Word: broadcast
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...addition to WHRB on-air personalities, many former Harvard athletes have moved from the playing field to the broadcast booth over the years. John Dockery '66, a Crimson football player who went on to a professional career with the New York Jets and Pittsburgh Steelers, is now a nationally known broadcaster. In addition, James Brown '73 is studio co-host of the nationally televised FOX football pre-game show...
...famous Town Meeting that CNN broadcast from Columbus, Ohio, last Wednesday, when an unhappy trio of Administration foreign-policy advisers squirmed while cranks and crackpots fumed and bellowed, was by any measure a disaster--catastrophic as diplomacy, unlucky as public relations and worthless as a means of preparing the country for war. That's too bad, of course, but look on the bright side: the Ohio calamity may do away with "national town meetings" once...
Entertainers loved Harry Caray. He counted many, Sinatra and Elvis included, as friends. And why not? Caray himself was a kind of performance artist, working from a broadcast booth instead of a stage. The Harry Caray Elvis heard in the '50s and '60s was a truly great announcer; his outsized personality combined with exceptional broadcasting skills. In recent years, with age and illness, those skills diminished, leaving only Harry: the voice, the windshield-size glasses, the passion for the game that made him the fan's announcer. And that was good enough...
...name adorns the gargantuan Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center in Washington. Congressional Republicans and all other D.C. travelers can now feel a warm glow as they pass through Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. Earlier this week, PBS broadcast a four-and-a-half-hour documentary on Reagan. And, to complement your reading of Dinesh D'Souza's recently-published book Ronald Reagan: How an Ordinary Man Became an Extraordinary Leader, Reagan's official biography will be released next fall. Even The New Yorker, that bastion of liberal snootiness, recently published an article titled "A Celebration of Reagan...
...like-minded people who may have helped Rudolph escape the dragnet. ?Right now they?re out showing photos of people who they suspect might have helped, or are currently helping Rudolph,? says Fulton. Of course, the protracted manhunt might have been avoided altogether if the FBI hadn?t broadcast their intention to question Rudolph the night before actually visiting his house ?- a night on which he appears to have been at home watching a video...