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FOREIGN CORRESPONDENTS: Abel,
right, and Times colleague Paul Hoffman
reported from Vienna in 1956.
Courtesy Suzanne Abel |
colleagues remember journalist
and Stanford professor of communication emeritus Elie
Abel as a great storyteller who drew on experience that
ranged from the Nuremberg war-crimes trials to the Hungarian
and Tibetan uprisings to the fall of the Soviet Union.
“He knew everyone from presidents to prime ministers
to thieves,” recalls professor emerita Marion
Lewenstein, adding drily, “in the days when they
weren’t one and the same.” In a year she
taught overseas, she says, “I might be at a party
and the minute it was established that I knew Elie Abel,
I was surrounded. Everyone wanted to be with anyone
who knew Elie.”
Abel died July 22 in a hospice in Rockville, Md., of
pneumonia complicated by a stroke and Alzheimer’s
disease. He was 83.
Abel had worked for NBC News, the New York Times,
the Detroit News and others, sharing a Pulitzer
Prize awarded to the Times staff in 1958 for
international reporting. He won a 1967 George Foster
Peabody Award for his weekly NBC Radio series “The
World and Washington.” In 1966, he published the
first of four books, The Missile Crisis, about
the 1962 U.S.-Soviet standoff over Cuba. His last book,
The Shattered Bloc: Behind the Upheaval in Eastern
Europe, was published in 1990.
In 1979, Abel joined the Stanford faculty from the Columbia
School of Journalism. He headed the communication department
from 1983 to 1986 and served as Faculty Senate chair
in 1985-86, where he successfully lobbied to open senate
meetings to off-campus journalists. He was director
of Stanford in Washington in 1993-94.
“My sense was that he was enormously proud that
he achieved what he did from humble origins,”
says professor emeritus Henry Breitrose. Abel’s
father was a printer; his mother had sewed in a New
York sweatshop and routinely been arrested as a union
organizer. Elie grew up in Montreal, graduated from
McGill University in 1941 and earned his master’s
in journalism from Columbia in 1942. “He left
Canada because he wanted to be in the maelstrom [of
world affairs],” says his daughter, Suzanne Abel,
director of development at Stanford’s Haas Center
for Public Service. In an author’s note in Shattered
Bloc, Abel wrote that he thought “nothing could
be finer than the life of a foreign correspondent.”
“He was deeply interested in history and current
affairs,” Breitrose says. “Small talk with
Elie might be the way in which Tito managed to hold
off Dimitrov when Stalin sent him to bring Yugoslavia
back into the Soviet camp.” He thought good reporters
needed to have “long memories, rely on the public
record, and make sense of what is being said. This notion
of making sense was terribly important to him.”
Michael Boskin, professor of economics and senior fellow
at the Hoover Institution, says Abel would urge Knight
journalism fellows to take Econ 1, a “maniacal
program” in which first-year economics was crammed
into a single quarter.
A gracious man with a gruff voice, Abel enjoyed reading
and classical music. He counted violinist Nathan Milstein
and composer Leonard Bernstein as friends. He and his
first wife, Corinne Prevost Abel, who died in 1991 after
45 years of marriage, were involved in the restoration
of the lighthouse at Point Arena.
His other survivors include his wife, Charlotte (Sherry)
Page Abel, ’64, who was president of Washington’s
Stanford Club when they met in 1993; his son, Mark Abel,
’70; and a granddaughter. |