ly public affairs show based on the campus of American University. I didn't know anything about radio, but I had some common sense, and The New Republic was actually very good preparation for that job, because I'd learned who knew what about what — I knew who was out there and what their expertise was. NPR broadcast journalist Susan Stamberg has broken new ground in the examination of serious issues on radio. DIANA LIEBERMAN Staff Writer I is a clear, ringing voice, edged with humor and carrying more than a hint of New York. And it's as familiar to the baby boom generation as the voice of Captain Kangaroo. But Susan Stamberg has more going for her than precise diction. Stamberg, in Detroit Tuesday as keynote speaker for the National Council of Jewish Women, Greater Detroit Section, is a groundbreaker in broadcast journalism. Her work has transcended the ghet- to of""women's issues" and given credi- bility to radio as a medium for the serious, in-depth examination of broader issues and personalities. In 1994, she was inducted into the Broadcasting Hall of Fame, and, in 1996, the Radio Hall of Fame. The first woman to anchor a national nightly news program, Stamberg was co-host for 14 years of All Things Considered, National Public Radio's acclaimed newsmagazine. She then hosted Weekend Edition/Sunday, the NPR morning newsmagazine, from its 1987 premier through 1989. According to her own estimates, she has interviewed about 30,000 peo- ple, including Nancy Reagan, Rosa Parks, Dave Brubeck and James Baldwin. Stamberg has hosted several PBS television series; moderated three Fred Rogers specials for adults; was com- mentator, guest or co-host on various commercial television programs; and appeared as narrator in performances of the St. Louis and National Symphony orchestras. Her disembod- ied voice debuted on Broadway in the Wendy Wasserstein play, An American Daughter. She is married to Louis C. 10/8 1999 80 Detroit Jewish News Stamberg, recently retired from the Department of State's Agency for International Development. They have one son, Joshua, an actor. Stamberg, 61, now reports on cul- tural issues for all NPR programs, while serving as guest host of Morning Edition. The Jewish News reached her by phone in Miami, in the wake of Hurricane Floyd, as she was preparing for her latest interview. JN: What did you study in college? Were you a journalism major? SS: Oh, no — nothing to do with journalism. When young people have asked me, I've always told them, "Get yourself a good, solid liberal arts edu- cation." I don't know if that advice holds anymore. Now you just have to learn computer chips. But I majored in English and soci- ology at Barnard College. Both were very good preparations for the work I do. JN: How did you begin your career? SS: I always thought I'd get an inter- esting job in publishing. And I did, but it wasn't as interesting as I'd hoped. I was working on The New Republic magazine in Washington, and I was kind of bored. Mostly because I was secretary to the editor, so it meant lots of typing. This was in the early '60s. A television-producer friend told me I ought to call this radio station in town that was starting a new network — this was long before NPR. They might have a job as a producer. I said to her, "What does a produc- er do?" She said, "A producer is someone who won't take 'no' for an answer. And I thought, "I can do that." I called and they, for some rea- son, hired me to produce a week- JN: Is there a theme you are trying to get across in your work? SS: As journalists, we're supposed to be hard-nosed and tough. But I did that for so many years. I was news anchor at All Things Considered for 14 years and then put our Sunday morn- ing program on the air. All through those news years I tried to make sure the arts got a proper amount of attention. When the chance came to drop the anchor and take up reporting, that became my mission. I think it's so important to enhance the world of the listeners through great art. I don't mean "high" or "low" art, I mean art that's wonderfully crafted, done with passion and rakes you to anoth- er place. That is what I want to cover now JN:Does your being Jewish affect your per- spective in the inter- viewing process? SS: I think so much affects that. My age does; the fact that I'm a woman; the fact that I'm an urban person, that I grew up in New York; that I'm interested in the arts — everything. I can't Susan Stamberg: "That's what I enjoy the most, preparing for and getting ready for the next story Im going to do, whatever it is." imagine that it's just what my reli- gious background is. JN: What part of your career has been the most fun? SS: Probably what I'm going to do this afternoon. That's what I enjoy the most, preparing for and getting ready for the next story I'm going to do, whatever it is. Here in Miami, for instance, I'm going to see the Rubell family. You may be familiar with Steve Rubell, who used to run Studio 54 in New York. His older brother, Don, and his wife, Mira, are here in Miami, and they buy up great old art deco hotels and refurbish them. They are also major, major collectors of con- temporary art. They've opened their own collec- tion in a former drug enforcement agency confiscation center, in down- town Miami, where they have the most wild and outrageous "today" art.