Word: budgeteering
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Back in Scandinavia. Operating on a typically tight Hearst budget, Mrs. Brown has an editorial staff of 21. But they all throw themselves into her crusade. "I never have to compromise in my work," says Art Director Lene Bernbom, 24, a Danish blonde who joined the magazine in 1966. "Suddenly," she adds, "I'm like back in Scandinavia. Suddenly, I'm working...
...nearly half a century, the Cleveland schools suffered from a combination of civic complacency, the steady flight of middle-class whites to the suburbs, and the limiting effects of a debt-free, pay-as-you-go school budget policy. By 1964, the city was spending only $450 per student annually on education, compared with $850 in nearby Shaker Heights. As a result, half of Cleveland's students were in schools more than 50 years old. Only two high schools offered vocational training-and less than a third of all graduates were able to find jobs. None of the city...
Leahy said that he was "very encouraged" by a visit in January by a three-man inter-agency committee from the Bureau of the Budget. The committee, he said, visited 21 universities across the nation in an attempt to guage the general feeling toward effort-reporting among the nation's scientists...
Leahy said that he had met with the committee--composed of Cecil E. Goode of the Bureau of the Budget, Robert Boyden of the National Science Foundation, and Susumu Uyeda of the Government Accounting Office in Washington last week...
...said that the committee had been "very sensitive in trying to devise a more rational approach to the problem." Their report will be submitted to the Budget Bureau within the month...