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...press conference where FBI Agent Charles Bates announced the capture of Patty Hearst, later talked with members and friends of the Hearst family and also coordinated bureau coverage. Correspondent John Austin visited the scenes where the arrests were made and also filed a running chronology of events. Stringer Paul Ciotti maintained an almost constant vigil on the street near the scene of the arrests. Los Angeles Bureau Chief Jess Cook grabbed a plane to San Francisco as soon as he heard the news. "You deserve a little luck in this business," he says. "Who should be on the same plane...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, Sep. 29, 1975 | 9/29/1975 | See Source »

...been unrelenting. Boyce and Austin work from Monday through Saturday-fielding queries for other TIME stories all the while -and on Sundays one of them monitors a radio at all times for late news breaks. Helping them are Correspondent Patricia Delaney and Reporter-Researcher Anne Constable, and Stringers Paul Ciotti, Glenn Garvin and Gail Kennard. By questioning witnesses to last week's bank robbery, the team produced a thorough account of it. They also got exclusive interviews with members of the Hearst family last week. Boyce won the confidence of Linguistics Instructor Colston Westbrook, the former S.L.A. intimate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, Apr. 29, 1974 | 4/29/1974 | See Source »

...exhibition's high point in originality. Another girl student-Helen Kae Carter of Iowa State-sent a successfully elaborate still life of kitchen utensils hanging in midair; it was the happily screwball kind of experiment that professionals, with livings to make, seldom get around to. Philip Ciotti of the Carnegie Institute had explored the thin world between abstraction and reality to produce his weird, orange Newspaper Office (see cut). The result was less photographic than Charles Sheeler's clean-scrubbed in dustrial studies, and more interesting than most out-and-out abstractions...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Tomorrow's Artists | 8/16/1948 | See Source »

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