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・ Harry Butterworth
・ Harry Buxton
・ Harry Buxton Forman
・ Harry Byrd
・ Harry Byrd (baseball)
・ Harry Byrne
・ Harry Bähre
・ Harry C. Aderholt
・ Harry C. Adriance
・ Harry C. and Jessie F. Franzheim House
・ Harry C. Baker
・ Harry C. Beasley
・ Harry C. Bentley
・ Harry C. Bradley
・ Harry C. Bradley (actor)
Harry C. Butcher
・ Harry C. Canfield
・ Harry C. Carver
・ Harry C. Claiborne
・ Harry C. Clark
・ Harry C. Duncan House
・ Harry C. Egbert
・ Harry C. Foster
・ Harry C. Gahn
・ Harry C. Giese
・ Harry C. Goode, Jr.
・ Harry C. Hatch
・ Harry C. Ingles
・ Harry C. Katz
・ Harry C. Martin


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Harry C. Butcher : ウィキペディア英語版
Harry C. Butcher

Harry C. Butcher (November 1, 1901 - April 20, 1985) was a radio broadcaster who served during World War II as the Naval Aide to General Dwight D. Eisenhower from 1942 to 1945.
==Early life==

Butcher was born in Springville, Iowa on November 1, 1901. Following his graduation from Iowa State College, in 1929 Butcher began a career in radio broadcasting.〔"Backstage with Butcher" Time Magazine, May
6, 1946. (Retrieved April 28, 2009) http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,887051,00.html〕 He opened the Washington, D.C. office of CBS and served as its director until 1932. Beginning in 1932 he was the manager, and later vice-president, of the CBS Radio Network's station in Washington, D.C. station WJSV. While there, Butcher coined a term for President Franklin Roosevelt's radio speeches to the American public, referring to the May 7, 1933 address in a press release, as a "fireside chat".〔Russell D. Buhite and David W. Levy, eds., ''FDR's Fireside Chats'' (University of Oklahoma Press, 1992) p xv; "Fireside chats", ''Encyclopedia of Political Communication'' SAGE, 2008) pp243-244〕

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