Word: kalb
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...Bush's] expected victory in New Hampshire will have to be viewed as a strong, impressive victory," said Marvin Kalb, who directs the Center for Press, Politics, and Public Policy at the Kennedy School. "If the number two man in New Hampshire is in a strong position, that will reflect badly on the Vice President...
...over the next two weeks, coupled with more campus publicity. Most groups do not anticipate any more visits by presidential hopefuls, although every candidate except for Vice President George Bush came to Harvard's Institute of Politics this fall for Murrow Professor of Press and Public Policy Marvin S. Kalb's series of interviews...
...Reagan Administration may have made people wary of looking at their country emotionally, and so the search for a candidate with a vision may be the people's way of asking their leaders to create emotions for them. Because of their performances on television, particularly the Marvin Kalb interviews, several of the candidates appear more capable now than they looked originally, but none seems about to play choirmaster to the nation, and by expecting too much of them we diminish our capacity to appreciate their true worth. If America is becoming a mature product, then it may be time...
...very disappointed in your coverage of the Marvin Kalb interview with Democratic Presidential candidate Bruce Babbitt. An hour of political dialogue about important public policy issues such as the merits of a progressive national consumption tax, universal needs testing, and a more democratic workplace was completely ignored. What was the centerpiece of the Crimson story? All but the last three paragraphs talked about Hart's re-entry into the race and what Babbitt had to say about it. The topic of Gary Hart was discussed for all of about two minutes of the hour-long interview...
With $23 million raised and a still comfortable lead in the polls, Bush, like his boss, evidently feels no need to answer tough questions. That in effect is what he told Kalb when he declined to be interviewed. What he told the American people is that he would be their president without putting his case before them...