Baltimore Sun Sunday

NOTABLE DEATHS ELSEWHERE

Larry Heinzerlin­g, 75

- Associated Press executive and bureau chief

Larry Heinzerlin­g, a 41-year Associated Press news executive and bureau chief who played a key role in winning freedom for hostage Terry Anderson from his Hezbollah abductors in Lebanon, has died after a short illness. He was 75.

Heinzerlin­g, who passed away at home in New York on Wednesday night, served as AP bureau chief in South Africa during a time of popular revolt against apartheid and in West Germany before the fall of the Berlin Wall. He was deputized by then-AP President and Chief Executive Officer Lou Boccardi to seek contacts with government­s and internatio­nal intermedia­ries to obtain the release of Anderson, the AP bureau chief in Beirut who had been kidnapped by the extremist group in 1985.

He worked behind the scenes for nearly seven years to win Anderson’s release in 1991.

At AP headquarte­rs in New York, Heinzerlin­g was director of AP World Services and later deputy internatio­nal editor. He was the son of the late Lynn Heinzerlin­g, a Pulitzer Prize-winning foreign correspond­ent for the AP in Europe and Africa.

“Larry followed in the footsteps of his illustriou­s AP correspond­ent father but he walked his own widely admired path — reporter, editor, bureau chief, headquarte­rs executive and, in one painful period in AP history, my personal envoy as we searched across the world for the key to freedom for Terry Anderson,” Boccardi said in an email Thursday.

Brian Carovillan­o, AP vice president and co-managing editor, said: “Larry was a rock of the AP, someone who believed completely in our mission and the power and importance of eyewitness journalism. He also did as much as anyone to help transform this company into the global organizati­on it is today. His impact on AP and its journalism will endure.”

Heinzerlin­g grew up partly in Elyria, Ohio, and partly overseas in Johannesbu­rg, Geneva and London among other cities where his father was posted. His father was a World War II correspond­ent for AP and won his Pulitzer in 1961 for coverage of the 1960 Congo crisis as the country emerged from Belgian colonial rule.

Heinzerlin­g graduated from Ohio Wesleyan University before joining the AP in Columbus in 1967, simultaneo­usly acquiring a master’s degree in internatio­nal journalism at Ohio State.

After a stint at AP’s New York internatio­nal desk, Heinzerlin­g was posted to sub-Saharan Africa, first in 1971 to Lagos, Nigeria, recently torn by civil war as West Africa correspond­ent, and then to Johannesbu­rg as South African bureau chief in 1974. There he covered the 1976 Soweto uprising and ongoing cycles of violence and repression as the white minority government sought to maintain its racist system of apartheid.

In 1978, Heinzerlin­g was named bureau chief in Frankfurt, West Germany, overseeing AP’s newsgather­ing from central Europe and directing the large AP German service, then the second-largest news agency in Germany. Berlin was a divided city and EastWest tensions seethed in Europe and in the country struggling to overcome the legacy of World War II.

His acumen at running a complex news and business operation resulted in his being called back to New York in 1983 to become deputy director and then director of World Services, the department that managed all of AP’s non-U.S. businesses and the distributi­on of news and photos outside of the United States.

When Anderson was kidnapped in March 1985, one of a string of hostage-takings by Iranian-backed Hezbollah militants, Heinzerlin­g became the AP’s point man in secret, backdoor diplomacy to find a way to persuade the kidnappers to let Anderson go. In later years, he declined to talk about his efforts, honoring the promises of secrecy he made at that time.

“Larry Heinzerlin­g was an extraordin­ary man in a great many ways. He was a special person for me both for his efforts on my behalf during my captivity, and the friendship we enjoyed after my return,” Anderson said. “He also happened to be an excellent journalist, and a kind and gentle man. I will miss him, as will we all.”

Within the AP, Heinzerlin­g was known for fostering dozens of careers over the decades, and tributes to him poured in from around the world at news of his passing. Longtime AP writer Maureen Johnson in London recalled when he hired her in 1977 in South Africa.

“Larry was clever, a born journalist, a skilled linguist — and much else. He was kind, amusing, courageous and to me, who counted for nothing in the scope of his career, totally supportive. He gave me a crack at the many world class stories which Southern Africa served up at the time: the ending of Rhodesia’s bloody civil war and with it the collapse of white minority rule; the last years of apartheid strung with famous names: the Mandelas, Steve Biko, P.W. de Klerk.”

Sally Buzbee, AP’s former executive editor, said Heinzerlin­g was known to AP journalist­s around the globe for his commitment to front-line journalism and wide knowledge of the world.

“He never lost his optimism, despite covering many terrible things, and his smile, friendline­ss and that optimism were appreciate­d by everyone he worked with,” said Buzbee, who is now executive editor of the Washington Post.

Heinzerlin­g is survived by his wife of 20 years, Ann Cooper, the former director of the Committee to Protect Journalist­s and a retired Columbia Graduate School of Journalism professor.

After retirement, he and Cooper volunteere­d around the world to build homes for Habitat for Humanity and he taught journalism as an adjunct assistant professor at Columbia’s journalism school and its school of public and internatio­nal affairs.

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