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  1. Apr 20, 2013 · The hard-charging founder of USA Today died Friday in Cocoa Beach, Fla. He was 89. The news was announced by USA Today and by the Newseum, which he also founded. Jack Marsh, president of the Al ...

  2. 4 days ago · USA Today is a daily newspaper founded in 1982 by businessman, author, and columnist Al Neuharth. The paper covers national and world news focusing on entertainment, pop culture, and celebrity gossip news. USA Today Network also provides a Principles of Ethical Conduct For Newsrooms available to be viewed here.

  3. Apr 20, 2013 · April 19, 2013. Al Neuharth, the brash and blustery media mogul who built the Gannett Company into a communications Leviathan and created USA Today, for years America’s best-selling newspaper ...

  4. The Freedom Forum is a nonpartisan 501(c)(3) foundation dedicated to fostering First Amendment freedoms for all. The organization advances First Amendment freedoms through programs that include Today's Front Pages, the Power Shift Project, the annual Al Neuharth Free Spirit and Journalism Conference for high school juniors, annual First Amendment Festival, Free Expression Awards and other ...

  5. www.freedomforum.org › about-freedom-forum › al-neuharthAl Neuharth - Freedom Forum

    Neuharth was chairman of the Freedom Forum until 1997. He had been a trustee of its predecessor, the Gannett Foundation, from 1965 to 1991, and was chairman from 1986 to 1991. In 1982, he founded USA TODAY, the nation’s most widely read newspaper. And he was chairman and CEO of the Gannett Co. in the 1970s and ’80s.

  6. Apr 20, 2013 · Al Neuharth, the man who launched "USA Today" against all expert advice, has died at the age of 89. He was the chairman of Gannett newspapers who called himself a dreamer and schemer when he got ...

  7. www.newsbusters.org › journalists › al-neuharthAl Neuharth | Newsbusters

    Prompted by Newsweek’s Michele Bachmann cover picture choice, in his weekly Friday column, USA Today founder Al Neuharth, a pretty consistent liberal, recognized the magazine’s political agenda. “When Newsweek was owned by the Washington Post, it was predictably left-wing, but it was accurate,” Neuharth observed before slamming the new ...

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