Word: suttons
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Imagine how much worse it must be to get a really big government mad at you -- like the U.S. Government, in the person of former U.S. Attorney Rudolph Giuliani. That's what money manager James Sutton ("Jay") Regan, 47, seems to have done. His firm, Princeton/Newport Partners, was charged with making a series of bogus trades in 1984 and '85 to claim tax losses. The trades were shams, argued the Government, because though Princeton/Newport really did sell securities in which it really did have losses, the firm didn't really sell them because it had an unwritten deal...
...issue was produced by picture researcher Robert Stevens, designer Christine Castigliano, senior editor George Russell, associate editor Richard Lacayo, reporter-researchers Sidney Urquhart and Daniel Levy and assistants Denise Mei and Alex Sutton, under the direction of special-projects editor Donald Morrison. They sifted through tens of thousands of photos from the Time Inc. Magazines Picture Collection and other archives. They also solicited advice from museum curators and working photojournalists, particularly in compiling our list of history's ten most important news photos. You may not agree with those choices,* but we hope you will find them -- and the entire...
...stranger to deadlines, Alexander Sutton recalls having 30 minutes to decide which of 700 pictures from Louis Farrakhan's controversial 1988 visit to Philadelphia to publish in the Daily Pennsylvanian. Working in TIME's picture department, Sutton has been combing through mountains of film each week to find the right images for such stories as a recent look at the plight of the world's refugees. In our New York bureau, David Muhlbaum of Middlebury College handles reporting on subjects as varied as the prospects for economic stability in Argentina and the consequences of posing for Playboy...
What do our summer staffers make of the TIME experience? "TIME has such incredible resources," says Sutton. "Everything runs 24 hours a day." Adds Bruner: "There's something new every week. You never know what's going to happen next...
Style wars. Despite the warming trends in U.S.-Soviet relations, Nancy and Raisa would be at home in the frozen-food section of a supermarket. At lunch in the Sutton Place townhouse of U.N. Secretary-General Javier Perez de Cuellar, Mrs. Reagan interrupted Mrs. Gorbachev's lecture on the need for the two nations to become more open with one another. "Haven't we? Haven't we?" she cut in. Amid the shop-till-you-drop types, Barbara Bush was the only guest wearing the kind of suit a grandchild could spill apple juice on with impunity. She raised...