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This memoir traces his family from 18th century Vilnius, Poland, but focuses on his life in the post-World War II San Fernando Valley, a collection of mostly chicken ranches and citrus groves that grew explosively to 1.2 million people in four decades. If it were a separate city, "the Valley" would be the sixth largest in the country. His memoir traces his development as an L.A. Times reporter and editor and provides the backstory to some of the more notable of his several thousand stories during a 13-year reporting career and commentary on his accomplishments as an editorial executive, a…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This memoir traces his family from 18th century Vilnius, Poland, but focuses on his life in the post-World War II San Fernando Valley, a collection of mostly chicken ranches and citrus groves that grew explosively to 1.2 million people in four decades. If it were a separate city, "the Valley" would be the sixth largest in the country. His memoir traces his development as an L.A. Times reporter and editor and provides the backstory to some of the more notable of his several thousand stories during a 13-year reporting career and commentary on his accomplishments as an editorial executive, a leader in California newspapering and protecting the First Amendment. His reporting career paralleled sweeping U.S. social changes, including demands for women's rights, gay rights and civil rights.
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Autorenporträt
Bob Rawitch grew up in the San Fernando Valley in the 1950s and 1960s in a middle-class home and had a 28-year career as a reporter and senior editor at the Los Angeles Times, becoming a leader in the newspaper industry and a journalism educator. He served on the national board of the Society of Professional Journalists and was chair of both the California First Amendment Coalition and the California Society of Newspaper Editors. He was twice personally nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. At The Times, Rawitch started and oversaw the Valley and Ventura editions of the paper and started METPRO, the Minority Editorial Training Program, which has brought about 400 journalists of color into The Times and the newspaper industry. He is married for 54 years to Cynthia Rawitch, retired vice provost of California State University, Northridge, and has three children and six grandchildren.