Word: newsweeks
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...told her Clinton made a pass at Willey in 1993. But stranger than the fact of the indictment of this bit player, say lawyers with no dog in the fight, is that it's based in part on Steele's telling her allegedly false version to the press, specifically Newsweek and the National Enquirer--and in 1997, before Starr had even begun this phase of his probe. Lawyers for Steele, who denies the charges, are considering a First Amendment challenge. Steele's attorney, Nancy Luque, blasted the indictment as "a transparent attempt to unfairly influence the pending impeachment proceeding." Perhaps...
...next contender was Matt Cooper of Newsweek, the odds-on favorite to win (though, having actually performed at the Improv, he was regarded the way Soviet-bloc Olympians used to be: as suspiciously professional). The round, bald Cooper suggested that Al Gore might try to copy Bill Clinton's formula for success and have an affair, then dismissed it with a riff on the media's skeptical reaction. "How do we know?" he had scornful reporters saying. "There's no DNA on the dress! Prove it!" Alone among the contestants, Cooper could do passably good imitations, including of Clinton...
...Since joining the magazine as an intern in 1977, Mark has been a star performer as a reporter, writer, senior editor and managing editor," he said. "Mark clearly has the experience, drive, character and good judgement to lead Newsweek into a very successful future...
...know that Mark wants to be the best editor that Newsweek has ever had," she said. "Not just the best black editor...
Whitaker began working for Newsweek as an intern in 1977. When he won a Marshal Scholarship to Oxford for two years of graduate school, Whitaker reported for Newsweek in London and Paris. In 1981 he became a full-time reporter in New York City, working in the magazine's international section. He became a business editor...