Word: cameramen
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Before an audience of 2,000 correspondents, cameramen and spectators in Moscow University's ornate assembly hall, Russia's space twins, Major Andrian Nikolayev and Lieut. Colonel Pavel Popovich, last week underwent a four-hour earth post-mortem of their memorable exploit in space...
Minutes after 3 p.m.. the meeting broke up. Prince Souvanna Phouma strode out onto the porch, gave the railing a resounding slap. "Voila!" he cried. "Le gouvernement!" Soldiers of the three armies broke into cheers, and TV cameramen shouted for a word in English. Beaming. Souvanna replied: "I cannot speak English. I can only say-it is all O.K.'' Souvanna's enthusiasm was shared in Moscow. Nikita Khrushchev fired off a cable to President John Kennedy hailing the creation of a neutral Laotian government as "good news" in the "cause of strengthening peace in Southeast Asia...
Sidewalks along Hanvover St. in front of the theatre were thronged with enthusiastic vaudeville-sympe Saturday when the box office opened sales for the final, performance. Press photographers and cameramen watched while held the crowds in line and performers filed into the theatre from the next door, "The Burly Lounge, Where Show People Meet...
...para officer who was left for dead in Indo-China and who became notorious in Algeria for torturing French sympathizers of the F.L.N. Faced with a treason rap in France, many of the French mercenaries are acutely sensitive about publicity; they have threatened to kill photographers and television cameramen who have attempted to take their pictures. "The French are brave, resolute, and fanatical," says a former U.N. official. "Most of them are Algerian extremists of the type who think De Gaulle is a Communist. They're tough babies...
...said Brinkley, "they're here." And with that he showed some of the kingpins' lavish mansions in Grosse Pointe. Mich., rattling off the residents' names and specialities, from narcotics to counterfeiting. At one estate the hoods and their families came out and started pushing the NBC cameramen around; Brinkley showed that, too. A more obvious entry in the Journal dealt with that old American folk hero, the cowboy, as he lives in 1961. Brinkley found his latter-day cowboys at a 200,000-acre ranch in Wyoming, where the working day begins at 3 a.m. with breakfast...