Word: magnusons
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...talk with black leaders and with Ray's past and present lawyers. With files from other correspondents who interviewed sources in Boston, Chicago, Washington and Atlanta, Associate Editor James Atwater on Saturday wrote our account of how America's No. 1 prisoner escaped, and Senior Writer Ed Magnuson described the conspiracy theory that surrounds the assassination of Ray's victim, Martin Luther King Jr. Our Nation staff pieced together the Ray saga, as our World and International staffs began work on another late-breaking story, the Dutch marine attack on the South Moluccan kidnapers; their story...
Writing the cover story was a return engagement for Senior Writer Ed Magnuson, our Watergate specialist. "Mag" wrote 21 cover stories on Watergate in 19 months, including the final ones on Nixon's resignation and the country's reaction to the pardon. Says he: "It would be nice if this were the last...
...first of our Nation stories is devoted to the President's three presentations and their impact on people as diverse as Senator Robert Byrd and Philadelphia Personnel Manager June Rosato. It is by Senior Writer Ed Magnuson, who has written 67 TIME covers. Said he after reading the extensive files from our correspondents: "All those off-the-cuff views that most people will not rise to a crisis unless they feel immediately threatened seem to be wrong. Despite arguments over his program, it is clear that Carter has a better feeling for the people than many reporters and politicians...
Hannifin continued to send his files throughout the week to New York, where Senior Writer Ed Magnuson and Associate Editor James Atwater wrote this week's cover stories. But he did manage to take time out at least one evening for a dinner engagement: the Goddard memorial banquet of the National Space Club, which was held in Washington and which presented its 1977 Press Award to Hannifin for "outstanding reporting in covering the U.S. aerospace program...
...concrete-of the legislators' concern for the folks back home. What is more, there is no sure way of measuring the true value of such projects, many of which have transformed the life-and the landscape-of America. "In the long run," says Washington's Senator Warren Magnuson, "we're going to win this fight." And history is on his side...