Word: radioed
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...public, and he recognizes that the President has paid a price for the inclination of some on his staff to treat them dismissively or high-handedly. His first move, working with counselor Dan Bartlett, was to offer the press secretary job to Tony Snow of Fox News radio and television, a former newspaper editorial writer and onetime host of Fox News Sunday who served George H.W. Bush as speechwriting director. Snow, a father of three and a sax player, is the bona fide outsider that Republican allies have long prescribed for Bushworld and would bring irreverence to a place that...
...hurtled toward the dry bed of Rogers Lake, a natural twelve-mile-long runway. Air Force and North American officials crowded anxiously around loudspeakers relaying Crossfield's radio messages. At 14,000 ft., Scott Crossfield, a World War II Navy pilot and a test pilot for a decade, remarked laconically: "I wish I could do a roll on my way in." (Later he explained that he had restrained himself because "if I'd goofed, it would have looked kind of sour.") Testing his controls with a wide, lazy-S turn, Crossfield, following procedure, jettisoned the X-15's ventral tailfin...
...simple and stylish ways to help the environment. "The biggest issue with people is that they think living green is too hard, that it costs too much," he says. "I am providing solutions. I am teaching them how." Seo is the host of two shows, one on Sirius satellite radio and another on Lime Television, and he has written four books. His fifth one, Simply Green: Parties, will be published in June, and provides recipes and party-planning ideas with a focus on sustainable living. Tips include how to make a lantern out of a used paper...
...began by arguing that “China’s culture is becoming more popular than it used to be.” He said that China is attracting more foreign tourists, and China Radio International is now more widely broadcast in other East Asian nations than the U.S.-backed Voice of America...
...bears some scrutiny. Ahmadinejad was actually upstaged by his most detested domestic political rival, Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani - the former president who, despite the backing of supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khameini, lost his bid for a third term against Ahmadinejad. Rafsanjani broke news of the enrichment to an Iranian radio station several hours before Ahmadinejad, spoiling the surprise in an effort to deny Ahmadinejad the credit for the politically popular achievement...