Word: bureau
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...happens to be the age of the publisher. The associate and contributing editors, who constitute TIME's writing force, are an average 40, but 26 of them are 35 or under. A few other averages: senior editors, 43; researchers, 33, although ten are 25 or under; the Washington bureau, 38; the Boston bureau, 34; and the London bureau, 40. The average of these averages is just a greying hair over 40-when, one is pleasantly reminded, it has been said that life begins...
...people who worked on the cover story, Researcher Mary Vanaman, who undertook an impressive survey of the facts, figures and philosophies of middle age, and Boston Bureau Chief Ruth Mehrtens, who interviewed Miss Bacall, are both above the average for their categories. So are Editor Cranston Jones, 48, and Writer Ted Kalem...
...Prairie Lodge last week, under the peaks of Baldy and Old Scab, Douglas and his bride appeared blissfully unconcerned by the headshaking on the Potomac. "We don't get much news around here," drawled Douglas. "On the short-wave radio we can listen to the broadcasts from the Bureau of Reclamation and Peking." The latter, at least, should be worth listening to if Peking approves the Justice's plans, sanctioned last week by the State Department, to visit Red China with Cathy this September...
...years with the United Press International, Lowry Bowman reported his share of major news events-from the first manned U.S. rocket shots to the long, wearying travels of presidential campaigns. Later, as a $10,000-a-year rewrite man on the general-news desk of U.P.I.'s Washington bureau, he handled the nation's top political stories with speed and accuracy. A promotion was in the works; he was successful and progressing in his chosen profession...
...afford to budget some $400,000 a year for TV news coverage. And most of WDSU's 18 reporters have had experience in other kinds of journalism-an unusual state of affairs in any TV news department. News Director John Corporon, 37, who served as U.P.I, bureau chief in New Orleans, has a wire-service fascination with fastbreaking stories plus a balancing lack of hesitance about releasing staffers for months on stories requiring spadework and research...