December 3, 2004: Headlines: COS - Morocco: COS - Pakistan: Journalism: Newsday: Morocco RPCV James Rupert will open Newsday’s newest international bureau, in Islamabad, Pakistan, from where he will reinforce the paper’s coverage of the Islamic world
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December 3, 2004: Headlines: COS - Morocco: COS - Pakistan: Journalism: Newsday: Morocco RPCV James Rupert will open Newsday’s newest international bureau, in Islamabad, Pakistan, from where he will reinforce the paper’s coverage of the Islamic world
Morocco RPCV James Rupert will open Newsday’s newest international bureau, in Islamabad, Pakistan, from where he will reinforce the paper’s coverage of the Islamic world
Morocco RPCV James Rupert will open Newsday’s newest international bureau, in Islamabad, Pakistan, from where he will reinforce the paper’s coverage of the Islamic world
Recent works by James Rupert
James Rupert joined Newsday in 2000 and served four years as deputy foreign editor before returning overseas as a correspondent. In January, he will open Newsday’s newest international bureau, in Islamabad, Pakistan, from where he will reinforce the paper’s coverage of the Islamic world.
Rupert came to Newsday from The Washington Post, where he spent 14 years as a foreign correspondent – based in South Asia, Soviet Central Asia, Ukraine and West Africa – and as a foreign news editor, based in Washington. He has reported from more than 60 countries.
Rupert began his career abroad as a Peace Corps volunteer, teaching mechanics and welding in Morocco. He worked as a freelance correspondent in North Africa and in Paris before joining the Post. In the mid-1980s, he was one of few Western correspondents to cover Afghanistan and its war against Soviet military occupation.
In 1991, Rupert was awarded an Alicia Patterson Fellowship to study Central Asia. In 1999, he was a University of Michigan Journalism Fellow. He has published articles in Foreign Policy quarterly (Washington, DC), the World Policy Journal (New York) and le Monde Diplomatique (Paris).
Rupert speaks French, Russian, Arabic and Persian. He graduated with honors from Swarthmore College in 1979.
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Story Source: Newsday
This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - Morocco; COS - Pakistan; Journalism
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