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- LETTERS, Page 8Forgetting Foreigners
-
- Your article "Who Cares About Foreigners?" on how the U.S.
- media cover death and disaster refers to a journalistic
- concept, the "Racial Equivalence Scale," which shows the minimum
- number of people from different countries who must die in a
- plane crash before the press will report it (PRESS, Oct. 9). It
- seems to me that TIME has followed a similar scale in its
- handling of a recent accident. On Sept. 3 a Cuban air carrier
- crashed right after taking off from Havana airport, killing 150
- Italian tourists and Cubans. You made no mention of the tragedy.
-
- Patrick Paludan Copenhagen
-
- One reason that U.S. press coverage of foreign disasters is
- so uneven is that the media cater to the geographical illiteracy
- of many Americans, who don't know where most countries are
- located. Why should we care about events that happen in some
- unknown place? To help out its readers, TIME has to refer to
- "the African nation of Chad." Otherwise they might think Chad
- was just another movie star's first name.
-
- J. Casserly Haskell San Francisco
-
- Tens of thousands of East Germans immigrating to the West
- get heavy coverage in TIME. How about equal space for the more
- than 300,000 ethnic Turks who fled from Bulgaria to Turkey?
-
- Ibrahim Kavrakoglu Istanbul
-