Word: rauch
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...Popular Force irregulars in the area, who were little better than gun-happy mobs. South of Quang Tri city, one such mob fired away with giddy abandon for two hours at Communists holding a bridge on Highway 1. When the Communists finally broke and ran, reported TIME Correspondent Rudolph Rauch, "the South Vietnamese ran off after them, hooting in jubilation-until the Communists turned to fire a few sobering rounds at their pursuers. The troops stopped, then fled back to the bridge, where they all crowded together and indulged in a flurry of mutual self-congratulations. There was a wounded...
...will be the 7,000-man 3rd Brigade of the First Cavalry Division (Airmobile), which is responsible for the security of a vast area of Vietnamese countryside surrounding the huge American installations at Bien Hoa, Long Binh and the Tan Son Nhut airbase outside Saigon. Recently, TIME Correspondent Rudolph Rauch joined one 3rd Brigade company as it pushed off from a fire base 35 miles east of Saigon to begin a patrol in search of North Vietnamese infiltrators. His report...
What did it all prove? Primarily that South Viet Nam's ruling politicians have imbibed only sparingly of the spirit of democracy, while adopting every trick in the freewheeling history of American ward politics and adding some new wrinkles of their own. On election day, TIME Correspondent Rudolph Rauch made a tour of the Mekong Delta province of Vinh Binh, where the government seemed particularly intent on making certain that popular Opposition Deputy Ngo Cong Duc lost (TIME, Sept. 6). Rauch's report...
...Cavanagh-Fish doubles team was given a rest. Jim Esserman and Howie Conant teamed up for a 6-3, 6-2 victory, and Barnett and Bill Rauch triumphed four...
...attempts to stabilize the badly unsettled U.S. economy. The cover story was written by George Church, researched by Kathleen Cooil and Eileen Shields and edited by Marshall Loeb. The view from Washington was provided by Correspondent Lawrence Malkin, while the assessment from Wall Street came from Correspondents Rudolph Rauch and Roger Beard-wood. For Rauch, at least, the belt-tightening was only too graphic: lunch in the private dining room of a Manhattan brokerage house consisted of franks and beans...