Word: trailed
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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Producing TIME is a little like running a marathon every week. For instance: it's blazing a clear trail through the ethical questions surrounding Patricia Bowman's decision to reveal her identity as William Kennedy Smith's accuser. And it's searching through the cheers and tears of audiences for the next movie hit of this holiday season. It's a physically exhausting but exhilarating race to keep on top of the news and issues that animate the world around us, and to get the results to press on time...
...shown that rare ability to stick to a schedule in his own life as well. After graduating from Kenyon College with an English major in 1980, he started working for a Pennsylvania company that printed many different magazines, including TIME. He proceeded to work his way up the paper trail from printer to engraver to plant operations manager, finally joining the editorial ranks in 1990. That kind of perseverance, plus the good-humored but relentless way he hounds us toward our deadlines each week, is one reason we somehow win the news marathon 52 times a year...
...Nobody is claiming that the movie is the truth," says Sklar, the editor of Garrison's book, On the Trail of the Assassins. "But Oliver wanted to find out as much as he could about the assassination and get close to the full truth, which he, like many people, thinks has never been told...
...slopes themselves are excellent. Sunday River makes a lot of snow, so the only time a skier will encounter icy trails is maybe the first ten or so feet of a black diamond or double black diamond slope. On a windy day, the snow on top of the mountain gets blown off. The trails are always very well covered past that. For a little excitement, many of the trails are only half groomed, leaving moguls for the adventurous skier. White Heat, the double black diamond trail, is a must ski. For the experienced skier. Sunday River also offers some very...
...chance that either one can be spirited out of Libya and brought to trial in the U.S. seems remote. In any case, the real responsibility lies higher up: government officials on both sides of the Atlantic think the trail of blame leads straight into the office of Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi. But how can he and his regime be punished...