Word: ogden
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...Denver reporters dug into the incident, questions arose last week about Key's fitness to fly and her station management's judgment. Roger Ogden, KOA-TV general manager, admitted that the station hired Key knowing that she had been arrested for driving drunk last year. Further, it turned out, she had exaggerated her experience as a pilot, and the station had not uncovered that fact. Insisted Ogden: "Her flying was never cause for concern." But while some Denver pilots termed Key cautious, fellow reporters said they were uneasy flying with her. The windy Rockies near Denver are known...
...Denver station has revamped its policy on using choppers, though Key's crash was the city's fourth in 2½ years. Ogden denies that the stations are showboating. Says he: "News value is the predominant factor in whether...
...hostages held captive for 444 days in Iran, and Joan Walsh, 36, also a State Department foreign service officer and hostage, although for only 16 days, after which she, some other women and blacks were released; he for the second time, she for the first; in Ogden, Utah. The couple met when both were assigned to the U.S. embassy in Iran and became reacquainted when both were assigned to State Department jobs in Washington...
Included in this week's cover story is an exclusive interview with Carter conducted in Plains, Ga., by Assistant Managing Editor Ronald Kriss, who supervised the excerpting of the Carter book, and Chicago Bureau Chief Chris Ogden. TIME'S White House and State Department correspondent during the Carter Administration, Ogden prepped for the interview by renewing old contacts with former Carter aides and reviewing stories and his own yellowing notes. Recalls Ogden: "Carter is not a politician in the traditional sense who feels compelled to put up a false friendly front. While gracious, he was, as usual...
With his book ready for publication, Jimmy Carter reviewed his presidency and its aftermath with TIME Assistant Managing Editor Ronald Kriss and Midwest Bureau Chief Christopher Ogden, who covered the Carter Administration as White House and State Department correspondent. The four-hour interview began in his wood-paneled home-town office just off the main street of Plains, Ga., and concluded on the sunny back patio of his modest brick ranch house a few blocks away. Afterward, Carter went right to work polishing up the inaugural lecture he was to present the next day as a professor at Emory University...