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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
-
-
- Few stories strike such emotional resonance among their
- authors as this week's cover on adoption. The profound
- complexities of the subject were especially well understood by
- at least one correspondent, researcher and writer: all three
- have experienced adoption firsthand. Los Angeles correspondent
- James Willwerth, who suggested the project, is the adoptive
- father of Piya, 5, and Mike, 4. Already parents of a son, David,
- who arrived the conventional way, Willwerth and his wife Ardis
- chose a daughter and a second son from two different Bangkok
- orphanages during his assignment in Thailand. Giving a home to
- "waiting" children "longing for love and attention," says
- Willwerth, "is to witness an extraordinary miracle. They blossom
- before your eyes." As he talked with other parents, children and
- adoption professionals, he says, "I had credentials rare to most
- assignments -- Piya and Mike. When I mentioned them, interviews
- came alive."
-
- After his return to the U.S. in 1987, Willwerth talked
- frequently with reporter-researcher Lois Gilman, who is the
- author of The Adoption Resource Book, an information guide for
- those setting out to adopt a child. Gilman devoted weeks of work
- to the cover package, but in effect she began her personal
- research in 1979 when she and her husband Ernest adopted Seth,
- an infant from Chile, then Eve from South Korea in 1981. "We
- wanted this week's story to convey how much the dynamics of
- adoption are changing," Gilman says. "Our whole notion of who
- can be a parent and who can be adopted is dramatically
- different."
-
- The story also sounded a special chord for associate editor
- Richard Lacayo, who wrote the story on the children who wait,
- too often in vain, for adoption. His brother Joseph, now 21, was
- one who did not. He arrived on a day Lacayo remembers as the
- happiest in his family's life. "All the while that I worked on
- this piece," says Lacayo, "I had my brother in mind as the image
- of why adoption is worth whatever trouble people go through."
- Despite uncovering some painful sides of adoption, our staffers
- came away heartened by how many children and potential parents
- are finding happiness by finding one another.
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