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- <text id=94TT1007>
- <title>
- Aug. 01, 1994: To Our Readers
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Aug. 01, 1994 This is the beginning...:Rwanda/Zaire
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- To Oor Readers, Page 2
- Elizabeth Valk Long
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> White House correspondent James Carney likes to say his current
- beat couldn't be more different from his previous assignment,
- which was chronicling the fall of the Soviet Union and the rise
- of Russia and the other independent states. "There the story
- was as vast as the land mass," Carney notes. "Here the setting
- is much more intimate, with the focus on the small and overcrowded
- West Wing of the White House." Washington bureau chief Dan Goodgame
- sees it another way. "Covering coup attempts in Moscow and fistfights
- in the Russian parliament," Goodgame argues, "has prepared Jay
- wonderfully well to cover the Clinton White House."
- </p>
- <p> Goodgame has a point. Tensions and struggles abound in the West
- Wing power suites, and never more so than on the agonizing issue
- of health care. For journalists too, the Administration's effort
- to revamp the health-care system is a complex story, tangling
- science, economics, business and politics. The topic has absorbed
- the efforts of the Washington staff, from science specialist
- Dick Thompson to Capitol Hill correspondents Julie Johnson and
- Laurence I. Barrett. But it all has a way of coming back to
- the White House, which is why Carney has written this week's
- story.
- </p>
- <p> "The White House right now is consumed with the health-care
- issue," he says. "At this point, no issue matters so much to
- Bill Clinton, not even Haiti. Certainly no issue will have so
- large an effect on determining the success or failure of his
- presidency. Health care so dominates the White House agenda
- that one official told me, `If it's not your issue, you're off
- in space somewhere between Jupiter and Uranus.'"
- </p>
- <p> Carney's White House posting has brought him back to his roots:
- he was born in Washington and raised in suburban Virginia. When
- he joined TIME in 1988 as Miami bureau chief, after a stint
- with the Miami Herald, it was another homecoming: in 1986, between
- his junior and senior years at Yale, he was one of the magazine's
- summer interns. Along with curiosity and agility, Carney brings
- a dogged will to his pursuits that is cloaked by a disarmingly
- easygoing manner. "I once thought Jay might be `too nice' to
- cover the White House," admits Goodgame. "But that concern was
- dispelled for good when I listened to the tape of one of his
- interviews for a story on Whitewater. I heard a top Clinton
- aide trying to intimidate Jay by yelling at him, and I heard
- Jay, without losing his cool, raising his voice right back and
- demanding that his questions get answered--which they were."
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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