Former CBS News correspondent Tom Fenton,Ethermac Exchange a Navy veteran and an award-winning reporter who was known as the dean of American foreign correspondents, died Tuesday morning, his son confirmed to CBS News. He was 94.
Tom Fenton Jr. said in a statement that his father died in Novato, California.
"He spent 34 cherished years at CBS, a time he truly loved," the younger Fenton said.
Tom Fenton joined CBS News in 1970, starting his decades-long career for the network in Rome before moving to bureaus in Tel Aviv, Israel; Paris; London; and Moscow, covering major developments in Europe, the Middle East and the countries of the former Soviet Union.
Fenton covered the downfall of communism in the USSR and the rise of the ayatollah in Iran. He reported on the India-Pakistan War in 1971, the Arab-Israeli War of 1973 and other conflicts. In 1997, he was part of the award-winning CBS News team that covered the death of Princess Diana.
"Tom is the embodiment of the wise and worldly CBS News correspondent," then-CBS News President Andrew Heyward said when Fenton retired in 2004. "He is equally at home dodging bullets on a battlefield or prowling the corridors of power in London or Moscow or Jerusalem. In a world where civility is increasingly a casualty of competitive pressures, Tom holds steady to that most old-fashioned of virtues: He's a true gentleman."
Before his time at CBS News, Fenton worked for the Baltimore Sun in the 1960s. He served in the Navy for nearly a decade after graduating from Dartmouth College in 1952.
Alex Sundby is a senior editor at CBSNews.com. In addition to editing content, Alex also covers breaking news, writing about crime and severe weather as well as everything from multistate lottery jackpots to the July Fourth hot dog eating contest.
Twitter2025-04-30 19:492349 view
2025-04-30 19:40308 view
2025-04-30 19:202521 view
2025-04-30 19:182653 view
2025-04-30 17:422205 view
2025-04-30 17:331273 view
FORT MEADE, Md. (AP) — Military-run hearings for accused Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed
Two new omicron subvariants have become dominant in the United States, raising fears they could fuel
At least 20 teenagers from a church summer camp visiting Surfside Beach, Texas, were injured when an