Word: planned
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...period of rethinking of strategy by Ho Chi Minh and his men. The allies generally assume that orders from Hanoi take around four weeks to filter down to Communist troops in the South. If President Nixon's eight-point Viet Nam proposal of May 14, which included a plan for mutual troop withdrawals, caused a reevaluation by the North Vietnamese, then orders implementing any changes would have reached Communist units by mid-June-just about the time the lull began. The theory is bolstered by the fact that a push, expected by American intelligence for June...
...editor with license to ride herd on the "bullpen"-the traditionally sacrosanct bank of rewrite editors. Finally, the appointment of able, amiable Seymour Topping, 47, as assistant managing editor gives his good friend Rosenthal a strong right hand. "Nearly two years ago," Sulzberger summed up, "we began seriously to plan the transition to the next generation . . . That mission has been accomplished...
...promotion of Reston to vice president, was geared to the retirement of Vice President Turner Catledge, which would have been mandatory in early 1971 when Catledge turns 70. But five weeks ago, Catledge told Sulzberger he would retire at once, and Sulzberger and Reston set in motion the plan to install Rosenthal as top editor. When Cat-ledge changed his mind about retirement, the publisher decided to go ahead with the change anyway and created a new vice-presidential slot for Reston...
...federal statutes governing tax-free foundations, the state charged, the outfit tried to conceal the fact by enjoining its clients to absolute secrecy. "The cleverness of the scheme," said California Deputy Attorney General H. Warren Siegel, "was to get you to join by saying 'Only we have this plan,' and then saying 'Don't tell anyone what we told you or we'll boot you out.' And then no one would know until after the founder died that they couldn't really avoid inheritance taxes...
Mostly Adults. Newspaper and magazine publishers, unlike broadcasters, are not federally licensed and are protected under the First Amendment's freedom-of-speech provision. Few publications plan voluntarily to stop such advertising in the near future, since it brought them $50 million in revenues last year. They also argue that printed ads appeal mostly to adults and are less intrusive than TV commercials, which often run while children are viewing. Even so, Senator Moss has warned publishers to avoid accepting "massive print advertising campaigns" and urged them to "maintain current ratios" of cigarette to non-cigarette advertising. Quite likely...