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'Wit1040a, ,.., . ..: I Not Valid Witfi tithe Otters • Not Valid On Spepials Expires12/n9P.,,,,,,. . • • Dine-In Only • Valid Lunch Or Dinner • Not Valid With Other Offers • Not Valid On Specials • Expires 12/31/97 I ...I 1 i SUZANNE CHESSLER Special to The Jewish News id eeting with Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, dining with Prince Charles at his London palace and even suffering a gunshot wound at Jonestown in Guyana fall in line with the everyday experiences of Charles Krause, foreign affairs correspondent and substitute anchor for "The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer." His report on the prospects for the Oslo peace process in the aftermath of last year's Israeli election — "Hebron: The First Test" — won this year's Emmy Award in the category "Outstanding General Coverage of a Single Breaking News Story in a Regularly Scheduled Newscast." Krause, 50, who broadcasts between 6 and 7 p.m. weekdays on WTVS (Channel 56), did not antici- pate becoming a journalist while he was growing up in Michigan, _where he celebrated his bar mitzvah at Temple Israel, attended Mumford High School and graduated from Cranbrook. The interest surfaced while he was a political science major working on the student newspaper at the University of Pennsylvania. As he decided to become a reporter, he did not decide to look for danger and intrigue, but that's what he found. Whether reporting on the Gulf War from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, at the time Scud missiles were being shot at that city by Iraq, or being questioned in the presence of torture apparatus by the Bolivian military for concealing a news source, Krause is determined to continue with firsthand accounts of the tough events on distant shores. "It's not that I go looking for trou- ble; it's just that the job -requires that I go to places where there is trouble, and I love the job," said Krause, who has a master's degree in international relations from Princeton University. "Most of the time I'm not-being shot at, and I guess I think that noth- ing bad is going to happen to me. I focus on the idea that somehow or other I'm performing a service of sorts for the world, doing something that needs to be done. "I have an inner tranquility in a sense. If I began to fear every step out- side, I couldn't continue with this kind of assignment." Krause was the Washington Post cor- respondent who accompanied U.S. Rep. Leo J. Ryan to Jonestown and was among the journalists shot at the time the congressman was killed in 1978. He also was the first reporter to return to Jonestown after the mass sui- cide/murder of more than 900 cult members there and was nominated for a Pulitzer- Prize by the Post for his arti- cle about the tragedy. The former Detroiter received awards from the Overseas Press Club and Sigma Delta Chi for his work in Jonestown. During an assignment in Bolivia in 1978, Krause had to be secretly shut- tled out of the country by the CIA in order to avoid repercussions for not compromising his journalistic values to accommodate the military regime. Krause traces his early fascination with international relations to fre- quent family trips to Europe. His interest in covering events of impor- tance crystallized during his college newspaper days, when he covered widespread student issues such as anti- war protests. Reporting for the Washington Post, where he had been an intern, was Krause's first professional job. After completing a three-year newspaper assignment in Latin America, he con- tinued in the area with CBS News, joining "The NewsHour" in 1983. 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