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<text id=93TT1523>
<title>
Apr. 26, 1993: From The Publisher
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Apr. 26, 1993 The Truth about Dinosaurs
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Andrea Dorfman remembers viewing Tyrannosaurus rex in New
York City's American Museum of Natural History as a grade
schooler, and, like millions of her peers, being "mesmerized.
How could you not be captivated by those huge teeth?" she asks.
</p>
<p> She returned to the museum hundreds of times, as an intern
at Natural History magazine, as a journalist and as a happy
gawker, and the exhibit never changed--the same impressive
dentition.
</p>
<p> On her most recent visit, however, interviewing
paleontologists Mark Norell and Michael Novacek for this week's
cover story, the dinosaur halls were closed--and for the very
reason, she notes with some satisfaction, that drove our story.
"They're being overhauled to reflect all the new information in
the field."
</p>
<p> That Dorfman was convinced the story was valid and not just
a product of recurrent dinomania or the buzz surrounding the
upcoming release of Steven Spielberg's Jurassic Park came as a
relief to her colleagues. In her capacity as TIME's head science
researcher, she has sent many an overhyped nonstory to
extinction. "Andrea serves as a kind of litmus test," says
senior editor Claudia Wallis, who first suggested the time
might be ripe for a reappraisal of dinosaurs. "She's
constitutionally incapable of exaggeration." Adds another
editor, Charles Alexander: "She has a scientist's skepticism."
</p>
<p> As with most good scientists and journalists, the skepticism
is balanced by an enthusiast's energy. The head researcher
position is a full-time job, but Dorfman is also one of the
section's more prolific reporters. A biology major at Yale,
where she was also science editor of the Yale Daily News, she
has covered everything from the Neolithic Iceman found in an
Alpine glacier to the Exxon Valdez oil spill to genetic
engineering. She was also one of the organizing hands behind
TIME's intensive treatment of the 1992 Earth Summit. Still,
Dorfman, who keeps a small collection of fossils herself, has a
fondness for things that come out of the past to enlighten the
present. Without old bones, Dorfman points out, we wouldn't
have realized that "every time you order chicken for dinner,
you're actually ordering dinosaur."
</p>
<p> Elizabeth Valk Long
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>