Word: filings
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Reporter Connery's long and careful file arrived in New York to be distilled, evaluated and turned into story form by an able collaborator: Associate Editor Robert McLaughlin, 51. A TIME staffer since 1949, McLaughlin has written in Foreign News since 1957, specializing in the Far East. Besides cover stories on Indonesia's President Sukarno (March 10, 1958), Japan's Princess Michiko (March 23) and Red China's Liu Shao-chi (Oct. 12), McLaughlin wrote the Dalai Lama cover (April 20), which Connery also reported...
...guess proved correct. The story was broken from Vienna by the New York Times's Correspondent A. M. Rosenthal, who was recently expelled from Poland (TIME, Nov. 23) for "probing" too deeply into Polish affairs and was now free to report what he had not felt free to file at the time. At first, Monat's defection to the U.S. was flatly denied by the State Department, then officially confirmed...
...just about the finest teacher they knew. And academic standards are high in the suburban Westchester County area, home of many a well-heeled Manhattan commuter with an eye on Harvard for his son. But last week able, balding Teacher Worley, 38, was fired. Reason: he refused to file lesson plans with the front office two weeks ahead of class...
...orphans arrested Saturday for trespassing while selling magazine subscriptions in the Freshman dorms were tried and convicted yesterday in a Cambridge court. According to Matthew J. Toohy, Captain of the University Police, the judge placed the case "in file" and did not impose a sentence. A representative of the subscription company which had employed the boys said Sunday night that the orphans have quit their jobs selling publications...
...Beers, however, could not file permanent patent application on its process until it was sure that it could produce the synthetics on a sustained commercial basis. While De Beers continued work on the project, G.E. was taking approximately 10% of the U.S. industrial-diamond market away from De Beers' natural industrial stones, indicated that it could supply half of the U.S. market for industrial diamonds. Synthetics are not only priced lower than natural stones, but manufacturers say that in many cases they are substantially more efficient...