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...become newsier and more credible. Now when E.T. attends a media party, asserts Bellows, "we're not there to taste the shrimp." Bellows has made it clear to the staff that he wants to break, not inflate, stories. E.T. closely followed the recent slander trial of Dr. Carl Galloway vs. Sixty Minutes and Dan Rather, telecasting outtakes from unedited CBS interviews. Last month a new E.T. investigative team did a four-part feature about the National Enquirer that was both balanced and informative. That same team is currently working on a report called "Where Does Your Money...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Video: Turning Show Biz into News | 7/4/1983 | See Source »

...injuries from automobile mishaps. Rather's narrative charged wide collusion among doctors and lawyers, but cited only one physician by name. A 60 Minutes investigator obtained a phony medical report at a clinic; Rather held up the report and said, on air, "It was signed by Carl A. Galloway, M.D." Among the estimated 40 million people watching was Galloway, a Los Angeles internist and a distant relative of the clinic's owner. Galloway informed CBS that he had left the clinic a month before the report was issued, and that his signature was forged - points that CBS does...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: Star Witness | 6/6/1983 | See Source »

...geography of uptown/downtown applies to any city in America, whatever the size. Uptown and down, there are plenty of racial stereotypes to go around. One that dies particularly hard for downtowners is that when uptown kids dress to chill, they turn themselves out like some wild amalgam of Cab Galloway going for broke and Isaac Hayes going to a gogo. That is inaccurate, but it does have one small home truth: musicians, more than anyone else, set the style, just as, this minute, rap music is setting the beat...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: Chilling Out on Rap Flash | 3/21/1983 | See Source »

...college official who visited the school five years ago compares the training program to an evangelistic meeting with cheering contingencies from each college. Edward M. Noise, director of Yale's career advancement and placement service, adds that a Billy Graham-type figure exhorted sales techniques to a packed auditorium. Galloway, who attended the same session, says the company "gives a rather enthusiastic presentation like the military used to do." Students, he adds, are like "paratroopers ready to jump, in high spirits before they go out on their...

Author: By Rebecca J. Joseph, | Title: The Southwestern Equation | 5/6/1982 | See Source »

...explains that the company has a fine reputation but adds that problems with student managers sometimes develop. With the high turnover of personnel. Steel says relationships with recruiters differ each year, adding that last year Southwestern wasn't sponsored because recruiters didn't stay in contact with the school. Galloway says the recruiters' independent relationship to Southwestern contributes to the problems because there is no one overseer to address complaints...

Author: By Rebecca J. Joseph, | Title: The Southwestern Equation | 5/6/1982 | See Source »

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