Word: programing
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Dates: during 1980-1980
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...knows he can only stay in the game so long, and he understands the fuel one television appearance can add to a smoldering campaign fire. "That smile? I was just making a mental calculation of what 16 minutes of prime time television would cost me," he explains when the program ends. Exposure has been good for Anderson. The nationally aired Iowa Republican debate, Anderson realizes, at least brought his candidacy out of the shadows, if not into the limelight...
...very active research program" necessitated the expansion, Dr. William Silen, Johnson Professor of Surgery, said yesterday. "We've been constrained only by the lack of space and the heavy teaching load," he said, adding that he will hire at least three additional instructors in surgery...
...stance on the issues strikes many as confusing. Leave aside the commitment to Zen and the "Linda Ronstadt number." Brown takes positions many label unusual. He advocates placing private citizens on the board of directors of the major oil companies and laying out billions for a new American space program. Although he opposes development of the MX missile, nobody can quite find a place for Brown on the foreign policy scale. For the record, he pictures himself a social liberal and fiscal conservative; he loudly supports a constitutional amendment requiring a balanced budget and favors tax-cutting schemes like Proposition...
...White House spies keep an eye on proceedings, planting Watergate seeds [the Canuck letter, et. al] as part of Nixon's sabotage program. Ed "Big Ed" Muskie, the Maine senator with "a free ride" to the Democratic nomination, breaks down on the back of a flatbed truck, flustered by Manchester Union-Leader publisher Generalissimo William Loeb. George McGovern, the soft-spoken South Dakotan teacher and World War II bomber pilot, reminds enough voters that Vietnam hasn't gone away to keep Muskie under 50 per cent and get his own candidacy rolling. Nixon? He's too engrossd with Peking, Chou...
...another hour at night, and sets his alarm clock each week to catch his favorite show, CBS's Sunday Morning, "perhaps the most imaginative and creative news experiment going on in journalism." Smith got up extra early one recent Sunday to see Charles Kuralt and colleagues put the program together at a CBS studio in Manhattan...