Word: editor
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Such shortcuts do not seem to diminish the satisfactions. "There is tremendous excitement in putting seeds in the ground-little pieces of nothing in the earth-and seeing them grow," declares Harold Field, a retired editor and enthusiastic gardener in New York's Westchester County. "It defies description. It's almost magical." The rising interest in pots, plots and window boxes is, indeed, a healthy trend in a mechanized society. Millions of Americans work at jobs that rarely encompass more than a step in a production sequence or a repetition of services. And they work indoors, besides...
This time, Rocky's off-the-cuff remarks became a matter of public record. A Republican leader who had listened to him at the Georgia gathering got in touch with David Nordan, political editor of the Atlanta Journal. "Don't you think you press guys should expose this?" the Republican demanded. After checking the caller's account with three other individuals who had heard the Vice President's remarks, Nordan pieced the story together and the Journal ran it on Page One last week...
...much like an old newspaper tactic that I have used myself: inventing a secret source ... If there is a Deep Throat, he's worth $10 million on the hoof." Woodward declares that there is a Deep Throat who will be known some day (see box). Says Post Executive Editor Benjamin Bradlee: "I know he exists." But not even Bradlee knows...
...editors at the [Washington] Post know he exists-though they don't know who he is. From the beginning, I typed up detailed memos of our interviews on six-ply paper for in-house distribution. This was before Howie [Post Managing Editor Howard Simons] nicknamed him Deep Throat. He was "X" or "Mr. X" then...
Mark E. Roberts '77, Diaspora editor, said yesterday, "I'm very happy about our grant. And I don't see Diaspora as a threat to the Advocate...