Word: joined
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Republican Convention last week was one of those rare major news events that seems scheduled to the convenience of a weekly newsmagazine. With all the activity ending two days before TIME'S deadline, almost the entire Nation staff from New York-writers, editors, reporters, researchers-was able to join correspondents from bureaus across the country as they converged on Miami. For a change, photographers and picture editors were on the scene together. A Television editor was able to observe TV reporters not only on the tube but on the convention floor. The Press editor could observe daily newsmen...
...Administration forces by engaging many presently inactive Kennedy supporters and bringing their added pressure to bear against the Vice President. Almost as soon as Mc Govern announced, old New Frontiersmen Pierre Salinger and Arthur Schlesinger Jr. endorsed him. Salinger and former R.F.K. Press Secretary Frank Mankiewicz are expected to join his staff...
...them, but Huong would clearly like to see more relieved. So, too, would Thieu, but competent replacements are hard to find. Old avenues of corruption persist as well. Draft exemptions can still be bought: it costs only $425 to become a secret-police agent or $250 to join the Regional Forces and thus escape regular army service. And big names still enjoy protection. Not long ago, an ARVN colonel was charged with corruption but was not tried because he had too much influence...
Appealing to other steelmakers for restraint, Johnson expressed hope that they "will not join this parade." Bethlehem insisted that its action, if adopted by other producers, would raise the cost of an automobile by only $12, a refrigerator by 720. Not so sanguine, the Administration estimated that across-the-board increases of the magnitude announced by Bethlehem would cost the nation's consumers $600 million, minimize the economy-cooling effects of the new federal income tax sur charge and, by raising prices of U.S. exports, further strain the nation's balance of payments...
...insure divergent viewpoints, the committee drew on various branches of medical faculties. For good measure Ebert and Beecher got some non-medical types to join the crew; they felt that death was not simply a matter of medicine, but also one for other disciplines, especially religion and law. Everett I. Mendelsohn, associate professor of the History of Science at Harvard, joined up after Beecher saw him at a conference on the social implications of biology and chemistry, because he felt his historical background would broaden the group. Ralph Potter was pulled in from Divinity School because Ebert wanted a theologian...