If you spend enough time in or around Washington, you'll meet amazing people who work for the government.
From Judy Woodruff
My younger sister retired a few years ago after a 30-year career teaching history and social studies at an inner-city high school.
But I want to pay tribute to Anna Lee Woodruff, an extraordinary, selfless woman and beautiful grandmother who in her quiet determined way was a role model for her two daughters, and who left a lasting impression on so many who knew her.
Every news organization should ideally be as broadly representative as possible.
There have been trade-offs every day, every month, every year. There's a lot that I missed and I do have regrets in that area. But I have been able to bring to my family the richness of being a journalist.
As the mother of a grown son with a traumatic brain injury, I couldn't be more excited about the prospect of finding out how to repair even a small part of the damage that changed his life.
You can find inspiration when you're not even looking for it.
As the mother of a son with disabilities, I try to keep an eye out for news that affects people in the large community of which he is a part.
And I've been incredibly lucky to have a long career in journalism that has given me a front-row seat to some of the most important moments in modern American political life.
We decided to focus on women because no one was singling them out.
2 perspectives
1 perspectives