William Lutz is an American linguist specialising in doublespeak and the use of plain language. Lutz is widely published on the topic of doublespeak, or the manipulation of language, and has also worked with corporations and government in the use of 'plain language'. He wrote a famous essay The World of Doublespeak on this subject. Lutz has been Professor of English at Rutgers University's campus in Camden, New Jersey since 1991. William Lutz also has a entry in the book titled "The Longman Reader", a college book for students. His story describes the four different types of Doublespeak and the dangers of doublespeak. Doublespeak is language deliberately constructed to disguise or distort its actual meaning, often resulting in a communication bypass. ... Doublespeak is language deliberately constructed to disguise or distort its actual meaning, often resulting in a communication bypass. ... The Camden campus of Rutgers University was formerly known as the College of South Jersey, which was merged with Rutgers in 1950 by an act of the New Jersey legislature. ... Image:City Hall Camden. ...
Lutz is an unincorporated census-designated place in Hillsborough County, Florida, United States.
Lutz began with the construction of a small train depot on the Tampa Northern Railroad which carried materials from Tampa to Brooksville.
As people moved to the rural community from Tampa, the Lutz area continued to grow until it no longer depended on the "Lutz Junction", which was demolished in the late 1960s.
Lutz to come out of her home and told her that the Lutzes were to clear from the property all buildings that belonged to them.
Lutz himself testified that when he built the garage he had no survey and thought he was getting it on his own property, which certainly falls short of establishing that he did it under a claim of title hostile to the true owner.
WilliamLutz's brother Charlie was mentally incompetent; after the principal case, Eugene was appointed as his guardian.