The Shadow Yearbook - Editors

Editors

  • 1925 Austin S. Van Arsdale
  • 1926 Daniel Cregar
  • 1927 Joseph E. Wardell
  • 1931 John Terranova
  • 1933 T. Leonard Hill
  • 1934 David Major
  • 1935 John J. Snyder
  • 1936 Ken Bennett
  • 1937 Calista White
  • 1938 Lydia Kerkendall and Allan Ziegler
  • 1940 Frank Witman
  • 1941 Ernest Curtin
  • 1942 Val L. Corradi, Jr.
  • 1943 Joan MacNaughton
  • 1944 Jean Hutchinson
  • 1971 Blaine S. Greenfield
  • 1972 Paul E. Lakeman
  • 1973 Kathy Santy
  • 1974 Pat Bontempo
  • 1975 Janet Strom
  • 1976 Steve McIver
  • 1977 Debbie Teck
  • 1978 Jodi Danow
  • 1979 Marie Inferrera
  • 1981 Rob Hagedorn
  • 1982 Bradley Kent
  • 1985 Patricia Schauder
  • 1988 Lisa Anne Unterkofler
  • 1989 Shawneen Buckley
  • 1990 Andrew McCaul
  • 1991 Stephanie Felzenberg
  • 1992 Erin J. Rielly
  • 1993 Jason Kirschner
  • 1994 Mary Hirsch
  • 1995 Raechel Bermann
  • 1996 Raechel Bermann
  • 1997 Raechel Bermann
  • 1998 Jaime Moltisanti
  • 1999 Jaime Moltisanti
  • 2000 Terrence Wiggins
  • 2001 Sharon Kelley
  • 2002 Sharon Kelley
  • 2003 Matthew Popilowski
  • 2004 Matthew Popilowski
  • 2005 Matthew Popilowski
  • 2006 Laura Franko and Kimberly Frey
  • 2007 Laura Franko and Kimberly Frey
  • 2008 Laura Franko
  • 2009 Amanda Earle
  • 2010 Katie Beckman
  • 2011 Christine Grazio

Read more about this topic:  The Shadow Yearbook

Famous quotes containing the word editors:

    Narrowed-down by her early editors and anthologists, reduced to quaintness or spinsterish oddity by many of her commentators, sentimentalized, fallen-in-love with like some gnomic Garbo, still unread in the breadth and depth of her full range of work, she was, and is, a wonder to me when I try to imagine myself into that mind.
    Adrienne Rich (b. 1929)

    The editors are committed to nothing save this: to keep common sense as fast as they can, to belabor sham as agreeably as possible, to give civilized entertainment.
    —H.L. (Henry Lewis)

    The trenchant editorials plus the keen rivalry natural to extremely partisan papers made it necessary for the editors to be expert pugilists and duelists as well as journalists. An editor made no assertion that he could not defend with fists or firearms.
    —Federal Writers’ Project Of The Wor, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)