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Jim Santel’s Life with the Prep News
by Paul Gillam '19
Ninety minutes. That’s all the heads-up he had been given. It was July of 2016. Tensions in the United States were rising and Jim Santel ‘08, the Acting Chief Speech Writer of the U.S. Attorney General, was notified of a press conference – one the nation would surely be watching. He had just spoken to U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch and now was hunkered in his office, fervently writing her speech. Working on such a short deadline, adrenaline pumped through the stressed but not panicked speechwriter, and he couldn’t help but laugh. He had been here before and had written much more in much less time. Memories of late Thursday nights flooded into his mind and Jim, Editor-in-Chief of Prep News volume 72, found comfort in them.
“That was the Prep News alive and well in my life,” said Jim in an interview. “In a very concrete way, it was a way to remind myself that I had the skills to do this and that I was there for a reason. I wrote the speech and it all went fine, but I drew directly on Prep News in a very stressful time at the heart of American government.”
That wasn’t the first or the last time Jim drew on his experiences with the high school newspaper. To Jim, the Prep News is a living and evolving project that still continues to impact him today.
Long before Jim was a speechwriter for the chief lawyer of the Federal Government, he was a freshman at St. Louis U. High. Entering SLUH in 2004, Jim followed in the footsteps of his father, Tom ’76, who in his day was Editor-in-Chief of Prep News volume 40 and more recently has served as the school’s chair of the Board of Trustees. Jim had heard about the Prep News from his father and wanted to try it out for himself, so three weeks into his freshman year, he found his way up to the Prep News office. That Friday, for the first time ever, he saw his name in print and never looked back.
Junior year, Jim was one of two news editors – the other being a senior who he would carpool with on Thursdays – and the only non-senior on the editorial staff. Although not unheard of, junior editors were uncommon. But Jim didn’t feel out of place.
“It’s a place where everyone put the project above any other distinctions,” said Jim.
Two generations of the Prep News: Jim ’08 and Tom ‘76 Santel (middle), both editors in chief of the newspaper, along with their respective moderators, Steve Missey ’88 (left) and Jim Raterman (Photo taken in 2008.)
The following year he was named Editor-in-Chief – becoming one half of the only father-son EIC duo in Prep News history – and took his position seriously.
Although classified as a club, to Jim the Prep News was more. It was a second education where he learned skills that have since been the foundation of his professional life and have largely shaped who he is today. It was his gratitude for this education that brought him back to SLUH.
After graduating from University of Pennsylvania with an English degree, Jim returned to SLUH with the Alum Service Corps in the fall of 2012. He taught two sections of junior English and assisted Prep News moderator Steve Missey with the newspaper. Although his end goal was not teaching, he wanted to give back to the place and people that gave so much to him.
“SLUH and Prep News really put my life on the trajectory it was sent on,” said Jim. “Whether it was majoring in English or pursuing writing, I was just very conscious of the fact that all of that came out of SLUH.”
But perhaps most importantly, the Prep News was a school for citizenship where Jim learned the importance of being an active and responsible member of his community – a lesson he’s kept with him since.
Through a six-month-long internship with West Wing Writers in New York and a two-year-long stint as Kerry Kennedy’s speech writer at the Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Center, Jim’s speech writing career had taken off. In his opinion, there was no better way to combine his love for writing with active citizenship. The necessity to quickly learn about topics, then spin them into interesting, compelling and followable language reminded him of his high school news writing – just on a larger scale – and once again he found himself thankful for the Prep News.
Jim loved the Kennedy nonprofit, but he wanted to get into government. Since high school, he had had an interest in politics, and he hoped that his speech writing experience could help him get his foot in the door.
One day in May of 2015, Jim found in his inbox an email from the U.S. Attorney General’s chief speechwriter, asking Jim to apply to be the Attorney General’s deputy speechwriter. Someone at West Wing Writers had recommended him for the position. Out of the blue – being recruited for his dream job. Jim couldn’t believe it. It was just too good to be true. He applied and got the job that August.
Around the same time Jim opened a life changing email, he started writing a book – a biography of Hubert Humphrey, Lyndon Johnson’s vice president. Never having considered himself a novelist, but having learned interview and information gathering skills with the Prep News and in his SLUH English classes, a biography was right in his wheelhouse.
“It’s a project that I can trace directly back to SLUH,” said Jim.
In July of 2016 the Attorney General’s chief speechwriter left his position and Jim was asked to fill the vacancy. For the next six months, while America faced racial and political strife, Jim worked 50 to 60-hour weeks, meeting and travelling with Attorney General Lynch as her acting chief speech writer. It was an exciting and busy job – the often unfixed speech schedule made sure of it – but Jim was well prepared. The hundreds of hours he’d spent interviewing students, faculty, and staff and the late, time-crunched nights in the Prep News office paid off.
When the Oval Office changed hands and a new Attorney General was appointed, Jim continued his speech writing with the NAACP Legal Defense Fund. He was there until December of 2018, when he decided he needed a change of scenery. Law school crossed his mind.
“(Speech writing) is a young person’s game,” said Jim. “At some point I thought, ‘I don’t just want to write about policies, I want to help shape them.’”
So Jim enrolled at Stanford Law where he will begin as a full-time law student this Fall and hopefully enter back into government. Until then, he’ll be working on his book.
Fifteen years ago, the path Jim would soon embark on seemed absurd. The many twists and turns leading him from SLUH to the Department of Justice to Stanford Law have made for an exciting journey, each stop shaped by a life changing high school newspaper.
“The Prep News is a living, evolving project, and it was fun to be a small part of it,” said Jim. “I can’t tell you how I think it would be different (without it), but I know it would, and I wouldn’t want it to be any other way.”
About the Author
While at SLUH, Paul Gillam ‘19 was Prep News Editor-in-Chief (Volume 83), a senior advisor, member of the senior pastoral team and varsity chorus. He is attending Saint Louis University in the fall and wants to pursue a major in English and minors in Catholic Studies and Journalism.
“I want to follow in the footsteps of all of those who have taught me as a role model and witness to young people,” says Gillam. “One goal I have is to come back to SLUH and teach. I have been given so much from this institution and those in it that I feel called to give back in any way I can.”