Morton Dean (born Morton Dean Dubitsky), 88, is a retired television and radio anchor, news correspondent, and author. He is a former weekend news anchor for CBS Evening News, as well as ABC’s Good Morning America. While a correspondent for CBS News for 20 years and ABC News for 14 years, his many assignments included the U.S. space program, political campaigns and the Vietnam War. Dean received numerous awards for his reporting, including a National Emmy Award, an Overseas Press Club Award, and a UPI Golden Mike.
— Wikipedia
Quote: “Putting himself in harm’s way, Dean reported on the invasion of Grenada, the Falklands War, and Cuba from the early days of the Castro regime up to the present. He reported on Iran during the hostage crisis, from Somalia during the U.S. intervention, the turmoil in Israel and the Palestinian Territory, and the military action in Kosovo involving U. S. Marines. He covered Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, the NATO air attacks in Belgrade, the terror bomb blast on the USS Cole bombing in Yemen, the bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi, and the U.S. retaliation in Sudan, as well as the first terrorist attacks on World Trade Center in 1993.”
— artspeak.fiu.edu
Learn more about Morton Dean from Wikipedia. ►
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Read “Morton Dean: TV News “Spiraling Down Into a Deep, Dark Ravine” [September 2009]. ►
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