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Peggy Mitchell Peterman (née Mitchell; ca. 1936 – August 19, 2004) was an African American journalist and columnist at the St. Petersburg Times in St. Petersburg, Florida, United States. She was known for initiating the integration of the news that had previously been on a page devoted to blacks throughout the newspaper.
10 highest paying jobs in Florida that don’t require a college degree. Based on data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, here are 10 high-paying occupations in the state that don’t ...
Andrews was born in Lewiston, Maine, to Paula Andrews, a teacher, and Steven Andrews, a broadcast journalist. [3] [4] Her family moved to San Antonio, Texas when she was 5 years old, and then to Valrico, Florida [5] 18 months later, [6] when her father, a six-time Emmy Award winner, began working as an investigative reporter for the local NBC affiliate, WFLA-TV.
The college traces its origins to 1925 when the Department of Journalism was formed in Language Hall (now Anderson Hall). Orland K. "O.K." Armstrong was the first head of the department. The first three journalism degrees were awarded in 1928. The department moved into Buckman Hall, a renovated dormitory, in 1937. [3]
In 1993, he earned a bachelor's degree in mass communication, with a minor in political science, from James Madison University. [8] [9] While in school, Acosta volunteered for WXJM, the student-run radio station. [10] He also worked as a reporter at WSVA, a local radio station owned and operated by Saga Communications. He got married in 1999 to ...
On May 28, 2003, after being given a two-week suspension for writing a story that was reported by an uncredited stringer, [2] Bragg resigned from the New York Times. [3]For the story, an account of Florida Gulf Coast oystermen culture he had written the year before, Bragg relied on the reporting of volunteer intern J. Wes Yoder.
Although learning the responsibilities of a journalist is important, education is required to work in broadcast journalism. A bachelor's degree in, "...journalism, broadcast journalism or interactive media," [16] can lead to a career in broadcast production. However, a heavy amount of the education they receive is hands-on activity through ...
After the war, the first journalism school in Germany was founded in 1949 as Werner Friedmann Institute. 1961 the school's name was changed into Deutsche Journalistenschule (German school of journalism). In 1979, a new journalism school was created in Hamburg, later renamed after the founder of Stern magazine, Henri Nannen.