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Murrow and produced
The " See It Now " segment on Grandma Moses, presently available on DVD in " The Edward R. Murrow Collection ", unfortunately contains but one-third of the actual 25-minute produced interview.
The show was an adaptation of radio's Hear It Now, also produced by Murrow and Friendly.
The first regularly scheduled network radio program produced and edited on wire was CBS ' Hear It Now with Edward R. Murrow.
Murrow and Friendly had produced a notable See It Now episode on the topic the previous fall, when the show probed the case of Air Force Reserve Lieutenant Milo Radulovich, who had lost his security clearance because of the supposed leftist leanings of his sister and father — evidence the Air Force kept sealed.
He received a national Edward R. Murrow Award in 2008 for a report he wrote and produced about a soldier from Delaware, Stephen McGowan, who died in Iraq.

Murrow and number
* HAER Survey number HAER WA-2-Lacey V. Murrow Memorial Floating Bridge, Spanning Lake Washington at I-90, Seattle, King County, WA

Murrow and episodes
Murrow High School, various episodes

Murrow and show
Kaye entered the world of television in 1956 through the CBS show See It Now with Edward R. Murrow.
TV news pioneer Edward R. Murrow hosted a talk show entitled Small World in the late 1950s and since then, political TV talk shows have predominantly aired on Sunday mornings.
It was created by Edward R. Murrow and Fred W. Friendly, Murrow being the host of the show.
* Small World ( Talk show ) hosted by Edward R Murrow
On his weekly news show See It Now on CBS, Murrow presented live reports from journalists on both the east and west coasts of the United States — the first program with live simultaneous transmission from coast to coast.
It was created by Edward R. Murrow and Fred W. Friendly, Murrow being the host of the show.
Friendly later recalled how truck drivers pulled up alongside Murrow and shouted, " Good show, Ed.
When the quiz show phenomenon began and took the world of TV by storm in the mid-1950s, Murrow realized the days of See It Now as a Tuesday-night fixture on CBS were numbered.
After CBS granted another such request — regarding a See It Now show on whether or not Alaska and Hawaii deserved statehood — Murrow complained to CBS head William S. Paley he could not continue doing the program if CBS continued to accede to such equal-time requests under those circumstances.
Two high media walls show memorable television clips, a multimedia timeline, and a memorial to Edward R. Murrow.
( This show had originally been hosted by Edward R. Murrow on the U. S. CBS Radio Network from 1951 to 1955 and it was then edited in London for rebroadcast on 208 with a British style of presentation at 9: 30 PM on Sunday evenings.
A few months later, in an October 1959 speech before the same RTNDA that Murrow had addressed in 1958, Stanton promised there would be no repeat of the program deceptions embodied by the quiz show scandals.
He also helped keep alive another Murrow tradition at CBS that began with the interview show Person to Person.
While the station often claims that it was the " first " news show to abandon the traditional anchor desk, this was not true, as CBS News in the United States had done this as early as the 1950s under Edward R. Murrow.
That fall, Murrow and Friendly collaborated to produce a CBS Radio documentary series inspired by their record albums — a weekly show called Hear It Now that was hosted by Murrow.
His year-and-a-half tenure on the show ended in September 1947, when Murrow — who had been CBS's vice president for public affairs — returned to on-air work and took over the broadcast.
In addition, the show has won Edward R. Murrow Awards for feature reporting and investigative reporting, the National Press Club's Arthur Rowse Award for Press Criticism, and the Bart Richards Award for Media Criticism.

Murrow and with
Earlier this month Edward R. Murrow, director of the United States Information Agency, came to Hollywood and had dinner with more than 100 leaders of the motion picture industry.
" They covered history in the making, and sometimes made it themselves: on March 12, 1938, Hitler boldly annexed nearby Austria and Murrow and Boys quickly assembled coverage with Shirer in London, Edgar Ansel Mowrer in Paris, Pierre Huss in Berlin, Frank Gervasi in Rome and Trout in New York.
Once the war was over and Murrow returned for good, it was as " a superstar with prestige and freedom and respect within his profession and within his company.
" He possessed enormous capital within that company, and as the unknown form of television news loomed large, he would spend it freely, first in radio news, then in television, taking on Senator Joseph McCarthy first, then eventually William S. Paley himself, and with a foe that formidable, even the vast Murrow account would soon run dry.
President Harry S. Truman presented her with the Women's National Press Club trophy Award for outstanding accomplishment in art in 1949, and in 1951 she appeared on See It Now, a television program hosted by Edward R. Murrow.
" Joseph McCarthy was a notable Republican Senator from Wisconsin infamous for his anti-Communist campaigning and sparring with journalist Edward R. Murrow.
* Edward R. Murrow and Fred W. Friendly 1954 investigation for CBS's See It Now of Senator Joseph McCarthy's conduct in the anti-communism hearings and their 1960 CBS Reports television documentary, along with David Lowe, Harvest of Shame on the condition of migrant workers in agriculture.
Its first episode, on November 18, 1951, opened with the first live simultaneous coast-to-coast TV transmission from both the East Coast ( the Brooklyn Bridge and New York Harbor ) and the West Coast ( the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge and San Francisco Bay ), as reporters on both sides of the North American continent gave live reports to Murrow, who was sitting in the control room on CBS ' Studio 41 with director Don Hewitt.
One of the most popular of the See It Now reports was a 1952 broadcast entitled Christmas in Korea, when Murrow spoke with American soldiers assigned to the United Nations combat forces.
His friendship with Ed Murrow, one of the leading lights in the CBS news division ( and by then a vice president of CBS ), suffered during the 1950s over the hard-hitting tone of the Murrow-hosted See It Now series.
Interstate 5 ( I-5 ) cut the city in half on a north-south axis, while I-90 crossed east-west, connecting with Mercer Island via the floating Lacey V. Murrow Memorial Bridge.
Several prominent radio personalities along with CBS News vice president Edward R. Murrow supported Faulk's earnest attempt to put an end to blacklisting.
During her marriage to Randolph Churchill, she had romantic involvements with men such as: Averell Harriman, who much later became her third husband ; Edward R. Murrow ; and John Hay " Jock " Whitney.
His 38-year career in broadcasting included service with the U. S. Armed Forces Broadcast Network during the Korean War. In 1975, Stephens earned the Edward R. Murrow award for journalistic excellence in editorials for uncovering a scandal in the Montana Workers ' Compensation Program.
Rose, along with Lara Logan, has hosted the revived CBS classic Person to Person, a news program during which celebrities are interviewed in their homes, originally hosted from 1953 to 1961 by Edward R. Murrow.
During the war, Manning himself was a correspondent for the fledgling CBS News, along with Edward R. Murrow and Walter Cronkite in London, and his reporting and subsequent researches presented Bormann's cunning and skill in the organization and planning for the flight of Nazi-controlled capital from Europe during the last years of the war -- notwithstanding the strong possibility of Bormann's death in Berlin on May 1, 1945, especially in light of DNA identification of skeletal remains unearthed near the Lehrter Bahnhof as Bormann's.
Henderson, who had hoped to become Canada's answer to Edward R. Murrow, had spent several years travelling the world with his Headliners radio broadcast.
Arnold expressed similar views in a 1950 interview with journalist Edward R. Murrow:

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