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His son, Caleb, was in school together with my daughters at the Anglo-American school in Moscow. The Daniloffs and Hursts often found themselves seated together around diplomatic dinner-party tables. It had quickly became obvious that Daniloff was a hostage to be traded for Zakharov; the question was when. As I made a screeching, illegal U-turn across four lanes of traffic in front of the U.S. Embassy on Moscow's inner ring road, Daniloff emerged from the embassy vehicle, said little but how happy he was to have been freed. He was not yet allowed, however, to leave the country. The deal was not quite done for Zakharov. It would be by Sept. 23. Leaves on the poplar trees Stalin had ordered planted along Moscow streets were turning to brown. The first flakes of snow could be expected in just a couple of weeks. The U.S. News editor-in-chief, Mort Zuckerman, born in 1937 like Daniloff, had quickly flown to Moscow during his correspondent's imprisonment. Zuckerman had been helpful as a source in the course of the story. With the U.S. News office in disarray after Daniloff's final, hasty departure, Zuckerman, I learned, needed a lift to Moscow's Sheremetyevo Airport for the flight home.
As we drove the broad highway heading West, I asked the media big shot how he'd liked the visit. "The end," he said, "was the best."
[Associated
Press;
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