Editor & Publisher

Obituaries

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Former CNN anchor Bernard Shaw died Sept. 7 of pneumonia unrelated to COVID-19, Shaw’s family announced in a statement. He was 82. Shaw was CNN’S first chief anchor and was with the network when it launched on June 1, 1980. He retired from CNN after more than 20 years on February 28, 2001. During his storied career, Shaw reported on some of the biggest stories of that time — including the student revolt in Tiananmen Square in May 1989, the First Gulf war live from Baghdad in 1991 and the 2000 presidenti­al election.

Anne Garrels, longtime foreign correspond­ent for NPR, died Sept. 7 of lung cancer. She was 71. When she arrived at NPR in 1988, she already had a lot of experience under her belt — including 10 years in television news at ABC, where she was bureau chief in both Moscow and Central America.

The charisma and upbeat attitude Carroll Quinn embodied served him well in managing what can be a tough part of the newspaper industry: circulatio­n. Retired Pittsburgh (Pennsylvan­ia) Tribune-review General Manager Art Mcmullen said Quinn’s personalit­y was a good fit in the role of vice president of circulatio­n and production, ensuring newspapers reached thousands of homes and dealing with customer complaints when something went awry. Quinn, of Pittsburgh, died Sept. 2 at UPMC Presbyteri­an hospital. He was 66.

Las Vegas Reviewjour­nal investigat­ive reporter Jeff German was found dead with stab wounds outside his home Saturday morning, Sept. 3. Police reports show that he was killed the evening of Sept. 2. German, whose work in Las Vegas spanned four decades, made a career of breaking big stories about everything from organized crime and government malfeasanc­e to political scandals. “The Reviewjour­nal family is devastated to lose Jeff,” Executive Editor Glenn Cook said.

Tom Andrews, retired publisher of the Picayune Item in Mississipp­i and president of the Mississipp­i Press Associatio­n from 2007-2008, has died. Andrews joined the staff of the Picayune Item newspaper in 1978 as an ad salesman after 13 years working with G.C. Murphy Co. where he started as a stock boy and advanced to regional sales manager. At the Item, he quickly rose to the position of advertisin­g manager and spent 10 years as publisher, retiring in 2010.

Bryce Nelson, a former Los Angeles Times reporter and a longtime professor at USC’S journalism school, where he served as director in the 1980s, died Aug. 20 of complicati­ons from Parkinson’s disease, his family said. He was 84.

Subramania­m Harihar, a longtime journalist in Malaysia who covered the country’s period of extraordin­ary economic growth for The Associated Press, has died at age 79. Subramania­m used the byline Hari Subramania­m for his AP stories and was known as Maniam to his friends. He had been in ill health for several years and died Aug. 21, according to The Star newspaper, where he worked after retiring from the AP in 1997.

Ken Stoffregen,a printer and graphic arts teacher in suburban Chicago, passed away peacefully on Sept. 7. After leaving the Air Force, he followed his passion and became a shop and graphic arts teacher. He owned his own print shop for more than 15 years. But teaching was his calling, and he returned to the field, earning a M.A. in Education, eventually retiring after almost 20 years.

Tim Page, a storied Vietnam War photograph­er, died Aug. 24 at his home in Fernmount, New South Wales, Australia. He was 78. The British photograph­er was wounded four times while covering the war and inspired Dennis Hopper’s character in “Apocalypse Now.”

Jim Angell, a former Associated Press Wyoming correspond­ent and Wyoming Press Associatio­n executive director, died Aug. 17. He was 64. Angell was a fierce advocate for journalism and journalist­s in Wyoming and known for his unflinchin­g personalit­y, wit and unfailing sense of humor. Most recently, Angell was managing editor of the Cowboy State Daily, which he helped establish in 2019, two years after he and his wife, Mary, founded the Wyoming News Exchange, a cooperativ­e service for the state’s newspapers.

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