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Robert C. Maynard
Saturday, February 19, 2011
As a young man, Robert C. Maynard dreamed of being a newspaper reporter, but back in the 1950s newspapers were either not hiring “Negro” reporters or already had their one black reporter on staff. Undaunted, Maynard sent out 200 resumes, eventually landing a job at the York Gazette and Daily. In 1966 he was awarded a Nieman Fellowship at Harvard University and moved on to the Washington Post in 1967. During his ten year career at the Post, Maynard distinguished himself as a national reporter, ombudsman and then a member of the editorial board. In 1979, he was named editor of the Oakland Tribune, becoming the first African American to head a major metropolitan newspaper and in 1983, he and his wife, Nancy, purchased the paper, making them the first African Americans to own a major metropolitan newspaper.
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Dori Maynard tweets on Diversity, Media & More
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@aaronhuey will use http://t.co/OeNpOyYH to connect networks of community based story tellers with major media outlets. #jsk
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@terebouza realized there were stories hiding in data waiting to be discovered so she's creating a data mining handbook for journalists #jsk
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@girmatf wants to bring together exiled reporters, human rights experts & others to keep those journalists connected and supported. #jsk




