Andrea Seabrook

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Andrea Seabrook is an American radio journalist for NPR who primarily reports on the United States Congress.

Seabrook received a bachelor's degree in biology from Earlham College in 1996. While at Earlham, Seabrook got involved in college radio. She went on to study Latin American literature National Autonomous University of Mexico in Mexico City.

Seabrook began reporting for NPR in 2001, after working on Anthem, an NPR music program, and working in the Mexico Bureau and provided fill-in coverage of Mexico and Central America. She then returned to NPR headquarters in Washington, and worked with NPR's Radio Expeditions series, before she shifted to Morning Edition.

Seabrook is known to play the guitar and tuba and is married to composer and musician Chris Mandra.

  • "At this morning's news meeting, NPR Foreign Editor Loren Jenkins referred to the fact that many of the top physicists in Iran's uranium enrichment program were trained at top U.S. engineering schools, notably MIT and UCLA. I was surprised to hear this, though it makes perfect sense -- I just hadn't thought about it." [1]


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