00:35:16Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2010-12-20:/on-success/panelists2010/12/dylan_not_dark_yet.html</id>
<summary type="text"> Q: Sure, Bob Dylan is &quot;the age&apos;s iconic singer-songwriter and rock&apos;s poet laureate.&apos;&apos; All the same, the Wall Street Journal suggests, he should hang up his hat. The Journal caught Dylan, 69, at a bare ballroom in an Atlantic City casino, his voice a &quot;laryngitic croak&apos;&apos; as people walked out to play the slots. Are there age limits on success? Do you go out at the top of your talents, or do you soldier...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name>Hile Rutledge</name>
</author>
<category term="Success and age" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>The best motivator</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://views.washingtonpost.com/on-success/panelists/kristina_bouweiri/2010/12/kristina.html" />
<updated>2010-12-13T22:03:56Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2010-12-13:/on-success/panelists2010/12/kristina.html</id>
<summary type="text"> Q: One did time in prison. Another was raised by migrant farmworkers. All came from humble origins. One recent night, Oprah Winfrey, Merle Haggard, dancer Bill T. Jones, Broadway composer Jerry Herman and a guy named Paul McCartney received one of the world&apos;s highest awards for artists: the Kennedy Center honors. What does this tell us, if anything, about the will to succeed, the importance of personal history and the theme of the American...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name>Kristina Bouweiri</name>
</author>
<category term="Success and adversity" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>The dream lives on</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://views.washingtonpost.com/on-success/panelists/jan_scruggs/2010/12/the_dream_lives.html" />
<updated>2010-12-13T03:33:17Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2010-12-13:/on-success/panelists2010/12/the_dream_lives.html</id>
<summary type="text"> Q: One did time in prison. Another was raised by migrant farmworkers. All came from humble origins. One recent night, Oprah Winfrey, Merle Haggard, dancer Bill T. Jones, Broadway composer Jerry Herman and a guy named Paul McCartney received one of the world&apos;s highest awards for artists: the Kennedy Center honors. What does this tell us, if anything, about the will to succeed, the importance of personal history and the theme of the American...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name>Jan Scruggs</name>
</author>
<category term="Success and adversity" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>Underdogs on top</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://views.washingtonpost.com/on-success/panelists/allison_miner/2010/12/people_stand_in_long_lines.html" />
<updated>2010-12-13T04:14:58Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2010-12-13:/on-success/panelists2010/12/people_stand_in_long_lines.html</id>
<summary type="text"> Q: One did time in prison. Another was raised by migrant farmworkers. All came from humble origins. One recent night, Oprah Winfrey, Merle Haggard, dancer Bill T. Jones, Broadway composer Jerry Herman and a guy named Paul McCartney received one of the world&apos;s highest awards for artists: the Kennedy Center honors. What does this tell us, if anything, about the will to succeed, the importance of personal history and the theme of the American...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name>Allison Miner</name>
</author>
<category term="Success and adversity" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>Passion and practice</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://views.washingtonpost.com/on-success/panelists/jenny_tucker/2010/12/passion_and_practice.html" />
<updated>2010-12-12T23:48:13Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2010-12-13:/on-success/panelists2010/12/passion_and_practice.html</id>
<summary type="text"> Q: One did time in prison. Another was raised by migrant farmworkers. All came from humble origins. One recent night, Oprah Winfrey, Merle Haggard, dancer Bill T. Jones, Broadway composer Jerry Herman and a guy named Paul McCartney received one of the world&apos;s highest awards for artists: the Kennedy Center honors. What does this tell us, if anything, about the will to succeed, the importance of personal history and the theme of the American...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name>Jennifer Tucker</name>
</author>
<category term="Success and adversity" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>Seize the moment!</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://views.washingtonpost.com/on-success/panelists/pat_mcguire/2010/12/seize_the_moment.html" />
<updated>2010-12-12T23:53:18Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2010-12-13:/on-success/panelists2010/12/seize_the_moment.html</id>
<summary type="text"> Q: One did time in prison. Another was raised by migrant farmworkers. All came from humble origins. One recent night, Oprah Winfrey, Merle Haggard, dancer Bill T. Jones, Broadway composer Jerry Herman and a guy named Paul McCartney received one of the world&apos;s highest awards for artists: the Kennedy Center honors. What does this tell us, if anything, about the will to succeed, the importance of personal history and the theme of the American...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name>Patricia McGuire</name>
</author>
<category term="Success and adversity" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>A winning combo</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://views.washingtonpost.com/on-success/panelists/ginny_mathis/2010/12/a_winning_combination.html" />
<updated>2010-12-10T01:00:53Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2010-12-13:/on-success/panelists2010/12/a_winning_combination.html</id>
<summary type="text">Q: One did time in prison. Another was raised by migrant farmworkers. All came from humble origins. One recent night, Oprah Winfrey, Merle Haggard, dancer Bill T. Jones, Broadway composer Jerry Herman and a guy named Paul McCartney received one of the world&apos;s highest awards for artists: the Kennedy Center honors. What does this tell us, if anything, about the will to succeed, the importance of personal history and the theme of the American Dream?...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name>Virginia Bianco-Mathis</name>
</author>
<category term="Success and adversity" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>Natural evolution</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://views.washingtonpost.com/on-success/panelists/cleve_francis/2010/12/natural_evolution.html" />
<updated>2010-12-06T21:43:17Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2010-12-06:/on-success/panelists2010/12/natural_evolution.html</id>
<summary type="text"> Q: Wasn&apos;t it just yesterday that Google was the coolest company on the planet? The New York Times says the online giant is now seen by techies as a lumbering behemoth, and key employees are starting to leave for more nimble companies. Is it possible to stay in the lead indefinitely, or is there always a &quot;hungrier&quot; competitor right around the corner? Do large companies offer the same shot at success, or do workers...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name>Cleve Francis</name>
</author>
<category term="Success in the workplace" />
</entry>

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