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Edgar Allen Poe lived here, and so did I: Charles Osgood Wood. The year was 1942, I was nine years old. Like many nine-year-old boys, I was in love with baseball, and radio, and the world around me.
Charles Osgood shows off his pitching arm. CBS News My best boyhood pal was a girl, my slightly younger sister Mary Ann, who followed the Orioles and the war and loved radio just as much as I did.
Osgood, who anchored the popular news magazine's for more than two decades, was host of the long-running radio program "The Osgood File" and was referred to as CBS News' poet-in-residence, has died.
A once-every-four-year report card on the upkeep of America's infrastructure gave it a "C" grade in 2025, up slightly from previous reports.
Former CBS journalist Charles Osgood, an award-winning newsman known for his work on radio and television, died Tuesday at his home in New Jersey, CBS News reported. He was 91.
Charles Osgood, anchor of CBS's "Sunday Morning," poses for a portrait on the set in New York on March 28, 1999. Osgood, who anchored the popular news magazine's for more than two decades, was ...
Osgood followed Charles Kuralt into the host chair at the CBS Sunday Morning show and made it his own. For 22 years, until he retired from the program in 2016, he got to say: “Good Morning!
Osgood, who graduated from Fordham University in 1954, started as a classic music DJ in Washington, D.C., served in the Army and returned to help start WHCT in Hartford, Connecticut.
He was 91. Osgood was the anchor of the network's venerable "CBS Sunday Morning" program from 1994 to 2016, succeeding original host Charles Kuralt.
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