Word: wilton
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Rome Bureau Chief Wilton Wynn has accompanied the Pope on 16 of his voyages abroad and found the current one the hardest to cover, because of the very tight security surrounding the Pope in Central America. But Wynn thinks that because of the strains in Central American church-state relations, this papal trip may ultimately rank among John Paul's most important. "At one time," he says, "I assumed that if the Pope traveled too often, his trips would lose their news impact. Somehow, the trips are never routine." This is why John Paul makes his sixth appearance...
...assassination attempt on Pope John Paul II. Rome Correspondent Barry Kalb has followed the scenarios that have speculated on various countries' possible roles in the affair. In Washington, Correspondent Ross H. Munro canvassed the intelligence community and pored over the Soviet press. Rome Bureau Chief Wilton Wynn went to Turkey to assess "the amazing Bulgarian involvement in arms and drugs, and Bulgarian activities aimed at destabilizing Turkey." Eastern Europe Bureau Chief Richard Hornik traveled to Sofia, Bulgaria's capital, and gained a different perspective. "The country has been in the news because of an assassination plot," Hornik says...
...expectations were dashed of at least postponed by the injury Dixon suffered in a dual meet against Army at the end of 1981. The Wilton, Conn. native went home and didn't run on an indoor track for more than a year...
...master and slave." True as that may be, it does not constitute any proof of Soviet involvement in the Pope's shooting. Indeed, Bulgarian involvement has not been proved, but Italian authorities plainly feel their case is strong. -By Kenneth W. Banta. Reported by Gregory H. Wierzynski/Washington and Wilton Wynn/Rome, with other bureaus
...deterrence "marginally justifiable." Instead, they declared that deterrence must only be "a step on the way toward progressive disarmament," and could not be used to justify the continued arms race. "We have pretty well accepted the Holy Father's view of the deterrent role," Bernardin told TIME Correspondent Wilton Wynn in Rome last week. "But we are going forward in applying these principles to very concrete situations...