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‘Consummate’ journalist and former CNN reporter passes away

Veteran journalist and former CNN great Stuart Loory, 82, passed away Friday in his home in Brooklyn, New York, after battling cancer.
Stuart Loory
(CNN) — A veteran journalist and former CNN great has passed away.

Stuart Loory, 82, died Friday in his home in Brooklyn, New York, after battling cancer.

In addition to working as a correspondent, Loory also oversaw CNN bureaus in Washington and Moscow. He later became a vice president of Turner Broadcasting.

But it hardly sums up his life, which was about following his passion for a good story to various points on the map.

“He was the consummate journalist,” said his son, Josh Loory, who also became a news producer.

Stuart Loory got his start in the mid-1950s as a newspaper reporter at the Newark Evening News, which is no longer in print. In 1958, he moved to Vienna, Austria, on a Pulitzer travel fellowship, and took the family with him, his son said.

Josh was 3 months old then. In the course of his father’s career, he would attend eight different schools in 12 years as they hopped between Moscow, Washington, New York, Chicago and Atlanta.

“The people that he knew and the circles that he traveled in were absolutely amazing,” his son said.

Josh Loory remembers sailing with former Secretary of State and diplomacy icon Henry Kissinger.

Before coming to CNN, Loory ran various operations for major daily newspapers. He reported on the White House for the Los Angeles Times. “He covered the end of the (Lyndon) Johnson administration and the (Richard) Nixon administration,” his son said.

“Loory was included on (Richard) Nixon’s ‘enemies list’ of political opponents,” according to his biography on the website of the University of Missouri, where he taught from 1997 on after leaving CNN.

He had a passion for science, which he wrote about at The New York Times. “He covered every manned space flight from Mercury through Gemini,” his son said.

Later, Loory covered NASA space shuttle flights for CNN.

Before making the switch to TV journalism for CNN in 1980, he was managing editor of the Chicago Sun-Times.

CNN sent him back to Moscow. In the bitter cold, he once reported wearing a huge hat and received a message telling him he’d look better if he left it off.

Loory answered with a funny TV report advocating for his giant, bushy Russian fur hat.

His son said Stuart Loory was family man — and an all-around journalist.

He wanted to look out for the downtrodden, Josh Loory said. “He liked to shine the light of the media where it needed to be shined.”

He is survived by his wife and three children.

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