Los Angeles Times

Journalist and aide to Nixon, Ford

- By David Colker david.colker@latimes.com Twitter: @davidcolke­r

Jerry Warren was the top editor of the San Diego Union, and Union-Tribune after a merger, for a combined 20 years. But before that, it was he who faced journalist­s as the White House’s deputy press secretary during the Richard Nixon presidency. Indeed, Warren often handled the highly contentiou­s morning news conference­s in the wake of the Watergate scandal.

“How can you describe that empty feeling in your stomach that keeps gnawing away at you?” he said of the news conference­s in a 1974 Los Angeles Times interview.

Warren, 84, who was able to build a respected newspaper career after that time and later turned to studying spiritual matters, died Friday at a hospital in Arlington, Va.

He had late-stage cancer, said his daughter, Mia Johnson, and died of pneumonia.

Warren was assistant managing editor at the Union in 1969 when he got an offer to become deputy press secretary. “It was a challenge that doesn’t come along very often,” he said in The Times interview. “Not too many people have an opportunit­y to work for a president.”

Phemie Davis, who was married to Warren during his time in the White House, said that unlike many in the administra­tion, Warren had friendship­s with reporters. “He was the only journalist in the group of top aides,” Davis said in an interview Saturday. “He had a special relationsh­ip with the press that the rest of the administra­tion didn’t enjoy.”

But Warren’s relationsh­ips with the press came under strain as the Watergate scandal worsened. And Davis said Warren was devastated when he learned the truth of how much Nixon was personally involved in the scandal.

“When it turned out that so much he was told wasn’t true,” she said of her former husband, “it was very, very hard.”

He was born Gerald Warren on Aug. 17, 1930, in Hastings, Neb. His father was a school superinten­dent and his mother was a teacher.

Warren graduated from Saint Edward High School in Saint Edward, Neb., and went on to the University of Nebraska, earning a bachelor’s degree in journalism in 1952. He spent four years in the Navy and in 1956 enrolled in a Copley journalism training program in San Diego, according to a report in the San Diego Union-Tribune.

After a stint as a reporter, Warren was made an editor. “He understood copy and best of all, he got along very well with reporters and people,” said former editor Peter Kaye, quoted in the U-T on Saturday. In 1975, after working at the White House through Nixon’s 1974 resignatio­n and into the Gerald Ford administra­tion, Warren returned to San Diego at the invitation of the Union’s owner, Helen Copley, to become editor.

The paper’s circulatio­n increased during his time at the helm, and he oversaw some controvers­ial stories, including an expose of the Roman Catholic diocese.

There were stumbles too, including pressing reporters to get more informatio­n on a grand jury investigat­ion into the city’s mayor in 1984. When some of the informatio­n reported in the paper turned out to be inaccurate, he saw himself as “an accessory, if not the godfather of that mistake,” he said in a 1995 U-T interview.

Warren retired in 1995. Moving to Virginia, he became more involved with the Episcopal church, enrolling at the Virginia Theologica­l Seminary, where the vast majority of students were many decades younger.

“He lived in the dorm,” Johnson said, by choice. “My father was able to develop close relationsh­ips with people of all ages and all walks of life. I’m sure he got along brilliantl­y.”

In addition to Johnson, who lives in New York, Warren is survived by his son, Ben, who lives in El Centro; and two grandchild­ren. Both of Warren’s marriages ended in divorce.

 ?? Associated Press ?? ‘A SPECIAL RELATIONSH­IP WITH THE PRESS’ Warren in 1973, when he was deputy press secretary in the Nixon White House. A former wife says he was devastated when he learned about Nixon’s role in the Watergate scandal.
Associated Press ‘A SPECIAL RELATIONSH­IP WITH THE PRESS’ Warren in 1973, when he was deputy press secretary in the Nixon White House. A former wife says he was devastated when he learned about Nixon’s role in the Watergate scandal.

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