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Theodore Menline Bernstein (November 17, 1904 –
June 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.[1]
Biography
Bernstein obtained his B.A. from Columbia University in 1924. Among
many other responsibilities in the 1950s and 1960s, 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 Invasion fiasco in
1961, the two settled on a four-column lead headline that put the
invasion into dramatic perspective. However, under pressure from
President John
F. Kennedy, publisher Orvil 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 editor Harrison
Salisbury.
Publications
He wrote or co-wrote 7 books[1]
on grammar and usage, which
have all been reprinted and republished since their first
appearances. They are:
- Headlines and Deadlines: A Manual for Copy Editors
(1933) (coauthored with Robert E. Garst) (ISBN 0-231-04816-5)
- Watch Your Language: A Lively, Informal Guide to Better
Writing, Emanating from the News Room of the New York Times
(1958) (ISBN 0-689-70531-X)
- More Language that Needs Watching: Second Aid for Writers
and Editors, Emanating from the News Room of the New York
Times (1962) (LCCN 62-018182)
- The Careful Writer (1965) (ISBN 0-684-82632-1)
- Miss Thistlebottom's Hobgoblins: The Careful Writer's Guide
To The Taboos, Bugbears, and Outmoded Rules of English Usage
(1971) (ISBN 0374210438)
- Bernstein's Reverse Dictionary (1975) (with the
collaboration of Jane Wagner) (ISBN 0812905660)
- Dos, Don'ts & Maybes of English Usage (1977) (with
the assistance of Marylea Meyersohn and Bertram Lippman) (ISBN
0812906950)
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
References
- ^ a
b
"Died". Time magazine. July 9, 1979. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,920488,00.html. Retrieved 2008-12-16.
"Theodore M. Bernstein, 74, former assistant managing editor of the
New York Times, who served as the paper's prose polisher and syntax
surgeon for almost five decades, authoring seven popular texts on
English usage and journalism; of cancer; in New York City. In a
witty Times house organ called Winners & Sinners, the
shirtsleeves vigilante caught solecists in the act and fended off
such encroaching verbal vices as the politician's "windy-foggery,"
Madison Avenue's "addiction" and faddish "hot-rod
writing.""