Word: conrades
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...work of TIME'S correspondents-in the convention hall, at the delegates' meetings, in the candidates' headquarters-will be coordinated at a news desk in the Conrad Hilton Hotel. There Washington Bureau Chief James Shepley, who covers politics in and out of season, will share with Lawrence Laybourne, chief of TIME Inc.'s U.S. and Canadian correspondents, the task of making assignments, and of tying together correspondents' reports. By the time the candidate is nominated, TIME'S editors will already have begun culling their own on-the-spot observations to bring you a report...
...housekeeper at Chicago's Conrad Hilton hotel, although outwardly neutral like all the hotel employees, is wearing (according to Ikemen) an Eisenhower button on her slip. That is one of the latest eve-of-battle bulletins from Chicago, as the city braces for C-day amid tornadoes of campaign literature, jungles of telephone wire, rivers of ice water and the thunderous fizz of headache powders...
...speaker's platform, where the main press gallery is, 30 noiseless teletype machines will carry running stories as fast as they come from reporters' typewriters. Elsewhere in the hall are 45 other teletypes, a battery of wirephoto transmitters, and more than 2,000 telephone lines. At the Conrad Hilton Hotel, convention headquarters, is another big press room. This, plus the hall's equipment, will enable reporters to file 500,000 words of wire copy an hour. As double insurance, many newspapers have put in their own teletype and telephone lines direct to home offices...
Matador, by Barnaby Conrad. Latest addition to the small shelf of good books about bullfighters (TIME, June...
...Odor of Courage. What "they," i.e., two big black bulls, do to Pacote and what he does with them is the climax but not the core of Barnaby Conrad's Matador, a novel about bullfighting fine enough to share the shelf with Tom Lea's The Brave Bulls (TIME, April 25, 1949). Like Ernest Hemingway, whose hard-packed style accents every sentence in Matador, Novelist Conrad is steeped in the classic ritual of the corrida. (In 1945, at 23, he shared an afternoon's billing in the Seville ring with his tutor, famed Juan Belmonte...