A journalist should be a dispassionate reporter of fact. From Wordnet, Princeton University.
All this angst needs to be placed in dispassionate perspective. From Wordnik.com. [Michael Brenner: A Phony War] Reference
The answer is entirely predictable, and not likely to be grounded in dispassionate analysis. From Wordnik.com. [Sound Politics: Democrats Pitch on Stem Cell Research Stinks] Reference
But by no stretch of the imagination could she be called a dispassionate expert. From Wordnik.com. [Top stories from Times Online] Reference
He believed he would be "dispassionate" on the issue. From Wordnik.com. [ANC Daily News Briefing] Reference
His was certainly not "dispassionate" or value-free social science. From Wordnik.com. [Archive 2008-01-01] Reference
He was very impressed with how methodical they were and he used the word "dispassionate" to describe their deliberations. From Wordnik.com. [Jane Hamsher: Libby Jury: Scooter Fall Guy For Rove and Cheney] Reference
"Amelia" comes across as the kind of dispassionate Hollywood. From Wordnik.com. [indieWIRE News] Reference
I agree with all that. "dispassionate" is what we need a lot more of. From Wordnik.com. [AlterNet.org Main RSS Feed] Reference
Mr. Gates also vowed the the review committee would address the issue in a "dispassionate" way. From Wordnik.com. [The Washington Times stories: Latest Headlines] Reference
It showed Helfenridge to be the better and stronger man; and there was a kind of dispassionate consolation in that. From Wordnik.com. [That Good May Come] Reference
"dispassionate" and that she hadn't even considered the potential for an environmental backlash. From Wordnik.com. [Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion] Reference
Which gives some inkling of how dispassionate they are. From Wordnik.com. [Books in Brief] Reference
People are not dispassionate information-processing machines. From Wordnik.com. [When It’s Head Versus Heart, The Heart Wins] Reference
Perhaps what's needed is a dispassionate look at the research. From Wordnik.com. [The Truth About Global Warming] Reference
They do not emerge from a dispassionate effort to discover the truth. From Wordnik.com. [Book Excerpt: 'Untruth: Why The Conventional Wisdom Is (Almost Always) Wrong'] Reference
The surviving family -- Hughes died in 1998 -- isn't so dispassionate. From Wordnik.com. [Rethinking A Marriage From Hell] Reference
The state's waiver application makes its case with dispassionate math. From Wordnik.com. [Ehrlich chastises state on military voting request] Reference
The court also heard dispassionate accounts of terror from German witnesses. From Wordnik.com. [The Trial Of The Century] Reference
Look at the possible obstacles to your vision in a dispassionate and objective way. From Wordnik.com. [The Basics Of Being Strategic About Change] Reference
But in two earlier election cases, Lewis had seemed like a cool and dispassionate hand. From Wordnik.com. [Settling Old Scores In The Swamp] Reference
His verdict is delivered in the dispassionate prose of a lifetime spent drafting memos. From Wordnik.com. [TONY KNOWS BEST] Reference
It's not clear what Obama's heart belongs to — he is a much more dispassionate figure. From Wordnik.com. [The Surprising Lessons of Vietnam] Reference
In theory I should be dispassionate about the final destination of the championship trophy. From Wordnik.com. [Somerset county championship win would exorcise ghosts of legends past] Reference
Over time, Warren began to see herself less as a dispassionate analyst and more as an advocate. From Wordnik.com. [The Debt Crusader] Reference
The secularists were too flippant, too dismissive of real belief; the scholars, too dispassionate. From Wordnik.com. [A Rethinking of the Gospels] Reference
However, it is hard to find a dispassionate observer of the war who thinks that we have achieved that goal. From Wordnik.com. [A Man Apart] Reference
They are dispassionate, brutally calculating and, man, they are fickle, paying back those who scorn them in kind. From Wordnik.com. [The Ailing Tigers Of Asia] Reference
We need to follow the model laid out in The Blueprint where we make a dispassionate decision based on the numbers. From Wordnik.com. [Where do we place our defensive line?] Reference
Reporters are supposed to be cool and dispassionate, but sometimes what we witness can't help but touch our hearts. From Wordnik.com. [THE EDITOR'S DESK] Reference
McCain, by contrast, was almost dispassionate when he told a NEWSWEEK reporter that he wishes to expand the war in Iraq. From Wordnik.com. [Iraq: Friends at War] Reference
How can Thomas be dispassionate after he raged against liberal interest groups, Democratic senators and television cameras?. From Wordnik.com. [An Uncomfortable Seat] Reference
Neither an apologist nor a high-minded scourge, Todd confronts the tragic actions of his forebears with dispassionate honesty. From Wordnik.com. [Slaves in the Family] Reference
Still, at least the French and German exchanges have gone public, bringing in more dispassionate shareholders from the outside. From Wordnik.com. [Periscope] Reference
But it's asking an awful lot for someone to take a dispassionate look at the compensation of a CEO who can hand him big contracts. From Wordnik.com. [In Their Pocket] Reference
In the case of Austen Ivereigh, for example, he is not a dispassionate commentator but a prolific propagandist for the papal cause. From Wordnik.com. [Why the Holy See is treated as a state] Reference
The professor delivered her testimony in a dispassionate, lawyerly way; Thomas's fiery delivery may have drowned out Hill's message. From Wordnik.com. [Dividing Lines] Reference
The effort is casual and dispassionate, but the result are arresting paintings that capture the viewer's attention and excite comment. From Wordnik.com. [Fern Siegel: Review: 320 Studios] Reference
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