Word: mcmanus
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...CURSED spite, that I was born this wrong to write." Paraphrasing Hamlet with bitter humor. TIME'S Common Market correspondent Jason McManus cabled that message to New York last week in the heat of reporting his part of the cover story on Charles de Gaulle's veto of Great Britain's application to the Common Market. For Correspondent McManus, 28. the week's events had a special impact...
...native of Kansas City, Kans.. McManus trained to write of politico-economics at Davidson College in Davidson, N.C.. where he graduated cum laude and as a Phi Beta Kappa in 1956, at Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, where he took his master's degree in 1958, and during a year as a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford. He joined TIME'S staff in 1959 and wrote the first story of Britain's desire to join the Common Market in 1961 (Aug. 11). From then on, as the Common Market began...
...most significant moral to be drawn from 1962's business year was the impact of overseas business upon the U.S., and the increasing U.S. involvement abroad. To round out this part of the story, our Common Market Correspondent Jason McManus interviewed several dozen bankers, industrialists and economists in Europe, as well as that new breed of technician, the Eurocrats. For the past 6 months we have been presenting two business sections each week-U.S. and World Business. Since the theme of this story is how the two areas became interwoven in 1962, it is appropriate that...
...Prendergast and Correspondent Judson Gooding concentrated on French politics and De Gaulle the man. Israel Shenker dealt with the French economic picture, Godfrey Blunden with the feeling and spirit of France, Jeremy Main with French foreign policy and the country's place in NATO. Common Market Correspondent Jason McManus reported on France's stake in the Market. In New York, their reports provided the basic material for the cover story written by Michael Demarest and edited by Edward Hughes, taking studied measure of Charles de Gaulle's triumph...
...Will Rogers and Darryl Zanuck played polo nearby, stopped so often at the hotel bar that it was and is still called the Polo Lounge. There were off-screen sporting events: Tom Mix once was sent to the carpet in a flying tackle by an autograph hound; Cartoonist George McManus unscrewed a button marked "Press" from a men's room urinal, affixed it to his lapel and crashed a swank party as a newspaperman. But of more lasting interest was the hotel's impeccable service, a concept originally executed by, and credited to. the Beverly Hills...