Word: phi
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...Leonard Carpenter Meeker, 49, deputy legal adviser in the State Department, will move up to legal adviser. A dedicated, little-known Government attorney from New Jersey, Meeker was a Phi Beta Kappa at Amherst, got his law degree from Harvard in 1940, and, except for four years' Army duty in World War II, has been working for the Government in Washington ever since...
...Donald F. Turner, 44, Harvard Law professor, will become Assistant U.S. Attorney General in charge of the antitrust division. A Phi Beta Kappa (Northwestern), Turner took a Ph.D. in economics at Harvard, earned a law degree at Yale, where he met Nicholas Katzenbach, now Attorney General. Turner was Katzenbach's personal choice to replace William Orrick, who is resigning. A consultant to both the Government and private industry in top antitrust cases, Turner has written widely on the subject, is considered an expert with a tough approach. In Antitrust Policy: An Economic and Legal Analysis, a book that Turner...
...Phi Betes. Macy was named head of the Civil Service Commission by President Kennedy in 1961. He streamlined the organization, strengthened its operations considerably and helped get salary raises for the 1,600,000 federal employees who come under the competitive civil service system. But it was only last November, when White House Personnel Scout Ralph Dungan was appointed Ambassador to Chile, that President Johnson asked Macy to take over top-level, non-civil service head-hunting duties as well...
Despite obvious dissimilarities, the Big Three have some important bonds in common. Each has a Phi Beta Kappa key and a striking record of success before joining the Government. Bundy, 46, was Skull and Bones at Yale, became dean of Harvard's Faculty of Arts and Sciences at 34. McNamara, 48, became the $400,000-plus-a-year president of Ford at 44. Rusk, 56, was a Rhodes scholar, became president of the Rockefeller Foundation...
Raised in Raleigh, Royster went to prep school in Bell Buckle, Tenn., then to the University of North Carolina, where he reported for the Daily Tar Heel and made Phi Beta Kappa. "He was as busy as the bumblebee he resembled," a friend recalls. A few months after he joined the Journal, he went to Washington, where he covered the Treasury, Capitol Hill, the White House. As a sign of his new national outlook, he and his wife Frances did not name their two daughters for states; they are called Bonnie and Eleanor...