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Topic: Alex Chadwick


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In the News (Wed 16 Dec 09)

  
  NPR : Alex Chadwick
Chadwick's newest role is host of NPR's new program, Day to Day, a weekday, one-hour newsmagazine produced by NPR in collaboration with Slate Magazine.
Chadwick came to NPR in 1977 as host and producer of NPR's morning news service.
Chadwick lives in Los Angeles with his wife, the executive producer of "Radio Expeditions," Carolyn Jensen, and likes to bicycle to work.
www.npr.org /about/people/bios/achadwick.html   (434 words)

  
  Dow Jones Interactive
CHADWICK: We've heard of news over the last decade of these strange mutations that appear in frogs; frogs are an amphibian population.
CHADWICK: HIV, famously, is a disease that moved from animal populations to human populations.
CHADWICK: Dr. Peter Daszak is executive director of the Consortium for Conservation Medicine in Palisades, New York.
www.conservationmedicine.org /news/NPR_6_8_02.htm   (1322 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
CHADWICK: It's a city where many different ethnic groups mix and parts of Santa Fe suffer poverty that's as bad as anything to be found in the country.
CHADWICK: Let me welcome another guest from member station WAMC in Albany, Doctor Kathy Spatz Widom is Professor of Criminal Justice and Psychology at the State University of New York in Albany.
CHADWICK: Dr. John Conte of the University of Washington is editor of the Journal Of Interpersonal Violence, also Doctor Deborah Daro who's the Director of the National Center on Child Abuse Prevention Research and Doctor Cathy Spatz Widom, Professor of Criminal Justice and Psychology at the State University of New York in Albany.
www.well.com:70 /0/Community/cycle/pgm1   (6767 words)

  
 Morning Edition (NPR): Alex Chadwick interviews James Lee Burke, author of "Burning Angel", the latest@ HighBeam ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Alex Chadwick interviews James Lee Burke, author of "Burning Angel", the latest
Alex Chadwick interviews James Lee Burke, author of "Burning Angel", the latest in his series of mystery novels set in the real town of New Iberia, Louisiana.
ALEX CHADWICK, Host: Southerners like to say that not only is the past not dead, it isn't even past, a theme that runs through the mystery novels of author James Lee Burke.
www.highbeam.com /library/doc0.asp?DOCID=1P1:28471736&refid=ip_encyclopedia_hf   (230 words)

  
 Alex Chadwick NPR Stories - Reverbiage Feeds from National Public Radio
Sep 10th, 2007 · A number of people were moved by Alex Chadwick's piece on Elizabeth Eckford, the young fl woman who was harassed as she tried to attend an all-white school.
Keywords: Alex Chadwick · schools · songs · Elizabeth · eckford · Elizabeth Eckford
Keywords: Senate · Alex Chadwick · chairman · Joint Chiefs of Staff · Adm · Retired Adm · nomination · Mullen · Robert Natter
www.reverbiage.com /find/alex-chadwick   (572 words)

  
 Ballpoint Wren » Alex Chadwick drops the ball while interviewing Times-Picayune's editor, James Amoss   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Note how Alex Chadwick wastes no time in telling us Mayor Nagin was "among those repeating the stories of rape and murder," conveniently overlooking the Times-Picayune's part — not to mention NPR's part — in relaying that misinformation.
Chadwick asks James Amoss a question similar to the one I already asked Mr.
Chadwick couldn't admit that NPR played a role in spreading rumors, he could have at least pointed out the hypocrisy of the Times-Picayune's attack on convenient scapegoats Compass and Nagin.
www.bonniewren.com /more/page/16/?p=162   (1155 words)

  
 WGTE FM 91 - NPR Hosts
For almost 30 years, Alex Chadwick has been bringing the world to NPR listeners as an NPR News correspondent and frequent guest host.
Chadwick’s approach to radio carries the mark of a veteran: he presents listeners with news in perspective – relevant and real instead of overly intellectualized and intense.
He wrote the 60 Minutes "25th Anniversary Special," which was the highest-rated television program for 1993, as well as a three-hour CBS Reports special on violence, "In the Killing Fields of America," which won an Emmy, a 1996 Peabody, and the Robert F. Kennedy Award for reporting on the disadvantaged.
www.wgte.org /fm91/nprhosts-chadwick.asp   (474 words)

  
 NPR To Present "Radio Expedition" to UCSB Audience - Daily Nexus Online   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Alex Chadwick, reporter and producer for National Public Radio, will be giving a presentation of sounds collected during his travels titled "The Radio Expeditions Sound Spectacular" at 8 p.m.
Chadwick, who began working at NPR in 1977, said he expects that the members of tonight's audience will hear "the best recordings of their lives."
Chadwick said the inspiration for "Radio Expeditions" came from his wife, Carolyn Jensen.
www.ucsbdailynexus.com /print_article.php?a=6574   (293 words)

  
 The Transom Review: Alex Chadwick's Famous Fifty-Cent Interviews
I went out as Alex's producer one time, back in my days at NPR - a story about the Library of Congress, I think - and I was shocked by the way he uses silence in interviews.
Once I thought maybe Alex had fallen asleep.
The interviewee felt the need to fill the silence and Alex got the kind of un-canned spontaneous tape he was looking for.
www.transom.org /guests/review/200106.review.achadwick.html   (792 words)

  
 KPBS - Alex Chadwick   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
As a reporter, producer, and program host, Alex Chadwick has helped create some of NPR’s most successful programs, with numerous awards for his radio and television writing and coverage.
Chadwick has reported from Central and South America, Europe, Africa, and Asia, as well as every part of the US.
Chadwick lives in Washington with his wife, the executive producer of Radio Expeditions, Carolyn Jensen, and likes to bicycle to work.
www.kpbs.org /Radio/DynPage.php?id=539   (364 words)

  
 Canny Cougar Eludes Police in Suburban Delaware
ALEX CHADWICK: This is an animal that escaped.
The problem is is that usually means that he's kept in a cage and they throw meat in there to feed him, and he still has all his claws and he still has all of his hunting ability, that they just call him a pet because he's in a cage.
ALEX CHADWICK: Corporal Butch LeFebvre of the Newcastle County Police in Delaware is trying to catch a cougar.
www.easterncougarnet.org /delawareNPRtranscription.htm   (846 words)

  
 Musarium: Interviews 50 Cents
Alex Chadwick: Tell me a little bit about yourself.
Alex Chadwick: What is it about your life that leads you to vote the way that you do for president?
Alex Chadwick: Well, that's a good election song.
www.musarium.com /interviews50cents/electiontext8.html   (164 words)

  
 PH@school: Literature: Author Biographies   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Alex Chadwick graduated from American University in 1974 with a bachelor's degree in communications.
He is also co-host and chief writer for Radio Expeditions, a series of radio specials that are co-produced by NPR and the National Geographic Society.
As a freelance television writer, he wrote a three-hour CBS Reports special on violence titled "In the Killing Fields of America," which won an Emmy, a Peabody, and a Robert F. Kennedy Award.
phschool.com /atschool/literature/author_biographies/chadwick_a.html   (145 words)

  
 WDIY - eWaves - Printer-Friendly Format
The program is based at NPR's new west coast facility in Los Angeles and is hosted by principal NPR correspondent, Alex Chadwick.
Host Alex Chadwick has spent more than two decades in a variety of roles at NPR, both on and off the air.
Chadwick came to NPR in 1977 as host and producer of NPR's morning news service and has hosted and prepared reports for public radio's most listened to newsmagazines, Morning Edition, and All Things Considered as well as Weekend Edition.
www.wdiyfm.org /read/issuePrint.jsp?id=5   (997 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
CHADWICK: Let me ask you--there have been stories, news stories, about the threats and vulnerability of New Orleans for years.
And those are the houses I'm talking about when I say that it at least is a chance, when we rebuild, to make the people who live in those neighborhoods--where we move them and can find a place to house them--that they can feel that they're on more certain ground.
CHADWICK: Kristina Ford, adjunct professor of environmental studies at Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine, a past director of city planning for the city of New Orleans.
www6.lexisnexis.com /publisher/EndUser?Action=UserDisplayFullDocument&orgId=1593&topicId=21355&docId=l:307427868   (837 words)

  
 Living on Earth: April 28, 2000
CHADWICK: There are a lot of frogs in Australia, and a lot of creatures evolved to eat them, not expecting ever to encounter a poison toad.
CHADWICK: Conrad had a long pole with a large net at one end, and we set off walking the edge of the pond, looking for toads.
CHADWICK: Kakadu is in the center of Australia's north coast.
www.loe.org /shows/shows.htm?programID=00-P13-00017   (7563 words)

  
 VIOLENCE IN THE SIXTIES -- AND NOW
ALEX CHADWICK (Host): Today a 30-year-old study on the causes of violent crime in the U.S. gets an update.
CHADWICK: I was interested to see one statistic that you talked about, and that is fear of crime.
CHADWICK: Lynn Curtis is president of the Milton S. Eisenhower Foundation and lead author of "A 30-Year Update of the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence."
www.eisenhowerfoundation.org /frames/media/NPRdec10.html   (789 words)

  
 Kaus Patrol: January 2004 Archives   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
But--wonder of wonders, o my brothers--if Mickey thought that Day to Day co-host Alex Chadwick was going to simply let his rants hang there in midair, as unchallenged as they are in Slate, he was seriously mistaken.
Alex Chadwick introduces Mickey and his substanceless and idiotic attitude that we should be judging Kerry's "character" instead of the things he believes or does:
Chadwick's ha ha only serious zinger may just be a joke among friends, or it could be his tweedy, NPR way of saying look, I know the guy's a dick, don't blame me, I didn't hire the SOB.
www.phenry.org /log/kauspatrol/archives/2004_01.html   (1686 words)

  
 Out Of The Shadows :: Hartman Uses Hard Work, Desire to Become One of Nation's Best   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
It didn't take long for Ole Miss men's tennis head coach Billy Chadwick to realize that he had found something special in Rebel senior Alex Hartman, who has worked to become one of the nation's top players.
Chadwick looked past the rankings, and saw a strong work ethic, determination and desire - qualities that can't be measured by numbers.
"Alex is a player who made a big, big jump in his last year of high school," Chadwick said.
olemisssports.collegesports.com /sports/m-tennis/spec-rel/092402aaa.html   (1163 words)

  
 The Unofficial Paul Krugman Web Page
CHADWICK: The president also says this tax cut is good for our current economic situation, which looks worse than it did a year ago when he was running and first proposing this.
CHADWICK: Are you suggesting in your book that this tax cut will lead to the kinds of deficits that we experienced during the Reagan administration?
CHADWICK: Paul Krugman is author of the book "Fuzzy Math: The Essential Guide to the Bush Tax Plan." This is MORNING EDITION from NPR News.
www.pkarchive.org /economy/MorningEdition051701.html   (859 words)

  
 Does Money Talk?   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Alex Chadwick talks with John Dickerson about the politics of the Miers nomination on Capitol Hill and the Senate request for a "do-over." Listen to the segment.
Alex Chadwick speaks to Mickey Kaus about New York Times reporter Judith Miller, one of the key players in the investigation into who leaked the name of CIA operative Valerie Plame to the media.
Alex Chadwick speaks with Dahlia Lithwick about what senators are learning about Miers from meetings and from her answers to a written questionnaire.
fray.slate.com /id/2128315   (504 words)

  
 A&L News Release - Winter 2004 Lecture Series   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Alex Chadwick is the kind of journalist who is as comfortable in the studio as he is on a safari.
Chadwick’s most recent role is host of NPR’s new program Day to Day, a weekday, one-hour newsmagazine produced by NPR in collaboration with Slate Magazine.
Chadwick’s work at NPR has also won numerous awards, including the Lowell Thomas Award from the Overseas Press Club and the 2002 Investigative Reporting Award from the Society of Professional Journalists.
www.artsandlectures.ucsb.edu /archive/2003-2004/pr/chadwick.asp   (582 words)

  
 Community Development   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
On September 22nd, Alex Chadwick, NPR’s premiere journalist, producer and explorer, will present, “The Art of Communication” at NPR West located in Culver City.
Sponsored by the Culver City Redevelopment Agency, Cultural Affairs Commission, and the Culver City Chamber of Commerce, this is the eighth presentation in the Art of…Speaker Series that highlights the expertise and inspiration of accomplished individuals throughout Culver City.
Alex Chadwick is a journalist who is as comfortable in the studio interviewing heads of state as he is on a safari.
www.ci.culver-city.ca.us /citygov/community/theartof.html   (385 words)

  
 Current.org | Chadwick begins hosting Day to Day from L.A., 2003
Chadwick cites advantages and drawbacks to working across the country from NPR's headquarters.
Several said a deciding factor was Chadwick, who has built a solid reputation as a reporter and substitute host.
Alex Chadwick's diaries for Slate about the show's first week.
www.current.org /radio/radio0314day.html   (1319 words)

  
 Press Release-WETA 90.9 FM Launches a New Radio Format - WETA TV 26/ 90.9 FM - Washington, D.C.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
The newsmagazine "Day to Day," hosted by award-winning journalist Alex Chadwick, is an engaging mix of hard news and enlightening features.
As a versatile journalist, Chadwick is comfortable tackling both breaking news and complex cultural subjects.
Chadwick's easy, welcoming style has won him accolades from both the public and his peers; his work has earned him a Peabody award, a duPont-Columbia Journalism Award and, for his television writing, an Emmy.
www.weta.org /static/pressroom/fmnews   (858 words)

  
 Read   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
NPR's Alex Chadwick speaks with Jack Shafer about whether there's a new trend in media ownership that runs against public perception of giant media mergers: "deconsolidation." Listen to the segment.
Johnson is disabled herself, and argues that the removal of the feeding tube without Terri Schiavo's express consent is a form of discrimination against the disabled.
NPR's Alex Chadwick talks to Dahlia Lithwick about the legal issues surrounding the case of Terri Schiavo, a brain-damaged woman whose fate has grown into a major political and legal battle.
slate.msn.com /toolbar.aspx?action=read&id=2115165   (299 words)

  
 Living on Earth: December 29, 2000
CHADWICK: We are a pair of small microphones wired to their helmets.
CHADWICK: And slips his safety rope through a clip on the end of the screw.
CHADWICK: They're on Pinnacle Gully, high on a shoulder of Mount Washington, New England's tallest peak, though modest by many standards: 6,300 feet.
www.loe.org /shows/shows.htm?programID=00-P13-00052   (6458 words)

  
 The Trailmaster: adventure travel, hiking : Hiking L.A.'s Backcountry with The African Bushmen (Hiking Santa Monica ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Alex Chadwick called me earlier in the week to enlist my hiking expertise and ask me to help him lead the Bushmen on a hike to a place in the L.A. backcountry where they could talk about their homeland.
We sit in the shade of an old oak tree and snack on fruit and cookies as Alex Chadwick and his soundman prepare to interview Roy Sesana.
Chadwick is a master interviewer and I sure hope this setting is conducive to the Bushman speaking his heart and mind.
www.thetrailmaster.com /articles/BushmenInLA.html   (1826 words)

  
 KPBS -   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Host Alex Chadwick has spent more than two decades at NPR, both on and off the air.
Chadwick recently earned the Sigma Delta Chi Award for investigative reporting, and has twice won the Lowell Thomas Award for foreign reporting, along with an Emmy; a Peabody; and the Robert F. Kennedy Award for reporting on the disadvantaged.
KPBS is a broadcast service of San Diego State University, serving the region with TV, radio and Internet content that is educational as well as entertaining – and free of commercial interruption.
www.kpbs.org /Members/DynPage.php?id=557   (475 words)

  
 In Peru Highlands, Temple Remains Offer Window on Pre-Inca Civilization   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
National Public Radio's Alex Chadwick followed Stanish through uncharted territory as the team discovered one of these sacred ruins.
Chadwick's journey is the subject of NPR's Radio Expeditions and a four-part series being aired on National Geographic Today beginning February 4.
Chadwick: Chip Stanish is looking for evidence to explain why civilizations developed, and he thinks the ancient society of the Pukara (who lived more than 2,500 years before the Inca) may help provide the answers.
news.nationalgeographic.com /news/2002/02/0204_020204_tvperutemples.html   (891 words)

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