Jill Abramson, former executive editor of The New York Times, waves as she speaks at the commencement ceremony at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem,N.C., on May 19, 2014. |
Jill Abramson, fired last week as
executive editor of The New York Times, encouraged a group of college
graduates Monday to use disappointments in their lives to “show what you
are made of.”
In a commencement
address at Wake Forest University in North Carolina, Abramson said that
she did not know what was next for her but suggested that she would not
stray far from her last job. They were her first public comments since
her ouster.
“Losing a job you love hurts,” she said. “But the work I revere, journalism that holds powerful institutions and people accountable, is what makes our democracy so resilient. This is the work I will remain very much a part of.”
She joked that she wasn’t unlike the newly minted graduates.
“What’s next for me? I don’t know,” she said. “So I’m in exactly the same boat as many of you! And like you, I’m a little scared, but also excited.”
Abramson also resolved
speculation over what she would do about a tattoo of the signature Times
“T” logo on her back. She said that she had been asked by a Wake Forest
student whether she would have it removed.
“Not a chance,” she said.
The remarks were her first in public
since Abramson, the first woman to lead the newspaper, was dismissed
last week after less than three years on the job.
Her supporters have said that she was treated unfairly because she is a woman. The New Yorker magazine reported after the firing that Abramson was paid 10 percent less than her predecessor, Bill Keller, when she took the job.
Arthur Sulzberger Jr., the publisher, said this weekend
that Abramson’s pay was “not in fact unequal.” In a statement, he cited
“arbitrary decision-making, a failure to consult and bring colleagues
with her, inadequate communication and the public mistreatment of
colleagues.”
Abramson was succeeded by Dean Baquet, the first black executive editor in the paper’s history.
In her speech at Wake
Forest, Abramson said that among the people she has heard from since her
firing is Anita Hill, the law professor who accused Clarence Thomas of
sexual harassment during his Supreme Court confirmation proceedings in
1991.
Hill wrote to say that she was proud of Abramson, she said.
Abramson closed by
citing a commencement address given by Robert Frost in 1956, in which he
described life after graduation as “pieces of knitting to go on with.”
“My mother was a great
knitter, and she made some really magnificent things, but she also made a
few itchy, frankly hideous sweaters for me,” Abramson said. “She left
some things unfinished. So today, you gorgeous, brilliant people, get on
with your knitting.”
Source: NBC News
Source: NBC News
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