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EDUCATION; COLLEGES STUDYING SOVIET TELEVISION
in
COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES
/ Goldman, Marshall
/ GOLDMAN, MARSHALL I (PROF)
/ Sanders, Jonathan
/ TELEVISION
1986
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EDUCATION; COLLEGES STUDYING SOVIET TELEVISION
in
COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES
/ Goldman, Marshall
/ GOLDMAN, MARSHALL I (PROF)
/ Sanders, Jonathan
/ TELEVISION
1986
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Newspaper Article
EDUCATION; COLLEGES STUDYING SOVIET TELEVISION
1986
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''Study of the Soviet Union in the United States has always relied heavily on printed matter,'' said Marshall Goldman, Associate Director of the Russian Research Center at Harvard, which began offering the programs last month. ''I think scholars generally feel more comfortable with a newspaper. But more exciting things are going on in the Soviet Union than make their way to Pravda and Izvestia.'' Professor Goldman said that aside from illustrating nuances of spoken Russian, the programs also illustrate the interests and concerns of average Russian citizens, who are interviewed frequently on the nightly Russian news show, ''Vremya'' or ''time.'' Creighton has become one of the two major distributors of the special equipment necessary to track and receive transmissions from the orbiting Soviet television satellite ''Molnyia'' (''Lightning'') which is used to send programs originating in Moscow to the people of the Soviet Union's 11 time zones, especially those in Siberia.
Publisher
New York Times Company
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