Word: editor-in-chief
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...character. He chose Cornell rather than any other college because his older brothers had studied ther and because "Cornell was less uncomfortably elitist, less discriminatory, less homogenous than Harvard. Yale or Princeton,"--schools he could easily have entered. In the course of his years in college. White became editor-in-chief of the Cornell Daily Sun, a post which seems to have meant more to him than any other single experience...
...introducing the President at Eureka, Time Inc. Editor-in-Chief Henry Grunwald recalled the familiar debate in the academic world between those who believe history is made by individuals and those who think it is the result of abstract, faceless forces. Said Grunwald: "We at TIME have always sided with the former school. In that spirit, TIME started out by putting a person on its cover every week, and the mainstay of that cover is still people." Grunwald called the Distinguished Speakers Program a "logical extension" of this tenet, one that would put TIME cover subjects "in direct touch with...
...Bernstein realizes her aversion to making the news business her career was a "typical adolescent problem of needing to separate from my father's identity," says Bernstein. Her father, Lester Bernstein, worked for Time magazine, NBC News and finally served as managing editor and Editor-in-Chief of Newsweek from...
Martin H. Peretz, lecturer in Social Studies, likes his students so much that he hired two of them. They both work for him at The New Republic, a left-of-center "weekly opinion journal" where Peretz serves as editor-in-chief...
...most visible evidence of Peretz's work is any issue of The New Republic since 1975, when Peretz assumed the position of editor-in-chief after a year's apprenticeship. During his year of training for the job, he maintained his responsibilities as Master of South House...