Word: schecters
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...complete support.* Nonetheless, the significance of the meeting may very well lie in the fact that leaders of the industrial world are likely to listen more attentively than ever before to reasonable Third World demands. As Secretary of State Henry Kissinger told TIME'S diplomatic editor Jerrold Schecter in the Middle East: "At the least we must have a dialogue. We cannot be in isolation from nine-tenths of humanity." Last week Kissinger had gone through at least eight drafts of a speech that will underscore the problems of the developing world and, in an aide's words...
Both before and after his Saturday meeting in Bonn with Henry Kissinger, Israeli Premier Yitzhak Rabin discussed the current state of Middle East negotiations with TIME Diplomatic Editor Jerrold L. Schecter and Reporter David Halevy. Excerpts from the interviews...
...their relations with one another and with Washington. Last week Thailand-a member of the Association of South East Asian Nations, once regarded as a barrier to Chinese Communist expansion-followed the Philippines and Malaysia in establishing formal diplomatic relations with Peking. TIME'S diplomatic editor Jerrold L. Schecter completed a tour of Asia that included many of the affected capitals. His report...
...Blue House, official residence of South Korean President Park Chung Hee, sits amidst manicured gardens in the hills overlooking Seoul. There last week TIME Diplomatic Editor Jerrold Schecter, Tokyo Bureau Chief William Stewart and Correspondent S. Chang met with Park for 1½ hours. Relaxed and self-assured, Park alternately smoked a pipe and cigarettes as he propounded his views. Excerpts...
Diplomatic Editor Jerrold Schecter, who reported from Saigon for TIME in the mid-60s, noted the emotional wrenching that the events in Indochina worked on Americans with long involvement in South Viet Nam's fortunes. Many of Schecter's sources spent years "in country" as soldiers, diplomats or intelligence officers, and they feel a deep sense of loss. "The war is personalized for the Americans who served in Viet Nam," Schecter wired last week. "Somehow everybody feels that they did not do enough. None of the experts I talked to is blaming the Vietnamese in his heart...