Word: newsweeks
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TIME prospered all the more. The gravity of world news--especially the war--stimulated the magazine's reporting and its genius for packaging news. TIME became an influence in millions of American lives. It inspired a competitor, Newsweek (which began publication in 1933). It acquired siblings--FORTUNE (1930), LIFE (1936), The March of Time (1935), Architectural Forum (1932). Luce had a golden touch...
...Arbor. Charges were filed. The night before his trial, the couple fled to Europe. Ten years ago, they quietly returned to her native Lexington to care for Gayl's ailing mother. Then, last month, Gayl published The Healing, her first novel in 21 years. Reviews were enthusiastic; Newsweek ran a feature on her literary comeback...
According to Steele's lawyer, John West, Steele got a call one day in early 1997 from Willey, who was talking with Newsweek reporter Michael Isikoff. Could Isikoff come to interview her about Willey's visit to the Oval Office? Steele agreed but wondered why. While Isikoff was on his way to Steele's house, Willey called her again and told her what to say--that Willey had come to her house after returning from Washington that day, described a sexual advance by Clinton and was in great distress...
...stained-dress story was bouncing and morphing about, there were also reports of another Lewinsky dress. Newsweek, in a Jan. 21 online report, said Lewinsky had been taped saying Clinton had given her a dress. On Jan. 24 the New York Post described the gift dress as a "multicolored peasant dress" and distinguished it from the "black cocktail dress" that reportedly had the President's semen on it. (A source close to Tripp has told TIME there are two dresses. The gift dress, the source says, is a "cheap" one purchased on Martha's Vineyard; the stained dress...
...TIME and Newsweek ran stories reporting on the dress in similar terms. TIME stated that in an untaped conversation with Tripp, Lewinsky "allegedly held up a dress she claimed was stained with the President's semen and said, 'I'll never wash it again.'" TIME's story did not contain attribution for this point, but its source was someone close to Tripp that TIME believes credible. Newsweek wrote that "Lewinsky told Tripp that she was keeping, as a kind of grotesque memento, a navy blue dress stained with Clinton's semen. Holding it up as a trophy to Tripp...