Stephen S. Rosenfeld
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Stephen Samuel Rosenfeld (July 26, 1932 – May 2, 2010) was an American journalist who worked as an editor and columnist for ''The Washington Post'' for 40 years. He joined the newspaper in 1959 as a reporter, was promoted to the editorial board in 1962, became deputy editor of the editorial pages in 1982, and page editor in 1999.Brown, Emma

''The Washington Post'', May 3, 2010.
During his time with the newspaper, he wrote over 10,000 op-ed pieces and editorials.(Obit, Stephen S. Rosenfeld, washingtonpost.com) The ''Post'' wrote on his death that the ones he was proudest of were a series of editorials calling for the release from internal exile in the Soviet Union of Russian physicist
Andrei Sakharov Andrei Dmitrievich Sakharov ( rus, Андрей Дмитриевич Сахаров, p=ɐnˈdrʲej ˈdmʲitrʲɪjevʲɪtɕ ˈsaxərəf; 21 May 192114 December 1989) was a Soviet nuclear physicist, dissident, nobel laureate and activist for nu ...
. According to the ''Post'', Sakharov, after his release in 1986, visited Washington and asked to speak to the person who had written the editorials. Rosenfeld was the author with his wife, Barbara, of ''Return From Red Square'' (1967) about his time as the ''Post's'' Moscow chief in Moscow in 1964, and ''The Time of Their Dying'' (1977) about his parents' death. __TOC__


Background

Rosenfeld was born in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. The ''Post'' wrote that his father owned a local clothing store, played the violin, and wrote pieces about music criticism for the local newspaper, the ''
Berkshire Eagle ''The Berkshire Eagle'' is an American daily newspaper published in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, and covering all of Berkshire County, as well as four New York communities near Pittsfield. It is considered a newspaper of record for Berkshire County ...
'', while his mother was a secretary and immigrant from Latvia. He obtained his BA in history from Harvard University in 1953, and served in the Marine Corps for two years, before taking up his first job in journalism as a reporter for the ''Eagle''. He went on to complete an MA in Russian history at Columbia University in 1959. As well as writing editorials, Rosenfeld was one of the ''Post's'' foreign affairs correspondents. He opened the newspaper's Moscow bureau in 1964, but was expelled from the Soviet Union a year later because of the ''Posts serialization, without Rosenfeld's involvement, of ''The Penkovsky Papers'' (1965). These were supposedly the memoirs of
Oleg Penkovsky Oleg Vladimirovich Penkovsky (russian: link=no, Олег Владимирович Пеньковский; 23 April 1919 – 16 May 1963), codenamed HERO, was a Soviet military intelligence (GRU) colonel during the late 1950s and early 1960s. Pen ...
, a Soviet intelligence officer convicted of spying for Britain and the U.S., but they had in fact been written, unknown to the ''Post'', by the CIA.Fox, Margalit
"Stephen Rosenfeld, Retired Columnist, Dies at 77"
''The New York Times'', May 10, 2010.
Rosenfeld retired from the ''Post'' in 2000, and died after suffering from Parkinson's disease.


Notes


Further reading


Stephen Rosenfeld's articles
''Foreign Affairs'', accessed February 22, 2011. {{DEFAULTSORT:Rosenfeld, Stephen American male journalists People from Pittsfield, Massachusetts 1932 births 2010 deaths Harvard University alumni Columbia Graduate School of Arts and Sciences alumni The Washington Post people