Word: bureau
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Named to succeed Gordon was Charles L. Schultze, 40, until last February an assistant director of the Bureau of the Budget. The son of a Washington, D.C., accountant, Schultze holds a Ph.D. in economics from the University of Maryland, for seven years was a staff assistant to the Council of Economic Advisers, in 1962 became one of Gordon's top assistants. In that capacity, Schultze was deeply involved in estimating annual personal income, corporate profits, and the G.N.P. - an exacting task, the results of which determine estimates of Government revenues and the entire program of federal expenditures...
Spinning the Wheels. In 1941, Royster was commissioned in the Navy, served in the Atlantic and the South' Pacific, where baffled brass mistook his name for some kind of code. At war's end, he became the Journal's Washington bureau chief, later moved to New York to write editorials for which he won a 1953 Pulitzer Prize for "warmth, simplicity and understanding of the basic outlook of the American people." He was named editor in 1958 and put in charge of the editorial page. Though he still sets policy, he writes few editorials nowadays. Instead...
From a phone booth at the restaurant Miss Caldeira called Capt. John Granger, chief of the Cambridge detective bureau. Granger phoned the Boston police, who went quickly to the restaurant and made the arrest for Cambridge. Farrell was reported to be gentle and cooperative at the arrest. He bummed cigars off the officers and addressed each...
Getting the story called for reporting by TIME correspondents from Oklahoma to Okinawa. Principally, it called for hard and fast work in the field by Hong Kong Bureau Chief Frank McCulloch (a Marine sergeant in World War II) and two of his correspondents, James Wilde and Peter Forbath. Their first task was to find the right man for the cover. They nominated-as representative and symbolic-Lieut. Colonel Robinson Risner, 40, and the editors readily agreed...
...these days, even though it means flying the hammer and sickle over Madrid's Santiago Bernabeu Stadium. The Catholic newspaper Ya, which, like the rest of the Spanish press, had for more than two decades been forbidden to publish a Russian dateline, last month opened its own Moscow bureau...