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He lives in the [[Takoma Park]] neighborhood of [[Washington, D.C.]] with his two children.<ref name=slate>[http://www.slate.com/id/2160222/ "Evicted From Wikipedia"], by Timothy Noah, ''[[Slate]]'', Feb. 24, 2007</ref> |
He lives in the [[Takoma Park]] neighborhood of [[Washington, D.C.]] with his two children.<ref name=slate>[http://www.slate.com/id/2160222/ "Evicted From Wikipedia"], by Timothy Noah, ''[[Slate]]'', Feb. 24, 2007</ref> |
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Wikipedia seems to be afraid of Mr. Noah and has threatened to remove me from the site if I edit his page again. However, I hope that others who read this Slate article will continue to edit his page, if for no other reason than to keep a great journalist "notable". |
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==Iraq War== |
==Iraq War== |
Revision as of 22:28, 25 February 2007
Timothy Noah is a senior writer for Slate Magazine, where he writes the "Chatterbox" column. He is also a contributing editor to The Washington Monthly. Noah was previously an assistant managing editor at U.S. News and World Report and a Washington reporter for the Wall Street Journal.[1] Before that, he was a staff writer at the New Republic and a congressional correspondent for Newsweek. He is a graduate of Harvard University, where he was an editor of the Harvard Advocate.[citation needed]
Noah's wife, fellow journalist Marjorie Williams, died of cancer on January 16, 2005. After her death, Noah edited an anthology of Williams' writing and published it under the title, The Woman at the Washington Zoo: Writings on Politics, Family, and Fate.[2]
He lives in the Takoma Park neighborhood of Washington, D.C. with his two children.[3]
Iraq War
In a February 2002 article in Slate, "Chatterbox Goes to War,"[4] Noah described his initial opposition to the Iraq War and then described his conversion to the pro-war position after hearing the evidence presented by Colin Powell to the United Nations.
After Powell's statements were proved false, Noah changed his mind about the war. He praised those who had remained steadfastly against it in an August 2004 column, "Can you forgive them?"[5]
References
- ^ The Washington Monthly bio
- ^ Meghan O'Rourke, Marjorie Williams: A journalist who made feminism matter, Slate, November 9, 2005.
- ^ "Evicted From Wikipedia", by Timothy Noah, Slate, Feb. 24, 2007
- ^ Timothy Noah, Chatterbox Goes to War, Slate, February 10, 2003
- ^ Timothy Noah, Can You Forgive Them?, Slate, August 20, 2004