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48 Sentences With "be the editor of"

How to use be the editor of in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "be the editor of" and check conjugation/comparative form for "be the editor of". Mastering all the usages of "be the editor of" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Did you want to be the editor of Time Magazine?
In October 2015, Yiannopoulos was promoted to be the editor of Breitbart's brand new Tech section.
You seem like the kind of guy who might be the editor of Fortune Magazine at some point.
You are not running to be the editor of Politifact: It can be tempting to make correcting such errors and deceptions the essence of your debate strategy.
Oliver Roeder, the reporter for FiveThirtyEight who broke the news about the accusations, reports that Mr. Parker, a contractor for USA Today, will no longer be the editor of the USA Today puzzle or for any Gannett features, but will continue to work for Universal/Uclick.
Thomas Kibble Hervey (4 February 1799 – 27 February 1859) was a Scottish-born poet and critic. He rose to be the Editor of the Athenaeum, a leading British literary magazine in the 19th century.
It was later reported that Achu Rajamani would compose the music, Sriram would handle the cinematography, Marthand K Venkatesh would be the editor of the film, while Ramanjaneyulu would be the art director of the film.
After Shanks' retirement at the end of 2017, Robert R. Cargill was selected to be the editor of the publication. The society also published Bible Review (1985–2005) and Archaeology Odyssey, which merged with Biblical Archaeology Review after 2005.
Owens will be the editor of a forthcoming website, The School of Sex for Disabled People, which is being created by sexually experienced disabled people and those who provide them with sexual services. She is currently writing her autobiography.
S.A.S. (1902), p. 321. Additionally, he went on to be the editor of the Journal of the Royal Microscopical Society, the main publication of the Royal Microscopical Society, an institution in which he was a fellow and also served three terms as vice-president.
There was a director for each branch. From its creation the central director of Shaheen Fawz was Mr. Kazi Shamsul Huq. He used to be the editor of a section of a weekly magazine, namely ‘Weekly Jahane Nao”. The name of that section was “ meeting of Shaheen”.
Today, Tagebuch einer Verlorenen is accepted as a work of fiction. However, when it first published, the book was believed to be the actual diary of a young woman. Böhme claimed only to be the editor of the manuscript. Controversy arose over the story revealed in the book.
Anna Fifield (born 14 March 1976) is the former Beijing bureau chief for The Washington Post and soon to be the editor of The Dominion Post. In that role, she focused her attention on news and issues of Japan, North Korea, and South Korea. She has been to North Korea a dozen times.
This show led him to present Media@SAfm and then to AM Live after the resignation of John Perlman. Maggs refers to the show as his "great joy". In August 2007, Maggs was announced to be the editor of a magazine called Mags which itself is about content relating to magazines. In February 2008, Maggs joined the e.
In 2015, Yang Chao invited her to be the editor of Crosscurrent (2016). Before her, the editor was changed twice. Yang Mingming was the right one, and she contributed to the final success of the film. After Crosscurrent, Yang Mingming got to direct her first feature-length film Girls Always Happy (2018), which was supervised by Yang Chao and produced by Yang Jing.
The newspaper was established by William Lane in 1887, publishing its first issue on 19 November 1887. James Drake, future Attorney-General of Australia, was a shareholder, writer and joint editor. In 1891, Lane was approached to be the editor of The Worker, a newspaper being established by the local labour unions. As a consequence, Lane sold The Boomerang to Gresley Lukin.
Edith Shackleton Heald was born on 12 September 1885 in Manchester, the younger daughter of John Thomas Heald, and Mary Shackleton. They were both from Stacksteads, Lancashire, and he was originally a schoolmaster. She had an older sister, Nora Shackleton Heald, with whom she co-owned the Chantry House. Nora would go on to be the editor of The Queen and The Lady.
When Hughes returned from the United Nations he began work as a consultant for the Deseret News. Following his counsel, the paper switched its distribution to morning rather than afternoon, which improved circulation. Following the success of this change, the board of directors asked Hughes to be the editor of the newspaper. Hughes accepted the position, and became the first non- Mormon editor of the Deseret News.
Champika Liyanaarachchi is a journalist, an academic and the first woman to be the editor of a daily newspaper in Sri Lanka. Liyanaarachchi was the Editor of Sri Lanka's largest selling independent English daily, the Daily Mirror from January 2007 to January 2015. She stepped down from editor post in January 2015 on completing eight years as editor. Currently she serves as the Consultant editor of the paper.
Within months, he was sent to New Hampshire to cover the 1992 presidential primary, thus beginning his career as a political writer. He went on to be the editor of the Arts section, and the Assistant Managing Editor in charge of the Style section. By his own admission in an article in National Journal, Von Drehle says, "I like to change gears every four or five years."Lunney, Kellie.
After graduating from high school, Price attended Northeastern State University where she received a scholarship her second year to be the editor of the college newspaper. She graduated from NSU with a degree in music education. While at Northeastern State University, Price met her husband, Norris. The two dated through their sophomore year and married after he returned from Japan after serving a year in the National Guard.
These turned out to be forgeries undertaken by an Italian mother and daughter, Amalia and Rosa Panvini. In 1981 Rupert Murdoch, who owned several other papers in Australia, New Zealand and the UK, purchased Times Newspapers Ltd, which owned both The Times and its Sunday sister. Murdoch appointed Frank Giles to be the editor of The Sunday Times. The historian Hugh Trevor-Roper became an independent national director of The Times in 1974.
The magazine had its origins in the newsletter of the Birmingham User's Group, an independent Atari club based in England. Les Ellingham was appointed to be the editor of the newsletter, but decided to produce a magazine with broader appeal instead. He remained editor of Page 6 throughout its entire run of 85 issues. Although subscription-only for most of its life, it was available through newsagents during the late 1980s and early 1990s.
The administration of the Ghanaian Presbyterian Church appointed Adom to be the Editor of the Christian Messenger from 1966 to 1970 for a tenure of about four and a half years. The newspaper established in 1883 by the Basel Mission. as the church's news bulletin, He was a member of the Review Committee which revised the New Testament in Ga and Dangme. He was also a member of the Bible Society of Ghana.
He was admitted to the New York Bar in 1888, but he soon moved to Denver, Colorado, and practiced law there for two years until 1890, when he moved back to New Hampshire after his father fell ill. and died. In 1893 Ellis went to work as an editor of the Keene Evening Sentinel and the weekly New Hampshire Weekly Sentinel. Ellis continued to be the editor of the Sentinel until two years before his death.
The ceiling was defined as discriminatory promotion patterns where the written promotional policy is non- discriminatory, but in practice denies promotion to qualified females. Lawrence presented this at the annual Conference of the Women's Institute for Freedom of the Press at meeting the National Press. The term was later used in March 1984 by Gay Bryant. She was the former editor of Working Woman magazine and was changing jobs to be the editor of Family Circle.
She also suggests it is possible for women to contribute greatly to Wikipedia, explaining, "What Wikipedia needs is you, the female editor, with your unique aptitudes and interests and talkpage tone. Without you, gender imbalance and systemic bias continue on Wikipedia." On January 23, 2020, Stephenson- Goodknight was announced by Wikipedia to be the editor of the 6,000,000th article on Wikipedia, namely the article on Canadian author Maria Elise Turner Lauder. Wikipedia now has more than 6 million articles in English, Manish Singh, January 23, 2020, techcrunch.com.
In Superman #366 (Dec. 1981) George Taylor was shown to be the editor of the Daily Planet on Earth- One before Perry White. Taylor, who had succeeded a man named Morton, chose White to replace him when he retired at age sixty-five, an event that coincided with Clark Kent's junior year at Metropolis University.Superman: The Secret Years #4 (May 1985) George Taylor, Junior, became editor of the Daily Star in Star City and continuously tried to prove that Oliver Queen was the masked hero Green Arrow.
After finishing the Tây Tiến offensives, in late of 1948 Quang Dũng became the Head of Propaganda and Instruction Department in Tây Tiến Regiment, and then the Head of Letters and Arts Delegation of 3rd Inter-region. In August 1951, Quang Dũng concluded his military service. After the Resistance war ended in 1954, he was appointed to be the Editor of Văn Nghệ newspaper, then worked at Literature Publisher. During these times Quang Dũng produced many literature works, including poems, short stories, drama screenplays.
He spent much of his time recruiting contributors to the two magazines, and published a new work in 1847, James the Second but claimed only to be the "editor" of the work. By 1847, he was able to purchase the copyright of many of his earlier works in order to reissue them. During this time, he was working on what would be his best novel, The Lancashire Witches. By the end of 1847, the plan of the novel was finished and the work was to be published in The Sunday Times.
Khwaja received his primary education from his home and was later graduated from Jamia Millia Islamia. Khwaja was a member of Delhi Urdu Academy, Ghalib Academy and Ghalib Institute, and was the Chairman of Ghalib Academy. He was also the founder-member of All India Soofi Conference, Hyderabad, secretary of Khwaja Hasan Nizami Memorial Society and member of National Ameer Khusro Society. Khwaja was also said to be the editor of " the Munadi" (monthly magazine) after his father Khwaja Hasan Nizami from 1955 onwards, which he continued publishing under his editorship from 1955 onwards.
He attended political meetings in Paris before moving in 1883 to Geneva where he was invited by Peter Kropotkin and Elisée Reclus to be the editor of Le Révolté, which was renamed La Révolte when it moved to Paris in 1886. He edited La Révolte from 1887 to 1894. In 1893 Grave wrote La société mourante et l'anarchie, prefaced by Octave Mirbeau, for which he was sentenced to two years in prison. Mirbeau, like Élisée Reclus, Paul Adam, and Bernard Lazare had testified on Grave's behalf, but to no avail.
Throughout his academic career, Much served on the committees of many scholarly committees and was the editor of several scholarly journals. He declined to be the editor of the first edition of the Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde, to which he was nevertheless one of the most important contributors. Much retired from his Chair as Professor Emeritus in 1934, but continued to lecture at the University. A popular professor, Much acquaired a large following of students at the University of Vienna, many of whom would later acquire prominent positions in the field.
In 1937 he was picked by Kenneth Murray to be the editor of a new magazine, Man. He married Margaret on 2 April 1937 and they had four children, one of which died in infancy.Sydney Morning Herald, 18 August 1939, p10 Greenop was an accomplished self-taught linguist and could speak seven languages with some fluency. He wrote numerous articles and fiction stories for Man, as well as dozens of patriotic and sentimental poems, many of which were collected in a volume of his verses published by K.G. Murray Publishing in 1944.
He and his wife Nanie owned the house for nine years when they sold it in March 1891. with While he lived in town he became involved with the local newspaper business and bought the Winterset Chronicle and the Madisonian. He would go on to be the editor of the Iowa Homestead, a leading farm publication in Des Moines, and found Wallace's Farmer. The two-story frame, Italianate, house features a hip roof, and ornamental iron work on the roof, above the main entry porch, and above the side window bay.
Dov Hoenig was an editor for Golan's previous films and was initially planned to also be the editor of The Apple. He also was on set with Golan on shooting days for the film. Recht described him as his "spiritual partner," reasoning that he was the only person working on the movie that agreed with Recht and Yotvat's stylistic and production ideas. However, Golan and Hoenig always had arguments with each other during the making of Golan's other works, and when working on The Apple, they nearly got into a fistfight.
He accompanied Zulfikar Ali Bhutto on several foreign tours. He was an active member of the Pakistan Writers' Guild and a member of the Progressive Writers Association which was then and still is a part of the larger organization, the Progressive Writers Movement in the India-Pakistan subcontinent. Shaukat Siddiqui worked at the news-desks of the Karachi newspapers Times, Pakistan Standard, and the Morning News. He finally got promoted to be the editor of the Karachi Urdu language newspapers Daily Anjaam, the Weekly Al-Fatah and the Daily Musawat, before finally saying goodbye to journalism in 1984.
Senior editor at DC Comics, Peter Tomasi, was the editor of the Batman books in 2006. He was supposed to be the editor of Grant Morrison's Superman story, All Star Superman, however when that changed and he was exclusively on Batman, he decided to work with Morrison. Tomasi spoke with DC's executive editor, Dan Didio and convinced him to hire Morrison for the main Batman book. Morrison had previously worked with the character of Batman in the graphic novel Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth, where he explored the psyches of Batman and a number of his enemies,Morrison, Grant.
From September 1934, Wallace-Johnson became the subject of scathing articles in the Gold Coast Independent. The headline of one such article read "Meddlesome Wallace-Johnson Must Either Shut Up or Get Out: The Gold Coast Wants Helpers Not Rabid Confusionists." The author of the vehement attack article, speculated to be the editor of the paper, told Wallace-Johnson to go to Liberia, where he could become president, or to Nigeria.. He believed that if the leader's actions were not suppressed, the "country and its vital interests [would be] in hopeless ruin.". Soon after, a press war erupted between the Gold Coast Independent and two papers supporting Wallace-Johnson, the Gold Coast Spectator and the Vox Populi.
Fields' career as a film editor commenced when the director Irving Lerner recruited her to be the editor of the film Studs Lonigan (1960); Fields and Lerner had both worked on The Savage Eye. In 1963, she edited An Affair of the Skin, which was directed by Ben Maddow (another Savage Eye contact). Over the next five years, Fields edited several other independent films, but her best known work was on the Disney film The Legend of the Boy and the Eagle (1967). She also made documentaries funded by the United States government through the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO), the United States Information Agency (USIA), and the U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW).
The magazine was founded in 1952 by a consortium of photographers and proponents of photography: Ansel Adams, Melton Ferris, Dorothea Lange, Ernest Louie, Barbara Morgan, Beaumont Newhall, Nancy Newhall, Dody Warren, and Minor White.“Camera Notes: A West Coast Group Starts a New Quarterly,” New York Times, March 16, 1952. It was the first journal since Alfred Stieglitz’s Camera Work to explore photography as a fine art.Michael R. Peres, ed., The Focal Encyclopedia of Photography, 4th edition (New York: Elsevier, 2007), p. 223, The journal’s mission, as stated in its inaugural issue: Minor White was appointed by the founders to be the editor of the magazine, which was at first published out of San Francisco.
According to Blackner, who himself was suspected of involvement with the Luddite group,Nottinghamshire in the Eighteenth Century: A Study of Life and Labour, By Jonathan David Chambers, Routledge, p.300, accessed 22 March 2008 the name came from a youth called Ludlam who when asked by his father to square his needles just took a hammer and beat them to a heap.Understanding History by John Child, 1992, Heinemann, , accessed 22 March 2008 He was the landlord for some years of the Rancliffe Arms, Sussex Street, Nottingham, and died there on 22 December 1816. After Blackner's death, James Orange reviewed his contribution to the history of Nottingham and noted the accuracy of his dates, however he was surprised that Blackner had ever risen to be the editor of a national newspaper.
Funerary monument, Brompton Cemetery, London Having been commissioned into the British Army Medical Service his first Imperial tour of service was in India, from thence to a 5-year spell with the Gibraltar garrison, where along with his military duties he acted as the Rock's Medical Officer for Health. Whilst he was there he also found time to be the Editor of the Gibraltar Chronicle and was active in horse-racing and polo matches. Returning to England in 1890 he was appointed DADG, AMD2 at the War Office, a post which he held until 1902. In recognition of services during the Second Boer War, he was appointed a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG) in the South African Honours list published on 26 June 1902.
Davies was a member of the faculty of Modern History at the University of Oxford from 1919 to 1924, where he served as an assistant to C. H. Firth, the Regius Professor of History at Oxford from 1904 to 1925. After Firth's death in 1936, Davies wrote the memoir of Firth's life for the Proceedings of the British Academy published in 1937, edited for publication Firth's A Commentary on Macaulay's History of England (Macmillan, 1938), and also saw through publication Firth's posthumously published Essays, Historical and Literary (Oxford University Press, 1938) and completed his Regimental History of Cromwell's Army (1940). In February 1923, a joint committee of the Royal Historical Society and the American Historical Society nominated Davies to be the editor of what would become Davies' most widely-used work, Bibliography of British History. Stuart Period, 1603–1714.
Power Comics was the first attempt to integrate elements of American superhero comics into mainstream British comic publishing, motivated by the huge success of Stan Lee's line of Marvel Comics in the USA. Besides reprinting many of Marvel's most popular series such as Spider-Man and the X-Men, there was also an attempt to create a home-grown British superhero: firstly with Johnny Future, who appeared in Fantastic prior to its merger with Terrific; and subsequently with Tri-Man, who appeared in Smash after its merger with Fantastic. As well as drawing heavily on Stan Lee's creative output, Power Comics also attempted to emulate Lee's chatty style and community building efforts, through their own editors, who were Alf and Bart on some titles, and Alf and Cos on others. In point of fact, "Alf" was Odhams staff editor Alf Wallace, "Bart" was Eagle editor Bob Bartholomew, and "Cos" was Albert Cosser, who would later be the editor of TV Times magazine.
20 At House's urging, the school eventually expanded to include an industrial department. House was both head of the school and the youngest man in the mission. The school grew from 15 to 20 students living in a hired house to 75 students, a modest campus, two large school buildings, an industrial department, and the church. In America his work was recognized, and in 1886 he was given the degree of Doctor of Divinity by his Alma Mater, when he was just a little over 40 years old. House who spoke fluent Bulgarian was also sent to Constantinople for one year, from 1891-1892, to be the editor of the widely circulated Bulgarian newspaper Zornitsa (Morning Star), which was then the oldest newspaper published in Turkey.NY Times Obit Following a furlough to America, House was reassigned to work in Thessaloniki, Ottoman Empire, around 1895. In 1903, House was targeted for kidnapping by a group of Bulgarian revolutionaries who seized Miss Ellen M. Stone and Mrs. Katerina Tsilka instead.
In 2011 Professor Southall was also invited to be the key note speaker for The David Harvey Lecture an annual UK Neonatal Update in London which was published as a paper. In 2012, Professor Southall was elected a member of the Ray E Helfer Society, a prestigious organisation of child protection specialists based in the USA whose mission is to help prevent and reduce the harm resulting from child maltreatment, by advancing the work of physicians in the areas of education, clinical care, research and advocacy. In 2013 Professor Southall was invited to be the Editor of a special issue covering global child abuse and child protection in the medical journal “Paediatrics and International Child Health” Finally between 2010 and 2014, Professor Southall has been the Editor of a recently published (October 2014) 921 page textbook. This book includes chapters written and reviewed by over 100 experts from around the world and addresses the hospital care of pregnant women and girls, newborn infants and children in poorly resourced countries.
Following education at Oxford University, Gielgud began his career as a secretary to a Member of Parliament, before moving into writing when he took a job as the sub-editor of a comic book / magazine. It was this job that led him to work for the BBC's own listings magazine, the Radio Times, as the assistant to the editor Eric Maschwitz. This was Gielgud's first connection to the Corporation, and although he was not yet involved in any radio production, he often used his position at the magazine to make his thoughts on radio dramas felt: in his autobiography, he later confessed to having written several of the letters appearing on the magazine's correspondence page, supposedly from listeners, criticising various aspects of the Corporation's drama productions.Hannak Khalil "Val Gielgud’s legacy to Radio Drama today", About the BBC (blog), 4 April 2013 Maschwitz and Gielgud were close friends, and even wrote detective fiction together – Gielgud would later on go on to be responsible in whole or part for twenty-six detective / mystery novels, one short story collection, two historical novels, nineteen stage plays, four film screenplays, forty radio plays, seven non-fiction books and be the editor of a further two books.

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