Gail Collins
Clark Hoyt Says His Column 'Was Not a Message' For Times Columnists to 'Tone it Down'
On June 22, the Times public editor Clark Hoyt had a few words for the Times’ Maureen Dowd for several primary-season columns that disparaged Hillary Clinton. "Even [Ms. Dowd], I think, by assailing Clinton in gender-heavy terms in column after column, went over the top this election season."
So two days ago, current Op-Ed columnist (and former editorial page editor) Gail Collins wrote into Mr. Hoyt’s reader's response column to respond: "When the public editor laces into an opinion page columnist for making fun of a controversial political figure, it sounds like a suggestion that all of us tone things down. I hope I’m hearing wrong. read more »
Times’ Rosenthal Is Glutton For Opinion
NYT: Andrew Rosen-Something Moves Up the Masthead
And how! The release describes Rosenthal's journalistic background, including stints as a Washington correspondent, Denver bureau reporter and AP sports stringer. It does not mention his earliest connection with the profession--and the Times: his birth, in 1956, to a celebrated young foreign correspondent named A.M. Rosenthal.
Collins will depart for book leave, according to the release, and will return as an op-ed columnist.
Barefoot Tasini Running Anti-War Against Hillary
Why Didn’t Times Back Lieberman? Joe Doesn’t Know
A History Lesson with John Tierney
In New Orleans, the mayor seemed to assume all that was beyond his control, just like the mayors in the 1960's who let the riots occur.It's so nice to finally hear someone say it! Damn all those mayors and their pro-riot agendas! And affirmative action and that evil, baby-loving Head Start program: actually more damaging than urban riots. "He's just a very interesting thinker," NYT editorial page editor Gail Collins once said of Mr. Tierney. "Just"? Surely that's faint praise for a man who manages to hold down a job on the op-ed page while being too fucking stupid to dress himself in the morning without assistance. read more » UPDATE: Hey, didn't Mr. Giuliani actually, like, cause a riot among cops in New York City? Huh. —Choire SichaThey said their cities couldn't survive without help from Washington, which proceeded to shower inner cities with money and programs that did more damage than the riots. Cities didn't recover until some mayors, especially Republicans like Rudy Giuliani, tried self-reliance.
Candidates Cramming

Candidates Cramming for A Times Examination












