'Are you with us or against us?' A journalist reflects.
Day, Nancy
'Are you with us or against us?' A journalist reflects.
Fifty years ago, in the summer of 1968, I was working on my
hometown newspaper, the Rock Island Argus.
Smithsonian magazine called it a year "that shattered
America." The Kerner Commission, after months of research, declared
"white racism," not black agitators, the primary cause of
widespread urban violence the year before. On March 31, Lyndon B.
Johnson announced he would not seek re-election, sparking an intense
battle for the Democratic presidential nomination and escalating demands
to get out of Vietnam. The assassinations of Martin Luther King (April
4) and Robert F. Kennedy (June 4) dominated 50-year remembrances this
year, as did coverage of the mayhem surrounding the Democratic Party
convention in Chicago.
I was 20 that summer, still a student at the University of
Illinois. But as The Washington Post's Dan Balz recently recounted,
I, too, felt compelled to witness the political upheaval of a divided
nation. (Balz had been my editor at the Daily Illini). As Balz and so
many others have described, there was rioting in the streets, fueled by
masses of police armed with clubs and tear gas and clear orders from
then Mayor Richard J. Daley. Democrats nominated Vice President Hubert
Humphrey. Republican Richard M. Nixon defeated him to become president.
Dan and I were among many young, intrepid, idealistic work horses
unwilling to take no for an answer despite the complicated climate. Balz
wrote commentary and news stories for his newspaper. I just watched and
listened, a precursor to covering many anti-war demonstrations the
following year as a stringer for the Associated Press San Francisco
bureau when I was a graduate student at Stanford. It was exciting and
exhausting to race night after night, with sometimes hundreds of
protesters, from the ROTC building some wanted to burn to the aerospace
complex whose windows many sought to break with thrown rocks. There were
arrests. Other protesters were peaceful, encouraged in daytime rallies
by singer Joan Baez and Nobel Laureate Linus Pauling.
When I was interviewing activists, I'd often be asked,
"Are you with us or against us?" It's a question
reporters are still asked today, goaded by a president who tweeted in
July that journalists are "unpatriotic."
Curious journalists wanted
We'd been schooled to be impartial, and our journalism
professors held us to high standards. Gene Graham, for example, was a
deep thinker, reader, reporter, writer and editorial cartoonist. I first
learned of the Birmingham church bombing that killed four little girls
from him. He introduced me to reporting by David Halberstam, Neil
Sheehan and others. I knew my father, a newspaperman in the South in his
20s, would enjoy meeting him, so I invited him to dinner with my
parents. For Graham's editorial writing course, I did a series on
abortion rights, five years before the U.S. Supreme Court decided Roe v
Wade. At the time, the university clinic would not prescribe birth
control pills, even to married students.
"This is really good," Graham told me in his slow,
Southern drawl during our conference about the project. "But does
your Daddy know you're writin' about this?"
People underestimated him because of that accent, he told us. A few
years later, covering the Illinois state capitol, for what is now the
Springfield Journal-Register, many of my sources underestimated me,
speaking freely in the elevators, assuming the young woman with a
notepad was a secretary. That attitude came in handy when I was given
the political column. Gene Callahan had that column for years. When he
became press secretary to Cecil Partee, the first African-American
elected President of the Illinois Senate, he handed over book of
sources. Cheri Bustos, his daughter, is now co-chair of the Democratic
Congressional Campaign Committee. A former reporter, she represents the
17th District, hugging the Mississippi River (Moline, Rock Island and
rural communities). On Aug. 16, she posted four tweets, noting that
journalists' jobs are harder today, more crucial to democracy than
ever. Her last tweet concluded: "That's the opposite of #Enemy
of the People," the narrative told by the current president of the
United States.
The summer of 1968 was an incredible time to be a fledgling
journalist. But so was the summer of 2018. The headlines are different
and platforms have changed, but the demand for curious journalists
driven by the need to witness accurately and fairly remains.
Extant journalism
This summer I taught teens in a program run by the New England
Center for Investigative Reporting. My colleagues and I sought to fire
them up about journalism, encouraging them to find their own story ideas
and sources. Yes, it was hard, especially in that time frame. And many
had been told by well-meaning friends and relatives "journalism is
dead... no future, no money."
Yet several of the top students learned how exhilarating it is to
keep digging till you find multiple facets of a story and see your
byline on a well-crafted piece. Ben came all the way from Toronto and
had new ammunition--and great clips--for his grandparents about the
worthiness and prospects of journalism. Amber came from Chicago and
wrote her final piece about the dearth of people of color in news media
today. Maddie came from Connecticut. She addressed the future of
journalism head-on, citing research and jobs data and interviewing,
among others, Tom Fiedler, a Pulitzer winner and former executive editor
of The Miami Herald before he became dean of the Boston University
College of Communication in 2008. He told her enrollment was up, and
indeed it is at several top journalism schools across the country.
In April, Marketwatch reported a double-digit spike in journalism
applications at the University of Southern California, Columbia
University Graduate School of Journalism and Northwestern University.
Last month, Atlantic magazine picked up the thread. Both compared it to
the era when Nixon was in his second term, and two young reporters
followed the story that lead to his resignation on Aug. 9,1974. Bob
Woodward's and Carl Bernstein's own story ended up in their
book, All the Presidents Men, which was made into a popular movie
starring Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman.
Immigration was the signature issue last summer, starting on June
30, when we covered the Boston rally against family separation at the
border, and continued through rallies at the Massachusetts Statehouse.
Covering these events created new challenges for these teens on the
same question I faced 50 years ago, "Are you with us or against
us?"
I hope history's pendulum theories hold true. Americans are
interested in holding their elected officials accountable, realizing
anew that the best way to do that is by consuming credible,
fact-checked, verified, accurate reporting, without any spin or worse.
The good news is that the next generation is already taking up the call.
by Nancy Day
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