31. Grunte asked his hostess whether there were any press present, and seemed relieved to hear that there most certainly were none. 32. The press was too great and we found ourselves trapped by the crowd just in front a massive, black-timbered scaffold. 33. It does however represent an ethical standard which the press should be reluctant to infringe other than for reasons of genuine public interest. 34. Next year another new press will be in place, the two producing eighty thousand tons of car panels a year. 35. He added that other vehicles were despatched when it was realised the press were in attendance and that other people in area might be there. 36. Perhaps underused as a source of prospects, the press is nevertheless important. 37. Although some people swear by them, garlic presses might be the poster children for this problem. 38. Although most newspaper publishers were anti-FDR, the White House press was docile, largely because FDR was such good copy after Hoover, Coolidge and Harding. 39. Among the criticisms in the European press were charges that Albright, by threatening airstrikes against Milosevic without following through, had diluted the credibility of NATO. 40. And Clinton spinners, called once more into the breach, again argued that the press was tawdry for reporting personal matters. |