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The Central Texas television station KCEN team mourned one of their own live on-air Oct. 30 and announced the death of co-anchor Kris Radcliffe.
The co-anchors worked for NBC affiliate KCEN-TV in Waco and Temple, Texas. “This is an incredibly sad day for our KCEN family,” Liepman began the segment, as she discussed her 51-year-old co ...
Texas Historical Commission marker for Temple Daily Telegram. The newspaper emerged from a mixture of publications circulating in Temple between 1881 and 1907. In 1907, E. K. Williams and J. F. Crouch crafted the Temple Times into the Temple Daily Telegram, the city's first daily newspaper.
former Frank Mayborn Enterprises, Inc radio station KCEN TV, owned from (1978-1987). 2009 bought by NBC. Mayborn was a communication member and pioneer in media starting a radio station in KTEM at Temple in 1936, and owned WMAK radio at Nashville in 1945 and the KCEN-TV station in 1952 resided at Temple, Texas.
Dusek attended Temple High School and played for its football team as a quarterback and safety. [2] He was selected Parade All-American as a senior. [3] He then enrolled at Texas A&M University and played Texas A&M Aggies football from 1969 to 1972 [4] [5] [6] as a fullback in its wishbone offense.
Ben Hamill Procter (February 21, 1927 – April 17, 2012) was a historian who served from 1957 to 2000 on the faculty of Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas.. A native of Temple, Texas, Procter moved with his family to Austin, where he graduated from Stephen F. Austin High School.
His father, Joseph Martin Dawson was the minister of the First Baptist Church in Waco, Texas. He graduated from Baylor University in 1933 and pursued a career as a geologist, first with Humble Oil and Refining in Houston and then beginning in 1938 with the Ren-War Oil Corporation in Corpus Christi, Texas.
Temple is a city in Bell County, Texas, United States.As of 2020, the city has a population of 82,073 according to the U.S. census. [4] Temple lies in the region referred to as Central Texas and is a principal city in the Killeen–Temple–Fort Hood metropolitan area, (Fort Hood was redesignated "Fort Cavazos" in 2023) which as of the 2020 Census had a population of 475,367.