Word: bureaus
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...bureaus throughout the world contributed to this week's cover story, written by Associate Editor Richard Ostling, and the box on Communism and the church, written by Associate Editor Mayo Mohs. With this cover package, TIME begins its task of recording and interpreting the reign of Pope John Paul II. Wierzynski, however, already feels strongly about his fellow Pole. "He's a tough, compassionate, realistic and warm man," judges our man in Cracow. "He'll make a great Pope...
...letters are immediately pored over by Letters Chief Maria Luisa Cisneros and her staff. The most newsworthy are sent to Reporter-Researcher Nancy Chase, who picks those that will be published. A digest of the week's letters is also distributed to TIME'S editors and news bureaus. All letters are acknowledged, and those that question the tone, emphasis or factual content of a story are answered by Cisneros, her deputy, Isabel Kouri, or one of six letters correspondents. More and more, Cisneros and her co-workers are finding that the letters are thoughtful, and require thoughtful replies...
This week TIME welcomes its newest staff member: PDP-11/34. Programmed according to TIME'S design, PDP-11/34 will speed the handling of the hundreds of queries and reports that flow between the home office in New York City and our 28 bureaus, scattered around the world...
...race to bring Sadat and Begin together began as a three-way scramble among the U.S. commercial networks on Nov. 12, when Begin was quoted in U.S. newspapers as welcoming a visit from Sadat. CBS then asked its bureaus in Cairo, Tunis and Washington to approach Egyptian officials about arranging a satellite interview between Sadat and Cronkite, who had met each other on several previous occasions. The pair taped an exchange the following Monday, Nov. 14. "Under my suggestive questioning," Cronkite recalled, "Sadat said he could go [to Israel] within a week, as soon as he had an official invitation...
...dear friend.' It was an invitation to the extraordinary warmth that pours from Rostropovich like lava from some Slavic Vesuvius." Interviewing Rostropovich's many friends and associates for our story on the new musical director of Washington's National Symphony Orchestra, eleven TIME correspondents in bureaus around the world found similar signs of lava, smoke and fire wherever Rostropovich has wandered. In Jerusalem, Isaac Stern talked to TIME'S Robert Slater about "the intensity, the sheer eruptive force behind Rostropovich's enthusiasm." In New York City, Reporter-Researcher Rosemarie Tauris Zadikov interviewed Leonard Bernstein...