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Mooshil, the son of Assyrian parents who came to Chicago from Iran, grew up on the city's North Side, hawking pennants, peanuts and scorecards at Wrigley Field. After graduating from high school in 1944, he joined the U.S. Navy, served as a radio operator in the South Pacific during World War II and then helped repatriate Chinese and Japanese prisoners afterward. He returned home and attended the University of Illinois on the G.I. bill, graduated with a bachelor of arts degree in 1950 and joined The AP as a newsman in Huntington, W.Va., soon after. By 1953, he was back in Chicago and assigned to the sports desk.
Until his retirement in 1993, his byline was atop nearly every important story that involved the Bears, Cubs, White Sox, Bulls and nearby Notre Dame. While covering one Cubs' opener, Mooshil became part of the story. At the start of the ninth inning, as he began dictating his story to the sports department in New York, something whizzed through the open window of the press box and cracked the window behind him. Assuming it was a broken light bulb, Mooshil hardly took note and finished dictating. It wasn't until he read the Chicago Sun-Times the next day that he learned someone had fired a bullet into the press box.
"I never missed a word," Mooshil recalled a few years later. "It was the one 'no-hitter' I really appreciated being able to cover."
He is survived by his wife of nearly 51 years, Claire; three daughters, Maria, Leah and Angele and five grandchildren; and one brother, Edward. A funeral mass was scheduled Tuesday at Queen of All Saints Basilica.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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