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Word: franticness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...badge and journeyed upstairs to the press conference. It was in a small room, with little sunlight and tight around the collar. The speaker's table was engulfed by a grotesque blob of lenses and flesh and cigars and cameras and elbows and underarms. In the middle of the frantic enterprise she appeared. Like a jelly donut atop an anthill. They swarmed...

Author: By David Melody, | Title: Notes From A Photographer's Journal | 2/25/1977 | See Source »

...Frantic Search. Another problem: the scheduled cover story on how President-elect Jimmy Carter chose Walter Mondale as his running mate had been written by one of the missing, Reeves. Brady asked him if he could use the story. Reeves refused. After a frantic search, Brady settled on a piece by Syndicated Columnist Nick Thimmesch, describing how John Ehrlichman spent his last days before jail, which had already run in part in Potomac, the Washington Post's Sunday supplement...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: New York's Battleground (Contd.) | 1/24/1977 | See Source »

Bogdanovich is right to mourn the passing of the foolishness and charm of the happy-go-lucky flickers: It is too bad that the frantic slapstick of the film's early passages ill prepares one for the ending, vitiating its force. It is by no means a fatal flaw, there being so much about Nickelodeon-including supporting performances by Tatum O'Neal, Brian Keith and Stella Stevens-that is captivating. It is just that the film does not realize all of its potential...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The First Picture Shows | 1/3/1977 | See Source »

...night and when the networks, uncertain of where they were going, were willing to experiment with talent and quality. Though TV has expanded beyond all recognition and is technically light years beyond those pioneering days, it has, in Chayefsky's view, entered its own dark ages. In its frantic race for ratings, it has become debased, an extension of a corporate way of life that Chayefsky sees "dehumanizing all of us. " Last week Chayefsky talked to TIME about Network-and the real, unreal world of television. Excerpts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: Chayefsky: 'Network Is True' | 12/13/1976 | See Source »

...Irvine Foundation owns the controlling interest. Under federal tax law, the foundation cannot control an enterprise that aims at making a profit-and Irvine Co. not only tries to turn a profit but clears a rather tidy one. Mobil Oil Corp. offered $200 million in May, setting off a frantic bidding war. Since then, counteroffers have come from Cadillac Fairview, a Canadian land developer, and SMBH & Z, a Detroit investment firm. Mobil has made a second bid, and the price has been pushed up toward $300 million. Last week the foundation and a California court that must approve any sale...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CORPORATIONS: War for 80,000 Acres | 12/6/1976 | See Source »

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