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Walter Lippmann

Walter Lippmann

Walter Lippmann

Public Opinion will be released on June 12, 1997 in Trade Paperback
Jun 12, 1997
Public Opinion is now available in Trade Paperback
Jun 12, 1997
Public Opinion will be released on June 12, 1997 in
Jun 12, 1997
Public Opinion is now available in
Jun 12, 1997

Authors on the Web

Guardian.co.uk, May 25, 2012
...the acquisition of status symbols. The phrase next appeared in print in a 1923 Vanity Fair article by Walter Lippmann, "Education and the White-Collar Class" (which Fitzgerald probably read); it warned that widening access to education was creating...
Roanoke Times, May 13, 2012
...White House, Johnson asked Church where he got his information; Church said he got it from [newspaper columnist] Walter Lippmann. Johnson to Church: “Well, the next time you need a dam in Idaho, you just ask Walter Lippmann...
NYC Independent Media Center, April 26, 2012
...television) craze continues....we are destined to have a nation of morons." Well before television arrived, journalist Walter Lippmann called the public "the bewildered herd." In policy matters, their function is to be "spectators," not "participants."...
Columbia Journalism Review, April 25, 2012
...of the fundamental necessity of original reporting. Facts are the coin of the realm in a democracy. As Walter Lippmann put it, “A free press is not a privilege but an organic necessity in a great society. Without criticism and reliable and intelligent...
The Atlantic Wire, April 11, 2012
...of the Director’s hyperbolic media commentary. Drew Pearson was “a jackal” and Jimmy Wechsler “a rat,” while Walter Lippmann was the “coyote of the press” and Art Buchwald a “sick alleged humorist.” Hoover did worse to others,...
New York Times, March 9, 2012
...outstripped its small staff and its small circulation (around 50,000). Founded in 1914 by the political journalist Walter Lippmann, it has long been a part of the liberal movement, counting presidents as readers, including John F. Kennedy, and luminaries...
New York Times, March 9, 2012
...outstripped its small staff and its small circulation (around 50,000). Founded in 1914 by the political journalist Walter Lippmann, it has long been a part of the liberal movement, counting presidents as readers, including , and luminaries as writers,...
Venezuelanalysis.com, March 2, 2012
...Amidst highly politicised coverage of Venezuela and the media’s obsession with its controversial leader, Hugo Chávez, it is clear that the current government is the most proactive of the progressive forces on the South American continent. To get a...
Middle East Online, March 2, 2012
...possible. The health of a nation’s democracy tracks closely to the distribution of wealth, a point that Walter Lippmann made in 1914 in his book Drift and Mastery, a book that was one of the hallmarks of the Progressive Era arguing that without a...
Consortium News, February 29, 2012
...possible. The health of a nation’s democracy tracks closely to the distribution of wealth, a point that Walter Lippmann made in 1914 in his book Drift and Mastery, a book that was one of the hallmarks of the Progressive Era arguing that without a...
Capital Times, February 28, 2012
...echo chamber just becomes louder. It doesn’t have to be like this. A long time ago, someone (Walter Lippmann, to be specific) “decided” since the public was clearly not qualified to make or even think about policy, citizens only job could be...
Newsmagazine Network, February 23, 2012
...peoples who did the carving but Wilson, French Premier Georges Clemenceau and British Prime Minister David Lloyd George. Walter Lippmann saw what a reckless undertaking this was. He said, “We are feeding on maps, talking of populations as if they were...
Current TV, February 18, 2012
...peoples who did the carving but Wilson, French Premier Georges Clemenceau and British Prime Minister David Lloyd George. Walter Lippmann saw what a reckless undertaking this was. He said, We are feeding on maps, talking of populations as if they were...
Globe and Mail, February 17, 2012
...John Irving first edition, a 1911 translation of a Euripides play and a book of interviews with journalist Walter Lippmann. No friend of mine has these things in their home, but it's a charming gambit. A question mark. When I visited with my wife and son...