Dave
Nimmer
Dave
Nimmer has been a constant steward of the highest
standards of journalism in this community for 38
years. He joined the staff of the Minneapolis Star
in 1963 as a cub, and cut his teeth in the trenches
as a cops and courts reporter. His style began to
develop along with his saw tooth personality; informed
by the characters he covered on both sides of the
law.
Eleven
years on the beat, with stints as a tough investigative
reporter, Nimmer was
selected to become part of the Star's management
team. For four years Dave led the paper as its managing
editor, fighting to keep the afternoon daily alive
in the face of
competition from evening television newscasts. As
Nimmer built the paper's strategy, he analyzed the
strengths and values of broadcast journalism, and
found them attractive.
In 1979 WCCO-TV hired Dave Nimmer as a general assignment
reporter. He
immediately became a community favorite. His natural
mix of hard-bitten, Chandleresque prose, and his
love of this community and people, was a perfect
combination to set him apart from his fellow storytellers.
In 1983 WCCO recognized the same leadership qualities
the newspaper had discovered and elevated Nimmer
to the
position of Associate News Director. That move certified
a role he'd been playing since he arrived at the
station: mentor. Hundreds of young reporters today
say that Dave Nimmer was an instrumental figure
in their own professional and personal development.
In
1986 WCCO-TV began a new style news program called
Newsday. Teamed with a good friend and veteran journalist
Marcia Fleur, the program broke new ground in public
affairs reporting. It was also in 1986 that Father
James Whalen selected Nimmer to teach young journalists
at the College of St. Thomas. It was a part-time
job, but Dave quickly discovered that it was his
full-time passion. When he eventually left WCCO-TV,
he
permanently joined the faculty of the new University
of St. Thomas. Students in his
classes learned that journalism is nothing more
than the first draft of history, written as a story.
Very few journalists have so completely grasped
the importance of story telling to public comprehension
of critical issues. As if to demonstrated the point,
Nimmer quietly authored two books of short stories,
based on the people he met and places he admired
through his career. He was honored with the Minnesota
Book Award for his very first effort.
In
honoring Dave Nimmer one wonders how best to describe
him. Investigative Reporter? Editor of a large metropolitan
daily, television reporter, professor, or author?
He may choose, storyteller. We choose teacher. Because,
in every one of his
journalistic roles, we never stopped learning from
him.