Word: iwama
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...hurricane, of course, were Alex Campbell and Tokyo Staffer Frank Iwama. Campbell, a Scotsman, who in ten years with TIME has served in South Africa and India -and written books about both-cabled a veritable volume of 32,500 words of valuable background material on Ambassador MacArthur and postwar Japan for this week's cover story, constantly wired the running story as the demonstrations crescendoed. Campbell found that his green tin hat, with "TIME-LIFE" in white letters on front, proved to be a passport. In their polite Japanese way, police and demonstrators alike stopped to clear a path...
...front-line work of Campbell and Iwama, the behind-the-lines reporting of other correspondents around the world and the analysis of the editors in New York, came a clear view of a complicated week. See NATIONAL AFFAIRS, The Visible Hand, On With the Trip and The No. I Objective; FOREIGN NEWS, The Expendable Premier and The Men Behind the Mobs; and PRESS, Free Press Gone Wrong...
During the next 40 hours, cables and telephone calls moved from Moscow to Hong Kong to Beirut to Atlanta as TIME'S staffers and stringers ferreted out details of the story. Acting on a tip from Bureau Chief McCullough, the Tokyo Bureau's Frank Iwama tracked down a Japanese magazine with the best-known printed description of the U2, and fired off a running English translation by cable...
...most eminent students of the problem. From England, Correspondent Herman Nickel reported the opposing views of Sir Charles Darwin and London University's Professor J. D. Bernal, Britain's chief exponent of the Marxist view of population. In Tokyo, Bureau Chief Alexander Campbell and Correspondent Frank Iwama sounded out Experts Minoru Taji and Tatsuo Honda of Japan's Population Problems Research Institute...
...Wrong Spirit. In Niigata, Japan, after her home was destroyed by fire, Mrs. Iwama, 25, protested in a letter to the Niigata Nippo that friends had been sending sake as a condolence gift: "At such a time one hopes that the men will work cleaning up the debris, but all they do is drink sake, talk much, get drunk, and end up snoring loudly. It is very discouraging to a poor housewife...