Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Beverly Deepe Keever

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
American

Spouse(s)
  
Charles J. Keever


Name
  
Beverly Keever

Beverly Deepe Keever

Born
  
June 1, 1935
Hebron, Nebraska, USA

Education
  
University of Nebraska, Bachelor of Arts, Columbia University, Master of Science in Journalism University of Hawai’i, Master of Library and Information Studies and Doctor of Philosophy

Occupation
  
Journalist, author, professor

Notable credit(s)
  
Death Zones and Darling Spies: Seven Years of Vietnam War Reporting (2013), News Zero: The New York Times and The Bomb (2004), U.S. News Coverage of Racial Minorities, A Sourcebook: 1934 to 1996; co-editor and chapter contributor, Top Secret: Censoring the First Rough Draft of Atomic-Bomb History, Four articles based on the personal papers of Wilbur Schramm, a founder of the communications discipline, Poisoning the Pacific on Nuclear Guinea Pigs, Suffering Secrecy Exile, Remember Enewetak, Stopping the Presses: The Unprecedented Licensing of Hawaii’s Media After the Attack on Pearl Harbor

Residence
  
United States of America

Beverly Deepe Keever (born June 1, 1935) is an American journalist, Vietnam War correspondent, author and professor emerita of journalism and communications. In 1969 Beverly Deepe married Charles J. Keever.

Contents

Beverly Deepe Keever has had a varied career that spanned the journalistic profession and professorate. Her career ranged from public opinion polling for an author-syndicated columnist in New York, to war correspondent, to covering Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. and then to teaching and researching journalism and communications for 29 years at the University of Hawai’i.

As a professor emerita and 40-some years after departing Saigon, she wrote her memoirs of covering the Vietnam War for seven years—longer than any other American correspondent as of that time. Titled Death Zones and Darling Spies, the book chronicles her dispatches as a freelancer and then successively for Newsweek, the New York Herald Tribune, the Christian Science Monitor and the London Daily Express and Sunday Express.

Her 1968 coverage of the embattled Khe Sanh combat base was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in International Reporting by the Christian Science Monitor. Another of her 1968 dispatches was selected by the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism in its centennial year as one of the 50 great stories by its alumni. In 2001 she was one of some four dozen combat correspondents whose work was selected for an exhibit at the Newseum in Washington, D.C. designed to trace 148 years of war reporting starting with the Crimean conflict of 1853. Fourteen years later, her artifacts and journalistic career were displayed and discussed in the “Reporting Vietnam” exhibit featured at the Newseum through September 2015.

She also researched and wrote News Zero: The New York Times and The Bomb. Excerpts from and adaptations of this book have been published in two award-winning cover articles in Honolulu's alternative weekly and on global web sites. She is also a co-editor of U.S. News Coverage of Racial Minorities: A Sourcebook, 1934-1996, for which she conceptualized with others the prospectus of the volume; made arrangements with the publisher; served, in effect, as the managing editor coordinating the writing of 11 other scholars; contributed two chapters and co-authored two others.

Early life and education

Beverly Deepe was born during the worst of the dust-bowl days in 1935 to Doris Widler Deepe and Martin Deepe as they struggled on his father’s heavily mortgaged farm. At the Coon Ridge country school that her father had attended a generation earlier, the youngster was mesmerized upon reading Pearl Buck’s Good Earth, which sparked her childhood dream of visiting China.

She then entered the University of Nebraska at Lincoln, double majoring in journalism and political science, graduating in 1957 as Phi Beta Kappa for scholarship and Mortar Board for leadership. She went on to attend Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism, graduating in 1958 with honors.

Then, working for two years in New York as an assistant to acclaimed public-opinion pollster and syndicated columnist, Samuel Lubell, Beverly hoarded a modest nest egg while learning to travel light and fast, ring doorbells of voters in barometer precincts, analyze election data and develop systematic record-keeping. She carried these skills with her as she traveled to Asia.

To fulfill her childhood fantasy, in 1961—a dozen years after Mao Tse-tung’s army transformed the world’s most populous country and a decade before the United States established diplomatic relations with it, she wrote a Ship-side View of Drab Shanghai from a Polish passenger-carrying steamer. 52 years later, she again visited Shanghai and described the dazzling changes that had transformed it with the world’s tallest sky-huggers being constructed on marshland where she had seen cows grazing a half century earlier and she noted its determined push toward a “de—Americanized” world economy.

She later was awarded from the University of Hawaii at Manoa a Master’s degree in Library and Information Studies and a doctorate in American Studies.

Journalism

The 27-year-old Beverly Deepe arrived in South Vietnam in early 1962 just as President John Kennedy had initiated a new phase of an anti-communist campaign and American helicopter units and provincial advisors were unpacking. With this uptick in newsworthiness, she worked as a free-lancer without a regular paycheck, relying on her portable typewriter to write dispatches airmailed on speculation to Associated Press Newsfeatures and other media outlets. Upon her arrival, she was the sole female correspondent among the eight resident Western correspondents. When she departed Vietnam after seven years of continuous reporting, she had outlasted all of them. During that long tenure, she acquired an institutional knowledge and array of valuable local sources that few other Americans had, giving her a unique plus often lipsticked perspective.

She was among the 467 women correspondents accredited by the U.S. Military command from 1965 to 1973, the years when U.S. combat units arrived and when they departed; of those 467, 267 were American. Scholars assess that with more women covering the Vietnam War than any previous U.S. conflict, it was “a turning point—to some extent a watershed—for American women as war correspondents” and in doing so, “they staked out a lasting place for their gender on the landscape of war.”;

After her arrival, she switched from dresses to fatigues and combat boots purchased in the black markets that flourished throughout the Paris-like Saigon. She helicoptered to Western-styled forts designed to foment communist infiltration along the Laotian border only to learn seven years later of their fall or abandonment. By jeep and by speedboat along the waterways of the Mekong Delta, she traveled to interview embittered peasants and tenant farmers, as her own parents had been when she was born.

By 1965 with the introduction of American combat troops and squadrons of U.S. aircraft and helicopters, she trudged along soup-y rice paddies and head-high grasses to report on American and South Vietnam fighters, who often had difficulty detecting friendly folk from hide-and-seek guerrillas.

Her Vietnam War reporting included a number of notable achievements:

  • Using her background of door-to-door political interviews conducted in the U.S., she became intrigued in Vietnam to learn why villagers were joining the communist enemy of the U.S.-backed Saigon government and what drove these do-or-die guerrillas or sympathizers to battle a global, nuclear-armed superpower. She wrote a number of articles probing this question over the seven years, consulting her Vietnamese assistants and numerous other sources, dissecting translations of captured documents, and interviewing pro-communists who had defected or been captured.
  • In 1962, she was probably the first American correspondent to write about “death zones.” She used that chilling term in quoting province chief Maj. Tran Van Minh, head of the Saigon government’s Operation Sunrise that warned the rural population in pro-communist-controlled jungled areas northwest of Saigon to leave their home areas or were forcibly relocated to secured areas because the 40-square-mile pro-communist stronghold was going to be bombed and shelled. The gripping “death zones” term was later sanitized by the U.S. government into the more palatable label of “free-fire zones” needed to obscure the increased number of allied airstrikes and artillery bombardments. Six years later, as President Johnson began peace negotiations in 1968, one renowned scholar noted, “further applications of massive American firepower across South Vietnam seemed likely to annihilate all too well the country the Americans had come to save.”
  • In 1964 when working for the New York Herald Tribune, she was the first to report on the first-ever detected presence of North Vietnamese fighting units, based on her field trip to the northern city of Danang and interviews with top U.S. and South Vietnamese officers. But the Pentagon and Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara denied her dispatches during this politically sensitive period before the U.S. presidential elections when, as a diplomat in Saigon told her American policy was “to back every status quo in sight “while trying to hold the lid on Vietnam until after the election.; Months after the election, her articles were officially confirmed, as disclosed in the Pentagon Papers.
  • In 1964, her exclusive interviews with Vietnamese prime minister and military strongman Gen. Nguyen Khanh infuriated the American Embassy in Saigon and Washington. But she also relayed his prediction that America’s policy in Vietnam was so wrong-headed that “The United States will lose Southeast Asia.” Time Magazine described her “dust-up” with the Embassy and Khanh interviews as “a singular achievement for a girl who has yet to be accepted as a regular in Saigon’s corps of foreign correspondents and who had been a Tribune correspondent for only two months,” noting that she was the only U.S. reporter not regularly invited to U.S. briefings. Within a year, Khanh was exiled; within a decade the American military and political presence had vanished from South Vietnam, paving the way for a communist take-over.
  • In 1965, the New York Herald Tribune published her five-part series on the vital role Vietnamese women played on both sides of the armed conflict and provided a window on the havoc this made-by-men war was disrupting everyday life. The newspaper advertised the series as describing women “surviving amidst a savage, never-ending Holocaust.”.
  • In 1968, during the communist country-wide blitz capturing portions of the American Embassy grounds in Saigon, overrunning dozens of provincial towns and exposing the U.S. failed search-and-destroy military strategy, she wrote that the U.S. faced the possibility of losing its first major war in its history. This front-page dispatch in the Christian Science Monitor was later selected by the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism—her alma mater—as one of the 50 greatest stories by its alumni in its 100-year history. That dispatch is now available online at centennial.journalism.columbia.edu/1962-Vietnam.
  • In 1969 she was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in international reporting by the Christian Science Monitor for her earlier coverage of the embattled Khe Sanh combat base while it was being bombarded by communist artillery lodged so skillfully across the border in Laotian mountains that hundreds of sorties of American strategic bombers could not silence the phantom weapons. “Most of Beverly Deepe’s readers presume she is a man—for her beat in Vietnam is rough, tough and dangerous,” the Monitor’s nomination letter read. The Pulitzer Prize Committee was then told, “Yet Miss Beverly Ann Deepe, who hails from little Carleton, Nebraska, has been reporting the war and political developments from Saigon and military outposts such as Khe Sanh for seven years now. She holds her own with hosts of masculine correspondents—and asks no favors.”
  • In 2001 she was among four dozen or so correspondents whose work had been selected for an exhibit to showcase 148 years of war reporting beginning with the Crimean conflict of 1853. Displayed at the Newseum in Washington, D.C, these “War Stories” illustrated “how correspondents deal with the challenge of reporting the facts accurately,” especially when their coverage contradicts official announcements, as hers had done. Fourteen years later, her journalistic career was discussed in the “Reporting Vietnam” exhibit at the Newseum through September 12, 2015.
  • Academia

    After Vietnam, she began teaching journalism and communications at the University of Hawaii for 29 years. While teaching, she earned a Master’s degree in Library and Information Studies and a PhD in American Studies. She created numerous instructional materials for her students of public affairs reporting, conducted research and wrote extensively on First Amendment and freedom-of-information issues as described in Let Us Now Praise a Lone Hawaii Voice Fighting for Open Records. She also conducted research and wrote about it that led to publication of three books.

    Books and notable articles

    Death Zones and Darling Spies: Seven Years of Vietnam War Reporting

    Published in May 2013, it was the 2015 One Book One Nebraska selection designed to spark reading and discussion during the 40th anniversary year of the defeat of the American-backed South Vietnam government by communist forces.

    Using the systematic record-keeping skills she had acquired in New York, she also assembled a unique bottoms-up archive and shipped all her reporting materials, bound volumes of carbon-paper copies of articles and packets of documents and maps that she had collected and stored them for 40 years until she had time to write her memoirs of seven-years of Vietnam reporting and the U.S. conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan renewed public and policymakers’ interest in insurgencies and guerrilla warfare. Thus, the memoirs of her Vietnam War reporting are based not simply on memory, but on archival materials and document research. Much of her archives has been donated to the University of Nebraska’s special collection in its research library;

    “It’s one thing for historians to comb through archives to write their thick volumes, but one of the distinctive features of my book is that I amassed and preserved my own ground-level archive for such a long time,” she told the Shanghai Daily in 2013. “I amassed this archive amidst the hectic pace of covering a shooting war and bizarre political upheaval.”.

    News Zero: The New York Times and The Bomb
    Beverly Deepe Keever researched and wrote News Zero: The New York Times and The Bomb (Common Courage Press, 2004; available on Amazon and Kindle). In a first-of-its-kind, across-time investigation, this case study documents that U.S. government secrecy and timid reporting by the self-advertised newspaper-of-record hid from the public or obscured the defining—and deadly—feature of nuclear weapons: radiation and radioactivity.
    Also hidden from the public for decades was the magnitude of the most horrific experiments in the Pacific after World War II. The author’s analysis of the U.S. government’s statistics shrouded in secrecy until 1994 showed that the yield of 86 weapons tests in the northern Pacific amounted to at least 128,704 kilotons from 1946 to 1962. This unparalleled explosive force over 16 years equates to that emitted by detonations of 8,580 Hiroshima-size bombs. That’s 10.33 explosions per week or 1.47 per day.

    Most U.S. nuclear weapons tests were conducted in the Marshall Islands and its surrounding waters that were administered by the U.S. under a unique, United Nations sanctioned Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, which obligated the U.S. to protect the health and natural resources of the Islanders and to prepare them for self-governance. Only since 1994, however, could researchers calculate that the 86 Pacific tests accounted for nearly 75 per cent of the yield—or explosive force—of all 1,054 nuclear tests conducted by the U.S. worldwide through 1992. These remote Pacific atolls served as the proving grounds vital for U.S. superpower status by providing sites for nuclear tests too powerful and unpredictable to be detonated in the 48 contiguous states and for permitting the transition in nuclear delivery systems from conventional bombers to intercontinental missiles. However, even after 70 years, the irreversible persistence of radiation and radioactivity on the health and environment has left a bitter legacy of death, despair and cultural destruction for which the Islanders have unsuccessfully pleaded for more U.S. compensation and assistance.

    U.S. News Coverage of Racial Minorities: A Sourcebook, 1934-1996 (co-editor)
    U.S. News Coverage of Racial Minorities: A Sourcebook, 1934-1996, for which she conceptualized with others the prospectus of the volume; made arrangements with the publisher and served, in effect, as the managing editor coordinating the writing of 11 other scholars. She also co-authored two chapters and contributed two sole-authored chapters. In one chapter titled, “The Origins and Colors of a News Gap,” she found four main biases in news media coverage of racial minorities: the bias of religion and pseudo-science, the bias of the mode of communication, the bias of the legal construction of race and racism, and the bias in the nature of news.

    Awards and honors

    She has received the University of Hawai`i Regents Medal for Excellence in Teaching, numerous freedom-of-information awards and awards from the alumni associations of two of her alma maters, the University Of Nebraska College Of Journalism and Mass Communications and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. In March 2015 she was inducted into the Marian Andersen Nebraska Women Journalists’ Hall of Fame, housed in Andersen Hall of the College of Journalism and Mass Communications at the University of Nebraska Lincoln campus. From May through September 12, 2015 the Newseum, blocks from the White House in Washington, included in its “Reporting Vietnam” exhibit her press card issued through the Christian Science Monitor and a North Vietnamese shovel for digging foxholes given to her by fellow correspondents upon her departure from Saigon and a description of her journalistic contributions.

    References

    Beverly Deepe Keever Wikipedia