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...Marilyn, another law student. Quayle, who has refused to release his law-school transcript, also worked full-time as an aide in the state attorney general's office. He passed the bar exam in 1974 and spent the next two years working for his father's newspaper, the Huntington Herald-Press, until he was elected to Congress in 1976. That was Quayle's entire legal record. Marilyn was the lawyer in the family; he was the politician...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dan Quayle's Legal Career | 8/26/1991 | See Source »

Laura Parker, chief of the Washington Post's Miami bureau, took the shortcut principle even further in filing a piece about mosquito and grasshopper infestations in Florida. She lifted most of her reporting from stories by the Miami Herald and the Associated Press, including direct quotations from people she had not interviewed. She presumably saw little point in the donkey work of calling the quoted sources, or hunting up counterparts, to provide innocuous remarks. In the mind of her editors, however, she broke an implicit contract with the reader, in which the newspaper vouches that all its facts, especially those...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Recycling in The Newsroom | 7/29/1991 | See Source »

...according to Miami Herald movie reviewer Bill Cosford, "a butt- kicking feminist manifesto . . . which sweeps you along for the ride." No, says Sheila Benson, a Los Angeles Times film critic, it is a betrayal of feminism, which, as she understands it, "has to do with responsibility, equality, sensitivity, understanding -- not revenge, retribution or sadistic behavior...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Gender Bender Over Thelma & Louise | 6/24/1991 | See Source »

This is the tale of one town. When dawn breaks in Ujantia, it is not chirping birds or crowing cocks that herald the new day but the wailing of hungry babies. Rarely do desperate parents have anything to silence the cries. Says Sultana Razia, rocking her infant girl: "I have only water to feed my child." The howling dies down, more often than not, when the babies simply fall mute from exhaustion...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bangladesh | 5/20/1991 | See Source »

Also in the Nieman program next year: Michael E. Ruane, 42, reporter for The Philadelphia Inquirer; Mark Seibel, 37, foreign editor of The Miami Herald; Tom Witosky, 39, sports projects reporter for The Des Moines Register; and Nancy Wright, 37, political reporter for the Rutland, Vt., Herald and The Times Argus...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: New Class of Neimans Selected By University | 5/8/1991 | See Source »

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