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

Some fear that TV's pervasive presence at such events can be dangerous. The anchorpersons played their roles discreetly enough this time, but suppose, say, that ABC had dispatched Howard Cosell to interview Sadat at a delicate moment ("Now, Mr. President, in your fortuitous peregrinations . . .") or that CBS had sent the prosecutorial Mike Wallace ("Do you really expect us to believe . . ."). Television has a hazardous appetite for the dramatic, a way of demanding more and more, of propelling events with its own requirements for momentum. It can also, quite simply, falsify reality. Indeed it has frequently done so; film...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Time Essay: TV Goes into Diplomacy | 12/5/1977 | See Source »

WILFRED BURCHETT does not look like a radical journalist. In fact, he looks more like a conservative businessman. But when he opens an interview by pointing to a nearby poster of Ho Chi Minh and says, "Ah, my good friend," it becomes easier to recognize in him the man who has been covering revolutionary movements sympathetically since the late...

Author: By Gay Seidman, | Title: A Peripatetic Fellow | 11/30/1977 | See Source »

Paul said yesterday he plans to gradually limit the number of medical school applicants interviewed to those whose application files require further personal information or recommendations. He added the goal of the admissions office is to "keep the number manageable to the manpower we have and to bring the interview to the applicant." Over 1000 applicants were interviewed last year, most of them two or three times...

Author: By Susan K. Brown, | Title: Board Affirms Medical Dean For Admissions | 11/29/1977 | See Source »

Paul said he has already arranged to have alumm and students in major cities across the country interview applicants in order to spare them the cost of traveling to Cambridge...

Author: By Susan K. Brown, | Title: Board Affirms Medical Dean For Admissions | 11/29/1977 | See Source »

...defense of Richard Nixon's presidency and his attack upon the forces that brought Nixon down, he is much more reticent about the Richard Nixon he knows today. The signs of Price's continuing ties to the disgraced former president are evident even here at Harvard. During a recent interview, Price pointed to a pile of papers of his desk at the Institute of Politics--a draft of a section from the memoirs he is reading for Nixon. It is apparently a routine occurrence for Julie Nixon Eisenhower or Rose Mary Woods to telephone for Price at the institute. Occasionally...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Raymond Price Remembers | 11/29/1977 | See Source »

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