In 1972 she became the first woman to anchor a national evening news broadcast. She retired this summer after 50 years on the ...
LAist on MSN
NPR ‘founding mother’ Susan Stamberg has died
Remembering trailblazing NPR broadcaster Susan Stamberg — her pioneering voice, legacy in journalism, and impact on public ...
The Forward on MSN
Susan Stamberg, iconic Jewish ‘founding mother’ of NPR, dies at 87
When Susan Stamberg first sat behind the microphone to host a newfangled broadcasting venture called National Public Radio, in 1972, some board members had a concern: She sounded too Jewish. To ...
Susan Stamberg, who became the first woman in the U.S. to anchor a nightly national news program with NPR's "All Things ...
The future of AM radio as we know it is coming to an end,' Morris O'Kelly said after cutbacks at KFI-AM (640) resulted in the ...
Starting life as a humble Mercedes-Benz 190E, Affalterbach, Germany-based HWA AG transforms it into a four-second supercar.
Newser on MSN
'Founding Mother' of NPR Dead at 87
Susan Stamberg, a pioneering voice at NPR and the first woman to anchor a national evening news broadcast in the US, has died ...
NPR's Susan Stamberg was a longtime champion of visual arts coverage, but she had to invent new ways to do it on the radio.
Susan Stamberg, who died Thursday. She was the first woman to host a national news broadcast and set the tone, pace, and ...
Susan Stamberg, a 'founding mother' of National Public Radio and the first female broadcaster to host a national news program, has died. She was 87.
NPR's Ari Shapiro speaks with correspondent and former All Things Considered and Weekend Edition host, Susan Stamberg, about her career as she retires from the network this week.
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