Word: angelo
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When TIME editors scheduled this week's cover story on Designer Ralph Lauren, Bonnie Angelo, TIME's Eastern regional bureau chief, tackled the bulk of the reporting herself. "Most stories I've worked on have dealt with politics," she says, "so the fact that this one was about business interested...
...stitch together the Lauren tale, Angelo interviewed the designer and his key associates, then spoke with fashion editors, Wall Street analysts, various competitors and Actress Candice Bergen, a Lauren client. For good measure, Angelo took an advance peek at Lauren's new furniture line...
...When Angelo came to New York City in July 1985 to take over her Eastern regional responsibilities, she realized that the fashion industry is a source of major news in the area. She began her career with TIME in the L.B.J. era, reporting from Washington on events ranging from Viet Nam War protests to the Watergate scandals and the resignation of Richard Nixon. In 1977 Angelo was named London bureau chief, a job she held for the next 7 1/2 years, through the political emergence of Margaret Thatcher, the royal wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana, and the Falklands...
Washington: Strobe Talbott, Ann Blackman, David Aikman, David Beckwith, Gisela Bolte, Jay Branegan, Ricardo Chavira, Anne Constable, Patricia Delaney, Michael Duffy, Hays Gorey, David Halevy, Jerry Hannifin, Neil MacNeil, Johanna McGeary, Christopher Redman, Barrett Seaman, Alessandra Stanley, Bruce van Voorst, Gregory H. Wierzynski, John E. Yang New York: Bonnie Angelo, Joseph N. Boyce, Cathy Booth, Dean Brelis, Thomas McCarroll, Raji Samghabadi, Wayne Svoboda Boston: Robert Ajemian, Joelle Attinger, Timothy Loughran, Dick Thompson Chicago: Jack E. White, Barbara Dolan, Lee Griggs, J. Madeleine Nash, Elizabeth Taylor Detroit: William J. Mitchell Atlanta: Joseph J. Kane, B. Russell Leavitt, Don Winbush Houston: David...
Perhaps in its original Spanish The Tower of Glass flows more beautifully. The book is an intellectual excercise, a challenge, not an escape into a verbal paradise. In this profoundly, horribly real work Angelo uses all his art to capture a life as convoluted and shifting, helpless and oppressive as his own prose: this intellectual challenge is not an ivory tower but The Tower of Glass...