Word: cash
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...administrative budget will be a record-breaking $112.8 billion, while the estimate for federal revenues for the same period totals $111 billion. That left a deficit of $1.8 billion, which, Johnson carefully emphasized, would be "one of the lowest in many years." In fact, he said, the cash budget for fiscal 1967 (as opposed to the smaller administrative budget, which does not include such ready-cash sources as social security payments and highway funds) would actually show a surplus of $500 million...
...together a fortune that ran up to $2,000,000. The specific charges involve devious transactions over 3½ years that brought Bobby some $137,000 from clients who felt the need of his special talents as "the 101st Senator." None of the money, which he received largely in cash, was reported as taxable income. Furthermore, Baker not only deceived the Government but apparently never played quite foursquare with his cohorts...
...Bromley, 37, a Baker chum since the days when both were young Senate pages. The indictment charged that Bromley had been Bobby's tax screen, receiving as "legal fees" $37,000 from Baker clients in 1963-64. Most of this, the grand jury found, ended up as cash in Baker's pockets. The scheme became so routine, however, that Baker began ignoring his pal altogether and having "a person other than Wayne L. Bromley" endorse the checks. Bromley was one of the grand jury's key witnesses and, though he was named as a "conspirator" with Baker...
...office. Straight off, they discover that they have forgotten to bring tools. Detouring to "basement hardware," they lose more time through a plumbing mishap, Santa's payday and a jammed elevator-then, none too brilliantly, bring off the heist. A couple of minutes later, they lose the cash to a teen gang that has been holding up a tiny dry goods shop down the street...
...salvo last September with a massively advertised new blade coating named "Microchrome EB-7." Wilkinson, whose ads seem designed to sell swords as much as blades, still is holding on to its 52% share of the British stain less market, but it has had to lay out needed cash to double its advertising spending. "We made certain forecasts and geared our output to them," says Managing Director Roy Randolph. "Well, it has proved more difficult than we expected. Believe me, though, we don't intend to stand still...