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Meg Greenfield

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Person.png Meg Greenfield   KeywikiRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
writer)
Meg Greenfield.jpg
BornMary Ellen Greenfield
December 27, 1930
 Seattle,  Washington (state),  USA
DiedMay 13, 1999 (Age 68)
 Georgetown,  Washington DC,  USA
Cause of death
 cancer
Nationality US
EthnicityJewish
Alma mater •  The Bush School
•  Smith College
•  Cambridge University
Member ofFulbright Program
Interests Norman Podhoretz
US columnist who who worked for the Washington Post and Newsweek', and attended the 1978 and 1982 Bilderbergs.

Employment.png Columnist

In office
1974 - 1999
EmployerNewsweek
Succeeded bySergio Romano
Attended Bilderberg/1978 and Bilderberg/1982.

Mary Ellen Greenfield, known as Meg Greenfield, was an American editorial writer who worked for the Washington Post and Newsweek. She attended the 1978 and 1982 Bilderbergs.

Background

Greenfield was born in Seattle, the daughter of Lorraine (Nathan) and Lewis James Greenfield.[1] Her family was Jewish.

From 1954 until her death in 1999, she was married to James Greenfield.

Education

She attended The Bush School and graduated summa cum laude from Smith College in 1952. She also studied at Cambridge University as a Fulbright Scholar and was friends there with Norman Podhoretz, one of the founding fathers of the neoconservative movement, who also went on to a career in journalism.

Career

She became influential in a male-dominated world and a close confidante of Post publisher Katharine Graham. She spent 20 years as the editorial page editor for The Washington Post and 25 years as a columnist for Newsweek. She influenced generations of Washington Post writers.[2]

Greenfield also wielded influence in the elite dining rooms of Georgetown, where she lived near the home of her employer, who was also among her closest friends, Katharine Graham, the chairwoman of the executive committee of the Washington Post Company, which owns both The Post and Newsweek. She was also close to Graham's son, Donald, who was the company's chairman and chief executive as well as The Post's publisher. Her friends and confidants were many, including Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan and Alice M. Rivlin.[3]

When diagnosed with cancer, Greenfield partly retired to Bainbridge Island in her native Washington, where she wrote a posthumously published memoir entitled Washington. She died of the disease, at age 68.[4][5]

Greenfield won the 1978 Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing.[6]


 

Events Participated in

EventStartEndLocation(s)Description
Bilderberg/197821 April 197823 April 1978US
New Jersey
Princeton University
The 26th Bilderberg, held in the US
Bilderberg/198214 May 198216 May 1982Norway
Sandefjord
The 30th Bilderberg, held in Norway.
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References