Saturday, March 3, 2012

Anthony shadid

  • It was damp and cold as Anthony Shadid and I crossed in darkness over the barbed-wire fence that separated Turkey from Syria last month.
  • (New York Times)
  • The book's searching characters and mournful tone would be moving even if a reader had no knowledge that Mr. Shadid, a correspondent for The New York Times and perhaps his generation's finest chronicler of the Middle East, died on Feb.
  • (New York Times)
  • Reporter Anthony Shadid was, as he wrote, "never the type to stay home." But before he died on Feb. 16 at the age of 43 while covering the civil war in Syria for the New York Times, Shadid had found a home.
  • (Chicago Sun-Times)
  • Nada Bakri, wife of the late Anthony Shadid, spoke of her conflicted feelings regarding the profession she and her husband once loved together. Bakri, also a reporter, appeared on Erin Burnetts CNN show Outfront on Thursday.
  • (Huffington Post)
  • But before he died Feb. 16 at age 43 while covering the civil war in Syria for The New York Times, Shadid had found a home. Home was found in a Lebanese village in an abandoned and looted house built by his great-grandfather.
  • (USA Today)
  • Rajiv Chandrasekaran is a senior correspondent and associate editor of Foreign Policy.
  • (NPR News)
  • In April, the prize-winning New York Times correspondent Anthony Shadid was asked, on the NPR talk show On Point, why he kept taking terrible risks to cover conflicts in the Middle East.
  • (Sacramento Bee)
  • OKLAHOMA CITY — The family of Pulitzer Prize winner Anthony Shadid will hold a memorial service for the late journalist next month in his hometown of Oklahoma City.
  • (msnbc.com)

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