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Search resuls for: "Lehrer NewsHour"


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Robert MacNeil, the Canadian-born journalist who delivered sober evening newscasts for more than two decades on PBS as the co-anchor of “The MacNeil/Lehrer Report,” later expanded as “The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour,” died early Friday in Manhattan. His death, at NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital, was confirmed by his daughter Alison MacNeil. But he came to reject the flashier style of the commercial American networks, and in 1971 he joined the fledgling Public Broadcasting Service. A pairing with Jim Lehrer in 1973 to cover the Senate Watergate hearings for PBS was unpopular with the operators of many local public stations, who thought the prime-time broadcasts weren’t appropriate evening fare. But the two men’s serious demeanor was a hit with viewers, and the broadcasts won an Emmy Award and eventually launched an enduring collaboration.
Persons: Robert MacNeil, The MacNeil, Lehrer, , Lehrer NewsHour, Alison MacNeil, Mr, MacNeil, John F, Kennedy, Jim Lehrer Organizations: PBS, – Presbyterian Hospital, NBC News, Public Broadcasting Service, BBC Locations: Canadian, Manhattan, Dallas
Demetria GallegosDemetria Gallegos is part of the Journal Reports team. Coverage areas include leadership, small business, wealth management, personal finance, retirement, health, technology, energy and WSJ's College Rankings. Previously, she wrote "The Juggle on Sunday," a column about family finances. Prior to The Journal, she worked at The Denver Post, 9News/KUSA in Denver and The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour. She attended Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism and graduated from Columbia College.
Persons: Demetria Gallegos Demetria Gallegos, MacNeil, Lehrer NewsHour Organizations: Journal, WSJ's, The Denver Post, Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism, Columbia College Locations: Denver
As the Cold War was waning, the physicist Lewis Branscomb feared that America’s economic and scientific superiority was in jeopardy. Declining scientific literacy and critical thinking in American education, he believed, could have disastrous consequences for the country. Students, he told “The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour” on PBS in 1986, “don’t need to know a lot of facts about science, but they really do need to understand how to think in the way scientists think — that is, in a problem-solving approach, given a complex environment within which to make decisions.”Whether in academia, private industry or government, Dr. Branscomb made it his job to push for the advancement of science and give it a bigger role in public policy. He held out hope for a brighter future through technology, but only if scientists and policymakers could get the public behind the idea. Dr. Branscomb, who worked at the nexus of science, technology, policy and business throughout his career, died on May 31 at a care facility in Redwood City, Calif., his son, Harvie, said.
Persons: Lewis Branscomb, “ The MacNeil, Lehrer, , Branscomb, Harvie Organizations: Students, PBS Locations: Redwood City, Calif
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