James S. Doyle
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- For other persons named James Doyle, see James Doyle (disambiguation).
James S. "Jim" Doyle is an American journalist.
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[edit] History
He graduated Boston College, the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism (with honors), and was a 1965 Society of Nieman Fellows at Harvard University.
He started as Washington bureau chief for The Boston Globe in 1965, where he broke the story of an unqualified nominee for federal district judge, which led to the withdrawal of the nomination and the Globe's winning its first Pulitzer Prize for Distinguished Public Service in 1966. In 1970 he joined The Washington Star as national correspondent, which landed him on the master list of Nixon political opponents.
In 1973 to 1975 Doyle was Special Assistant to Watergate Prosecutors Archibald Cox, Leon Jaworski and Henry Ruth. His book on the battles of the Watergate prosecutors, Not Above The Law, was published by William Morrow in 1977. From 1976 to 1983 he was chief political correspondent and deputy Washington bureau chief for Newsweek magazine.
Doyle retired in 1998, then suprvised the Committee of Concerned Journalists study "The Clinton/Lewinsky Story: How Accurate? How Fair?"
Since then he has been a senior adviser to Business Leaders for Sensible Priorities, a non-profit set up by Ben Cohen of Ben & Jerry's aimed at educating the public to the need to shift 15% ($40 billion-plus) from defense procurement of cold war weapons to domestic programs such as child health insurance and Head Start.
[edit] Awards
He won the New York Newspaper Guild Page One Award in 1980 for the Newsweek cover article, "Is America Turning Right?"
[edit] Membership and Associations
He's a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, the advisory board of the Pew Center For Civic Journalism, and an associate of the Project for Excellence in Journalism.
For fifteen years, Doyle ran the editorial operations for Army Times Publishing Company, a group of six national weeklies covering the military, defense, aerospace and civilian federal workers, now a division of the Gannett.
[edit] References
- Doyle, James S. Has Money Corrupted Washington Journalism? Nieman Reports Vol. 53 No. 4 Winter 1999