Word: doerner
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Files from Washington and the other bureaus came to Associate Editor William Doerner, who wrote the cover story, and Reporter-Researcher Kathleen Cooil, who assisted him. Kathleen has just completed seven years in our BUSINESS section, and had worked on the two economics cover articles published earlier this summer; she was anticipating a complete change of pace in her first week as a NATION staffer. "All I could think of when I got the Meany assignment," she says, "was whatever possessed me to major in economics...
These reports and others filed by our correspondents, along with those produced by a team of reporter-researchers, went to Writers William Doerner and James Grant. Says Business Editor Marshall Loeb, who saw the SST mock-up at Boeing's Seattle plant last year: "It's hard to look at it and think that it won't fly. You see skilled technicians, and you wonder what will happen to them. You begin to understand their side of the issue...
...their recollections of his life. The reporting was coordinated by Beirut Bureau Chief Gavin Scott. Also contributing: Marlin Levin and John Shaw in Jerusalem, Lansing Lament in London and Herman Nickel and William Mader in Washington. The finished story and accompanying boxes were written by Spencer Davidson and William Doerner, assisted by Researchers Ursula Nadasdy and Betty Suyker. The article was edited by Ronald Kriss...
Others with key roles in developing the finished product were Associate Editor David B. Tinnin, Contributing Editor William R. Doerner, Researchers Sara Medina and Genevieve Wilson...
...fanatics terrorized hundreds of people, blew up four planes and held the world at bay. ∙ For its cover story on the incredible week of piracy and peril, TIME mobilized dozens of staffers in the U.S. and abroad. In New York, the main story was written by William Doerner, researched by Sara Medina and edited by David Tinnin. They drew on reports from Washington, Bonn, Geneva, Jerusalem and other cities, where TIME correspondents detailed the incidents as well as the frustrating inability of modern power and diplomacy to cope with the hijackers...