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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 2
-
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- The momentous decisions in the Soviet Union last week were
- approved by the Communist Party's 249-member Central Committee.
- Or should that be 250-member? Our Moscow bureau chief, John
- Kohan, asked his secretary to check with the International
- Department of the Central Committee. The apparatchik there said
- he had "no idea." Kohan's secretary then called the Committee's
- General Department, which refused to supply any information.
- Next she tried a back channel, asking a Soviet magazine editor
- for the number to call. Kohan then got the answer he needed
- (249 members) from the Central Committee's Department for Party
- Building and Cadre Work. Reflecting on that experience, says
- Kohan, "I have enormous sympathy for Mikhail Gorbachev and the
- struggles he faces every day with the party bureaucracy."
-
- Kohan, who became bureau chief in 1988, started preparing
- for the assignment when he began studying Russian at the
- University of Virginia 20 years ago. He spent four months in
- 1974 polishing his language skills at the University of
- Leningrad. Joining TIME in New York City the following year,
- he helped shape the magazine's coverage of Soviet affairs.
- Staffers in the World section still vividly remember John's
- farewell party, held at a Russian restaurant; to this day, at
- least one of John's colleagues cannot look at a bottle of vodka
- without wincing.
-
- Just since January, John has reported on the secessionist
- movement in Lithuania, civil war in the Caucasus, thousands of
- Soviets marching on the Kremlin, and the abdication of the
- Communist Party. Sipping tea one evening last week, he and some
- Russian friends agreed that the history unfolding around them
- matched that of the revolutions of 1917.
-
- Selecting a spot to pose for the picture you see here, John
- decided on the entrance to the liberal Moscow News. On the
- sidewalk he encountered a huckster selling an unofficial
- broadsheet printed in Minsk. The lead article was titled "Raisa
- Gorbachev: Who Is She? Translation from TIME Magazine." Says
- Kohan: "He was doing a brisk business at one ruble per copy."
- Now that's glasnost.
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- -- Louis A. Weil III
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