Word: broadcasting
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...moving out, according to Ferraro. Just 2 1/2 months later, Jones went public with her claim that Clinton asked her for oral sex in an Arkansas hotel room in 1991. She filed suit in May 1994. Ferraro contacted the White House after she saw Jones on a TV news broadcast, and has spoken several times to Clinton's private lawyers. Jones and her husband, claims Ferraro, "were always wanting something for nothing." Jones' lawyers have consistently denied that she was motivated by money. On Friday, federal judge Susan Webber Wright is likely to set a trial date. But given...
...publish special issues on the most influential leaders, business titans, scientists, entertainers and heroes, culminating at the end of 1999 with an issue on the Person of the Century. Each will also look ahead at what to expect in these fields during the new millennium. CBS News will broadcast prime-time specials in conjunction with each of the issues...
...answer that question, we have to go back in television history to 1989, when The Arsenio Hall Show went on the air. It was a broadcast phenomenon, bringing new viewers--young, lots of them black--to late night for the first time. Hall respected many of the genre's conventions, but his ethnicity, effusive personality and mix of guests broke with tradition. Also, Hall didn't use a desk. Curled up in his easy chair, he was loose and open and schmoozerific. Since his show was canceled in 1994, though, no one has served his audience, and now the producers...
...reforms vanished, and in their place came $115 billion in cuts to hospitals that even the medical industry knew were largely inevitable. Elsewhere, the budgeteers fell back on easy targets: raising taxes on cigarettes, boosting fees on airline tickets and selling off pieces of the public trust, like the broadcast spectrum, to raise some of the money needed to help bring the budget into balance...
BANGKOK, Thailand: Pol Pot, the infamous and reclusive Cambodian leader, has been tried and sentenced to life in prison at a mass rally in Anlong Veng, according to Nate Thayer, a reporter for the Far Eastern Economic Review who witnessed the show trial on Friday. ABC News will broadcast Thayer's videotape tonight on Nightline. Until Friday, the Cambodian leader who led the bloody revolution that killed 2 million of his countrymen in the late 1970s, had not been seen by anyone from outside his country in twenty years; persistent and conflicting rumors this year have said either that...