WORLD'S OLDEST REPORTER IS 96!
This month we salute Dina Sundby, who, at 96, is probably the world's oldest
reporter. Hard on her heels are famous international radio commentator Alistair
Cooke, who'll be 94 in November, and the Pentagon's fabled journo, Raymond
Cromley, who's 91.
Earlier this year, Portuguese centenarian Fernando Pessa was hailed as the
world's oldest journalist. He joined Portugal's state radio in 1934,
covered World War II for BBC radio, and launched Portugal's radio and TVnational
service. When he died in a Lisbon hospital in April, a few days after his 100th
bithday, his country's House of Representatives carried a motion of regret at
the passing of "the world-wide dean of jounrnalists," whose force and enthusiasm
were "an example for the professionals of social communcation."
We first read about Dina Sunby on a Dutch website, which displayed a shadowy
picture that at first glance reminded us of Whistler's Mother. Then we found
another reference describing Dina as North Dakota's oldest reporter. A few email
inquiries revealed that her reports appear in the weekly newspaper Hillsboro
Banner.
We asked news editor Michelle McLean to tell us about her oldest reporter.
She replied: "Dina Sundby lives on her family's rural farmstead near Hillsboro.
She has been a local correspondent for the Hillsboro Banner for 68
years.
"She gathers local news and handwrites her weekly column on a yellow legal
pad. The subject matter includes who visits who, who travels to where, who's
born, who's died, who's moved - just the everyday happenings in her
neighborhood.
"She calls her neighbors regularly on her dial telephone to develop her news.
She faithfully provides the Bloomfield Township news each week to our offices.
She's a delightfully alive and vibrant woman. She has never married and
maintains a vast network of friends that spans at least four generations."
Our second nonagenarian journalist, Alistair Cooke, writes for a wider
audience. The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) claims that his weekly
Letter From America, which it has broadcast since 1946, is the
world's longest running speech radio program. His commentaries on American
culture and politics, spiced with witty remarks and personal reminiscences,
delight listeners around the world.
Addressing the Royal Television Society in New York in 1997, he said "a wise
old talks producer came to me and said, 'Cooke, a word in your ear. Could I give
you a bit of advice?' I said, 'of course.' He said, 'don't get too popular . . .
or they'll drop you.' Well, I've been working on that for 51 years!"
Third on our list is Raymond Cromley, who regularly attends Pentagon press
briefings. Wall Street Journal staff reporter Greg Jaffe recently
wrote this about him: "More than 500 reporters cover the Pentagon. One is
Raymond Cromley, sole representative of Cromley News Service.
"Mr. Cromley, 91 years old, has a cubicle in the Pentagon press room
outfitted with an old Royal typewriter without a ribbon, a 1971 World Almanac
and 17 toothbrushes in a plastic cup. At Pentagon press briefings, he scribbles
notes on 3-by-5 index cards that fit neatly into his shirt pocket....
"Mr. Cromley hasn't written a story in years. 'He's been here longer than I
have,' says Glenn Flood, a Pentagon public information officer since 1978.
'Though I can't say I have ever really worked with him on a story. I am not sure
any of us have.'"
You can read the rest of Jaffe's article on the Wall
Street Journal online
The BBC has an interesting (1998) page
about Alistair Cooke, Ninety
Years Young. See his photo and read one of his speeches.
See
Fernando
Pessa's picture.
And if you'd like to read one of Dina Sundby's
stories, you could try the Hillsboro
Banner.
NIMBLE NONAGENARIANS
Nonagenarians, that is, the people in their nineties, are adaptive, creative,
and rather self sufficient. They survive even the survivors. Professor Dunbar of
Columbia University studied people in their nineties. He called them "nimble
nonagenarians." Dunbar found that nimble nonagenarians don't accept what they
hear from others about old age. They are well insulated from negative emotions,
such as depression, anxiety, and conflict. They have a strong survival instinct
along with a terrific sense of humor. -- Characteristics of People Who
Live Beyond 90, Vijai P. Sharma,
Ph.D |
POSTSCRIPT. On August 20, Elwood P Smith, 83, Philadelphia
News' veteran photojournalist, celebrated 65 years of shooting the city.
Deborah Bolling has written a great story about him, in the Philadelphia City
Paper.