Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Kay_StammersKay Stammers - Wikipedia

    Katherine "Kay" Esther Stammers (3 April 1914 – 23 December 2005) was a female tennis player from the United Kingdom.

  2. Pioneering Australian television journalist Kay Stammers has passed away following a long battle with cancer. The 72-year-old, who became the first female reporter on Nine News in 1975, died at...

  3. Kay was one of the pioneer female television journalists, beginning her career in the seventies as reporter for Nine's ground-breaking daytime current affairs show No Man's Land – produced and presented by women for women – before being snapped up by Mike Willesee for his new current affairs program 24 Hours, screened nationally on the 0 ...

    • Kay Stammers1
    • Kay Stammers2
    • Kay Stammers3
    • Kay Stammers4
    • Kay Stammers5
  4. Kay Stammers, Alice Marble, and JFK. By David Linebarger. July 13, 2023. "Kay Stammers," artwork by Giada llenia Pinna. Kay designed her own dresses. Four inches above the knee. Is that why JFK dated her?

  5. ONE of Australia’s pioneering female television journalists and late night news anchors, Kay Stammers, has died in Sydney. Stammers, 72, was a familiar face on Australian TV screens in the 1970s and 1980s as the only female journalist on Sydney’s Channel 9 news team and the presenter on Channel 7’s late night show NewsWorld. Pioneer...

  6. 26 de feb. de 2020 · Pioneering news presenter Kay Stammers who worked in news & current affairs for Seven, Nine and 10, has died, aged 72. She died following a battle with cancer. Stammers served as a newsreader, presenter, reporter, producer and health & medical specialist across multiple networks including as presenter for Seven’s Newsworld in the 1980s.

  7. www.thetimes.com › article › kay-stammers-lr28kdpd82hKay Stammers - thetimes.com

    KAY STAMMERS was a glamourous tennis champion of the 1930s, who enjoyed some media attention and international popularity aftershe won the Wimbledon women’s doubles matches with Freda James in 1935.