Word: journalists
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Recently, I went to New York to interview Dr. Jeffries for the Crimson's weekly magazine, What Is To Be Done?. My interest was that of a journalist who, in the past, has let controversial figures such as Camille Paglia, Noam Chomsky and Meir Kahane tell their stories candidly. As a result of this interview and of my interactions with him, Jeffries has now concluded that I am part of "a media lynching" directed against...
Fields called herself a journalist in transition, saying, "I've always been into journalism," but confessing, "I'm still not sure why I'm a journalist...
Through his experiences with Dorothy Day, the journalist and social reformer, Coles says, he realized that acknowledging the existence of poverty does not necessitate living a life of poverty. "I don't think I'm going to help poor people by becoming poor myself," he says...
Except that a journalist who reads PrairyErth asks whether the van in Cedar Point could be the same noble '75 Ford Econoline, named Ghost Dancing, that rattled for 13,000 miles in Blue Highways. "Of course," said the author last week, sounding pleased. "Got a dead battery now, but otherwise just fine." Plenty of nostalgic action here. And a hope that with a fresh battery, Ghost Dancing will have still another fine, quirky book...
...help keep watch over one of TIME's most crucial bureaus. But her feel for day-to-day journalism ensures that she spends much of her time reporting and writing as well. And what writing. Carlson's flavorful prose, lucid, tart and funny, is the hallmark of a journalist who sees even the biggest stories in distinctly human terms. "Being a reporter in Washington is like talking across one big backyard fence," she says. "Congress, the White House, the people at the agencies -- they're always trading stories with each other and with the press...