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David Steinberg (journalist)
American journalist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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David Steinberg (1932 – March 8, 2017) was a journalist for the New York Herald Tribune and president of PR Newswire. He received the first distinguished business journalism award for newspapers in 1958.[1]
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Early life
Steinberg was born to Rosalie and Harry Steinberg in the Bronx, New York, in 1932.[2][3] He had a sister named Abby.[4] Steinberg attended DeWitt Clinton High School in the Bronx and graduated from the City College of New York (CCNY) in 1953.[3]
Career
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New York Herald Tribune
Steinberg started working for the New York Herald Tribune in junior high school as a messenger collecting hand-written stock quotes for the newspaper's financial statisticians.[3] In college, he was the Tribune's college correspondent for CCNY.[3] He became a copy editor in the business and financial news department before graduating.[3] He was the newspaper's business editor by 1956.[5]
Writing for the Tribune, Steinberg traveled extensively and interviewed heads of state, including Fidel Castro.[3]
In 1958, Steinberg was honored with one of the first two Gerald Loeb Awards, the first awards for distinguished business and financial journalism.[1]
New York Report
During the 1962–1963 New York City newspaper strike, Steinberg took a temporary job as the financial editor for the New York Report, a newspaper published during the strike by the owners of Il Progresso Italo-Americano, an Italian-language newspaper.[6] Steinberg convinced PR Newswire to provide their newswire receiver so that he could report financial news without reporters.[6]
PR Newswire
PR Newswire founder Herb Muschel, impressed by Steinberg's use of his service during the strike, recruited Steinberg for a management position.[6] He joined the company after the strike.[6]
Steinberg continued as the vice president and chief of operations after the company was acquired by Western Union in 1970.[6][7] He became president of the company in 1976.[8]
His contributions to the company included being a major architect of the company's international network.[3] During his tenure as president, the service became a state-of-the-art communications network with 700 employees.[3]
Steinberg retired in 1992.[4] He continued as vice chairman of the company.[4] He served as chairman of Canada Newswire until 2002.[4]
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Personal life
Steinberg and his wife Anne had two sons, Howard and Michael.[4]
His sister, Abby, was a record company representative who married songwriter and music publisher Aaron Schroeder on October 31, 1967.[9]
Rosalie, Steinberg's mother, died in 1979.[2]
Steinberg died on March 8, 2017, from surgery complications.[4]
Awards
Professional affiliations
- Governor of the New York Financial Writers Association[3]
- President of the World Trade Writers Association[3]
- Member of the Deadline Chapter of Sigma Delta Chi[3]
- Member of the Society of Professional Journalists[3]
- Member of The Silurians Press Club[3]
References
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