Please Note:
This profile was automatically generated using 3 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 3 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
Web References
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1. The Daily Times
www.delcotimes.com/site/news.c - [Cached]Published on: 6/27/2004 Last Visited: 6/30/2004
From the Academy, Clark went to Lincoln University, where he worked on the school newspaper (fortunately for ‘Dray,' he got out of that end of the business quickly), and the campus radio station while serving as an intern at KYW-3 and Fox-29 in Philadelphia. After picking up his degree in communications, he moved to Macon, Ga., working with 13-WMAZ, the CBS affiliate in central Georgia.
He moved to Detroit in July 2002, signing with WOOD-TV in Grand Rapids, Mich., where he is a reporter and weekend news anchor. He has covered everything from President Clinton to massive flooding across the state, but it was his close involvement with a stricken family that put him on track for the Emmy.
If he's on television, you have to assume that Clark is a good-looking dude.
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"When I accepted my award on their behalf, I spoke of the lessons I had learned from the family," Clark said. I traveled with them to Minneapolis and to North Carolina, trying to find a cure. They taught me about faith and courage. They just refused to give up. They're still fighting to save their children."
Clark is married to the former Lorren Daniels of Chester's First Ward. She and "Dray" were classmates at the Academy. Lorren was graduated from Penn State and is pursuing her master's degree in Michigan.
Clark's contract with his station is up in 2005. As much as he enjoys working in Michigan, it's no secret that he'd like to work a little closer to his old hometown and he is looking into it. Nobody would be more pleased, of course, than his mom. -
2. Sun-Sentinel: Sports
www.sun-sentinel.com/sports/sf - [Cached]Published on: 7/11/2002 Last Visited: 7/11/2002
Woods' appeals lawyer, Terence J. Clark, takes the position that Rush is probably entitled to create the painting but not to sell it or reproduce it. "In this situation, we have a portrait artist do a painting, and if you stop right there and the painting is done and you hang it on a wall, that probably is going to be acceptable under state and common law," Clark said. "But when you commercialize on the person's image or likeness, well, then you cross that bright line. And that is what happened here."
Clark said that Rush could have sought permission to paint Woods. And what if Woods said no? "He is entitled to say no," Clark said. "And then the painter can't do it."
Copyright © 2002, South Florida Sun-Sentinel -
3. The Daily Times
www.delcotimes.com/site/news.c - [Cached]Published on: 7/1/2004 Last Visited: 7/15/2004
"He always said he wanted to be on TV," recalled his mother, Terri Clark, at a City Council meeting Wednesday morning.
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As Clark grew up, that thirst came in handy with academics. After graduating from Chester High School Academy in 1996, he went on to Lincoln University.
He worked at the university newspaper and campus radio station, balancing his studies with internships at KYW-3 and FOX-29 in Philadelphia. He also interned for 12 weeks with WAVE news station, an NBC affiliate in Louisville, Ky.
Clark graduated from Lincoln in 2000 with a communications degree. He moved to Macon, Ga., where he was a reporter and weekend evening anchor for CBS affiliate 13-WMAZ. Two years later, he moved to Grand Rapids, Mich., to do the same jobs at NBC's WOOD-TV 8.
It was in Grand Rapids that his documentary, "Fight for Life," about a couple struggling to save their three children afflicted with a deadly and incurable disease, earned him an Emmy in medical reporting.
Clark's contract at WOOD-TV expires in 2005. He hopes to move back to the area so he can be closer to friends and family, to whom he attributes his success.
"It was because of their love and dedication that I'm here today," said Clark at the ceremony. "With the support of your friends and family, you can do whatever you want in life."
Clark says he'll soon begin looking for a job on the East Coast -- in Baltimore, Washington or Philadelphia.

