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Norm MacDonald Longtime Boston Weatherman

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Kozlovia

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May 6, 2002, 12:13:18 PM5/6/02
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Norman Macdonald, 77, longtime WBZ weatherman


By Tom Long, Boston Globe Staff, 4/26/2002

Norman J. Macdonald, 77, a WBZ-TV weatherman who spent his retirement
years giving expert court testimony on weather conditions, died of
cancer Sunday in York Hospital in Maine.


Mr. Macdonald joined WBZ-TV in 1961 as weatherman on its 6 p.m. and 11
p.m. broadcasts. In July 1974, he became weekend weatherman. He also
broadcast the weather on WBZ radio for many years.

''He didn't take himself seriously, and he didn't like people who take
themselves too seriously,'' said Fred Ward, his friend and competitor,
who delivered the forecasts on WNAC-TV.

''Tune in later for my latest forecast'' was a line he often used on
his two-minute weather spot on WBZ. ''But what exactly does that
mean?'' he'd often say to his friends out of range of the TV camera.
''If my forecast was any good, you wouldn't have to tune in later.
It's either accurate or it's not.''

When the camera was rolling, he'd forecast rain and serve up a spiffy
reason, such as a low pressure system moving in from the south, or a
high moving out to the north. But later, with his friends, he would
say, ''We pretend we have a reason for our forecast, but it's really
just the accumulated history of weather patterns. If it rained to the
south of Boston today, it'll probably rain in Boston tomorrow.''

Working in the days before computer-generated graphics and computer
forecasting models, he delivered his TV forecasts on a yellow board,
drawing in the weather patterns and his prognostications with a magic
marker.

''Back in his day, you had to do some real forecasting,'' Ward said.
''Today, computers are so good, you can't beat them.''

Both Ward and Macdonald were meteorologists at the Air Force Cambridge
Research Laboratory when they got the call to forecast the weather on
TV. Mr. Macdonald quit and joined the staff at WBZ. Ward kept his day
job with the Air Force when he joined WNAC. ''He just jumped into
it,'' Ward said. ''I told him forecasting the weather on TV isn't a
career, it's a job, but he didn't give it a second thought.''

Yesterday, former WBZ weatherman Don Kent remembered Mr. Macdonald as
''a great guy who was in weather all his life.'' Kent recalled the
time Mr. Macdonald was delivering his forecast using a new series of
sliding weather maps when he got caught between the New England and
national maps. ''It was a bad relay or something,'' Kent said. ''He
was caught out of view of the camera and was unable to continue the
forecast. It's something we always laughed about.''

Mr. Macdonald was born in Boston. He earned a bachelor's degree and a
master's degree in meteorology at CalTech. He served in the Navy and
the Naval Reserve from 1942 to 1963. He also did research at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology for about 10 years.

After retiring from WBZ in 1977, he was affiliated with Weather
Services Inc. and AccuWeather. He also did research on global warming
and published scientific papers on the subject. In his retirement, he
was a forensic meteorologist, which his Web site describes as the
''reconstruction of weather conditions surrounding specific events.''

''Lawyers and insurance companies use forensic meteorologists to
determine if, for example, fog was thick enough to severely limit
visibility at the time of an accident, if a sidewalk was icy, or if
glare could have blinded a driver, causing an accident,'' according to
the Web site.

Ward, who is also a forensic meteorologist, described the specialty as
mainly court testimony in ''slip-and-fall cases.'' ''In
Massachusetts,'' he said, ''you can only sue if you slip on a sidewalk
if there is an unnatural accumulation of ice or snow, so they need a
meteorologist to testify as an expert witness at court proceedings.''

Mr. Macdonald's friends and relatives all recalled his sense of humor.
''He always had a joke to tell,'' said Ward. He was a ''very funny
man,'' said Kent.

''He may not have been the life of the party,'' said his wife, Carol,
''but he wanted to be.''

''He was a fellow who did a million things and did them well, but
never stuck with any one thing,'' Ward said.

Besides his wife, he leaves two sons, Collin of Hawaii and Brian of
Dracut; two daughters, Christina of Clifton, Va., and Lauren
Piechowicz of Granville, Ohio; three stepchildren, Joel Gurner of Fort
Myers, Fla., Hilary Steinberg of Pennsylvania and Sarah Gurner of
South Berwick, Maine; and nine grandchildren.

A memorial service will be held at 3 p.m. Sunday in First Parish
Church in York, Maine.

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