And lived with the dominant culture and so some of the stuff that ive learned from that i put back in my cartoons. Next on book tv, Barbara Matusow editor of scoop recounts the life and career of her late husband pulitzer prizewinning reporter jack nelson who died in 2009 at the age of 80. Ms. Matusow is joined by former president jimmy carter, former mayor of atlanta and u. S. Ambassador to the United Nations andrew young and former Justice Department spokesman Terry Adamson in the discussion of jack nelsons ms. Moore scoop the evolution of a southern reporter. Its about an hour good evening everyone. My name is haint and i will be moderating this wonderful panel tonight. The director of the Journalism Program at emory and a coauthor of a book about News Coverage in the Civil Rights Movement that featured jack quite prominently. First i want to thank the Carter Library and museum for hosting this and cosponsoring this and also Emory University which houses the papers and the wisdom of
Atlanta Press Club inducts Robin Meade, Scott Slade into Hall of Fame ajc.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ajc.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Individual Consciousness, Lengthy Biographies and Other Letters to the Editor
Mount Chamberlin in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, left, and Trisul Peak in the Himalaya.Credit.Photographs, from left: Christopher Miller for The New York Times’ Michael Benanav for The New York Times
Jan. 22, 2021
To the Editor:
In her review of Andrea Pitzer’s “Icebound: Shipwrecked at the Edge of the Word” (Jan. 10), Rachel Slade concludes by writing: “‘Icebound’ is a reminder that there was once a time when things were unknown. And when their ships bumped up against the edge of the Arctic, the Europeans gazed with horror and awe at the sparkling ice and wondered what Edens lay beyond, waiting to be discovered.”
Lengthy Biographies, James Joyce and Other Letters to the Editor
Sylvia Plath in Paris in the spring of 1956.Credit.Gordon Lameyer/Lilly Library and Elizabeth Lameyer Gilmore
Jan. 8, 2021
To the Editor:
Daphne Merkin is to be lauded for her review of “Red Comet” (Dec. 27), Heather Clark’s new work about the “Short Life and Blazing Art of Sylvia Plath.” The combination of extraordinary talent and self-destructive behavior culminating in suicide sparks the curiosity of many of us, especially those, like myself, who have spent decades working in the world of mental health. Merkin herself is someone who has suffered her own depression and has shared this with us in many illuminating and provocative works.