Longtime NBC newsman Irving R. Levine dies at 86
24 mins ago

BOCA RATON, Fla. – Irving R. Levine, the professorial NBC newsman who explained 
the fine points of economics to millions of viewers for nearly a quarter 
century, has died. He was 86.

Levine died Thursday, announced Kevin M. Ross, president of Lynn University in 
Boca Raton. Levine taught at the school after leaving NBC. Further details of 
his death were not immediately available.

Known for his dry, measured delivery and trademark bow ties, Levine was a 
presence at NBC since 1950 when he began covering the Korean War until his 
retirement in 1995.

He had become the network's full-time economics correspondent in 1971 and in 
the last five years of his tenure also did weekly commentaries on CNBC. He also 
appeared on "Meet the Press" more than 100 times over the years.

After retiring from NBC, Levine joined Lynn University as dean of the college 
of international communication.

Born in Pawtucket, R.I., Levine began his career in 1940, writing obituaries 
for The Providence Journal. He also worked as a correspondent for the 
International News Service and The Times of London.

After joining NBC, he covered assignments from Korea, Moscow and Vietnam to 
Algeria, Poland and South Africa.

As NBC correspondent in the Soviet Union, he did a half-hour program in 1955 
giving a tourist's eye view of Moscow, showing Cold War-era Americans that the 
Communist capital had "an amusement park not unlike Coney Island (and) another 
park in which old men played chess and mothers relaxed with their children," 
The New York Times reported. He explored similar themes in his 1959 book, "Main 
Street, U.S.S.R."

In 1965, while in Rome, he interviewed the great film director Federico Fellini.

In a 1995 New York Times interview, he recalled that he had hoped to cover the 
State Department after winding up his foreign correspondent days. But NBC 
bosses asked him early in 1971 to cover business news instead.

"It was a barren time," Levine said. "Producers just weren't interested in 
those stories." By the time he retired, though, business news on television was 
a booming field — though he noted in 1995 that something like the Oklahoma city 
bombing or the O.J. Simpson trial could still push it aside.

At a welcoming ceremony at the Boca Raton school later that year, Levine said 
he didn't miss the daily grind but still read three or four newspapers every 
day, quipping, "Once a news junkie, always a news junkie." He retired from the 
school in 2004 but continued to be a prominent fixture on campus, a statement 
from the university said.

He is survived by his wife, Nancy, and their three children, Jeffrey, Daniel 
and Jennifer.

In a humorous 2001 essay in The New York Times, Levine welcomed the return of 
the middle initial as epitomized by then-new President George W. Bush.

He recalled that producers trying to shorten a television news story of his 
"finally suggested I drop the R in my sign-off, Irving R. Levine. I held my 
ground."

"`No,' I said, 'I'd rather drop the B in NBC.'"

___

Associated Press writer Polly Anderson in New York contributed to this report.

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