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Video (Click titles to view):
Langston Hughes - Lewis recalls having his poetry rejected by a rising young poet who visited PS 23. Running Time 1:50
Newsweek - As a Newsweek copy boy, Lewis gets encouragement from some of the top writers and editors at the magazine. Running Time 1:28
House Negro - Lewis accidentally falls into sports writing at Newsweek while attending a prize fight. Running Time 1:56
Race Consciousness - Lewis recognizes black movement leaders for helping to force mainstream newsrooms to hire black reporters. Running Time 2:23
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Claude Lewis
Newsweek sports beat opened the door to many journalism opportunities
The seeds of ambition are sometimes planted unwittingly by strangers or
distant acquaintances. For Bronx-born Claude Lewis, one such distant
acquaintance was Langston Hughes. In 1945, his grammar school teacher at
PS 23 invited Hughes to the class to talk about poetry. He encouraged
each student to write a poem, which he offered to critique.
When Lewis submitted his verse, Hughes gave the young writer an honest
yet scalding assessment. The poetry was plain bad. But Hughes encouraged
him to try again. Lewis gave it another shot and shared it with Hughes.
The second works were just as bad if not worse.
"You'll never be a poet," Hughes told Lewis. "But you tried again. You
have perseverance. You might want to try your hand at newspaper
reporting."
Though Lewis didn't run to the nearest newspaper immediately, the idea
stayed with him many years. While attending New York City College he
worked on the school newspaper, the only African American on the student
staff. One of his first assignments was to write a three-part series
about blacks, Puerto Ricans and Jews. He completed the first two parts
of the series but his editors felt he was not qualified enough to write
a piece about Jews.
He continued to attend City College taking night classes. He had married
young, at the age of 17 and had a family to support. In search of a job and while riding the bus in Manhattan,
he happened to see a sign on 42nd and Seventh Avenue that advertised
Newsweek. He decided to drop by the
magazine's office and inquire about job opportunities. He asked the
receptionist if Newsweek had any positions. She immediately said no.
But as Lewis turned to leave she quickly said that there might be a position
as an errand boy.
Lewis spent 12 years at Newsweek. His first published story for the
news magazine landed in his lap by accident. A friend gave him tickets to
see the prize fight between Cuban boxer Benny "Kid" Paret and Emile
Griffith. Paret was beaten unconscious in the ring and died 10 days later.
When Lewis told the editor that he was at the fight, the editor told
Lewis to write what he saw. Impressed with his story, the editor asked
him to continue to write for sports. But he wasn't confined to the sports
beat. Whenever they needed a black reporter to cover an issue or event in
the black community, they called on Lewis.
Like many black reporters who started around this time, the civil rights
movement, protests and riots gave Lewis ample opportunity to do stories
outside of the sports beat. In this position, Lewis said he developed a
deep sense of race consciousness.
"As I went out into the world, I realized things didn't happen with
inevitability," Lewis says. "You had to make things happen."
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