The Scotsman

‘Recipe for success’

Foreign correspond­ent covered the capture of Nazi Eichmann

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Former Associated Press foreign correspond­ent Sam Summerlin, who was the first to report the Korean War had ended and covered everything from Latin American revolution­s to US race riots during a long and distinguis­hed career, has died. He was 89.

He died Monday at a care home in Carlsbad, California, from complicati­ons of Parkinson’s disease, according to his daughter, Claire Slattery of Encinitas, California.

Summerlin had a second successful career as a New York Times executive and then a third as producer of scores of documentar­ies on historical figures and entertaine­rs. But it was his days as an AP foreign correspond­ent that he treasured the most, he said in a 2004 oral history for the news service’s archives.

It was a job that gave him a window through which to view some of world’s most historic events, as well as an opportunit­y to meet such disparate cultural icons as author Ernest Hemingway and Latin American revolution­ary Che Guevara.

Summerlin was born on New Year’s Day 1928 in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.

He graduated with Phi Beta Kappa honours at the University of North Carolina and joined The Associated Press in 1949.

Two years later, he was sent to cover the Korean War, where at age 23 he was one of the youngest war correspond­ents in Asia.

When the two Koreas signed an armistice ending the fighting on 27 July, 1953, Summerlin was the first to report it. That was in large part, he said, because he weighed only 125 pounds and could outrun the other 200 or so reporters to the only telephone available at the signing ceremony in the North Korean capital of Pyongyang.

He was given just 15 seconds to dictate his report, so he recalled simply saying, “Flash: The Korean War is Over,” before handing the oldfashion­ed crank phone back to a military official.

After the war, the AP sent Summerlin to Cuba. It was several years before the Communist revolution that would bring Fidel Castro to power, and Hemingway was living and writing in a converted lighthouse outside of Havana.

Summerlin went to drop in on the author one day, but when he saw an ominous sign written in English and Spanish ordering people without prior appointmen­ts to stay away he decided to call first.

Hemingway, not known to like reporters, or anyone else who would barge in unannounce­d, so appreciate­d the courtesy that he invited him over. Several visits followed.

“We used to sit and talk about who should have won the Nobel Prize and all this kind of stuff, and it would be 20 million cats at the table when we had lunch – you know he loved cats,” he said.

When Hemingway won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1954, he gave Summerlin the first interview and agreed not to speak with anyone else until he had filed his story.

Afterwards, Hemingway asked Summerlin to organize his first post-nobel Prize press conference.

Summerlin left Cuba to become AP bureau chief in Buenos Aires before Castro rose to power, but he returned years later with a small group of reporters, a visit he would jokingly say resulted in him making the biggest mistake of his career.

ABC News star Barbara Walters was in the group, and when Castro asked for an introducti­on, Summerlin, who spoke fluent Spanish, provided one. Castro immediatel­y left the other reporters behind to take Walters on a personal tour.

“Don’t introduce a celebrity to the person you’re trying to interview,” Summerlin would say afterwards.

He also confided that he never cared much for Castro or the Cuban leader’s famously long-winded, boring speeches,whichhesai­dwouldalmo­st put reporters to sleep.

“Fidel had no sense of humour,” Summerlin said. “He was a brutal, tough guy.”

Guevara on the other hand did, and the two became friendly. Summerlin recalled onemeeting­inparticul­ar,atan Alliance For Progress conference in Uruguay, when a photograph­er who had accompanie­d him approached Guevara.

He proudly showed the Latin American revolution­ary prints of 20 photos he’d taken of him over the years, pointing out there was no error in any caption.

“Che Guevara laughed and said the AP couldn’t be correct 20 times in a row if they tried,” Summerlin said.

While in Argentina, Summerlin covered several Latin American revolution­s and was among the first to report the capture of Nazi fugitive and Holocaust architect Adolf Eichmann there in 1960.

After a stint in the Philippine­s, he was promoted to chief of the AP’S New Orleans bureau in 1963.

There he found himself immediatel­y immersed in the civil rights movement and the often-violent encounters between police – and white supporters of the status quo – and those seeking change. “For two years it was just like looking back at Argentina with all the race riots,” he said.

In 1965, he moved to New York, where he worked as deputy news editor for AP’S World Services division.

He left in 1975 to join the New York Times, where he was president and chairman of the newspaper’s news service and syndicate.

After retiring from the Times in 1987, he founded Hollywood Stars Inc., which produced video programmes, and SAGA Agency Inc., which provided celebrity still photos and interviews.

He produced TV shows for various cable channels, including biographie­s of Tom Hanks, Denzel Washington and Jamie Lee Curtis for the A&E Network.

He also authored or coauthored several books, including Latin America: Land of Revolution and The China Cloud. The latter was an examinatio­n of China’s developmen­t of nuclear weapons.

Summerlin’s wife, Cynthia, died in 2000.

In addition to his daughter, Summerlin is survived by his son, Thomas, and three grandchild­ren. JOHN ROGERS

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