Difference between revisions of "Juan Williams"
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'''Juan Williams''' is a [[liberal]] or left-of-center commentator who appears regularly on [[Fox News Channel|FoxNews]]. He formerly worked as a columnist for the [[Washington Post]] for over 20 years, and, until October 2010, had been employed by [[National Public Radio]] as a commentator since 2000. He is the author of "Eyes on The Prize: America's Civil Rights Years, 1954-1965" and "[[Thurgood Marshall]]: American Revolutionary". | '''Juan Williams''' is a [[liberal]] or left-of-center commentator who appears regularly on [[Fox News Channel|FoxNews]]. He formerly worked as a columnist for the [[Washington Post]] for over 20 years, and, until October 2010, had been employed by [[National Public Radio]] as a commentator since 2000. He is the author of "Eyes on The Prize: America's Civil Rights Years, 1954-1965" and "[[Thurgood Marshall]]: American Revolutionary". | ||
− | Williams release from NPR set off a firestorm of controversy over free speech and and [[censorship]] from a taxpayer funded [[Government Sponsored Entity]]. NPR's chief operating officer Vivian Schiller | + | Williams release from NPR set off a firestorm of controversy over free speech and and [[censorship]] from a taxpayer funded [[Government Sponsored Entity]]. NPR's chief operating officer Vivian Schiller<ref>Shiller graduated from [[Cornell University]] with a Bachelor's degree in Russian studies and [[Soviet]] studies. Prior to leading NPR, Schiller was a senior vice president of [[NYTimes]].com.</ref> publicly [[defamation|defamed]] Williams during his firing. |
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 16:53, October 22, 2010
Juan Williams is a liberal or left-of-center commentator who appears regularly on FoxNews. He formerly worked as a columnist for the Washington Post for over 20 years, and, until October 2010, had been employed by National Public Radio as a commentator since 2000. He is the author of "Eyes on The Prize: America's Civil Rights Years, 1954-1965" and "Thurgood Marshall: American Revolutionary".
Williams release from NPR set off a firestorm of controversy over free speech and and censorship from a taxpayer funded Government Sponsored Entity. NPR's chief operating officer Vivian Schiller[1] publicly defamed Williams during his firing.
References
- ↑ Shiller graduated from Cornell University with a Bachelor's degree in Russian studies and Soviet studies. Prior to leading NPR, Schiller was a senior vice president of NYTimes.com.