|
Aarons is a founding board member of the Maynard Institute. He is also founding president of the National Lesbian and Gay Journalists Association, which since 1990 has had a significant impact on how mainstream media cover gay issues and relate to their gay and lesbian employees. Aarons covered events of the 1960s and 1970s as chief of The Washington Post's New York and West Coast bureaus. In 1982, he spent a year in Israel, covering among other things the Israel-Lebanon war as a freelancer for Time magazine. In 1983, he joined his friend and colleague Robert Maynard, then the new owner of The Oakland Tribune, in the job of features editor. In 1985, he was named executive editor and in 1988 senior vice president for news with corporate responsibilities in addition to news supervision. During his tenure, the Tribune won a 1990 Pulitzer Prize for its photojournalism during the devastating October 1989 earthquake in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Blethen is involved in a number of civic and industry efforts focused on higher education and health and human services. He served as chair of the 1996 United Way of King County Campaign and is a member of the 1997 campaign cabinet. He chaired the major gifts division of Campaign Washington State University. He chairs the Kitchen Cabinet advisory panel for the president of Washington State University. He is also on the Business Advisory Group for the president of the University of Washington.
Dotson is a member of the Pulitzer Prize Board of Directors, which chooses Pulitzer Prize winners each year, and the Board of Visitors of the John S. Knight Fellowship Program, which offers working journalists a year's study at Stanford University in California. He is an ex officio member of the Newspaper Association of America and a member of its diversity subcommittee. He is also a co-founder of the Maynard Institute for Journalism Education.
From 1979 through 1997, she served as a regular columnist for The Washington Post. She wrote columns on local, national and international issues on topics that included education, politics, racial and cultural diversity, gender and social issues. Her journalistic expertise involves broad and extensive coverage on C-Span, Public Broadcasting System's "To the Contrary," Black Entertainment Television, and Howard University's WHMM-TV. In 1993, Gilliam was elected president of the National Association of Black Journalists, which gave her leadership of more than 3,500 members in broadcast and newspaper journalism public relations, advertising and journalism education.
In April of 1997, Harshaw was inducted into the National Association of Black Journalists Region VI Hall of Fame. She is a recipient of the 1997 Ohio Associated Press third-place award for editorial writing and received the 1995 "Best of Cox" award for column writing. Her other professional affiliations include membership in the National Association of Black Journalists, the National Association of Minority Media Executives and the Ohio Newspaper Women's Association. She was a founder of the Dayton Association of Black Journalists.
Professor Lerude is a 1961 journalism graduate of the University of Nevada. After a career as a reporter and editor with The Associated Press in Los Angeles, San Diego, Las Vegas and Reno, he joined the Reno newspapers and rose from reporter to editor, publisher and president of the Reno Evening Gazette and Nevada State Journal.
She also serves on the boards of the National Medical Fellowships, Inc., a nonprofit organization that seeks to improve the accessibility of health care to all communities, and the Center for Public Integrity, a nonprofit journalism watchdog agency. She is on the executive committee of the Campaign to Save Cardinal Spellman High School her alma mater. A graduate of Vassar College (class of '74), Madison's first news position was as a reporter for the Syracuse (N.Y.). Herald Journal In 1980, Madison joined the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, as an investigative reporter; she was later assistant city editor at the Dallas Times Herald.
Prior to joining the Free Press, Miller was the managing editor of The Sun News in Myrtle Beach, S.C. He had been managing editor of the Sun News since 1996. From 1991 to 1996, he had been executive editor at the Reporter in Landsdale, Pa. He came to the Reporter from USA Today, where he was deputy managing editor for sports. He worked at USA Today from 1982 to 1991 and was one of the original staff members in sports. Previously, Miller worked at the Charlotte Observer in North Carolina as a sports copy and layout editor. Miller is on the advisory board for the James K. Batten Award for Excellence in Civic Journalism and is a board member of the Associated Press Managing Editors. He is an active member of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, the National Association of Minority Media Executives and the National Association of Black Journalists.
Montiel has more than two decades of experience as a journalist, educator and foundation executive. He was formerly vice president for communications of the Amateur Athletic Foundation of Los Angeles and worked as a reporter and editor for The Associated Press in San Francisco, Los Angeles and Salt Lake City. During his 10 years of news experience, he was also a reporter in Vietnam for Pacific Stars and Stripes, a staff writer and copy editor at the Arizona Daily Star and a copy editor at the Los Angeles Times. He was a member of the California Chicano News Media Association while in Los Angeles. From 1979 to 1981, he was assistant professor of journalism at the University of Arizona in Tucson. He directed the institute's Summer Program for Minority Journalists in 1978, 1980 and 1985, the Editing Program for Minority Journalists in 1981, and the institute's 1991 Management Training Center. Montiel has been a member of the Maynard Institute Board of Directors since its incorporation in 1977. He served as deputy press secretary of the 1984 Olympic Games and as campaign press secretary for the re-election of Mayor Tom Bradley of Los Angeles in 1985. He graduated in 1969 from the University of Arizona with a BA in journalism.
While in Ohio, Proctor taught journalism part-time at Kent State University, where he is currently a member of the journalism school's national advisory board. Proctor also did editing and reporting stints at the Quad City Times in Davenport, Iowa and United Press International in Philadelphia and worked as a press secretary for former Rep. Dan Mica of Florida. He began his career as a reporter for the Daily Local News in West Chester, PA. At the Beacon Journal, Proctor was part of the team that won the Pulitzer Prize in 1987 for coverage of the Goodyear takeover. He was a Pulitzer Prize Juror 2000 and 2001. A former Marine and Vietnam veteran, Proctor spent six years on active duty and six years as a reservist.
A 1980 graduate of The Editing Program, Rimmer has served as the chair of the Maynard Institute's Editing Program Advisory Committee for several years. She is a graduate of Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism and the City College of New York.
Before joining The Times, Schmidt worked for Newsweek for eight years, the last two as bureau chief in Moscow. For the three years prior to his Moscow assignment, Schmidt was Newsweek's Middle East bureau chief, based in Cairo. He also served as the magazine's Miami bureau chief and was a correspondent in its Chicago bureau. From 1967 until 1973, he was a reporter with The Detroit Free Press. In 1987 Schmidt was among seven reporters and two editors at The Times who shared the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting for articles about the causes of the Challenger disaster. In 1971 he shared the George Polk Award for national reporting for coverage of the shootings at Kent State University. In 1977 he won an award from the Overseas Press Club for his reporting on the war in Lebanon. Schmidt received a B.A degree in journalism from the University of Michigan.
He began his newspaper career at the age of 15 as a part-time reporter in his hometown of Graham, Texas, and bought his first newspaper at age 21. He served on the board of the Newspaper Association of America from 1993 until 2004 and is the former Chairman of the Board. He also serves on the Associated Press Board of Directors, the Board of Trustees for the Rocky Mountain Multiple Sclerosis Center, the National Sports Center for the Disabled Board, The Helen G. Bonfils Foundation, The Denver Center for the Performing Arts and the Winter Park Recreational Association Board. In addition, he is a member of the board of trustees for the University of Denver.
Trahant is a member of the Shoshone-Bannock Tribe of Idaho and has received numerous honors, including the Elias Boudinot Award for Lifetime Contributions to Journalism and the Hewywood Broun and Paul Tobenkin awards; was a Pulitzer Prize finalist in 1989. He is past president and a current member of the Native American Journalists Asociation. Trahant is a trustee of The Freedom Forum. |