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Coren and .
Finn Coren also created a different musical setting for the poem on his album The Blake Project: Spring.
This expedition was commissioned by Alan Coren for the magazine Punch, the other members of the party being cartoonist Merrily Harpur and a toy Alsatian to represent Montmorency, the dog in the original story.
* Coren, Stanley.
* 2006 Alan Coren, British writer and satirist, announced in his Christmas 2006 column for The Times that his long absence as a columnist had been due to contracting the disease while on holiday in France.
Coren, one of the Spanish agricultural sector's most important companies, is headquartered in Ourense.
Computer Music Inc. was started in New Jersey USA in 1972 by Harry Mendell and Dan Coren.
Originally Private Eye editor Richard Ingrams and Punch editor Alan Coren acted as team captains.
It began airing on 13 May 1996 with Alan Coren and Sandi Toksvig as the team captains and Bob Holness replacing Robinson as chairman.
Michael Coren, whose humour column " Aesthete's Diary " was retitled " Michael Coren's Diary " after he revealed his true identity, was one of the few contributors ever to use his real name in the magazine.
He created and, for four series, hosted the Radio 4 comedy discussion programme Heresy, before passing hosting duties on to Victoria Coren.
In 2005, research by Victoria Coren and others for the Wordhunt project in conjunction with the first series of Balderdash and Piffle on the BBC ( first broadcast at the beginning of 2006 ) traced the origin of the phrase to 1960.
Alan Coren ( 27 June 1938 – 18 October 2007 ) was an English humorist, writer and satirist who was well known as a regular panellist on the BBC radio quiz The News Quiz and a team captain on BBC television's Call My Bluff.
Coren was also a journalist, and for nine years was the editor of Punch magazine.
Alan Coren was born in Southgate, North London in 1938, the son of a plumber and a hairdresser.
Coren was educated at East Barnet Grammar School, followed by Wadham College at the University of Oxford to which he gained a scholarship, and where he got a First in English in 1960.
Coren considered an academic career but decided instead to become a writer and journalist.
From 1971 to 1978, Coren wrote a television review column for The Times and from 1972 to 1976 a humour column for the Daily Mail.
In 1973 Coren became the Rector of the University of St Andrews, after John Cleese, an honorary position for that university in St Andrews, Fife on the East coast of Scotland.
When Coren left Punch in 1987 he became editor of The Listener, continuing in that role until 1989.
From 1984 Coren worked as a television critic for the Mail on Sunday until he moved as a humorous columnist to the Sunday Express, which he left in 1996.
From 1975 to 1982 Coren wrote comic essays, such as Golfing for Cats and The Cricklewood Diet and from 1976 to 1983 wrote the Arthur series of children's books.
Coren began his broadcasting career in 1977, while writing for The Observer, Tatler and The Times.
Coren had published about twenty books during his life, many of which were collections of his newspaper columns.
In May 2006, Coren was bitten by an insect that gave him septicaemia which led to his developing necrotising fasciitis.

Coren and with
* The Outsiders ( with Michael Coren, 1984 )
Today Tonight, seen here with former East Coast host Anna Coren, replaced Real Life ( TV program ) | Real Life in 1995.
The Michael Coren Show ( originally Michael Coren Live, until it ceased being a live-to-air broadcast ) was an hour-long Canadian public affairs panel show hosted by Michael Coren which dealt with current events, social issues as well as arts and culture.
The showed aired on CTS from 1999 until June 30, 2011 when Coren left CTS to join the Sun News Network to host The Arena with Michael Coren.
The show was known for debate on controversial issues ( for example, Coren has hosted numerous shows on the Palestinian-Israeli conflict and radical Islam versus moderate Islam, with guests who have strong stances on both sides of these issues ).
He hosted the television talk show The Michael Coren Show on the Crossroads Television System from 1999 to 2011 when he moved to the Sun News Network to host an evening talk show, The Arena with Michael Coren.
" Coren argues that it was a satire comparing in his mind public attitude to third world starvation with North America's obsession with slimming and self-indulgence.
After receiving 60 % approval from CFRB listeners in an August 2006 poll, Coren returned to the CFRB airwaves in September 2006 with a Sunday evening show.
Coren was again let go by CFRB along with 12 other staff of the Toronto radio station on 27 August 2009.
On television, Coren hosted the Michael Coren Show on the Crossroads Television System until June 2011 when he left to join the Sun News Network where he hosts The Arena with Michael Coren weeknights on beginning August 30, 2011.
" Also in 1993, Michael Coren had a falling out with the Catholic Church over an unflattering profile he wrote of Archbishop Aloysius Ambrozic for Toronto Life magazine.
In April 2007, she participated in Edwardian Supersize Me for the BBC with food critic Giles Coren, spending a week eating the equivalent of a wealthy Edwardian couple's food, whilst wearing a corset.
Sue Perkins appeared in a second ' Supersizers ' series called The Supersizers Eat ... with Giles Coren which aired on BBC Two in June and July 2009.
Perkins filmed two series which aired on BBC Two in 2010: Giles and Sue Live The Good Life, with Giles Coren, and The Great British Bake Off, a cookery competition series which she co-hosts with Mel Giedroyc, each episode looking at a different aspect of baking.
As Talk 640, the station aired syndicated programming such as the Joy Browne, Rhona Raskin, Dr. Laura and Live Audio Wrestling, along with local programming hosted by personalities such as Gene Valaitis, Jane Hawtin, Bill Carroll, Shelley Klinck, Marsha Lederman, Karen Horsman, Michael Coren, Dave Chalk, Spaceman Gary Bell and Roger Kelly.

Coren and ;
* Coren, Michael ; Theatre Royal: 100 Years of Stratford East, Quartet Books, 1984 ; ISBN 0-7043-2474-1
With Sue Perkins, Coren starred in Edwardian Supersize Me ; the two spent a week on the diet of a wealthy Edwardian couple, for a BBC Four documentary shown in December 2007.
Ontario lawyer and columnist Karen Selick argued with social conservative television host Michael Coren in a debate column on current public policy issues called Face-off ; Edmonton-based National Post columnist Colby Cosh authored the sports column ; and Matthew Johnston was the magazine's senior vice-president.
In 2007 she co-presented Animal Farm with Giles Coren ; the series, which explored genetic modification and pharming, was produced by Lion Television for Channel 4.
Coren has joked that she and Mitchell met at a party ; it had previously been speculated that they had first met during the filming of The Bubble.

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