Word: elected
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
WHILE President Eisenhower was still in Key West, Brazil's President-elect Juscelino Kubitschek visited the White House especially to learn how the Administration's staff system operates. When he expressed this wish, presidential aides produced a copy of TIME'S Jan. 9 issue, with a portrait of White House Chief of Staff Sherman Adams on the cover, and opened it to our report on the White House office and its staff, illustrated with a chart by R. M. Chapin Jr. This, Ike's aides told their distinguished guest, was the latest and most accurate picture...
After his brief visit, Brazil's President-elect left the White House with many new administrative ideas in mind and the Jan. 9 issue of TIME safely tucked under...
President-elect Kubitschek is not the first to discover how well Bob Chapin's charts and maps can clarify a subject, from geography or medicine to economics or government. Among the reprint requests that come to my office each month, many ask permission to use TIME'S charts and maps. Since Chapin joined our staff in 1937, his work has been reproduced by foreign governments, the U.S. State Department, Air Force, Army, Navy, numerous universities, and publishers of textbooks and encyclopedias. At the moment he is devoting his spare " time to a four-color map in global perspective...
...Mississippi, a group of lawyers and legislators, headed by U.S. Senator James Eastland, urged the state to nullify the Supreme Court's decision. Governor-elect J. P. Coleman countered that such action would be nothing less than an "invitation to the Federal Government to send troops into Mississippi." He himself has come out for some sort of "interposition," has hinted that he will make his position clear in his inaugural address this week...
Another proposal, which CCA members suggest, would make the mayoralty election separate from the Council elections. The voters would elect one mayor and eight Councilmen--not nine potential mayors as at present. The delays and recurring political deals would vanish, and the mayoralty would cease to be a political plum, plucked in back rooms of the Hotel Commander. The qualifications for a mayor, after all, differ from those for a councilman; the separate elections would give the voters the chance to put the right man in the right office, and the city would not be forced to depend so much...