Word: shipman
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...aren't naive, just depressed. "I believe in the capitalist system," says Sam Donaldson, whose future as the host of This Week is up in the air after the retirement announcement of his co-anchor, Cokie Roberts. (According to press reports, ABC is grooming a replacement team of Claire Shipman and George Stephanopoulos.) "We are owned by a company that wants to make money, and I believe that the people who run these companies have to try to do that." But Donaldson thinks subbing Late Show for Nightline would cause a ripple effect. "If the news department is seen...
...heart of the allegations but only dwell on the edges; he doesn't deny that Chandra visited his apartment, only that he didn't tell police she did. So far, no one has retracted a word. During Cotchett's appearance on Good Morning America, he assured ABC's Claire Shipman that Chandra had not spent the night, but then added "If she [Chandra] spent the night she...spent it out on a couch somewhere...because [Condit's] wife was in Washington the entire period, the week [April 28 to May 2] that she's claimed to be missing...
...uses low expectations to his advantage," Jay says. "His opponents judge him by his sometimes awkward public performances and fail to realize that he is a shrewd judge of character with keen political instincts." Both reporters have family connections to their new assignment. Jay's wife Claire Shipman has been covering the White House for NBC News (her cubicle in the press section is one flight up from TIME's), while John's mother, TV correspondent Nancy Dickerson, reported on four Presidents, starting with J.F.K. "With Bush, but in a very much smaller and quieter way, it feels...
...Gore's "here's-why-I'm-in-court" p.r. offensive continued its new, apparently daily pace Wednesday with a "Today" show interview with NBC's Claire Shipman that seemed exclusively aimed at offsetting that day's AP article calling him a "lost soul." A resolutely calm Gore told Shipman he believes he won the election, and put his chances of proving it in court at "50-50." (He also sleeps seven or eight hours a night...
...would he go? A true believer needs no support. Pressed for a finish line, Gore gave Shipman a firm "middle of December" - suggesting that maybe he's not as intent on finishing by December 12, when Florida chooses its electors, as David Boies would like us to think. One thing about the law: You can argue until Washington freezes over, which in this case is January...