Word: journalisting
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...year Toronto returned to its root functions as film showplace and star magnet (there's Dustin! there's Denzel!). But on Sept. 11, 2002, the programmers presented two films that explicitly confronted the attacks and their aftermath: Jim Simpson's The Guys, a conventionally heart-rending meeting of a journalist and a New York City fire captain, and the much more ambitious and provocative 11'09"01: September...
...reach of that material around the world. "It's a real contribution," says Boston University historian Ezra Mendelsohn, a leading specialist on East European Jewry. The story of Judit Kinszki, now available with 60 other interviews and 750 family photographs at www.centropa.org, begins with her great-grandfather - a journalist and lawyer who was among the first to represent minorities in the old Austro-Hungarian Empire - and ends in the present day. But the focus is on the years just before World War II. With a storyteller's eye, Judit describes an unlikely mixture of worldly and parochial, secular and devout...
...journalist asked Galluccio how he would bridge the gap between Cambridge, which the journalist said has a reputation as full of “know-it-all liberals...
...members of the royal family traumatized the nation and left it struggling for an explanation. Was it the work of Maoist rebels? An attempted coup, perhaps? The truth would be harder for Nepal to accept?a privileged, trusted son had murdered his own family. Jonathan Gregson, a Calcutta-born journalist now based in London, was in Kathmandu in the weeks after the attack, running with a pack of foreign reporters who fought to tell the story. One by one the grieving eyewitnesses came forward and recounted the same chilling tale: Crown Prince Dipendra Bir Bikram Shah had gunned down...
...only Western journalist allowed aboard, I came along to observe the "exchange" between these ancient enemies, and to get a better sense of how North Koreans view the outside world?particularly Japan and its other nemesis, America. I knew, though, that my perambulations would be tightly restricted by the North Korean government. Indeed, our itinerary proved to have been carefully pre-packaged. At the Grand People's Study House, a library overlooking Kim Il Sung Square with its giant portraits of Marx and Lenin, our North Korean hosts arranged a seminar on what life was like under the Japanese...