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04/06/2009
AP Press Release
Three incumbents, four new members
elected to AP board
NEW YORK – Three incumbents and four new members were
elected to the board of directors of The Associated Press
in results announced Monday at the annual meeting of the
news cooperative, in San Diego.
Re-elected to three-year terms were Craig A. Dubow, the
chairman, president and CEO of Gannett Co., Inc.; John Mitchell,
president and publisher of the Rutland Herald (Vt.) and the
Barre-Montpelier Times Argus (Vt.); and Gary Pruitt, chairman,
president and CEO of The McClatchy Company.
The new members are Elizabeth Brenner, publisher and president
of The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel and executive vice president
of Milwaukee-based Journal Communications Inc.; David M.
Paxton, president and CEO of Paxton Media Group; Steven R.
Swartz, president of Hearst Newspapers and senior vice president
of Hearst Corp.; and Paul C. Tash, chairman and CEO of the
Times Publishing Co. and editor of the St. Petersburg Times.
Paxton will serve two years in a seat left vacant by a resignation;
the others were elected to three-year terms.
On Saturday, the board also re-appointed David Lord, vice
chairman of Pioneer Newspapers, Inc., in Seattle, to an additional
two-year term.
Three directors are retiring from the board after completing
the maximum service permitted under the AP bylaws: Walter
Hussman, publisher of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette; Julie
Inskeep, publisher of The Journal Gazette of Fort Wayne (Ind.);
and Bruce Reese, president and CEO of Bonneville International
Corp.
The Associated Press board has 18 directors elected by AP
members at their annual meeting, in staggered classes of
six each year. These directors are elected to three-year
terms and are eligible to serve up to a total of nine years.
The board can also appoint up to six additional directors
if it chooses.
About The AP
The Associated Press is the essential global news network, delivering fast,
unbiased news from every corner of the world to all media platforms and formats.
Founded in 1846, AP today is the largest and most trusted source of independent
news and information. On any given day, more than half the world’s
population sees news from AP.
On the Net: www.ap.org
Contact: Jack Stokes, AP Corporate Communications, 212.621.1730
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