The News
Sunday 24 of November 2024

Eugene Kim, veteran AP writer of Today in History, dies


FILE -This July, 2015 file photo shows Eugene Kim, longtime broadcast writer and editor for The Associated Press.  For 34 years, Kim was the writer of the daily Today in History feature that was used by AP broadcasters and newspapers around the country.  Kim has died at the age of 61. (AP Photo),FILE -This July, 2015 file photo shows Eugene Kim, longtime broadcast writer and editor for The Associated Press.  For 34 years, Kim was the writer of the daily Today in History feature that was used by AP broadcasters and newspapers around the country.  Kim has died at the age of 61. (AP Photo)
FILE -This July, 2015 file photo shows Eugene Kim, longtime broadcast writer and editor for The Associated Press. For 34 years, Kim was the writer of the daily Today in History feature that was used by AP broadcasters and newspapers around the country. Kim has died at the age of 61. (AP Photo),FILE -This July, 2015 file photo shows Eugene Kim, longtime broadcast writer and editor for The Associated Press. For 34 years, Kim was the writer of the daily Today in History feature that was used by AP broadcasters and newspapers around the country. Kim has died at the age of 61. (AP Photo)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Eugene Kim, a broadcast writer and editor for The Associated Press who for 34 years wrote the AP’s Today In History feature used by newspapers and broadcasters around the country, has died. He was 61.

Kim, a graduate of Syracuse University, began his AP career in New York in 1981 after working as a news reporter at radio stations in Connecticut. He moved to Washington in 1983 when the AP relocated its broadcast wire operation there.

In 1984, he became the writer of Today in History, the daily feature that includes a capsule summary of significant events that took place on that date.

Kim was known among colleagues for his diligence in researching items for Today in History, and his determination to make sure that every item was complete and accurate. In the days before the internet, he would spend hours at a time at the Library of Congress to pin down names, places and dates. Colleagues were often able to rely on his encyclopedic knowledge to fill in gaps on stories they were writing. They also remembered Kim as unflappable, with a wry sense of humor.

Greg Peppers, executive producer for AP Radio, said Kim would “go the extra mile” to confirm details in Today in History. He said Kim “took each line of it and made it his own.” Peppers described Kim as a “quiet, steadfast presence on the broadcast wire desk.”