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- <text id=94TT1569>
- <title>
- Nov. 14, 1994: To Our Readers
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 14, 1994 How Could She Do It?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TO OUR READERS, Page 4
- Elizabeth Valk Long, President
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Week 1 on any job can be nerve-racking--all of those new faces,
- new procedures and new coffee machines. At TIME, with the added
- pressures of a weekly newsmagazine, it can be positively manic.
- So Lee Aitken, our newest senior editor, was already busy enough
- last Thursday evening when, four days into her first week--and less than 48 hours from deadline--she was asked to oversee
- our late-breaking cover story on Susan Smith, the young South
- Carolina mother accused of murdering her children. It was an
- assignment whose challenge amounted almost to hazing, but Aitken
- brought it off with skill and aplomb.
- </p>
- <p> Were her new TIME colleagues surprised? Not a bit. Aitken, after
- all, came to us after seven years at our corporate-cousin publication
- PEOPLE, where she built her reputation by deftly managing first
- the magazine's book and theater departments, then its news sections.
- She edited dozens of PEOPLE cover stories, including those on
- the Polly Klaas kidnapping and the Baby Jessica DeBoer case.
- The latter was particularly meaningful to Aitken, a single parent
- who adopted her daughter Sophie, 3, in Bulgaria after a two-year
- search for a child. "Lee has an amazing way of expanding the
- dimensions of a story, making it grow beyond the confines of
- its narrative," says senior editor Howard Chua-Eoan, a former
- PEOPLE editor himself. "She will remember past incidents that
- give resonance to present, a quote by some authority that still
- proves illuminating, the name of an expert who must be tapped."
- </p>
- <p> Harvard-educated, Aitken was managing editor of the political
- weekly In These Times and a founding editor of New England Monthly.
- "I've done policy journalism and what's called personality journalism,"
- she says, "and I think my assignment at TIME can combine the
- best of both: putting a human face on issues and finding the
- lessons for us all in personal tragedies like Susan Smith's."
- </p>
- <p> Our report "Follow the Money" ((TIME ON CAPITOL HILL, Nov. 7))
- provided campaign-finance information on congressional candidates
- using data from Federal Election Commission reports. Several
- candidates complained that although they do not accept PAC money,
- figures for PAC donations appeared in their listing. The amounts
- in the PAC column included donations from political committees
- acting as PACs, some of which are candidate-campaign committees
- that take money from PACs. Our column heading should have reflected
- that fact.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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