Obituaries
Mary Corey was the the first
woman to lead the newsroom at The Baltimore Sun. She was hired as editor in 2010.
Barry Horstman's journalism career lasted almost 40 years.
Bazy McCormick Miller, as she was known in the 1940s after marrying for the first time, was prepared by her uncle, Robert R. McCormick, to be heir apparent to the Tribune company.
William D. Behling began his newspaper career with the Beloit Daily News in 1946.
Frank Russell served as president and chairman of Central Newspapers Inc., which published the Arizona Republic and the Indianapolis
Star.
Into the 1970s, Stanley Karnow would cover the war off and on for Time, The Washington Post and other publications.
Roger F. Coleman became publisher of The Independent in 2002, where he worked a little less than two years.
Jane Glenn Haas had a 20-plus year run as a reporter and columnist with the Orange County Register.
Bob Barton owned, ran and wrote for the Elgin Courier, the Hays County Citizen and the Hays Free Press.
Roger Allen bought the Rockford Squire when it was the Rockford Weekly Register in the early 1980s and founded the Cedar Springs Post in 1988.
Lee Cearnal spent more than a decade at the Houston Chronicle.
Michael Triplett played an enormous role in UNITY: Journalists for
Diversity in 2011 and was one of the first representatives to the UNITY
board.
Pauline Friedman Phillips, who wrote under the name Abigail Van Buren, penned the Dear Abby column, which appeared in 1,000 newspapers.
Newsosaur: How Publishers Can Win at Mobile Commerce



