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Chris Clark (reporter) : ウィキペディア英語版
Chris Clark (reporter)

Chris Clark (real name Chris Botsaris, born December 9, 1938〔http://www.capitol.tn.gov/Bills/105/Bill/SJR0556.pdf〕) was the lead news anchor at WTVF (NewsChannel5) in Nashville, Tennessee. He had been a consistent anchor at the station since 1966, but retired on May 23, 2007 after 41 years, making him one of the longest-tenured anchors in American television history. In the earlier years of his tenure, Clark also served as the News Director.〔("Look Back 2007: Chris Clark Retired" - News Channel 5 )〕
==Biography==
Clark was born as Chris Botsaris on December 9, 1938 in Atlanta, Georgia. The grandson of a Greek immigrant, he graduated from North Fulton High School. As a teenager he worked bussing tables at his father's Eagle
Café, across the street from the offices of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Chris heard colorful stories from the reporters that frequented the restaurant, and decided to become a reporter himself, graduating from the University of Georgia's School of Journalism in 1962. He was a member of Alpha Tau Omega. He was asked to change his last name from Botsaris to Clark before joining WALB in Albany, Georgia in 1961, and would go on to anchor and report the news at an ABC affiliate in Atlanta from 1964-1966, until an executive from WTVF (then called WLAC-TV) invited him to Nashville to interview for lead news anchor. He would serve as lead news anchor from 1966 until his retirement on May 23, 2007.
Among the countries documented in his reporting: Somalia, Great Britain, the Soviet Union, Israel, Puerto Rico, and the Dominican Republic.
He also was involved in a crisis situation when Tennessee Governor Buford Ellington called him in to mediate the release of hostages held by an inmate at the state penitentiary.
During his time as news director at WTVF, he was a part of the station's conversion from film to electronic news coverage. Shortly before his retirement the station became the first in the Nashville market to broadcast in High Definition.
As chair of the Society of Professional Journalists Freedom of Information Committee, Chris played a role in convincing the Tennessee Supreme Court to allow an experiment with cameras in the court. That experiment persuaded the justices to allow cameras in state courts.
He is currently a teacher at Middle Tennessee State University in the Mass Communications Department.

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