Irving r levine biography

Irving R. Levine

American journalist (1922–2009)

Irving Raskin Levine (August 26, 1922 – March 27, 2009)[1] was an American journalist and longtime correspondent for NBC News. During his 45-year career, Levine reported from more than two dozen countries. He was the first American television correspondent to be accredited in the Soviet Union. He wrote three non-fiction books on life in the USSR, each of which became a bestseller.

Early life and education

Born in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, Levine graduated from Brown University.[1]

Career

In 1940 Levine went into journalism, starting at the Providence Journal as an obituary writer.[2] During World War II, he served with the Army Signal Corps.[1]

After completing graduate school at the Columbia University School of Journalism, Levine started working for the International News Service. He covered the outbreak of war in Korea in 1950 and began freelancing for NBC News. He joined them in 1950 as a correspondent. During his career, he reported from more than two doz

Irving R. Levine dies at 86; covered economic news for NBC

Irving R. Levine, who pioneered network television coverage of economic issues during his more than 40-year career as a correspondent for NBC News, died Friday. He was 86.

Levine died of prostate cancer at a hospice in Washington, D.C., according to his son, Daniel R. Levine.

With his distinctive bow tie, slow-paced delivery and use of his middle initial in his sign-off, the balding Levine became a highly recognizable presence in television news. His dry manner made him an occasional foil for jokes from late-night talk-show hosts.


FOR THE RECORD:
Levine obituary: In Saturday’s Section A, the obituary of Irving R. Levine, an NBC News correspondent who pioneered coverage of economic issues and made a point of using his middle initial in his broadcast sign-off, failed to say that his middle initial stood for Raskin. —


“A generation of Americans grew up knowing the name Irving R. Levine. From his signature broadcast style to his signature bow tie, this unlikely television star came to symbolize the journalistic stand

Irving Levine, 1922-2009, became one of the country’s top newsmen in the radio and television fields. He gained fame as a reporter, photographer, and commentator while on overseas assignments and was best known as an NBC News correspondent. His career spanned nearly forty-five years.

Born in Pawtucket, Rhode Island on August 26,1922 to Ukrainian immigrants Joseph and Emma (Raskin) Levine. He attended Pawtucket public schools before entering Brown University. His first job out of college was for the Providence Journal writing obituaries, but he soon entered the United State Army. Following WWII, he entered Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. From 1947 to 1948 he was foreign news editor for the International News Service, and chief of the Vienna (Austria) bureau from 1948 to 1950. In 1950 he began his long and distinguished association with NBC News.

While working for NBC he reported from more than two dozen countries. He was war correspondent in Korea (1950-1952); radio anchor for World News Roundup, New York City (1953-1954); chief correspondent NBC, M

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