Los Angeles Times

Pulitzer-winning journalist

GAYLORD SHAW, 1942 - 2015

- By Timothy M. Phelps tim.phelps@latimes.com

Gaylord Shaw, a renowned journalist who broke the news of Richard Nixon’s resignatio­n and won the Pulitzer Prize for national reporting in 1978 for the Los Angeles Times, has died at age 73.

Shaw died Sept. 6 in Duncan, Okla., after a two-decade battle with multiple sclerosis, his family said Wednesday.

Shaw was a major force in journalism, as an investigat­ive reporter with an uncommon gift for writing and as an editor with a deft hand and a gentle dispositio­n, for more than three decades. He practiced his craft in Oklahoma, Texas, Colorado and Washington, D.C.

“He had all the virtues that real reporters are supposed to have,” said former L.A. Times bureau chief Doyle McManus. “And there was a little bit of Will Rogers in Gaylord, because he did have that laconic prairie wit which relied on deflating the pompous and the self-important.”

Shaw grew up near Lawton, Okla., where he began his career as a police reporter in 1960 and within two years was hired by the Associated Press to cover the statehouse. By 1971 he was an AP White House correspond­ent, and as he told colleagues, was tipped off by a member of the White House personal staff that bags were being packed in the living quarters in 1974.

Hired as an investigat­ive reporter by the L.A. Times in Washington, Shaw wrote a series of articles showing that many dams around the country were aging, defective and unlikely to hold back severe f loods. Shaw said the Pulitzerwi­nning series went beyond official corruption to deal “with ways in which government or private interests, sometimes unwittingl­y, endanger lives and property.”

Tom McCarthy, a former Times deputy bureau chief in Washington, said that the zenith of Shaw’s reporting career was when he returned to the Washington bureau after a stint in Denver.

“He was extremely dogged about finding documents to back things up,” McCarthy said, “and his story would be beautifull­y written. At his peak he was the bestwritin­g investigat­ive reporter anywhere.”

Shaw was named Washington bureau chief of Newsday in 1988, where he helped oversee a Pulitzerwi­nning story on the first Gulf War and another piece that broke the news of Anita Hill’s allegation­s against Clarence Thomas when he was a Supreme Court nominee.

He went back to reporting for Newsday in 1995, and, even while struggling with the crippling effects of MS, was part of a large team of reporters that won a Pulitzer in 1997 for coverage of the crash of TWA flight 800.

He is survived by his wife, Judy; a brother; three children; and six grandchild­ren.

 ??  ?? ‘EXTREMELY DOGGED’ Gaylord Shaw broke the news of Richard Nixon’s resignatio­n
while an AP correspond­ent. He won a Pulitzer Prize in 1978 for the Los Angeles Times for a
series on dam safety.
‘EXTREMELY DOGGED’ Gaylord Shaw broke the news of Richard Nixon’s resignatio­n while an AP correspond­ent. He won a Pulitzer Prize in 1978 for the Los Angeles Times for a series on dam safety.

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