It shouldn’t have come as a surprise for us to review the thickening ... And there was William F. Buckley Jr., the leader of an emerging national conservatism. Bill Buckley was the new new ...
Today, February 27, marks the 15th anniversary of William F. Buckley’s death ... as a fellow at the institution, National Review, that Bill loved so dearly. The closest he and I came to meeting ...
(Editor’s Note: This is an ongoing series published on Sundays dedicated to explicating and sharing the writing of William F. Buckley Jr. Due to some understandable confusion, the name has been ...
Buckley Jr. himself entertained a species of Pigouvian taxation in the pages of the National Review, then it cannot be heresy for someone else to do so. On June 24, 1965, William F. Buckley ...
Why did NR never take its place in the family of little magazines as primus inter pares? I think it may have been the result ...
Bernstein reminds me of William F. Buckley Jr., different as they were in their politics. Buckley edited a magazine, wrote a syndicated column, hosted a television show, lectured widely ...
Buckley might make of the state of conservatism today. Take a listen. Hundreds of ballots in Vancouver, Wa., were destroyed. A powdered fire suppressant protected all but three ballots in Portland.
This is something really neat: the William F. Buckley Jr. Essay Contest. The contest is open to college students who will be a sophomore or junior in the fall. (Oh, I’d love to give college a go ...
Who’s the Fairest of Them All? Why 7 Percent of North Carolina Early Voters Are of ‘Unknown’ Gender William F. Buckley Jr., in deciding to write a novel, realized he needed a protagonist.
In his role as emcee, Greenfield asked, “What tribute could measure up to William F. Buckley? Naturally, no one agonized over this more than Mr. Buckley himself. He had some wonderful ideas.
As I wrote in June: It’s worth remembering that, in their time, William F. Buckley and the other young conservatives who were involved in the Sharon Statement were radicals, too. Tom Hayden ...
At least once, a union came after NR directly. In the February 8, 1956, issue, NR republished a “form letter from Mr. William Talbot of the New York Typographical Union No. 6” that it had ...