THIS STORY HAS BEEN FORMATTED FOR EASY PRINTING

Mary Lou Forbes, won Pulitzer for her desegregation coverage

By Adam Bernstein
Washington Post / July 1, 2009
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WASHINGTON - Mary Lou Forbes, a journalist who won a Pulitzer Prize in 1959 at the Washington Star for her coverage of Virginia school desegregation and became founding editor of the Washington Times’ Commentary opinion page, died Saturday at Inova Alexandria Hospital in Virginia of breast cancer. She was 83.

Mrs. Forbes began her career at the Star as a 17-year-old copy girl. Rapidly promoted to reporter, she made her greatest impact during the 1950s reporting on “massive resistance’’ in Virginia to race-mixing in public schools, an effort pushed by the political machine of then-US Senator Harry F. Byrd Sr. and which worked to shut down public schools rather than integrate.

The Star, which folded in 1981, was an afternoon paper, and Mrs. Forbes faced intense early deadline pressures on a major beat. She mostly dictated her stories to the main office, and she said it was crucial to get the wording precise on the first try.

Her dispatches won a Pulitzer for local reporting, and the citation praised “her comprehensive year-long coverage of the integration crisis in Virginia which demonstrated admirable qualities of accuracy, speed, and the ability to interpret the news under deadline pressure in the course of a difficult and taxing assignment.’’

Mary Lou Werner was born June 21, 1926, in Alexandria and raised by her widowed mother. After graduating in 1942 from George Washington High School, she began studying math at the University of Maryland, but her family’s finances led her to quit school and seek employment.

She initially applied for a job at the Star’s accounting department, but the job was taken and she was directed to the newsroom. There she said she thrived, as long as editors did not think she was married or planning to have children.

In the late 1950s, she became one of the paper’s first female editors. When she was hired, she recalled, the newsroom’s top executive asked her, “Do you think that men will take orders from you?’’

After her Pulitzer victory, she rose through the Star’s editing ranks and also worked for the opinion page. When the paper closed, she shared a byline for its obituary.