The Washington Post's original article "correctly" had who students said, but The Age altered this as a matter of house style to whom students said. (The continuation with the parallel construction who stood apart illustrates how The Age style can lead to inconsistencies.) Even the King James Bible has the problematic whom as a subject at least six times, and has been much censured for it:
The Asian series (James Clavell, the books are Shogun, Gai-Jin, King Rat, and Whirlwind, although I might be leaving one out. Can never remember if King Rat is part of it or not.) Fantasy The Dark Tower series (Stephen King, best damn thing I ever read) The Royal Assassin trilogy (Robin Hobb, I know I hate most fantasy but god I love those books)
Popular among charismatics, the “heart-level” Bible version was criticized as a paraphrase posing as translation. A Bible version designed to “recapture the emotion of God’s Word” was removed from ...
Gateway plans to introduce the Profile 4, an upgraded version of its all-in-one desktop PC, at the end of August, sources familiar with its plans said. The new Profile 4 will put the finishing touches ...
Apple Computer has whipped up a frenzy with its new flat-panel iMac, and Gateway is getting in on the action. Gateway, which is trying to regain a stable footing in the marketplace, plans to release ...
Gateway is doing what few in the industry are willing to do–pitting their product head-to-head with the competition, and this time the competition is the iMac. The new Profile 4 series features most ...