Word: newsweek
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Collins, 50, an American and a former Newsweek bureau chief in Paris, and Frenchman Lapierre, 48, a former editor at Paris-Match, spent four years interviewing and researching for the book on five continents, producing what they call "research-fiction." In the process, they talked with U.S. nuclear scientists at Los Alamos, civil defense experts in New York, Arab students in Europe and North Africa, and Israeli generals, not to mention a brace of agents from the CIA, Israel's Mossad and the S.D.E.C.E., the French secret service...
...appalled by the Washington Post-Newsweek broadcast group's statement that "controversial issues should be dealt with in our news and public affairs program" in response to Mobil's advocacy commercials. This is surely restriction of expression by the media. They wish to impose their censorship on a company (Mobil) that wishes to defend itself...
...women, women's right to control their own reproductive lives, and other revolutionary policies. In 1970, 50,000 people had marched down Fifth Avenue in New York City in support of a nationwide Women's Strike for Equality. And the final straw--when those radical weeklies, Time and Newsweek, featured the WLM in cover stories, the FBI knew the time had come to move on this growing pinko-inspired threat...
Four years ago Iowa made Carter a credible candidate; this year, it made George Bush an instant frontrunner. The media discovered George Bush. The day after his January 21 victory, Bush was "on the move," and on the cover of every major newspaper in the country, not to mention Newsweek, The New York Times Magazine and countless political journals. When the media discovered George Bush, so did the people. The fallout from the Iowa publicity has been a meteoric rise in the polls. A Newsweek poll conducted a week before the caucuses showed Reagan annihilating Bush, 45-6 per cent...
...nuclear peanut rides tall in the saddle, grinning his way past a crowded field of "hopefuls" to a victory here and the covers of Time and Newsweek. Can the nomination be far behind? No. Ford--he was our president then--edges Ronald Reagan, who shrugs it off. He's a young...