Amerikai Magyar Hírlap, 2009 (21. évfolyam, 1-50. szám)
2009-03-06 / 9. szám
A MŰSORBAN FELLÉPNEK: KOÓSJÁNOS mindenki kedvenc énekese Budapestről DÉKÁNY SAROLTA éS KOÓS RÉKA előadóművészek Tiszteletbeli Fővédnökök: BOKOR BALÁZS nagykövet, Los Angeles-i Főkonzul ANDREW FRIEDMAN ügyvéd, L.A. City Commissioner Belépő: személyenként $150.-. JEGYRENDELÉS: Csárdás Étterem, 5820 Melrose Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90038 Tel. (323) 962-6434 * FAX: 323.962.5680 Jancsó Julius 323.842-3235 * Hírlap - Jancsó Zsuzsa 323.463.6376 1989. március 15-én a Los Angeles-i magyar közösség új magyar hetilappal gazdagodott. Az Amerikai Magyar Hírlap 12 oldalon jelent meg, hazai és helyi hírekkel, eseményekkel, interjúkkal, egy angol oldallal. Az indulásnál a főszerkesztő Szegedi László volt, a kiadók: Jancsó Julius és Reksz Ilona, az Angol Oldalt Jancsó Zsuzsa szerkesztette. Az újság az idők során fejlődött és változott. 1994-től Jancsó Zsuzsa vette át a főszerkesztői posztot, 2003-tól a 12 oldal közül négy színesben jelenik meg. A Hírlapot öt világrészre küldjük szét, Budapesten épp olyan jól ismerik mint New Yorkban vagy Los Angelesben. Reméljük örömmel olvassák lapunkat minden héten, és megtisztelnek jelenlétükkel a huszadik évforduló alkalmából rendezett bálon. Felejthetetlen élmény lesz ez a bál az elegáns Biltmore Hotelben. A kitűnő hangulat garantált! American Hungarian Journal 20th Anniversary Gala Ball at the Biltmore Saturday, March 21, 2009 from 6 pm Paul Harvey, who was long considered the most-listened-to radio broadcaster in the world and whose distinctive delivery of news, commentary and human interest stories informed and entertained a national radio audience for nearly 60 years, died Saturday. He was 90. Harvey, called “the voice of Middle America” and “the voice of the Silent Majority” by the media for his flag-waving conservatism and championing of traditional values, died at a hospital near his winter home in Phoenix. The Chicago-based Harvey was syndicated on more than 1,200 radio stations nationally and 400 Armed Forces Radio stations around the world. His wife, Lynne Harvey, a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Washington University, was her husband’s strongest supporter and his closest professional collaborator. She died last year after nearly 58 years of marriage. Since the death of his beloved “Angel”, Harvey had not been on the air on a daily basis, but he did do some prerecorded segments. His son, Paul Harvey Jr., had been filling in as host. He was born Paul Harvey Aurandt in Tülsa, Okla., on Sept. 4, 1918. His father was a Tulsa police officer who was killed in the line of duty when Harvey was 3, and Harvey’s mother raised him and his sister. (He dropped his last name for professional reasons, because, he said “no one could spell it.”) Coming of professional age in the late 1930s and the 1940s, a time when broadcasters such as Lowell Thomas and Gabriel Heatter were household names, Harvey continued to flourish in the era of Howard Stern and Rush Limbaugh. * For more than 50 years, beginning in 1951, ABC Radio Network listeners were greeted by Harvey’s trademark telegraphic delivery punctuated by his patented pauses: “Hello, Americans!” he’d boom into the microphone in his studio high above Michigan Avenue, “This is Paul Harvey! [pause] Stand by for news!” He’d end each broadcast with his signature: “Paul Harvey, [long pause] Good day!” The “Paul Harvey News and Comment” broadcasts - five minutes n the morning and 15 minutes at midday six days a week - were consistently ranked first and second in the nation among network radio shows. Equally popular were his five- minute “The Rest of the Story” broadcasts in which Harvey told historical vignettes with surprise endings, such as the 13-year-old boy who receives a cash gift from Franklin D. Roosevelt and turns out to be Fidel Castro. Or the one about the DUNA Travel 8530 Holloway Dr. §102 W. Hollywood, CA 90069 Spa, Hotel foglalások, Kocsi bérlés Kedvezményes repülőjegy árak LAX-BUD-LAX $429.-tői +Tax +Fee november 1-től Információért hívják ZSUZSÁT TEL: (310) 652-5294 FAX: (310) 652-5287 1-888-532-0168 famous trial lawyer who never finished law school (Clarence Darrow). Harvey’s various broadcasts reached an estimated 24 million listeners daily. “He certainly was among the last great radio commentators,” Michael C. Keith, communications professor at Boston College and author of “The Broadcast Century,” told The Times in 2001. Part of Harvey’s enduring appeal, Keith said, was his writing style, “a kind of down-home flavor yet sophisticated quality. It grabs you and holds on to you. His delivery was always reminiscent of the great broadcasters of the past, which made him a unique sound on contemporary radio. But he was always relevant to the present. Paul Harvey was never out of fashion. Once he came on the air, he was just irresistible. He really had you from the moment he said, ‘Page One!’ “ For years, he’d rise at 3:30 a.m. and be picked up by limousine in front of his 27-room house in suburban River Forest. At his office in downtown Chicago, he’d cull material for his broadcasts from wire services, letters from listeners and scores of newspapers. Then he’d write the scripts himself, on an electric typewriter in large block type on yellow copy paper. Harvey, who also read his own commercials over the air, has been credited with coining words such as “guestimate,” “trendency,” and “snoopervision.” In 2000, at age 82, he signed a reported $100-million contract with ABC Radio that would have kept him on the air for 10 more years. In 2005, Harvey received a Presidential Medal of Freedom, America’s highest civilian award, in a White House ceremony. He is survived by his son, Paul Harvey Jr. Hungarian Journal ■pa.ul Harvev 1918 - 2009 20. ÉVFORDULÓ GÁLA BÁL 2009. március 21-én, szombaton este 6 órától a Millennium Biltmore Hotel “Gold Room” báltermében 506 S. Grand Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90071 Tel. (213) 624-1011 A parkolás megoldott. A szórakoztató zenét CZINNER ROBI és NAGY JULIUS szolgáltatja. Március 6, 2009