Word: macoy
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Recently TIME Correspondent Ramelle MaCoy of our Bonn Bureau drove into Russian-occupied East Germany to visit the Leipzig international trade fair. After his trip, he reported the impact his American automobile had made on East German audiences...
...JOHANNESBURG: Alexander Campbell. BEIRUT: James Bell, David Richardson. NEW DELHI: James Burke, Joe David Brown, Achal Rangaswami. SINGAPORE: John Dowling. HONG KONG: John M. Mecklin. TOKYO: Dwight Martin, James L. Greenfield. MEXICO CITY: Robert Lubar, Rafael Delgado Lozano. PANAMA: Philip Payne. Rio DE JANEIRO: Cranston Jones. BUENOS AIRES: Ramelle MaCoy...
...power. Since then, yanqui-baiting Dictator Perón has become the most familiar Latin American figure to the U.S.-and in some ways the most alarming. How is Perón doing after a decade in power? Last week TIME's Buenos Aires Correspondent Ramelle MaCoy reported...
Correspondent R. C. MaCoy arrived in Tokyo a year ago, spent six months in Korea as an interlude between two lively assignments in Latin America (TIME, Feb. 4). Last November, Bud Hutton joined the Tokyo staff. Hutton, who claims to be virtually indestructible in wars, flew 23 missions as a gunner before D-day in World War II, later made a parachute jump at the Rhine ("I got jarred around a little bit, that's all"), and came out unscathed when his jeep was forced off the road by a truck in Korea...
During one of those trips, he was treated to a good illustration of the fact that copies of TIME are likely to turn up in just as many out-of-the-way spots as TIME'S correspondents. On an assignment in the Bay Islands, MaCoy arrived tired after a hard day. He got a room at the hotel with a window overlooking the town square, and settled down in bed. He was almost asleep when he heard a loud voice outside. MaCoy walked over to the window. In the square he saw "a man reading aloud the last issue...