Word: stringer
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Many of the stringers are editors of student newspapers or are in other ways deeply involved in campus activities. Nearly all of them find that reporting for TIME makes them give more thorough consideration to what is going on, not only on their campuses but also far beyond, bringing local insights into broad perspective. Their TIME credentials usually will help get them in to see the president of the university or into a student protest conference, but the job often does call for some special approaches-particularly with people who happen to disagree with us. Says Gloria Anderson, our girl...
...James Willwerth, 24, first worked for TIME when he was a stringer at the Berkeley campus of the University of California, from which he holds a master's degree in journalism-political science. He was attached to our San Francisco bureau before he moved to New York as a reporter for The Nation...
...Oliver S. Moore III, 25, concentrated on economics in his study of foreign affairs at the University of Virginia, where he graduated in 1964, and then worked for the Richmond Times-Dispatch. He was our stringer (part-time correspondent) in Charlottesville, Va., before he moved to New York, where he now is reporting for Business...
...George M. Taber, 25, is a 1964 graduate of Georgetown University, later studied at the College of Europe in Bruges, where he started to work for us as a stringer. His area of reporting is especially wide-ranging since he is assigned to Essay...
...hasn't chortled once. The grand old actress fractured a thigh when she tripped on a rug in her hotel room in Rome, and had to be flown to London for an emergency operation. Dame Margaret is mad as a wasp about the whole thing, said Husband Stringer Davis. "She had been swimming every day near Rome, and is furious that the fall has put an end to that for the time being...