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| American Dream Show
Guest: |
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Robert F.
Keeler Newsday Editorial Board,
Editor, Author, Pulitzer Prize Winner, Journalist, Public
Speaker
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Robert F. Keeler
covered religion, ethics and values for Newsday. In 1996, he won the Pulitzer
Prize for best reporting, for his series of stories about the day-to-day faith
of a Catholic parish, St. Brigid's in Westbury.
Keeler entered the craft
of journalism in 1965 at the New York Herald Tribune, where he worked as a copy
boy and an editorial assistant. Drafted in November 1965, Keeler served for
almost three and a half years in the United States Army, including assignments
in Maryland as an information officer and in Korea as an intelligence
officer. |
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After he left the service in 1969, Keeler worked at the Waterbury
Republican in Connecticut, covering civil rights, then at the Staten Island
Advance, where he primarily wrote about transportation issues. He came to
Newsday in April 1971.
Keeler's first assignment at Newsday
involved covering the Town of Brookhaven, geographically the largest town on
Long Island. In that first year on staff, Keeler wrote a two-part series on the
problems at the Suffolk State School in Melville, a facility for the
developmentally disabled. That same year, he worked on a team covering the
bloody uprising at the state prison in Attica. His series on Suffolk State
School won the 1972 distinguished community service award of the New York State
Publishers Association.
From 1973 to 1978, Keeler was the lead reporter
covering Suffolk County government. From 1978 to 1981, he served as Albany
bureau chief. In that assignment, he wrote extensively about the state's prison
system, including a strike by prison guards and the first prison interview with
David Berkowitz, the "Son of Sam" serial killer.
His experience in
political coverage includes races from the town board and county legislature
level to the 1974 and 1978 gubernatorial races, the 1976 and 1980 Democratic
presidential conventions, and the 1976, 1980 and 1992 campaigns for United
States Senate from New York.
After his tour as Albany bureau chief,
Keeler served briefly as a national correspondent, then as editor of The
Newsday Magazine in 1982 and 1983. In 1984, he became state editor. From 1987
to 1990, he worked on a book about the history of Newsday. The book, Newsday: A
Candid History of the Respectable Tabloid, was published in 1990 by William
Morrow.
Keeler's next assignment, after the publication of the Newsday
book, involved long-term projects. In that job, his longest-running project was
an 18-month examination of the State University of New York. The SUNY series
ran in 1992 and won awards from the Education Writers Association, the Society
of Silurians and the Long Island Press Club, the local chapter of the
journalism fraternity Sigma Delta Chi.
In June 1993, Keeler began
covering the religion beat. Among the stories that he covered were papal visits
to Denver in 1993 and to New York in 1995, and the first-ever Holocaust
memorial concert at the Vatican in 1994.
The stories that won him the
Pulitzer began as a persistent idea in the mind of Assistant Managing Editor
Phyllis Singer, who had been trying for some time to get Newsday to run a
series on a year in the life of a Catholic parish. That assignment turned out
to be a natural for Keeler, who has been a Catholic all his life and once
studied for the priesthood at Cathedral College of the Immaculate Conception, a
preparatory seminary in Brooklyn.
After a significant amount of
reporting to determine which parish would be most suitable as the subject of
the series, Keeler began spending much of his time at St. Brigid's in December
1994. The first piece in the occasional series ran on April 2, 1995. The
nomination for the Pulitzer included the first seven pieces on St. Brigid's,
which all appeared in 1995. Later, the entire series became the basis for a
1997 book published by The Crossroad Publishing Company, Parish! The Pulitzer
Prize-Winning Story of a Vibrant Catholic Community.
In March 2000,
Keeler served on a Newsday team covering the pilgrimage of Pope John Paul II to
the Holy Land. He and his colleague, Paul Moses, wrote a book about that
pilgrimage, Days of Intense Emotion: Praying with Pope John Paul II in the Holy
Land, published by Resurrection Press in the spring of 2001.
Keeler
lives in Stony Brook with his wife, Judith Ann Dempsey Keeler, who teaches in a
Catholic elementary school. They have two adult children, Rebekah and Rachel,
and one granddaughter, Hailey. |
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