Word: photographers
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Rhodesia's journalistic arms race first came to international attention last year after Freelancer J. Ross Baughman won a Pulitzer Prize for his Associated Press photograph of a suspected Rhodesian guerrilla; it turned out that the photo had earlier been rejected for an Overseas Press Club a Ward, in part because the judges learned that Baughman was armed and wearing a Rhodesian cavalry uniform. Then Richard Valentine Cecil, a British television correspondent and TIME stringer, was killed last April by guerrillas, reportedly while carrying a rifle and accompanying an army detachment. A check by TIME turned up an arsenal...
...dismayed that as the basis of your cover portrait you used, without authorization, my well-known photograph of the moving face of Albert Einstein...
When the four lead columns of a newspaper--including a photograph--are devoted to an utterly unnewsworthy piece, it is an indication that the news is being created instead of reported. I find it particularly alarming that the reporters responsible are recently elected members of your senior staff. They are already guilty of gross misuse of their newly acquired power. It looks like a grim year lies ahead for Harvard journalism. Andrew M. Browne...
...years, British Cameraman Peter Scoones has had an unlikely dream. A dedicated scuba diver, he wanted to photograph a live coelacanth (pronounced seal-ah-kanlh), the ancient, almost legendary, stump-legged fish which once was believed to have died out soon after the dinosaurs. Now this paparazzo of the deep has nailed his prey. Last week Scoones released rare color photographs of one of these "living fossils," swimming contentedly for his camera in the Indian Ocean off the Comoro Islands near the Malagasy Republic...
...individuals continued to stare into each other's eyes. silent beneath a photograph of Hubbard. They were advancing their communication potential...