The bureau could not find the people it was looking for and closed the case.
The Bureau found the quality of teaching to be good but the physical structures very poor.
In 1980, the bureau found 5.1 million more people than its earlier estimates had led it to expect.
In 1991, the bureau did a new calculation and found that about 5 million people had not been counted the first time around.
The bureau found that 57 percent of all families did not earn enough to buy houses in their regions.
The gods of immortality knew the Bureau could always find work.
The bureau found that 725 of the 6,023 occupational deaths reported in 1999 involved Hispanic workers.
The bureau also found that at least four airlines could change their mileage programs without notice.
But even the latest figure was far higher than the 9.2 percent rate of poverty that the bureau found among non-Hispanic families.
In the 1992 report, the bureau found that none of the 20 companies surveyed could provide a ticket at the advertised price.