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Pussyfooting. Those who succeed will join huge reportorial staffs that bring suffocation coverage to any news event. Asahi has about 1,000 reporters and deskmen in its Tokyo office alone (v. 478 for the New York Times's headquarters staff), plus a fleet of 13 planes and helicopters to deploy them all over the country. Because Asahi prints as many as 139 editions round the clock and assigns specialists to virtually every aspect of each big story, there is enough work to keep everyone busy. All major papers send cadres to cover government offices and ministries...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Job Seeking in Japan | 7/17/1972 | See Source »

...nearly twenty years, I.F. Stone has lived every journalist's dream. He was his own editor, publisher, and staff, and he printed the truth as he saw it. Unfettered by stockholders, managers, advertisers, or cautious deskmen, he has jousted with official Washington every week for nearly 1,000 weeks, and won far more often than he lost. This week he announced that he is closing down the paper because, at 64 "I can't be a five day bike racer any more...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: I.F. Stone's (Bi) Weekly | 12/13/1971 | See Source »

...service has five editorial deskmen, seven full-time reporters and twelve stringers, including four whites. They operate under the experienced hand of George Earner, 40, the first black reporter ever to win the New York Press Association Award (for his account of the 1958 stabbing of Dr. Martin Luther King in a department store). Working out of offices on lower Fifth Avenue and in Harlem and Bedford-Stuyvesant, the staff turns out an average of 5,000 words a day, consisting of five to eight stories plus a calendar of events...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Covering the Minorities | 8/10/1970 | See Source »

With a $38,000 salary, a chauffeured limousine and a huge office on F Street -not to mention a fiefdom of almost 10,000 deskmen-the job sounds like a bureaucrat's dream. Recently, though, it seemed as if no one in the country was willing to take the burdensome post mired in controversy. It was fitting that the Nixon Administration finally had to conscript a man to head the Selective Service System...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Draft: Conscripting a Chief | 3/23/1970 | See Source »

Unfortunately, this time the Defense Department, the Central Intelligence Agency and the State Department are all split themselves. The State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research wears a gloomy mien that irks Secretary of State Dean Rusk and the optimistic deskmen of the East Asian bureau. In the Pentagon, the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the Defense Intelligence Agency are assembling a rosy picture of a seriously weakened enemy and a greatly improved South Vietnamese military machine, a vision shared by U.S. Commander General Creighton Abrams and his headquarters in Saigon. But the Defense Department's civilian...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The War: Conflicting Advice | 1/3/1969 | See Source »

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