Word: isaacsons
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...that he was tempted to invoke the ?Never again? mantra that followed the Holocaust. ?But his National Security staff insisted that he hedge any pledge to stop future genocides since it was not a mission that the U.S. military was prepared to take on,? says TIME Managing Editor Walter Isaacson, traveling with the President. ?So, even though he gave a moving speech in Rwanda about the need to stop future genocides, there's no new American policy or military doctrine for getting involved in genocidal wars in Africa...
...Hours later, however, the President was reminded of the potential for evil back home. ?The President was awakened by Bruce Lindsey who told him about the Arkansas shooting,? says Isaacson. ?He was so upset he couldn't get back to sleep. He called people back in Arkansas to keep talking about it through the night.? Developing a policy response to that tragedy may prove even more complex than the Rwanda dilemma...
...75th anniversary, and for it to hit this list means something really dramatic is happening. It's livelier, more energetic and more insightful." Michael Lotito, executive director of account services for Ammirati Puris Lintas, specifically praised TIME's coverage of technology--a special interest of managing editor Walter Isaacson, whose previous job was editor of New Media for Time...
Adweek editor Garland said TIME's top billing reflects Isaacson's wall-to-wall effort to "liven up the magazine." Garland stressed that "the editorial work always comes first and then translates into the marketplace...
...your hands. In a special 62-page feature, we look back, notably through an extensive sampling of the major stories we have run over the past 7 1/2 decades (all excerpted but with their distinctive wording unchanged). We also look ahead, with an Essay in which managing editor Walter Isaacson projects our core values into the digital future...