Word: rauch
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...prevail upon gas station owners to imitate the architecture of the casinos in the interest of architectural unity, Venturi and group hurried to sing its praises. The results of the study as well as an essay on the symbolism of sprawl and another on the work of Venturi and Rauch as practicing architects make up Venturi's latest book. Learning from Las Vegas...
Most of the 150,000 Montagnards who remain in resettlement camps are forced to live chiefly on meager handouts of rice. At the Nguyen Hue camp in central Kontum, one refugee told TIME Correspondent Rudolph S. Rauch that he had been given fish or fish sauce only three times in three months, and had never received any meat or vegetables. Other Montagnards complained that they were not even getting their full portions of rice, supposedly 500 grams per person...
...victims were local officials whom the enemy wanted to eliminate either because they were especially effective in their jobs, or because they were so unpopular that the Viet Cong could win favor by killing them. The primary motive for the show trials and the brutalities, reports TIME Correspondent Rudolph Rauch, "appears to have been to wreck whatever allegiance the government might have built up, and there are few more effective ways of mitigating allegiance than to bury four dozen loyal men alive" -as happened in the town of Bong Son. Some examples...
...siege of An Loc had not yet been broken at week's end, but airborne troops had managed to reach the city, which-through allied air power and the sheer endurance of its Vietnamese defenders-had held out even longer than Dien Bien Phu. TIME Correspondent Rudolph Rauch and Photographer Le Minh managed to enter the city last week by helicopter. Rauch was one of the first two American correspondents to reach An Loc since the siege began. He sent this report...
...more than a third of South Viet Nam's population lives there, and it grows 80% of the country's rice. As the conventional war to the north remained stalemated last week, attention shifted to the south, where Communist guerrillas are still waging what TIME Correspondent Rudolph Rauch calls "a Graham Greene kind of war, of weak outposts overrun at night, of ambushes and infiltration, of contested villages and safe roads suddenly cut." Rauch and TIME Pentagon Correspondent John Mulliken toured the Delta last week. Their report...