We talked to our former
editors about their memories of the magazine.
Not exact matches
Taking a diametrically different tack, Bloomberg Markets magazine
editor, Joel Weber, fawned over Dimon in a Bloomberg TV interview, repeatedly asserting that Jamie Dimon is all
about the customer... Unfortunately for Dimon, attorneys Chaitman and Gotthoffer have no such lapse of
memory.
Michael Lemonick, opinion
editor at Scientific American, talks
about his most recent book, The Perpetual Now: A Story of Amnesia,
Memory and Love, about Lonni Sue Johnson, who suffered a specific kind of brain damage that robbed her of much of her memory and her ability to form new memories, and what she has revealed to neuroscientists about memory and the
Memory and Love,
about Lonni Sue Johnson, who suffered a specific kind of brain damage that robbed her of much of her
memory and her ability to form new memories, and what she has revealed to neuroscientists about memory and the
memory and her ability to form new
memories, and what she has revealed to neuroscientists
about memory and the
memory and the brain.
DISCOVER associate
editor Gemma Tarlach talked to Fernyhough
about the mutability of
memories — and whether we'll ever remember things as they really happened.
Criterion has also added «Strange Magic,» a 13 - minute featurette focused around writer and Rookie
editor - in - chief Tavi Gevinson, who explores the film through the lens of adolescence, suicide, and
memory via her own writing and imagery from a fanzine she made
about the film in 2012.
Vintage Armstrong - Siddeleys — Bill Bishop writes
about these high quality Coventry - made cars of the 1920s / 1938 Rootes Talbot — The restoration of a 3 - litre sports tourer is described by David Hawtin / «It was fun then» — Part one of an article by Bill Boddy recalling motoring
memories from over fifty years ago / VSCC Wessex Trial — Tom Threlfall reports this event in his «Diary of a dilettante» / Retromobile Show Paris — Peter Russell drove to Paris in February to bring us his report / Invicta S - type in the rain On his rain - soaked excursion this month — The
Editor drove an open 1931 4 1/2 litre / Vulcan in the twenties — Michael Worthington - Williams describes the diversity of engines used by this Lancashire - based manufacturer / Austin Seven sports re-creation — John Williams tells
about the rebuilding of a 1924 «works» two - seater.
The early years of Wolseley — How the company developed up to the First World War by Norman Painting / Homage to a Morris 8 — D.H. Smith relates his
memories of a 1937 Morris 8 named «Cleopatra» / Amilcar anniversary — Brian Heath visited the Auvergne in company with other Amilcar enthusiasts on the occasion of the car's 75th anniversary / The Citroen 2CV phenomenon — The story of this unconventional classic is told by Chris Bowes / Honeymoon trip in a Riley — Malcolm Bates tells us
about a young couple's trip to remember in a 1929/30 Riley Monaco /
Memories of Woolf Barnato and W.O. Bentley — Rivers Fletcher relates his personal reminiscences of Woolf Barnato and W.O. Bentley in the 1920s and 30s / 1933 Alvis Speed Twenty — This month The
Editor gives us his impressions of this traditional — but tecnically advanced — British sporting car / Sunbeam Talbot Darracq rally — A report on the STD register's national rally by Nick Baldwin / Vulcan history part two — Michael Worthington - Williams continues his article on this comparitively little known manufacturer.
Khong, the former executive
editor of Lucky Peach magazine and the author of All
About Eggs: Everything We Know
About the World's Most Important Food, makes us laugh once again as she shares the secret behind her first novel's diary style and shakes her fist at
memory.
Reading over Kevin's recent from the
editor's desk
about looking back, it triggered a
memory.
As
editor with oversight of the entire production of In
Memory of My Feelings (Museum of Modern Art, 1967; bound facsimile reprint, 2005), I offer the following additional information
about its making, as well as a few corrections.
I've submitted concerns
about the paper's coverage of global warming to the Public
Editor at least twice (if my
memory is correct) in the recent couple of months, and I haven't heard or seen anything
about the matter in his pieces in the paper.