|
George A. Kroen II: [ Age 78 ] Television cameraman and engineer started his career in the early days of WMAR-TV.
|
Byline: Frederick N. Rasmussen
Oct. 26--George A. Kroen II, a retired television cameraman and engineer whose career dated to the pioneering days of WMAR-TV, died of complications from a stroke Sunday at Sinai Hospital. The longtime Randallstown resident was 78.
Mr. Kroen was born in Baltimore and raised in Highlandtown and on his family's farm in Westminster. He was a 1946 graduate of Mount St. Joseph High School in Irvington. He also studied broadcast engineering at the Commercial Radio Institute.
In 1947, he began his broadcasting career as a staff announcer for ...
Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research
(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)
|
Say It Ain't So, Baltimore
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post
; One aspect of dear old Baltimore that for some reason is too little...Mother Teresa. From time to time Baltimore likes to swagger and strut, pretending...other players in the urban power game Baltimore's customary refrain is: "What have...
|
|
Recruiters Aim to Make Baltimore Attractive to Businesses, Academic Stars.
Newspaper article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News
; The Baltimore Sun Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News Mar. 13--For those who love it, Baltimore has many charms. But for some not personally...Philadelphia. Sad to say, Owens is not alone. Baltimore can be a tough sell, recruiters say. Those...
|
|
Biologist Baltimore to Lead Caltech; Defense of Colleague in Fraud Probe Stalled Nobel Laureate's Career
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post
; David Baltimore, the Nobel Prize-winning biologist whose...latest step in a career turnabout for Baltimore, who in 1991 resigned from the presidency...leading many observers to conclude that Baltimore had been wrongly dragged through the...
|
|
Ravens shine light on hometown; Comeback city: Baltimore battles negative image
Newspaper article from: Telegraph - Herald (Dubuque)
; BALTIMORE - Baltimore's been called a lot of things over the years, not all of them nice...and energetic 38-year-old mayor, Martin O'Malley, has been calling Baltimore the "City of Champions." Last year, the mayor, who also fronts an Irish...
|
|
Baltimore to slash 400 jobs as pounds 18m loss is revealed
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London
; Baltimore Technologies, once the great hope of the British technology...business. The announcement will come on Wednesday when Baltimore is expected to reveal a half-year pre-tax loss of pounds...largest computer- security software maker. In March 2000, Baltimore was a FTSE 100 company with a market ...
|
|
MIT'S BALTIMORE ACCEPTS POSITION AS HEAD OF ROCKEFELLER UNIVERSITY
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe
; CAMBRIDGE - David Baltimore, the Nobel Prize-winning director...meet faculty critics there head-on. Baltimore, who was cited as an outside candidate...nhattan's Upper East Side, who fretted over Baltimore's well-publicized involvement in a...
|
|
MIT laureate to lead Caltech Baltimore weathered data dispute
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe
; Nobel laureate David Baltimore, a preeminent biologist and science...Boston area, was made yesterday as Baltimore was presented to the faculty at Caltech...on the outskirts of Los Angeles. Baltimore, 59, said in an interview that he...
|
|
Neighboring Cities On Different Roads; D.C. Rebounds as Baltimore Struggles
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post
; For decades, Washington and Baltimore seemed to share a common fate, watching their populations...Washington is turning around, census figures show, while Baltimore's numbers continue to slide. Baltimore has resorted to running ads that urge D.C. residents...
|
|
Neighboring Cities On Different Roads; D.C. Succeeding, Baltimore Struggling at Revival, Census Finds [ Corrected 6/5/02 ]
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post
; For decades, Washington and Baltimore seemed to share a common fate, watching their populations...Washington is turning around, census figures show, while Baltimore's numbers continue to slide. Baltimore has resorted to running ads that urge D.C. residents...
|
|
Baltimore Uses Midwest Advantage to Gain Back Cargo Lost During '80s. (Originated from Traffic World)
Newspaper article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News
; BALTIMORE--Sep. 13--Baltimore continued its competitive rebound for the fourth consecutive quarter...connections into the large Midwestern market, port analysts said. The Baltimore advantage in the port's continuing competitive battle with arch...
|
For more facts and information,
see all results
Find more facts and information related to the article "George A. Kroen II: [ Age 78 ] Television ..."