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66 records found for Charles Collingwood
#16498: CBS YEAR-END REVIEW
Order1970-12-29, CBS, 57 min.
CBS Chief correspondents review the year's headlines in two one-hour programs. (December 27th and 29th.) This is part 2. Moderator Charles Collingwood leads a discussion about US involvement in Vietnam and Cambodia; the Paris peace talks; America's relationships with Russia and Red China; and revolutionary terrorist groups such as the Palestinian Guerillas. Correspondents: Eric Sevareid, Marvin Kalb, Richard C. Hottelet, Morley Safer, Peter Kallscher, Charles Collingwood.
1971-01-07, CBS, 26 min.
United Nations Middle East peace talks. 1970 US Vietnam casualty toll 4,204. Charles Collingwood subbing for Walter Cronkite.
1971-01-08, CBS, 29 min.
Featured, Walter Cronkite continues his interview with Anwar Sadat of Egypt. Soviet embassy bombed in Washington. Charles Collingwood subbing for Cronkite.
1971-02-16, CBS, min.
- Charles Collingwood
- Ho Chi Minh
- Marvin Kalb
- Don Webster
- Frank Church
- Nguyen Van Thieu
- Jed Duvall
- Melvin Laird
- Jeff Williams
- Bob Schieffer
CBS news special on the widening war in Laos and Cambodia. First of two parts.
#16415: CBS NEWS, THE
Order1971-12-27, CBS, 27 min.
Jimmy Hoffa returns to Detroit after parole. Hubert Humphrey appears at American Association For Advancement of Science conference. Host: Charles Collingwood.
1971-12-27, CBS, min.
Group leaves Washington for Peking ahead of Nixon. Group is led by Defense Secretary Ron Ziegler.
1971-12-27, CBS, 5 min.
Defense Secretary Melvin Laird speaks of North Vietnam raids. Laird sees no draft calls for first three months of 1972. Host: Charles Collingwood
1971-12-28, CBS, 28 min.
Northern Ireland report with Charles Kuralt. James Hoffa criticizes President Nixon for freezing wages. Charles Collingwood subs for Walter Cronkite.
1971-12-29, CBS, 28 min.
Major Floyd Kushner sends his family a Christmas letter. New York City Mayor John Lindsay campaigns in Wisconsin and calls bombings sheer madness. Charles Collingwood subbing for Walter Cronkite.
1972-04-17, CBS, 26 min.
CBS NEWS SPECIAL REPORT WITH CHARLES COLLINGWOOD. A summary of today's appearance of Secretary of State William P. Rogers before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee earlier in the day. Excerpts of that hearing are broadcast.
1972-08-15, CBS, 13 min.
Henry Kissinger undertaking general review of Vietnam problem. In Republican primaries, Rep. Paul McCloskey wins one delegate from New Mexico. Walter Cronkite reports from the Republican National Convention in Miami. Charles Collingwood reports from New York City.
1972-08-17, CBS, 29 min.
155th session of Paris peace talks. Heavy American bombing raids against North Vietnam. Walter Cronkite and Charles Collingwood report.
1972-08-18, CBS, min.
Walter Cronkite reports from the Miami Beach Convention Center. Charles Collingwood from New York City. Communist gunners shell United States Air Force base at Danang, South Vietnam. Hijacking to British Columbia, demands end to Vietnam war.
1973-01-08, CBS, 57 min.
- Walter Cronkite
- Charles Collingwood
- Eric Sevareid
- Richard Nixon
- Dan Rather
- Marvin Kalb
- Roger Mudd
- Daniel Schorr
"NIXON: THE NEXT FOUR YEARS--THE CORRESPONDENTS REPORT" CBS SPECIAL BROADCAST (Video Tape). Walter Cronkite is anchor for a roundtable discussion by a group of seven CBS correspondents on what might be expected from President Nixon's second administration, projecting both domestic and foreign planning and actions, and comparing the future to what has happened during the past four years. The correspondents are Eric Sevareid, Dan Rather, Charles Collingwood, Marvin Kalb, Roger Mudd and Daniel Schorr, with Cronkite as the seventh in the discussion.
1977-04-20, CBS, 60 min.
Comparison of the United States and Soviet military preparedness and capabilities. Weapons are assessed that could give the United States the edge.
1977-08-31, CBS, 180 min.
- Walter Cronkite
- Charles Collingwood
- Richard Wagner
- Bruce Dunning
- George Herman
- Morton Dean
- Jimmy Carter
- Nelson Benton
- Mike Lee
- Bob Schieffer
- Brock Adams
- James Schlesinger
- Carroll Wilson
- William Simon
- Skeik Yamani
- Melvin Calvin
- Eric Engberg
- Davie Culhane
- Phil Jones
Three hour CBS SPECIAL report on the energy crisis in the United States and how it is perceived by the experts and the US public. Walter Cronkite is the anchorman. This Special pre-emts the entire nighttime schedule from 8 to 11, "WHERE WE STAND: ENERGY." President Jimmy Carter's energy plan is examined, energy experts and officials give their opinions on the proposals and alternatives. Speakers include Secretary of Energy James Schlesinger; Dr. Carroll Wilson, Director of the Workshop on Alternative Energy Strategies; William Simon; and Skeik Yamani, Saudi Arabia's Oil Minister. Oil supply, off-shore drilling, breakdown of oil consumption, OPEC policies, and alternative sources of shale oil and LNG are discussed. Walter Cronkite summarizes and coal production is highlighted. The second hour examines the coal industry and sulfur pollution, followed by a review of pilot projects on the energy alternatives of gasified coal, liquefaction, fluidized bed combustion and solvent refining. Nuclear power is examined and opposition to nuclear plants in studied. Detroit's efforts to comply with new federal energy conserving regulations are explored, and Secretary of Transportation Brock Adams speaks. Walter Cronkite summarizes this hour. The trend toward home insulation is reviewed and use of solar energy is noted. In the final hour, Bob Schieffer speaks with President Jimmy Carter, who explains his energy proposals. The program continues with looks at the political infighting over the energy plan and the Ford Foundation's "no growth" energy report. Energy alternatives are explored, and Dr. Melvin Calvin discusses photosynthesis. Energy sources of hydrogen gas and OTEC (Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion), satellite power stations, geothermal energy, and laser fusion are explored. Walter Cronkite summarizes energy as "the invisible crisis." A CBS News Poll is conducted to determine how much public support exists for a program that President Jimmy Carter announced only last April stating it must be pursued powerfully as the "Moral equivalent of war." This broadcast is the eighth "Where We Stand" series which began in January 1958.