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Billionaire philanthropist Leonore Annenberg, 91, dies...
philly.com ^ | 3.12.09 | Karen Heller

Posted on 03/12/2009 11:56:33 AM PDT by trumandogz

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To: Yossarian

The records of the administration of the Chicago Annenberg Challenge (CAC) released last week by the University of Illinois show that the Ayers-Obama connection was, in fact, an intimate collaboration and that it led to the only executive or administrative experience in Obama’s life.

After Walter Annenberg’s foundation offered several hundred million dollars to American public schools in the mid-’90s, William Ayers applied for $50 million for Chicago. The purpose of his application was to secure funds to “raise political consciousness” in Chicago’s public schools.

After he won the grant, Ayers’ group chose Barack Obama to distribute the money. Between 1995 and 1999, Obama distributed the $50 million and raised another $60 million from other civic groups to augment it.

In doing so, he was following Ayers’ admonition to grant the funds to “external” organizations, like American Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN), to pair with schools and conduct programs to radicalize the students and politicize them.

http://www.nationalledger.com/cgi-bin/artman/exec/view.cgi?archive=30&num=23111


21 posted on 03/12/2009 3:58:32 PM PDT by george76 (Ward Churchill : Fake Indian, Fake Scholarship, and Fake Art)
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To: george76; AdmSmith; Berosus; Convert from ECUSA; dervish; Ernest_at_the_Beach; Fred Nerks; ...

Thanks geo, and g’night all.


22 posted on 03/12/2009 6:42:17 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/____________________ Profile updated Monday, January 12, 2009)
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To: dennisw; GeronL; All

The Annenbergs were conservatives. Foundations established by conservatives usually get hijacked by liberals

~~~

So true and so sad. Walter Annenberg must be
rotating in his grave.

C-Span is one of his enduring legacies, as well.
A great philanthropist and certainly a friend of
Ronald Reagan must have been a very good man.

~~~~

WALTER ANNENBERG

U.S. Media Executive/Publisher/Diplomat

As a media magnate Walter Annenberg controlled important properties in the newspaper, television, and magazine industries. Perhaps most significantly, he was responsible for the creation of TV Guide, the largest circulation weekly magazine in the world, a magazine central to understanding television in America.

He was also very active in the arena of American politics, and served as United States Ambassador to the Court of St. James.

In his later life, Annenberg became renowned for his substantial philanthropic activities, which included significant donations to educational institutions and public television.

When his father was imprisoned for tax evasion, Annenberg took over the family publishing business. Triangle Publications, particularly The Daily Racing Form, proved to be extremely profitable, and Annenberg looked for ways to expand his company at precisely the time television was beginning to emerge as America’s communications medium of the future.

Inspired by a Philadelphia area television magazine called TV Digest, Annenberg conceived the idea of publishing a national television feature magazine, which he would then wrap around local television listings. The idea came to fruition when Annenberg purchased TV Digest, along with the similar publications TV Forecast from Chicago, and TV Guide from New York.

He combined their operations to form TV Guide in 1953, and quickly expanded the magazine by creating new regional editions and purchasing existing television listings publications in other markets.

Annenberg and his aide, Merrill Panitt (who would go on to become TV Guide’ s editorial director), realized that in order achieve the circulation necessary to make their publication a truly mass medium, they needed to go beyond the fan magazine approach that had been typical of most earlier television and radio periodicals.

Because of this desire, they created a magazine that was both a staunch booster of the American system of television, yet at times also one of the most visible critics of the medium’s more egregious perceived shortcomings. TV Guide’ s editors often encouraged the magazine’s readers to support quality television programs struggling to gain an audience.

In fact, TV Guide’ s greatest accomplishment under Annenberg may have been the magazine’s success in walking the fine line between encouraging and prodding the medium to achieve its full potential without becoming too far removed from the prevailing tastes of the mass viewing public. As a consequence, TV Guide became extremely popular and widely read, and very influential among those in the television industry.

A large number of distinguished authors wrote articles for the magazine over the years, including such names as Margaret Mead, Betty Friedan, John Updike, Gore Vidal, and Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.

Many of these writers were attracted by the lure of reaching TV Guide’ s huge audience; at its peak in the late 1970s, TV Guide had a paid circulation of nearly 20 million copies per week.

Annenberg remained supportive of conservative political causes throughout the years, and his efforts on behalf of Republicans were rewarded with his designation by President Richard Nixon as U. S. Ambassador to Great Britain in 1969.

The appointment led Annenberg to sell his newspapers and television stations, but he retained TV Guide and remained active in managing the publication throughout his five-year tenure as Ambassador.

Shortly after the election of his close friend, Ronald Reagan, as President in 1980 (he would endorse Reagan’s re-election campaign in 1984 in TV Guide, the only such political endorsement ever to appear in the magazine), Annenberg announced a plan to provide the Corporation for Public Broadcasting with $150 million in funds over a fifteen year period to produce educational television programs through which viewers could obtain college credits.

Annenberg’s sympathy for educational causes had already been evidenced by his financial support of the Annenberg Schools of Communication at both the University of Pennsylvania and at the University of Southern California.

His activities in this regard would grow even more pronounced in the years to come, particularly after his sale of TV Guide and Triangle Publications to Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation in 1988 for approximately $3 billion—at the time, the largest price ever commanded for a publishing property.

Annenberg continued to make news after his sale of Triangle because of his many substantial donations to educational causes. In addition, Annenberg was also one of the country’s foremost collectors of art, and in 1991, he bequeathed his extensive collection—valued at more than $1 billion—to New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art.

His post-Triangle era charitable activities in the areas of education, art, and television served to further assure Annenberg’s lasting legacy to a wide spectrum of American culture.

http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/A/htmlA/annenbergwa/annenbergwa.htm


23 posted on 03/12/2009 8:09:48 PM PDT by STARWISE (They (LIBS-STILL) think of this WOT as Bush's war, not America's war- Richard Miniter)
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