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- <text id=91TT2367>
- <title>
- Oct. 21, 1991: From The Managing Editor
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Oct. 21, 1991 Sex, Lies & Politics
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- FROM THE MANAGING EDITOR, Page 4
- </hdr><body>
- <p> Walter Isaacson is what some people like to call a "hard-
- news" person. In his 13-year career at TIME, he has worked as a
- writer in Nation, a correspondent in the Washington bureau, and
- later editor of Nation. Named assistant managing editor in July,
- Walter presides over what we call the back of the book, the
- various departments that cover news in the sciences, society and
- culture. But that does not mean he now considers himself a "soft
- news" person. "The distinction between hard news and soft news
- has become irrelevant, even meaningless," he says. "News is
- whatever is current that affects our lives, interests us or
- provokes us to think about the world."
- </p>
- <p> Actually, our co-founder Henry Luce thought the same way
- back in 1923, when he organized TIME as a magazine that would
- cover not only national affairs and foreign news but also
- religion, education, science, business and art. Among the first
- cover subjects were Joseph Conrad, Jack Dempsey and Ethel
- Barrymore. "TIME's conception of human nature...and TIME's
- value judgments run through all the fields of endeavor and all
- the categories of human aspirations and speculations," he said
- on the magazine's 40th anniversary. That philosophy is now more
- compelling than ever. Important social issues like date rape,
- the deterioration of the environment and the troubles of
- America's educational system are news; so are advances in
- medicine and cultural phenomena. "When the movie Thelma & Louise
- came out, it struck a chord," notes Walter, "so it became news
- for us as well as a review."
- </p>
- <p> A graduate of Harvard and Oxford, Isaacson learned
- journalism the old way: as a police reporter for the New Orleans
- Times-Picayune, his hometown paper, and later for the London
- Sunday Times. He landed at TIME in 1978, contributed some
- memorable coverage of the 1980 presidential campaign, and has
- won three Overseas Press Club Awards for his writing. Co-author
- of The Wise Men, a collective study of six men who shaped
- American foreign policy during the cold war, he has written a
- biography of Henry Kissinger that is due out next fall.
- </p>
- <p> "Walter is a voracious assimilator of information," says
- Jim Kelly, a friend and senior editor. "He's the kind of person
- who can discourse with equal intelligence on Cajun music, the
- Philby spy ring and medical ethics. His journalistic mind is at
- work at least 18 hours a day." All that energy is now at the
- service of readers who look to our back of the book for
- information and understanding.
- </p>
- <p>-- Henry Muller
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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