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Degree and Year: BJ '43 Employer: The New York Times (Retired) Title: Former Foreign Correspondent, Foreign Editor, Managing Editor and Regional Editorial Director City and State: Scarsdale, N.Y.
War Losses and GainsSitting on top of the mantel in Topping's New York office is a black and white photograph of Omar Akins, Topping's closest friend at the University of Missouri. They lived in the same boarding house near campus and shared similar experiences as young collegians in the early 1940s - mandatory ROTC training, occasional trips to the Shack for a beer and service in World War II. They were both called up for service at the same time - Topping to the Army, Akins to the Air Force. Not long after, Topping received devastating news; Akins had been killed in a training crash. "I think of him more than anyone else," Topping said, recalling the memory some 60 years later. For this reason, Topping's first stop when visiting campus over the years has been Memorial Union, where Akins' name and those of other companions lost in the war are inscribed in the white stone tower. "Coming back after an absence of more than a decade has been a very moving, somewhat emotional experience, because I recall the friendships I've had here, the faculty who were my mentors and also both the academic and social life," Topping said. Topping's Missouri years and those immediately following were a time of loss because of the war but also of great gain. Ironically, the same war that took his best friend would be the starting point for his career as a foreign correspondent - the goal that originally brought him to the Missouri School of Journalism.A Goal-Oriented YouthFrom the age of 16, when Topping was the editor of his high school newspaper in New York City, he knew he wanted to be a journalist. But he didn't want to be just a regular reporter; he specifically wanted to be a foreign correspondent in China. Topping was inspired by Edgar Snow's Red Star Over China, a seminal book on the beginning of China's Communist Party. Snow, from Kansas City, briefly attended the Missouri School of Journalism prior to his 13 years reporting from China. With such a specific goal, Topping said the Missouri School of Journalism was a "natural choice." "I knew that Missouri had special connections with Asia, particularly with China and Japan. Dean (Walter) Williams had traveled extensively to China and was instrumental in the establishment of schools of journalism in Shanghai at St. John's and at Yenching University in Peking," Topping said. "Also, there were quite a number of correspondents working in Asia who were graduates of Missouri's School of Journalism." Another far less commonly cited attraction was the School's location. "As a New Yorker, I wanted to familiarize myself more with the Midwest and other parts of the United States," Topping said. That familiarization process proved to be a bit more challenging than expected. One of Topping's most vivid memories is of his first encounter with horses at mandatory ROTC, which at the time was still using horse-drawn field artillery. "I'd never been on a horse," Topping said. "I remember going into the stables with the other students - friends of mine - most were Missouri farm boys. They collapsed in laughter when I tried to get on the horse from the wrong side." Like the many other challenges he would face in his career, Topping approached this one with a determination to master it. He practiced riding everyday in the stables and eventually made Missouri's polo squad. The team's coach, Lt. Leslie Green, never let Topping forget that incident, always labeling him "the New York boy who came to Missouri and learned to ride a horse." One could argue that Topping learned more at Missouri than how to ride a horse. He still credits his experience covering general beats at the Columbia Missourian with jumpstarting his reporting career. In addition Sharp's mentoring, Topping also received guidance from Frank L. Martin, the second dean of the School. "He was particularly influential in the practical work that I did at the Missourian. He was truly an outstanding and inspirational teacher," Topping said. Topping's time at the School was cut short, however, when his ROTC class was called up for duty several months before graduation. Having completed the necessary credits, Topping did receive his degree, but it came in the mail instead of at a graduation ceremony. It was the first of Topping's many life and career events that would be affected by war.Life Abroad
A Historical LegacyWith 20 years of experience as a foreign correspondent, Topping settled in New York in 1966 as the Times' foreign editor. He spent the next 27 years rising through the ranks of management, serving 10 of those years as managing editor of The New York Times. Returning to Missouri periodically over the years, Topping is especially proud of two visits: one in 1968 to receive the Missouri Honor Medal for Distinguished Service in Journalism, and the other in 1982 to speak at the School's commencement. Finally, he was able to participate in the ceremony denied to him by World War II. He received further recognition in 2000 when Topping and his wife, Audrey, received the first Greenway-Winship Award from the International Center for Journalists for their roles in international journalism. Topping retired from The Times in 1992 as editorial director of the company's regional papers in order to become Administrator of the Pulitzer Prizes at Columbia University's School of Journalism. During his nine years as Administrator, he also originated and taught a course on "Covering Regional and Ethnic Conflicts." After retiring from Columbia University in 2002, Topping conducted a masters' seminar on "The Evolution of the Media and the Public Interest - History and Issues" in Columbia's Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. During more than half a century of service to journalism, both as a correspondent and an editor, Topping covered nearly every major event that has shaped post World War II history. "The events that I covered on the ground in Asia were critical to American society," Topping recalled. "The Chinese Civil War and early conflicts in Vietnam, which led on into the Korean War, the struggle with the Soviet Union for Berlin - all impacted deeply on the future of the American people." As a result, Topping has written several memoirs and novels about his experiences. While continuing to teach at Columbia, Topping is writing his fourth book, a historical memoir of the Asian wars and how they relate to present day American foreign policy. His first book, Journey Between Two Chinas, published in 1972, was a memoir on the Communist conquest and subsequent rule of China. In 1999, he published his first historical novel, The Peking Letter: A Novel of China's Civil War; it was followed in 2005 by Fatal Crossroads: A Novel of Vietnam 1945. Topping said that although today's war reporting from Iraq is strikingly different with embedded journalists and intense television news coverage, the conflict itself can be compared politically and culturally with the roots of the wars he covered in China and Vietnam. He said that it is essential that generations of aspiring journalists should know that history to understand what is transpiring today; but they must also understand what working as a journalist entails, Topping added. "They (students) should only go into journalism if they're prepared to make a real commitment. I always tell people who put that question to me, 'If you don't have a fire in the belly, don't do it,'" Topping said. "Don't go into journalism because it is such a demanding profession in both the professional and the personal sense. It calls upon you to make all kinds of sacrifices in your personal life. But having said that, in return, you have very rewarding experiences, and you also have a lot of fun." Topping made that commitment to journalism from the day of his first report on the Chinese Civil War, when he relied upon the training given to him by his mentor Gene Sharp and the Missouri School of Journalism. That cub reporter may not have realized the implications of his commitment in 1946, but the veteran journalist does now in 2006. The sacrifice of a journalist pays off when one's life work becomes a part of the enduring legacy of history.News Releases
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| Revised: 03 September 2008. Copyright © 2009 The Curators of the University of Missouri | Contact the J-School | |