Wendall J. Woodbury (June 20, 1942 – October 20, 2010) was an American television journalist and news anchor. He spent much of his career as a reporter for WGAL-TV in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, from 1968 until his retirement from broadcast news in 1992 as a feature reporter.[1] He was known for a series of segments called "Wendall's World" while at WGAL.[1] Woodbury was the first television anchor in the United States to report on the Three Mile Island accident as the story broke in 1979.[2]
Wendall J. Woodbury (June 20, 1942 – October 20, 2010) was an American television journalist and news anchor. He spent much of his career as a reporter...
(1838–1915), American politician Walter B. Woodbury (1834–1885), British inventor and pioneering photographer WendallWoodbury (1942–2010), American television...
including drama educator T. Earl Pardoe, actress Reta Shaw, and journalist WendallWoodbury. Leland T. Powers founded the school after teaching with the Redpath...
Ari Up, 48, German-born British punk musician (The Slits), cancer. WendallWoodbury, 68, American television journalist and host (WGAL-TV), lymphoma. Antonio...
are met at the pier by Inspector Nelson and two rival reporters, Joan Wendall and Speed Patton. Billie, who left the country hurriedly a year ago when...