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David Nyhan (December 23, 1940 – January 23, 2005), born Charles David Nyhan Jr., was a journalist and biographer, whose op-ed column ran in The Boston Globe newspaper for many years. He graduated from Harvard College where he played varsity football. [1]
Jacoby's column has been published on the op-ed page of The Boston Globe since 1994. From 1987 to 1994, he was chief editorial writer for the Boston Herald.Within months of his debut at the Globe, he was described by the left-leaning Boston Phoenix as "the region's pre-eminent spokesman for the Conservative Nation," and a columnist who had "quickly established himself as a must-read."
Racism. Image. Reality”, a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting in 2018. Prior to becoming a columnist, he covered local news as well as state and local politics. He was also the paper's deputy political editor from 1995 to 1997. Walker was named an associate editor of the Globe in 2021.
Joan Elizabeth Vennochi (born January 27, 1953) is an American newspaper columnist. She specializes in local and national politics at The Boston Globe.With Stephen A. Kurkjian, Alexander B. Hawes Jr., Nils Bruzelius, and Robert M. Porterfield she won the 1980 Pulitzer Prize for Local Investigative Specialized Reporting.
Shirley Leung is an American journalist who covers business, especially as it relates to innovation and growth, politics, gender, and race. [1] She is an associate editor at The Boston Globe, where she writes a twice-a-week business column and is host of the weekly Globe Opinion podcast "Say More with Shirley Leung".
She was a reporter at the Detroit Free Press starting in 1965 and has worked as an associate editor at The Boston Globe since 1967. Her column was syndicated by The Washington Post Writers Group in 1976. In 1996, she taught at Stanford University as the first Lorry I. Lokey Visiting professor in Professional Journalism. [2]
In his publisher's column in The Weekly Tab, Pergament frequently railed against the biases of The Boston Globe. In response to the financial success of The Tabs, which earned $12 million in annual revenue by 1989, the Globe launched its own weekly section aimed at the same demographic.
According to the Boston Globe, Milano is a veteran music critic whose 2007 book, The Sound of Our Town: A History of Boston Rock and Roll, "should be required reading for anyone interested in understanding Boston's unique contribution to rock 'n' roll." [4] Milano entered the Boston music scene in the 1980s as a music journalist. [1]