Word: network
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...months of speculation over the futures of “The Tonight Show” and of O’Brien. O’Brien had publicly made clear that he wished to move to an earlier show and this past spring was linked to a move to rival network FOX. Rumors also circulated that Jon Stewart, host of Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show,” was being courted to inherit Leno’s desk...
...into a renewed era of global leadership. While George W. Bush believes that the nations in the world offer very little to us in terms of American safety and security, John Kerry understands that the only way to fight a global war on terror is to have a global network of law enforcement and intelligence officials. Many of the victories in the War on Terror have come due to the cooperation of other nations, and specifically with their local law enforcement. John Kerry understands that while major deployments of American troops may sometimes be necessary (as in Tora Bora, where...
...factions that traditionally provide the ideological dynamite for Labor's creative self-destruction have taken a pause: it's the Mark Latham show. As a political act that veers from somber to slapstick, earthy to edgy, the new leader could fill all the channels on a satellite television network with his mix of messages. So, on the eve of an election where victory is not beyond its grasp, the key to understanding what a Labor government would do - and how it would change Australia - is Latham: his family, character and style, his beliefs and passions, his policy ideas and political...
...Harvard men’s hockey team will appear in at least one of five games featuring ECAC squads and broadcast nationwide on College Sports Television, according to a release from the network...
...still characterizes the insurgency as a loosely organized network that includes former members of the Baath ruling party, homegrown jihadis and foreign terrorists. But interviews with insurgents and materials obtained by TIME suggest that the most active and violent elements of the insurgency now come under the sway of al-Zarqawi and his allies. A series of audiocassettes obtained by TIME provides rare insight into their mind-set. In hours of sermons and "seminars," as they are called, leaders of Attawhid wal Jihad exhort their rank and file to slaughter Iraqis cooperating with the U.S. and the interim government...