Word: cbs
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1970
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...maker in question, Margaret's husband, Lord Snowdon, has found an answer: into offbeat, unblinking television documentaries. His first, dealing with old age and titled Don't Count the Candles, was shown in 21 countries and earned six awards (including two Emmys after its 1968 appearance on CBS). His second, which is called Love of a Kind and concerns Britons' infatuation with pets, can-and should-be seen on NBC's First Tuesday next week...
...effect. He would, if he could, mortgage Margaret's Christopher Wren-designed palace for a chance to do a feature film like that cinematographic tour de force, Elvira Madigan. His next project, though, will still be "on the fringes of documentary." He is dickering about it with CBS, to which he feels indebted for getting him into film. Though the BBC was outraged at being passed over, Lord Snowdon says: "It was important that I should be asked to do my first film by an entirely private firm with no state money behind it." That way, he feels...
...assistant dean of students, Ted Theismeyer, and threatened a student's life. Soon after a John Doe complaint charging him with harassment was filed. Why, the students now demanded, had the complaint never been served? In an interview broadcast last week on Walter Cronkite's CBS Evening News, Ontario County Sheriff Ray Morrow replied: because he was only doing the job he was hired to do. Morrow defended Tommy's actions as necessary to build up his credibility to radical students. As for instructing students on how to build bombs, then urging them to use them, said...
...will be giving more planes to Israel, while at the same time pressing both Israelis and Arabs to grant major concessions in order to make negotiations possible. The U.S. "is not pro-Israeli and not pro-Arab but pro-peace," he said. But the Secretary added on CBS' Face the Nation: "It is in our best interest that Israel survive as a nation...
Syvertsen, tall, bespectacled and assured, had worked seven years with the Associated Press in New York, Poland and Moscow before joining CBS in 1966. Lately, as a correspondent in the network's Tokyo bureau, he had been spending one month out of every three in the war zone. Not reluctantly: Syvertsen had a reputation for spunk. TIME'S Rome bureau chief, James Bell, particularly remembers a time in 1963 when Nikita Khrushchev was meeting with Dean Rusk in Pitsunda on the Black Sea. "The Soviet security people tried to throw us out," Bell recalls. "We were rescued...