Word: stringer
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From his apartment overlooking the Valley of the Cross, Jerusalem Stringer Marlin Levin could watch a Jordan-Israeli artillery exchange, "left-right, left-right, almost like a tennis game." Levin's eight-year-old son Donnie whiled away the time by writing letters to relatives in the U.S.: "There is no school today. I am sitting in a shelter. I like school. It is more fun than...
...Israeli side, things also seemed fairly familiar to Marlin Levin, our Jerusalem stringer, who has been through every previous Arab-Jewish crisis. A U.S. newspaperman from Harrisburg, Pa., he went to the Holy Land on his honeymoon in 1947, stayed on to cover the war of independence, and has been there ever since. When the current clash developed, he was joined by Rome Bureau Chief Israel Shenker and Madrid Bureau Chief Peter Forbath...
...circulation in 1938 had reached 822,670?had its effects on both the magazine and the country. From more or less a pastepot operation in which its writers clipped from newspapers and magazines to sift and organize the news, TIME developed its own news service (its first Washington stringer: Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.), began to be served by the press associations, built up a morgue and reference library, and increasingly depended on its writers' own knowledge for special information and judgments. It also lost some of its early brashness?though not its freshness?as the times became more serious...
...other hand, there is Dan Orlovsky, who was All-Chicago and trailed only Beller with a 10.6 freshman average, even though he was a second and sometimes third-stringer. Orlovsky and fellow guard Mike Aron quit the team this year after wasting a season on Wilson's bench. Carl Kendrick, third high scorer, forsook basketball after freshman year, and Steve Handler transfered to Michigan, where he is on the squad...
...Berlin, has been covering Germany for four years. He was able to get a 45-minute interview with Kiesinger an hour after he took the oath of office-the first interview granted by the new Chancellor. On hand to help were Correspondent Gisela Bolte, our German economics specialist, and Stringer Burton Pines, who is working for a doctorate in modern German history. European Economic Correspondent Robert Ball, stationed in Zurich, came to Bonn for the story; Ball is an old German hand who had put in an eleven-year stint in Munich and Berlin...