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Obituaries
World

Legendary TV newsman Morley Safer dead at 84, one week after retiring from ‘60 Minutes’

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This 1985 photo released by CBS shows Morley Safer at his office in New York. Safer, the veteran “60 Minutes” correspondent who exposed a military atrocity in Vietnam that played an early role in changing Americans’ view of the war, died Thursday. Photo: AP
Associated Press

TV viewers didn’t need to see Morley Safer’s reporting to feel its effects.

They could have almost heard the yowling from the Oval Office and the Pentagon after Safer’s 1965 expose of a US military atrocity in Vietnam that played an early role in changing Americans’ view of the war.

They may have felt a flush of gratitude on learning that Safer’s 1983 investigation of justice gone awry resulted in the release of a Texas man wrongfully sentenced to life in prison.

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Perhaps they headed to their wine shop with a heightened sense of purpose after word spread of Safer’s story that quoted medical experts who said red wine can be good for you.
“60 Minutes” journalist Morley Safer attends the world premiere of new HBO series “VEEP” in New York City in 2012. Photo: Reuters
“60 Minutes” journalist Morley Safer attends the world premiere of new HBO series “VEEP” in New York City in 2012. Photo: Reuters

Safer’s far-flung journalism got reactions and results during a 61-year career that found him equally at home reporting on social wrongs, the Orient Express, abstract art and the horrors of war.

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That career came to an end this week, with a 60 Minutes tribute on Sunday and, then, with Safer’s death, at age 84, on Thursday.

The Canadian born reporter is survived by his wife, the former Jane Fearer, and his daughter Sarah Safer.

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