Word: bureau
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Torment (see BOOKS). Author Mecklin had unique credentials for the task, having reported the .disastrous French campaign against the Communists and the establishment of the Diem regime for TIME between 1953 and 1955. He also covered the Middle East and West Germany for us, is now our San Francisco Bureau Chief. Says Mecklin: "I wouldn't have missed the Saigon experience for anything, but then again I wouldn't want to repeat it. It's great to be back on the reporter's side of the news...
This week's cover story about one of the world's most remarkable businessmen is a case in point. Reported largely by Los Angeles Bureau Chief Marshall Berges, written by Spencer Davidson and edited by Edward L. Jamieson, it is a story of business and art and philanthropy-but, most of all, it is a searching examination of the life and works of Norton Simon, the corporate Cezanne...
...make matters still brighter for management, 38 editorial staffers who are not Guild members have continued to work during the strike. Neither the paper's 12-man Washington bureau nor any of the foreign bureaus are covered by the Guild contract. "They're going to break the strike," said a Federal observer last week. "If they get back in publication, they'll kill the Guild. You can replace a Guild member, but you can't replace the craft unions...
...DeBakey heard this hitherto unpublished story from Barren Beshoar, chief of TIME'S Denver bureau, who did much of the reporting on the cover story. He is the grandson of the Dr. Beshoar who began practice in the cattle town of Trinidad in 1865, and his great-grandfather and father were surgeons as well. After finishing the cover story, Medicine Writer Gilbert Cant sent a note of congratulation to Beshoar: "TIME'S annals are full of examples of reporters who went to amazing lengths to get the facts. But I can't think of any other...
Squads of security police stormed into the magazine's Hamburg head quarters and its bureau in Bonn, ransacking files and arresting everyone in sight. Publisher Rudolf Augstein was held without bail, and Military Editor Conrad Ahlers was forcibly sent back from a vacation in Spain. In the Defense Ministry, Strauss issued a hastily prepared memorandum charging that Der Spiegel had betrayed military secrets. In the Bundestag, Chancellor Konrad Adenauer shook with rage as he denounced "an abyss of treason in this land." The public and press reacted in a different way. "Gestapo!" roared newspapers throughout the land. Students marched...