Word: gart
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Election Day will end months of campaigning, not only by the candidates but also by a pursuing army of some 200 reporters (see THE PRESS). To represent TIME, Chief of Correspondents Murray Gart assigned two teams of Washington staffers: Dean Fischer, Strobe Talbott and Christopher Ogden to the Ford-Dole campaign; Stanley Cloud, Bonnie Angelo and John F. Stacks to Carter-Mondale-and sometimes the correspondents have switched from one campaign to the other to get a fresh perspective. For this week's issue, both candidates gave exclusive interviews to TIME (see THE NATION...
With that, Halevy quickly called Chief of Correspondents Murray Gart, 6,000 miles away in Connecticut, who relayed the message to other editors at their homes. Moments later, Washington Correspondent Bonnie Angelo, tipped off by a State Department source, sent confirming word from the capital. At that point (about 9 p.m. New York time), only a few thousand copies of the cover picture for the July 12 issue had been printed, and TIME's managing editor gave the order to stop the presses and reopen the magazine. Within minutes, the needed staff began assembling on the 25th floor...
...arena of world events. Like the six previous TIME news tours, it was designed to enable a group of influential and concerned citizens, traveling at their own expense, to seek information from the best sources available to TIME. Arrangements for the tour were made by Chief of Correspondents Murray Gart and Assistant Publisher Lane Fortinberry, with the help of TIME bureau chiefs in the Middle East. For the travelers, the tour provided a unique opportunity to learn firsthand about a geopolitically vital region, and to pose hard questions to heads of state on oil and investment policy, petrodollar recycling...
...week's issue contains an unusual assortment of such interviews. Two of them are with the President and the Vice President. Visiting Gerald Ford in the Oval Office for a question-and-answer session last week were TIME'S Managing Editor Henry Grunwald, Chief of Correspondents Murray Gart, Washington Bureau Chief Hugh Sidey and Correspondents Bonnie Angelo and Dean Fischer. Sidey and Angelo also caucused with Nelson Rockefeller to discuss his role in the Administration, while Fischer talked with White House Chief of Staff Donald Rumsfeld about the President's work style. When Judge John Sirica released...
...left hand, and answered questions on energy and economic policy, foreign affairs and the demands of presidential leadership. In several areas, he was clearly still in the process of formulating his State of the Union program. The questions were asked by Managing Editor Henry Grunwald, Chief of Correspondents Murray Gart, Washington Bureau Chief Hugh Sidey and White House Correspondents Bonnie Angela and Dean Fischer. Excerpts from the exchange...