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CC0 Usage Conditions ApplyClick for more information. The collection documents, through printed materials, photographs, audio and moving image, Don Herbert's career as a science educator under the ...
LOS ANGELES — Don Herbert, who explained the wonderful world of science to millions of young baby boomers on television in the 1950s and ’60s as “Mr. Wizard” and did the same for a later generation of ...
At the very same time during the 1950s that some young women wondered why they should study science when all they wanted to do was get married, and magazines aimed at teen girls and women did their ...
In the early years of television, Don Herbert explained principles of science to millions of American youngsters and established himself as one of America's great science educators, even though he ...
LOS ANGELES – Don Herbert, who explained the wonderful world of science to millions of young baby boomers on television in the 1950s and ’60s as “Mr. Wizard” and did the same for a later generation of ...
Don Herbert, better known to generations of TV viewers as Mr. Wizard, died yesterday at the age of 89. The cause was multiple myeloma. From the 1950s through to the 80s, Herbert brought science to the ...
Don Herbert, who as television's "Mr. Wizard" introduced generations of young viewers to the joys of science, died Tuesday. Herbert was 89. By The Associated Press Don Herbert, who as television’s “Mr ...
Don Herbert was known to his fans as Mr. Wizard, star of the Watch Mr. Wizard show. Long before Mythbusters, Herbert made common household items seem magical every Saturday at noon on NBC, from 1951 ...
Don Herbert died June 12 at the age of 89. As TV's Mr. Wizard, he made science accessible and led many to careers in science. Steve Mirsky reports. For more, go to www.mrwizardstudios.com If you're ...
Jules Power, who helped break the mold of cartoonish children’s shows in the early days of television by producing programs that entranced youngsters with basic science and allowed them to roam the ...
BOZO THE CLOWN. Howdy Doody. Mr. Wizard? He may not have the same name recognition as his fellow 1950's kiddie TV superstars, but Don Herbert was a television Einstein: in 1955, there were 5,000 Mr.