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TIME - Man of the Year
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1992-08-28
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FROM THE MANAGING EDITOR, Page 8
It was not all that easy to decide on the Man of the Year for
1991. Two major international stories -- the gulf war and the
Second Russian Revolution -- dominated the news, and both of
them produced a fairly obvious list of candidates: George Bush,
Norman Schwarzkopf, Dick Cheney, Colin Powell and Boris
Yeltsin, among others. On the domestic scene, too, individuals
like Anita Hill and Clarence Thomas came to mind. But the more
we thought about it, the more compelling it seemed to focus on
a theme that emerged time and again as major events unfolded
this year: the amazing power of CNN to bind the world into a
truly global village.
TIME's Man of the Year tradition began rather casually
during a slow week at the end of 1927 when the magazine's
editors didn't know whom to put on the cover. Recalling that
they had shortchanged Lindbergh after he made the first solo
crossing of the Atlantic earlier that year, they named him Man
of the Year. The idea caught on, and among Lindy's successors
have been such men as Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill
and such women as Wallis Simpson and Madame Chiang Kai-shek.
The Man of the Year is not an accolade, however, or our
version of the Nobel Peace Prize. It is a judgment about news,
and specifically about who, for better or worse, had the most
impact on the course of history in a given year. The list
includes people with indisputable credentials for goodness, like
Mahatma Gandhi and the American G.I., but also some of the
century's worst despots, like Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin.
This year's package was produced by several dozen
staffers, under the guidance of assistant managing editor Jim
Kelly. Associate editor Priscilla Painton, who approaches every
subject with tireless zeal, spent a month interviewing Ted
Turner's family, friends and associates. "I discovered that
there was something new to say about him," says Painton. "He is
a changed man not just because he fell madly in love or because
he got older, but because he made an emotionally strenuous
effort to grow up. There are no trophies in his office
commemorating this adventure, but it may be the most courageous
of all."
-- Henry Muller