Event class: editor, newspaper, became, daily, news, joined, reporter, career, moved, worked

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Events with high posterior probability

Kevin KallaugherKallaugher returned to the U. S. in 1988 to join The Baltimore Sun as its editorial cartoonist.
Hanson W. BaldwinAfter three years of naval service he began his newspaper career in 1927 as a reporter for The Baltimore Sun.
Jon CraigIn 1998, Craig joined the Sunday Express newspaper as Political Editor, remaining with the paper for three years.
Ira O. McDanielThe family moved to Atlanta in 1847 and two years later he co-founded its first successful daily newspaper, the Daily Intelligencer.
Tom ColtenIn 1948, he relocated to Bogalusa in Washington Parish in southeastern Louisiana, and became business manager and stockholder of the Bogalusa Daily News, since a Wick Communications publication.
Will RansomHe was credited by C. J. Bulliet, Editor of the art magazine for the Chicago Evening Post and later art critic of the Chicago Daily News, of being the person that, in 1923, introduced Helen West Heller to woodcutting, a medium in which she went forward to become one of the world's foremost practitioners.
Rachel Johnson In 1989 she joined the staff of the Financial Times, becoming the first female graduate trainee at the paper, where she wrote on the economy.
Loren Miller (judge)Charlotta Bass sold the newspaper California Eagle in 1951 to Loren Miller, the former city editor of the Eagle, and began writing for the Eagle, which earned him a reputation in the black community as an articulate and outspoken defender of African Americans.
Stanley Doust For 31 years from 1920, Doust was the lawn tennis correspondent for the Daily Mail.
James Harding (journalist) After serving for three years as the Financial Times Washington bureau chief, he joined The Times in Summer 2006 as Business Editor.
Steven RattnerWhile at Brown, he served as editor-in-chief of The Brown Daily Herald in 1973.
Roy M. FisherFisher returned to the Chicago Daily News in 1965, as Editor-in-Chief.
Melville Elijah StoneIn 1881 he established the Chicago Morning News (renamed the Chicago Record).
Carl GilesHis strip came to the attention of the editor of the Sunday Express and in 1943 he was interviewed for a job on the Evening Standard, but was eventually offered a job on the Daily Express and Sunday Express instead, at a higher salary of 20 guineas per week, and he quit Reynolds News.
Anila BaigBaig began working as a journalist in 1998, when she joined the Telegraph & Argus newspaper as a trainee reporter, before moving to Yorkshire Post as a columnist.
Hannen SwafferHe was editor of The People, and in 1926, became drama critic of the Daily Express.
Andrew Morton (writer)He was a tabloid journalist and worked for three London tabloids, namely the Daily Star, News of the World, and Daily Mail, until 1987.
Martin H. GlynnFrom 1896 on, he wrote for the Albany Times-Union daily newspaper, becoming eventually its editor, publisher and owner.
David Gibson (Australian politician)In June 2004 he was promoted as to the position of General Manager of the APN publication The Gympie Times in Gympie, Queensland.
John Norman MacleanJohn Maclean was a writer, editor, and reporter for the Chicago Tribune for 30 years before he resigned in 1995 to begin a second career writing books.
Valda CooperCooper joined the Farmington Daily Times in 1953 after moving to the area because of her husband's job transfer.
Donald BrookLater (from 1968) he became art critic of the Sydney Morning Herald when he was appointed as one of the three first academics in the new Power Institute of Fine Arts in the University of Sydney.
Ben Robertson (journalist)His work as a war correspondent began in 1940 covering England for the New York paper PM.
Tom GriscomHe left R. J. Reynolds in the later half of 1999 and returned to Chattanooga'' to help shape the overall identity'' of the city's now single daily print newspaper, formed after WEHCO Media bought and merged the fiercely competitive afternoon Free Press and the morning The Chattanooga Times to create the Chattanooga Times Free Press.
Turner CatledgeAfter college, the Democrat offered him another job but instead he became editor of the Tunica Times (Tunica, Mississippi) in 1922, and later managing editor and mechanical superintendent of the Tupelo Journal (Tupelo, Mississippi).
Jeffrey GettlemanIn 2002, Gettleman joined The New York Times as a domestic correspondent in Atlanta, where he later became the bureau chief.
Herbert IngramEncouraged by the success of The Illustrated London News, Ingram decided in 1848 to start a daily newspaper, the London Telegraph.
Hugh Denison In 1910, Denison as he was now named, founded Sun Newspaper Ltd and took over publication of the Sunday Sun and Australian Star (renamed the Sun).
Raymond AronA lifelong journalist, Aron in 1947 became an influential columnist for Le Figaro, a position he held for thirty years until he joined L'Express, where he wrote a political column up to his death.
James Hogg (publisher)He subsequently entered the book house attached to the Caledonian Mercury, where the printing of the seventh edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica had been commenced in 1827, and became reader on the Caledonian Mercury.
Mark AmesIn 1995 he published'' The Rise and Fall of Moscow's Expat' Royalty''' in the English-language Moscow newspaper The Moscow Times, and was shortly thereafter hired by its competitor Living Here.
Louis HerenIn 1961 he became chief Washington correspondent (later American editor) of The Times.
John Hay In 1870 he left government and worked for 6 years as an editor for the New York Tribune under Whitelaw Reid.
Francis B. LoomisA year following his graduation in 1883, Loomis became a reporter for the New York Tribune and later assumed a campaign press relations position.
Robert GirouxIn 1947 Frank Morley left the company and returned to London, and a year later, Giroux was promoted to editor-in-chief, reporting to Eugene Reynal, an Ivy League scholar whom Brace had brought in to replace Morley.
Sa?a PapacIn June 2011, Glasgow newspaper The Herald reported Papac was returning to international football.
George Carpozi, Jr.In 1953 he joined the New York Journal-American as a reporter, night city editor and chief assistant city editor.
Victoria NewtonVictoria Newton (born 9 March 1972, Liverpool, England) is the editor of the Sun on Sunday She ran the'' Bizarre'' showbiz column of Rupert Murdoch's The Sun newspaper and then became Deputy Editor of the paper.
James Whitcomb RileyThe editors of the Anderson Democrat discovered Riley's poems in the Indianapolis Journal and offered him a job as a reporter in February 1877.
Diane Anderson-Minshall In 1990, she became the editor of the Crescent City Star, a weekly LGBT newspaper in New Orleans.
Francis A. MallisonHe eventually gained editorial control of the Rome Sentinel and remained editor until he moved to Brooklyn in November 1859, whereupon he took a position at the City News.
Valda CooperShe worked as a staff member at the Borger Herald for nine years before joining the Associated Press' Bureau in Santa Fe, New Mexico, in 1943.
Philip Dansken RossHe returned to Montreal and joined the Montreal Star in 1885, eventually becoming its managing editor.
George Washington GiftHe died February 11, 1879, while serving as editor of the Napa City Reporter.
Nina EastonIn 1984 she became a staff reporter for the Washington D. C. - based Legal Times.
Benson John LossingIn 1835, Lossing became part owner and editor of the Poughkeepsie Telegraph.
Peter TinniswoodHe spent four years in Sheffield from 1958, first working for the The Star, and then for the Sheffield Telegraph, where he was a leader writer and specialised in feature writing.
Col AllanIn 1974 he moved to Sydney as a reporter for The Daily Mirror.
David WhittonHe began his journalistic career with D. C. Thomson in 1970 before moving to the Fife Free Press and then the Evening Express in Aberdeen, specialising in local government activities.
Scott Morrison (journalist)He worked for the Toronto Sun throughout the 1980s and 1990s until he joined Rogers Sportsnet in 2001 as managing editor of Hockey.
Janet Street-PorterShe became fashion editor of the Evening Standard in 1971.
Mark HaysomIn 1992 he joined Thomson Regional Newspapers where he ran their free newspaper division before moving the following year to the Western Mail and South Wales Echo as Managing Director.
Jim MunroIn November 2006 he returned to The Sun as Executive Sports Editor of The Sun Online.
David WhittonHe worked at The Scotsman in Glasgow for three years then moved to the Daily Record where he became Industrial Editor in 1983.
David BrewertonIn 1988 Brewerton was recruited by Rupert Murdoch as Executive Editor of The Times Business News.
Frank McGuinness (journalist)In 1941 Frank moved to Sydney to become the inaugural editor of The Daily Mirror, a Sydney based afternoon newspaper founded by Ezra Norton.
Edward W. CarmackCarmack joined the staff of the Nashville Democrat in 1889, later becoming editor-in-chief of the Nashville American when the two papers merged.
Bob WoodwardAfter a year at the Montgomery Sentinel, a weekly newspaper in the Washington, D. C., suburbs, Woodward was hired as a Post reporter in 1971.
Steve MartiniIn 1970 he became the newspaper's first correspondent at the State Capitol in Sacramento and later its bureau chief.
Shayne CurrieThe New Zealand journalist Shayne Currie (born 1 April 1971) is editor of the New Zealand Herald newspaper, an Auckland - based newspaper with the highest circulation of any newspaper in the country.
Lester MarkelIn 1919 he was promoted to assistant managing editor of the Tribune.
John Newman EdwardsIn 1887, Edwards returned to Kansas City as editor of the paper he had founded.
Sherman BoothJust days before Wisconsin became a state in 1848, Booth and his editor Ichabod Codding arrived in Wisconsin to establish another abolitionist paper, the American Freeman.
Robert Neville (journalist)Coming back again to New York, Neville decided on a return to daily newspaper work, joining, as one of the initial reporters, the newly founded (in June 1940) leftist afternoon daily PM, which did not accept advertising and resembled a weekly newsmagazine in its reliance on large photographs and stapled pages.
Wallace Carlson Born in St. Louis, Missouri, Carlson moved with his family in 1905 to Chicago, where he took a job at the Chicago Inter Ocean newspaper as a copy boy.
Byron PricePrice served as the AP's Washington bureau chief and, in 1937, became executive news editor of the organization.
Mark Harris (author)After resigning in July 1946, he spent the next year and a half in a succession of short-lived journalism jobs in Albuquerque, New Mexico (Albuquerque Journal), Chicago (Negro Digest and Ebony), and New York (Park Row News Service).
Richard RealfIn 1856 he accompanied a party of free-state emigrants to Kansas, where he became a journalist and correspondent of several eastern newspapers.
David Lawrence Jr.Before coming to The Miami Herald in 1989, he was publisher and executive editor of the Detroit Free Press.
Roy GreensladeAfter graduating in 1979, he joined the Daily Star in Manchester for six months until being seconded to the Daily Express in London.
Bill Howard Bill joined Forbes Newspapers in Somerville, N. J., in July 1992 and served as the primary sportswriter and copy editor of The Metuchen-Edison Review and Highland Park Herald weekly community newspapers.
Charles PortisAfter serving as the London bureau chief of the New York Herald Tribune, he left journalism in 1964.
Shiela Grant DuffIn January 1935 she found employment as a correspondent for The Observer covering the Saar plebiscite in January 1935, her copy providing that newspaper's successive front-page coverage.
Donald McLachlanAfter a period as a Laming Fellow at The Queen's College, Oxford, he began his career in journalism in 1933 with a position as a sub-editor and foreign correspondent for The Times.
Michael Specter Specter initially covered local news at The Washington Post in 1985, then became a national science reporter for the Post and finally New York City bureau chief.
Simon Dring Simon got his first media job in early 1963, working as a Proof-Reader and Feature Writer for the Bangkok World newspaper in Thailand.
Stephen HunterHe joined The Baltimore Sun in 1971, working at the copy desk of the newspaper's Sunday edition for a decade.
James Warren (journalist)In 2001, Warren returned to Chicago as the Tribune ′ s associate managing editor for features.
John WilkeIn July 1989, Wilke joined the Wall Street Journal s Boston bureau, covering technology.
Paul JanenschIn 1992, he left Gannett to become top editor of the Worcester (MA) Telegram and Gazette, then owned by the San Francisco Chronicle.
Jon CraigIn 1992, Craig joined the Daily Express newspaper, becoming its Political Editor.
Fulgence CharpentierCharpentier began covering Parliament for Ottawa's Le Droit (the city's largest newspaper) in 1922.
Keren NeubachIn her youth she dreamt of becoming a novelist ; when she was conscripted into the IDF, she was sent to serve as a correspondent for Galei Zahal, and in 1991 was the station's Washington DC correspondent, and also wrote for Al HaMishmar newspaper.
Dorothy Bar-AdonWriting under the by-lines Dot Kahn, Dorothy Kahn and Dorothy R. Kahn, Member of the Press Staff or Staff Correspondent, Bar-Adon was employed by the newspaper until her immigration to Palestine in 1933.
Charles Ambrose LorenszLorensz and a syndicate purchased the Examiner in 1859, which was renamed as the Ceylon Examiner thus becoming the first Ceylonese newspaper, of which he was the managing editor.
Gordon McKenzie (journalist)After working for Denis Hamilton, editorial director of Kemsley Newspapers and alongside the group's Foreign Manager Ian Fleming he was given his first editorship at the Sunday Chronicle in 1950 : at the age of 33 McKenzie was Fleet Street's youngest editor.
Rod DreherHe was a conservative editorial writer and a columnist for The Dallas Morning News, but departed that newspaper in late 2009 to affiliate with the John Templeton Foundation.
Robb Montgomery He was a principal editor and designer of Chicago's Red Streak newspaper that was published by the Chicago Sun-Times starting in October, 2002 as a competitor to the Chicago Tribune s RedEye tabloid.
Robin EsserHe later became consultant editor of the London Evening News, before in 1985 returning to the Daily Express.
Elliott DoddsHe returned to England intending to read for the bar but was drawn instead to journalism accepting the post of leader writer and literary assistant on the Huddersfield Examiner in 1914.
Pierre van PaassenIn 1921 he became a journalist with the Toronto Globe, and a year later moved to the U. S. and began writing a syndicated column for the Atlanta Journal Constitution.
Geraldine KennedyOn the foundation of the Sunday Tribune in 1980, Kennedy joined it as the paper's political correspondent.
John C. Jacobs In 1857, he became a reporter for the New York Express, was the paper's correspondent in Albany, New York, and was its war correspondent, accompanying the Peninsular Campaign.
Marilyn BeckShe became affiliated with Tribune Media Services in 1980, and a decade later moved to Creators Syndicate.
Morgan MellishIn 1997 Mellish joined the business section of The Sydney Morning Herald as a staff writer.
Jackie Diamond HymanAfter moving to Orange County, California, in 1972, she worked as a reporter and editor for The Orange Coast Daily Pilot and as a copy editor for The Orange County Register.
Harry HaenigsenIn 1970, when Hoest left to start his own strip, My Son John, for the Chicago Tribune New York News Syndicate, Haenigsen chose to end Penny and retired.
Margo KingstonShe also worked for The Age, The Canberra Times and A Current Affair before moving to The Sydney Morning Herald, where she worked until August 2005.
Adriaan van Dis During his college days Van Dis was already working as editor with the NRC Handelsblad and after graduating he remained connected to the paper until 1982, working for the Saturday Supplement.
Lise BissonnetteShe became the parliamentary correspondent in Quebec City, then in Ottawa, before taking on the position of editorialist and, finally, that of writer-in-chief in 1982.