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Topic: Richard Wallace (journalist)


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In the News (Sun 15 Nov 09)

  
 Mike Wallace (journalist) -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Mike Wallace (born May 9, 1918 as Myron Leon Wallace) is an (A native or inhabitant of the United States) American (A writer for newspapers and magazines) journalist with a long-running career.
Wallace has been criticized for his tactics, which include conducting interviews under deceptive or "ambush" circumstances in order to embarrass his quarry.
Mike Wallace in 2004 made headlines in a dispute with (The largest city in New York State and in the United States; located in southeastern New York at the mouth of the Hudson river; a major financial and cultural center) New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission inspectors.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/M/Mi/Mike_Wallace_(journalist).htm   (443 words)

  
 Wallace, Mike
While his journalistic credentials and tactics have been questioned at times, his longevity, celebrity, and ability to land big interviews made him one of the most important news figures in the history of television.
Wallace, however, studied broadcasting at the University of Michigan and began an acting and announcing career in 1939.
Wallace's move into interviewing at the network level came in the form of two husband-and-wife talk shows, All Around the Town and Mike and Buff, which CBS adapted from a successful Chicago radio program.
www.museum.tv /archives/etv/W/htmlW/wallacemike/wallacemike.htm   (1597 words)

  
 Science Fair Projects - Edgar Wallace
Richard Horatio Edgar Wallace (April 1, 1875 - February 10, 1932) was a prolific British crime writer, journalist and playwright, who wrote 175 novels, 24 plays, and countless articles in newspapers and journals.
It is said that Wallace was the first British crime novelist to use policemen rather than brilliant amateur sleuths as most other writers of the time did.
Today we think of Wallace as a novelist but in his time he was a very popular playwright.
www.all-science-fair-projects.com /science_fair_projects_encyclopedia/Edgar_Wallace   (571 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: Wallace
William Hervey Lamme Wallace (July 8, 1821 – April 10, 1862), more commonly known as W.H.L. Wallace, was a lawyer and a Union general in the American Civil War, considered by Ulysses S. Grant to be one of the Unions greatest generals.
Wallace and Gromit are the main characters in a series of three British animated films.
Wallace, Nova Scotia is a city in Nova Scotia, Canada.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Wallace   (1479 words)

  
 Washingtonpost.com: Live Online
Richard Hutton: First, the Discovery Institute was invited to participate in Evolution, but declined, because it disagreed with its placement in the series.
As a science journalist, not a scientist, I don’t judge the science behind intelligent design assertions that there is evidence to contradict evolution.
Richard Hutton: My journalist's opinion of evolutionary psychology is that many of its assertions are provocative and fascinating, but advocates have a long way to go to prove much of what's been proposed.
discuss.washingtonpost.com /wp-srv/zforum/01/evolution2_092601.htm   (2425 words)

  
 Term paper on Edgar Wallace
Presumably born in London, he was found abandoned at the age of nine days in Billingsgate by a fishmonger, who subsequently brought him up as his own son.
He wrote an immense number of novels in the last ten years of his life and his output is often compared to that of other prolific authors, such as Isaac Asimov.
Wallace, Edgar Wallace, Edgar de:Edgar Wallace eo:Edgar WALLACE
www.termpapertopic.org /ed/edgar-wallace.html   (208 words)

  
 Wallace Stevens - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wallace Stevens (October 2, 1879 - August 2, 1955) was an American Modernist poet.
Born in Reading, Pennsylvania, Stevens went to college at Harvard, after which he moved to New York City and briefly worked as a journalist.
Baird, James, The Dome and the Rock: Structure in the Poetry of Wallace Stevens (1968)
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Wallace_Stevens   (1673 words)

  
 Edgar Wallace
British novelist, playwright, and journalist who produced popular detective and suspense stories and was in his time "the king" of the modern thriller.
Young Wallace left school at the age of 12, and took menial jobs before enlisting at the age of 18 in the Army, serving in the Royal West Kent Regiment from 1893 to 1896.
Wallace wrote his works at a prodigious pace, among others one of his most popular plays, ON THE SPOT (1931), was finished in four days.
www.kirjasto.sci.fi /ewallace.htm   (1818 words)

  
 George Wallace   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
One of the ways that Wallace improved his racist credentials was to recruit Asa Earl Carter as his main speechwriter in the 1962 election.
Wallace continued to resist the demands of John F. Kennedy and the federal government to integrate the Alabama's education system.
Mr Wallace, the governor of Alabama who gained notoriety in the 1960s for his segregational politics, was paralysed by the shots and three other people were injured in the incident.
www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk /USAwallaceG.htm   (4826 words)

  
 Edgar Wallace (1875 - 1932)
Wallace's books were adapted for the German screen during the 1920s, and resurfaced in the 1960s to become the bread and butter of the German film industry.
Bergfelder points out that while Wallace seemed to represent the quintessence of British ambience, there was really not that much specifically British about the novels, which rendered them ideal for cultural appropriation in Germany and the United States.
Many Wallace adaptations during the 1960s -- internecine feuds about inheritances shot in the labyrinthine settings of country mansions harboring subterranean hideouts and trapdoors -- were among the top-grossing films in Germany during that era.
www.jahsonic.com /EdgarWallace.html   (1033 words)

  
 Edgar Wallace
Among Wallace's characters are J.G. Reeder, T.B. Smith, Superintendent Minter, Sanders of the Rivers, The Sooper, and Sergeant/Inspector Elk.
Edgar Wallace was born in Greenwich, and was brought up as an adopted child in the family of Dick Freeman, a London fishporter.
Young Wallace left school at the age of 12, and took menial jobs before enlisting at 18 in the Army, serving in the Royal West Kent Regiment from 1893 to 1896.
bildung.freepage.de /scholli   (628 words)

  
 Mirror.co.uk - News - All News Archive - HE CARED DEEPLY ABOUT HIS READERS, AND USED THE POWER OF HIS PEN TO FIGHT ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Daily Mirror editor Richard Wallace said of Foot, twice Journalist of the Year: "He was a great champion for Mirror readers.
Richard Stott, another Mirror editor who worked closely with Foot, called him "the greatest campaigning journalist of his generation".
He was Journalist of the Year in the What The Papers Say Awards in 1972 and 1989 and Campaigning Journalist of the Year in the 1980 British Press Awards.
www.mirror.co.uk /news/allnews/tm_objectid=14442207&method=full&siteid=50143&headline=he-cared-deeply-about-his-readers--and-used-the-power-of-his-pen-to-fight-injustice-name_page.html   (949 words)

  
 [alicebot-general] text of Board coup   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Richard Wallace is a brilliant computer scientist; often maligned by others including his peers.
There is one fact that all the Board members agree and that is that Dr. Richard Wallace has and hopefully will continue to develop is the powerful world of AIML.
This is the important issue; not : "he or she said this or that" but to make sure that this community survives for without that vision, there is no hope for the future.
www.alicebot.org /pipermail/alicebot-general/2002-August/005731.html   (1331 words)

  
 Richard Wallace   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Richard Wallace (art collector) (1818 - 1890), whose collection forms the basis of the Wallace Collection
Richard Wallace (scientist) (born 1960), Chairman of the A.L.I.C.E Artificial Intelligence Foundation
Richard Wallace (journalist), editor of The Daily Mirror newspaper
www.encyclopedia-1.com /r/ri/richard_wallace.html   (103 words)

  
 JS Online: Two novelists step out of character, into non-fiction
Wallace's fiction, with its footnotes and hyperactive language, has dramatized our anxiety over language's failure to describe the tangible chaos of human emotions.
In his "Small But Necessary Foreword," Wallace describes the project as "a piece of pop technical writing," his goal "to make math beautiful - or at least to get the reader to see how someone might find it so." Wallace, who claims to have nursed a "medium-strong amateur interest in math," succeeds admirably.
For a while, it seemed Vollmann was neck-and-neck in a size war with Wallace, Richard Powers and anyone else who would take him on.
www.jsonline.com /enter/books/reviews/oct03/179729.asp?format=print   (822 words)

  
 American Politics Journal -- Pundit Pap
Wallace and Myers rumor-mongered about alleged plots to kidnap members of the Iraqi Governing Council and exchange them for Saddam (big deal -- we'd be surprised if these sort of plots didn't exist in the chaotic stretch of land that is Iraq).
Wallace also pressed Myers about whether or not the threat level should be raised in the US (keep in mind that a few hours after airtime Tom Ridge would do just that after days of rumors and intimations that such a move would be made), and Myers correctly said that was Tom Ridge's call.
We noticed that Wallace has adapted the rude, snotty FOX News habit of cutting off Democrat guests before they are able to complete their answers.
www.americanpolitics.com /20031221punditpap.html   (1357 words)

  
 Richard Wallace (journalist)
Richard Wallace is the current editor of British newspaper the Daily Mirror.
Wallace was appointed editor in 2004 on the dismissal of well-known editor Piers Morgan for publishing false images of British soldiers in Iraq.
This page was last modified 23:43, 18 Feb 2005.
www.arikah.net /encyclopedia/Richard_Wallace_%28journalist%29   (97 words)

  
 Blogger: Email Post to a Friend   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Mirror journalists who spoke to the Standard on condition of anonymity questioned Bailey's commitment to the "seriously good popular journalism" which she promised to invest in after Morgan was removed.
"Richard's a nice bloke, but these problems are greater than any individual can solve and he probably realises it too," the former staffer says.
And journalists, the company likes to point out, fail to understand that newspapers are not cultural icons to be protected, but hard-headed businesses.
www.blogger.com /email-post.g?blogID=10878440&postID=110933725840949410   (1177 words)

  
 Richard Wallace - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Richard Wallace (born 1960), Chairman of A.L.I.C.E. Artificial Intelligence Foundation
Richard Wallace, author of Jack the Ripper, Light-Hearted Friend
Richard Wallace, editor of The Daily Mirror newspaper
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Richard_Wallace   (93 words)

  
 The Wallace Collection Centenary Press Pack   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
The Wallace Collection's Centenary Project is to be launched on 22 June 2000, when the museum celebrates to the day its 100th anniversary as a national museum.
The Collection was bequeathed to the nation in 1897 by Lady Wallace, probably reflecting Sir Richard Wallace's wishes that his collection should be made accessible to the public as a resource for art education.
The bronze fountain brought by Sir Richard Wallace from his château de Bagatelle in Paris has been re-installed in the centre of the space and gives the restaurant its name, Café Bagatelle.
www.wallacecollection.org /i_s/press/press_pack_centenary_project.htm   (2166 words)

  
 60minutestrans
WALLACE: (Voiceover) To explain why Dr. Lee was singled out in the first place, Secretary Richardson, in that conversation 14 months ago, brought up America’s most sophisticated nuclear warhead, the W-88, and said he...
WALLACE: And that Wen Ho Lee apparently is the follow who gave information on the W-88 to some Chinese scientist.
WALLACE: But in a phone call last Thursday, Secretary Richardson told me he not only stands by the answers he gave us 14 months ago, but that Dr. Lee’s ordeal is hardly over.
www.wenholee.org /60minutestrans.htm   (1233 words)

  
 Dictionary of Australian Biography Sa-Sp   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
He was one of the original three journalists who conducted the "Passing Show" column, a feature of the paper carried on by generations of writers for more than 50 years.
His views on the tariff prevented his being elected as one of the Victorian delegates to the 1897 convention, but at the first federal election in 1901 he was elected as one of the senators for Victoria in spite of the opposition of the protectionist press.
Smith was a thoroughly equipped journalist who with his well-stored mind and fine library could produce an excellent article on almost any subject at the shortest notice.
gutenberg.net.au /dictbiog/0-dict-biogSa-Sp.html   (21523 words)

  
 Edgar Wallace   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Edgar Wallace pictured on a 1929 cover of Time Richard Horatio Edgar Wallace (April 1, 1875–February 10, 1932) was a prolific British crime writer, journalist and playwright, who wrote 175 novels, 24 plays, and countless articles in newspapers and journals.
The wheel has written on it several events, such as "murder", and when turned one comes up and should be incorporated in the storywriting.
His Son Bryan Edgar Wallace also was an author.
www.kiwipedia.com /en/edgar-wallace.html   (433 words)

  
 Additional Reading (from Wallace, Sir Richard, Baronet) --  Encyclopædia Britannica
Laid out in 1748 by Nicholas Scull and William Parsons on land owned by Thomas and Richard Penn (sons of William Penn, Pennsylvania's founder), it was built around Penn Common, a large open square, and named for the hometown of the Penn...
British novelist, playwright, and journalist who was an enormously popular writer of detective and suspense stories.
Wallace was an ardent supporter of New Deal programs and tried to help farmers with groundbreaking—though often controversial—legislation.
www.britannica.com /eb/article?tocId=7753   (650 words)

  
 Chicago Reader: Hot Type
There's a message in those little flags: "I may be a journalist, but I'm an American first." No doubt the journalist is, but it's unflattering for a journalist to seem to need to say so.
That little flag certainly doesn't prove that its wearer is getting carried away with nationalist fervor, but the absence of it quietly suggests that the journalist is not.
Journalists who think twice about their public role might discover they value this suggestion.
www.chireader.com /hottype/2001/011012_2.html   (1226 words)

  
 Edgar Wallace   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Richard Horatio Edgar Wallace (April 1, 1875 - February 10, 1932) was a British crime writer, journalist and playwright.
Probably born in London, he was found abandoned at the age of nine days in Billingsgate by a fishmonger, who subsequently brought him up as his own son.
The Clue Of The Twisted Candle (e-text of one of Edgar Wallace's works)
www.encyclopedia-1.com /e/ed/edgar_wallace.html   (185 words)

  
 Dictionary of Meaning www.mauspfeil.net
'''Richard Wallace''' is the current editor of United Kingdom British newspaper the ''Daily Mirror''.
Wallace was appointed editor in 2004 on the dismissal of well-known editor Piers Morgan for publishing false images of United Kingdom British soldiers in Iraq.
There you find a list of all editors and the possibility to edit the original text of the article Richard Wallace (journalist).
www.mauspfeil.net /Richard_Wallace_%28journalist%29.html   (116 words)

  
 Journalism.org - Resources We Offer - Education & Training - Forums and Speeches - CCJ Forums - What the Public ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-17)
Richard Wallace: The main purpose of the conference is to provide the public an opportunity to express their feelings about the news business I believe we are in a very challenging time for the mass media.
Here at the world's oldest school of journalism, we have a continuing commitment to educate tomorrow's journalists to be fair, objective, and accurate in their reporting.
So it's very easy for the journalists to drive direct to the person he or she thinks is the best source of information in the shortest period of time.
www.journalism.org /resources/education/forums/ccj/forum15   (5077 words)

  
 Wallace Hurman - Surch
Wallace and Gromit is an exciting arcade platform adventure where you have to li...
Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit closely follows the events of the...
Wallace office supplies at huge discounts - free UK delivery on all business orders over £30.
www.surch.co.uk /wallace+hurman   (316 words)

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