Lloyd Turner (journalist)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Lloyd_Turner_(journalist) an entity of type: Thing

Lloyd Turner (2 October 1938 – 12 September 1996) was a newspaper editor in the United Kingdom. Born in Australia, Turner worked on the Newcastle Morning Herald before moving to England to work as a journalist at the Manchester Evening News. He subsequently relocated to London to work on the Daily Express, where he became father of the chapel of the newspaper's National Union of Journalists. During this period, he founded the 84 Club, a drinking club, with Peter Tory. He was brought back in November 1988 as editor of the short-lived newspaper The Post until the paper closed five weeks later. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Lloyd Turner (journalist)
rdf:langString Lloyd Turner
rdf:langString Lloyd Turner
rdf:langString London, U.K.
xsd:date 1996-09-12
xsd:date 1938-10-02
xsd:integer 26965465
xsd:integer 1117272575
rdf:langString Michael Gabbert
xsd:date 1938-10-02
xsd:date 1996-09-12
rdf:langString Newspaper Editor
rdf:langString Journalist, Farmer
xsd:integer 1973
rdf:langString
rdf:langString Jill Turner
rdf:langString Editor of the Daily Star
xsd:integer 1980
rdf:langString Lloyd Turner (2 October 1938 – 12 September 1996) was a newspaper editor in the United Kingdom. Born in Australia, Turner worked on the Newcastle Morning Herald before moving to England to work as a journalist at the Manchester Evening News. He subsequently relocated to London to work on the Daily Express, where he became father of the chapel of the newspaper's National Union of Journalists. During this period, he founded the 84 Club, a drinking club, with Peter Tory. After working for many years as chief sub editor of the Express, Turner was appointed editor of its stablemate, the Daily Star. He increased its sales, at the expense of the Daily Mirror, but was sacked in 1987 after being convicted of libelling Jeffrey Archer, by claiming that he had had sex with prostitute Monica Coghlan. Archer was awarded a then-record £500,000 in damages but, in 2001, Archer was convicted of perjury and perverting the course of justice at the 1987 trial, and was imprisoned. Out of journalism, Turner bought a farm and began rearing bulls. He was brought back in November 1988 as editor of the short-lived newspaper The Post until the paper closed five weeks later. Returning to farming, Turner came back one more time to the national newspaper Today, serving as an assistant editor until the paper closed down in 1995. He worked as an advisor to the National Farmers' Union of England and Wales on Bovine spongiform encephalopathy until his death, at which time he was planning to again return to an editorial post, this time on the Daily Mail.
rdf:langString Daily Express
rdf:langString Today
rdf:langString The Post
rdf:langString Manchester Evening News
rdf:langString Daily Star
rdf:langString Newcastle Morning Herald
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3610
xsd:gYear 1938
xsd:gYear 1996

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