FACTOID # 140: In Switzerland, the average person has to work for 102 minutes to buy a kilogram of beef - one of the longest times in the developed world. On the other hand, they only have work 14 hours to buy a refrigerator for it.
 
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Encyclopedia > Ben Bradlee

Benjamin Crowninshield Bradlee (born August 26, 1921) is the vice president of the Washington Post. As managing editor of the Post from 1965 to 1991, he challenged the federal government over the right to publish the Pentagon papers. He became famous for overseeing the publication of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein's stories documenting the Watergate Scandal. Bradlee is one of only four people who knows the true identity of Deep Throat.


Benjamin Bradlee was born in Boston, Massachusetts. He attended Harvard University, graduating in 1942. He served in the US Naval Reserve during World War II. He first worked for the Washington Post in 1948 as a reporter. He was a reporter in various assignments there until 1961, when he became a senior editor. He maintained that position until 1965 when he was promoted to managing editor.


His lowest professional moment came in 1981. Janet Cooke, a Washington Post reporter, won a Pulitzer Prize for a "Jimmy's World", a profile of an eight year old heroin addict. It turned out to be complete fiction. Ensuring accuracy was the editor's job, and he had failed miserably and publicly.


He published an autobiography in 1995, A Good Life: Newspapering and Other Adventures.






  Results from FactBites:
 
Character Above All: BEN BRADLEE (120 words)
Benjamin C. Bradlee participated in the PBS television adaptation of Character Above All.
Bradlee retired as executive editor of The Washington Post in September 1991 after 23 years in that position.
Bradlee received a B.A. degree from Harvard University.
Ben Bradlee - MSN Encarta (411 words)
Ben Bradlee, born in 1921, vice president and executive editor of the Washington Post when that newspaper published the Pulitzer Prize-winning articles that initially exposed the Watergate scandal.
Benjamin Crowninshield Bradlee was born in Boston, Massachusetts, and earned a bachelor's degree from Harvard University in 1942.
Bradlee retired as executive editor of the Post in 1991, but continued as a vice president at-large.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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