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Displaying results 1 - 25 of 22 for news reporter and a feature columnist. Subscribe to this search

  1. article Retail Corridor: New columnist asks for help for long journey

    Thursday, October 5, 2006 6:32 am

    The Chinese philosopher Laotzu said a journey of a thousand miles begins with one step. So, with Laotzu as my travel buddy, I embark this week on an exciting journey as the Tribune’s new retail reporter by writing this, my first Retail Corridor column.

  • article Couric makes `CBS Evening News' debut

    Tuesday, September 5, 2006 6:49 am

    NEW YORK - After Katie Couric was introduced on her first night as "CBS Evening News" anchor by a Walter Cronkite voiceover, she delivered a fast-moving newscast that the legendary newsman might have found unrecognizable.

    2 image(s)

  • article Sometimes a theory is only a theory

    Monday, December 8, 2008 7:09 pm

    A gentleman described as "a leading Russian political analyst" - and how acute do you have to be to analyze rigged elections? - says the United States is in the throes of a collapse that will result in us fragmenting into six separate nations.

  • article A new Carrie glows in a 'Sex and the City' prequel

    Monday, January 14, 2013 10:45 am

    NEW YORK — Once upon a time, Carrie Bradshaw was a virgin.

    4 image(s)

  • article You, too, can be a highly motivated voter

    Saturday, August 4, 2012 12:00 pm

    Early ballots went into the mail last week for this month’s Arizona primary election. Some of you may have already received them.

    1 image(s)

  • article Scarp: You, too, can be a highly motivated voter

    Saturday, August 11, 2012 3:11 pm

    Early ballots went into the mail last week for this month’s Arizona primary election. Some of you may have already received them.

    1 image(s) 4 article(s)

  • article New look for EastValleyTribune.com

    Sunday, March 6, 2011 12:45 am

    Wondering what's different about our website? Here's a look at some new features -- and some familiar faces.

  • article Tribune earns Newspaper of Year title

    Saturday, September 22, 2007 8:14 pm

    The East Valley Tribune won its fourth consecutive Arizona Newspapers Association Newspaper of the Year award Saturday evening.

  • article Changes to the East Valley Tribune

    Saturday, March 5, 2011 5:52 pm

    Flip through the pages of the East Valley Tribune on Sunday and you'll see many significant changes.

    1 article(s)

  • article Trib’s Zolondz wins Designer of Year

    Sunday, May 13, 2007 7:19 am

    Tribune page designer Julia Zolondz was named Arizona Designer of the Year at the 2006 Arizona Press Club banquet Saturday night in Phoenix.

  • article Sakal: Leaving one of the best jobs in the world, saying goodbye to the Tribune

    Friday, January 4, 2013 6:45 pm

    That happy rainy day has arrived.

    6 image(s)

  • article Tribune named top Arizona newspaper

    Sunday, September 26, 2004 5:36 am

    The Arizona Newspaper Association named the Tribune Newspaper of the Year 2004 on Saturday for its combination of editorial and advertising excellence.

  • article AP editors name Tribune state’s best newspaper

    Sunday, May 4, 2003 11:03 am

    The Tribune has been honored as Arizona’s best newspaper in 2002 by The Associated Press Managing Editors.

  • article N.Y. Times editors Raines, Boyd resign

    Thursday, June 5, 2003 9:36 am

    NEW YORK - The New York Times' top two editors resigned Thursday after a tumultuous five weeks that began with the exposure of Jayson Blair's journalistic fraud and grew into a drumbeat of criticism of the management style at one of the world's most distinguished newspapers.

    2 image(s)

  • article 'Mancession' an opportunity

    Monday, August 29, 2011 11:57 am

    Tom Purcell

    1 image(s)

  • article Peter Morgan

    Saturday, April 14, 2007 12:00 am

    In many ways it made complete sense. Of course the boy born in the house next to the factory would grow up running the place. Of course the boy would take over where the father left off, refusing to bow to conventional wisdom and preferring to stay the course.

  • article Political notebook: No shots at Obama in Clinton's Tempe rally talk

    Saturday, February 2, 2008 9:00 pm

    Former President Bill Clinton was on his best behavior during a campaign rally for his wife and presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton on Thursday in Tempe.

    1 image(s)

  • article Busy McCain expresses views on Rumsfeld, immigration, Iraq war

    Saturday, April 15, 2006 6:13 am

    Sen. John McCain joined the ranks of retired generals who have said they have no confidence in Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld.

    2 image(s)

  • article All Tracy-Hepburn films packaged together for the first time

    Tuesday, April 12, 2011 1:28 pm

    Spencer Tracy was fond of telling a story about his first encounter with Katharine Hepburn. It was 1941, and the two MGM stars had tentatively agreed to co-star in a movie, "Woman of the Year." The 5-foot-7 Hepburn was wearing platform shoes that added 4 inches to her already formidable height when she met the 5-9 Tracy outside the studio commissary.

    After producer Joseph L. Mankiewicz introduced them, Hepburn said, "I'm afraid I'm a little tall for you, Mr. Tracy." They shook hands, Tracy smiled, and he replied, "Don't worry, Miss Hepburn. I'll cut you down to my size."

    Tracy and Hepburn fell in love while making "Woman of the Year" and remained lovers until his death, shortly after they completed their final film together, "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner," in 1967. All nine of their films have been packaged for the first time in "Tracy and Hepburn: The Definitive Collection," a 10-disc set released this week (Warner Home Video, $59.92, not rated). The collection also includes the Hepburn-narrated Emmy Award-winning documentary from 1986, "The Spencer Tracy Legacy: A Tribute by Katharine Hepburn," in which Hepburn gives her own, slightly different version of their first meeting. Two of the films, "Keeper of the Flame" (1942) and "The Sea of Grass" (1947), appearing here on DVD for the first time, are also available as single releases ($19.97 apiece).

    On screen, the duo usually portrayed either a married couple or a pair of opposites who gradually attract. As a couple, they often had to go through a certain amount of conflict, even separation, before eventually working out their problems. It's the conflict and its resolution, whether played for laughs or for high drama, that remains most compelling about their screen performances.

    Tracy and Hepburn never married, largely because Tracy, a Catholic, would not divorce his wife of many years, Louise, the mother of their two children and a well-respected philanthropist who founded the John Tracy Clinic for deaf children in Los Angeles. (The Tracys' son, John, was born deaf.) Tracy and Hepburn were always discrete about their relationship, and the times allowed them to maintain it without scandal or exposure.

    As Hepburn biographer Anne Edwards points out, they were protected by their powerful studio, MGM, which was usually able to control press coverage of its stars, and by Louise Tracy's stature in the community, which further prevented negative gossip from appearing in print.

    (These days, news of the sparks flying between Tracy and Hepburn on the set of "Woman of the Year," accompanied by smuggled cellphone videos, would have appeared the same afternoon on TMZ.)

    As many film critics and historians have noted, Tracy and Hepburn are best in their comedies, whether playing an assistant district attorney who battles in court with his wife, a defense lawyer, in "Adam's Rib" (1949); a crusty boxing manager/promoter who takes on as a client an outstanding female golfer and tennis player in "Pat and Mike" (1952); or as a technocrat whose new computer may replace the work of a research librarian in "Desk Set" (1957). Hepburn's characters embody the modern, emancipated woman whose intelligence and independence is respected, even admired, by Tracy, a confident, stable yet vulnerable man. The problems in their relationship invariably occur when one of the characters crosses a line, tipping and unbalancing their 50-50 equilibrium.

    "Adam's Rib," written by the couple's close friends, the husband-and-wife team of Garson Kanin and Ruth Gordon, and directed by frequent collaborator George Cukor, is the best of the Tracy-Hepburn films. (Following Tracy's death, Kanin wrote the best-selling "Tracy and Hepburn," an "intimate memoir.") As lawyers who find themselves on opposite sides of a murder case involving a distraught woman (Judy Holliday, in a star-making performance) who attempts to shoot her philandering husband (Tom Ewell), their battle of the sexes moves from the courtroom to the bedroom. The film, which seems far advanced for its time, raises some serious issues about male-female differences and the difficulty of maintaining a relationship between two career-minded people. Yet it remains a terrific comedy.

    "Without Love," a shallow comedy-drama from 1945, features Tracy as a scientist and Hepburn as a widow who agree to a marriage of convenience but later discover -- surprise! -- that they really love each other.

    Among the dramas, "Woman of the Year" is the best, "Keeper of the Flame" the murkiest, "Sea of Grass" the soggiest, "State of the Union" (1948) the most disappointing and "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner" the most obvious.

    Hepburn portrays a character modeled after the well-known journalist Dorothy Thompson in "Woman of the Year," well-written by Ring Lardner Jr. (later a blacklisted member of the Hollywood 10) and Michael Kanin (Garson's brother) and expertly directly by George Stevens. In opposites-attract manner, she falls in love with another journalist, a sports columnist and regular guy who's not used to the international circles his new wife travels in and expects a more wifely wife. Despite an unfortunate ending tacked on by the studio heads, in which Hepburn's character can't manage the appliances of a modern kitchen, it remains a good film.

    "Keeper of the Flame" doesn't live up to its potential. Released in the early days of American involvement in World War II, there's some compelling material about a popular figure who promotes "Americanism" while actually being a clandestine fascist. But the story lacks urgency or bite, despite fine performances by Hepburn as the widow of a popular, renowned businessman and Tracy as a reporter who wants to write about his life.

    Elia Kazan once described directing "Sea of Grass" as his most "miserable experience" in Hollywood. The movie, about a wealthy New Mexico cattle rancher who marries a woman from the East, was actually shelved by MGM upon completion, only to be released a year later. The movie was harmed by MGM's insistence that Kazan shoot the entire film on studio sets, using stock footage of grasslands as a backdrop. In addition, Tracy and Kazan clashed over their respective styles of acting, with Tracy denigrating Kazan's "Method" acting as "a lot of high-flown mumbo-jumbo."

    Director Frank Capra's "State of the Union" tries to be up-to-date politically. It's about the run-up to the 1948 presidential election and tosses in references to current issues like the anti-labor Taft-Hartley Act. But the film never gets to the heart of the political controversies of the day. Hepburn plays the estranged wife of a successful, self-made industrialist (Tracy) who is being groomed for a presidential run by two wheeler-dealers -- a ruthless newspaper publisher (Angela Lansbury, presaging her role more than a decade later in "The Manchurian Candidate"); and a conniving politician (Adolphe Menjou). In a film that doesn't ring true, the best scenes involve the cunning Lansbury and the confrontations between Hepburn's character and Menjou's. (Hepburn, like Tracy, was an ardent supporter of Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal; a devout liberal, she despised the right-wing Menjou, who had testified against Hepburn before the House Un-American Activities Committee, aka HUAC, saying, "Scratch a do-gooder, like Hepburn, and they'll yell, 'Pravda.' ")

    Finally, after a decade's gap between their co-starring films, Tracy and Hepburn made "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner," directed by Stanley Kramer. A box-office hit featuring an Oscar-winning performance by Hepburn, the movie is progressive in content but woodenly directed and utterly predictable. Tracy and Hepburn play a couple whose liberal views are challenged when their daughter (played by Hepburn's real-life niece, Katharine Houghton) brings home her new fiance (Sidney Poitier), a brilliant doctor who happens to be black.

    Fifteen days after principal photography for "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner" was concluded, Tracy, who had been ill throughout the production, died of a heart attack. Out of deference to Louise, Hepburn did not attend Tracy's funeral.

    But their love for each other is apparent in the nine movies in "Tracy and Hepburn: The Definitive Collection." It's not just acting.

    1 image(s)

  • article Health Briefs

    Tuesday, August 10, 2010 12:30 pm

    Am I Hungry?

  • article Health Briefs (7/2)

    Sunday, July 4, 2010 9:30 am

    New FitPro Bootcamp starting at Aspire

  • article Health Briefs (7/16)

    Sunday, July 18, 2010 9:30 am

    Team Diabetes offers meetings, training for upcoming marathons

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    • McClellan: Conflicted over whether or not to trust our government

      Guest Commentary by Mike McClellan

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      Guest Commentary by Tom Patterson

    • Scarp: Go east, young man, go east (valley)

      By Mark Scarp, contributing columnist

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      By Jerry Brown, contributing columnist

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      Guest Commentary by Bill Richardson

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