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03/14/07
Deborah
Seward named special editor for innovation, training for AP
NEW YORK -- Deborah Seward, executive producer at the Central
Newsroom at Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and the former
international editor of The Associated Press, will return
to the AP as a special international editor for innovation,
training and restructuring.
AP International Editor John Daniszewski announced her appointment
to the new position March 14.
Seward will be based in Paris and work with staffers around
the globe on training, planning and developing a more online-oriented
international news product. She also will help oversee issues
related to current and planned non-English language services.
"She has been among our most creative and effective news
executives and I know she will play a major part in fostering
innovation and moving the AP's international report and people
to new heights of accomplishment," Daniszewski said.
"I'm honored and proud to be back," Seward said
in an e-mail message after her appointment was announced to
AP colleagues. She is scheduled to assume the new duties on
June 15.
The world's largest and oldest news-gathering organization,
founded in 1846 and headquartered in New York, the AP maintains
240 worldwide bureaus in 97 countries.
Seward is an expert on European affairs who speaks French,
Russian, German and Polish in addition to English. She first
joined the news cooperative in 1988 in Warsaw, Poland, where
she helped cover the rebirth of the banned Solidarity trade
union.
She transferred to Berlin in 1990, reporting on the unification
of Germany. A year later she joined the Moscow reporting team
that covered the collapse of the Soviet Union and its aftermath,
before being named news editor in the Russian capital in 1994.
A Nieman Fellow in 1996 at Harvard University, she joined
AP's Paris bureau in 1997, where she spent three years as
news editor. In 2000 she was named bureau chief in Moscow
and then became AP's international editor in New York from
2003-2005.
As executive producer at Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty's
newsroom in Prague, the Czech Republic, Seward supervised
convergence of that organization's broadcast and English-language
Web site operations, and produced a news report and features
for its many national language services broadcasting to parts
of Eastern Europe, Central Asia and the Middle East.
Early in her career, she worked at Newsweek magazine, in Paris,
New York and Bonn, Germany.
A Connecticut native, Seward earned a bachelor's degree in
history from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
in 1978, followed by graduate studies at the Institut d'Etudes
Politiques in Paris.
About The AP
The Associated Press
is the essential global news network, delivering fast, unbiased
news from every corner of the world to all media platforms
and formats. Founded in 1846, AP today is the largest and
most trusted source of independent news and information. On
any given day, more than half the world's population sees
news from AP.
Contact: Jack Stokes, AP Corporate Communications, 212.621.1720
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