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- FROM THE MANAGING EDITOR, Page 4
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- There was a time when every hiccup from Moscow made headlines
- around the world. With the end of the cold war, newspapers and
- television have shifted their attention to other areas -- from a
- riveting U.S. election to the tragedies in Yugoslavia and
- Somalia. Yet the tumultuous transformation of the former Soviet
- Union remains one of the biggest stories of the decade, and
- that's why we've devoted the entire main section of this week's
- issue to a special report on the New Russia. "The former Soviet
- Union's fate is still critically important to America and the
- rest of the world," says senior editor Johanna McGeary, who
- oversaw the project. "The threat this time comes from
- instability rather than communism."
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- In preparing the special report, McGeary called on a
- variety of talents at the magazine, including those of our
- nine-person Moscow staff. Correspondent James Carney, a native
- Virginian and Russian studies major at Yale, focused on two of
- his specialties: the nascent Baltic nations and Russia's
- hard-line conservatives. Reporter Ann Simmons, a British subject
- with a master's degree in journalism from Columbia University,
- spent time with a working-class family to profile its desperate
- struggle to afford life's necessities.
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- Bringing special insight to TIME's coverage was
- correspondent Yuri Zarakhovich, a native Muscovite and
- translator of more than 20 books. "The best way to satisfy your
- curiosity about your own country is to cover it for a foreign
- magazine," says Zarakhovich. "When you just live among things,
- you often take them for granted; but when you have to spell them
- out for outsiders, you've got to stop and think hard to make
- them clear to yourself first."
-
- Pictures also help tell the story, thanks to Moscow photo
- editor Glenn Mack, an Arkansas native and expert on Russian
- language, literature and telephone etiquette. "You are fortunate
- if you have a clear line long enough to have an actual
- conversation," he says. Bureau chief John Kohan, who returned
- to New York City last week to help editors close the issue,
- probed the Russian mind in an essay reflecting his four years
- in Moscow. "Just because they have McDonald's and Barbie dolls,
- we shouldn't expect they'll think and act like Americans," he
- says. That is precisely why we hope you'll find our report a
- fascinating window into a complex, evolving society.
-
- Henry Muller
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