Word: editorships
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...Perhaps - but what sets magazine editorship apart from almost every other profession is that its most famous practitioners are almost all women. It's the only industry, outside modeling, where females have higher profiles and are more influential than their male counterparts. So there's another reason there are so many fashion editors in movies: it's an easy shorthand for feminine power...
...THAT GOT AWAY HOWELL RAINES "There is," Raines tells us, "nothing as gone, as utterly lost to us, nothing as definitely absent and irretrievable as a lost fish." This from a man who lost one of the biggest fish in media, executive editorship of the New York Times, after the infamous Jayson Blair scandal. In this easy chair of a book, Raines, frank, engaging and not entirely without rancor, hops nimbly from the newsroom to such remote waters as the Kola Peninsula in Russia and the seas around tiny Christmas Island. "Howell eats gunpowder for breakfast," one Times reporter says...
...Norton, he said, in part because competitors have tended to focus on “a very highfalutin text in which professors were trying to impress other professors.” After collaborating with Abrams on the past two editions of the Norton, Greenblatt is now assuming the full editorship. Abrams said that Greenblatt, who is also the editor of “The Norton Shakespeare,” was the obvious choice as the next editor of the anthology. The transition of the editorship from a Harvard graduate to a Harvard professor was not purposeful, Abrams said...
...create a visiting chair because it would change universities year-to-year and cater to the needs of working journalists. “The chair was created with someone like John [Carroll] in mind,” Maidenberg said. “Someone like Carroll, who came off the editorship of the Los Angeles Times may not want to become a chair and commit himself to teaching and research, but as a lecturer at Harvard, he has a superb platform to begin explaining his ideas about what is happening in journalism and to uphold values that he believes...
Since its institution in 1981, the Salient has certainly done a lot of that. During the editorship of Gladden J. Pappin ’04, gay rights advocacy provided constant fodder for the magazine’s criticisms. In a Dec. 2002 letter to the editor, Pappin praised a 1920 secret court that disciplined homosexual students. The Harvard administrators’ actions had not been public until an article in Fifteen Minutes reported on them that December...