WASHINGTON, JUNE 29, 2009--
Heritage
Foundation President Edwin J. Feulner today issued the following
statement on the death of veteran Washington journalist Mary Lou
Forbes:
I was saddened to hear yesterday of the passing of Mary Lou
Forbes, who first provided a much-needed canvas for conservative
opinion and policy solutions more than a quarter-century ago, as
editor of the Commentary pages of The Washington Times. She
relished that job until she collapsed two weeks ago under the
weight of an undiagnosed cancer.
Mary Lou was more than a good journalist, although she got a
kick out of showing the men's club at the old Washington Evening
Star that she could report as fast and as well as any of them.
That's just what she did in the late 1950s, during her
Pulitzer-winning coverage of the school desegregation fight in
Virginia.
More importantly, Ludy was a good person: imaginative, creative
and principled. Those qualities, joined to discipline, formidable
work habits and high standards, made her a force within the
conservative movement as the Reagan revolution gathered steam.
To me, Ludy was a friend and a mentor. She helped me sharpen my
thinking and my writing as a columnist. Here at The Heritage
Foundation, we were grateful when she made space on her Commentary
pages for the views of our policy experts. But she didn't mince
words when one of those pieces wasn't clear, engaging or
distinctive enough.
Ludy became a regular at Heritage's annual Christmas party for
Washington media, her presence announced by a full-throated laugh
that filled the room. Along with her laugh, the inspiration and
guidance of Mary Lou Forbes will be sorely missed by all those who
care about rigorous, honest debate about the role of
government.
For me, the sense of loss began yesterday afternoon, when I
didn't see Ludy seated in her customary pew at St. Mary's Church.
Even as I prayed for her, I could take comfort in the thought that
she had rejoined her beloved husband, James -- and that the Lord
had plenty to keep her busy.