Nelson Paul Poynter was the owner of the St. Petersburg Times, in Florida, which for years has enjoyed the reputation as one of the best newspapers in the United
States. Poynter was born in 1903 in Sullivan, Ind., where his father owned several newspapers. In 1912, his father, Paul, bought the St. Petersburg Times and turned it into a family business.
As a young man, Poynter began gaining experience in the newspaper business. He worked as a reporter, editor, advertising salesman and ad director at different newspapers.
In 1947, when Poynter bought controlling interest in the newspaper, the Times began its rise toward excellence. He based his enterprises on "standards of ownership," defining ownership as a "sacred trust and a great privilege" in which the owner had responsibilities to the community.
For Nelson Poynter, the standards meant honesty, integrity, aggressive service and financial independence. It also meant high standards for staff and management to carry out those principles. Poynter led his staff in a statewide campaign against lynching and government mismanagement, and in favor of racial integration and the development of
St. Petersburg and other Counties into something more than the sleepy retirement community it for old people.
His pro-development crusades included such projects as the Sunshine Skyway
Bridge. After his death at 74, the newspaper advocated the construction of what is now known as Tropicana Field. Poynter also was competitive in business. In 1971, his newspaper's circulation campaign and booming growth in Pinellas County combined to surpass rival Tampa Tribune in circulation, a lead that remains today.
Poynter's campaigns resulted in the newspaper's first Pulitzer Prize in 1964 for public service. The paper won five more Pulitzers, National reporting in 1980,
On July 18, 1918, Rolihlahla Mandela was born into the Madiba clan in Mvezo, Transkei. His parents were Nonqaphi Nosekeni and Nkosi Mphakanyiswa Gadla Mandela. Nkosi was the principal counsellor to the acting King of the Thembu People, Jongintaba Dalindyebo. Rolihlahlas father died when he was a child. When his father died, Rolihlahla became a ward of Jongintaba, at the Great Place, in Mquekezweni. Rolihlahla dreamed of making his own contribution to the freedom struggle of his people. Nelson Mandela Foundation.
property he can run it any way he sees fit. This is a belief which
Carnegie’s essay contains explanations of three common methods by which wealth is distributed and his own opinions on the effects of each. After reading the entire essay, readers can see his overall appeals to logos; having wealth does not make anyone rich, but using that wealth for the greater good does. He does not force his opinions onto the reader, but is effectively convincing of why his beliefs make sense. Andrew Carnegie’s simple explanations intertwined with small, but powerful appeals to ethos and pathos become incorporated into his overall appeal to logos in his definition of what it means for one to truly be rich.
The Third Estate is everything. As to the author Abbe Sieyes, a nation requires private and public activities to survive and prosper. Four separate classes of The Third Estate that include a people from your basic peasants, to industry workers, and merchants, to the “most distinguished liberal and scientific professions to the lowest of menial tasks.” According to Sieyes the thirds estate comprises nineteen twentieths of the population who absorbs the arduous work that the “privileged order refuses to perform”. Essentially, The Third Estate is the backbone of their social, and economic estate but yet the nobility and the clergy continue to step on them and exploit their labor for capital gain. Abbe brings to light the question as do we not understand the ramifications of a monopoly, while the
He recognized the black people who were dominants of the South. His leadership strategies were aimed at bringing all southern states as one nation without oppressing blacks and therefore upbringing the black supremacy (Foner Par 2).
In Andrew Carnegie’s “The Gospel of Wealth” he outlines what the rich man’s responsibilities to the public is regarding his wealth. Andrew Carnegie was one of his times wealthiest men and wrote this in 1889. He states that, “Our duty is with what is practicable now-with the next step possible in our day and generation. It is criminal to waste our energies in endeavoring to uproot, when all we can profitably accomplish is to bend the universal tree of humanity a little in the direction most favorable to the production of the good fruit under existing circumstances (Carnegie 23-24).” In his writing he talks about the best way to dispose of the wealth one has acquired. The remainder of this paper will address the
Many people in the world have a fairly concrete idea of what it means to own something. However, this concrete idea is often quite limited in the sense that it only encompasses the ownership of objects. Yet, a large number of philosophers have extended the reach of the term ownership, in a way that it encompasses skills and knowing something thoroughly. When confronted with this idea, many great thinkers throughout history have had contradicting viewpoints. Several of these thinkers include Plato, Plato’s pupil Aristotle, and modern philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre. All three of these brilliant philosophers had differing views of ownership. Plato argues that owning objects are detrimental to a person 's character, Aristotle claims that ownership
...ame into office, tariff rates were reduces and a private banking system was created. He continued to stop unfair business practices. However Wilson had downfalls when he failed to support anti-lynching legislation and did support the practice of segregation. Ray Stannard Baker wrote The Conditions of a Negro where he states, “They murdered the Negro in cold blood in the jail doorway...Easy people imagine that, having hanged a Negro, the mob goes quietly about its business...but once released, the spirit of anarchy spreads and spreads, not subsiding until it has accomplished its full measure of evil” (Reading 12, p. 4). The African American community was facing harsher conditions of their own and needed the government to stop this evil. Unemployment rate was growing and few trusts were dissolved compared to other Progressive presidents, while Wilson was in office.
It is one sad existence, to live and die, without discovering, what could have been. The question is often asked, what is the meaning of life? Or even, what is the purpose? There is no clear answer, and yet there is a search in every moment, every breath, and every corner, for a minute hint. In a societal setting, identity is merely determined by the amount of tangible things owned. Society places the ideology on individuals that those who own the most tangible things are above others. An individual can trump all those societal values by owning the self. This brings equality to all, and levels the playing field. This has been true throughout history, however behind all of this, there are individuals learning to conquer themselves. It begs the question, what defines a person, the physical or the metaphysical? There is obviously a compelling relationship between ownership and the sense of self or identity. But, is it ownership that determines the sense of self or is it perhaps, that the sense of self determines ownership. The
Ownership is the act, state, or right of possessing something. Many people believe taking ownership is parallel to taking responsibility. In some cases, taking responsibility can be rewarding, but in other cases, it can be very self centered. According to Aristotle, ownership of tangible objects leads to develop moral character, even though it is not stated whether those morals are good or bad. Plato exaggerates how disparaging ownership can be to one's character and life. The affect ownership obtains on moral character is intensely detrimental.
USA Today has been a widely successful company. When newspapers were the only form of read news, USA Today cornered the market in the national newspaper arena. As the digital age came about, it was time for change. New companies were emerging as leaders in the online news arena, and even established companies were moving towards online news. USA Today had to move in a different direction. They had to deal with staying ahead, or even with the competition.
The Tribune is America’s largest employee-owned media company, operating businesses in publishing, interactive and broadcasting. In publishing, Tribune’s leading daily newspapers include the Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, Newsday (Long Island, N.Y.), The Sun (Baltimore), South Florida Sun-Sentinel, Orlando Sentinel, Hartford Courant, Morning Call and Daily Press. The Company’s broadcasting group operates 23 television stations, WGN America on national cable, Chicago’s WGN-AM and the Chicago Cubs baseball. (Tribune.com)
...shness, succeed in establishing a social contract to defend their property rights.” So it is claimed that the social contract ‘we theoretically signed’ is created out of self interest from the wealthy people. The most disturbing part is in fact that the poor had to give up the only thing that belonged to them.
It’s a question that keeps floating around in the public sphere: is print advertising and newspapers dead? The world is becoming more and more fast-paced and although, our want and need for the up-to-date news and breaking stories has not changed, the way in which we consume it has. This background report investigates and explains the downfall of the newspaper and the technological shift to online news. It will also discuss differing opinions of this relevant topic of the future of journalism from a range of reliable primary sources and investigative data.