$PARA PAR@`TEXT`Schiff, Dorothy 19031989 newspaper publisher Born in New York City on March 11, 1903, Dorothy Schiff was educated at the Brearley School in Manhattan and attended Bryn Mawr College for a year in 19201921. For some years she led the life of a wealthy debutante and socialite. During the 1930s she became interested in social service and reform. She served on the boards of the Henry Street Settlement, Mount Sinai Hospital, and the Womens Trade Union League of New York, and on the Social Service Committee of Bellevue Hospital, and she was a member of various child welfare groups. She also abandoned her inherited affiliation with the Republican party and became an active Democrat and New Dealer. In 1939 Schiff bought majority control of the New York Post, the nations oldest continuously published newspaper (founded in 1801 by Alexander Hamilton). She took the titles of director, vice-president, and treasurer and installed her second husband, George Backer, as publisher and president. With his resignation owing to illness in 1942 she became president and publisherthe first woman newspaper publisher in New Yorkand in 1943, divorcing Backer, she assumed the title of owner and publisher. From 1943 to 1949 she was married to Theodore O. Thackrey, who served as editor of the Post in that period. Under her direction the Post was a crusading paper devoted to liberal causes, staunchly supporting unions and social welfare legislation. It also published an array of the most popular newspaper columnists, particularly during the 1940s, when its pages featured the commentary of Franklin P. Adams, Drew Pearson, Eleanor Roosevelt, Sylvia Porter, Elsa Maxwell, Leonard Lyons, Eric Sevareid, Joseph Kraft, and others. From 1951 to 1958 Dorothy Schiff also wrote a regular Post column, Publishers Notebook, later called Dear Reader. In 1961 she assumed charge of the news department and the next year took the newly created title of editor in chief. In 1976 she sold the Post, New Yorks only remaining afternoon newspaper, to Australian publisher Rupert Murdoch, who later sold it to Peter Kalikow. She remained a consultant to the New York Post from 1976-1981. She died on August 30, 1989, at her home in New York City. styl`!555/!I 5!I!I!I!I!I!I!IC!IH!Ie!Iv!Ix!I!I!I!I!I!It!I!I>link`HYPRevHYPRxHYPR