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・ Richard Heeks
・ Richard Heermance
・ Richard Heffer
・ Richard Heffner
・ Richard Hefter
・ Richard Heidrich
・ Richard Harding Watt
・ Richard Hardinge
・ Richard Hardisty
・ Richard Hardman
・ Richard Hardstaff
・ Richard Hardy
・ Richard Hare (bishop)
・ Richard Hargrave
・ Richard Harison
Richard Harkness
・ Richard Harlan
・ Richard Harland
・ Richard Harliston
・ Richard Harman
・ Richard Harman (journalist)
・ Richard Harman (politician)
・ Richard Harmon
・ Richard Harned
・ Richard Harold Steinberg
・ Richard Harpin
・ Richard Harries, Baron Harries of Pentregarth
・ Richard Harrington
・ Richard Harrington (actor)
・ Richard Harrington (photographer)


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Richard Harkness : ウィキペディア英語版
Richard Harkness

Richard C. Harkness (1907-February 16, 1977) was an American journalist. He was the Washington correspondent for NBC from December 1942 to 1970. In the 1940s he had a 15-minute Monday-Friday newscast on NBC radio.〔Alicoate, Jack, Ed. (1947). ''The 1947 Radio Annual''. Radio Daily Corp. P. 118.〕 Before going into broadcasting, Harkness was the Washington correspondent for the Philadelphia Inquirer. Journalism scholar Edward Bliss Jr. wrote that Harkness "suggested that (Franklin D. ) Roosevelt include freedom from fear in his 'Four Freedoms' speech before Congress in January 1941."〔Bliss, Edward Jr. (1992). ''Now the News: The Story of Broadcast Journalism''. Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231044035. P. 165.〕
Harkness had the first regularly scheduled NBC television newscast from Washington. He interviewed government officials on the 15-minute weekly program, which began January 7, 1948. Beginning January 14, 1952, he had a Monday-Friday 11:45-noon (Eastern Time) newscast from Washington on NBC.
Harkness headed the national Radio Correspondents Association in 1945. On November 8, 1960, Harkness joined newsmen Chet Huntley and David Brinkley at the anchor desk for the NBC News coverage of the Kennedy-Nixon election night returns. Harkness' roll was explaining to viewers the use of computer vote tabulation, relatively new at that time, by the RCA 501 computer. NBC, at that time, was a branch of the RCA corporation.
Harkness, retiring from NBC in 1972, later joined President Gerald R. Ford's anti-drug abuse program as press representative. 〔Cox, Jim (2013). ''Radio Journalism in America: Telling the News in the Golden Age and Beyond''. Mcfarland & Company, Inc. ISBN 978-0-7864-6963-5. P. 189.〕
==References==


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