The US is in a gloomy state as one of the chief editors dies. Sir Harold Evans, the charismatic publisher, author and meddler who was a bold-faced name for consecutive 10 years as he exposed wrongdoing in 1960s London to publishing 1990s best-sellers such as Primary Colors, has died, his wife Tina gave this information on Thursday. He was aged 92. His wife, fellow author-publisher Tina Brown, declared that he died on Wednesday in New York from congestive heart failure. Evans was a high-profile go-getter, he began as an editor of the Northern Echo and The Sunday Times of London in the 1960's. China: First asymptomatic case get found at Qingdao Airport A supporter of print journalism well into the digital age, Evans was one of the all-time newspaper editors, startling British society with revelations of surveillance, corporate wrongdoing and government scams. In the US, he printed the mysterious political novel Primary Colors and journals by Manuel Noriega and Marlon Brando. More recently, he served as a supporting editor to US News and editor-at-large for The Week. In 2011, he became an editor-at-large for Reuters, a leading daily. Protestors in the US get enraged by the death of a black woman Evans served as president and publisher of Random House trade group between 1990 and 1997, working with such authors as William Styron, Shelby Foote and Maya Angelou, and making titles for splashy deals for Joe Klein’s “Primary Colors” and autobiographies from Colin Powell and Marlon Brando. In addition to his wife Tina Brown, he is survived by their son, George, and daughter, Isabel, and by his son, Michael, and daughters, Ruth and Kate, from his early marriage to Enid Parker. US President Trump lauds health workers but still faces opposition slashes