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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 6
-
-
- Nation editor Robert T. Zintl never forgot how LIFE magazine
- in 1969 drove home the human cost of the Viet Nam War by publishing
- photographs of 217 of the 242 American servicemen killed in a
- single week. Today far more Americans die each week from gunfire.
- Zintl proposed that TIME undertake a project to find out who the
- victims are and how they die.
-
- The task of getting the information -- by canvassing thousands
- of coroners, police desks and sheriffs' offices from coast to coast
- -- was logistically awesome. It would have been impossible without
- TIME's national reporting network, which includes 62 correspondents
- in ten bureaus plus more than 200 stringers, or part-time
- reporters.
-
- The most painful job was approaching grieving relatives for
- missing information, as well as for photographs of the victims. In
- many cases, the relatives wanted to keep their sorrow private. In
- others, paradoxically, they did not want to cooperate with a
- project that might promote tighter gun laws.
-
- Still, many families and friends supported the broader purpose.
- St. Louis stringer Staci Kramer obtained photographs from the
- mothers of two gun victims. "They want the world to know their
- children are more than statistics," Kramer explained. The sister
- of one victim told Chicago's Beth Austin that although her husband
- was a member of the National Rifle Association, she thought TIME's
- project "could save some lives." Atlanta stringer Joyce Leviton
- found that some relatives "wanted to talk for long periods, as if
- explaining to a stranger would help whatever had gone wrong."
- Pursuing a picture of a gang victim in Harlem, stringer John
- McDonald was "repeatedly warned that I was within earshot of the
- perpetrators of the shooting."
-
- The photographs of the victims were assembled and logged by
- assistant picture editor Richard Boeth. Nation head researcher
- Ursula Nadasdy de Gallo spent most of nine weeks tracking the
- information on her computer. "I felt sadness for the wasted lives,"
- she says, "and eventually an outrage that we allow so much
- unnecessary carnage by guns to occur."