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  1. 14. Feb. 2024 · Carlson, who is doing a fantastic impersonation of Walter Duranty—the disgraced New York Times correspondent who treated American readers to tales of the glory of life in Joseph Stalin’s Russia—reports that the experience of seeing how clean and orderly Moscow is was “radicalizing” for him.

  2. 29. März 2022 · Walter Duranty, born in Liverpool (England) in 1884, was always something of a scoundrel and openly relished in being able to get away with it. In S. J. Taylor’s excellent biography, Stalin’s Apologist: Walter Duranty: The New York Times’s Man in Moscow (Oxford University Press, 1990), he is seen lying even about his own family origins, claiming in his autobiography to have been an only ...

  3. Short, unattractive, hobbling about Stalin's Moscow on a wooden leg, Walter Duranty was an unlikely candidate for the world's most famous foreign correspondent. Yet for almost twenty years his articles filled the front page of The New York Times with gripping coverage of the aftermath of the Russian Revolution.

  4. Walter Duranty was the recipient of the prestigious Pulitzer Prize in 1932, for his reporting of Joseph Stalin’s collectivization program, which was the instrument of the Holodomor and led to the killing of 7-10 million Ukrainians. The Pulitzer Prize is a distinguished and highly coveted award given to deserving journalists who stake their ...

  5. Walter Duranty (1884?October 3, 1957) was a Liverpool-born British journalist who served as the Moscow bureau chief of the New York Times from 1922 through 1936. Stöbern Sie im Onlineshop von buecher.de und kaufen Sie Ihre Artikel versandkostenfrei und ohne Mindestbestellwert!

  6. 4. Okt. 2019 · Foreign reporters could have delved into the story and written about it, the most notable being Walter Duranty. The New York Times’ bureau chief from 1922 to 1936 and a correspondent for five years after that, he was an odd guy. Born in Liverpool, he had joined Aleister Crowley in some bizarre drug-sex-and-Satan rituals in earlier days.

  7. On an unearned Pulitzer and some of history’s most deceitful reporting. A sk any journalist to name the most disreputable figure in his profession, and one name immediately comes to mind—the late New York Times reporter, Walter Duranty. Duranty is known for reporting on the Ukrainian famine precipitated by Joseph Stalin in the early Thirties.