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・ Alicia Reece
・ Alicia rhadina
・ Alicia Rhett
・ Alicia Ricalde Magaña
・ Alicia Rickter
・ Alicia Rio
・ Alicia Rodríguez
・ Alicia Rodríguez (Chilean actress)
・ Alicia Rodríguez (FALN)
・ Alicia Rodríguez (Spanish actress)
・ Alicia Rodríguez Martínez
・ Alicia Ross
・ Alicia Sacramone
・ Alicia sansibarensis
・ Alicia Seegert
Alicia Shepard
・ Alicia Sheridan LeFanu
・ Alicia Silverstone
・ Alicia Sixtos
・ Alicia Smith
・ Alicia Steimberg
・ Alicia Suazo
・ Alicia Svigals
・ Alicia Sánchez-Camacho
・ Alicia Tate-Nadeau
・ Alicia Terzian
・ Alicia Thompson
・ Alicia Thorgrimsson
・ Alicia Tindal Palmer
・ Alicia Urreta


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Alicia Shepard : ウィキペディア英語版
Alicia Shepard
Alicia C. Shepard (born April 27, 1953, in Boston, Massachusetts) () is an American journalist, media writer and expert on the work and lives of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein. In February 2014, she moved to Kabul, Afghanistan to work with Afghan journalists. In fall 2012 Shepard joined the University of Nevada, Las Vegas faculty as a guest professor for the Greenspun College of Urban Affairs. 〔http://www.lvrj.com/news/shepard-media-critic-and-former-npr-ombudsman-joins-unlv-faculty-150077985.html〕 〔http://journalism.unlv.edu〕〔http://www.linkedin.com/pub/alicia-shepard/28/3b4/691〕 She joined National Public Radio (NPR) in October, 2007, for a three-year appointment as the Ombudsman for the nonprofit public media organization that ended May 31, 2011. In that role, she said on June 21, 2009, that waterboarding, as practiced by Americans on terror captives, should not be called 'torture',() although she later mentioned in an interview that "I think that it does... constitute torture." () On this matter she claimed she was supporting an NPR policy originated by Managing Editor David Sweeney.
Shepard taught media ethics at Georgetown University to its masters program from 2007 until 2010. She also taught journalism at American University. She was a Times Mirror Visiting Professor at University of Texas at Austin for the 2005-2006 academic year, where she taught a class she designed on Watergate and the press. She spent the last four years interviewing more than 175 people connected to Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein and sifting through the new archival materials that UT bought from Woodward and Bernstein for $5 million in 2003. She is the author of the 2006 book "Woodward and Bernstein: Life in the Shadow of Watergate."
==Awards and recognition==

Shepard contributes to ''Washingtonian'' and ''People'' magazines, and has written for ''The New York Times'', ''The Washington Post'' and the ''Chicago Tribune''. For nearly a decade, she wrote for ''American Journalism Review'' on such things as ethics, the newspaper industry and how journalism works - or doesn't. For that work, the National Press Club awarded her its top media criticism prize three different years. In 2003, she was a Foster Distinguished Writer at Penn State. From 1982 to 1987, she was a reporter for the ''San Jose Mercury News'' in California.

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