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This issue's Men of the Year stories were supervised by Assistant Managing Editor John Elson and Senior Editor Henry Muller. The main narrative was the work of Senior Writer George Church, who drew extensively on the reporting of Diplomatic Correspondent Strobe Talbott, Moscow Bureau Chief Erik Amfitheatrof, Eastern Europe Bureau Chief John Moody and White House Correspondent Laurence Barrett. Their efforts bring into distinctive focus for TIME'S readers the most compelling story of 1983: the superpowers' confrontation, and the actions of the leaders who must cope with...
...lived in both countries, and both remind me of people looking at the undersides of cars-seeing only the bad side," says Dr. James Muller, who was one of the first Americans to study medicine at a Soviet university, and who is now trying to arrange for at least 30 doctors from each nation to visit the other side's hospitals next June. "That is not to say that the Soviet Union is all good. It isn't. No one is. But there is some good, and our objectives, to some degree, are the same. We should concentrate...
Just before 3 a.m., both outlets sounded the first ugly bulletin about the attack on the Marines in Beirut. Such late-breaking major news is the raison d'être of McConnell's job: she immediately telephoned World Senior Editor Henry Muller and Deputy Chief of Correspondents B. William Mader. Muller, in turn, called Managing Editor Ray Cave. Clearly, the Beirut bombing had to be in the magazine this week...
...correspondents around the world were up and as officials and experts for their reactions and assessments. Manhattan was still dark as Senior Writer William E. Smith, who wrote the main story, and Associate Editor Kurt Andersen, who wrote the accompanying piece on Marine life, got down to work with Muller; indeed, all three had left the office well after dark the night before. By dawn more than two score other staff members, including Reporter-Researchers Betty Satterwhite Sutler and Nelida Gonzalez-Alfonso, had been called in to help...
...dead fliers were identified as Agustín Roman, a Nicaraguan who once worked for Aeronica, and Sebastián Muller, an air force deserter. Nicaraguan authorities said that flight plans and other documents found in the wreckage showed that the two aircraft had taken off from a small airport near San José, the capital of Costa Rica. Spokesmen for both the Costa Rican government and Pastora's rebels denied that the planes had come from Costa Rica. A.R.D.E. sources claimed that the flights had originated at a dirt airstrip that the rebels had recently captured in southeastern...