Terry Drinkwater

Terry Drinkwater (May 9, 1936 May 31, 1989) was an American television and radio journalist most widely known for his quarter-century career as a correspondent for CBS News. Drinkwater was also an anchorman for the West Coast editions of the CBS Evening News, covering events that occurred after the East Coast version with Walter Cronkite aired.

Terry Drinkwater
Born(1936-05-09)May 9, 1936
Denver, Colorado, U.S.
DiedMay 31, 1989(1989-05-31) (aged 53)
EducationPomona College (1958), UC Berkeley (Master of Arts, 1959)
OccupationRadio and television news reporter and correspondent
EmployerCBS News (19631988)
AwardsThree Emmy Awards, Alfred I. duPont–Columbia University Award

Education

A native of Denver, Colorado, Drinkwater attended Pomona College, where he co-founded KSPC radio and earned a bachelor's degree[1] in 1958. The following year he received a Master of Arts at the a University of California at Berkeley.[2]

Radio career

Drinkwater's first major break in broadcasting came when he was hired in 1959 as general manager of Pacifica Radio KPFK-FM, a public station in Los Angeles.[3] Under his leadership KPFK won a Peabody Institutional Award the following year, in recognition of the station's programming.[4]

Television career

Drinkwater joined CBS News in 1963, after working as a reporter at television station KTLA in Los Angeles.[2] At CBS, his main assignment was as a regional correspondent,[1] "roaming the West from the Rocky Mountains to Alaska."[2] Drinkwater and fellow CBS News correspondent, Roger Mudd, were on scene in the Embassy Ballroom of the Ambassador Hotel in downtown Los Angeles in the early morning hours of June 5, 1968 when United States Senator Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated, he died the following day at Good Samaritan Hospital. He covered such notable events as the 1974 kidnapping of Patricia "Patty" Hearst and the 1980 eruption of Mount St. Helens.[5]

Drinkwater received three Emmy Awards and an Alfred I. duPont–Columbia University Award.[1] He once received a 90-day suspension from CBS for representing a wine-company employee as a satisfied customer.[6]

Death

Drinkwater filed his last report for CBS News in August 1988. He died at his home in Malibu, California at the age of 53[5] after a six-year battle with cancer. At the time of his death, he was senior correspondent in the Los Angeles Bureau of CBS News.

gollark: Well, your graph looks very graphical, I suppose.
gollark: Yes. It might not be possible to do anything but somehow optimize the genetic-algorithm-based approach then.
gollark: That sounds worrying.
gollark: If your problem actually is nice and differentiable - which it sounds like it *might* be, I think you're laying out cables or something? - then it should be a lot faster if you can use that instead of just moving around randomly.
gollark: "Borrow" a cutting-edge silicon fab and make your design on 5nm, for maximum good.

References

  1. "Terry Drinkwater, 53, Correspondent for CBS". The New York Times. June 1, 1989.
  2. Bigelow, Bruce V. (May 31, 1989). "Veteran CBS Journalist Terry Drinkwater Dead at 53". Associated Press.
  3. "Historical events at Pacifica". WBAI.net CdPNY.
  4. "Institutional Award: KPFK Radio for Locally Produced Programs". Peabody Award.
  5. "CBS's Terry Drinkwater Dies". The Washington Post. June 1, 1989. Archived from the original on May 16, 2011.
  6. Schaefer, Richard (1998). "The Development of the CBS News Guidelines During the Salant Years". Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media 42, 1998, pp. 1-20. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
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