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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 18
-
-
- The only part of TIME operations that can lay claim to
- omniscience is the news desk. Sitting by banks of computer
- terminals, telephones and clocks adjusted to a spectrum of time
- zones, nine news-desk editors, managers and assistants keep track
- of our worldwide corps of 88 correspondents, ensuring that editors'
- questions to them, and their reports from the field, reach the
- right destinations.
-
- "News-desk staffers sometimes have to call us at 2 or 3 a.m.,"
- says Eastern Europe bureau chief John Borrell, who over the past
- few months has come to view sleep as a hobby that he once had time
- for. "In soft, soothing tones that the Metternich school of
- diplomacy would doubtless endorse, they first apologize profusely
- for waking you and then tell you that the editors need to know,
- generally instantly, something like the GNP of each Warsaw Pact
- country. The secret, which they have mastered, is to be smooth and
- nonchalant."
-
- If those on the news desk are not actually on the firing line,
- they sometimes find themselves at least within earshot. "When a
- deadline looms," says Jean White, a veteran of the desk since 1975,
- "there is a lot of testiness both in New York and in the bureaus."
- During a violent night in Beirut in 1984, a correspondent called
- White, asking that he be allowed to dictate over the telephone his
- answers to questions posed by a senior editor, rather than send
- them by telex. Consumed by the deadline rush, White snapped, "Can't
- you get to a machine? It really would make things easier for us."
- Suddenly, a loud explosion echoed across Beirut -- and over the
- telephone line. Said White: "I take that back. I'll write it down."
-
- When correspondent Ann Blackman complained last year that she
- did not know what to do about Thanksgiving fixings in Moscow,
- news-desk editor Waits May telexed her a recipe for cabbage
- dressing. And sometimes the news desk reaches out and nobody's
- there. May recalls reading an edited story to an exhausted
- correspondent in Algiers late one night to check its accuracy.
- After a while he heard only a faint thump-thump on the line. He
- realized that the correspondent had fallen asleep, and the receiver
- was resting on her chest.