Word: interviewer
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Bush exploits this confusion for all it's worth. Cultivating a moderate stand on foreign policy, he scoffs at the idea of sending American troops to the Middle East to protect our interests there. Yet he defended the concept of "winning" a nuclear war against the Soviets in an interview with Robert Scheer of the Los Angeles Times...
...flocked into Commonwealth monitoring camps in observance of the ceasefire. But Soames has been attacked for many of his political decisions-such as permitting South African troops to remain at the border crossing of Beit Bridge, and using armed "auxiliaries" in remote rural areas. Last week, in his first interview as Governor, Soames spent 75 minutes with TIME Johannesburg Bureau Chief William McWhirter discussing some of the problems he faces. McWhirter'sreport...
...interview took place just before the Afghanistan invasion. TIME delayed publication while trying to get Castro to comment on the Soviet move. He declined
...documentary crew was awarded the keys to the city. In Harlan, TIME Correspondent Madeleine Nash was quietly observing a precinct caucus when somebody announced her presence to the audience, which applauded warmly. Occasional requests for off-the-record or deep-background treatment notwithstanding, most Iowans seemed to be eager interview subjects. Says David Yepsen of the Des Moines Register: "People are civil here. If someone comes up and talks to you, you talk back...
...voters than by the candidates. Ronald Reagan used 150 news people on hand for a rally as unwitting bit players in a paid campaign broadcast. John Connally dragged a busload of reporters on a tightly programmed 40-hour tour of the state that left them little time to interview anyone but Connally supporters. At one stop the troupe paid a 4:30 a.m. visit to a farm in Elberon (pop. 193,000) that just happened to be populated by 40 or 50 of the candidate's fans. Says Des Moines Register Reporter Elizabeth Ballantine: "The Connally people wanted...