Word: editorialists
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Editorialist Jennings Perry "is a sorry, unworthy, despicable character-a venal and licentious scribbler" whose "hifaluting way" of writing about Greek culture does not show "enough knowledge of Greek to qualify him to open a restaurant. . . . Just as one would expect of a wanderoo. He has the brains of a quagga...
...Tennessean: the South once "bred original and talented artificers in insult. ... Its present practitioners are no more than mere name callers, repetitiously stumbling through the same comminations . . . mumbling a string of bawdy epithets." Trying its own hand, the Tennessean did a little better, but not much. Crump, wrote Editorialist Perry, is a "foulmouthed old boss . . . ugly and snarling ... a contemptible relic of the barbarous past...
...since, has been on the Times only four months- but he is regarded as the most up & coming journalist in Fleet Street. He is able, amiable Donald Tyerman, 36, accountant's son who has been partly paralyzed since he was three. Tyerman came in when famed Times Editorialist Edward Hallet Carr (a professor of international politics, known as a Leninist of the right for his advocacy of liberal totalitarianism) went back to the academic life...
...short, the Army & Navy Journal flatly accused Winston Churchill and Joseph Stalin of holding up the war by getting sidetracked in politics. Though the U.S. as a whole certainly did not agree with the Journal's unnamed editorialist, many a U.S. citizen grinned. Here was a critic irascible enough to balance Pravda's human snickersnee David Zaslavsky, who last week added U.S. Journalist W. L. White to his list of victims (see FOREIGN NEWS...
...same edition with the Vice President's article was a skilled job of editorial surgery upon it. The Times's editorialist found Mr. Wallace approaching the "very intolerance that he condemns. . . . The Vice President of the U.S. ought not to indulge in merely abusive epithets...