Edward and Janet Murrow and son, Casey, return to the U.S. after spending nine years in London during the war
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Edward R. Murrow pictured with war correspondents
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Edward R. Murrow in uniform, on the telephone
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President John F. Kennedy welcomes recently-appointed Director of U.S. Information Agency, Edward R. Murrow, his wife Janet and son Casey to the Washington New Frontier
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Display for Edward R. Murrow's 'This is London' at WJSV's window
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Display for Edward R. Murrow's 'This is London' at Fowler Bros. book store (Los Angeles, CA)
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Edward R. Murrow with other students in the National Student Federation of America
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Display for Edward R. Murrow's 'This is London' on Newsreel marquee
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Display for Edward R. Murrow's 'This is London' at KMOX CBS
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Murrow and Fred Friendly, at Murrow's desk
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Edward R. Murrow at the microphone with a pad of paper
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Edward R. Murrow, Class of 1930, The State College of Washington
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Edward R. Murrow with Harry S. Truman and CBS crew setting up for an interview in Islamorada, Florida (2/8/1957-2/15/1957)
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Monsieur Andre Gerard ('Pertinax') speaks to America, March 3, 1939, with Edward R. Murrow (left), European Representative of the Columbia Broadcasting System
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Edward R. Murrow, Mary Marvin Breckinridge, William L. Shirer, putting on ice skates in Amsterdam (January 19, 1940)
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John Aaron, Edward R. Murrow, Jesse Zousmer (Daily News, Later and Person to Person)
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Edward R. Murrow with Bill Downs and Ron Cochran at a national convention
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Edward R. Murrow covering a political convention
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Edward R. Murrow working on a report for 'This is London,' 1943
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Marian Anderson, Eleanor Roosevelt and Edward R. Murrow