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...Alliance have long been a concern of TIME'S editors, both in print and out. Last week they acted on that concern by convening 45 representatives from seven NATO countries, including politicians government officials, academics and think-tank analysts, for a three-day Atlantic Conference '83 in Hamburg, West Germany. Explains Editor-in-Chief Henry Grunwald, who led TIME'S delegation of 26 editors, writers and correspondents: "We all know that the survival and strength of the Atlantic Alliance, military, political, economic, are of the utmost importance to world peace. We wanted to find some...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher: May 9, 1983 | 5/9/1983 | See Source »

...organizing the ambitious undertaking, held at Hamburg's appropriately named Atlantic Hotel, fell to Deputy Chief of Correspondents B. William Mader. Working closely with the staffs of the Bonn, Paris, London, Rome and Washington bureaus, Mader oversaw every detail, from arranging participants' travel to working out meeting agendas and deciding on lunch and dinner menus...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher: May 9, 1983 | 5/9/1983 | See Source »

Against this backdrop, TIME last week held an Atlantic Alliance conference to assess the differences that now separate the U.S. and its West European allies. The setting was Hamburg, which, as Helmut Schmidt, the former West German Chancellor, pointed out, is only 25 minutes by car from the frontier with the Soviet bloc and only twelve minutes more from the nearest Soviet armored division. For three days, 45 political leaders, government officials, strategists and economists from the U.S. and Western Europe diagnosed the alliance's ills, aired their grievances and sought to find remedies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Alliance: Trying to Heal the Rift | 5/9/1983 | See Source »

...Ringo's parts in the studio. Epstein agonized over a merchandising deal that lost the Beatles millions, but Lennon consoled himself with cash delivered by concert promoters in brown paper bags. Epstein took 25%, and the band got the rest. As young, hungry rockers playing in Hamburg, West Germany, the Beatles contracted, and were cured of, any number of venereal diseases. Later, rich and famous beyond anyone's wildest imaginings, they would become infected with incurable jealousy and suspicion, some of which was well founded. The final blow, Brown writes, came in one of those stultifying board meetings...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Backstage Beatles | 5/9/1983 | See Source »

...victim of a hoax." To allay any lingering doubts, Stern announced last week that it would eventually turn the diaries over to the West German national archives, where historians will be free to examine them in detail. -By Marguerite Johnson. Reported by Bonnie Angelo/London and B. William Mader/ Hamburg...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: West Germany: Black Ink and Red Wax Swastikas | 5/2/1983 | See Source »

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