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Topic: Susan Stamberg


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In the News (Sun 29 Nov 09)

  
  Susan Stamberg - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Susan Stamberg (born 7 September 1938 in Newark, New Jersey) is an American radio journalist, currently a Special Correspondent for National Public Radio and guest host for Weekend Edition Saturday.
Each Thanksgiving, she is also known for providing NPR listeners with her mother-in-law's recipe for a cranberry relish sauce that is noteworthy for having horseradish as one of its principal ingredients.
She is married to Louis C. Stamberg, retired from the Department of State's Agency for International Development in Washington.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Susan_Stamberg   (202 words)

  
 Susan Stamberg Speaker - Booking Keynote Speaker for Corporate, Meeting Event - Contact Susan Stamberg   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Stamberg is the first woman to anchor a national nightly news program, and has won every major award in broadcasting.
Stamberg now serves as guest host of NPR's Morning Edition and Weekend Edition/Saturday, and reports on cultural issues for all NPR programs.
Stamberg is one of the pioneers of National Public Radio, on staff since the network began in 1971.
www.grabow.biz /printable_pages/SusanStamberg.htm   (470 words)

  
 Third Coast International Audio Festival // Chicago Public Radio
Susan Stamberg's history in radio may be well-known, but bears repetition.
Susan's strong presence on the air—and that laughter—impressed me and inspired me through the next few years when various male news directors told me directly or implied strongly that I would find no future on the radio.
Part of Susan Stamberg's fingerprint is just the 'normal-ness' of her voice, her personality, her curiosity on the air.
www.thirdcoastfestival.org /behind_scenes_stamberg.asp   (776 words)

  
 Radio Royalty   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
When Susan Stamberg visited San Diego June In a way, she is the queen of radio.
Stamberg launched her literary career with "Every Night at Five: Susan Stamberg's All Things Considered Book" and followed with "The Wedding Cake in the Middle of the Road: 23 Variations on a Theme" (co-edited with George Garrett).
Stamberg may not be the official queen of radio, but her stately behavior proved why so many listeners consider her royalty.
www.radioguide.com /sdrad/radroyal.html   (714 words)

  
 City Pulse at Lansing.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Stamberg was in Greater Lansing on Monday for a series of appearances at Michigan State University arranged by the College of Arts and Letters.
Stamberg calls herself the "founding mother" of National Public Radio, where she started in 1972 as one of the original hosts of "All Things Considered," the two-hour evening news program.
Stamberg said "issues of journalism" concern her as the terrorism story unfolds.
www.lansingcitypulse.com /011017/011017stamberg.html   (427 words)

  
 Print Susan Stamberg Biography -- AEI Speakers Bureau
Susan Stamberg is the first woman to anchor a national nightly news program, and has won every major award in broadcasting.
Susan Stamberg is one of the pioneers of National Public Radio, on staff since the network began in 1971.
Susan Stamberg is married to Louis C. Stamberg, recently retired from the Department of State's Agency for International Development in Washington.
www.aeispeakers.com /print.php?SpeakerID=960   (475 words)

  
 AIArchitect, June 2001 - Stamberg Addresses Creating Community
In preparing for her talk, which was themed "Leadership, Community, and the Built Environment," Stamberg said she reflected on how NPR broadcasts build a "community without walls or structure," and how when listeners meet, a bond is formed instantly.
Stamberg spoke of the acute angle formed in pink marble that visitors are so compelled to touch that it has grayed with fingerprint oil.
Stamberg asked the architects present to create places that are flexible enough to take on different uses throughout their existence and are able to "let diversity [created by building users themselves] happen.
www.aia.org /aiarchitect/thismonth/0601stories/0601themestamberg.htm   (422 words)

  
 USATODAY.com - All things considered, NPR is a 'union' shop   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Susan Stamberg is slightly embarrassed by the list she has kept for the past 30 years.
Stamberg says that even though the vast majority of couples are still together, some colleagues got a bit obsessive about the whole thing — insisting that asterisks accompany divorces and deaths.
Stamberg, who was married before her NPR days, says the most unions have come from Edwards' a.m.
www.usatoday.com /life/columnist/mediamix/2002-10-01-media-mix_x.htm   (357 words)

  
 NPR : Susan Stamberg
Stamberg is one of the pioneers of NPR, on staff since the network began in 1971.
Stamberg is the author of two books, and co-editor of a third.
Stamberg has hosted a number of series on PBS, moderated three Fred Rogers television specials for adults, served as commentator, guest or co-host on various commercial TV programs, and appeared as a narrator in performance with the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra and the National Symphony Orchestra.
www.npr.org /about/people/bios/sstamberg.html   (609 words)

  
 Radio Hall of Fame - Susan Stamberg, Newscaster
Susan Stamberg, Special Correspondent for National Public Radio, was the first woman to anchor a national nightly news program on a regular basis.
Stamberg earned a bachelor’s degree from Barnard College and has been awarded numerous honorary degrees, including a Doctor of Humane Letters from Dartmouth College.
Susan Stamberg was inducted into the Radio Hall of Fame in 1996.
www.radiohof.org /news/susanstamberg.html   (221 words)

  
 KENNEDY LECTURE SERIES HOSTS SUSAN STAMBERG   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Stamberg, who is appearing as part of the Kennedy Lecture Series, will focus on the theme, "The Medium is the 'Massage.'" After her talk, the broadcaster will take questions from the audience.
Stamberg served as co-host of NPR's award-winning news magazine "All Things Considered" for 14 years beginning in 1972.
Stamberg is the author of two books, "TALK: NPR's Susan Stamberg Considers All Things" (Turtle Bay Press/Random House, 1993) and "Every Night at Five: Susan Stamberg's ALL THINGS CONSIDERED Book" (Pantheon, 1982).
www.ohiou.edu /news/months/feb2001/180.html   (310 words)

  
 NPR, July 14, 1983
SUSAN STAMBERG: I read somewhere that he has said he himself can't play some of the music he writes.
SUSAN STAMBERG: Sorabji's music is a little like Debussy or Ravel - waves of sound as caressing as a warm summer shower.
The interview by NPR's Susan Stamberg was originally broadcast on National Public Radio's "All Things Considered®" on July 14, 1983, and is used with the permission of National Public Radio, Inc. Any unauthorized duplication is strictly prohibited.
www.michaelhabermann.com /articles/both/npr-stamberg.html   (946 words)

  
 About GreenMeans
Produced by Ken Ellis and hosted by NPR's Susan Stamberg, the award winning series is underwritten for a fourth year by the Richard and Rhoda Goldman Fund, a prominent philanthropic organization that annually awards the prestigious Goldman Environmental Prize.
Susan Stamberg, host of three seasons of GREEN MEANS, returns as the host for the fourth season.
Stamberg, who graduated from Barnard College, is a Fellow of Silliman College, Yale University and serves on the Board of the PEN/Faulkner Fiction Award Foundation.
gm.kqed.org /aboutus.html   (285 words)

  
 Susan Stamberg at Spokane Public Radio Sept 1999
Susan Stamberg meets Susan Cole, who lived for several years with fledgling radio station KPBX in her basement.
Those who gave their financial support to bring KPBX to the airwaves met with Susan Stamberg, and George Cole, the man who began the first version of KPBX back in the 1970s from his home basement.
Novelist E.L. Doctorow called Stamberg “the closest thing to an enlightened humanist on the radio,” because of her conversational style, sassy intelligence, and knack for finding an unusual angle to a story.
www.kpbx.org /events/00990923SS.htm   (487 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
STAMBERG: According to your work, things didn't get any better from the fourth to the thirteenth century, that you call a period of abandonment, when babies were actually turned over to others.
STAMBERG: The task of being a parent is filled with stress, from tending to a crying baby night after night to coping with the exhausting demands of a teenager.
STAMBERG: The oldest of 4 children, Peggy who doesn't want us to use her real name was born and raised in the North Shore area of Massachusetts in the 1930's and 40's.
www.well.com:70 /0/Community/cycle/pgm1   (6767 words)

  
 The Whole Kit and Caboodle (washingtonpost.com)
Susan Stamberg's House Came in a Kit, From the Beams to the Bolts.
Stamberg's current pride of place reflects the growing cachet of ready-to-assemble houses, both by those who consciously seek them out and those who learn later what they've got.
Indeed, when Carter and Margaret Griffin bought their own Maywood last year not far from the Stambergs, one of the first things she did was commission a 14-foot window box just like the one shown in 1920s catalogues.
www.geocities.com /Yosemite/Trails/9401/washpostsears.html   (1678 words)

  
 No Laughing Matter
In a highly unusual incident perhaps 20 years ago, Susan Stamberg, host of National Public Radio’s All These Considered program from 1972 to 1986, defended herself against charges that she laughed inappropriately in the course of interviewing a disabled person.
Stamberg’s on air persona, her self-control was short lived and she soon resumed her previous extravagance as well as her inappropriate laughter.
Stamberg has pioneered laughing as a way of turning the spotlight on herself and demonstrating that ordinary constraints don’t apply.
desip.igc.org /desip/NoLaughingMatter.html   (1404 words)

  
 NPR's Stamberg on 'intouch'   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Susan Stamberg is a nationally renowned broadcast journalist, and special correspondent.
Prior to joining NPR, she served as producer, program director, and general manager of NPR member station WAMU-FM/Washington, D.C. Stamberg is the author of two books, and co-editor of a third.
She is married to Louis C. Stamberg, recently retired from the Department of State's Agency for International Development in Washington.
www.ohiou.edu /news/00-01/313.html   (655 words)

  
 Bunk1home
Our very own Susan Stamberg is one of these stalwart veterans, and she joins us today to talk about her summer camp experience.
Susan, now I understand you had a mini-reunion last night with some of your summer camp friends from Camp...
STAMBERG: Well, what you do is you go out in the woods and we spread you around, and each of you sits at the base of a tree in the total pitch dark.
www.bunk1.com /press/news_NPR.asp   (6058 words)

  
 Speaker Page: Susan Stamberg -- Resourceful Women: A Library of Congress Symposium. June 19-20, 2003
Susan Stamberg's familiar voice informs and entertains a nationwide audience on National Public Radio, where her news stories and interviews have enlightened radio audiences for more than thirty years.
In 1972, Stamberg became the first woman to anchor a nightly news program, and for fourteen years she served as the cohost of the award-winning All Things Considered.
She is the recipient of all the major awards in broadcasting and has received numerous honorary degrees.
www.loc.gov /rr/women/stamberg.html   (221 words)

  
 Barnard College Newscenter
Today and tomorrow on MORNING EDITION, NPR special correspondent Susan Stamberg speaks with graduating seniors from the Manhattan school she herself attended in very different times.
STAMBERG: OK. So all of you had been at Barnard in orientation and then at classes for two weeks before the attacks.
I felt sort of this overwhelming sense that I could never be safe again living in New York, which was disturbing because I had this great new sort of profound love for the city, and at the same time, all I had really known of Manhattan was Manhattan in chaos.
www.barnard.edu /newnews/news051905.html   (885 words)

  
 MT&R | She Made It | Susan Stamberg
Susan Stamberg became the first woman to anchor full-time a national nightly news broadcast in the United States when she was named a cohost of All Things Considered on National Public Radio in 1972.
In 1963 Stamberg was inspired to work as a radio producer after she was told that a producer “is someone who doesn’t take no for an answer.” She served as program director, producer, and general manager of WAMU-FM in Washington, DC, until 1966.
Stamberg works to find an interesting story in any interview she does and has discovered that feelings and conflicts are the important aspects in news stories she works on.
www.shemadeit.org /meet/biography.aspx?m=52   (718 words)

  
 Barnard College: Alumna in Action
Susan Levitt Stamberg '59 at the 2002 opening of NPR's new production facility in Culver City, CA.
Susan Levitt Stamberg '59, special correspondent for National Public Radio (NPR), has perhaps the most recognizable voice on the air.
But most of all I'm proud of our son [actor Joshua C. Stamberg] and how talented he is. He will be in an episode of USA Networks's "Monk" on August 8.
alum.barnard.edu /site/PageServer?pagename=alu_act_0903stamberg   (847 words)

  
 Mama Stamberg's Cranberry Relish   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
to Susan Stamberg on NPR for many years, and for at least twenty of them I've listened to her give her mother-in-law's cranberry relish recipe just before Thanksgiving.
Last year, driving to school, I heard her talk about the recipe with two guys working in a market in Seattle while they were throwing fish to each other.
Susan Stamberg, Denise Konicek, and Rodney Lister after recording "Mama Stamberg's Cranberry Relish" at the WGBH studios, Boston, September 2000.
www.rodneylister.com /relish.html   (136 words)

  
 USI: English Department--Julia Galbus, Ph.D.
On December 16, 2003, National Public Radio aired a piece by Susan Stamberg, part of a series the reporter is doing on people’s sense of “home.” This was the response I sent to NPR.
Stamberg interviewed her neighbors in Washington D.C., author Howard Norman and poet Jane Shore, to discuss how they repossessed their sense of “home” after a tragedy.
Stamberg mentions an image from one of Shore’s poems, a bar of soap with thick fl hair on it, as if Shore’s red hair would be tainted by the foreign hair belonging to the dead woman.
www.usi.edu /libarts/ENGLISH/JGalbus2.asp   (577 words)

  
 Newsletters - California Women Lawyers   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
She was the first woman to anchor a nightly news broadcast and has won every major broadcasting award, including induction into the Radio Hall of Fame, the Armstrong and Dupont Awards, the Edward R. Murrow Award from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, and the Distinguished Broadcaster Award from the American Women in Radio and Television.
Stamberg’s style has been called "fresh," "friendly, down-toearth," and (by novelist E.L. Doctorow) "the closest thing to an enlightened humanist on the radio." Her thousands of interviews include conversations with Nancy Reagan, Annie Liebowitz, Rosa Parks, Dave Brubeck, and James Baldwin.
Stamberg also co-edited The Wedding Cake in the Middle of the Road, which emerged from a series of stories she commissioned for NPR’s Weekend.
www.cwl.org /newsletters.shtml   (319 words)

  
 Current.org | Lyricism over Stamberg's cranberry relish
The chorus goes: "Shut up, Susan, go away, it won't be any loss, if we never hear again about your goddamn cranberry sauce." You can hear it at www.bluecanyonproductions.com/satire.html.
Terr admits that he was too muzzy with sleep when he wrote the song to recall that Stamberg's recipe is a relish, not a sauce.
Swan song is an apt turn of phrase, because, this year, NPR's listeners heard the relish recipe delivered not in Stamberg's distinctive voice, but by soprano Denise Konicek in the key of A minor.
www.current.org /people/peop022cran.html   (527 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Talk: Npr's Susan Stamberg Considers All Things: Books: Susan Stamberg   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The first woman to anchoar a national nightly news program, Stamberg brought her inimitable style to National Public Radio in 1971 and helped it grow into an influential network with a weekly audience of 15 million -- and in the process she helped transform broadcast news.
This rich collection of 85 interviews conducted by Stamberg (Every Night at Five) for National Public Radio's news show, All Things Considered, is a browser's delight.
Stamberg's easygoing manner is deceptive; her finely honed style soon disarms her subjects into opening up (with the exception of Nancy Reagan, whose glacial veneer even Stamberg failed to pierce).
www.amazon.com /Talk-Susan-Stamberg-Considers-Things/dp/0399518738   (632 words)

  
 Susan Stamberg - KJZZ 91.5 FM - Your NPR News Station   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Susan Stamberg - KJZZ 91.5 FM - Your NPR News Station
Susan Stamberg was the first woman ever to host a national daily news program.
Stamberg was there for every major news event from Watergate to Vietnam, from John Lennon's death to the Challenger disaster.
kjzz.org /programs/hereandnow/comments/49   (285 words)

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