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TOM
PLATE, an internationally syndicated columnist, writes
about America's relationship with the Pacific Rim and travels frequently
to Asia. Mr. Plate's columns have appeared in many world newspapers,
in Asia and the United States. For many years now, his weekly column
has been running regularly in The Honolulu Advertiser, The South
China Morning Post of Hong Kong, The Straits Times of Singapore,
The San Francisco Chronicle, The Japan Times in Tokyo, The Korea
Times (South Korea) and The Seattle Times -- and many other papers
from time to time via the Los Angeles Times Syndicate International
and the Tribune Media Services/Knight-Ridder news service.
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Plate teaches upper-division undergraduates in the College of Letters
and Science as well as in the School of Public Policy at the University
of California, at Los Angeles, where he began teaching full time
in 1996. He teaches courses on Asia's media and politics, and on
business, government and media ethics. He has lectured at UCLA's
Anderson School, the East West Center at the University of Hawaii,
The Getty Museum and Trust, and at universities in Asia. He is currently
working on an autobiography about journalism, and a nonfiction book
about the future of Asia.
He is the founder
of the non-profit Asia Pacific Media Network, headquartered at UCLA.
APMN is an international network for educators, journalists and
media professionals, government and business officials concerned
with regionally common issues, controversies and opportunities.
Mr. Plate is
a member of the Pacific Council on International Policy, the Century
Association of New York and the Phi Beta Kappa Society. He is a
graduate of Amherst College and Princeton's Woodrow Wilson School
of Public and International Affairs, with a masters degree in public
and international affairs. He is the author of five books and has
been a journalist at Time, Newsday, New York Magazine and CBS Family
Week. He has written for many national managines. From 1989-1995
he was Editor of the Editorial Pages of the Los Angeles Times. He
has won numerous journalism awards, including the American Society
of Newspaper Editors Deadline Writing Award and the Greater Los
Angeles Press Club Award for Best Editorial.Recently, he was a Media
Fellow at Stanford University and a fellow in Tokyo at the famed
Foreign Press Center's annual Asia-Pacific Media Conference. He
is listed in Who's Who in America and for the last several years
has been a participant at the annual retreat of the World Economic
Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
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