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Eric Sevareid's Not So Wild A Dream DVD

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The Distinguished CBS News Journalist Recounts His Extraordinary Journey From Being A Dedicated Anti-War Student Radical At The University Of Minnesota To Being A Confirmed Military Interventionist When As A CBS News Radio Correspondent He Saw First Hand The Evils Of Fascist Militarism In 1930s Europe, Presented In The Highest DVD Quality MPG Video Format Of 9.1 MBPS As An Archival Quality All Regions Format DVD! (Color, 1988, 53 Minutes.) #EricSevareid #Journalists #NewsJournalist #CBSNews #CBS #MurrowsBoys #Commentators #RadioCommentators #TVCommentators #PoliticalAnalysts #RadioPoliticalAnalysts #TVRadioPoliticalAnalysts #Editorialists #RadioEditorialists #TVEditorialists #Journalists #RadioJournalists #TVJournalists #BroadcastJournalists #FallOfParis #ChinaBurmaIndiaTheater #CBI #WorldWarII #WWII #WW2 #WorldWarTwo #WorldWar2 #SecondWorldWar #SecondEuropeanWar #EuropeanCivilWar #PacificWar #AsiaPacificWar #AsiaticPacificTheater #Journalism #RadioJournalism #TVJournalistm #BroadcastJournalism #Journalism #Radio #RadioHistory #HistoryOfRadio #Television #TelevisionHistory #HistoryOfTelevision#TV #TVHistory #HistoryOfTV #DVD

Eric Sevareid, American radio and television journalist (November 26, 1912 - July 9, 1992) was born Arnold Eric Sevareid in Velva in in central North Dakota. Several days after he graduated from high school, he and his friend Walter Port embarked on an expedition by canoe from Minneapolis to York Factory on Hudson Bay, sponsored by the Minneapolis Star newspaper (now The Star Tribune). While attending the University of Minnesota, he was an activist against ROTC recruitment on campus. He was one of a group of elite war correspondents hired by pioneering CBS newsman Edward R. Murrow, and thus dubbed "Murrow's Boys". He was the first to report the fall of Paris when it was captured by the Germans during World War II. Traveling into Burma during World War II, his aircraft was shot down and he was rescued from behind enemy lines by a search and rescue team established for that purpose. He was the final journalist to interview Adlai Stevenson before his death. After a long and distinguished career, he followed in Murrow's footsteps as a commentator on the CBS Evening News for 12 years for which he was recognized with Emmy and Peabody Awards. Eric Sevareid died of stomach cancer at age 79 in Washington, D.C. on July 9, 1992.

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