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Mary Catherine Jordan (born November 10, 1960) is a Pulitzer Prize-winning American journalist for the ''Washington Post''.〔''The Washington Post''. ( Washington Post National: Staff - Mary Jordan ).〕 She is currently a national correspondent covering the 2016 presidential campaign. For 14 years she was a foreign correspondent and she has written from nearly 40 countries. With her husband, ''Post'' journalist Kevin Sullivan, Jordan ran the newspaper's bureaus in Tokyo, Mexico City and London. Jordan also was the founding editor and head of content for Washington Post Live, which organizes political debates, conferences and news events for the media company. Jordan and Sullivan are the authors of the Number #1 Bestselling book, ''Hope: A Memoir of Survival in Cleveland,'' that was released in April, 2015. 〔http://www.nytimes.com/best-sellers-books/2015-05-17/hardcover-nonfiction/list.html〕 Hope is written with Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus, two of the women who were kidnapped and held for a decade in Cleveland, Jordan’s hometown. ==Early life and career== Jordan, a daughter of Irish immigrants, was born and raised in Cleveland, Ohio. For her high school experience, she attended Saint Joseph Academy in Cleveland, Ohio (Class of 1979). She graduated from Georgetown University in 1983 and earned a master's degree from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism in 1984. In 1989-90, Jordan was awarded a Nieman Fellowship by Harvard University. Jordan began her ''Post'' career as an intern for the Style section, crisscrossed the country writing about colleges and schools as the national education reporter, and covered Virginia and national politics. For a year at Trinity College in Dublin, Ireland, she studied W. B. Yeats and other Irish poets. She was given her first job in the newspaper business by Irish author and editor Tim Pat Coogan, who hired her to write a column in ''The Irish Press''. She enrolled in Japanese language classes at Georgetown University before moving to Tokyo for four years and studied Spanish on a post-graduate fellowship at Stanford University before moving to Mexico for five years. Currently, Jordan is a national correspondent covering politics and writing profiles of political figures. From 2010 to early 2015, she was the founding editor and moderator for Washington Post Live, which hosted forums including the “The 40th Anniversary of Watergate” in June 2012 that featured key Watergate figures including former White House counsel John Dean, ''Washington Post'' editor Ben Bradlee, and reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein. It was held at the Watergate hotel. She also hosted the 2010 Maryland gubernatorial debate between Governor Martin O'Malley and former Governor Robert Ehrlich, and moderated a rare sit-down with Washington Redskins owner Daniel Snyder, Washington Capitals owner Ted Leonsis, and other owners of Washington's sports teams. She launched a new series for the Post called America Answers, which brought innovators and officials from around the country to Washington to talk about how to solve problems affecting millions of people. Vice President Joe Biden spoke at the first America Answers held in October, 2014. Among the many newsmakers she has interviewed: singer and songwriter Paul McCartney, Colombian novelist Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Nobel Prize winner Henry Kissinger, former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, and Benjamin Arellano Felix, one of Mexico's most notorious drug kingpins. Jordan has written extensively about injustices and discrimination against women around the world including articles about the exceedingly low conviction rate of rape in Britain and the unfortunate girls in India denied schooling solely because they were not born male. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Mary Jordan (journalist)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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