Word: newsweekly
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...self-interested hypocrite taking advantage of his celebrity status to gain increased attention. I do not ask Abdul-Rauf to love his country, merely to show it the respect it deserves for providing him, and only him, the opportunity to pursue his dreams. An article in Newsweek summed it up best: "...if the national anthem is such an obvious symbol of tyranny and oppression, why isn't the national dollar likewise to be denied?" --Scott Muoio...
...Hillary had actually thrown the lamp at Bill in a raging argument. Hillary assumed the story came from the White House security detail, confirming her fears about their loyalty, and was upset that no one from the Secret Service came forward to deny it. The story soon appeared in Newsweek, and Hillary and Bill vented some of their anger on Foster and Watkins for failing to act on her earlier concerns. They were "too naive and too nice, being from Arkansas," Hillary said...
Managing what he calls "this rich trove of cyberspace resources" is second nature for Ramo, a journalist and cybersurfer who put Newsweek on Prodigy 18 months ago. Josh, it should be noted, is something of a prodigy himself. At 27, he is the youngest senior editor in TIME's history...
...Primary Colors, which this week tops the fiction list. In the continuing parlor game of who wrote it, Newsweek's Joe Klein is now so hot that his weekly oeuvre is getting deconstructed a la Jacques Derrida. Klein is a good guy, author (maybe), even though he doesn't bring a camera on trips--only dorks do that--but expects you to take his picture on a camel and get two-for-one prints made...
Still, the late winter was not all good news for the University. When Newsweek decided to do a cover story on fatigue in American life, it chose Rudenstine for its cover in a move that insiders say was highly embarrassing to the University...