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- <text id=93TT2014>
- <title>
- July 19, 1993: From The Publisher
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 19, 1993 Whose Little Girl Is This?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Covering the G-7 summit last week in Tokyo was a tricky reporting
- job. The national leaders, many of them faltering in the polls
- at home, badly needed to portray the meeting as a success. All
- the hype made it harder than usual to get an accurate assessment
- of the week's achievements. Our correspondents spent all day
- gathering opinions and information from seven different sides,
- then devoted their evenings to figuring out how much of it was
- substance and how much smoke and mirrors. Was the "breakthrough"
- on the GATT talks a promise to create millions of jobs, or just
- a first step forward in a still perilous process? Did President
- Bill Clinton put U.S.-Japan relations back on a friendly footing
- by his campaign-style charm with the Japanese people? Tough
- questions call for tougher questioners. Luckily for us, we had
- Tokyo bureau chief Ned Desmond organizing the effort. "Covering
- a G-7 demands a lot of discipline and attention," he says. "The
- most difficult thing is to see behind the expressions of self-congratulation
- and determine what, if any, progress has really been made."
- </p>
- <p> Ned was part of a force that included Washington colleagues
- Dan Goodgame and Michael Duffy, who reported on Clinton, correspondent
- Kumiko Makihara and researcher Satsuki Oba. They spent the week
- conducting man-in-the-street interviews, reviewing the Japanese
- press and calling officials, diplomats and trade experts. The
- Japanese foreign ministry made their job, as well as that of
- every journalist there, a little easier by arranging efficient
- daily briefings in the Hotel New Otani and the Hotel Okura,
- where the Clinton team was based. "The only thing they can't
- do is add hours to the day," says Desmond. "Reporting a summit
- is a marathon because there are so many points of view to capture."
- </p>
- <p> Ned joined TIME in 1984 as a researcher, leaving New York to
- become our New Delhi bureau chief in late 1988. After that stint
- he boned up for the Tokyo job by taking a six-month leave of
- absence during which he studied the Japanese language and politics
- on a fellowship at Oxford. He took over the Tokyo bureau a year
- ago and was immediately struck by how much his new post was
- the antithesis of his last. "I rarely wore a tie or saw an office
- tower on the off-road beats of South Asia," he says, "but now
- I am in the buttoned-down world of Big Business and G-7 summits.
- The challenges could not be more different." That may be so,
- but the appropriate responses--hard digging and cool analysis--are the same, and Ned is a seasoned practitioner.
- </p>
- <p> Elizabeth Valk Long
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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