Hertzberg Of The New Yorker In January 2000 he tells us that new hampshire is shaped like a wine bottle, and most of its Even as a boy Hertzberg had been obsessed with newspapers. http://www.harvardmagazine.com/on-line/0103112.html
Extractions: O n a January evening in 1977, at the old New Yorker offices on West 43rd Street, a going-away party was in progress for Hendrik Hertzberg '65, a staff writer there since 1969. Jimmy Carter had been elected president, and Hertzberg was leaving to join his speechwriting staff. "I felt I had been drifting a bit. I was at loose ends, not feeling like a 'real' writer, until I lucked into speechwriting," he says. "That focused me on politics. The life of a young writer in New York in the mid 1970s entailed a lot of angstgoing to a shrink, trying to figure out the meaning of life, getting involved in very intense relationships. I wanted to get out of myself, and when the White House thing came calling, I didn't hesitate for one second." Hertzberg was taking a leave of absence from a magazine put out by talented, eccentric, opinionated, hilarious, and sometimes acridly quarrelsome writers, artists, and editors. Yet nearly everyone there seems to have liked Hertzberg, and for his sendoff, pugnacious film critic Pauline Kael dragged the famously diffident editor, William Shawn, from his office to the soirée on the eighteenth floor. Unexpectedly, Shawn sat down at a piano and dazzled the crowd. "He was a really good jazz piano player," says Hertzberg. "Shawn knew I loved jazz, and he played wonderful boogie-woogie and stride piano. It was just magical."
Extractions: Permalink postCount('092405a'); FRIDAY NEWS UPDATE. POLITICAL APPRENTICE. Will the voters say "You're Fired" or "Your Hired" to candidates trying to launch their political careers from appearances on Donald Trump's The Apprentice TV show. Perhaps you remember the bow-tie wearing, walking stick strutting prig and womanizer Raj Bhakta from Season 2? Well, it turns out businessman Raj, 29, is exploring a run next year against Congresswoman Allyson Schwartz (D-PA). "Another girl who got fired from The Apprentice is off eating bugs. I've gotten off and tried to talk about issues I think are important for the country. I care deeply, and that's why I'm doing this," he explained to The Intelligencer suburban Philadelphia newspaper. "For somebody who's not well-known by the electorate, except for people who watch the television show, I would say it's an uphill battle [for Raj] ... He could be a good candidate, but it's a question of money and message," said local GOP Chair Ken Davis. Raj has already launched three websites: a
CalStuff: News. Observations. who just finished her second year at Dartmouth College in new hampshire. Lefty/Asian mag. Berzerk Comics mag; In Passing Bloggish. Cal news Sites http://calstuff.blogsome.com/2005/07/17/shooting-victim-idenitified/
Extractions: July 17, 2005 at 2:16 pm A report from the Chronicle A promising Ivy League college student was gunned down in Berkeley early Sunday morning, as she stood with a group of girlfriends outside her apartment, police said. The victim was identified by her friends as Meleia Willis-Starbuck, 19, who just finished her second year at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire. She had graduated two years ago from Berkeley High, and attended Dartmouth on scholarship. According to police, Willis-Starbuck was standing with a group of girlfriends at 1:45 a.m. outside Berkshire Apartments on College Avenue, where she was subletting a one-bedroom apartment for the summer. She had returned to her hometown so she could work as an intern at a womenâs drop-in center in downtown Berkeley, where she helped clients find safe shelters and legal help, according to her friends. Willis-Starbuck and her friends were approached by a second group of people and a brief argument ensued, according to Berkeley police spokesman Joe Okies. The argument appeared to be over, but a car returned moments later and a man got out and fired several rounds toward Willis-Starbuckâs group of friends. the shelter that Willis-Starbuck volunteered at would appreciate a donation.
CyberSleuths - The Reality Of Crime News Slain Durst Pal Had Big news mag (new York Daily news) A former close friend Concord, new hampshire Tulloch s lawyers argue state police lab work is http://www.cybersleuths.com/news/00__2002news/01032002.1250.htm
Extractions: Jail Journals - (Hizzoner.com) Starting Dec. 27, Mike Peterson has resumed the writing of periodic columns, styled "Jail Journals," for hizzoner.com." They will continue under that title as long as he remains confined in the Durham County Jail, since the jail provides his source material. Michael's columns will be reflections and observations on life in confinement.
Software Wire: E-mail Media News Sources new African magazine, World Women Soccer new Atlantis NOW new hampshire Business Review Paper mag Parents, Educators, Publishers Site Resource http://www.softwarewire.com/swnewslist.htm
Extractions: News Sources (Partial List) The Software Wire database consists of close to 10,000 reporters covering a wide variety of software, technology and trade related news sectors. A customized list matching your news to our sources is created for each assignment. Media contacts include writers and reporters working for online publications, magazines, newspapers, television and radio stations, and wire services. If you have specific questions as to whether your news will be delivered to an industry specific publication please inquire. We only distribute your news to an appropriate editor. List size varies with each distribution however we guarantee a minimum of 200 reporters will receive your news. Most news is received by 500 plus reporters. Following your news distribution you will receive a receipt with a complete list of all the news outlets to which the release was distributed. Please contact a staff person at +1 954-989-3338 or 800-713-7701 if you have specific questions. Office hours are 9 AM-6 PM EST. Media Professionals: Please fill out the online Software Wire Media Registration Form with your assignment profile so that we may include you on our list of subscribers.
YANKEE Magazine At his cabin in Canterbury, new hampshire, he watches himself call a crowded dance in a 1976 newspapers called him the Pied Piper of Canterbury. http://www.laufman.org/Yankee1995.htm
Extractions: Video Films YANKEE Magazine December 1995 by Jim Collins Hear a cut from the CD re-release of the Canterbury Country Dance Orchestra: Farewell to Whiskey / Money Musk click (May take a while to download) D udley Laufman is no better at stopping time than the rest of us. At his cabin in Canterbury, New Hampshire, he watches himself call a crowded dance in a 1976 documentary about the resurgence of New England contradancing. "That seems like a hundred years ago," he says. For a time Dudley stood at the leading edge of a movement that brought country dancing back to the Grange halls and church basements of small-town New England. He took the torch of a dying oral tradition from the hands of a few old-timers and fired up an entire generation of young people. At the 1965 Newport Folk Festival, 16,000 people stomped and clapped wildly for Dudley and his country orchestra, the same night Bob Dylan was booed for playing an electric guitar. Newspapers called him "the Pied Piper of Canterbury." Twenty-five years later, the New England contradance is still vibrant, still going strong. Dudley Laufman is still playing the fiddle and calling dances. But he is no longer at the center of the scene. The movement he created inevitably evolved. Dudley refused to evolve with it.
BAD MAGS My memory entered the timeline of magazines in 1960 in new hampshire. The first monster mag I bought was Famous Monsters of Filmland 34 August 65 http://www.badmags.com/bmontherack.html
Extractions: So the newsstands evolved to shelter the early dealers of pulp from the elements. And what of the little bundles of joy themselves? The magazines? Sold to the public; never to be nestled together again in the same space and time; scattered to the wind like pollen or seed, disseminated bits of information, gossip, humor and news. National Geographic Magazine . Not able to read much yet, I was fascinated by the photos and paintings, which would mesmerize me for hours. A few years down the line I had graduated to such things as Highlights and , to which I subscribed, courtesy of my parents.
Extractions: @import url(http://www.rcfp.org/magazine.css); Back to: This issue's table of contents home page RCFP Home Page ROUNDUP New Hampshire Supreme Court rules in favor of cameras in courtrooms; other courts limit access By Paula Canning and April Thorn "[T]he use of cameras by the electronic media is merely an extension of the reporting function of the more traditional arms of the press," New Hampshire Supreme Court Justice Joseph P. Nadeau wrote in a December decision responding to media requests that the court adopt a presumption that courts be open to the public. Writing for the state's high court, Nadeau said that judges should limit camera coverage only if there is "substantial likelihood of harm to any person or other harmful consequences" and "only when no other practical alternative is available." The high court ruled in response to efforts by WMUR-TV Channel 9 in Manchester, The Boston Globe and the New Hampshire Association of Broadcasters to change a trial court's ruling, made without a hearing, that camera presence would infringe upon "the defendant's constitutional right to a fair trial." The Radio-Television News Directors Association and The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press filed a friend-of-the-court brief. The ruling will affect administrative policies in two counties that had prohibited cameras in courtrooms altogether.
Concord Monitor Online - Concord, NH 03301 Concord Monitor, new hampshire online newspaper edition, Concord, new Speaking of Runner s World, the fleetfooted mag features Edwards as this month s http://www.cmonitor.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20041017/REPOSITORY/410170342
Concord Monitor Online - Concord, NH 03301 Concord Monitor, new hampshire online newspaper edition, Concord, new But he was determined to have a car and mag wheels toughguy hubcaps with a few http://www.cmonitor.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050724/REPOSITORY/507240357
The Neil Rogers Show - News Archives Jacko put wine in boy s coke can, mag says by Robert Kahn John Kerrys new hampshire win wasnt just a victorywith a 13point margin over Howard Dean, http://news.neilrogers.com/news/archives/20040129.html
Extractions: In the wake of the latest revelations from weapons inspector David Kay, many of the largest U.S. newspapers are belatedly pressing the Bush administration for an explanation of how it could have gotten the question of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq so wrong in the march to war last year. A growing number are raising the possibility that Bush and his team may have "cooked" the intelligence to support their case for war. Parole board moves up release date for 'TV Intoxication' killer A man who gained notoriety as a teenager 27 years ago when his lawyer said watching violent television caused the youth to murder his elderly neighbor had his prison release date changed Wednesday to June 7.The Florida Parole Commission voted 2-1 to let Ronny Zamora be released this year instead of June 7, 2005, as the panel voted last year. That decision had taken seven years off the original release date for Zamora, who prison officials say is a model prisoner. Dean to Focus on 7 States After Shake - Up Fresh off a staff shake-up, Howard Dean is returning to the campaign trail, trying to regain his footing with a new strategy focused on the delegate-rich states most likely to determine this year's Democratic presidential nominee.With less than a week before a seven-state blitz of primaries and caucuses, Dean stayed in his hometown of Burlington, Vt., Wednesday, designing a new course for his faltering bid for the White House.
Extractions: Day-long celebration of Conway Scenic's 28th Birthday. Fares rolled back to almost half price, on the return trips either Conway or Bartlett, passengers will be served cake and lemonade. Balloons will also be handed out to any adult or child. (603) 356-5251. GREASE Mt. Washington Valley Theatre Company From 10am to 12 noon - Great fun for the entire family! Join us for a couple of hours of "mucking around" for frogs, toads and insect life. A teacher/ naturalist from Tin Mountain Conservation Center will have nets, bug boxes, hand lenses, identification cards and all the things you need to explore the beautiful Trout Pond at the base of Wildcat Mountain. All welcome, program is FREE. Picnic lunches available for purchase, or bring your own. Wildcat Mountain Ski Area & Summer Gondola, Route 16, Pinkham Notch, NH. (800) 255-6439
AgentQuery :: Find The Agent Who Will Find You A Publisher and by the bimonthly publication of Georgia Writers news/mag. The new hampshire Writers Project is a resource for writers, publishers, booksellers http://www.agentquery.com/resource_lo.aspx
Extractions: Select a Nonfiction Genre... Adventure/True Story Art Biography Business Celebrity Cookbooks Cultural/Social Issues Current Affairs Dating/Relationships Finance Gardening History Home/Design How-To Humor Journalism Medical Memoirs Military/War Multi-Cultural Music Narrative Nature/Ecology Parenting Pets Photography Politics Pop Culture Psychology Religion Science Self-Help Spirituality Sports Technology Travel True Crime Women's Issues Select a Fiction Genre... Adventure Chick Lit Children's Christian Commercial Fiction Family Saga Fantasy Historical Fiction Horror Humor/Satire Literary Fiction Military/Espionage Multi-Cultural Mystery Offbeat/Quirky Romance Science Fiction Short Stories Thrillers/Suspense True Crime Western Women's Fiction Young Adult Founded in 1948, the American Society of Journalists and Authors is the nation's leading organization of independent nonfiction writers. Their membership consists of more than 1,000 outstanding freelance writers of magazine articles, trade books, and many other forms of nonfiction writing, each of whom has met ASJA's exacting standards of professional achievement. The Children's Book Council (CBC) is a non-profit trade organization dedicated to encouraging literacy and the use and enjoyment of children's books. It is the official sponsor of Young People's Poetry Week and Children's Book Week each year. The Council's Members include U.S. publishers and packagers of trade books for children and young adults.
Ski Mag 41-59 NH newspaper Reports College Skiing Subsidized pg.1 RMSkiing Applies fro Nat l Sanction pg.1 Ski Resorts in new hampshire Note Expansion pg.8 http://skiinghistory.org/skiingmagindex1.html
Prior To A Career Change, Test Drive Your Dream Job With A Fox news Channel Imag, Travel Time Section, VocationVacations Feature Video. May 20, 2005 Portsmouth Herald - new hampshire. Lexus.MSN - Luxury Living http://www.vocationvacations.com/press/index.asp
ABC News: The Note: 'Both Hopeful And Precarious' Duck and cover One of those glossy men s mag Abombs is about to hit official comes from the Senate s new Budget Committee Chairman, new hampshire Sen. http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/TheNote/story?id=561367
Newsbull Mag Editor Media Want Kerry To Win, Cover Sunshine JOURNAL Media, Bias in newspapers, Bias on Networks, Media Industry news Please Note We are updating newsbull with many new functions and a new look. http://www.newsbull.com/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=16576
Drug Company Guidelines It looks at drug company advertising and other new guidelines announced by the in journalism reporting for two new hampshire newspapers the Concord http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/discussion/2005/08/02/DI20050802008
Extractions: var SA_Message="SACategory=" + 'liveonline/business/pearlsteins_talk'; Hello Edit Profile Sign Out Sign In Register Now ... Subscribe to SEARCH: News Web var ie = document.getElementById?true:false; ie ? formSize=27 : formSize=24 ; document.write(''); Top 20 E-mailed Articles washingtonpost.com Live Discussions Print This Article ... E-Mail This Article Top News Live Discussions What is RSS? All RSS Feeds Steven Pearlstein Washington Post Columnist Wednesday, August 3, 2005; 11:00 AM Washington Post business columnist Steven Pearlstein was online to discuss his latest column , which examines drug company advertising and other guidelines announced Tuesday by the industry. A transcript follows.
Kovels Yellow Pages - A-General The Modernism magazine 20th Century Art Design (mag) The Modernism magazine monthly newspaper covering antiques and auctions in new hampshire and http://cache.tias.com/5866/InventoryPage/1151149/6.html
Extractions: A-General Page 6 of 6 This is Page 6 of 6 in this category. Browse the listings below, or click on the arrows or page numbers at the bottom of this page to view more listings. Click on the house to return to the full category listings. Select the listing you want to view and click the "Get Listing" button when you are done. Description Select Tradicion Revista (MAG) Tradicion Revista (MAG), a quarterly publication covering the art and culture of the Hispanic Southwest. Subscription $30 for one year, $54 for 2 years, $77 for 3 years. Treasure Chest (NP) Treasure Chest (NP), published monthly, $25 per year. Unravel the Gavel (NP) Unravel the Gavel (NP), monthly newspaper covering antiques and auctions in New Hampshire and northern New England, subscription $29.95 First Class, $19.00 bulk mail. Upper Canadian (NP) Upper Canadian (NP), bimonthly newspaper, subscription in U.S. $27 for one year, $48 for 2 years; in Canada $26 for one year, $46 for 2 years. Vermont Antique Times (NP) West Coast Peddler (NP) West Coast Peddler (NP), monthly journal, subscription $30 for one year.
1774AD In Pennsylvania mag. Hist. Biog. XXVII, 1903, pp 4955. FITCH, Ebenezer (1736-1833) of LITTLE, Deacon Enoch (1763-1848) of Boscawen, new hampshire A107 http://diarysearch.co.uk/Subweb/1774ad.htm