Malvina Stephenson | |
|---|---|
| Born | October 17, 1911 |
| Died | February 16, 1996 (aged 84) |
| Occupation | Journalist |
Malvina Stephenson (1911-1996) was an American journalist noted for her coverage of Washington politics. She is considered to be one of the pioneering women reporters to break on the national scene. [1] Stephenson also served as the press secretary and the biographer of Senator Robert Samuel Kerr. [2]
Stephenson was born on October 17, 1911, in Paris, Texas. [3] Her family relocated to Hugo, Oklahoma where her father, Robert E. Stephenson, practiced law. [1]
Stephenson graduated from Sapulpa High School. [1] She took an associate's degree in history at the Southeastern State Teachers College (now Southeastern Oklahoma State University). [3] After graduating in 1932, she taught for three years. [3] She then obtained a master's degree in journalism at the University of Oklahoma before working as a feature writer for the Tulsa World. [4] [5] She then relocated to Washington, D.C. and started covering Washington politics. [6] In an interview, Stephenson said that she went to Washington with $700 savings. [7]
Stephenson founded her own independent news bureau and became a regular correspondent for several newspapers such as the Tulsa World, Tulsa Tribune, Cincinnati Times-Star, The Kansas City Star, ABC Radio, and United Feature, among others. [4] In 1944, she became part of the weekly radio program with Ray Henle. [1]
By 1951, Stephenson was selected as Senator Kerr's press secretary, a job she kept until 1963. [3] She was a co-author of his book Land, Wood, and Water. After Kerr died in 1963, Stephenson resumed her work as a journalist and became part of the female political columnist team that produced Washington Offbeat. [3] She regularly contributed an op-ed column for the Tulsa World. Some of her noted works were written with Vera Glaser and these included reports about Clark Mollenhoff, a special counsel to Nixon's White House, and his collection of the 250 names of State Department employees who criticized Nixon's policies during the Vietnam War. [8]
In 1995, Stephenson published Kerr's biography. She died a year later, on February 16, 1996.
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