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18 result(s) for "Hopgood, Mei-Ling."
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Lucky girl
In a true story of family ties, journalist Hopgood, one of the first wave of Asian adoptees to arrive in America, comes face to face with her past when her Chinese birth family suddenly requests a reunion after more than two decades.
How the New York Times Maintains its Credibility
[...]quarter figures released in November show the Times has more than 4 million paying customers, three-quarters of them digital-only subscribers. The Times hired its first public editor 15 years ago amid a scandal involving reporter Jayson Blair, whose plagiarism and fabrications cost Executive Editor Howell Raines and Managing Editor Gerald Boyd their jobs. In the years leading up to the 2003 invasion of Iraq, lax reporting and a failure to challenge information from some Iraqi sources led the Times to incorrectly suggest Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction - coverage the Bush administration used to bolster its case for going to war. In the years leading up to the 2003 invasion of Iraq, lax reporting and a failure to challenge information from some Iraqi sources led the Times to incorrectly suggest Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction - coverage the Bush administration used to bolster its case for going to war.
Trade Publication Article
The bookworm
What if you didn't have all these things available? How do other mothers do it? In the new book \"How Eskimos Keep Their Babies Warm\" by [Mei-Ling Hopgood] Hopgood, you'll be delighted to find out. So you've read your childcare book cover-tocover already - twice - and you're still getting conflicting advice on what's best for baby. Now it's time for a different kind of childcare book; one that will prove to you that there are several \"right\" ways to be a new mom or dad. \"How Eskimos Keep Their Babies Warm\" is a heartwarming book, light but informative, and filled with advice. Author Mei-Ling Hopgood doesn't write just for parents, though; the information she unswaddled is endlessly fascinating, which makes this a great book for friends without kids, and for anyone with a curious mind.
CAMPUS HEADLINES
In 1998, [Mei-Ling Hopgood] spent a year at the University of Hawaii on the Freedom Forum's Asia Fellowship for Journalists. She returned to the Detroit Free Press in the fall of 1999 before joining the Dayton Daily News . The sessions will be led by Dayton Daily News assistant managing editor Ron Rollins, reporter Cathy Mong, chief photographer Skip Peterson, entertainment reporter Bob Batz, copy editor Bill Begley and editorial board member Eddie Roth.
DRUG WAR FARES POORLY IN CAPITAL BY MEI-LING HOPGOOD WASHINGTON BUREAU
Gone may be the dwindling number of police officers assigned specially to public housing in Dayton. Already gone is the security officer who used to monitor [Rice]'s building at night. She and other senior volunteers fill in by logging in visitors and patrolling their all-senior building, at least as long as they can manage to stay awake. The Dayton housing authority and others nationwide want to get the money restored. They are lobbying legislators, begging for a reprieve. Meanwhile, Dayton plans to cut janitorial staff and other services so it can keep some security presence.
WE NOW RESUME THE USUAL
During the summer, Dayton Rep. Tony Hall made national headlines as the House Democrat pushing the president's faith-based initiative to give religious groups more access to federal money to help the poor. The plan passed the House, but stalled in the Senate just before terrorism riveted the nation's attention. At least one Bush priority, education reform, did pass in December, carried in the House by U.S. Rep. John Boehner, R-West Chester. Bush will visit Hamilton on Tuesday to highlight that accomplishment. It passed in the House in December, and, with the help of Sen. Mike DeWine, R-Ohio, seems on its way to Senate approval. An anti- terrorism bill passed by Congress expanded DeWine's efforts to give local law enforcement groups more money for anti-terrorism technology.
Journalist discovers her birth family Memoir review Taiwan-born writer also makes peace with being different in America
Hopgood responded to the Wangs, as she calls them here, and, with her adoptive parents' encouragement, made a first, overwhelming visit to Taiwan, where she was engulfed by her new, noisy family, flooded with gifts and constantly stuffed with food.