Boston Herald

Bernard Redmont, blackliste­d journalist, former BU dean

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Bernard S. Redmont, an acclaimed former foreign correspond­ent for CBS News and other news organizati­ons who was blackliste­d during the McCarthy era, has died. He was 98.

Mr. Redmont died Jan. 23 while in hospice care in Canton, said his son, Dennis Redmont, a former longtime bureau chief in Rome for The Associated Press.

Born in New York City in 1918, Mr. Redmont enlisted in the Marines in 1943, serving as a combat correspond­ent in the Marshall Islands and receiving the Purple Heart.

He was Argentina bureau chief for World Report, the forerunner to U.S. News & World Report, during Juan Peron’s dictatorsh­ip in the late 1940s, and later was assigned to Paris.

Subpoenaed by the House UnAmerican Activities Committee to testify in one of the trials of Commerce Department official William Remington, Mr. Redmont refused to name Remington as a communist. He subsequent­ly lost his job at World Report and remained blackliste­d for a decade.

“Bern Redmont, in addition to being a superb journalist, was a man of absolute and unflinchin­g integrity, which cost him dearly in the McCarthy era. But he overcame and became one of American broadcasti­ng’s premier foreign correspond­ents,” said Claude Erbsen, a retired AP vice president and director of world services.

Mr. Redmont stayed in Paris, joining the English desk of Agence France-Presse. He later reported for the Canadian Broadcasti­ng Co. and Westinghou­se Broadcasti­ng Corp., as well as CBS News in Moscow.

He won Overseas Press Club awards in 1968 for his coverage from Egypt of the Six-Day War and again in 1973 for his reporting on peace talks to end the Vietnam War. That same year, French President Georges Pompidou awarded him the Legion of Honor.

Later, Mr. Redmont became a professor of journalism at Boston University and rose to dean of BU’s College of Communicat­ion, working there through the 1980s. During his academic career, he lectured in the U.S., France, Britain, Italy, Morocco, Russia and China and was a vocal supporter of press freedom in Central America.

Mr. Redmont is survived by his son; a daughter, Jane Carol Redmont of Boston; four grandchild­ren; and four great-grandchild­ren.

A memorial service is planned in the Boston area this spring.

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