Word: editor
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...merger raises the possibility of conflicts of interest among the various parts of the Time-Warner empire. Could, for example, a Time publication objectively review a Warner Bros. movie? Certainly, said TIME Editor in Chief Jason McManus, who pointed out that for years TIME and PEOPLE have been reviewing, both favorably and unfavorably, shows produced by the company's Home Box Office cable service. In forming their union, Time and Warner officials agreed that a commitment to journalistic and artistic integrity was absolutely essential. When asked what would happen when one of the Time magazines panned a Warner film, Ross...
This space normally belongs to the editor and publisher of the magazine you hold in your hands, used by them to point with pride to particular stories and introduce you to the people who created them. Almost never is there any need to talk about the extended family of other magazines and the book, video and cable enterprises that make up the whole of the parent Time Inc. corporation...
...economics is only part of the story. For many African Americans, black colleges promise a level of academic and social support that mostly white campuses cannot match. "Psychologically, a black student is going to feel better about himself at a black college," says Barry Beckham, editor of The Black Student's Guide to Colleges. At schools such as Dillard, Fisk, Morehouse and Howard, black students say they feel a surge of self-esteem directly traceable to the experience of being the majority race on campus...
...show in Paris," shrugs Gigli, perhaps forgetting that Paris, for other Italian designers (like Simonetta), turned into a nightmare that left them disenfranchised, with no singular creative identity. "I shouldn't yet take all this for more than a one-season wonder," said Suzy Menkes, the savvy fashion editor of the International Herald Tribune. "All designers are prima donnas to some extent, and I expect Gigli just wanted to teach the Milanese organizers a lesson...
...their homeland, because to leave the U.S. might mean never to return. "You often find them trying to put on New York accents while they serve you in a restaurant, just so they can meld into the background and not be found out," says Ray O'Hanlon, the national editor of the New York City-based Irish Echo newspaper. "This is rather...