Word: brews
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TIME correspondents accompanied each of the four major candidates as they gave their last speeches and shook their last few hundred hands. Two White House correspondents covered Ronald Reagan's final forays: Douglas Brew traveled with the President on a five-day, 16-city swing, and Laurence Barrett was there for the huge G.O.P. wrap-up rally in San Diego...
Time Inc. Editor in Chief Henry Grunwald, TIME Managing Editor Ray Cave and Barrett met with Reagan last week in the Oval Office for an exclusive interview, and Barrett and Brew interviewed the President again on Election Day, when he knew his victory was assured (see page 52). On the road with Mondale were Correspondents Sam Allis and Jack White. Said Allis of the frantic finish: "Mondale's pace since the debates has been brutal. We arrive and leave our hotels in the dark, stops are added to the schedule at the last minute. Sometimes I feel...
...Jacob V. Lamar Jr. Reported by Sam Allis with Mondale and Douglas Brew with the President...
...James Kelly. Reported by Douglas Brew and John E. Yang/Washington
Meanwhile, seven correspondents were dispatched to Kansas City. Laurence Barrett and John Yang from Washington, Jack White from New York and Christopher Ogden from Chicago reported and assessed the debate, question by question. Douglas Brew and Sam Allis, both from Washington, judged the individual performances of Reagan and Mondale. Washington Bureau Chief Robert Ajemian, in consultation with his TIME colleagues, contributed an overview of the event. In Washington, Diplomatic Correspondent Strobe Talbott reviewed how each candidate handled the details of foreign policy under the pressures of the face-to-face meeting. In addition, TIME had a panel of foreign policy...