Journalist
in sentence
537 examples of Journalist in a sentence
As the
journalist
Marcus Walker recently put it, Europe “was supposed to come of age as an actor on the world stage, bolstered by the Lisbon Treaty.
After a policeman died, live ammunition was fired into the crowds – killing a journalist, Bwizamani Singh, and provoking a rebuke from Reporters without Borders.
Among them were the
journalist
Roy Gutman, who discovered and reported on the Bosnian Serb camps, and former US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, who made the ICTY’s establishment a priority when she became US Ambassador to the UN during President Bill Clinton’s administration.
Hadjiev’s sister, the
journalist
Olgusapar Muradova, died in prison several weeks later, under suspicious circumstances.
He once told a female fellow legislator, “I wouldn’t rape you because you don’t deserve it,” and he is on record calling a female
journalist
a “whore.”
These programs develop what the American
journalist
Edward R. Murrow once called the crucial “last three feet” – face-to-face communications, with the enhanced credibility that reciprocity creates.
The Kismet of Basic ScienceSTANFORD – The British
journalist
Matt Ridley is usually an insightful commenter on the philosophy and practice of science.
“There is only fear, not freedom, of expression in Ethiopia,” says one leading
journalist.
Most notably, a crusading small-town
journalist
who reported the rape complaint against him was murdered in 2002.
The
journalist
Martin Woolacott describes Myanmar as a “halfway house between military and civilian rule,” observing that the country’s generals have been promising to complete the transition to democracy for several years now, yet remain unwilling to allow Suu Kyi to run for President.
This Thing Called the American DreamNEW YORK – In 1968, gonzo
journalist
Hunter S. Thompson mused about “this Death of the American Dream thing.”
The
journalist
Steve Clemons went further, stating that “rapprochement with Iran would be the biggest positive shift in global affairs since the end of the Cold War and the normalization of relations with China.”
In The Road to Somewhere: The Populist Revolt and the Future of Politics, British
journalist
David Goodhart argues that today’s politics is no longer a battle between left and right.
This was the first Zionist Congress, chaired by a then only moderately-known Viennese
journalist
and playwright Theodor Herzl.
According to the German
journalist
Ruth Andreas-Friedrich, the shame felt about “lost honor” created an “atmosphere of suicide.”
Above all, journalism is not regarded as a noble profession, because too many young Africans, for too long, saw the
journalist
as a mere propagandist.
This is the pernicious victimization narrative – still very popular in universities across Latin America – the late Venezuelan
journalist
Carlos Rangel eloquently refuted in books such as The Third World Ideology.
In 2000, for example, the
journalist
Georgiy Gongadze was kidnapped and beheaded after publishing online reports about high-level government corruption.
Having a telephone was a rare privilege: if you were not an important government official, a doctor, or a journalist, you might languish on a long waiting list and never receive a phone.
The first book is The Shifts and the Shocks, by the conservative British
journalist
Martin Wolf, who begins by cataloguing the major shifts that set the stage for the economic disaster that continues to shape the world today.
As the
journalist
Martin Wolf noted recently, “the rest of the UK has surely not escaped the horrors of the eurozone only to create similar horrors for itself at home.”
Only a few years ago, a young journalist, Georgi Gongadze, seeking to inform the public about our old regime’s corruption, was brutalized and beheaded by that regime’s thugs.
Goto, a
journalist
who traveled to Syria last October to try to secure Yukawa’s release, will supposedly be spared if Japan secures Jordan’s release of a convicted terrorist.
Haffner, later a
journalist
and author, was a law student who witnessed how the Nazi dictatorship became lethal, again incrementally, like the persecution of Jews in Italy.
The
journalist
Matt Taibbi’s memorable description in 2009 of Goldman Sachs – “a great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money” – still resonates, and for good reason.
After all, Milosevic’s critics and political rivals such as the
journalist
Slavko Curuvija and Milosevic’s former mentor, Ivan Stambolic, were assasinated by Serb police agents, who also tried three times to murder the opposition leader Vuk Draskovic.
Indeed, Lapid, a popular, eloquent, and attractive television journalist, clearly found the right formula for opposing the status quo without alienating too many voters with radical positions.
Another is the massacre, examined by the
journalist
Anna Bikont, of at least 340 – and, according to other authors, as many as 1,600 – Jewish men, women, and children in the town of Jedwabne.
For that, Daoud has been saddled with a double fatwa: one from his “assassin brothers,” to borrow the Algerian-French
journalist
Mohamed Sifaoui’s phrase, and another from a handful of supposedly progressive and anti-racist French intellectuals who accused him of “recycling the most hackneyed clichés of Orientalism” when he urged Arab men to respect the dignity of women.
After the identity of the CIA’s station chief in Pakistan was exposed (probably by Pakistani military officials), America made it known that it had good evidence that a prominent Pakistani
journalist
was ordered murdered by ISI.
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