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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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time
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031389
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03138900.057
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1990-09-22
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FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 17
It was a Friday nine weeks ago, and another issue of TIME was
headed toward the presses. Suddenly came the news that Emperor
Hirohito of Japan had died. As the magazine's editorial staff tore
up its story list to accommodate several pages of an obituary,
makeup editor Charlotte Quiggle faced a different kind of revision.
Her job is to develop a plan for the sequence of all the editorial
and advertising pages each week so they make a smoothly readable
magazine. TIME's advertising staff immediately told Japanese
advertisers that they were free, if they wished, to cancel ads in
that issue as a mark of deference. Several Japanese companies did
so, leaving three blank pages. Within hours Quiggle rejuggled the
book, as it is called, into a successful new combination. "Every
week brings a unique set of problems," she says. "The trick is to
solve them quickly."
This trick seems to come easily to Quiggle, who joined TIME in
1979 and served as cover art researcher from 1980 to 1984 and
deputy makeup editor from 1981 to 1986. She became makeup editor
three years ago, but claims her natural affinity for the work goes
back much further. "As a kid I seldom lost at bridge. That's why
I got the job," she says half jokingly. "It requires a knack for
puzzle solving." Not to mention diplomacy and stamina. Quiggle
works closely with the magazine's advertising staff to help
coordinate the fast-moving mix of articles and ads that appears in
TIME and its nine international editions.
Overall, Quiggle is guided by one rule: Emphasize the editorial
design. Beyond that, there are only a few absolutes, such as the
requirement that only the first news section and the cover story
must open with at least five consecutive editorial pages. One of
Quiggle's most delicate duties is to separate stories and ads on
similar subjects. "You don't put a story about an air crash on the
same page or the facing page with an airline ad," she explains.
When a conflict between an ad and an article does arise, the
ad is usually the one to be moved. "Makeup is where church (our
editorial staff) meets state (our business interests)," says
Quiggle, but given her skills (we do not recommend challenging her
at backgammon, either), that's only one more solvable puzzle.