Word: flamini
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Ajemian is already deep into his seventh presidential season. For this week's cover story on Ronald Reagan's reach for the Republican nomination, which was written by Associate Editor Frank Merrick, Ajemian interviewed the candidate himself, while Correspondents John Austin, Jess Cook and Roland Flamini talked to Reagan's aides, friends and political adversaries. For Ajemian's personal assessment of Reagan's potential as a survivalist, see page...
...Lynette Fromme, Patty Hearst). Under the overall coordination of Los Angeles Bureau Chief Jess Cook, San Francisco Correspondent John Austin talked with local FBI and police sources and also interviewed the only FBI informant to have successfully infiltrated the Weather underground for our story on the California underground. Roland Flamini assembled a portrait of Sara Jane ("Sally") Moore. Christopher Ogden, who was close enough to the shooting to see the smoke of the gun, followed Moore in the aftermath and also interviewed Marine Corps Hero Oliver Sipple. A separate story in our Press section examines charges that press coverage...
...numbers on their blunt noses, bear an eerie resemblance to massed football linemen. The air base is not some secret, Seven Days in May outpost, but the Pentagon's Military Aircraft Storage and Disposition Center (MASDC), a giant parking apron for aged or unneeded aircraft. TIME Correspondent Roland Flamini visited MASDC to roam among its aerial mastodons and talk with their keepers...
Riggs' own secret weapon is his mouth, and Flamini reports that it produced a constant volley of phrases and clichés as varied as the spins, lobs and trick shots that Bobby uses so well on the court. "A lovable rogue, that's how you should portray me," Riggs told Flamini at one point. "I like that role." Flamini faced the lovable rogue on the tennis court one day, but did not last long; he fell during the warmup, badly twisting his ankle, and spent the rest of the time using a cane to keep up with...
...antics of Bobby Riggs, this week's cover subject, are so much more theatrical than athletic that we assigned TIME'S Show Business correspondent, Roland Flamini, to cover Riggs in Los Angeles. "For six hilarious, mind-boggling days," Flamini says, "I followed him around as he wallowed in the limelight and hustled games on the Beverly Hills tennis circuit. During that time he was so blatantly male chauvinistic that I began to suspect that he was really the Women's Liberation movement's secret weapon...