Item type | Current library | Home library | Shelving location | Call number | Materials specified | Status | Barcode | |
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American University in Dubai | American University in Dubai | Main Collection | PN 4874 .M18 A3 2003 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Copy Type:01 - Books | Available | 250549 |
PN 4874 .H834 J64 2003 "Good night, Chet" : a biography of Chet Huntley / | PN 4874 .J29 A25 2005 Teenage hipster in the modern world : from the birth of punk to the land of Bush : thirty years of millenial journalism / | PN 4874 .L76 B75 2010 The publisher : Henry Luce and his American century / | PN 4874 .M18 A3 2003 Looking for my country : finding myself in America / Robert MacNeil. | PN 4874 .M538 A3 2007 Talking back-- to presidents, dictators, and assorted scoundrels / | PN 4874 .M89 B47 2003 World War II on the air : Edward R. Murrow and the broadcasts that riveted a nation / | PN 4874 .M89 E38 2004 Edward R. Murrow and the birth of broadcast journalism / |
"Growing up in Halifax, Nova Scotia, during World War II, MacNeil felt as though nothing of significance ever happened in Canada; Canada seemed too small, too parochial for his ambitions. Reared on his mother's obsession with all things English, when he moved to Britain in his mid-twenties he expected to find himself adopted by a new country that was at once familiar and foreign. But his career led him down a different path. Receiving a call from NBC to fill in as their London correspondent, he began reporting for an American audience. By the early sixties, NBC convinced him to come to the United States, where he continued his broadcasts and eventually founded the highly acclaimed MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour at PBS." "In these years Robert MacNeil was witness to many of the events that shaped the last century - the erection of the Berlin Wall, Kennedy's election and assassination, the Cuban Missile Crisis, Watergate - and finally the events of September 11, 2001. As a trenchant and respected newsman, he reported world issues to the American public not only from an American perspective, but with that of the Canadian values which informed his youth. He also weighed the issue of citizenship: To which country did he really belong? After living in the United States for more than thirty years, MacNeil returned to his country of birth in the mid 1990s and he found much changed - multiculturalism and diversity had caused Canadian culture to blossom in his absence."--BOOK JACKET. Distributed by Syndetic Solutions, Inc.
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