Best & Brightest: Former Colleagues Pay Tribute to Halberstam

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By: Friends and former journalism colleagues hailed David Halberstam, the famed reporter and author, on learning of his death in a car accident in California on Monday. He was 73.

"The world has lost one of our greatest journalists," said Arthur Sulzberger Jr., publisher of The New York Times, where Halberstam won a Pulitzer Prize in 1964 covering Vietnam.

Halberstam's 1972 best-seller, "The Best and the Brightest" a critical account of U.S. involvement in Southeast Asia and especially Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, established him as one of the most committed journalists of his generation.

"He was the institutional memory of the Vietnam War. I think he understood it better than any other journalist," said Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Peter Arnett, who is teaching in China.

Halberstam's other books include "The Powers That Be," a 1979 undressing of the titans of the news media; "The Fifties," his 1993 chronicle about the decade before the war; "The Reckoning," about the U.S. auto industry; and "The Children," a 1999 narrative about the civil rights movement.

His 2002 best-seller, "War in a Time of Peace" -- an examination of how the lessons of Vietnam have influenced American foreign policy in the post-Cold War era -- was a runner-up for the Pulitzer Prize in nonfiction.

His most recent, "The Coldest Winter," an account of a key early battle of the Korean War, is scheduled to be published in the fall.

At the time of the car accident, Halberstam was being driven to an interview with Hall of Fame quarterback Y.A. Tittle by a graduate journalism student from the University of California at Berkeley, where he had visited over the weekend.

Menlo Park police were investigating Monday morning's accident. The driver of the car carrying Halberstam and the operator of the car that crashed into his were both injured, but not seriously.

As word of Halberstam's death spread, tributes and remembrances poured in for the veteran reporter whose deep baritone matched the heft of his nonfiction narratives.

"The thing about David Halberstam was that he stayed the course and he kept the faith in the belief in the people's right to know," said George Esper, who spent 10 years in Vietnam with The Associated Press.

Journalist Neil Sheehan, former Saigon bureau chief for United Press International, said he had lost his best friend, a man of enormous physical and mental energy who had "profound moral and physical courage."

"We were in Vietnam at a time when we were being denounced by those on high," said Sheehan, who went on to write "A Bright Shining Lie," a Pulitzer Prize-winning account of the Vietnam War. "There was tremendous pressure. David never buckled under it at all."

Author Gay Talese, who was at the Halberstams' home Monday night, said he had known Halberstam since the early 1960s, was best man at his wedding and shared Thanksgiving dinner in Paris last year.

"He was a dear friend," Talese said.

Halberstam's wife, Jean Halberstam, said Monday that she would remember him most for his "unending, bottomless generosity to young journalists."

"For someone who obviously was so competitive with himself, the generosity with other writers was incredible," she said by phone from their New York home. He also is survived by a daughter, Julia.

Born April 10, 1934, in New York City, to a surgeon father and teacher mother, Halberstam attended Harvard University, where he was managing editor of the Harvard Crimson newspaper.

After graduating in 1955, he launched his career at the Daily Times Leader, a small daily in West Point, Miss. He spent only a year there because the editor at the time thought Halberstam was too politically liberal, said Bill Minor, Jackson bureau chief for the New Orleans Times-Picayune.

He went on to The Tennessean, in Nashville, where he covered the civil rights struggle, and then The New York Times, which sent him to Vietnam. Halberstam quit daily journalism in 1967 and turned to books.

"He was a mentor, a companion and a very dear friend," said Horst Faas, a retired AP photographer who met Halberstam in the Congo in 1960 and later shared a house with him in Saigon. "As a journalist he was very different from the rest of us. Not everybody went along with him, but he believed it was his duty to change things."

Halberstam told journalists during a conference last year in Tennessee that government criticism of news reporters in Iraq reminded him of the way he was treated while covering the war in Vietnam.

"The crueler the war gets, the crueler the attacks get on anybody who doesn't salute or play the game," he said. "And then one day, the people who are doing the attacking look around and they've used up their credibility."

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