home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT0765>
- <title>
- Jun. 13, 1994: To Our Readers
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jun. 13, 1994 Korean Conflict
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TO OUR READERS, Page 4
- Elizabeth Valk Long, President
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> It would be easy to be overwhelmed by the world's biggest government
- building, housing the country's largest bureaucracy. But TIME's
- new defense correspondent, Mark Thompson, has found a way to
- tame the beast. "I don't view the Pentagon as some monolithic
- hulk," he says. "Once you add in family members and defense-industry
- workers, it is more like a city the size of New York. It has
- nice and not-so-nice neighborhoods, cozy bars, gangs and fiefdoms.
- Thinking of it in that way makes it less intimidating and almost
- friendly."
- </p>
- <p> Thompson's stories, on the other hand, have not always been
- so friendly. In 1985, while covering defense for the Fort Worth,
- Texas, Star-Telegram, he won a Pulitzer Prize for uncovering
- helicopter design flaws that had been ignored for more than
- a decade, resulting in the death of some 250 soldiers. His picture
- ran in TIME: "It was a high point for my parents."
- </p>
- <p> Thompson, 41, showed a penchant for investigative reporting
- from the start of his journalistic career. At the Pendulum,
- his hometown paper in East Greenwich, Rhode Island, he alternated
- coverage of bake sales with exposes of the local police department
- that led to an FBI probe and the firing of the town's police
- chief. After more local reporting, in Pontiac, Michigan, he
- shifted to the nation's capital 15 years ago, and quickly mastered
- the balancing act required of any Washington correspondent.
- As TIME's Washington bureau chief Dan Goodgame puts it, "He
- manages to ask tough questions and write critical stories while
- maintaining the respect of the top sources on his beat."
- </p>
- <p> Since joining TIME four months ago, Thompson has interviewed
- cadets at West Point, traveled with Defense Secretary William
- Perry on a weeklong tour through four of the republics of the
- former Soviet Union and interviewed dozens of military families
- for an investigative report on the epidemic of domestic violence
- in the services. The story, which ran three weeks ago, prompted
- Maine Senator William Cohen to request that the Pentagon report
- back to the Senate on its efforts to combat such abuse.
- </p>
- <p> Thompson has spent the past several weeks grilling Pentagon
- officials and outside experts about the chances of war on the
- Korean peninsula. "The major and sobering consensus on that
- score," Thompson says, "is that any conflict there would be
- fierce and bloody and would leave Seoul in ruins." That frightening
- scenario is the subject of this week's cover package, and could
- keep Thompson busy for months to come.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-