Ted Turner
Ted Turner received the World Ecology Award from the International
Center for Tropical Ecology at a gala dinner held on Thursday June 8, 2000
at the Ridgway Center, Missouri Botanical Garden. He was selected
to receive this prestigious award because of his long-term commitment to
environmental protection and his efforts to raise public awareness of the
issues that surround biodiversity conservation.
Ted Turner is vice chairman of Time Warner, Inc., the world's leading
media company. He was born in Cincinnati, Ohio and moved to Savannah, Georgia
when he was nine years old. He graduated from Brown University and began
his business career as an account executive for what developed into Turner
Broadcasting System, Inc.
Ted Turner, the recipient of numerous honorary degrees, is an active
environmentalist. He crusades for cleaner transportation, sustainable population
growth, wilderness conservation and greener business. He has worked to conserve
endangered species, including Mexican wolves, California condors, black-tailed
prairie dogs and desert bighorn sheep. He manages the largest private herd
of bison on his ranch in Montana and recently reintroduced wolves to this
property. He has received numerous civic and industry awards and honors
and was Time magazine's Man of the Year in 1991.
Ted Turner is a member of the board of directors of the Martin Luther
King, Jr. Center for Nonviolent Change, the Greater Yellowstone Coalition,
the International Founders Council of the Smithsonian Museum of the American
Indian and the Business Council of the United Nations. He is president of
the Turner Foundation, the Turner family's private grant-making organization,
which focuses on population and the environment. He also chairs the United
Nations Foundation, a charitable organization he founded to support population
and women's projects and programs which directly help the environment and
children.