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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
-
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- Those of us in the business of putting words and pictures on
- paper are frequently reminded of the strong reactions that
- readers have to the stories we publish. A story in TIME might
- prompt a reader to fire off a letter to our editors, call a
- Congressman or, in the case of Paul LaBell, do something
- astonishing and profound. A New York City print publisher,
- LaBell makes his living surrounded by images meant to stir the
- emotions. But that didn't prepare him for photographer Michael
- Springer's picture of starving Sudanese in our Dec. 5, 1988,
- issue.
-
- "They were so thin they looked like Giacometti sculptures
- -- living stick figures," LaBell recalls. "The photograph so
- haunted me that I decided I wanted to do something about it."
- Marrying his pledge to his profession, he came up with a plan
- to organize a charity art auction for the United Nations
- Children's Fund.
-
- Once UNICEF agreed to the idea, LaBell went to work on
- winning the support of the art world, expecting a tough sell.
- "Artists are constantly asked to give time, effort and artwork
- to charity," he notes. "But almost no one turned us down." Over
- several months LaBell enlisted the help of more than 200 art
- dealers, museum directors and artists, who donated work to be
- sold, including Annie Leibovitz, Roy Lichtenstein, Robert
- Rauschenberg and Claes Oldenburg. To eliminate administrative
- costs, La Bell persuaded everyone from catalog photographers to
- an insurance company to give their services to the project,
- dubbed "Art for Children's Survival."
-
- LaBell's efforts culminated in a benefit auction last
- September at Sotheby's in New York City that raised almost
- $250,000. Funds from the auction have been directed to relief
- and development projects in nine countries, which will help
- thousands of children.
-
- "I'm a firm believer in the idea that one person can make
- a difference," says LaBell, who is compelling evidence for that
- argument. While we can claim no part of LaBell's success, we are
- proud to have played a small role in providing his motivation.
-
- -- Elizabeth P. Valk
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