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Harry Smith (born August 21, 1951 in Lansing, Illinois) is a co-anchor for CBS' The Early Show and the host of A&E's Biography series. In addition to these regular appearances, Smith has appeared in a number of other television endeavors. On the History Channel, Smith hosted several episodes of Modern Marvels, as well as documentaries on holidays including Christmas, Thanksgiving, and Halloween. He has also appeared as a guest judge on Iron Chef America.
Smith began his broadcasting career at Denver radio stations KHOW and KIMN and Cincinnati radio station WLW (1973-81). From 1981-82, he worked for Denver's public television station, KRMA-TV. From 1982-85, he served as a reporter and anchor for KMGH-TV, the CBS affiliate in Denver. In 1986, Smith joined CBS News as a reporter and was later named a correspondent in 1987.
For 13 years, Smith was a contributor to The CBS Evening News with Dan Rather, 48 Hours, and CBS News documentaries. From 1987-96, he served as a co-anchor for CBS This Morning. In 2002, Smith joined The Early Show.
In addition to his TV assignments, Smith does the daily "Harry Smith Reporting" commentary for the CBS Radio Network.
Smith received his B.A. degree in communications and theater from Central College in Pella, Iowa. He lives in New York with his wife, sports reporter Andrea Joyce, and their two sons.
Harry Smith (born August 2, 1985 in Calgary, Alberta) is a Canadian-American blank">RF Video shoot interview -_British professional wrestler currently signed to World Wrestling Entertainment wrestling on its RAW brand under the ring name D.H. Smith ("D" for Davey Boy Smith, and "H" for the Hart family).
Harry Smith, born May 21, 1891, Fishponds, Bristol, died November 12, 1937, Downend, Bristol, was a cricketer who played for Gloucestershire and England.
Smith was a reliable wicket-keeper and a right-hand batsman good enough to make 1000 runs in a season five times in the 1920s. He first played for Gloucestershire in 1912 and took over as regular wicket-keeper from Jack Board in 1914. From then until 1931, he was a regular in the side, often batting at No 3 in a team perennially reliant for its runs on just a few players.
He played just one Test match, the first match ever against the West Indies at Lord's in 1928. He scored seven runs and took one catch, but made way in the next match for Harry Elliott, who in turn made way for George Duckworth for the third and final Test.
Smith missed the whole of the 1932 season through illness, prompting Wisden in 1933 to an unusual tribute in its usually emotion-free pages: "Smith's absence," it wrote, "meant something more than the loss of a thoroughly dependable wicket-keeper and a batsman capable of getting runs when runs were most needed, because, perhaps unconsciously, his fellow professionals had come to regard him as their father, and, in an unassuming way, he was a source of strength to his captain on the field. His value was equally marked in the dressing room and on the long journeys which continually had to be faced."
Smith did not appear in first-class cricket in 1933 or 1934, but in 1935, Gloucestershire having failed to find an adequate successor as wicket-keeper, he returned for 15 county matches, though he was ill and his batting was negligible. He died little over two years later.
Harry Joseph Smith (born 1936) is a poet, editor and essayist who divides his time between Maine and New York City. Educated at Brown University, Smith first became known in the small press world as the editor of The Smith, a literary magazine and small press founded in the mid-1960s. Typical prose can be found in The Sexy Sixties (2002), poetry in Trinity (1975), Sonnets to P.L.A. (1979), and Ballads for the Possessed (1987). His magazine and press featured among others James T. Farrell, Menke Katz, Stanley Nelson, Sidney Bernard and Richard (Ward) Morris. A new anthology of avant-garde poetry Inside the Outside (2006) features a generous selection of his poetry. He is married to the playwright, Clare Melley Smith.
Harry Smith (born August 15, 1889 in Union, Nebraska; died July 26, 1964 in Dunbar, Nebraska) was a baseball player with the Chicago White Sox who played one game in 1912. He was the starting pitcher, he pitched five innings for an ERA of 1.8 and is credited with a win. However, he never played again.
Harry Thomas Smith (1874 - 1933), born in Yorkshire, England, was a baseball catcher who played between 1901 and 1910. He played back-up catcher for Pittsburgh Pirates (1902-7 178 games) and Boston Braves (1907-11 154 games), after starting at Philadelphia Athletics for 11 games. From a career 1004 at bats, he made 214 hits for 2 homers and 89 RBI. He managed the Braves for half of 1909 and went on to manage in the Minor Leagues.
Harry Smith (1890 - 1922) played 75 games of Major League Baseball between 1914 and 1918, mostly as a catcher. In all he had 148 at bats, his 27 hits produced one homer and 14 RBI for an average of .182, not sufficient to prolong his career in the big leagues. He started with the New York Giants, moving to the Brooklyn Feds for 1915, but he returned mid-way through the season. He was absent from the big leagues for 1916, starting 1917 with Cincinnati Reds, but after a couple of seasons as a peripheral figure with an average below .2, he disappeared from the big leagues for good.
Harry Arthur Smith (born October 10, 1932) was an English professional footballer, playing as a full-back. He was born in Wolverhampton.
Harry Smith joined West Bromwich Albion as an amateur, but left to join Torquay United in 1953 without breaking into the Baggie's first team.
He made his Torquay debut in a 3-1 win away to Walsall on December 5, 1953, with the regular left-back Jimmy Drinkwater out of the side. He initially lost his place when Drinkwater returned, but after two games out of the side, regained his place, Drinkwater switching to right-back as the on-loan Harry Parfitt missed out. He began the following season as the regular left-back in the Torquay side, playing in the FA Cup 4th round tie at home to Huddersfield Town in front of a record crowd of 21,908, which Huddersfield won 1-0. He lost his place late in the season, with John Anderton taking his place and played just 14 times in the 1955-56 season.
He started the 1956-57 season out of the first team with Anderton and then regular centre-half John James playing at left-back. However, Smith soon regained his place and remained a regular for the remainder of the season as Torquay lost out on promotion to Division Two on goal average from Ipswich Town.
He played 188 league games for Torquay, scoring just once, before leaving in July 1961 to join Bristol City. He played just once for the Ashton Gate side before leaving league football to settle down in Torquay, where he became an avid Pidgeon racer
Lieutenant Colonel Harry Arthur Smith MC, officer in the Australian Army and Officer Commanding D Coy, 6th Battalion, Royal Australian Regiment at the Battle of Long Tan in the Vietnam War.
After service as a National Serviceman Smith joined the Australian Regular Army and graduated as Second Lieutenant from the Officer Cadet School, Portsea.
In 1966 Smith, then a Major, was Officer Commanding D Coy, 6RAR, on patrol in the Rubber Plantation at Long Tan when his company ran into a large enemy force making its way to the Australian base at Nui Dat. The ensuing battle, know as the Battle of Long Tan has become a celebrated episode in Australia's military involvement in the Vietnam War. Although his company was outnumbered by almost 26 to one, and suffering high casualties, both Smith and his men inflicted massive casualties on the enemy, saving Nui Dat from attack and discouraging any further large scale attacks against Australian forces in Vietnam.
Smith’s leadership of his men during the fierce fighting earned him a Military Cross, although originally recommended for the Distinguished Service Order this was downgraded to the MC.
Following service in Vietnam, Smith commanded 1 Commando Company at Georges Heights and was later posted to the Special Air Service Regiment in Perth, Western Australia.
Smith left the Army in 1976.
Harry Smith (born December 29, 1883 in Ottawa, Ontario - 1953) was a professional ice hockey player who played 98 games in various professional and amateur leagues, including the National Hockey Association and Eastern Canada Amateur Hockey Association. Amongst the teams he for played with were the Cobalt Silver Kings, Toronto Tecumsehs, Ottawa Senators, and Montreal Wanderers.
Harry Smith (September 30, 1886 — June 24, 1955) was an English cricketer. He was a right-handed batsman and wicket-keeper. Smith was born in Chesterfield and died in Ruthin.
Smith started his career in 1912, when he appeared in one match for Warwickshire, against Derbyshire, in which he kept wicket and scored 15 runs in the lower order.
Coincidentally, Smith's second and final County match would come as a player for Derbyshire, against Somerset, eight years later. Though he was dismissed cheaply in the first innings, he made a career-best 24 not out in the second, immediately following which, he was axed from the team.
Harry J.A. Smith (died 1983) was a former U.S. soccer full back. Smith earned two caps with the U.S. national team in 1928. The first came at the 1928 Summer Olympics when the U.S. lost to Argentina 11-2. Following this loss, the U.S. tied Poland, 3-3, on June 10, 1928.
Henry Richard (Harry) Smith (September 11, 1873 - October 24, 1928) was a politician and physician in Alberta, Canada. He served on Edmonton City Council from 1912 until 1914 and as president of the Edmonton Conservative Association and the Alberta Medical Association.



