Event class: published, article, magazine, wrote, book, issue, appeared, first, story, review
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Events with high posterior probability
Charles J. Hynes | Following a January 2013 cover article in the Village Voice titled'' Brooklyn Deserves a New D. A.'', Hynes sent the Voice a lengthy rebuttal which called their story'' highly biased journalism'' and'' totally one-sided.'' |
Wild Bill Hickok | Richardson wrote of the encounter for the April 1877 issue of'' Scribner's Monthly'', in which he mentions McCall's second trial. |
Theodore Roosevelt | In 1894, Roosevelt met Jacob Riis, the muckraking Evening Sun newspaper journalist who was opening the eyes of New York's rich to the terrible conditions of the city's millions of poor immigrants with such books as How the Other Half Lives. |
Rolla Wells | His name first appears in print in the on October 9, 1892 edition of New York Times, where he is described as the'' President of the Fair Association'' for St. Louis. |
Agatha Christie | For example, in the first editions of the collection The Mysterious Mr Quin (1930), in the short story'' The Soul of the Croupier,'' she described'' Hebraic men with hook-noses wearing rather flamboyant jewellery'' ; in later editions the passage was edited to describe'' sallow men'' wearing same. |
Elizabeth Bentley | She met with reporters for the New York World-Telegram, and in July 1948 the paper carried a series of front page stories about the'' beautiful young blonde'' who had exposed a ring of spies (the initial articles included no picture of Bentley). |
Leslie Ward | In an 1897 interview given by Oliver Armstrong Fry (editor of Vanity Fair) to Frank Banfield of Cassell's Magazine, it was reported that Ward received a sum of between # 300 and # 400 for a portrait. |
Joseph McCarthy | '' Herblock'', coined the term'' -LSB- -LSB- McCarthyism'' in this cartoon in the March 29, 1950, Washington Post. -RSB- -RSB- |
Sigmund Livingston | Livingston was the founder and first president of the Anti-Defamation League, and the author of the book Must Men Hate (New York and London : Harper & Brothers, 1944). |
Hy Gardner | When Gardner died in 1989, his obituary in The New York Times was headlined'' Hy Gardner, 80, Gossip Columnist and a Celebrity in His Own Right.'' |
Mordecai Richler | Richler acknowledged his 1977 error on the PQ song, blaming himself for having'' cribbed'' the information from an article by Irwin Cotler and Ruth Wisse published in the American magazine, Commentary. |
William O'Brien | Now on the staff of the Freeman's Journal, after touring the Galtee Mountains around Christmas 1877 he published articles describing their conditions, which later appeared in pamphlet form. |
Stuart Sutcliffe | In July 1960, the British Sunday newspaper, The People, ran an article entitled'' The Beatnik Horror'' that featured a photograph taken in the flat below Sutcliffe's of a teenaged Lennon lying on the floor, with Sutcliffe standing by a window. |
Christopher Catherwood | In December 2008 he appeared as a cameo character in the online novel Corduroy Mansions by Alexander McCall Smith, who wrote a positive review of his book on Churchill's creation of Iraq in the New York Times. |
John Wallace Crawford | When Crawford died in 1917, newspapers across the nation reported on the event, one writer paying tribute in these words :'' -LSB- Crawford -RSB- was a real scout, and a real poet -- a man with a warrior's soul and the heart of a woman.'' |
Stiliyan Petrov | In 2005, Petrov wrote his autobiography with the assistance of Sunday Mail sports journalist Mark Guidi entitled You Can Call Me Stan, in reference to his nickname'' Stan'', a shortened form of his given name. |
Edgar Martins | In the Sunday July 6, 2009, edition of the New York Times Magazine, Edgar Martins published an expanded photo essay entitled'' Ruins of the Second Gilded Age''. |
Lewis H. Lapham | Lapham wrote a September 2004 column for Harper's in which he included a brief account of the Republican National Convention as if the event had already happened and he had witnessed it,'' reflecting on the content and sharing with readers a question that occurred to him as he listened'', Indeed, Senior's reading of Pretensions to Empire was called into question by her claim that the convention essay was'' conspicuously'' missing from Pretensions to Empire, when, in fact, an edited version of that essay opens the book. |
Bradish Johnson | The Johnson & Lazarus distillery at 16th Street was the subject of a famous muckraking exposé by Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper in 1858. |
Harold MacGrath | It is said that during this same time, a young Boris Karloff, who previously had a few uncredited film roles, chose his stage name for his first screen credit in 1920 from the MacGrath novel The Drums of Jeopardy, which had also been published by The Saturday Evening Post in January of that year and which featured a Russia n mad scientist character named Boris Karlov. |
Joe Simon | Shortly thereafter, for $ 60 a week, he succeeded Liederman as art director of a paper whose name Simon recalled in his 1990 autobiography as the Syracuse Journal American, although the Syracuse Journal and the Syracuse Sunday American, were the separate weekday and Sunday papers, respectively. |
Robert T. Tobin | As he approached his 97th birthday and 76th wedding anniversary, the couple was profiled in the September 2007 issue of Jet magazine, which was on newsstands at the time of his death. |
Daniel Whitehead Hicky | In the Atlanta Journal-Constitution Magazine article, published in March 1973,'' The Reddening Leaves of Daniel Whitehead Hicky'', Hicky was interviewed by newspaper journalist and mystery writer, Keith Coulbourn prior to his'' final farewell'' book, The Poems of Daniel Whitehead Hicky. |
Norman T. Whitaker | His picture appears on the cover of the December 1969 issue of Chess Life magazine, which contains an article he wrote about his life. |
Malcolm X | Publishers had shown interest in Malcolm X's autobiography, and the 1963 book by Louis Lomax about the Nation, When the Word Is Given, showed a photograph of Malcolm X on its cover and reproduced five of his speeches, but featured only one of Muhammad's all of which greatly upset Muhammad and made him envious. |
Bobby Dews | In an article in the magazine'' Atlanta'' printed in March 2003 (Vol. |
Ed McBain | Lombino legally changed his name to Evan Hunter in May 1952, after an editor told him that a novel he wrote would sell more copies if credited to Evan Hunter than it would if it were credited to S. A. Lombino. |
Mohamed Bouazizi | html interview with the author about his story was posted to The New Yorker's'' This Week in Fiction'' on 9 September 2013. |
George F. Le Feuvre | On 13 January 1981, the Jersey Evening Post celebrated the 800th article by George published in that newspaper :'' Eight hundred articles, each of about 800 words and delivered regularly from wherever he happens to be (which is usually America, where he has lived for many years) is a remarkable achievement.'' |
Julia Lynch Olin | Also that year, an article appeared in which the engagement of her daughter Elsie Benkard to Charles H. Clarke was announced (New York Times, Dec 12, 1929 pg 27). |
John G. Thomas | thumb | 250px | right | Tin Man Timothy Bottoms on the set of Tin Man His first feature,'' Tin Man'' (1983), is the story of a deaf computer genius (Timothy Bottoms) who invents a computer which allows him to speak. |
Stephen Crane | In an 1896 interview with Herbert P. Williams, a reporter for the Boston Herald, Crane stated that he did'' not find that short stories are utterly different in character from other fiction. |
Lester Dent | His last published short story was a Western entitled'' Savage Challenge'', published in the February 22, 1958 issue of the Saturday Evening Post. |
Nick Gabaldon | The poem was published in its entirety in the now defunct newspaper Santa Monica Evening Outlook There is also a brief reference to Nick's death in the 1957 novel,'' Gidget'' by Frederick Kohner. |
Larry McMurtry | right | thumb | 240px | One of McMurtry's bookstores in Archer City, Texas Archer City, Texas Archer City, Texas, March 29, 2010 McMurtry has been a regular contributor to The New York Review of Books and is a past president of PEN. |
Junior Johnson | In the mid 1960s writer Tom Wolfe researched and wrote an article about Johnson, published March 1965 in'' Esquire'', and reprinted in Wolfe's The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine Flake Streamline Baby (1965) (in turn reprinted in The Best American Sports Writing of the Century, ed. |
John Stanley (cartoonist) | The only time Stanley received credit was Little Lulu # 49 (July 1952) where a box at the bottom of the inside front cover listed him as being among the staff writers and illustrators who worked on the issue ; it also gives Stanley a separate credit for the front cover. |
John Egan (Gaelic footballer) | In a Sunday Independent column published on 7 March 2010, Páidí Ó Sé wrote :'' All our best wishes go to my old colleague John Egan who, I'm told, is not well right now. |
David Horowitz | In the spring of 1985, however, Horowitz and longtime collaborator Peter Collier wrote an article for the Washington Post entitled, Goodbye to All That. |
John C. Kornblum | Kornblum described the complex diplomacy which preceded President Reagan's speech at the Brandenburg Gate in an article entitled'' Reagan's Brandenburg Concerto'' (an allusion to the complex work of the Brandenburg concertos by Bach), which appeared in the May/June, 2007 issue of The American Interest and was reprinted in the German newspaper Die Welt on June 12, 2007. |
Ricardo Pinto | Pinto was interviewed about the books and stated that he wrote a first draft of the story during the long holiday while at university in 1982, and had written expanded drafts of the parts which became the second and third books while employed writing computer games. |
Frank Posegate | Frank Posegate, then 22 years old, is credited as the likely author for the first hand account of the start of the Pony Express ride that appeared in the paper of a former sailor named Richardson on a fine bay mare marking the beginning of the Pony Express 7:15, April 3, 1860. |
Lady Gwen Thompson | A portion of that article included a poem consisting of 26 rhyming couplets entitled The Rede of the Wiccae, stating that''... Our own particular form of the Wiccan Rede is that which was passed on to her heirs by Adriana Porter, who was well into her nineties when she crossed over into the Summerland in the year 1946...'' 4. |
Irving Thalberg | Thalberg approved of using her without a screen test and offered his rationale : Fitzgerald also based his short story'' Crazy Sunday'', originally published in the October 1932 issue of American Mercury, on an incident he witnessed at a party thrown by Thalberg and Shearer. |
David Almond | His short story'' The Knife Sharpener'' appeared in The Sunday Times on 25 January 2010 and The Savage was given away free as part of the Liverpool Reads event. |
Ted Hughes | In 1970, radical feminist poet Robin Morgan published the poem'' Arraignment'', in which she openly accused Hughes of the battery and murder of Plath ; other feminists threatened to kill him in Plath's name. |
Nikolay Haytov | His first feature article was published in 1954 in the Septemvri magazine, and he continued to work with the magazine, which printed the story Sluchay bez pretsedent (Case With No Precedent) and another article. |
James Palumbo, Baron Palumbo of Southwark | Palumbo delivers a savage satire of the highest calibre'', Monocle `` Snorting, wide-ranging, surreal... a satire that mixes fantastical imagery and the dislocation you find in J. G Ballard'', The Times Saturday Magazine `` The noises I made whilst reading this book frightened people on the train'', Noel Fielding'' Has cult written all over it, it's slick, cool, funny and very readable'', The Book Bag Tancredi, a novella on short term thinking and opportunism in politics was published in September 2011. |
Georgia Gibbs | The New Yorker magazine -LSB- Dec 24,31 2012 -RSB- ran a small, painful piece by Tad Friend which mentions her rape by an agent at the Gotham Hotel. |
Charles Thomson (journalist) | In February 2010 Thomson penned exclusive passages for inclusion in J. Randy Taraborrelli's book Michael Jackson : The Magic, the Madness, the Whole Story. |
Ernest Lanigan | Lanigan also wrote for Baseball Magazine, and it was under that banner that he compiled and published the first baseball encyclopedia, which he called The Baseball Cyclopedia, in 1922. |
Choi Yong-sool | Black Belt Magazine respecting Doju Chinil Chang as the second lineage successor asked him to write a brief obituary on Doju Choi that appeared in Black Belt magazine in the April 1987 issue Vol 25 Number 4. |
Ian Stewart (musician) | According to a Sunday Herald article in March 2006, Stewart was the basis for a fictional detective : The lyrics to Aidan Moffat & The Best-Of's song'' The Sixth Stone'' were written by Ian Rankin about Stewart. |
Richard Eberhart | Eberhart wrote a piece published in the September 2, 1956, New York Times Book Review entitled'' West Coast Rhythms'' that helped call national attention to the Beat generation, and especially to Allen Ginsberg as the author of Howl, which he called'' the most remarkable poem of the young group.'' |
Imro Fox | In December, 1908, Billboard Magazine wrote of Fox's first tour (in recent memory) of the American West, Imro Fox, comic conjurer and'' deceptionist,'' is in a class by himself. |
Pauline Kael | Upon the release of Kael's 1980 collection When the Lights Go Down, her New Yorker colleague Renata Adler published an 8,000-word review in The New York Review of Books that dismissed the book as'' jarringly, piece by piece, line by line, and without interruption, worthless.'' |
Alex Plank | Rosie O'Donnell and John Elder Robison talked about the show on Rosie Radio A front page article from The New York Times, entitled'' Navigating Love and Autism,'' written by Amy Harmon, was published in December 2011 about the romantic relationship between his two autistic co-hosts Jack Robison and Kirsten Lindsmith. |
Paul C. Doherty | A 2009 review by Mike Ripley, himself an acclaimed author and regular contributor of SHOTS Crime and Mystery magazine, states of Doherty's book'' The Spies of Sobeck'' :'' A very wise literary agent (and there are some) once told me that the trick with historical mysteries was to hook the reader early on with the mystery and then give them the history lesson. |
Jim Gary | During the same month, on January 24, 2006 the Los Angeles Times reported in an article, Jim Gary, 66 ; Artist Who Created Playful Dinosaur Skeletons From Car Parts, that some critics compared Jim Gary's sculptures with Pablo Picasso's famous bull's head made from a bicycle seat and handlebars. |
Richard J. Brenneke | Snepp included this evidence (of credit card receipts showing a presence in Portland when Brenneke said he was in Paris) in a February 1992 article he wrote for the Village Voice. |
Davis Miller | The Sunday Magazine Editors Association judged Miller's first published story,'' My Dinner with Ali,'' the best essay to have appeared in a newspaper magazine in the U. S. in 1989. |
Victor Canning | Article by Graham Lord,'' The crazy gamble that made Victor famous'', in the Sunday Express, 10 August 1975. |
John Wallace Crawford | On September 18, 1876, the New York Herald published Crawford's own story under the headline `` Captain Jack's Ride as a Bearer of Herald Despatches.'' |
Jimmy Page | In the December 2012 Rolling Stone cover story'' Jimmy Page Looks Back'', Page said :''... there was a request, suggesting that Lucifer Rising should come out again with my music on. |
Mark Danner | On December 6, 1993, for only the second time in its history, The New Yorker devoted its entire issue to one article, Danner's piece, markdanner. |
Dan Muller | That same year he wrote and illustrated an original short story titled'' Break'Em Gentle'' for the premier October 1933 issue of Esquire Magazine - an issue which also featured works by Ernest Hemingway, Dashiell Hammett, Ring Lardner, John Dos Passos and others. |
Sibby Sisti | The last page of The Great American Baseball Card Flipping, Trading and Bubble Gum Book (by Brendan C. Boyd & Fred C. Harris, Little Brown & Co, 1973) had a card of Sisti in his Braves uniform catching a ball, with the authors' caption,'' Goodnight, Sibby Sisti, wherever you are.'' |
Grover Cleveland Alexander | In The World Series and Highlights of Baseball, by Lamont Buchanan, published in 1951, the year after Alexander died, on pp. 106 -- 107 the author refers to'' Pete Alexander'' and'' Ol' Pete'' in a matter-of-fact way, suggesting the nickname was well-known. |
Bruce Wagner | His first autobiographical piece about his experience with the shaman and author Castaneda appeared in the Fall 2007 issue of Tricycle magazine. |
Joseph Alexander Altsheler | His obituary appeared in'' The Evening World,'' on June 6, 1919 (the text of which appears in'' Altsheler's Stories''). |
Kurt Schwitters | Having emigrated to the United States in 1936, Steinitz sent Schwitters letters describing life in the emerging consumer society, and wrapped the letters in pages of comics to give a flavour of the new world, which she encouraged Schwitters to ` Merz'. |
Ramsay MacDonald | thumb | left | Bloody Sunday 1887 MacDonald witnessed the Bloody Sunday of 13 November 1887 in Trafalgar Square, and in response, had a pamphlet published by the Pall Mall Gazette, entitled Remember Trafalgar Square : Tory Terrorism in 1887. |
Audrey Hepburn | In his review in The New York Times, A. H. Weiler wrote : Hepburn was signed to a seven-picture contract with Paramount with twelve months in between films to allow her time for stage work while spawning what became known as the Audrey Hepburn'' look'' after her illustration was placed on the September 1953 cover of'' TIME'' magazine. |
Joe Humeres | Joe, along with Harold Hunter and other skateboarders, appeared in an October 1989 Thrasher magazine photo essay that helped put New York City on the National skateboarding map. |
Gloria Emerson | In 2000 Emerson published her only novel, Loving Graham Greene, described by William Boyd in The New York Times Book Review as'' beguiling and memorable... a funny, moving and strangely profound novel''. |
Lou Rogers | New York City alone claimed, among others, resident cartoonist-illustrator Laura Foster and Edwina Dumm, as well as Cornelia Barns and Alice Beach Winter, who contributed to the radical avant-garde magazine, The Masses : <gallery> File : Rogers the Bonds 1912. |
Gerry Marshall | Some of Gerry's career highlights : - In 1963, Gerry started his first footsteps into motor journalism, something he was to enjoy for many years and he brought a smile to the face of many a reader with his'' Marshall Art'' and'' From the Hot Seat'' columns that he regularly used to write. |
E. Lilian Todd | In the November 1909 issue of Woman's Home Companion, an autobiographical article mentions her grandfather (probably on her mother's side), from whom she inherited her mechanical and inventive talent. |
Alexander Seik | An article in the Tábor weekly newspaper, in 1865, mentions that Seik had invented an improvement in the technique of chromophotography. |
Pyotr Dolgov | A fictionalized version of Dolgov's death (incorrectly dated in February 1961) appears in the short story'' The Chief Designer'' by Andy Duncan, which was published in Asimov's Science Fiction magazine and was a Hugo finalist. |
Hod Lisenbee | According to Lisenbee, in an article published by The Leaf-Chronicle newspaper in 1945, he was hailed as man of the year in Syracuse sports and when he left town, the local fans gave him $ 200 in war bonds. |
Walter Garstang | The poems included in his final work are : Veliger larva of -LSB- -LSB- sea hare Dolabrifera dolabrifera, with two curved rows of cilia, Garstang's'' whirling wheel on either side'' and'' double screws'' -RSB- -RSB- nudibranch | sea slug -LSB- -LSB- Fiona pinnata -RSB- -RSB- This, his most famous poem, was first published in 1928, privately printed, and copies were handed out at the BA meeting that year where Garstang gave the Presidential Address to the Zoology section. |
Jack London | In July 1901, two pieces of fiction appeared within the same month : London's'' Moon-Face'', in the San Francisco Argonaut, and Frank Norris''' The Passing of Cock-eye Blacklock'', in Century. |
Lance Rentzel | He was the subject of a lengthy feature article written by author Gary Cartwright in the issue of October 1972. |
John Bertram Oakes | After pushing the idea for ten years with a succession of publishers, he initiated the first modern op-ed (so called because it appeared'' opposite the editorial page'' ; the belief that the phrase stands for'' opinion'' -'' editorial'' is incorrect) page on September 21, 1970, on which the op-ed page of every other American newspaper is modeled. |
William Alexander Harris (Virginia) | An article that he wrote about the cave was printed in the Shenandoah Herald in 1825, and may have been the first to ever appear describing the site. |
Ronald E. Poelman | Controversy ensued when the version of his sermon that was published in the November 1984 Ensign magazine differed from the sermon Poelman had delivered orally. |
Theodore Lukens | In an 1898 article in the Los Angeles Times, Lukens was quoted terming the driving of stock in the mountains as'' Hoofed Locusts.'' |
Truman Capote | He ultimately refused to write the article, so the magazine recouped its interests by publishing, in April 1973, an interview of the author conducted by Andy Warhol. |
Henry Morton Stanley | The Herald's own first account of the meeting, published 4 July 1872, also includes the phrase :'' Preserving a calmness of exterior before the Arabs which was hard to simulate as he reached the group, Mr. Stanley said : --'' Doctor Livingstone, I presume ?'' |
John Robertson (journalist) | Around the same time in November 1979, in his regular back page column for Maclean's magazine, Robertson coined the term `` Rider Pride'' when he wrote about his experiences and his feeling that the Roughriders had the best fans in the CFL. |
Charles Plimpton | Plimpton was well respected in the toy trade, and an obituary was placed in the February 1949 issue of Games and Toys (see box). |
Harold Eugene Edgerton | Edgerton's work was featured in an October 1987 National Geographic Magazine article entitled,'' Doc Edgerton : the man who made time stand still.'' |
Grand Duke Michael Mikhailovich of Russia | Vanity Fair, 1908 Leslie Ward | Sky for Vanity Fair, 1908 In 1908, Michael published a novel, Never Say Die, about a morganatic marriage, written in resentment at not being allowed back into Russia. |
Ping Lu | As Perry Link pointed out in his article entitled'' Chinese Shadows'' (published on November 16, 2006, by The New York Review), Ms. Lu also tries to find in Song Qingling'' the person buried under all the layers of image-making'' and to'' reconstruct a credible portrait'' of the famous woman. |
Paul Stern | According to a September 1948 article on Markus in the Contract Bridge Journal, Stern was'' perhaps the greatest coach who ever lived''. |
Gail Sheehy | Sheehy's article'' The Secret of Grey Gardens'', a cover story from the January 10, 1972 issue of New York, brought the bizarre bohemian life of Jacqueline Kennedy's aunt Edith Bouvier Beale and cousin Edith' Little Edie' Bouvier Beale' to public attention. |
Isaac Asimov | Beginning in 1977, Asimov lent his name to Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine (now Asimov's Science Fiction) and penned an editorial for each issue. |
Martin Gardner | However, in 1993 Atlanta puzzle collector Tom Rodgers persuaded Gardner to attend an evening devoted to Gardner's puzzle-solving efforts, called'' Gathering for Gardner''. |
James Baldwin | The essay was originally published in two oversized issues of The New Yorker and landed Baldwin on the cover of Time magazine in 1963 while Baldwin was touring the South speaking about the restive Civil Rights movement. |