Word: schecters
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Moscow, Bureau Chief Jerrold Schecter was one of four American newsmen who were allowed a look at the meeting hall. To help Schecter with the preparations, Rome Bureau Chief James Bell flew to Russia-on the same Aeroflot plane with members of the Italian delegation. Washington Correspondent Gregory Wierzynski talked with Government officials, foreign diplomats and academic experts. From Hong Kong...
...TIME Correspondent Jerrold Schecter filed on the eve of the conference: "The issue is no longer unity. It is finding the lowest common denominator on which there can be limited agreement in the world Communist movement. Observers in Moscow believe that the meeting, and how it is carried off, holds the key to the success or failure of the current Kremlin leadership. Faced with a border war with China, the Soviet Union today must defend its national interests at the same time that it tries to justify them under the banner of 'proletarian internationalism.' In Eastern Europe, the invasion...
...results are mixed at best, reports TIME'S Moscow Correspondent Jerrold Schecter. The extra day has piled 10 million extra people on top of the 18 million already using the council's facilities. The demand for sports goods has grown so great that hockey sticks disappeared from the shelves of Moscow's stores this winter. There is still a two-to three-year wait for new automobiles, and drivers who plan a long trip must load up with food and extra gas before setting out, since there are few service stations and no motels and restaurants outside...
...Moscow, TIME'S Bureau Chief Jerrold Schecter had an unexpected opportunity to test his new knowledge of Russian. Fresh from a four-year tour in Tokyo, Schecter was winding up a crash course in a language school in Monterey, Calif., when the news sent him hurrying to his latest assignment...
...bonds of society. If the motivation of the Western press is the right to know, the basis of the Japanese press is to know what's right. "The 1960 rioting was a great lesson," Asahi Managing Editor Kikuo Tashiro told TIME'S Tokyo Bureau Chief Jerrold L. Schecter last week. "At that time, most of the people were moved by emotion and sentiment rather than any basic understanding of the issues. Since then, they have become much more mature politically, and the press has reflected this...