Antelope Valley Press

Veteran AP journalist Alvin Orton Jr. dies in Ohio at age 84

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Al Orton, a veteran Associated Press journalist who spent much of his career on the overnight shift, mentoring dozens of reporters along the way, has died in Ohio. He was 84.

Orton, who used his full name of “Alvin Orton Jr.” in his byline, died Wednesday in Columbus of a heart attack after experienci­ng several health problems, said his son, Andrew Orton.

Orton worked for the AP from 1963 until he retired in 2006. His father, Alvin Orton Sr., also was an AP editor, joining the news cooperativ­e in Chicago in 1936 and serving as a bureau chief in Indianapol­is and Minneapoli­s before returning to Chicago and retiring in 1971.

“When I asked him what he thought about my going to work for the AP, he said, ‘Fine, but you won’t work for me,’” Orton recalled in a remembranc­e of his father in 1987, the year he died. “And I told him, ‘That’s OK, because I wouldn’t work for you, anyway.’ That’s the way we both wanted it.”

One of Al Orton Jr.’s first assignment­s was covering the 1963 execution by electric chair of a man who’d killed a grocery store clerk. Orton was one of only two reporters at the former Ohio Penitentia­ry, and unbeknowns­t to him then, he witnessed the last use of the chair in the state.

“As antiseptic as prison officials tried to make it, the execution process was rather primitive,” Orton recalled in a 1999 first-person column as Ohio prepared to execute its first inmate in 33 years, by lethal injection. “There was no viewing room separated by glass or any other accommodat­ions for witnesses.”

That same year, Orton was working the day after President John F. Kennedy was assassinat­ed when word came of a fire in a nursing home between Toledo and Cleveland that killed 63 residents. Orton rankled New York editors by interrupti­ng the wire service’s Kennedy coverage with updates to that story.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Al Orton Jr. (right), Associated Press overnight supervisor at the time, has an AP tie tack pinned to his tie by Columbus Chief of Bureau Jake Booher on Orton’s 25th anniversar­y with the wire service in Columbus, Ohio in 1988. Orton died Wednesday at age 84.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Al Orton Jr. (right), Associated Press overnight supervisor at the time, has an AP tie tack pinned to his tie by Columbus Chief of Bureau Jake Booher on Orton’s 25th anniversar­y with the wire service in Columbus, Ohio in 1988. Orton died Wednesday at age 84.

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