- Mario Garcia
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This article is about Mario García. For the third president of Cuba, see Mario García Menocal.
Mario R. García (born February 15, 1947 in Placetas, Las Villas, Cuba) is an American newspaper and magazine designer and media consultant.
Career
He has collaborated with more than 573 publications over the past 40 years.[1] García has redesigned large publications such as The Wall Street Journal, The Miami Herald, The Philadelphia Inquirer, Handelsblatt, Die Zeit, Malayala Manorama, Sakshi and Paris Match; medium-size newspapers, such as The Charlotte Observer and România Liberă; and smaller newspapers, such as the Lawrence Journal-World.[2] He was appointed the head of Syracuse University's School of Graphic Arts in 1977. He assumed this position from Edmund Arnold, the man widely regarded as the "father" of modern American newspaper design. Garcia was the first recipient of the Society for News Design's Lifetime Achievement Award,[3] and in 2006 People en Español chose him as one of the 100 most influential Hispanics.[4] In October 2011 he was awarded the Missouri Honor Medal for Distinguished Service in Journalism by the Missouri School of Journalism.[5]
References
- ^ Reprint of an article on García from the Pacific Area Newspaper Publishers' Association conference newsletter
- ^ García Media biography
- ^ http://www.su-snd.org/helpfullinks/drgarciasremarks.html
- ^ http://www.newsdesigner.com/archives/2007_01.php
- ^ Recipients of the 2011 Missouri Honor Medal for Distinguished Service in Journalism Announced
External links
- Official García Media biography
- "The Mario Blog"
- "Official web site García Media Latinoamerica in spanish"
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