Youth

Beverly Deepe Keever began her path toward a career in journalism early in her life. Even as a student in a small Nebraska town, she threw herself into learning about the wider world and entered essay contests to hone her writing skills. In 1957, Keever graduated from the University of Nebraska and left her home state for Columbia Journalism School in New York City. This was just the beginning of her professional journey that would take her across Asia and into the heart of the Vietnam War.

Childhood in Nebraska

Beverly Keever (nee Deepe) was born on June 1st, 1935, to farmers Doris and Martin Deepe in Hebron, Nebraska, 65 miles southwest of Lincoln. She grew up on a farm struggling to survive through the Great Depression, but her parents worked hard to give her and her sister Joan a happy childhood. She attended Belvidere High School, where she would participate in a county-wide essay contest, which she won with a report on soil conservation. This would spark her interest in journalism as a career.

Time at University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Beverly attended the University of Nebraska-Lincoln from 1953 to 1957. During this time, she was an avid participant in student affairs. In addition to her double major in journalism and political science, she was a key member of student government who helped found the Student Tribunal, the forbearer to the current Student Court of the Association of Students of the University of Nebraska (ASUN). She was also a member of the Black Masque, the Nebraska chapter of the Motor Board, the Phi Beta Kappa honor society, and the Kappa Tau Alpha honor society for journalism.

Columbia University and New York City

After graduating with her bachelor’s degree from UNL in 1957, Beverly attended Columbia University in New York City. While there, she studied under the interviewer Samuel Lubell, for whom she would work for two years after obtaining her master’s degree with honors in 1958. Beverly also participated in a trip to the U.S.S.R. and other Warsaw Bloc countries sponsored by the YWCA in 1958.

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