Word: cisneroses
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
During the past calendar year a record 81,807 letters to TIME crossed the desk of Letters Chief Maria Luisa Cisneros. Letters about Nation stories led the lists, as always, and our Watergate stories attracted the most attention. A January 1973 profile of a little-known former CIA agent named...
Every letter we get (an average of 1,200 per week) goes to Maria Luisa Cisneros and her staff of nine, who answer the mail, analyze trends and distribute excerpts of the most interesting letters among TIME's staff. Isabel Kouri, a letters correspondent since 1960, answers mail critical...
Letters Chief Maria Luisa Cisneros and her staff of ten read the entire stack and circulate a weekly digest that keeps the editors up-to-date on reader reaction. She has observed two trends in recent years: TIME'S audience has become increasingly concerned with serious issues in the...
Only a small number of our readers' letters can be printed, and each week Reporter-Researcher Nancy Chase culls the mail for a representative and interesting sample. But all correspondence is answered. Miss Cisneros' staffers make a rough division by subject matter. Isabel Kouri, for instance, specializes in...
Villains somehow look blacker and heroines fairer under that Caribbean sun. In 1897, on the eve of the U.S. intervention to free Cuba from Spain, the fairest of all heroines to North Americans was a rebel named Evangelina Cisneros-"this tenderly nurtured girl," the New York Journal mourned, "imprisoned at...