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Dan Rather has identified the man he says beat him up on the street in 1986 while demanding to know "Kenneth, what is the frequency?" Two events in Rather's life are made to imply Rather is crazy.
In 1994 William Tager, now in prison for killing an NBC stagehand outside the Today show in 1994, convinced the media had him under surveillance and were beaming hostile messages to him, grabbed Rather and demanded that Rather tell him the frequency being used, according to a forensic psychiatrist who examined Tager after the NBC shooting.
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In the 80's A cabby picked up Dan Rather at O'Hare Airport and refused to go - per the Chicago police - where he was told and instead ''drove wildly through city streets'' with Mr. Rather shouting and gesturing for help. When the cab finally stopped, Mr. Rather filed a complaint, and the driver, 38-year-old Eugene Phillips, was charged with disorderly conduct.
SO....On MSNBC, Byron York repeated unwarranted attacks on Dan Rather As a guest on the January 11 edition of MSNBC's Hardball, National Review White House correspondent Byron York repeated unwarranted attacks on CBS Evening News anchor Dan Rather. York stated that "conservative watchdog groups" have targeted Rather because "he's had some very weird episodes that have been real chinks in his armor, like 'Kenneth, what's the frequency?' and ... a weird episode in Chicago with a cab." But neither of the two episodes mentioned by York involved anything Rather did, but instead, actions taken against him.
The right-wing website NewsMax.com referenced the two incidents -- which occurred in the 1980s -- in a September 2004 article, reporting that Rather "seemed to invite odd occurrences that seemed to be all the odder just for having happened to him." RatherBiased.com, a conservative website devoted to "document the partisan beliefs of one of the most politicized journalists of our time," as well as readers of the right-wing online forum Free Republic, have also cited the incidents in attempts to discredit Rather. The Associated Press even asserted in a September 20, 2004, article that Rather "seemed to invite" unusual occurrences.<snip>
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