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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
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- Mikhail Gorbachev makes so much news that for the past five
- years he has been almost a daily staple of the front pages and
- nightly broadcasts. Exclusive access is another matter: since
- taking office, he has given only a handful of interviews to
- American journalists. The first was to TIME in August 1985. "Do
- you think we're never going to meet again, so you are going to
- pile everything into one interview?" he joked after more than
- an hour of conversation. We did meet again. Last week, on the
- eve of his summit meeting with George Bush, Gorbachev invited
- Time Warner editor-in-chief Jason McManus and five TIME staff
- members to his Kremlin office for a tour d'horizon that lasted
- an hour.
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- The Soviet President engaged his visitors with that
- combination of energy and self-confidence for which he has
- become legendary. As his remarks were being translated, he made
- occasional asides to editor at large Strobe Talbott and Moscow
- bureau chief John Kohan, both fluent Russian speakers. "He is
- talking a long time," Gorbachev said of translator Pavel
- Palashenko at one point. "Did I really say that much?" When
- managing editor Henry Muller tried to slip in one last
- question, Gorbachev addressed him sternly as "Comrade Editor,"
- then, with a laugh, changed it to "Mr. Editor." Says chief of
- correspondents John Stacks, who covered Washington for 20
- years: "He was more in command of the situation than any
- American politician I have ever seen."
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- The only TIME representative who was present for both
- interviews -- and also for a session with Leonid Brezhnev in
- 1979 -- is the Moscow bureau's Felix Rosenthal. "Although
- Gorbachev in 1985 was a vivid contrast to Brezhnev -- young,
- smiling, talkative -- you could still sense a successful
- provincial party boss," he says. "Gorbachev in 1990 is
- polished, quite at home in his Kremlin office with the modern
- furniture that fits his image."
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- At the end of the interview, photographer David Burnett got
- Gorbachev, on the spur of the moment, to pose by the window.
- Late for his next meeting, the Soviet leader would not keep
- still. "He began to walk away after I had taken only four
- shots," Burnett says. But he was able to take several dozen
- pictures, including the one on the opening pages of our special
- section.
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- -- Louis A. Weil III
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