For 50 years, Rod Doss has remained dedicated to the New Pittsburgh Courier and his success has been among the more celebrated of Black Press publishers.
Doss received the National Newspaper Publishers Associationโs 2018 NNPA Publisher Lifetime Achievement Award at a ceremony in Las Vegas.
โThere is no greater honor than to be recognized by your peers,โ said Doss.
NNPA Chairman Dorothy Leavell, NNPA President and CEO Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis Jr., and Real Times Media CEO Hiram Jackson were on hand to present Doss the award.
Doss was joined on the podium at the ceremony by his sister, Marilyn Hughes, who he called his biggest booster and biggest fan.
โHis integrity as a journalist is impeccable,โ said Leavell. โHeโs contributed a lot and heโs really deserving of this honor. [Rod Doss] put the โIโ in the word โintegrity.โโ
Chavis said that Doss not only continues to manifest a distinguished career as a publisher of a Black-owned newspaper in America, but also that his work ethic embodies the high standards of journalism; Chavis added that Doss is committed to freedom, justice and equality for all humanity.
Robert W. Bogle, the chairman, president and CEO of โThe Philadelphia Tribune,โ agreed.
โHe worked his way up and made a real difference,โ Bogle said. โHeโs provided leadership to the New Pittsburgh Courier thatโs led to the success of the newspaper.โ
Doss joined the Courier in 1967 as an advertising sales representative. He climbed the ladder at the paper for years and, in 1983, he began running the publication as vice president and general manager.
In 1997, after the death of legendary publisher and Doss mentor John H. Sengstacke, Doss was named editor and publisher.
Under Dossโ leadership, the New Pittsburgh Courier has earned more than 100 NNPA Merit Awards, including the coveted John B. Russwurm Trophy and A. Philip Randolph Messenger Award.
โI went to the โUniversity of The New Pittsburgh Courierโ and it was there that seasoned professionals took me in and taught me everything I needed to know about the newspaper business,โ Doss said. โWhen I came into the operation, I knew nothing and they taught me sales, layout and design; they taught me how to write headlines, write articles and they taught me everything that I needed to know on a one-on-one personal basis.โ
Doss continued: โI was so pleased with that, that I shared it and passed it along and today I have a staff of people who are the most stable in the entire organization. They lift me up and I lift them up. They celebrate me and I celebrate them.โ
Doss said his โgraduate studiesโ began at NNPA.
โRight here, attending many informative sessions, year after year, and receiving invaluable training, meeting people and learning from established professionals all of the ins and outs,โ he said.
Along with receiving many accolades, Doss is known for giving his time through serving on numerous boards and by participating in community events.
He currently serves as chairman of the Rivers Club Board of Governors, a position heโs held for just over one year.
Doss credited much of his success to his own father and John H. Sengstacke, the famed publisher and civil rights activist.
โThere were a couple of people in my life who really made a difference,โ he said, remembering Sengstacke as a โwalking legend in the publishing industry,โ and his father as the person who taught him how to be a man.
Doss continued: โI can say that I am my fatherโs son.โ

