http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100816/ap_on_re_us/us_obit_kilpatrick

By NAFEESA SYEED, Associated Press Writer 
WASHINGTON – James J. Kilpatrick, who rose from cub  reporter to become one of 
the South's most prominent newspaper editors  and the nation's most widely 
syndicated political columnist, has died.  He was 89.
Kilpatrick's wife, Marianne Means, said he died Sunday night at George 
Washington University Hospital. Means said he was being treated for congestive 
heart failure.
TV watchers in the 1970s knew Kilpatrick as the  conservative half of the 
"Point-Counterpoint" segment of the CBS "60  Minutes." His sparring with 
liberal 
commentator Shana Alexander was  famously parodied on "Saturday Night Live."
Means, also a former journalist, described him as "a great family man" and a 
cultural icon of his era.
"He was a wonderful human being," said Means, 76. "He  cultivated a public 
image 
on TV of being a cranky conservative ... but  he wasn't a cranky conservative 
at 
home."
Before retiring a couple of years ago, he worked for years for Universal Press 
Syndicate.
He also was the author of a dozen books and numerous  magazine articles. He 
wrote columns on the U.S. Supreme Court and "The  Writer's Art," on the use and 
abuse of the English language, which  appeared in hundreds of daily newspapers.
Kilpatrick was for many years a vocal supporter of  racial segregation. When 
the 
U.S. Supreme Court struck down separate but  equal schools in its Brown vs. 
Board of Education decision in 1954, he accused the court of repudiating the 
Constitution.
"If it be said now that the South be flouting the  law, let it be said to the 
high court: you taught us how," he wrote.  Later, he would abandon the fight, 
saying his views had changed.
"He apologized over and over publicly and in print  when he could about being 
on 
the wrong side of the segregation issue,"  Means said. "He was a son of the 
South."
His newspaper columns were first syndicated in 1964, and two years later 
Kilpatrick left the Richmond (Va.) News Leader for Washington to write columns 
full time. He also  served as contributing editor to the National Review and 
had 
a monthly  column in Nation's Business.
He appeared as an analyst on television's "Agronsky  and Company" and was on 
"60 
Minutes," teamed first with liberal Nicholas  Von Hoffman and then, starting in 
1975, with Alexander.
The in-your-face, conservative vs. liberal format is now widely duplicated on 
broadcast and cable channels.
"People love to watch other people go at it. It does  make for good 
entertainment," Kilpatrick commented in 1981 in a  Washington Post story about 
a 
similar program.
But to baby boomers, the "60 Minutes" pairing would  be forever known as the 
source for the Dan Aykroyd-Jane Curtin "SNL"  parody, in which Aykroyd 
dismissed 
Curtin's opinions with a terse,  "Jane, you ignorant slut."
Conservatives, Kilpatrick wrote in Nation's Business  in 1978, "believe that a 
civilized society demands orders and classes,  that men are not inherently 
equal, that change and reform are not  identical, that in a free society men 
are 
children of God and not wards  of the state."
Kilpatrick also had a sense of whimsy, and as a young  reporter he once tried 
to 
get a state lawmaker to introduce a bill  outlawing the month of February.
One of his most popular columns had nothing to do  with politics but how to 
deal 
with a skunk that had taken up residence  beneath the office in his home in the 
Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia.  More than 500 readers sent suggestions. 

Much of Kilpatrick's later work focused on writing well. 
"Be clear, be clear, be clear!" he admonished in his book "The Writer's  Art," 
published in 1984. "Your image or idea may be murky but do not  write murkily 
about it. Be murky clearly." 

Kilpatrick was born Nov. 1, 1920. The man known as "Kilpo" to his media  
colleagues was one of three children of an Oklahoma City lumber dealer  and his 
wife. He showed an early penchant for letters, reading by age 4  and deciding 
early on he wanted to be a newsman. 

He worked summers as a copyboy at the Oklahoma City Times while studying 
journalism at the University of Missouri. 

After graduation in 1941, Kilpatrick took a job with the Richmond News  Leader. 
In 10 years, he was the newspaper's editor in chief. 

Kilpatrick, who received numerous journalism awards, was one of the few 
columnists ever honored as a fellow of the Society of Professional Journalists. 

Other honors included the William Allen White Award from the University  of 
Kansas and the Carr Van Anda Award from Ohio University. Kilpatrick  was also a 
trustee of the Supreme Court Historical Society and a  founding trustee of the 
Thomas Jefferson Center for the Protection of  Free Expression. 

His first wife, sculptor Marie Pietri, died of cancer in 1997. In 1998,  
Kilpatrick married Marianne Means, a longtime Washington columnist for  Hearst 
Newspapers. 

___ 
Associated Press writer Bruce Smith in Charleston, S.C., contributed to this 
report.

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