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[Deathwatch] Howard K. Smith, Veteran Newsman, 87



Newscaster Howard K. Smith dies at 87
February 18, 2002 Posted: 11:57 AM EST (1657 GMT)

http://www.cnn.com/2002/SHOWBIZ/News/02/18/obit.smith.ap/index.html

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Howard K. Smith, whose career as a newscaster ranged
from World War II as one of "Murrow's Boys" at CBS to roles as
co-anchor and analyst for ABC, is dead at age 87. 

Smith died of pneumonia aggravated by congestive heart failure on
Friday evening at his home in Bethesda, Maryland, his son, Jack, said
Monday. 

Although out of the public eye for nearly a quarter-century, Smith was
a broadcasting pioneer and, from television's infancy, a presence on
the air. 

Along the way, he made at least two appearances of lasting impact even
beyond the journalistic. 

In 1960, he served as the moderator of the first Kennedy-Nixon
presidential debate, a seminal TV event generally thought to have
played a decisive role in Kennedy's election. 

Smith also is memorialized in Robert Altman's 1975 political satire
"Nashville," in which Smith portrayed himself as a broadcast
commentator covering the presidential campaign of the never-glimpsed
candidate Hal Phillip Walker. 

Howard Kingsbury Smith was born May 12, 1914, in Ferriday, Louisiana,
and, after attending Tulane University, began his years as a foreign
correspondent working for United Press in Copenhagen and Berlin. 

In 1941 he joined CBS News as a member of the team assembled by the
legendary Edward R. Murrow during World War II, and in 1946 succeeded
Murrow as CBS's London correspondent. He covered Europe and the Middle
East for CBS until 1957, when he came to Washington, D.C., as a
correspondent and commentator on the network's nightly TV newscast. 

With the civil rights struggle heating up, Smith narrated a 1961
documentary, "Who Speaks for Birmingham?," in which he quoted Edmund
Burke's observation that "All that is necessary for the triumph of evil
is for good men to do nothing." When the quote was deemed
"editorializing" by his bosses and cut from the program, Smith resigned
from the network. 

Joining ABC News soon after, Smith served as a correspondent and
anchored several series, including the respected mid-1960s documentary
program "Scope," which focused on the Vietnam War. 

In 1969 he became co-anchor with Frank Reynolds of "The ABC Evening
News," then two years later was joined at the ABC anchor desk by his
former CBS colleague Harry Reasoner. 

In l975 Smith gave up his co-anchor role but continued as a political
commentator. Four years later, after denouncing a flashy four-anchor
evening-news format that uncomfortably married Reynolds, Peter
Jennings, Barbara Walters and Max Robinson, Smith retired. 

His several books include the 1942 bestseller "Last Train from Berlin,"
which describes Hitler's rise to power and his own experiences as the
last American correspondent to leave Berlin after war was declared, and
his 1966 memoir, "Events Leading Up to My Death: The Life of a
Twentieth-Century Reporter." 

His numerous awards include a Peabody and an Emmy. 

Survivors include his wife of 60 years, Benedicte Traberg Smith, and
one daughter and one son and three grandchildren. 

Copyright 2002 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.