Washington University

Former WashU Chancellor Mark Wrighton was smiling too, the day the Olympic statue was announced. (Photo by Joe Angeles/Washington University)

More than 13 years ago, I was hired by Washington University in St. Louis as editor of a print newspaper called the Record, which has since evolved into a daily email newsletter. After a stint doing media and news for the university’s Brown School, I am now executive news editor in Public Affairs responsible for The Source, the place for information, inspiration and stories about at the university. I also maintain and manage the Newsroom’s Twitter account, @WUSTLNews, telling the university’s story about four or five times per day in 280 characters or less.

Each day is something different to write, edit or produce, like the day our office helped the St. Louis Sports Commission reignite an effort to honor St. Louis’ Olympic legacy, or a story I wrote for Washington magazine about how WashU built a women’s sports program in the wake of Title IX.

Anna Quindlen address the Class of 2017 at the Washington University Commencement May 19, 2017.

My favorite time of year is Commencement, especially as I look at it now through the eyes of a mom as my boys have gotten older. There’s no finer day than the one in which your child earns a college degree, and I know exactly how proud each and every parent who walks into the Quad feels. It’s also my joy and honor to be able to write the Commencement wrap-up for Public Affairs. This year, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar delivered the address in a most unusual Commencement after the pandemic.

And in 2017, I watched one of my literary heroes, writer Anna Quindlen, tell the students, “I’m not afraid of success. i’m afraid of living a life that seems more like a resume than an adventure story.” I loved that.

Other Commencement stories have been this story about the speech made in 2015 by Ken Burns; and this wrap-up of Tony La Russa’s address to the Class of 2014.

Every year, this job seems to bring something memorable, as it did in the fall of 2016 when the university hosted the second Presidential Debate. This time, I led the news team that produced content for the debate website, as well as wrote a story about being inside the debate hall and how it felt for our student presidents to meet the candidates. I also helped produce the “Debate Insider” videos with our videographer, Tom Malkowicz, interviewing on camera Chancellor Mark Wrighton, former Dean Bob Virgil, police chief Mark Glenn and the always interesting Steve Givens.

Among my most favorite recent stories are an introduction of our athletic director Anthony Azama and a feature on our rowing team. Other stories I’ve written was an introduction of our former athletics director Josh Whitman; a story on the football team’s annual trek up Pikes Peak; and a feature on engineering student-athlete Lucy Cheadle. When one of our professors in Arts & Sciences, Anton DiSclafani,  got a seven-figure advance for her novel, I got to spend an hour in a coffee shop talking writing, the writing process and her book tour. The Yonahlossee Riding Camp for Girls was a pretty big  success.

Another highlight was a story and video produced about two construction workers on a major revamp of the campus’ east end. I can honestly say I’ll never forget Marjorie and Danyeal, The Gatekeepers.

A sampling of a few others:

  • A story putting a 1950s-era recruiting film, written and produced by Academy Award-winning filmmaker Charles Guggenheim, into perspective.
  • A conversation with Brown School Assistant Professor Jason Q. Purnell on how the poor were being overlooked during the 2012 election campaign.
  • A feature about a unique community partnership between the Missouri Botanical Gardens and WUSTL’s Institute for School Partnership called SIFT & TERF that encourages high school students to pursue science careers
  • A feature story on student stand-ins in the special issue of the Record published following the 2008 Vice-Presidential Debate.
  • Six “Washington People” profiles highlighting faculty and staff of the university, including volleyball coach Rich Luenemann (June 11, 2008); athletics department assistant Kathy Lasater (Nov. 19, 2008) and men’s tennis coach Roger Follmer (June 10, 2010),  Edison Theatre director Charlie Robin (Sept. 2, 2011), Brown School researcher and professor Ross Brownson (April 26, 2013) and Brown School associate dean Renee Cunningham-Williams (Oct. 4, 2013).

Every day is different. Every day this place amazes me. Wouldn’t have it any other way.

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