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Why Many of Us Will Miss Gwen Ifill

By Clarence Page, Tribune Content Agency on

After she showed the note to her boss, he was horrified and, along with other editors, was very apologetic. But since the offender was an older employee nearing retirement, they didn't want to fire him, she recalled. "So instead, they offered me a job," after careful consideration and a lack of opportunities elsewhere at the time, she took it.

So she had mixed feelings about the guy, she would say years later. He had done a terrible thing but it led to her first opportunity to get what she wanted, a job in a newspaper newsroom.

"And that's the perfect example of, once you get in the door, then you have to perform," she said. "No matter how you get the job, then you have to be the one to bring it."

And she brought it. She later moved on to report for the Baltimore Evening Sun, the Washington Post and, as a White House correspondent, the New York Times before moving on to PBS as a correspondent.

She broke barriers and shook up the status quo, but she did it in the public broadcasting way: with quiet dignity, determination and a generous helping of humor about the ironic world around her.

At the Post, for example, she memorably quipped at one point that she probably was the only reporter covering the Department of Housing and Urban Development at the time who actually had lived for a few years in federally subsidized housing.

Yes, Gwen's upbringing as a "PK" -- preacher's kid -- was lived on a tight budget but always, as members of her family have confirmed, with a lot of love. She was born in New York City, the fifth child of an African Methodist Episcopal minister who migrated from Panama.

Her parents sound a lot like mine, by her accounts, always reminding their children to avoid bitterness or "a chip on your shoulder." Just keep your eyes on the prize and achieve your goals regardless of obstacles the world might throw at you.

 

That's the sort of attitude -- a relentless optimism tempered by an awareness of tripwires along the way -- that energized Gwen's success. It also motivated her generous mentoring of other young people who were aspiring to be like her.

But her biggest honor, she often said, was to be emcee at the dedication of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., memorial on the Washington Mall. She received at least as much applause and, I would wager, appreciation as many of the civil rights pioneers at the event.

That great honor was humbling for her, she said, and I'm sure it was. But as an iconic figure in her own right, making journalistic history with each new achievement, she deserved to be there.

Our daily news diet won't be the same without her.

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(E-mail Clarence Page at cpage@chicagotribune.com.)


(c) 2016 CLARENCE PAGE DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

 

 

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