MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) —  Tom Wicker, the former New York Times political reporter and columnist  whose career soared following his acclaimed coverage of the  assassination of President John F. Kennedy, died Friday at his home in  Rochester, Vt. He was 85. Wicker died after an apparent heart attack Friday morning, his wife Pamela said. “He’d  been ill with things that come from being 85,” she said. “He died in  his bedroom looking out at the countryside that he loved.” Wicker  grew up in poverty in Hamlet, N.C., and wanted to be a novelist, but  pursued journalism when his early books didn’t catch fire. He worked at  weekly and daily newspapers in North Carolina before winning a spot as a  political correspondent in the Times’ Washington bureau in 1960. Three years later, he was the only Times reporter to be traveling with Kennedy when the president was shot in Dallas. Gay  Talese, author of the major history of The New York Times, wrote of  Wicker’s coverage: “It was a remarkable achievement in reporting and  writing, in collecting facts out of confusion, in reconstructing the  most deranged day in his life, the despair and bitterness and disbelief,  and then getting on a telephone to New York and dictating the story in a  voice that only rarely cracked with emotion.” One year later,  Wicker was named Washington bureau chief of the Times, succeeding  newspaper legend James Reston, who had hired Wicker and called him “one  of the most able political reporters of his generation.” In 1966,  Wicker began his “In the Nation” column, becoming, along with colleague  Anthony Lewis, a longtime liberal voice on the Op-Ed page. Two years  later he was named associate editor of the Times, a post he held until  1985. He ended his column and retired to Vermont in 1991 but  continued to write. He published 20 books, ranging from novels about  gritty, hard-scrabble life in the South to reflections on the presidents  he knew. Among his books was “A Time to Die,” winner of the Edgar  Allan Poe Award in 1976, which recounted Wicker’s 1971 experience as an  observer and mediator of a prison rebellion at New York’s Attica  prison. Wicker, the son of a railroad man, started in journalism  in 1949 at the weekly Sandhill Citizen in Aberdeen, N.C., where he was  paid $37.50 a week to report on such local news stories as the discovery  of “the first beaver dam in anyone’s memory on a local creek.” He  moved on to a local daily and then to the larger Winston-Salem Journal,  where he worked for most of the 50s, with time out in 1957-58 to serve  as a Nieman fellow at Harvard University. He went to work for the  Nashville Tennessean in 1959 but then a year later was hired by Reston. In  mid-1961, when Times veteran Bill Lawrence abruptly quit his post as  White House correspondent in a dispute with management, Wicker got the  assignment. He said it was a dream assignment — “sooner or later most of  the government’s newsworthy business passes through the White House” —  and especially covering the excitement of the Kennedy era. On Nov.  22, 1963, Wicker was in the first press bus following the Kennedy  motorcade when the president was assassinated. He would later write in a  memoir that the day was a turning point for the country: “The shots  ringing out in Dealey Plaza marked the beginning of the end of  innocence.” At that moment, however, all he knew was that he was  covering one of the biggest stories in history. “At first no one knew  what happened, or how, or where, much less why,” he later wrote.  “Gradually, bits and pieces began to fall together.” Wicker  dictated his story from phones grabbed here and there, with most of his  writing done at a desk in the upper level of the Dallas airport. “I  would write two pages, run down the stairs, across the waiting room,  grab a phone and dictate,” Wicker later wrote. “Dictating each take, I  would throw in items I hadn’t written, sometimes whole paragraphs.” Although  Wicker didn’t even have a reporter’s notebook that day and scribbled  all of his notes on the backs of printed itineraries of the presidential  visit, his story captured the detail and color of the tragic events. Describing  the president’s widow as she left the hospital in Dallas, Wicker wrote:  “Her face was sorrowful. She looked steadily at the floor. She still  wore the raspberry-colored suit in which she greeted welcoming crowds in  Fort Worth and Dallas. But she had taken off the matching pillbox hat  she had worn earlier in the day, and her dark hair was windblown and  tangled. Her hand rested lightly on her husband’s coffin as it was taken  to a waiting hearse.” In 1966, Wicker was named a national  columnist, replacing retiring Times’ icon Arthur Krock, who had covered  10 presidents. Wicker’s first column reported on a political rally in  Montana. He would later say that it was a huge step to move from  detached observer to opinion holder — and especially in the times he was  writing. “My own transition from reporter to columnist coincided  roughly with the immense American political re-evaluation that sprang in  the sixties from the Vietnam War and the movement against it, from the  ghetto riots in the major cities, and from the brief flowering of the  counterculture,” Wicker wrote in his 1978 book, “On Press.” Wicker  was not lacking in opinions, though, and over the years took strong and  sometimes unpredictable stands, emphasizing such issues as the nation’s  racial divide. On race, he said in a 1991 interview in the Times:  “I think the attitudes between the races, the fear and the animosity  that exist today, are greater than, let us say, at the time of the Brown  case, the famous school desegregation decision in 1954.” Although  Wicker was attacked by President Nixon and Vice President Spiro Agnew  for his negative coverage during the Nixon administration, he argued in a  1991 book, “One of Us: Richard Nixon and the American Dream,” that  Nixon accomplished much in his presidency and deserves a high ranking in  history. In his final column, published Dec. 29, 1991, Wicker  commented on the fall of the Soviet Union and urged President George  H.W. Bush to “exercise in a new world a more visionary leadership” on  non-military issues like the environment. “As the U.S. did not  hesitate to spend its resources to prevail in the cold war, it needs now  to go forward as boldly to lead a longer, more desperate struggle to  save the planet, and rescue the human race from itself,” he wrote.
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