Seymour Topping

Seymour Topping (born December 11, 1921) is an American writer best known for his long association with The New York Times as managing editor, foreign editor and foreign correspondent. He is the San Paolo Professor Emeritus of International Journalism at Columbia University, where he also served as administrator of the Pulitzer Prizes from 1993 to 2002.

Personal life

Topping was born in the Harlem district of New York City on December 11, 1921 and grew up in the outer boroughs of Queens and The Bronx, where he completed his secondary education.[1][2] He was married to photojournalist, documentary filmmaker, and author Audrey Ronning Topping (the daughter of Canadian diplomat Chester Ronning) on November 10, 1948; they had five children. Since 1967, they have resided in Scarsdale, New York. In October 2015, the Toppings were predeceased by a daughter, Susan.[3][4]

Career

After graduating from the University of Missouri School of Journalism with a B.J. degree in 1943, Topping served as a United States Army infantry officer in the Pacific during World War II. Thereafter, he joined the Associated Press in 1948 as a foreign correspondent in China and Southeast Asia.[5] He joined The New York Times Company in 1959; over the next 34 years, he held positions such as Moscow and Southeast Asia bureau chief, foreign editor, assistant managing editor (1969–1976), deputy managing editor (1976) and managing editor (1977–1987) of The New York Times. Following the reorientation of his duties toward the Times Company's regional publications at the behest of Arthur Ochs Sulzberger in 1985, Topping was appointed director of editorial development for The New York Times Company in 1986; in this capacity, he "focused exclusively on improving the journalistic quality of the regional papers."[6] He left the Times Company in 1993 to administer the Pulitzer Prizes as the nonvoting secretary of the Pulitzer Prize Board. From 1994 until his retirement in 2002, he taught at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism as the San Paolo Professor of International Journalism.[7]

During his career, Topping covered historical events all over the world, including the Chinese Revolution and the First Indochina War, and he reported from myriad countries and regions, including China, Vietnam, Russia, Germany, the United Kingdom, Tibet, Uzbekistan, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Kuwait, Iran, South Africa, Zimbabwe, New Zealand, Australia, Cuba, Nicaragua, Honduras, and El Salvador.

He has also served in various administrative capacities, including President of the International Advisory Board of the School of Journalism at Tsinghua University, President of Emeritus Professors In Columbia, President of the American Society of Newspaper Editors (1992-1993), and Chairman of the ASNE's Committee on International Communication. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, the Asia Society, the Century Association, and the National Committee on United States-China Relations.

Bibliography

Topping is the author of the books. On the Front Lines of the Cold War: An American Correspondent's Journal from the Chinese Civil War to the Cuban Missile Crisis and Vietnam (Louisiana State University Press, 2010), Journey Between Two Chinas, The Peking Letter: A Novel of the Chinese Civil War, and Fatal Crossroads: A Novel of Vietnam 1945 (based partly on the experiences of OSS officer A. Peter Dewey).[8] Some of his articles and those of his wife make up part of the book The New York Times Report from Red China.

gollark: Wait, that's kind of different.
gollark: There are eSIM thingies.
gollark: Yes, you need SIM cards to connect to the phone network, or virtual ones, the whole system is insane, aaaaa.
gollark: Not always, as far as I know, though that may be a software issue.
gollark: Hmm, really? Good to know. Still has the other issues, mind you.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.