2muchcoffeeman
Well-Known Member
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/28/us/28safire.html?_r=1&hp
Pancreatic cancer.
Pancreatic cancer.
2muchcoffeeman said:http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/28/us/28safire.html?_r=1&hp
Pancreatic cancer.
JR said:His "On Language" column in the NYTimes was my favourite weekly read.
JR said:His "On Language" column in the NYTimes was my favourite weekly read.
William Safire said:Favorite
sportsguydave said:Never agreed with a word he wrote ... but he was a master a writing it. RIP, Mr. Safire.
JR said:His "On Language" column in the NYTimes was my favourite weekly read.
Ditto. It's a must-read every week.JR said:His "On Language" column in the NYTimes was my favourite weekly read.
da man said:When I worked at one of the NYT's regional papers, the mother ship sent us a behind-the-scenes documentary-type film of Times reporters at work to reinforce good reporting practices (and just to show off). The one thing I remember about it was Safire calling some political big shot (the White House, maybe, or a senator). The receptionist asks him, ``May I tell him what this is regarding?'' and Safire fires back, ``I never say what I'm calling about.''
finishthehat said:Not to **** on the dead, but Safire went a bit off the deep end during the Clinton era with that language column -- basically took every wild rumor/pseudo-scandal about Clinton as a peg to examine some alleged new word or phrase that arose from it.
Stephen Sondheim called him on it (I think he used the term "near-pathological") in a letter that Safire, to his credit, printed in his column, admitting it was "a good hit."