|
Jack Averitt by From 1949 to 1988, Indiana was under the leadership
of eight governors. The men who sat in the state’s highest office were of different political parties and had different views of the role of government on Hoosiers’ lives. Philosophies ranged from conservative Republican Harold Handley’s belief that the expansion of the federal government was part of a “master plan of the radicals to disrupt American constitutional government,” to the progressive policies, especially on civil rights, of Democrat Matthew Welsh. All these men, however, had one thing in common: their triumphs, tragedies, and follies were documented fairly by the lively writing of newspaperman Jack Averitt. For thirty-six years Averitt prowled the corridors of the Indiana Statehouse as the Indianapolis News’s state government reporter, unearthing articles on politicians of every stripe for his news articles and weekly column “Inside Scoop.” From his first day on the beat, Averitt learned that he could look forward to some challenging and often humorous times. Introduced to Governor Henry F. Schricker, who kept a spittoon in his office, as the new Statehouse reporter for the News, Averitt remembered that the two-time governor from North Judson, Indiana, turned to him and said: “How do you do, Jack, Gene Pulliam [owner of the Indianapolis Star and News] hates my guts.” Until his retirement in 1988, Averitt collected a
number of honors from the journalism community,
including a United Press International Cadou
award for outstanding political or governmental
news reporting in Indiana newspapers, numerous
awards from the Indianapolis Press Club for
his coverage of state government, and national
recognition from the American Political Science Averitt also became known throughout the state
as an expert on the intricacies of the Indiana budget, Born in Cadiz, Kentucky, Averitt was a child of the Great epression. Because of an injury due to an accident suffered in the 1930s, Averitt’s father was unable to work, and others in the family had to step in and find work wherever they could. This meant that the family moved around from city to city, including stops in Louisville, Toledo, Tulsa, San Antonio, Dallas, Cincinnati, and Chicago. Averitt caught the reporting bug in a high school journalism class and continued to be fascinated by the profession while serving in World War II. As a radio operator and aerial gunner on B-24 bombers, he flew thirty-seven combat missions over China and the South China Sea, receiving the Distinguished Flying Cross for his efforts. Between combat missions, he wrote some articles for the Fourteenth Air Force’s newspaper, The China Lantern, as well as producing poetry and the draft of a book. |
Upon his return from the war, Averitt entered
the University of Cincinnati, where he worked
on the campus newspaper, the News-Record. He
left, however, after only a semester and enrolled
at Butler University in Indianapolis, drawn there
because of the high quality of the school’s journalism Averitt has fond memories of his days on the
News. “There was a lot of pride,” he said of the Competition between The News and the morning
Star could be intense, especially in covering politics,
which made reporting “a helluva lot more
exciting,” said Averitt. Although some readers Looking back on his career covering the nineteenth
state’s politics and politicians, Averitt said “In retrospect,” Averitt noted, “I did what I
wanted to do and I did it as fairly and accurately
as I possibly could.” |