Dallas Morning News names veteran journalist to run newsroom
Veteran journalist Katrice Hardy has been appointed executive editor of The Dallas Morning News, becoming the first Black person to run the 125-year-old daily newspaper
DALLAS (AP) Veteran journalist Katrice Hardy has been appointed executive editor of
The Dallas Morning News, becoming the first Black person to run the 125-year-old daily, the newspaper reported Wednesday.
Hardy, who also will be the first woman to hold the top job at the Dallas newsroom, will take up her duties next month. She succeeds Mike Wilson, who resigned last September after six years as the newspapers top editor and is now deputy sports editor at
The New York Times.
For the past 16 months, Hardy has been editor of
The Indianapolis Star, the Gannett-owned daily that shared this years Pulitzer Prize for national reporting with The Marshall Project, AL.com and Invisible Institute for their investigative collaboration, Mauled: When Police Dogs Are Weapons."
Her Indianapolis job also included serving as Midwest editor of the USA Today Network, where she oversaw two dozen other Gannett-owned newsrooms and 300 staff members in three states. One,
The Courier-Journal in Louisville, Kentucky, was a finalist in two categories for this year's Pulitzer Prizes breaking news and public service for its reporting on the police slaying of Breonna Taylor and the more than 180 consecutive days of protest it provoked in Louisville.
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