Word: broadcaster
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...which has sold over 1 million copies since it was first published in 1980. Last night’s event, titled “The Inner Life of Democracy,” was part of the Cambridge Forum series, a weekly public affairs program taped at the church and broadcast on public radio stations across the country. Poet Mark Nepo introduced Zinn and interviewed him on-stage before opening up to the audience for questions. Zinn was interrupted on multiple occasions by applause while he criticized the U.S. government’s conduct of the war in Iraq...
...Only Tuesday, Bush aides brought in a few dozen conservative radio talk show hosts to broadcast from the White House, where top officials such as Dick Cheney and Karl Rove tried to get them fired up about the importance of returning Republican majorities to Congress. And while G.O.P. leaders have been warning about high taxes and weakened national security if Democrats were to regain control of Congress, Republicans can now emphasize their differences with Democrats on an issue Christian conservatives are particularly passionate about. Most congressional Democrats voted against a constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage earlier this year...
...station lacked high-tech equipment, and the DJs felt that the product was below the station’s standards. In-studio recordings went on a break that will be broken this Friday.“We had to hold back, because we were not satisfied with the attempted broadcast,” says Hufstedler. “We didn’t feel comfortable with [a broadcast] that was sloppy to listen to on the air.”The station dug into its pockets, put on small-scale fundraiser shows, and scraped together the funds for proper studio...
...American people, and public opinion in the United States very sensitive to how to use the media to gain access through technical means that are available now on the Internet and everything else to create as much violence as possible, as much bloodshed as possible and get that broadcast back into the United States as a way to try to shape opinion and influence the outcome of our debate here at home. And I think some of that is going...
...find transparency to be an end in and of itself. When transparent measures work in the service of making a fair decision, they are justified. In this particular case, it is not clear what would be gained by having the details of Schleifer’s misconduct broadcast openly other than satisfying curious spectators. Harvard, however, has much to lose by establishing a precedent of leaving its procedures dealing with professional misdeeds open to public scrutiny. Nevertheless, the consolidation of decision-making powers by Knowles represents a process which lacks any serious checks on the discretion of a single individual...