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TIME - Man of the Year
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CompactPublishing-TimeMagazine-TimeManOfTheYear-Win31MSDOS.iso
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1992-08-28
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FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
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