Trevor Grove

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Trevor_Grove an entity of type: Thing

Trevor Grove (born 1 January 1945) is a British journalist and former editor of The Sunday Telegraph (1989–1992). Raised and educated in Buenos Aires, Argentina, where he was educated at St. George's College, Quilmes, Grove was appointed editor of The Sunday Telegraph on 3 October 1989 under Max Hastings, then editor-in-chief of both the daily and Sunday titles. Unusually, the previous editor, Peregrine Worsthorne, was not removed from the newspaper, but instead was retained as editor of the comment section. This prompted the emergence of factionalism on the newspaper, which made Grove's position difficult. He was eventually succeeded in 1992, after less than three years in the post, by Charles Moore. Grove subsequently moved back to Argentina to launch El Periodico de Tucuman. In 2004 he rdf:langString
rdf:langString Trevor Grove
xsd:integer 5609846
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rdf:langString Simon Heffer and Veronica Wadley
rdf:langString Deputy Editor of The Daily Telegraph
rdf:langString Editor of The Sunday Telegraph
rdf:langString with Veronica Wadley
xsd:integer 1989 1992
rdf:langString Trevor Grove (born 1 January 1945) is a British journalist and former editor of The Sunday Telegraph (1989–1992). Raised and educated in Buenos Aires, Argentina, where he was educated at St. George's College, Quilmes, Grove was appointed editor of The Sunday Telegraph on 3 October 1989 under Max Hastings, then editor-in-chief of both the daily and Sunday titles. Unusually, the previous editor, Peregrine Worsthorne, was not removed from the newspaper, but instead was retained as editor of the comment section. This prompted the emergence of factionalism on the newspaper, which made Grove's position difficult. He was eventually succeeded in 1992, after less than three years in the post, by Charles Moore. Grove subsequently moved back to Argentina to launch El Periodico de Tucuman. In 2004 he was the director of Inside Time, the national publication for UK prisoners. He has also written a number of books, including The Juryman's Tale (1998), a defence of the jury system, and One Dog and His Man about his relationship with his Dalmatian dog. He is married to the columnist and interviewer Valerie Grove. He is also a magistrate. In Who's Who he gives his recreations as "playing tennis, messing about in a boat, learning the tango, walking the dog".
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