Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Front page of The Age reporting the dismissal of the Prime Minister on 11 November 1975. Oswald Syme retired in 1964 and his grandson Ranald Macdonald was appointed managing director at the age of 26 and two years later he appointed Graham Perkin as editor; to ensure that the 36-year-old Perkin was free of board influence, Macdonald took on the role of editor-in-chief, a position he held until ...
Steger relocated to Melbourne, Australia, in 1987, where he worked as a journalist for The Herald before moving to The Sunday Age in 1990. [2] He became literary editor of both The Age and The Sunday Age in 2000, as part of which he contributes a weekly column to the "Spectrum" section of The Age each Saturday, summarising the latest news from both the local and international literary communities.
[4] [5] Kingsbury joined The New York Times in August 2017 as a deputy editorial page editor. [4] [6] On June 7, 2020, she was named "as acting Editorial Page Editor through the November election" [7] at The New York Times, replacing James Bennet. [8] In January 2021, she was named Opinion Editor by Publisher A.G. Sulzberger. [2]
Republican proposal to raise Social Security retirement age will be met with fierce push back | Letters to the editor. ... (Mar 19 Opinion) ...
Biden's age, ability should not be off limits As the 2024 presidential election kicks into high gear, a lot has been made about the health of President Joe Biden.
Hurt is the son of investigative journalist and former Reader's Digest editor Henry C. Hurt and his wife, Margaret Nolting Williams. [8] [9] His older brother, Robert Hurt, is a former United States Congressman. Charles Hurt had been a possible congressional candidate before his brother's term ended in 2016.
John Jeffries Martin, opinion contributor November 27, 2024 at 7:00 AM Ever since Donald Trump was re-elected, I have been haunted by a passage in Machiavelli’s “The Prince.”
He returned to Melbourne in 1967, as diplomatic and defence correspondent for The Age, later becoming the paper's assistant editor, then associate editor. In 1975, he was appointed U.S. correspondent at The Age's Washington, D.C. bureau, where he worked until 1981. [1] In 1981, Burns was appointed editor-in-chief at The Age. His appointment was ...