Will mcdonough young

Will McDonough

American sportswriter (1935–2003)

William McDonough (July 6, 1935 – January 9, 2003) was an American sportswriter for The Boston Globe who also worked as an on-air football reporter for CBS and NBC.[1]

Biography

Newspaper career

The youngest of nine children of Irish immigrants, McDonough grew up in working-class South Boston.[1] He attended The English High School, where he starred in baseball as a pitcher and in football as a quarterback. While attending the Northeastern University School of Journalism, McDonough started at the Boston Globe as a co-op intern / copy boy in 1955 to cover school sports, and he was hired by the Globe full-time after graduation in 1957.[2]

In 1960, after McDonough had been promoted to sportswriter, he was assigned as the beat reporter for the Boston Patriots of the start-up American Football League and remained one of the country's premier football reporters until his retirement in 2001.[2] During his 40+ years writing career with the Globe (interrupted only by a

By Bill Simmons
Page 2 columnist

Sometimes you read something so shocking, you feel the breath leave your body. That's how I felt this morning when I read that Will McDonough was dead. I grew up reading him in the Boston Globe, first as a Patriots beat reporter, then as a general columnist who always seemed to have inside info on everyone. Say what you want about the guy, but he mattered. Everyone was afraid of him. Everyone read him. Everyone knew him. He was a combination Max Mercy and Vito Corleone.

When I was growing up in Boston in the '70s, the Globe had Peter Gammons covering baseball, Bob Ryan covering the Celtics, McDonough on the Pats, Bud Collins on tennis, and Leigh Montville and the great Ray Fitzgerald as general columnists. As my friend Jeff said recently while complaining about the recent decline of the Globe's sports section, "Back then, reading that paper was like watching the '27 Yankees." People in Boston discuss those days like they would describe a great sports team in its prime. That's what it felt like to be there. And to be honest, reading those peop

William McDonough

American architect (born 1951)

For other people named William McDonough, see William McDonough (disambiguation).

William McDonough

Born (1951-02-20) February 20, 1951 (age 73)

Tokyo, Japan

NationalityAmerican
EducationDartmouth College (BA)
Yale University
OccupationArchitect
AwardsPresidential Award for Sustainable Development, National Design Award, Presidential Green Chemistry Challenge Award
PracticeMcDonough Innovation, William McDonough + Partners, McDonough Braungart Design Chemistry
BuildingsNASA Sustainability Base, 901 Cherry (for Gap Inc., now home to YouTube), Adam Joseph Lewis Center at Oberlin College, Ford Motor Company's River Rouge Plant
Websitemcdonough.com#home

William Andrews McDonough (born February 20, 1951) is an American architect and academic.[1][2][3] McDonough is the founding principal of William McDonough + Partners and was the dean of the School of Architecture at the University of Virginia.[4][5][6] He

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