How Do I Become a Full Professor?

Peter Arnett was a visiting professor at the Cheung Kong School of Journalism and Communication of Shantou University on March 1, 2007, and taught for one semester in Shantou. He has conducted a series of lectures and courses on his many years of war reporting experience and media experience. He has now renewed his contract with Shantou University for three years to become a full professor. "How I Interviewed Bin Laden" is the story of his legendary lecturer. Dozens of exclusive battlefield historical photos were revealed for the first time. Peter Arnett has won a total of 57 major journalism awards so far. Received an honors degree from universities in the United States, Brazil and other countries. In 2006, he was also appointed New Zealand official by the Queen. He is currently a dual citizen of the United States and New Zealand.

How do I interview bin Laden

Peter Arnett, over 70 years old, is a world-renowned battlefield reporter who has long tracked the Vietnam War, the Gulf War, and the Affluent War. He had an exclusive interview with Saddam Hussein and Bin Laden, and was the first reporter in the Western media to interview Bin Laden. At the same time, I also interviewed a large number of international political figures, such as Arafat, Bebutu, Castro and so on. In 1966, he won the world s highest journalism award, the Pulitzer Prize, for his excellent coverage of the Vietnam War. He is recognized as the best journalist in the Vietnam War in the United States.
In 1991, during the first Gulf War, Arnett live broadcasted on television for the first time in human history, which became a milestone in the history of TV news broadcast. This earned him the Emmy Award, the highest honor in American television. In 1994, he published a small book, "Return from the Battlefield," which was named Book of the Year by the New York Times Book Review Edition.
Peter Arnett is over seventy years old and is a world-renowned battlefield reporter who has long tracked the Vietnam War, the Gulf War, and the Afghani War. He had an exclusive interview with Saddam Hussein and Bin Laden, and was the first reporter in the Western media to interview Bin Laden. At the same time, I also interviewed a large number of international political figures, such as Arafat, Bebutu, Castro and so on. In 1966, he won the world s highest journalism award, the Pulitzer Prize, for his excellent coverage of the Vietnam War. He is recognized as the best journalist in the Vietnam War in the United States. In 1991, during the first Gulf War, Arnett live broadcasted on television for the first time in human history, which became a milestone in the history of TV news broadcast. This earned him the Emmy Award, the highest honor in American television. In 1994, he published a small book, "Return from the Battlefield." The book was named Book of the Year by the New York Times Book Review. Peter Arnett has won a total of 57 major journalism awards so far. Received an honors degree from universities in the United States, Brazil and other countries. In 2006, he was also appointed New Zealand official by the Queen. He is currently a dual citizen of the United States and New Zealand. Peter Arnett was a visiting professor at the Cheung Kong School of Journalism and Communication of Shantou University on March 1, 2007, and taught for one semester in Shantou. He has conducted a series of lectures and courses on his many years of war reporting experience and media experience. At present, he has renewed his contract with Shantou People for three years and became a full professor. This book is a lecture on his own legendary story. Dozens of exclusive battlefield historical photos were revealed for the first time.
The first western reporter to interview Bin Laden; an exclusive interview with Saddam Hussein; the nation's best-known war correspondent in the Vietnam War; the Pulitzer Prize winner; the first live television broadcast in human history War fighter-Peter Arnett. "How I Interviewed Bin Laden" is the full record of Arnett's first semester lecture at Shantou University. It is not only a sketch of the 40-year battlefield life of an old journalist, but also a summary of his hard work in the news front. Report. "How Do I Interview Bin Laden" is not only an attempt by Arnett, but also a gift from the Yangtze River Journalism Institute to the domestic press.
Foreword Deconstructing Battlefield Reporters
Chapter One From Vietnam War to Iraq War-45 Years of Reporting Resume
Chapter 2: How the Battlefield Reporter Was Made
Chapter 3: The Bad Journalist and the Failed Vietnam War
Chapter 4 Reporting a Failed War
Chapter 5 A Long and Bloody Mile
Chapter 6 "The Light at the End of the Tunnel"
Chapter VII Revisiting Vietnam 40 Years Later
Chapter Eight: On the Eve of the War in Baghdad: Go or Stay?
Chapter IX Live Report of the First Gulf War
Chapter X The Media vs. the Military-Another Battleground in the Iraq War
Chapter 11: How Saddam Controlled America and My Imagination
Chapter 12The Death of the Great Journalist
Chapter 13 Is Beijing the World's Largest Capital?
Chapter Fourteen Makes a Comeback: Dating a Battlefield Journalist and Academia
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