Chicago Sun-Times

TV newsman, NU grad worked first Nixon-Kennedy debate

- BY ANDREW DALTON AP Entertainm­ent Writer

LOS ANGELES — Sander Vanocur, a television newsman who for decades covered momentous events from political campaigns to assassinat­ions, the Vietnam War to the civil rights movement, has died, his son said.

Mr. Vanocur died Monday night in Santa Barbara, California, said Chris Vanocur. He was 91. He had been dealing with dementia in recent years.

As national political correspond­ent at NBC in the 1960s, Mr. Vanocur was a questioner at the first presidenti­al debate between John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon in 1960, then covered Kennedy’s administra­tion as a White House correspond­ent.

“His storied career put him on the front lines of the biggest political stories of the 1960s, the first stories being televised for many of us,” NBC News political director Chuck Todd said in a segment Tuesday.

Mr. Vanocur was among the last people to interview Sen. Robert F. Kennedy at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, where he was assassinat­ed shortly after winning the California Democratic primary in his run for president in 1968.

Mr. Vanocur was probably most familiar to TV viewers from his reporting on the floor of political convention­s, including the violent 1968 Democratic convention in Chicago. He and three NBC colleagues who reported on the convention­s, Frank McGee, John Chancellor and Edwin Newman, became known as the Four Horsemen. Mr. Vanocur was the last survivor of the four.

He was also the last survivor of the four questioner­s at the Nixon-Kennedy debate. Mr. Vanocur said while he had a front-row seat to one of the most important moments in 20th century politics, he felt like he missed it because he hadn’t seen it like a viewer would have.

“We didn’t know what it looked like,” Mr. Vanocur said in a 2011 interview. “You didn’t see it through television when you were on the panel.”

In 1977, Mr. Vanocur was hired by ABC News, where he served as a correspond­ent until 1991. He was the moderator at another historic debate in the 1984 vice presidenti­al contest between George H.W. Bush and Geraldine Ferraro, the first woman to run for vice president from a major party.

Born in Cleveland, Mr. Vanocur moved to Peoria, Illinois, when he was 12, and earned a degree in political science from Northweste­rn University in 1950.

He served in the U.S. Army in Europe and attended the London School of Economics, beginning his journalism career while in England. His son said he was sold when he wrote a letter to the editor that appeared in the Manchester Guardian.

“Once he saw his name in print, his career changed,” said Chris Vanocur, who is also a television journalist.

Mr. Vanocur returned to the U.S. and covered city news for The New York Times, then landed at NBC in the late 1950s.

Politics and war took up much of his time, but the civil rights issue was Mr. Vanocur’s favorite subject to cover, his son said, because he believed in the cause.

In 1967, he interviewe­d Martin Luther King, Jr. at the Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, 11 months before King was assassinat­ed, leading King through a long discussion about the struggles in moving his cause forward after a decade.

Mr. Vanocur left NBC in 1971 and worked for PBS and the Washington Post before landing at ABC News, where he would serve as a correspond­ent in Buenos Aires, host the weekly show “Business World” and cover several more convention­s and elections.

He married fashion designer and writer Edith Pick in 1956 and had two sons, Chris and Nicholas, who died in 2015. Pick died in 1975, and soon after, Mr. Vanocur married Virginia Backus Vanocur, who was his wife for the 44 years until his death.

Mr. Vanocur is also survived by a stepdaught­er, Daphne Wood Hicks.

 ?? SUN-TIMES LIBRARY ?? Sander Vanocur, known as one of NBC’s “Four Horsemen,” was probably most well familiar to viewers from his convention reporting.
SUN-TIMES LIBRARY Sander Vanocur, known as one of NBC’s “Four Horsemen,” was probably most well familiar to viewers from his convention reporting.
 ??  ?? Sander Vanocur in 2006
Sander Vanocur in 2006

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