Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Stewart_Steven> ?p ?o }
- Stewart_Steven abstract "Stewart Gustav Steven (born Stefan Gustaf Cohen; 30 September 1935 – 19 January 2004) was a British newspaper editor who grew circulation but whose career was marked by three major errors. He was personally generous to friends and family.Born in Hamburg to Jewish parents, Steven fled to England with his parents in 1941 as a refugee. He subsequently became a journalist with the Central Press, then the Western Daily Press, and from 1963 with the Daily Express. At the Express, he was a political reporter, diplomatic correspondent and finally foreign editor, before becoming an assistant editor of the Daily Mail in 1972, and associate editor in 1974.In 1972 the Daily Express reported a \"world exclusive\" that Martin Borman, Hitler's deputy, was living in South America. After six days, the paper realised it was a hoax. Steven left for the Daily Mail. In 1977, he took responsibility for the publication of a false story claiming that British Leyland had a fund to pay bribes.In 1982, he became editor of the Mail on Sunday, serving until 1992, when he became editor of the Evening Standard. In 1995, he printed a story critical of Tony Blair under the name of Bryan Gould, a former member of the Labour Party's shadow cabinet; in fact, Conservative Party Home Secretary Michael Howard's teenaged son had written the article. Steven retired later in the year, serving as the last Chairman of Punch and on the board of the London Film Commission.Steven was an early enthusiast for the London Eye. He enjoyed cricket and rugby. He supported the arts, both personally and in his newspapers.When he married a half Russian half Polish pop singer in 1965, he adopted her son and raised him as his own. She took up painting after retiring from music. At the time of his death he was caring for her; she suffered from multiple sclerosis.".
- Stewart_Steven almaMater Mayfield_and_Five_Ashes.
- Stewart_Steven award ITV_Granada.
- Stewart_Steven birthDate "1935-09-30".
- Stewart_Steven birthName "Stefan Gustaf Cohen".
- Stewart_Steven birthPlace Hamburg.
- Stewart_Steven birthYear "1935".
- Stewart_Steven board National_Campaign_for_the_Arts.
- Stewart_Steven deathDate "2004-01-19".
- Stewart_Steven deathYear "2004".
- Stewart_Steven employer Daily_Express.
- Stewart_Steven employer Daily_Mail.
- Stewart_Steven employer London_Evening_Standard.
- Stewart_Steven employer The_Mail_on_Sunday.
- Stewart_Steven employer Western_Daily_Press.
- Stewart_Steven occupation Editor-in-chief.
- Stewart_Steven occupation Journalist.
- Stewart_Steven occupation Stewart_Steven__1.
- Stewart_Steven occupation Stewart_Steven__2.
- Stewart_Steven occupation Stewart_Steven__3.
- Stewart_Steven religion Catholic_Church.
- Stewart_Steven religion Roman_Catholic.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageID "21687708".
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageLength "11404".
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageOutDegree "53".
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageRevisionID "679713223".
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Adolescence.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Adolf_Hitler.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink British_Leyland.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Bryan_Gould.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Category:1935_births.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Category:2006_deaths.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Category:Daily_Mail_journalists.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Category:English_newspaper_editors.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Category:Jews_who_immigrated_to_the_United_Kingdom_to_escape_Nazism.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Category:London_Evening_Standard_people.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Hamburg.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Catholic_Church.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Conservative_Party_(UK).
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Cricket.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Daily_Express.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Daily_Mail.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink David_English_(editor).
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Editor-in-chief.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Hamburg.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Home_Secretary.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink ITV_Granada.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Jonathan_Holborow.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Journalist.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Labour_Party_(UK).
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Lippincott.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink London_Evening_Standard.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink London_Eye.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Macmillan_Publishers_(United_States).
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Martin_Bormann.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Max_Hastings.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Mayfield_and_Five_Ashes.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Michael_Howard.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Multiple_sclerosis.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink National_Campaign_for_the_Arts.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Official_Opposition_Shadow_Cabinet_(United_Kingdom).
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Paul_Dacre.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Philadelphia.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Poles.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Punch_(magazine).
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Rugby_football.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink The_Mail_on_Sunday.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Tony_Blair.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink Western_Daily_Press.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLink What_the_Papers_Say.
- Stewart_Steven wikiPageWikiLinkText "Stewart Steven".
- Stewart_Steven after Jonathan_Holborow.
- Stewart_Steven after Max_Hastings.
- Stewart_Steven almaMater Mayfield_and_Five_Ashes.
- Stewart_Steven awards "Granada Television's What The Papers Say award".
- Stewart_Steven before David_English_(editor).
- Stewart_Steven before Paul_Dacre.
- Stewart_Steven birthDate "1935-09-30".
- Stewart_Steven birthName "Stefan Gustaf Cohen".
- Stewart_Steven birthPlace Hamburg.
- Stewart_Steven boards "Better English Campaign 1995–97".
- Stewart_Steven boards "Chairman, Advisory Council, National Campaign for the Arts c:a 1996–2004".
- Stewart_Steven boards "Chairman, National Campaign for the Arts c:a 1999–2004".
- Stewart_Steven boards "London Film Cmmn 1996–2000".
- Stewart_Steven boards "Thames Advisory Group 1995–97".
- Stewart_Steven children "adopted Inka's son".
- Stewart_Steven dateOfBirth "1935-09-30".
- Stewart_Steven dateOfDeath "Hamburg".
- Stewart_Steven deathDate "2004-01-19".
- Stewart_Steven deathPlace "London".
- Stewart_Steven employer "Central Press Features, political reporter 1961–63".
- Stewart_Steven employer "Daily Express political reporter 1964–65, diplomatic correspondent 1965–67, foreign editor 1967–72".
- Stewart_Steven employer "Daily Mail, asst ed 1972–74, associate ed 1974–82".
- Stewart_Steven employer "Evening Standard, editor 1992–95".
- Stewart_Steven employer "Mail on Sunday, columnist 1996–".
- Stewart_Steven employer "Mail on Sunday, editor 1982–92".
- Stewart_Steven employer "Western Daily Press, political correspondent 1963–64".
- Stewart_Steven name "Steven, Stewart Gustav".
- Stewart_Steven name "Stewart Steven".
- Stewart_Steven nationality "United Kingdom".