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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 15
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- It was during a recent flight over Arkansas that Margaret
- Carlson realized one of the ironies of being deputy chief of our
- Washington bureau, a job she assumed in July. Margaret was
- aboard a small plane to interview Arkansas Governor Bill
- Clinton, now a Democratic presidential hopeful, when a
- thunderstorm hit. "Clinton loved it," she says. "But I'm a
- white-knuckle flyer even in clear skies." As the plane bucked
- and lurched, she recalled that it is one of her duties to assign
- stories to the bureau's correspondents -- but she had assigned
- this one to herself.
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- Then again, placing herself on demanding stories is also
- one of Margaret's pleasures. The job of deputy chief requires
- her to help keep watch over one of TIME's most crucial bureaus.
- But her feel for day-to-day journalism ensures that she spends
- much of her time reporting and writing as well. And what
- writing. Carlson's flavorful prose, lucid, tart and funny, is
- the hallmark of a journalist who sees even the biggest stories
- in distinctly human terms. "Being a reporter in Washington is
- like talking across one big backyard fence," she says.
- "Congress, the White House, the people at the agencies --
- they're always trading stories with each other and with the
- press."
-
- Carlson made a detour into journalism in 1980, after
- getting her law degree from George Washington University. By
- 1987 she was acting managing editor of the New Republic and
- joined TIME in 1988. As deputy bureau chief, she helps decide
- which events we should cover. This week's NATION story on the
- abuse of congressional privileges is one example. Some members
- of Congress have been grumbling that the episode is being
- overblown. Not so, insists Carlson. "It says something important
- about the cocoon of privilege that members of Congress live in."
-
- You can sample Carlson's interview technique in this
- week's issue by reading her Q. and A. with veteran Manhattan
- prosecutor Linda Fairstein. With her new duties, Carlson has to
- apportion her reporting time more carefully than ever -- even
- when keeping to her schedule means taking a bumpy flight. "I
- can't say, `I'll catch up with you later,' " she laughs. "I have
- to get on the plane and fly through thunder and lightning."
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-
- -- Elizabeth P. Valk
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