Los Angeles Times

Former L.A. Times editor brought Column One to life

JOHN FOLEY

- By Alejandra Reyes-Velarde alejandra.reyesvelar­de@latimes.com

In the 1980s, with politics swirling in the country and in newsrooms, John Foley maintained a pristine image as an exceptiona­l newsman at the Los Angeles Times.

He was deputy managing editor of the newspaper, but he cared much less about titles than about guiding reporters to tell deep, thoughtful and literary stories that would earn a spot in Column One, a feature he created in 1968 that distinguis­hed The Times from other leading news organizati­ons.

Fifty years later, as the newspaper prepares to revive the beloved Column One that Foley nurtured, his influence on the newspaper and his reputation as a role model for the newsroom remains. He died of natural causes Sept. 5 in a senior-living home in Azusa surrounded by loved ones, his family said. He was 94.

“He was classy,” said Narda Zacchino, an author who was an associate editor when Foley was deputy managing editor. “He was a fine, fine journalist in his own right, and as a human being he was also exceptiona­l … and a wonderful mentor.”

Foley was a politics editor during several presidenti­al elections in the late 1970s and ’80s. He oversaw coverage of the Watergate scandal, the Los Angeles Olympics and helped create the Los Angeles Times Poll, which gathered and distribute­d the public’s opinion on political issues, said Robert Foley, one of his sons. Today it is the USC Dornsife/L.A. Times Poll.

He also led a redesign of the newspaper, including incorporat­ing color on the front page for the first time, Robert Foley said.

Still, Column One stories — which veered from the daily breaking news coverage to tell in-depth original narratives placed prominentl­y on the front page — were his trademark, Zacchino said.

But he never bragged about his accomplish­ments, said Robert Foley, who remembers hearing about his work doings at The Times through others.

“I was just reading, in fact, a story about how in 1976 he got Jimmy Carter, who was the Democratic nominee for president, to come to The Times and speak to the editors of the paper. But I didn’t learn about that until 30 years later,” Robert Foley said. “He was very modest.”

When Foley wasn’t in the newsroom, he enveloped himself in nature and literature. He was an aspiring novelist before deciding journalism would give him and his family more stability, and instilled the importance of reading and current events in his children.

Mary Salabrino, one of Foley’s daughters, said she remembers asking her father to give the children a synopsis of the day’s news in the Watergate era.

“No, no. Go read the paper,” she remembers him telling her.

Upon his retirement in 1989, Foley built a house near Big Bear Lake where he spent his days fishing and boating, and volunteere­d for the area’s library as well as the Los Angeles Arboretum in Arcadia.

“On a softer side, he was really a person of character, always ‘do the right thing’ and was really just a straight arrow,” Robert Foley said. “He never broke the rules.”

Foley is survived by six children, eight grandchild­ren and four great-grandchild­ren. His family plans to raise funds to plant a tree in his honor at the Los Angeles Arboretum.

 ?? Bob and Judy Shafer ?? ‘A FINE JOURNALIST AND WONDERFUL MENTOR’ As the L.A. Times politics editor, John Foley oversaw coverage of many presidenti­al elections. But Column One, a feature he created in 1968, distinguis­hed the paper from other leading news organizati­ons.
Bob and Judy Shafer ‘A FINE JOURNALIST AND WONDERFUL MENTOR’ As the L.A. Times politics editor, John Foley oversaw coverage of many presidenti­al elections. But Column One, a feature he created in 1968, distinguis­hed the paper from other leading news organizati­ons.

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