- Theodore M. Bernstein
Theodore Menline Bernstein (1904-1979) was an assistant managing editor of "
The New York Times " and from 1925 to 1950 a professor at the Columbia University School of Journalism. He wrote several books ongrammar andusage , including "The Careful Writer" (ISBN 0-684-82632-1) and "Watch Your Language" (ISBN 0-689-70531-X). He was also co-author of "Headlines and Deadlines" (ISBN 0-231-04816-5), a manual for copy editors.Among many other responsibilities in the 1950s and '60's, it fell to Bernstein and his colleague, Lewis Jordan, to make up the next day's front page of the "Times". His colleagues often saved his drafts on particularly newsworthy days. During the run-up to the
Bay of Pigs fiasco in 1961, the two settled on a four-column lead headline that put the invasion into dramatic perspective. However, under pressure from PresidentJohn F. Kennedy , publisherOrvil Dryfoos ordered that the story be toned down, and the headline reduced to one column. Bernstein and Jordan were both infuriated, even after Dryfoos personally explained his decision to them. The story is told in detail in "Without Fear or Favor" by former Times editorHarrison Salisbury .Bernstein obtained his B.A. from
Columbia University in 1924.Quotes
"Now, I am a firm believer in democracy, but I also believe that there are some fields of human activity in which a count of noses does not provide the best basis for law and order." -- from "The Careful Writer"
External links
* [http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/eresources/archives/collections/html/4079212.html 'Theodore M. Bernstein Papers 1922-1981] (Columbia University Library archive listing)
* [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,920488,00.html "Time Magazine" page with brief obit]
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