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・ Ranger 8
・ Ranger 9
・ Ranger APC
・ Ranger Assault Group
・ Ranger Assessment and Selection Program
・ Ranger Award
・ Ranger Bill
・ Ranger Bill Miller
・ Ranger Boats
・ Ranger Body Armor
・ Ranger Bridge
・ Ranger Challenge Tab
・ Ranger College
・ Ranger Creed
・ Ranger Districts in US National Forests
Ranger Hal
・ Ranger High School (Texas)
・ Ranger Independent School District
・ Ranger L-440
・ Ranger Lake
・ Ranger Memorial
・ Ranger Mountains
・ Ranger Nitros
・ Ranger of Cherokee Strip
・ Ranger of Windsor Great Park
・ Ranger Peak
・ Ranger Peak (California)
・ Ranger Peak (disambiguation)
・ Ranger Peak (Idaho)
・ Ranger program


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Ranger Hal : ウィキペディア英語版
Ranger Hal

''Ranger Hal'' was a children's television program that originated in Washington, DC, on WTOP-TV Channel 9 (now WUSA), a station owned by ''The Washington Post'' newspaper. It aired from 1957 to 1969 in a weekday and Saturday morning timeslot. It was hosted by Hal Shaw (1925–1999), a local television personality who created and produced the show.
The title character, Ranger Hal, was a fictional US Forest Service Ranger who was assigned to an unnamed national forest. He befriended various local animals (represented by puppets) including Oswald (or Ossie) the Rabbit, Dr. Fox, and Eager Beaver. Shaw voiced all the characters, but a staff of puppeteers animated them. Some of the puppeteers went on to greater fame, including Barry Levinson and Max Robinson.
After the initial success of the show on WTOP, ''The Washington Post'' replicated the concept at their Jacksonville, Florida affiliate, WJXT Channel 4. ''The Ranger Hal Show'' ran from 1958 through 1969, starring Henry Baran (the stage name of Henry Baranek, 1927–1979). Running in a similar timeslot, it was popular with adults as well as children, and maintained good viewing numbers for nearly its entire run.
When the original show ended in 1969, Hal Shaw was promoted to WTOP management. In 1978, he suffered from a brain aneurysm that left him permanently disabled. In 1985, the Forest Service made him an honorary Ranger. He retired to his farm near Great Falls, Virginia, where he died from cancer in 1999.
==External links==

*(Fan site Ranger Hal, DC )
*(Fan site Ranger Hal, Jacksonville )


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「Ranger Hal」の詳細全文を読む



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