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The Register and Me
BY Tom Hoopes
August 9-22, 2009 Issue |
Posted 7/31/09 at 9:49 AM
I have been writing for the Register for 20
years — and hope to make it 30 or 40 before I’m done. I will continue to write
for the Register. Not, however, as its executive editor.
I have been offered, and have
accepted, a position at Benedictine College in Atchison, Kan. I will be the
director of strategic communications in their advancement department, as well
as writer in residence, teaching a couple of classes and getting ready to do
more. As Register readers know, Benedictine takes its academics and campus life
seriously. It is clearly becoming one of America’s great Catholic colleges.
One of my duties will be instructing
the students who run the school newspaper, The Circuit.
It will be great having a captive audience to tell journalism stories to. The
Register has given me many.
In my years at the Register, I’ve
had the chance to meet all kinds of Catholic leaders: artists, senators,
singers, athletes, authors, cardinals, bishops, activists — and heroes.
Eighteen years ago, the great Register editor Fran Maier gave me the assignment
of shepherding an Albanian priest from San Francisco to Los Angeles. He had
been in communist gulags for 26 years, and he needed help getting through
American airports and in and out of taxi cabs.
I learned the stories of these
wonderful people, learned how the Church works, learned how to be a reporter —
and learned how to navigate airports and taxis — at the Register. I left to do
other things, but kept in touch, and stayed on the freelance payroll.
Late in the 1990s, I began
inundating Legionary Father Owen Kearns, the publisher, with ideas about what
the paper should be doing. In 1999, he agreed with my ideas, and he hired me to
enact them.
I had a terrible first year, in many
respects. While my family was still in Washington, I would stay late in the
office, taking hours to do badly the things that I now do in minutes. One night
it got so late I slept in the production room.
Slowly but surely, though, it
started getting better.
We instituted a three-source rule.
There are “three sides” to every story in the Register: the Catholic position,
the opposing position (we give you their argument, and then we answer it), and
the “man on the street” perspective.
We refocused stories so that they
tell you about who, not just what. We
tried to make the paper timelier and more relevant, while continuing to tell
the story of what the Church is doing in the world.
Father Owen Kearns is the editor in
chief with the final say in what we do. He will remain so. That’s good, because
he has kept me from taking the paper off the rails more than once. I will
always be grateful to him for that — and for the thousand signs of respect he
has shown that have ennobled me and enabled me to do my job.
I remember once when we put the
paper to bed while Father Owen was away. A page-one story we printed provoked
three prominent bishops to call him with tough questions. He stood by our
story, sight unseen, at a personal cost, simply because he trusted me and the
other editors.
About those other editors: I can’t
take credit for their quality, but I’m immensely proud that I helped hire them.
I was there for Dave Pearson’s interview, and I personally called John Burger
to encourage him to move to Connecticut from his New York perch. Tom Wehner’s
résumé was like a light in the darkness when it came in at the end of a long
and difficult search — and our blog readers already know Tom “Scoop” McFeely. I
can’t imagine my life for the past six years (and can hardly imagine the next
six) without Robyn Lee. Amy Smith has rounded out our team nicely, so I know
I’m leaving the paper in good hands.
And now that I have named people, I
can’t not name others: The intrepid Joe Pronechen is the first writer I edited
in my office; Tim Drake was a guy the Holy Spirit led us to in my first year,
and he has made us look good ever since.
These are the people who make the
Register what it is.
Now I see why people don’t start
naming names. There are so many more: our fearless leader for so many years,
Brendan McCaffery, publishing guru Angelo Matera, award-winning designer Kevin
Bedan, Web wonder woman Melissa Hartog, the indefatigable Lynne Hardt, the
sharp-eyed Lynn Wehner, and Eileen Schreck, who (unbeknownst to readers) was once illustrated in the Culture of Life
section as a mother holding five infants: the editorial staff. And now I can’t
not mention the incomparable Vivian Santilli; Vincine Franchilli, the Bronx
scrapper; Mike Lambert, the Georgian hunter for dollars; Michelle “Glug”
Kopfmann; Debbie “49er” Aguiar; the lovely Sue Lachapelle; the mighty Eric
LeStrange; the secret to Circle Press’ success, Claudia Volkman; David “Party
Planning Committee” Pascarelli; and the beautiful-voiced Debbie Paxson. Pearson
claims he discovered Danielle Bean, but he’s wrong, and I’m glad we have her at
Faith
& Family.
The Register has been with me my
entire adult life.
When I announced that I would be
leaving Circle Media, Legionary Father John Bartunek sent a note to my wife,
April, our eight children and me.
“I am sure the kids are going to
love Kansas!” he said. “I am also confident that Providence will work
effectively to maintain the current excellence of the Register and Faith
& Family, an excellence achieved on your watch.”
That’s exactly right. The Register
is what it is not because of the efforts of any one person. It’s the work of a
team — and more than the team. It is clear to me that God grants us a kind of
“grace of state” to do the things he wants done.
The Register’s job is to provide
active Catholics the tools they need to engage the culture. God wants that to
happen. I trust he will continue to get it done.
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