Word: valeriani
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...Correspondent Richard Valeriani ruefully recalled waiting in Barbados: "We couldn't cover the story. You can't cover a story unless you're there. All we could cover was what we were being told about the story...
Later that night, at a party at the home of NBC Correspondent Richard Valeriani, 49, ABC's David Brinkley, 61, who ended a 37-year NBC career last September in a dispute with the abrasive Small, regaled the guests with a mock press release about the ousting of the executive. Describing the bitter and raucous incidents as "excessive," Small's embarrassed successor, Reuven Frank, 61, said last week: "It was as though somebody had uncorked something...
...assumption that more men watch in the first hour than in the second, each of the shows concentrates on hard news early on. Today's Washington correspondent, Richard Valeriani, usually interviews a politician in that hour, for example; Good Morning's Jack Anderson rakes the muck at 7:10; and Morning's business correspondent, Ray Brady, discusses the impact of high interest rates on the housing industry at 7:45. By 8, the workingmen and -women have presumably left-along with Morning-and NBC and ABC turn their attention to housewives...
...pipe lend a thoughtful air to his comments; he pauses to consider questions before replying and accepts hostile queries without resorting to Ziegler's huffiness. Ziegler's programmed manner leaves little room for humor. Warren is more unbuttoned. Failing to hear a question from NBC Correspondent Richard Valeriani, he quipped: "Richard, will you speak in your on-the-air voice?" When he first began subbing for Ziegler, Warren would open with a crack at his own expense...
...jail. The G-2 official who questioned Mallin, unaware that Mallin was on a wanted list at headquarters, was unexpectedly polite and incurious, and ended the interview by saying, "Hope to see you again soon." At last Mallin and a fellow correspondent, NBC's Dick Valeriani, boarded the U.S. commercial plane. Valeriani said, "I don't believe it." Both correspondents had spent two years of tension, frustration and harassment in Cuba. When the plane was airborne, Valeriani turned again to Mallin: "I still don't believe it." The plane came down at Miami, and Valeriani said...
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