Word: bernstein
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...want to project a positive image," Geoffrey P. Bernstein '80, one of the group's organizers, said yesterday. "We stand for safe, clean, renewable energy like solar and wind power and a diversion of military funds toward meeting social needs...
Many White House observers, such as Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, portray Nixon in this final period as a man verging on suicide or nervous breakdown, at times incapable of dealing with potential threats to national security. Episodes of Richard Nixon, jabbering incoherently, or talking to paintings of past presidents at night in the White House have been widely reported. On the basis of his own first-hand observations, Price says he rejects these reports of Nixon as "being bonkers" during the final weeks of his presidency. Because of Nixon's unique ability to "departmentalize and compartmentalize" issues and ideas...
Price appears to view the post-resignation reportorial efforts of Woodward and Bernstein as especially worthy of condemnation. Price describes their second Watergate book, The Final Days, as an example of "hateploitation." At several points in his own book, Price directly challenges the Woodstein reconstruction of specific events and of various individuals' thoughts during the Watergate denouement. "My feelings about that book are pretty much unprintable," Price says...
...network's Tel Aviv bureau manager, Joel Bernstein, caught up with Begin 6½ hr. later at the city's Hilton hotel. Bernstein led Begin to a room that CBS had hastily rented and equipped with a satellite link to New York. Cronkite and Begin then taped a long-distance interview; 2½ min. of highlights were fitted together with 3½ min. of Cronkite's earlier Sadat interview and broadcast that night on the Evening News. "I don't see anything extraordinary about it," says Cronkite. "It was just a normal day's work...
...found saintliness threatens the stability of the maison à trois. His "seriousness" turns Barbara Jane's head. She must be rescued from both BEAT and marriage by Reynolds, who pretends a conversion of his own in order to expose the shallowness of the movement. The Ritchie-Bernstein version of an est seminar is done with marvelous malice, but it is not their only target. Along the way they take on rolfing, pyramid power and even something called movagenics, which invites its adepts to drop down on all fours and crawl around looking for their lost center of consciousness...