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 Columns and Editorials

(Links to fine writing in newspapers. Last altered, updated 13October2006.)
+ NEWSPAPERS' AND ONLINE DAILIES' COLUMNS +

+ NON-DAILY ONLINE COLUMNISTS +

+ INDIVIDUAL COLUMNISTS + COLUMNISTS' GROUPS +

 
"Journalism education has pretty much neglected columns  . . . . The heart of journalism may be news reporting, and the soul of journalism the editorial page, but the personality of journalism is the column."
Sam Riley, Editor,
The American Newspaper Columnist (1998).

I harbor a conviction that I can read nothing but columns (editorials, op-ed pieces, commentators and national, local and sports columnists) and remain abreast of current events. In fact, one probably can stay better informed about issues and current debates than one who reads nothing but the front-page news. Besides, it's a lot more fun and one is exposed to the true "literature" of journalism. Some of the finest writing in newspapers is found in columns and editorials (some of the worst, too).

One of the best quick sites for newspaper and online columnists is "My Virtual Newspaper"
Newspapers' Columnists 
(Select newspaper by letter):
A B  C  D E  F G H I J K L  M N  O  P Q R  S  T U V W X Y Z

Albuquerque Journal:
One nice feature of this site is the collection of the week's editorials. Only one or two local columnists, but one can get a feel for the community in a couple of week's reading these writers (and the letters they generate).

American Reporter:
The online newspaper that claims to be the first online publication with original content also houses a stable of pretty good columnists. Despite my being one of the stable, I'm recommending the other fine writers who appear here, and that includes the fine editorials of Editor Joe Shea.

Arizona Republic:
Good site for relatively conservative editorials, but not much for columnists of any stripe.

Arkansas (Little Rock) Democrat-Gazette:
Editorials and one or two commentaries on this page.

Atlanta Journal-Constitution:
Go from here to find what is billed as "realistic conservative thinking for Georgians."

Baltimore Sun:
This stable used to the the haunt of H.L.Mencken; and Jack Germond and Jules Witcover. To get to the Sun's editorials, click here.

Boston Globe:
Sports commentary probably shines best from  the Globe's fine columnist staff. Years ago, The Globe made some notorious headlines  with a scandal surrounding one of its columnist's fabricated stories. I've commented on that elsewhere.

Boston Herald:
Mike Barnicle, the columnist who got in trouble with the Globe, now writes periodically for the Herald. While the Herald often seems a second-fiddle to the larger Globe, many of its people match the Globe's thinkers.

Carroll County (Md.) Times:
An impressive and extensive list of columnists for a relatively small newspaper. Must be that Beltway influence.

Charlotte (N.C.) Observer:
This is the editorials page. Navigate from here to columnists.

Chicago Tribune:
Bob Greene used to highlight the cast in this line-up before discovery of his moral lapse lost him his job and his audience.  The site remains one of the most extensive collection of columnists on the Web.

Chicago Sun Times:
One of the most extensive listings of columnists in any newspaper, obviously competing with the Tribune.

Christian Science Monitor:
Some of the sanest commentary on the everyday world is found in the writings of the Monitor's little-known columnists. Their international and national analysts are considered among the most astute and objective observers as well. Also the home of a special Cybercoverage column.

Cleveland Plain Dealer:
Not exactly easy to find opinions from the home page, but some navigating will track down the opinion page. For entertainment and feature columns, use the "ultra-guide."

Colorado Springs Gazette Telegraph:
For the generally conservative views of this paper, go to this page. You'll have to search from here for regular columnists.

Columbus Dispatch:
Solid presentation of several days of editorials and letters.
 

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Daily Oklahoman:
Local issues dominant and highlighted in these editorials.

Dallas Morning News:
The columnists are gathered with the editorials and letters to the editor.

Denver Post:
A nice touch of the Post's line-up is their identification of many columnists by the job they perform at the newspaper, or, as with the sports columnists, identification of the sport in which each writer specializes. At a separate page, one finds editorials: http://www.denverpost.com/opinion/opinion.htm

Deseret News:
Opinion pieces and columns mixed at this darn good little paper and Web site in Utah. Browsers must hit the "Opinion" link and the calendar link at the top of the home page.
By the way, the Deseret News is produced by the LDS church.

Detroit Free Press:
The Freep, as it's affectionately called, provides one of the most comprehensive newspaper Web sites on the WWW, and this link takes one to columnists, editorials, and readers forums neatly and easily. The site also has a fine job link for positions in the Knight-Ridder chain and lots of helps for journalists online. Of course, it also is disliked by many because it has failed to negotiate a Guild contract for almost four years.

Detroit News:
A fine set of writers housed at this site of the nation's largest afternoon paper.

Earth Times:
This NY Times look-a-like site has Tom Wicker as one of its stable of columnists.

Evening Telegram (of St. John's, Newfoundland):
Sorry for allowing my heritage to show through, but this paper's "columns" link leads to an amazing line-up of local columnists. The provincial paper offers columns from the executive editor, the assignments editor, the managing editor, and several other editors and working stiffs. In addition, the Evening Telegram has an editorial cartoonist with considerable talent, KT, also known as Kevin Tobin.

Everett (Wash.) Herald:
Local columnists mostly posted on this site, although they sneak in the self-syndicated military writer, Tom Philpott, and his "Military Update."
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Fort Worth Star Telegram:
A fairly lengthy list of columnists divided into their local concerns. The Star-Telegram gives good play to online columnists of all stripes. Includes a neat feaure called "Cheers and Jeers" fashioned after the Columbia Journalism Review's "Darts and Laurels" that allows readers to describe instances of daily life deserving praise or criticism.
http://www.star-telegram.com/opinions/cheers.htm

Freelance-Star (Fredericksberg, Va.):
This newspaper recently switched from p.m. to a.m. and added a Sunday section. In the switch, an easy route to its columnists disappeared. One can still get to selected commentaries and editorials from the updated home page, though.

Hampton Roads Pilot:
Nice mix of national and local issues discussed in this mini-archive of opinions from the Virginia coast.

Hartford Courant:
In addition to this site for editorials, the Courant runs a "who we are" page that is a primer on editorials and their meaning and significance. It also tries to explain the "endorsement" process of newspaper editorial boards. Well worth reading.

Houston Chronicle Interactive:
As one might expect, this pioneering online news site has gathered its columnists into a neat and convenient package.

Indianapolis Star News:
A fairly comprehensive sampling of the opinions from these conservative newspapers in America's homeland and the capital of "Hoosier Hysteria."

International Herald Tribune:
The home page serves as a gateway to its features. One simply must scroll down to find the links.

Kansas City Star:
Nice, easy approach to both opinions and columns here. The Star provides a page that introduces its editorial board and offers readers means to contact all columnists, including the syndicated columnists that the newspaper runs.

Las Vegas Review-Journal:
Thorough presentation of a wide range of columnists here.

London Daily Telegraph:
Often only one opinion piece each day show up at this site.

Longview (Wa.) Daily News:
A small paper with a Pulitzer (Mt. St. Helens coverage) reputation and some timely editorial comment collected here.

Los Angeles Times:
This link doesn't go to the Times' regular columns, but one can navigate from here to find them.

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Miami Herald:
Click on the "voices" link to get to Dave Barry and several other fine Herald columnists, including their other Pulitzer Prize winner, Liz Balmaseda, who comments on life in Miami from a Cuban-American perspective.

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:
A sampling of local columnists. One has to search to find national writers or the newspaper's editorials.

Minneapolis Star Tribune:
Great little search tool takes one to an annotated listing of those who've been published.

NandO Times/News:
The pioneering online daily newspaper collects opinions from all over the published WWW. ***truly outstanding collection.

Newark Star-Ledger:
The editorial page editor of the Star-Ledger, Richard Aregood, left the Philadelphia Inquirer in part because he thought he'd have a better staff and a better opportunity to avoid a market-driven opinion organ. The lineup of this chain's columnists shows it's an uphill struggle.

Newsday:
Clean, quick, easily navigable, and with Jimmy Breslin at the top of the order.

New York Daily News:
This link gets one to the News' columnists. Navigate to Metro Sports for the sports columnists and other links for other specialist columnists. One may have to scroll to the bottom of a section as well to find the columnists.

New York Post:
One must consider that almost everything printed in the Post is a column. A nice feature of its site: easy and quick navigation. Check various categories to pinpoint columnists. Go to "gossip," for example.

New York Times:
This page is their op-ed site. Scout around for more columns. This is also home of the famous Pulitzer-winning "Sports of the Times" column.

Norfolk Virginia Pilot:
After scrolling to the end of all the editorials and letters, one finds the columnists.

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Orange County Register:
A large selection of columnists from this important California newspaper. Nicely arranged by topics, this site gets to many that other newspapers never touch. Includes an ombudsman, too, and a columnists who writes about radio!

Oregonian:
Only two columnists get posted on this hard-to-find-the-opinion-pages site. Not up to the standards of such a fine newspaper. I suspect the powers that be are afraid they'll lose advertising if they "give away" their product online.

Orlando Sentinel:
An excellent index to all the opinion in the Sentinel, and for most of them an e-mail address for access to truly interactive journalism. Bravo!

Philadelphia Inquirer:
Some fine editorials here with opening essays and biographical statements by the Editorial Board that produces the editorial and op-ed pages. Also the home of prize-winning cartoonist Tony Auth. Philly Online doesn't exactly make it easy to get to the Inquirer's columns. Work backwards from these bios.

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette:
Biographies and archives accompany each columnist in this stable. Includes Tony Norman, a human interest columnist who often brings a sane sense of God to his musings on life in modern society.

Providence Journal:
One will have to track from here to find the regular columnists. The Projo divides them into internal writers and external writers.

Raleigh News & Observer:
Historically the N&O (site of NandO's origin) has had some prize-winning editorialists. Check on "editorial" (at bottom of the page) and "opinion" to get to the thinkers' pages.

Roanoke (Va.) Times:
A typical site for mid-sized newspaper's opinions.

Rocky Mountain News:
Provides a nice capsule biography of each of its writers. A nice touch.

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Sacramento Bee:
A nice thing about this site is the provision of a mini-archive for each columnist.

San Antonio Express News:
A worthwhile line-up including one or two columns that are produced for online visitors only. Someone in San Antonio is paying much attention to opinions online.

San Diego Union-Tribune:
Mostly editorials at this site, but one or two columnists are featured.

San Francisco Chronicle:
A wonderful array of "darned good columns" as the site boasts of Jon Carroll's offerings. Columnists here attempt to be excessively cute. Too many appear to be trying to out-Barry the East Coast's Dave Barry. Carroll left last year to enter the academic world.

San Jose Mercury News:
This is a special page among the mercury news' opinion pages that offers advice on "how to write for the opinion page."

Sarasota (Fla.) Herald-Tribune:
Under the rubric of "Our Views," this coastal newspaper presents local and national editorials. Finding featured columnists at this site, however, is a difficult chore. Try using the search tool on the home page and put in the names Tom Tryon or Daryl Lease.

Seattle Post-Intelligencer:
About two weeks worth of opinions located here as the P-I plays catch-up on the Web after a 16-year JOA restriction is lifted.

Seattle Times:
The Pacific Northwest's dominant paper provides editorials and key columnists on one page. Some suspect the family publisher of steering the editorial policy in a self-serving manner.

St. Paul Pioneer Press:
Includes a religion columnist of some talent, Clark Morphew, who's likely to ask readers to pray for something, as he recently did in requesting prayer for B'ahais in Iran.  (In the last week of December, 2002, AP reported Morphew's death from lung cancer at age 64.)

St. Petersburg Times:
Hard to know who's doing the writing until one calls up the column here.

St. Louis Post-Dispatch:
This list includes national as well as local columnists.

Stockton (Calif.) Record:
Local angles all around here. For editorials and news columnists, click here.

Sydney Morning Herald -- Column 8:
This is an intriguing column that appears to be an amalgamation of many editorialists' thoughts and observations on life "down under." Something like the New Yorker's "Talk of the Town," but a bit more whimsical and epigrammatic.

Tampa Tribune:
Editorials are archived here cleanly and simply. Another page similarly presents the paper's columnists.

Toledo Blade:
The Blade's food columnist, science columnist and movie critic are among the many other feature columns one finds at this index page. Scroll to the bottom for an archive. Editorials and Letters are accessible from this page.

Toronto Globe and Mail:
Lots of commentary concerning the United States shows up in these writings.

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USAToday:
Larry King headlines this group of mostly entertainment columnists. For more newsy columnists, including Al Neuharth, the paper's founder, and Sam Meddis, USAToday's online technology editor, and many others, click here.

Washington Post:
The bigs inside the Beltway are here: Broder, Boswell, Greenfeld, et al. An excellent archives and search engine allows one to track down all writers.

Washington Times:
This conservative bastion goes heavy on politics in its commentaries.

Wichita Eagle:
Neatly planned and arranged for access to editorials, letters and local columnists. An interesting approach to readers' forum: Callers to a special line have 45 seconds to speak what's on their mind. I'll bet they don't put a similar governor on editorial writers and columnists!

Yakima Herald:
A great lineup of local columnists here.

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Non-Daily Online Columns:

AltaVista's Looksmart Category:

http://altavista.looksmart.com/eus1/eus52213/eus147927/eus277458/r?1&izf&
Alphabetically listed newspaper columnists from the search engine's files. A great list.
Austin (Texas) Chronicle: http://www.auschron.com/issues/dispatch/current/cols_index.htmlcols_index.html
An alternative weekly's columnists. Includes the PBS syndicated "Car Talk" with the Massachusetts brother Tom and Ray Magliozzi. Also features "News of the Weird." The local columnists are devoted to entertainment and Austin trivia. Not a lot of heavy thought in these pages.
Baltimore City Paper: http://www.citypaper.com/columns.htm
The dailies don't have a corner on opinion. One might go to this city weekly expecting strident alternative rantings, but that's not the fare. Instead, one gets some reasonable and well-thought-out arguments. The city paper in Baltimore is a product of the Scranton (Pa.) Times.
Chronicle of Higher Education: http://www.chronicle.com/opinion/
Some high-powered intellectual opinions offered here, most of them related to academia but often reflecting on American culture in general.
Excite!'s list of columnists: http://news.excite.com/more/columnists/
Perhaps unfair to list this as "non-daily"; nevertheless, this is an example of how search engines are evolving into portals and something more. A good listing of columnists of all stripes (slightly biased toward the conservative end, perhaps) is found here.
Infoworld Electric: http://www.idg.net/
Perhaps too much discussion of software and its problems, but that, after all, is where the action is with computers. This stable of columnists, many unknown to the world of daily journalism, may be on the cutting edge of the future. One might have to do some navigating from here to find interesting columns.
Lucianne:
http://www.lucianne.com

A wonderful collection of columns and news articles from multiple sources, especially newspapers on the Web.

MSNBC's "Opinions":

http://www.msnbc.com/news/OP_Front.asp
A surprisingly outstanding collection of commentaries from across the nation show up at this broadcast media page. I've yet to find something similar at the other networks.
Newsmax.com
http://www.newsmax.com

More of a collection of news stories, but with a little navigation one can reach an amazingly comprehensive array of syndicated columnists.

Pulitzer Prize-winning columns:

http://www.ncew.org/pulitzer/pulit.html
The National Conference of Editorial Writers has collected the editorials that won the Pulitzer for the past five years. The 1998 runners-up are also represented with their honored entries. Well worth a visit and some time spent reading here.
Reason Magazine: http://www.reason.com/opeds/opeds.html
Touts itself as championing the libertarian point of view and offers a host of op-ed columnists from a variety of publications, both print and online, to support that touting.
Slate's Pundit Central: http://www.slate.com/PunditCentral/punditlinks.asp
Now that Slate is free again, I can point gladly to its amazing list of pundits and critics. A great compilation.
Snap!'s listing of columnists: http://www.snap.com/directory/category/0,16,-21120,00.html
This is where the burgeoning search engine lists the lesser-known (and several well-known) columnists.
Universal Press Syndicate: http://www.uexpress.com/ups/opinion/
Lots of political punditry here. Several cartoonists' work, too. William F. Buckley, Georgie Anne Geyer, Gary Wills, Tony Auth among those represented.
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Individual Columnist's Links:
(I'm slow building this list. Bear with me.)

David Astor's "Syndicate World":

http://www.editorandpublisher.com/
Use the columns pull-down menu to locate this one.  Astor's column will keep one abreast of what's going on with comic, newspaper and magazine syndicated columnists.  It's part of Editor & Publisher online.
Tad Bartimus: http://www.tadfriends.com
Former AP correspondent Tad Bartimus, now CEO of The Women Syndicate in Hawaii, has her own offerings (from her own syndicate, naturally). Even if one doesn't appreciate her columns, she has some good links to other columnists and points of interest at her site.
Julie Benson:
http://www.juliebenson.com
Benson is a humor writer -- a promotionally proclaimed "fourth B" with Buchwald, Berry and Brombeck -- trying to make a living off her posted online columns as a writer for the Abiogenesis Publications group in Bellingham, Wash. Thus, the site offers only samples. One must drop $20 a pop to download her column, clearly aimed at the publication market. Benson updates her online offerings each month, providing about three samples with each update. Humor, as Benson acknowledges, is "the hardest genre of all." She doesn't provide fall down belly laughs, but instead, like her inspirational "B's", goes for a consistent mix of the wry and wacky often found in the ordinary.


Kimberley Blaker  (The Wall):

http://www.TheWall-OnChurchAndState.com
This young columnist largely writes on maintaining the separation of church and state.  Her columns are cogent and informed.  Ostensibly a writer on religious and philosophical issues, Blaker's columns make it easy to tell what she opposes but not always easy to latch on to what she's advocating.  Her views have been endorsed by Christians of moderate and left-wing persuasion as well as by humanists and atheists.  That being said, her voice is an often lonely one battling the torrent of Christian right-wing rhetoric on the Web.


Hiawatha Bray (Boston Globe):

http://www.boston.com/globe/columns/bray/
http://www.monitortan.com/
One of the less-known writers at the Globe, Bray writes on technology and can be found occasionally in other specialized publications.
William F. Buckley: http://www.uexpress.com/ups/opinion/column/wb/archive/
Buckley's syndicate archives his columns, but they're a bit late posting them. Thanks to the Sacramento Bee, one can get to an up-to-date archive of the syndicated columns of the intellectual guru of American conservativism. (Along with many others, by the way.)
Herb Caen (1918-1997): http://www.refdesk.com/paper3.html
A memorial to San Francisco's best-known columnist, the man who insisted the shorthand 'Frisco is an obscenity used only by those who don't know any better.
Randy Cassingham (This is True): http://www.thisistrue.com/index.html
Cassingham, a Boulder, Colo., journalist has scoured publications for these little summaries of unbelievable news items to which he has added his witty, cynical or sarcastic remarks. Good for laughs and for confirming the Biblical assertion that "all have sinned." One can sample his stuff at this site, but to get the full treatment one must subscribe.
Chandra K. Clarke ("In My Humble Opinion"): http://www.ChandraKClarke.com
Clarke is a Canadian writer who also teaches humor writing online. Writing humor is the most difficult form of journalism. If one loves Dave Barry (and I do) or Andy Rooney (and I don't), one is less likely to love Art Buchwald (and I don't) or Russell Baker (and I do). Sometimes Clarke misses, but she's generally moving in the right direction. Give her a fair shake. She also is part of the "Women in Comedy" Web ring.
John Corry: http://www.earthtimes.org/corrybio.htm
Corry is a former NY Times writer who now does the "media watch" column for Earth Times online. His comments are often more about politics than the media, but when he focuses he can be incisive and insightful.
Frank DeFord (Sports Illustrated): http://www.cnnsi.com/inside_game/archives/frank_deford/index.html
index.html
One of the intelligensia of sports writing from Sports Illustrated who often writes about something other than sports
E.J. Dionne (Washington Post): http://washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/politics/columns/dionneej/
A commentator on national politics for The Post, Dionne also writes cogent commentary from a religious perspective (without overtly promoting his religion) in Commonweal and other publications. One of the most articulate spokespersons writing today.
Hugh Downs (ABC-TV):
http://abcnews.go.com/onair/2020/downs_hugh_bio.html
Downs is one of television's hidden gems, in my opinion. A fine writer, whose intelligence and wit come through on the printed page even more than on television, Downs will forever be endeared to my heart by one small anecdote: When his family referred to him as a "walking encyclopedia," Downs retorted, "more like a walking pamphlet." Great pamphlet material can be found by searching ABC's site for Downs' writings. Every Friday, ABC.com posts Downs' online column, Insites.

Matt Drudge's homepage:

http://www.drudgereport.com
Regardless of what one thinks of Drudge, his home page is loaded with links to political columnists. They tend to the conservative side with which Drudge is sympathetic, but several others are linked here as well.
Kenneth Friedman (Lehigh University): http://www.suite101.com/topics/page.cfm/127
A professor in the special undergraduate environmental and science writing program at Lehigh U., Friedman's weekly columns on the environment are posted at Suite 101.
Cathy Lynn Grossman (USAToday):
http://www.usatoday.com
Going to the site and plugging in Grossman's name in the search engine might get one to some of her columns, which are generally erudite and informed.  Otherwise, one will get a list of her articles on a variety of  religious expressions.
Charles Haynes (The Tennessean; The Freedom Forum)
"Finding Common Ground":
http://www.freedomforum.org/templates/document.asp?documentID=12815
Haynes is the resident religion scholar for the Freedom Forum. He recently produced a book critical of the nation's educational system, arguing that schools do not take religion seriously enough in their curricula. Haynes' column appears regularly in The Tennessean, the Gannett newspaper in Nashville. His columns are notable for the issues they raise, not for the positions Haynes' takes.


David Hipschman (Casper, Wyo., Star Tribune) "Cyberland":

http://www.electricpencil.com
For six years, Hipschman, the editor of the Star Tribune, wrote his column, which also was posted to The American Reporter online newspaper. Hipschman quit, saying it had become "a job rather than the interesting experience it was in the first few years." He seems to have become convinced that the WWW outgrew its need for his articulate guidance. Any one of Hipschman's columns could be a launch pad for an Internet savvy reporter.
Kristen Hostetter (Seattle Post-Intelligencer): http://www.seattle-pi.com/pi/index/gear.html
A columnist devoted to hiking, walking and healthful travel with lots of tips. As much as I like it, this column has a little too much of an advertorial ring to it for my taste.
Jon Katz (Wired magazine):****Katz left Wired in September, 2000 and for a while posted for the Freedom Forum.  Not locateable as of April, 2001. http://hotwired.com/synapse/
Katz's provocative column, which often criticizes the traditional media, appeared under the label "synapse" on the Hotwired Web site; he has since started writing regularly for the Freedom Forum's free!Web site, and recently wrote a "spiritual" book about living in isolation in upstate New York.  He's apparently devoting himself to books these days rather than commentary.
Garrison Keillor (Salon magazine): http://www.salonmagazine.com/archives/to/col_keil.html
Keillor wrote a weekly column for the online magazine under the rubric, "Dear Mr. Blue" until September of 2001.  This link leads to Salon's archive of Keillor's columns. Personally, I like him better on the radio discussing life at Lake Wobegon.
Robert Kirby (Salt Lake Tribune): http://www.sltrib.com/kirby/
Ostensibly, Kirby writes about life in Utah, which might be interesting if one plans to be there for the 2002 Olympics. One can enjoy Kirby on his own merits, as well. He seems to be the only local columnist the Tribune touts. Kirby focusses on things Mormon and calls himself an "OxyMormon."
Howard Kurtz (Washington Post): http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/tv/front.htm
The Post's media critic is probably the most knowledgeable and entertaining critic of journalism as we currently understand it.
Sanders LaMont (Sacramento Bee): http://www.sacbee.com/voices/sac/lamont/index.html
The former executive editor of the Modesto Bee, a sister paper, is now the ombudsman for the SacBee. This is one of the few sites I know that collects the writings of its ombudsman into a mini-archive.  If one has trouble finding his stuff, put "ombudsman" in the search engine and take it from there.
Ken Layne (TABLOID): http://www.tabloid.net
You won't have to navigate far to find the strident writings of this daily online news site's co-founder and co-editor. Layne represents a throw-back to an earlier voice-of-outrage writing that he hopes to resurrect as a significant voice online. Layne also does reviews and a column for the Online Journalism Review under the rubric "Citizen Layne." One of his columns ("The summer of sackcloth and ashes, August 14, 1998) argues that the best columnists are found online. Not quite, yet, but they're getting there.
Jim Ledbetter (Village Voice): http://www.villagevoice.com/columns/9832/ledbetter.shtml
Known as "press clips," these columns provide some of the best news and commentary on the profession of journalism as it's practiced in the trenches. Ledbetter recently raised the ire of journalism educators by claiming j-schools are moving too close to becoming business schools with a journalism component.
In September, Ledbetter left the Village Voice. One can still get to some of his columns at the above URL.
Flora Lewis: http://www.earthtimes.org/lewisbio.htm
The distinguished former Foreign Affairs correspondent continued her observations in this forum provided by Earth Times up until her death in 2002.  (Page no longer available.)
Diane Lynch (ABCNews.com's "Wired Women"): http://abcnews.go.com/sections/tech/WiredWomen/wiredwomen.html
Lynch writes reflections on women and the Internet every other Wednesday for ABCNews.com. Lynch formerly wrote a weekly column for the Christian Science Monitor. A little searching of that site may lead to some of her archived columns called "alt.media." Click on the front page's "cybercoverage" link to track down the archives. Lynch teaches journalism at St. Michael's College in Winooski, Vermont, and is the author of Virtual Ethics. She often tracks the off-beat on the Web and is well worth a read.
Terry Mattingly ("On Religion"): http://www.gospelcom.net/tmattingly/
Mattingly's column for Scripps Howard News Service in Washington, D.C., is circulated in 350 newspapers in the U.S. and Canada, making him probably the most widely read religion columnist in North America. Mattingly formerly taught at Milligan College in Tennessee, a Christian Churches/Churches of Christ liberal arts college, and has recently agreed to teach at Palm Beach Atlantic College in Florida.  He is also a senior fellow for  the Journalism program of the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities. A former religion reporter with the Charlotte Observer, Mattingly uses his column as a teaching forum and brings a wide spectrum of religion personalities to the attention of readers. His site also offers an archive of his freelance articles that serves as a record of his spiritual thinking-and-writing pilgrimage, which has taken him from being a Southern Baptist through the Episcopal Church and into Eastern Orthodoxy.
Sam Vincent Meddis (USA Today): http://www.usatoday.com/news/comment/colindex.htm
I've put a link to Meddis's columns with USA Today, but he's worth singling out. He may be the only columnist I've read who can talk about the Internet in the context of contemporary philosophy and science. He also stays abreast of key sites on the WWW.
Jim Murray (1919-1998): http://www.latimes.com/sports/columnists/
(One may have to search among the sports columnists archives to find Murray)
Murray made a fine art of sportswriting for the Los Angeles Times. The Times for a long while posted its tribute to their colleague. One may have to chase down the archives from this page of columnists.  My own tribute to Murray -- a mere collection of his gems -- is also posted.
P.J. O'Rourke: http://www.web-presence.com/mac/pj/index.html
The caustic and clever champion of wiseacre conservatism is captured in a few samples of his work at this "unofficial" site.
Richard Ostling (Associated Press Religion Writer): http://www.wire.ap.org
AP's archive is sometimes difficult to get at, but if one plugs in the rubric of Ostling's column, i.e., "Testaments," one should get some results. Only the past two weeks are available free. The search/archive of The Washington Post, also keeps AP stories for two weeks -- even if the Post didn't publish them -- and it may be an easier route to Ostlins's latest offering! Just plug in Ostling's name or the rubric of his weekly column, "Testaments."
Shirley Povich (d. 1998): ***Link no longer available.  Search Post's archives.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp~srv/sports/longterm/general/povich/povich.htm
The Washington Post's enduring tribute to one of its fine sportswriters who died in 1998.
Tom Purcell (Humor columnist):
http://www.tompurcell.com/
In addition to hawking Purcell's column, this site provides a fine set of links to opinions and commentaries on the Web. Purcell, incidentally, is called "a rare pundit; a conservative with a sense of humor."
Mike Royko (1932-1997): http://chicagotribune.com/news/metro/chicago/ws/0,1246,7525,00.html
A tribute site put up by the Chicago Tribune to honor its late columnists, who was truly Chicago's columnist. As might be expected, this site is heavy on Royko's years at the Tribune but includes some of his memorable columns from his years at the Sun-Times.
The University of Chicago, touting a new book collection, features a few of Royko's columns to promote the book.
Wen Stephenson (The Atlantic Monthly): http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/media/index.htm
Stephenson, in addition to being the editorial director of "Atlantic Unbound," The Atlantic Monthly's Web site, writes good commentary on new media and its relationship to our culture. Some provocative thinking here.
E. R. Shipp (N.Y. Daily News): http://www.mostnewyork.com/manual/news/shipp/shiphome.htm
The Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist left the Daily News in 1998 to become the 12th ombudsman(woman?) for the Washington Post, replacing Geneva Overholser, who remains with the Post as a columnist. A mini-archive of Shipp's Pulitzer-winning entry remains at the News' site, as well as several of the New York life columns that she made popular. Shipp left the Post in October of 2000 to return to teaching at Columbia University, noting that the issue of credibility still plagued not only the Post but American journalism in general.
Steve Vogel (Washington Post): http://www.washingtonpost.com
One may have to search to find Vogel's commentary. He basically covers the military beat for the Post, but he often writes columns on subjects that would interest citizens with a concern for military matters. In fact, when he comments, it's often under the rubric "Military Matters."
Jim Wallis (Sojourners): http://www.msnbc.com/news/OP_Front.asp
In addition to finding Wallis's columns at the Sojourners' site, he is a regular on the MSNBC site. Click on "opinion" and look for Wallis's name in the line-up. Wallis speaks eloquently from a Christian viewpoint with a deep concern for Biblical approaches to poverty and justice. A refreshing antidote to Christian-right bombast.
Philip Yancey (Christianity Today): http://www.christianitytoday.com/ctmag/features/columns/yancey.html/
Yancey may be the most popular and respected author in the so-called evangelical Christian camp; although, Yancey may even have some reservations about being categorized in that camp. His writing is almost always a Biblically reasoned critique of evangelicalism's public faith, as well as the public faith of Christians in general.
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Columnists' Group Links:

American Media Columnists
(formerly, Blue Eagle Commentary):
http://www.blueagle.com/columnists.htm

A seller of long-distance services maintains this amazing site with a listing of over 400 columnists. They also ask browsers to suggest columnists they haven't listed. I made a few suggestions, and they not only added them, they added me! Obviously, they want to be the most comprehensive listing of columnists. An excellent list whose highlighted writers tend toward the conservative side, though includes many liberals. In all, some excellent writers.
AP Religion features:
This link works, but the columns have been removed. I'm trying to find out what's happening (January, 2000)
http://www.stardem.com/ap/apreligion.html
Not all columns, but this is such a unique collection, I felt it should be included.
The Star Democrat of Easton, Maryland, on the state's Eastern Shore, conveniently collects in one place online, the weekly religion features of the Associated Press's writers.
Campus Opinions (U-Wire): http://www.usatoday.com/uwire/cobriefs.htm
Compiled by the university wire service, U-Wire, and offered at USA Today's site, this offers a good sampling of opinions on the nation's big campuses. Now, if somebody would just gather opinions from the nation's smaller campuses.
Creators Syndicate: http://www.creators.com/corp/tree.htm#opinion1
The lineup at this syndicate is mostly at the conservative end. There an interesting lineup of biographies of columnists featured here.
Commentators.com http://www.commentators.com
A collection of the best known commentators with daily updates.
Covenant Syndicate: http://capo.org/opeds/opeds.html
Interesting food for thought here, with a collection of religiously oriented op-ed pieces. A caveat may lie in its having been awarded a "conservative site of the day" label. Heavily influenced by Reformed Presbyterian thinking.
Cyber-Columnists (Fort Worth Star-Telegram):
http://www.star-telegram.com/comm/reference/cybercol/
An interesting collection of online columnists offered by the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Columnists are invited to submit work, and every quarter of the year one is selected to be highlighted on the Star-Telegram's site. An example is last summer's quarterly columnist, Californian Robert Paul Reyes, who writes a column called "My Turn."
Duke University Online Op-ed Resource:
http://www.pubpol.duke.edu/courses/op-ed/
****Valuable columnists' resource.
This rather amazing site guides browsers into the fine art of writing and submitting opinion pieces to the major news outlets of the nation. Known as the Sanford Institute, named after former North Carolina governor and senator Terry Sanford, who also served as president of Duke U., this site is a dream site for analyzing opinion writing around the United States.
Junk science links:
http://www.junkscience.com/links/opinions.htm
An unusual place perhaps to find many links to editorials and op-ed pieces, but the junk science guru recognizes that science and politics are often strange bedfellows.
My Virtual Reference Desk: Editorials:
http::/www.refdesk.com/paper3.html
Bob Drudge, the father of Matt Drudge of cyberjournalism "scoop" fame with the Monica Lewinsky story, maintains this site and includes a listing of key newspaper editorial pages.
National Society of Newspaper Columnists: http://www.columnists.com
When he was awarded the NSNC "Columnist of the Year" honor in 1997, David Broder admitted he'd never heard of the organization. Not many of the membership are among the renowned syndicated variety, but at least Broder showed up and graciously accepted the accolade. NSNC probably missed a recruiting opportunity, though.
(I confess to being a former member; my columns can be found at: http://www.toad.net/~andrews/pacsunc.html
http://www.toad.net/~andrews/ol2000 and at:
http://www.toad.net/~andrews/olcol.html)
Opinion Pages (formerly, Think! Opinions, Ideas and Commentary):
http://www.opinion-pages.org/

A place to search for opinions, editorials and commentary in newspapers in Canada, the U.S. and around the world. A good launch pad to world opinions. For years, Monty Kersell (a Canadian) has been gathering editorials and letters to the editor from Web sites around the world. He's got a great search engine, too.

"Punditspeak" from The Hill: http://www.hillnews.com/features/pundits.html
A collection from around the nation of what well-known columnists and commentators are saying about particular issues. The congress-watching online publication doesn't offer a great deal of copy in this feature, but does compile and interesting mix of provocative opinion.
Religion Writers Columns:+++The broadest gathering of religion commentary on the Web. http://www.reporternews.com/2001/religion/col_index.html
The Abilene (Texas) Reporter News is responsible for compiling this fine stable of religion writers, most of them contributing to the Scripps Howard News Service.  Note that this page takes one to the most recent annual archive.  One must search the site for current religion columns, which are posted every Saturday.
Tribune Media Services: http://www.tms.tribune.com/catalog/commentators.html
This is an advertising site, but it provides teasing samples to some fine writers who are part of the TMS stable, among them: Dave Barry, Andy Rooney, Bob Greene and Deborah Mathis.
Washington Post Writers' Group: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/post/writersgroup/writersgroup.htm
Among the syndicated writers, this group provides an intellectual view of our culture couched in some good writing. Some of the group may be a bit stuffy.
Yahoo!'s Columnists List: http://dir.yahoo.com/News_and_Media/Columns_and_Columnists/
The grand-daddy of all portals offers an extensive list of columns and columnists. Some categorized, some listed as individuals.
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 WebSites for Journalists
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