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・ Sam Gannon
・ Sam Garba
・ Sam Gardel
・ Sam Gardiner
・ Sam Gargan
・ Sam Garnes
・ Sam Garrison
・ Sam Docherty
・ Sam Dockery
・ Sam Dodge
・ Sam Dodwell
・ Sam Dolan
・ Sam Dolgoff
・ Sam Domoni
・ Sam Donahue
Sam Donaldson
・ Sam Donnelly
・ Sam Dotson
・ Sam Douglas
・ Sam Doumany
・ Sam Doumit
・ Sam Dower
・ Sam Doyle
・ Sam Doyle (disambiguation)
・ Sam Dreben
・ Sam Drover
・ Sam Drucker
・ Sam Dryden
・ Sam Dubbin
・ Sam Duluk


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Sam Donaldson : ウィキペディア英語版
Sam Donaldson

Samuel Andrew "Sam" Donaldson, Jr.〔(Film Reference biography )〕 (born March 11, 1934) is an American reporter and news anchor, serving with ABC News from 1967 to 2013. He is best known as the network's White House Correspondent (1977–89 and 1998–99) and as a panelist and later co-anchor of the network's Sunday program, ''This Week''.
==Early life and career==
Donaldson was born in El Paso, Texas, the son of Chloe (née Hampson), a school teacher, and Samuel Donaldson, a farmer. He grew up on the family farm in Chamberino, New Mexico, which his father had bought in 1910, two years before New Mexico was admitted to the Union.
He attended New Mexico Military Institute as well as Texas Western College (now known as University of Texas at El Paso) where he served as station manager of KTEP, the campus radio station, and joined the Kappa Sigma Fraternity.〔(KTEP history )〕 From 1956 to 1959, Donaldson served on active duty as an artillery officer in the United States Army, attaining the rank of Captain (USAR). While on active duty in 1958, Donaldson was one of the military observers of an atomic test in the Nevada testing grounds when an atomic device with a yield roughly equivalent to the bombs dropped on Japan was detonated three thousand yards away from the slit trench which protected the observers.
Following military service, Donaldson was hired by KRLD-TV (now KDFW-TV), the then-CBS television affiliate in Dallas, Texas. After a year, he resigned and moved to New York City to look for a job in broadcast news. He failed to get one.
He was hired by WTOP-TV (currently WUSA-TV) in Washington, D.C., in February 1961. He covered both local and national stories, including the Goldwater Presidential campaign in 1964, the Senate debates on the civil rights bill in March 1964, and the Medicare bill the next year. He anchored the 6 PM Saturday and Sunday evening newscasts with John Douglas doing the weather forecasts.

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