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Briefings containing "British Journalist"

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John Timpson—British journalist

John Timpson in the mid 1960s John Harry Robert Timpson OBE, (2 July 1928 – 19 November 2005), born in Kenton, Middlesex, was a British journalist, best known as a radio presenter. He went straight to the Wembley News as a sixteen-year-old cub reporter. After five years there and two years of national service, he moved to Norfolk and the Eastern Daily Press, and then in 1959 to the BBC.

Giles Coren—British journalist

Coren is the son of the late British writer and humourist Alan Coren, and the brother of journalist Victoria Coren. He was educated at Westminster School before going on to Keble College, Oxford, where he achieved a first in English.

Mark Seddon—British journalist

Mark Seddon (1963- ) is a British journalist and activist in the Labour Party. The son of a British army officer, Seddon joined the Labour Party at the age of 15 and was educated at the University of East Anglia.

Isabel Hilton—British journalist

Isabel Hilton is a London-based writer and broadcaster who has reported extensively from Latin America, East and South Asia, Africa and Europe. ... She also writes a column on international affairs for the London daily newspaper, The Guardian. Isabel is frequently invited to lecture on international affairs, most recently at Stanford University in California, and has given the Lothian Lecture in Edinburgh. She is also a frequent delegate to international conferences, both independent and governmental, including those at Ditchley Park and Wilton Park. In 1989, she was a fellow of the British American Project for the Successor Generation. Isabel is the author of The Search for the Panchen Lama, a history of China and Tibet, and co-author of The Falklands War, and The Fourth Reich, a biography of Klaus Barbie. She receives a Doctorate in recognition of her work as a writer and a journalist and, in particular, for her contributions to the understanding of international politics.

Martin Newland—British journalist

Martin Newland (born 1962) is a United Kingdom journalist who was editor of The Daily Telegraph , a United Kingdom broadsheet newspaper , from 2003-2005, replacing Charles Moore (journalist) .

Nicholas Shakespeare—British journalist

Shakespeare Nicholas William Richmond Shakespeare (born March 3, 1957 in Worcester) is a British journalist and writer. Born to a diplomat, Shakespeare grew up in the Far East and in South America. He was educated at the Dragon School preparatory school then Winchester College and Cambridge and worked as a journalist for BBC television and then on The Times as assistant arts and literary editor.

Richard Gott—British journalist

Richard Gott, a British journalist and historian with many years’ experience in Latin America, first visited Cuba in 1963 and has reported from the island many times since. He is the author of the classic work on post-Castro revolutionary movements, Guerrilla Movements in Latin America, and most recently of In the Shadow of the Liberator: Hugo Chavez and the Transformation of Venezuela.

Des Kelly—British journalist

Des Kelly (born 1965) is a British journalist. A sports journalist, and former deputy editor of the Daily Mirror, he replaced the disgraced Piers Morgan temporarily as Acting Editor in the wake of the faked photos of Iraqi prisoners fiasco [1] Kelly is currently a sports columnist for the Daily Mail, a pundit on BBC1's Inside Sport alongside Gabby Logan, an Executive Consultant for the PR agency Hill & Knowlton [2] and director of the internet company Fast Web Media.

Trevor Grove—British journalist

Trevor Grove (born January 1, 1945) is a British journalist and former editor of The Sunday Telegraph (1989-1992). ...

Peter Hopkirk—British journalist

Peter Hopkirk (1930- ) is a British journalist, formerly chief reporter for The Times, who has specialized in writing books on Central Asia and Tibet since about 1980.

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