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Hinton and later
The founding director of CBS News, Paul White, for whom the top award given by the broadcast news directors organization Radio Television Digital News Association ( RTDNA ) is named, Kent Cooper, who later became the longtime GM of rival Associated Press, early ABC News president Elmer Lower, Raymond Clapper, originator of the term " smoked-filled room ", Merriman Smith, Helen Thomas, Marie Colvin, Martha Gellhorn, Kate Webb, Henry Tilton Gorrell, Seymour Hersh, Lucien Carr, Neil Sheehan, Brit Hume, Keith Olbermann, New York Times columnists Thomas Friedman and Gail Collins, Washington Post columnist Richard Cohen, sportswriter and Untouchables co-author Oscar Fraley, author H. Allen Smith, military author Joe Galloway, Saigon evacuation photographer Hubert van Es, photographer Stan Stearns, 1970s White House photographer David Hume Kennerly, White House spokesmen George Reedy, Ron Nessen and Larry Speakes, longtime Las Vegas bureau manager Myram Borders, onetime CIA Director Richard Helms, who interviewed Adolf Hitler for United Press during the 1936 Olympics, diplomat Edward M. Korry, former UP correspondent to Moscow Eugene Lyons, C-SPAN founder Brian Lamb, ex-Dow Jones CEO Les Hinton, 1980's-90's Singapore President Wee Kim Wee and novelists Allen Drury, Tony Hillerman and Daniel Silva.
Others who appeared were Ron Hagerthy, later a semi-regular on the Sky King series, and Ed Hinton.
Hinton attended the University of Mississippi and later the University of Southern Mississippi, where he was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, graduating in 1970.
Hinton wrote and lectured extensively to explain the Maoist approach and, in later years, to criticize Deng Xiaoping's market reforms.
Hinton later accepted a post as an English teacher at the Northern University in Southeast Shanxi province, near Changzhi City, in a liberated district.
The existence of a common-law copyright, however, was later rejected by a Scottish court in Hinton v. Donaldson.
He later married Lola Mahalia Akers, with whom he had three daughters: Violet Denson Hinton, Vera Denson Nunn, and Tommye Mahalia Denson Mauldin.
One of his happiest events of his later years was being a special guest on an early supersonic transatlantic flight of the Concorde, making the trip which had first taken Hinton 19 days in less than four hours.
His cousins include Joan Hinton, one of the few female scientists at Los Alamos who later moved to Beijing, and William Hinton who wrote " Fanshen ", a book about the Chinese revolution which he observed firsthand while working for the UN in China in 1949.
Since the 8th Earl lacked direct heirs and his sister Lady Bridget Poulett was childless, Hinton House was later subdivided into luxury flats.
In 1365 Nicholas Wase sold the manor to William Wroughton ( died 1392 ), whose family then held Broad Hinton until 1628 when Sir Giles Wroughton sold it to Sir John Glanville, MP and later Speaker of the House of Commons.
She and her husband rented Rose Cottage in Hinton Lane, during which time she wrote ' The Golden Arrow ' ( published 1916 ), and later another at The Nills.
" Hinton – who penned the Missing Adventure The Crystal Bucephalus, which featured Kamelion prominently – later died of a heart attack, at the age of 42, in 2006.
It wasn't until 1974 and later, when applied in the context of neural networks and through the work of Paul Werbos, David E. Rumelhart, Geoffrey E. Hinton and Ronald J. Williams, that it gained recognition, and it led to a “ renaissance ” in the field of artificial neural network research.
Hinton documented his return to Zhangchuangcun years later in Shenfan, chronicling what had happened in the years since and describing how the Cultural Revolution affected the village.
It was later held by the Arundell family ( 1461-1663 ) and then by the Pouletts of Hinton St George until the 20th century.
Hinton and Alcorn later participated in the fatal ambush that halted Barrow and Parker's spree on May 23, 1934 near Gibsland, Louisiana.

Hinton and introduced
He successfully introduced the machine to the University of Minnesota, where Hinton worked as an assistant professor until 1900, when he resigned to move to the U. S. Naval Observatory in Washington, D. C.
The present system of race grading was introduced in 1971, and for a period the Cherry Hinton Stakes was classed at Group 3 level.

Hinton and by
Fans sometimes make up explanations for such errors that may or may not be integrated into canon ; this has come to be colloquially known as fanwanking ( a term originally coined by the author Craig Hinton to describe excessive use of continuity ).
In 1983, he directed The Outsiders, a film adaptation of the novel of the same name by S. E. Hinton.
Rumble Fish was based on the novel of the same name by S. E. Hinton, who also co-wrote the screenplay.
In The Crystal Bucephalus by Craig Hinton, the name of their planet was given as Sontara.
Hinton cut in front of Mackey to make the catch and then took off for the end zone, but he lost a fumble at the 10-yard line while being tackled by defensive back Cornell Green.
According to the author Garry Boulard in his book Abraham Lincoln Ascendent, it was Sherman's 1859 endorsement of the controversial anti-slavery book, The Impending Crisis of the South, written by Hinton Helper, that doomed Sherman's chances of becoming Speaker.
The Country Music Hall of Fame was designed by local architecture firm Tuck Hinton Architects and museum design firm Ralph Appelbaum Associates.
Brian Hinton relates how " Jim Morrison learned quickly from his near namesake's stagecraft, his apparent recklessness, his air of subdued menace, the way he would improvise poetry to a rock beat, even his habit of crouching down by the bass drum during instrumental breaks.
The commission members favored land owned by Colonel John Hinton across the Neuse River, but the night before the final vote the committee adjourned to the home of Joel Lane for an evening of food and spirits.
It is operated by Ted Hinton, son of one of the officers involved in the ambush.
* Sylvester is in the north central part of the township by the junction of 85th Avenue and 5 Mile Road, approximately east of Altona and west of Halls Corner at David Fowler opened the first store in Hinton Township here in 1868.
Hinton book The Outsiders as a favored pattern of shirts and jackets worn by the Socs.
This was followed by the signing of rookie running back Willie " The Wisp " Fleming to the team, adding more youth to play alongside Hinton and Homer.
His uncle, the Reverend Thomas Spencer, vicar of Hinton Charterhouse near Bath, completed Spencer's limited formal education by teaching him some mathematics and physics, and enough Latin to enable him to translate some easy texts.
* Facscimile of James Hinton: a Sketch, 1918, by Edith Mary Oldham Lees Ellis ( Mrs. Havelock Ellis ); includes photos and chronology of events in his life from 30 of his 54 years
ISBN 0-8112-1605-5 Introduction, with translations by William Carlos Williams, Ezra Pound, Kenneth Rexroth, Gary Snyder, and David Hinton.
Other titles published by the press in its formative years include The Empire of Oil by Harvey O ' Connor ( 1955 ), The Political Economy of Growth by Paul Baran ( 1957 ), The United States, Cuba, and Castro by historian William Appleman Williams ( 1963 ), and Fanshen by William Hinton ( 1966 ).
Her breakout performances came with back-to-back adaptations of young adult novels by S. E. Hinton, adapted and directed by Francis Ford Coppola: The Outsiders in 1982 and Rumble Fish in 1983.
Led by former Rangers Hamer and B. M. " Manny " Gault, the posse included Sheriff Henderson Jordan and Deputy Prentiss Oakley of Bienville Parish, Louisiana, and Dallas County Deputies Bob Alcorn and Ted Hinton.

Hinton and study
A new study by the actuarial firm Towers Watson, found that male pensioners currently aged 65 in Hinton St George, have the highest predicted life expectancy in the UK at 88. 7 years.

Hinton and which
Matt Dillon and several others also starred in Coppola's related film, Rumble Fish, which was also based on a S. E. Hinton novel and filmed at the same time as The Outsiders on-location in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
On third down, Morrall threw his third consecutive incompletion, which would have forced Baltimore to punt from deep in their own territory, but Renfro was called for a 13-yard pass interference penalty while trying to cover Hinton, giving the Colts a first down.
Early on, Gull's friend James Hinton discusses his son Howard's theory of the " fourth dimension ", which proposes that time is a spatial dimension.
Summers County has one public high school, Summers County High School, which serves students in grades 9-12 ; one middle school, Summers Middle School, which serves students in grades 6-8 ; and three elementary schools, all of which serve students in grades Pre-K through 5: Hinton Area Elementary School, Jumping Branch, Elementary School, and Talcott Elementary School.
The " Classic Gong " line-up retired from regular touring in 2001, but there were one-off reunions subsequently, most notably at the " Gong Family Unconvention " ( Uncon ), the first of which was held in 2004 in the Glastonbury Assembly rooms as a one day event and featured many ex members and Gong family bands including Here and Now, House of Thandoy, Thom the Poet, Invisible Opera, Andy Bole, Bubbledub and Joie Hinton.
" Boots " Hinton, son of Ted Hinton, is curator of the Bonnie & Clyde Ambush Museum, which opened in Gibsland in 2004 .</ font size = 2 >
Hinton was named for John " Jack " Hinton, a prominent lawyer of Summers County and husband of Avis Gwinn Hinton, who owned the land upon which the city of Hinton is located.
CSX owns the rail line through Hinton, which is the mainline of the former Chesapeake and Ohio Railway.
As they watched the spectacle " America ", in which a backdrop depicting the Liberty Bell was lowered, Hinton suggested " The Liberty Bell " as the title of Sousa's recently completed march.
One of the Kennet's sources is Swallowhead Spring near Silbury Hill in the county of Wiltshire, the other being a collection of tributaries to the North of Avebury near the villages of Uffcott and Broad Hinton which flow south past Avebury and join up with the waters from Swallowhead Springs.
After his brother's death, Henry Fowler and his wife moved to Hinton St. George in Somerset, where he worked on the Pocket Oxford Dictionary and Modern English Usage, which he dedicated to his brother.
In 1984 Argyll acquired the Thornaby-based Amos Hinton plc which operated 55 supermarkets under the Hinton's name in the North East of England, Cumbria and Yorkshire.
Hinton Transit is the municipal public transportation service, operated under contract by First Canada, which is responsible for providing the vehicles, drivers and maintenance.
The parish included the tithings of Alkington, Breadstone, Ham, Hamfellow and Hinton, and the chapelry of Stone, which became a separate parish in 1797.
Also of note is the Hinton Art Gallery, which houses the Felton Bequest, a significant collection of work by Australian artists.
In the late 1980s, Hinton joined the new sports daily newspaper, The National, which folded after only a few years.
Hinton's father, a mathematician, had built a similar structure from bamboo when Hinton was a child ; his father's goal was to enable children to achieve an intuitive understanding of 3-dimensional space through a game in which numbers for the x, y, and z axes were called out and each child tried to be the first to grasp the indicated junction.
There were over 20 monasteries in Somerset at this period including the priory at Hinton Charterhouse which was founded in 1232 by Ela, Countess of Salisbury who also founded Lacock Abbey.

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