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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 1
-
-
- Whenever the staffers of the World section are stumped by
- questions like "Whatever happened to Albania's would-be King
- Leka?" or "What do you call those high-collared dresses that
- Chinese women wear?" someone is eventually bound to say, "Well,
- Bruce would know."
-
- Bruce Nelan, that is. In his 25 years of reporting around
- the globe for TIME, Nelan has amassed an encyclopedic store of
- lore, which makes him not only a writer of remarkable depth but
- also a thoroughly engaging lunch date. "You also should see him
- when Jeopardy! comes on," says reporter-researcher Sinting Lai.
- (King Leka, as Nelan can tell you, is in exile in South Africa,
- while the traditional Chinese dress is called a cheongsam.)
-
- Nelan's postings in Washington, Hong Kong, Bonn, Moscow and
- Johannesburg prepared him well for his current position as a
- senior writer. In crafting the main story in this week's special
- section on the Soviet Empire, Nelan drew from his experiences
- in Moscow from 1978 to 1981. Leonid Brezhnev was in charge, and
- the reforms that Mikhail Gorbachev later wrought were
- unimaginable then. "I understand the stage on which the recent
- changes are occurring," says Nelan, "but often I am completely
- amazed by the script."
-
- Brought up in Chicago, Nelan studied journalism at the
- University of Illinois, then received a Master of International
- Affairs from Columbia University. After three years as a TIME
- diplomatic correspondent in Washington, Nelan and his wife Rose,
- also a journalist, headed abroad. They have spent most of the
- years since overseas, along the way rearing two sons, Terence,
- 19, and Tony, 14.
-
- Nelan was assigned last year to New York City, where he can
- now savor firsthand the astonished looks of his colleagues as
- he dispenses another bit of knowledge in the hallways. "We were
- talking the other day about etiquette," says World editor Jim
- Kelly, "when Bruce remarked that there is only one thing that
- you can remove from your mouth and set on your plate while
- dining with the Queen of England. Bird shot." That ought to
- merit at least a $500 question on Jeopardy!
-
-
- -- Louis A. Weil III
-
-
-