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Linda Cavanaugh is an award-winning newscaster for NBC affiliate KFOR-TV (channel 4), in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.〔http://www.kfor.com/about/station/newsteam/kfor-anchor-linda-cavanaugh-bio,0,1429658.story〕 Cavanaugh anchors the station's weeknight 6:00 and 10:00PM newscasts with Kevin Ogle, and is solo anchor of the 4:30PM newscast. == Journalism == Linda Cavanaugh began her career in 1978 as a general assignment reporter and news photographer at KFOR-TV, before becoming the station's first female evening news co-anchor in the early 1980s. George Washington University honored her for a special report in the late 1980s, in which Cavanaugh was the first non-network journalist from the United States allowed in the Soviet Union under their new "glasnost". The report concerned how much of Oklahoma's wheat crop was ending up on the tables of Russian families. She was awarded the Weintal Prize for Diplomatic Reporting. In the early 1990s, Cavanaugh became the first television journalist allowed to photograph ancient Indian rituals that had been closed to tribal non-members, shown in the 12-part series "Strangers In Their Own Land". In 1995, Cavanaugh went to Vietnam and became the first American journalist allowed in the Hanoi Hilton, a POW camp where many American officers spent their final days. She was accompanied by former POW Dan Glenn, a Navy pilot who spent six years there as a prisoner. Cavanaugh was also known for her investigative reports in the late 1990s on health conditions inside Oklahoma restaurants called "Behind Kitchen Doors", which resulted in changes in the law and moved lawmakers to open inspection records of the Oklahoma Department of Health and Human Services so consumers could be aware of health code violations in restaurants. She made a cameo appearance as herself on NBC's series "The Event" in the episode titled "Your World to Take." 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Linda Cavanaugh」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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