Paul Tash

Paul C. Tash (born circa 1954) is the chairman and CEO of the Tampa Bay Times and Times Publishing Company,[1] which used to publish Congressional Quarterly—a publication that was sold to the Economist Group in 2009. He began working for the Times as a local news reporter. From 1990–91, he was the editor and publisher of Florida Trend, which was owned by Times Publishing.[2]

Family

He is married to Karyn Tash, a high school teacher of the International Baccalaureate at St. Petersburg High School. Together they have two daughters. One is a physician at Duke University Medical Center and the other is a student at Duke Law School.[2]

Education

In 1976, he graduated summa cum laude from Indiana University. Two years later, he attended the University of Edinburgh in Scotland on a Marshall Scholarship, graduating with a bachelor of laws degree. He graduated magna cum laude from the University of Edinburgh.[2]

Awards

Tash received the Distinguished Alumni Service Award from Indiana University in 2012. He was also selected to be inducted into the Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame.[2]

Organizations

In 2006 he was made a member of the Pulitzer Prize board,[3] the Associated Press, and the Committee to Protect Journalists. He is also a member of the Florida Council of 100, a group of business leaders.[2]

gollark: I assumed it was fine for ASCII.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: osmarkslisp™ is probably TC while regex is… probably a "context-free" grammar?
gollark: So if you replace the osmarkslisp™ parser with json.decode and work out how to fix the string/atom distinction given that, and add string manipulation functions, parsing regex should be doable.
gollark: Well, Lisps are typically encoded in S-expressions, but it's entirely possible to have an utterly homoiconic program in JSON instead.

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-03-30. Retrieved 2013-04-10.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. "Paul C. Tash". Times Publishing Co. Archived from the original on 30 March 2013. Retrieved 10 April 2013.
  3. Paul Tash biography, pulitzer.org, January 5, 2007. Retrieved on May 22, 2008.


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