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Word: broadcasting (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...begin with, the game was broadcast on ABC television, which is just asking for trouble. Members of the aforementioned frat house spent the day clustered in a relatively large group chasing the ABC cameras and microphones, shouting obscenities which hopefully would find their way across the airwaves. This was the first in a series of minor disturbances...

Author: By Thomas Aronson, | Title: Tom Columns | 10/18/1975 | See Source »

...television. The bad part about watching NBC, however, was enduring the mouths of Curt Gowdy and Joe Garagiola. Ever since Gowdy began to believe that the Bosox were not going to fold in September, he has reminded the American public on the average of two or three times a broadcast how he spent fifteen years announcing Red Sox games. You couldn't escape from Garagiola on the other hand even during the commercials with everyone yelling "Attaboy, Joe" on the Dodge...

Author: By James W. Reinig, | Title: By Jiminy | 10/10/1975 | See Source »

Next morning, when Stanford University police and Santa Clara County sheriffs deputies met with Secret Service agents to coordinate security plans for Ford's visit, they discussed Moore. The security team broadcast a B.O.L. (Be On the Lookout) for Moore on its radio network...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE SHOOTING: FORD'S SECOND CLOSE CALL | 10/6/1975 | See Source »

...newsman would argue that reporting "reality" is without consequences, or that exercising journalistic responsibility-the many decisions involved in how to play a story-is to be taken lightly. Several journalists, both print and broadcast, worried especially about the impact of television. Charles Seib, press ombudsman at the Washington Post, is offended by televised "instant replay" of President Ford's brush with death outside the St. Francis Hotel. "They played it slow, they played it fast, they paused," he complains. "You've seen that film a dozen times now." A number of newsmen are irked that Lynette Fromme...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Her Picture on the Cover | 10/6/1975 | See Source »

...that power (political-economy) and culture (ethnicity), however intertwined in localities, have sustained at the national level a functional distance one to the other. No doubt at any given period this situation is imperfectly realized. But at least the value of a functional differentiation of power and culture is broadcast and key spokesmen of national strata (lawyers, educators, capitalists, scientists, intellectuals, etc.) are found supporting...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ETHNIC MILITANCY | 10/1/1975 | See Source »

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