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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 6
-
-
- As Washington heralded a changing of the guard at the White
- House last week, so did TIME. Our inauguration, however, was a
- far more modest affair: we installed Michael Duffy and Dan
- Goodgame as our new White House correspondents, then sent them
- across town to front-row seats at the swearing-in of the
- country's 41st President. The White House beat is not always so
- glamorous. Or so easy. It requires unusual quantities of
- persistence, curiosity and humor, qualities that both
- correspondents demonstrated before they reached the Oval Office
- watch.
-
- A native of Columbus, Duffy, 30, graduated from Oberlin
- College in 1980, then went to work as a military-affairs
- reporter in Washington. Five years later, he signed on with
- TIME, reporting first on the Pentagon, then moving to Capitol
- Hill before joining the campaign trail last year to cover
- George Bush, Michael Dukakis and Jesse Jackson. His time in
- Washington has given Duffy an appreciation for one of the first
- principles of reporting governmental affairs: hurry up and wait.
- Duffy has spent entire days -- followed by long nights --
- waiting outside closed doors to learn the latest twist about
- tax-reform negotiations or the Iran-contra investigations.
-
- "Since a big part of covering the White House involves
- waiting -- waiting in outer offices to talk with officials,
- waiting on runways for motorcades, waiting for Bush to catch a
- fish -- I'm well trained for this position," says Duffy.
-
- Goodgame, 34, confesses to being not so patient a waiter as
- Duffy, but he's learning. A native of Pascagoula, Miss.,
- Goodgame studied at the University of Mississippi and at
- Oxford. After stints at the Tampa Tribune and Miami Herald, he
- joined TIME's Los Angeles bureau in 1984, where he covered
- everything from immigration to movie stars. "My editors, in
- their wisdom, saw some natural progression from profiling Bill
- Cosby to covering the President," he says.
-
- Goodgame is too modest: he, like Duffy, spent the past year
- on the campaign trail. While Goodgame misses California, he
- relishes his new assignment. "Michael and I agree that the only
- thing worse than covering the White House would be not ever
- getting to cover it," he says. So far, the wait seems worth it.
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