The Daily Telegraph suggests personal animosity is at the bottom of the tug of war. |
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Whatever the Telegraph may tell its readers, such voices represent what large parts of the world think. |
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He was made a political correspondent and was kept on by the Telegraph when it took over the Morning Post. |
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The Telegraph makes an aggressive argument for an end to appeasement in the Middle East. |
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Angel told the Greenock Telegraph that she had already had some enquiries, although a number were a bit mucky. |
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Rupert Murdoch didn't exactly invent the ploy, whatever squeaks the modern Telegraph may emit in that direction. |
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Andrew Gimson in the Telegraph sums up precisely what this means for the election. |
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The possible participation of Camilla Parker Bowles has occupied column inches in the diaries of The Times and the Daily Telegraph all week. |
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Upmarket, the Times and Telegraph are platforms for higher but no less destructive forms of scepticism. |
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The Telegraph reports today that the cartoon strip Alex is being turned into a 90 minute West End Show. |
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The first telegraph messages from overseas were received in Morse code in this building on 22 October 1872 via the Overland Telegraph Line. |
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Staff at the Western Telegraph set the trend on Friday, when they took part in a tea break with a difference. |
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The family later moved to Saltia where William operated as a teamster, carting materials for the Overland Telegraph. |
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After the completion of the Telegraph Station it remained an isolated group of buildings in the middle of nowhere. |
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The Government could make millions of pounds from eco-towns while watering down their green credentials, the Telegraph has revealed. |
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The Daily Telegraph has also learned that the planned housing density for the eco-towns in some places is equivalent to an inner city. |
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Jemima Lewis in the Telegraph makes some telling points about journalistic iconography and scientific nomenclature. |
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And so it would appear from his none too flattering article in yesterday's Telegraph. |
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He remained a Daily Telegraph columnist and Spectator editor as he started to climb the greasy pole at Westminster. |
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The spin on the Telegraph story is so blatant that it reeks of desperation. |
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A gin-soaked, retired General from Cheltenham writes to The Telegraph to tell us how it should be done. |
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If you prefer the modern, industrialised phalanx of grey and fuscous brown, then I refer you to Eamon McCann in the Belfast Telegraph. |
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The war ended, the airmen left, and Telegraph Cove became a sawmill town again, providing custom-made lumber for boats and docks. |
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James's appearance on the front of the Daily Telegraph sports section last Saturday has drawn a lot of response. |
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It was reported by the Daily Telegraph and cross-posted to the Courier Mail. |
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He made the promise as the Evening Telegraph went to Downing Street to tackle him on the issue. |
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The fact that this was perceived by the Telegraph to be unsayable merely makes Steyn's point for him. |
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The survey has been conducted in conjunction with the Daily Telegraph, which has been in the town taking pictures to extol Skipton's virtues. |
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His appointment was without doubt a defining moment in the history of the Daily Telegraph. |
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The Independent newspapers own the London daily and Sunday along with the Belfast Telegraph and Sunday Life. |
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There was also a cricket writer during the last England tour who gave us bad press in the London Daily Telegraph. |
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Last week, in the letters page to the Daily Telegraph, he wrote to defend the Edinburgh group from an item which appeared in a diary column. |
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Last year, plans for the revamp were revealed exclusively in the Lancashire Evening Telegraph. |
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Member, the First Commissioner has given instructions that an Exchange Telegraph tape machine shall be installed. |
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His column about the murder was pulled by the Daily Telegraph this week on grounds of taste. |
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The Sunday Telegraph, which has access to the files without redactions, can provide the full picture. |
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Throughout the last 150 years, the Western Telegraph has continued non-stop to bring the news to Pembrokeshire and West Wales. |
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According to today's Daily Telegraph, it used to be considered very unlucky for Good Friday to fall on March 25, Lady Day. |
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A Telegraph editorial says the case shows that something's rotten in the European superstate. |
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She was an avid reader and kept in touch with her home county through the weekly Connaught Telegraph. |
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Now he is petrified of fireworks and the noise they make and was prompted to write to the Lancashire Evening Telegraph about his fears. |
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While en route, Charles Todd commissioned him to act as estafette between the construction parties of the Overland Telegraph Line. |
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I wonder if the new editor of the Daily Telegraph has any Irish blood and will tone down the paper's anti-euro, anti-EU philippics. |
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Before long the Sunday Telegraph ran two feature stories about corruption and violence in the construction industry. |
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The plans, which also include a club house, are now available to view at Telegraph House. |
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From the Telegraph to the Guardian, from the Mail to the Mirror, he was laurelled in admiring headlines. |
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With the modern world getting it in the neck from both The Times and The Guardian, the Daily Telegraph could hardly stand idly by. |
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The Telegraph reported that it had obtained a copy of the diary and could find no reference to death threats or hit lists. |
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The most recent piece of legislation in this area was the Telegraph Act of 1863 which had loose restrictions on digging up roads. |
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In his autobiography he accredits the story to Neil Collins, Bennett's Daily Telegraph counterpart. |
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Hand your message in at any Telegraph Office, where full particulars concerning radio-telegrams can be obtained. |
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In 1913, she found a job on the Winnipeg Telegraph and also appeared in a number of plays at the local theatre. |
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From 1936 onwards short-wave radio stations replaced the posts on the Yukon Telegraph line. |
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The Western Telegraph today joins forces with the county council in a campaign to achieve total broadband coverage in Pembrokeshire. |
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As ever the Telegraph is busy fulmigating against so many straw men and other fallacious arguments. |
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In stark contrast to the Anglophile sentiments professed to in the Daily Telegraph, the Hale interview was militantly anti-British in tone. |
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But it wasn't a view shared by the Times or the Telegraph, where Steyn stuck to his earlier predictions that Republicans would walk it with a 315 electoral vote victory. |
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The stoppage was observed by 140 union members, according to the Daily Telegraph including gardeners, waiters, cooks and valets. |
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If the populist, royalist Daily Mail saw itself as supporting a very successful project, the tone in the Telegraph remained more in keeping with older ideas of the monarchy. |
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The Archbishop of Canterbury weighs into the discussion in the Telegraph. |
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Alex Massie is a former Washington correspondent for The Scotsman and The Daily Telegraph. |
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Ironically, those are the very three issues which the true blue Daily Telegraph says are the reasons for its decision to support the Conservative party. |
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He says the Telegraph ignored important reasons to suppose that the girl, or more likely her parents, were not innocents abroad but downloaders on a big scale. |
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The Sunday Telegraph reports that astrantias, gazanias and large-flowered clematis have all been reported in flower in different gardens in December. |
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Andrew Neil as publisher would be a blessing for the Telegraph, worried that its purchasers, often as old as the Conservative Party's average member, are dying off. |
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Over the coming fortnight, The Daily Telegraph will accompany the Paras as they seek to drive out the insurgents, discover their arms dumps and win over the population. |
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The Daily Telegraph reports that the new test required of applicants for British citizenship requires knowledge of where the different dialects of British English are spoken. |
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According to the Telegraph, guardsman Lee Wheeler, 29 said he spoke to her about the baby. |
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Her work has also appeared in The Daily Telegraph, The Guardian, monocle magazine and The Globe and Mail. |
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It's got him onto the health pages of the Telegraph, for one thing. |
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It is true that Italian unification has important lessons for all Europe, but not those the Telegraph writer thinks. |
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Telegraph lines were often built alongside the railways, and steamships laid the submarine cables that took the telegraph network across the seas and oceans. |
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This was in the days before the internet and I, as a young cub reporter, had to send my missives from the front line back to the Telegraph by carrier pigeon. |
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He had made an arrangement with Barclay H. Warburton, owner of the Philadelphia Evening Telegraph. |
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The Daily Mirror, The Sydney Morning Herald, the Sun and the Daily Telegraph, worked together to produce an emergency edition during a dispute with the printer's industrial union. |
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The Telegraph reports on the publication of a new dictionary of Italian neologisms, which includes dozens of coinages based on the names of political leaders. |
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Insiders at The Daily Telegraph, a ferocious Times competitor, claim that about 15,000 Times refuseniks have defected since last Monday when the broadsheet Times disappeared. |
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The young woman behind the counter in the office at Telegraph Cove down the coast was practising diplomacy on some disgruntled tourists when I arrived. |
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The Belfast Telegraph welcomes Gerry Adams' statement that the McCartney killing was an unpardonable crime. The IRA followed suite with a condemnation of the killers. |
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The Telegraph reported that over 5,000 patients with breast, bowel, skin, and pancreatic cancers would be affected. |
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The Telegraph reports that he is fluent in Swahili and a keen zoologist. |
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According to The Telegraph, a Home Office official who disagreed with this decision was suspended. |
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The 'race-fixing' story was also front-page news as far as the Guardian, The Times, the Daily Telegraph and the Sun were concerned. |
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From 2008, the Telegraph has been printed at the Newsprinters huge site at Knowsley. |
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But researchers are warning that the blueish light their screens emit can stop users getting a good night's sleep, the Telegraph reported. |
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A draft copy of Labour's manifesto was leaked to the Daily Mirror and The Daily Telegraph on 10 May. |
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He wrote numerous editorials for The Guardian, The Daily Telegraph and The Observer condemning the Iraq war. |
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In 2008 The Telegraph named him among the most influential people in British culture. |
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The Sunday Times has a significantly higher circulation than The Times, and sometimes outsells The Sunday Telegraph. |
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A joint committee of inquiry was established by the Board of Trade and the Atlantic Telegraph Company. |
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Lance Corporal Tasker, who was from Scotland, was shot dead and the dog Theo died from a seizure at Camp Bastion, The Daily Telegraph reports. |
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Simon Hart of the Daily Telegraph has tweeted that the prodigal triple-jumper has come home, in preparation for tomorrow's qualification round. |
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A writ of summons has also been issued in Northern Ireland against the Belfast Telegraph and 'other litigation is pending', the law firm said. |
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Fellow midfielder Aron Gunnarsson took this shot after borrowing Telegraph staffman Joe Bailey's camera. |
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The Telegraph understands the dispute centred primarily on how Dr Mattu should be reskilled to resume his research. |
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Brian, Valetta's husband, told the Telegraph how selfless Valetta even took on the care of his dying mother. |
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According to The Telegraph, the North Iowa Tea Party began displaying the sign in Mason City last week. |
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And since the brainteaser was too huge to be penned by hand, solutions are lighted in fluorescent letters at night, reports the Telegraph. |
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She also told how she left the show on medical grounds and spoke to a psychiatrist in the Bush Telegraph regularly. |
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More details have emerged sice the Telegraph exclusively revealed the Budget plas o Saturday. |
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According to Telegraph UK, Dolly Parton disappointed many fans who believed she was just miming in a supposedly-live performance. |
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Golding Constable owned a small ship, The Telegraph, which he moored at Mistley on the Stour estuary, and used to transport corn to London. |
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Shamed and determined not to be outdone by the yellow press, the nobs from The Times and Telegraph joined in. |
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Although Polydactylism is not particularly rare, it is extremely uncommon for an extra digit on each hand and foot, reports the Telegraph. |
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The Telegraph and Argus is Bradford's daily newspaper, published six days each week from Monday to Saturday. |
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Obituaries in the Times, Guardian and Daily Telegraph paid tribute to his outstanding contribution to landscape art. |
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The Telegraph reported an unidentified source as saying that despite his previous discussion of assisted suicide, his death had been natural. |
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He left school at the age of 15 and went to work as a copy boy in the Manchester Office of the Daily Telegraph. |
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The Atlantic Telegraph Company was formed in London in 1856 to undertake to construct a commercial telegraph cable across the Atlantic Ocean. |
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The Daily Telegraph and The Financial Times also predicted that Butler was about to be appointed. |
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The Calcutta Telegraph filed a report on its progress in one of its March editions. |
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McFarland's Down is a linear settlement that grew in the latter half of the 20th century and is to the immediate north of Telegraph. |
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The only golf club on the Isles of Scilly is situated between Telegraph and the coast to the west. |
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The cable service failed in 1876 and the Scilly Islands Telegraph Company did not have the resources to repair it. |
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Ashurst, Morris and Company of Old Jewry, London were contracted by the Scilly Islands Telegraph Company. |
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The settlement takes its name from Telegraph Tower, situated at the summit of the hill. |
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Telegraph is a settlement on St Mary's, the largest of the Isles of Scilly, England. |
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Other settlements on the island are Old Town, Porthloo, Pelistry, Trenoweth, Holy Vale, Maypole, Normandy, Longstone, Rocky Hill and Telegraph. |
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There was a short stop to look at Porthcurno and the Eastern Telegraph Company followed by refreshments at the First and Last Inn in Sennen. |
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By 23 June, news of the broadcast hit the front pages of the Daily Telegraph and the Daily Mail. |
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Another important customer was the Telegraph Office of the General Post Office, but this could not be reached though the culverts. |
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Both The Daily Telegraph and The Guardian described the acquittal as embarrassment to the Brown Ministry. |
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The Telegraph in 2016 estimated Bowie's total worldwide sales at 140 million records. |
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Chris Harvey, again from The Daily Telegraph identified a range of clues, cultural references and possible inspirations. |
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The album is viewed by several critics including The Independent, The Telegraph and the BBC, as one of the best live rock albums of all time. |
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Will Lewis, a former New York correspondent and News Editor for the FT, is the current editor of the Daily Telegraph. |
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Last Thursday the Telegraph reported how the datura stramonium, known as devil's trumpet, had been found in a family garden in Keresley. |
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The Belfast Telegraph is the leading newspaper, and UK and Irish national newspapers are also available. |
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British newspapers with unionist leanings, such as The Daily Telegraph, usually use unionist language. |
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The Daily Telegraph and The Morning Post on 21 December 1943 wrote that he had been saved by penicillin. |
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In a 2010 interview with The Telegraph, Caine spoke of the impersonations and how everyone he meets quotes lines at him, to the point he quotes them quoting him. |
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I have a monthly subscription to The Daily Telegraph newspaper. |
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I am fed up reading about the moaners and groaners in the Telegraph. |
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The Evening Telegraph reported yesterday how Debbie Niblett was taken 110 miles to Ashton-under-Lyne, Manchester, to give birth to her premature twin boys. |
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In June 2006, The Daily Telegraph reported that the Marylebone Cricket Club and Surrey CCC had put in a joint bid to host the tournament at Lord's and The Oval. |
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Conversely, the Telegraph carried a report on 5 January 2009, predicting the demise of Morris dancing within 20 years, due to the lack of young people willing to take part. |
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The heist took place around midnight on the A6 motorway at the Avallon toll booth, around 200 kilometers Southeast of Paris, The Telegraph reported. |
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The information was kept inside the DoJ until last week, even though FBI agents had already discovered classified information on Broadwell's computer, The Telegraph reports. |
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In the Bush Telegraph, George started to cry and was really upset. |
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According to the Daily Telegraph, Bingle, 22, is staying at the Beverly Laurel Motor Hotel in West Hollywood with hairstylist and close friend Max May, reports News. |
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Covert hacktivist collective Anonymous has hit out at Telegraph columnist Marth Gill for her article linking their Million Mask March with sweatshops in Brazil. |
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The Coastguard's Lookout Tower is also known as the Telegraph Tower. |
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The ashcoloured mummy has reportedly been sent to the National Centre of Forensic Expertise in Ulan Bator for further study, The Telegraph reported. |
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George Kennan, an American working on the Western Union Telegraph Expedition in the late 1860s, found that dog sled travel on the lower Anadyr was limited by lack of firewood. |
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This confirmed his suspicions and, along with his experience of analysing historic documents, it enabled him to persuade The Daily Telegraph to pay for forensic analysis. |
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A residential building collapsed, destroying nine houses on a hillside in the state capital of Aizawl on Saturday, the Telegraph newspaper reported. |
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Much in this country needs changing and improving, but we should not become nostalgists promoting a better yesterday, The Telegraph quoted Green, as saying. |
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The Daily Telegraph in 1856 became the first penny newspaper in London. |
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Two years later he took a job as a telegraph operator with the Danish Great Northern Telegraph Company laying a cable from Newcastle to Denmark using British contractors. |
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Jones has published a number of articles on political and social commentary, principally in newspapers The Daily Telegraph, The Guardian, The Independent, and The Observer. |
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The school was run from a succession of different locations, including its original premises at the Russells' residence, Telegraph House, near Harting, West Sussex. |
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Thomson's work had, however, caught the eye of the project's undertakers and in December 1856, he was elected to the board of directors of the Atlantic Telegraph Company. |
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Thomson's results were disputed at a meeting of the British Association in 1856 by Wildman Whitehouse, the electrician of the Atlantic Telegraph Company. |
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But residents say only two people appear to have been sent letters about the new mast which is designed to look like a telegraph pole. |
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He lost control of the car, striking a kerb, a stone wall and a telegraph pole. |
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Today, of course, we are no longer tethered to telegraph or telephone wires for conversation. |
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As soon as the telegraph lines were back up and running she'd wire the Western Rangers, after all this was what they did for a living. |
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Reporters in the late 1800s kept their stories short to save on telegraph charges. |
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In 1881 while working as a telegraph linesman, he married Mary Ann Bralla, an eighteen year old girl from Blinman. |
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My name's Betty Pearce and my dad was the son of a white man named Tom Williams, who was a linesman for the telegraph line. |
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The pioneers invested heavily in productive capital assets like mines, overland telegraph lines, dams and artesian bores. |
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By that time electronic telegraph was in the ascendent, and would grow to supplant the European semaphore networks. |
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In many places, his telegraph line was simply tacked onto trees instead of being tacked onto poles. |
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It were not just telegraph lines and telegraphy which he brought to South Australia. |
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The Germans also launched a maladroit effort to entice Mexico into the war, exposed by the Zimmermann telegraph affair. |
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In turn, the Afghan camel teamsters followed the telegraph line, as did, soon after, the Central Australian Railway. |
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The train can only proceed when the line ahead is clear, as indicated back to the previous staff station by telegraph. |
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He was instructed to announce, if possible, his coming by telegraph and report to the medical director at the place of destination. |
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There was so much emigration in the past I remember, in the post office, people would send money home by telegraph every week. |
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There were now 50,000 miles of telegraph wire in the theatre of war, making coverage more extensive and immediate. |
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Six months after the arrival of the telegraph, all southern provinces were linked by telegraph lines. |
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However, message transmission by telegraph was a slow and sometimes uncertain way of sending information. |
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The encirclement of the world by telegraph by the early 1870s represented yet another revolution in communications. |
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There was also the Morse code telegraph system which dated from the earliest days and remained in use to supplement the telephones. |
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On 11 May 1874 the residents of Callington celebrated the connection by telegraph with Adelaide. |
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In 1877 the town was connected by telegraph to Adelaide but it was not until 1911 that a telephone exchange was installed. |
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Miraculously, even the telegraph wires along which Morse code messages once pulsed still dangle in the breeze. |
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The telegraph wires had broken as well, according to the couple that had stopped by. |
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For about a hundred years the principal method of long distance communication was by telegraph. |
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It was communication by telegraph that brought one of the biggest revolutions in weather forecasting techniques. |
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Once the codebook was established and disseminated, a telegraph could serve as such a device. |
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Henry had a telegraph in his mill office, he knew before anybody, about the moving armies. |
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Devices like the telegraph, telephone, phonograph, and radio annihilated physical and temporal distance. |
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When the telegraph board is placed at the first teeing-ground, a person will be in charge of it, to note the order of starting. |
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How do we not telegraph to the rest of the world that we are vulnerable in some way? |
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You never want to telegraph that you underestimate in any way, shape or form your opponent's strength. |
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It's my opinion that both these methods are turgid in the extreme and what is more, they telegraph Germany's intentions early on. |
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Make sure that your upper body doesn't make any unnecessary movements that will telegraph your intentions to your opponent. |
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Learning telegraphy, he worked in various midwestern cities as a telegraph and presswire operator. |
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As far as I know the seeds of the telegraph plant need to be scarified before soaking them for the 12 hours. |
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Also, look for the golden yellow blooms of snakeweed, turpentinebush, goldeneyes, and telegraph plants. |
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In last month's crash a spinning car brought a telegraph pole and live power cables crashing onto nearby homes. |
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It has been designed to blend in with what is already there, and to look like a telegraph pole. |
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It looked as though it had hit the wall, a telegraph pole and some road signs as well. |
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A BT telegraph pole was hauled down as the lorry skidded along the road, leaving residents without a phone line for hours. |
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He hung from the guttering, cutting at the telephone wire that hung between the house and the nearest telegraph pole. |
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At first glance it looks like an ordinary telegraph pole but it's really a cunningly disguised mobile phone mast. |
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The long planks of timber fell off the truck to the left, knocking down a telegraph pole and felling telephone lines in the area. |
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The car then veered across the road and hit a telegraph pole, eventually becoming lodged between the pole and a tree. |
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At midnight yesterday the Government imposed full control over all communication by telephone and telegraph. |
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The steam printing press, telegraph, radio and television have all revolutionized media in some way or another. |
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The development of spin off technologies, such as the telegraph and semaphore flags, linked Civil War commanders on the first information net. |
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He was tied to a telegraph pole in a field on the outskirts of Cork City where he was repeatedly beaten by a gang of up to five men. |
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After the invention of the electrical telegraph in 1839, telegraph lines were laid alongside all the major railway tracks. |
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The truck came to rest on its side in the car park, after demolishing a telegraph pole and shedding half its load of soya. |
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As he started in rearranging the foliage on the wreath he signaled the waiting transmigrator operator to telegraph the bottle back to The Ship. |
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He discusses the science of the telegraph and the transoceanic telegraph cables that linked the world. |
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A cabin enclosing the ship's wheel, compass binnacle and a telegraph to the engine room. |
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One car ended up in a field after skidding off the road and up a bank, narrowly missing a tree and telegraph pole. |
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Instead, a voice-over quoting from telegraph reports briefly mentions some of the mob's racist violence. |
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Black tube steel was sourced from local foundries, together with telegraph poles and guy wires which were donated by a power supplier. |
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They served as clerks and couriers, telephone and telegraph operators, code and cipher analysts, and spies behind enemy lines in Europe. |
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The turbine he wanted was in galvanised steel and no taller than a telegraph pole and was almost noiseless, added Mr Kershaw. |
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The verdant hills and raised valleys are ideal for its commodes with ample erect telegraph poles to mark its new territorial space. |
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They elaborated the connections between the telegraph and spiritualist phenomena in an effort to legitimize their supernatural experiences. |
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The industry's bush telegraph often gives competitors several month's warning of a launch. |
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The industry bush telegraph is predicting more job cuts at Ericsson ahead of its Q1 earning figures on Friday. |
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The bear proceeded rather deliberately to nose the hotel's telegraph key before walking out the front door into the night. |
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Zhao Ziyang was away on a state visit to North Korea but received the text by telegraph and wired back his total agreement. |
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It had two stores, a post office and telegraph station, wheelwrights, blacksmiths and a pound. |
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One car even catapulted a telegraph pole into her house in the latest collision at the weekend. |
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Later, runners, telegraph, semaphore, heliograph and line were used to communicate. |
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Trees had been uprooted, telegraph poles broken, roofs torn off, advertising hoardings smashed and lorries turned over. |
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Whether they could do so through Sweden depended on the state of the railways, roads, and telegraph communications. |
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Glass telegraph insulators marked T.C.R. were one of the few things actually marked for the railway. |
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From the private hall a flight of stairs led to the upper floor, where there were rooms for the postmaster, stores, telegraph linesmen, postmen, and the female clerks. |
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The playing of music brought the penalty of a public lashing, audio cassettes were smashed and the tapes fluttered from telegraph posts in most cities. |
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From there they would repair telegraph lines, escort traders and pioneers, and, if necessary, fight the Cheyenne and their allies the Comanches and Kiowas. |
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A woman sits at a telegraph key and rattles Morse code along a wire. |
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Even online chat rooms have an antecedent in the exchanges of nineteenth-century American telegraph operators. |
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Icons of the genre, Jay Z, 50 cent, Kanye West, effortlessly telegraph cool. |
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He reckons the bush telegraph would soon get the others to slow down. |
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Distortions on the bush telegraph begin, via the Chinese whispers effect. |
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The jazz bush telegraph has ensured that audiences for jazz in Howden are continuing to grow, with people travelling from Leeds, Scarborough, York and Hull. |
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We came home from work on July 3 to discover our telephone had been cut off and BT engineers had erected a new telegraph pole a few metres from our home on the green. |
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He would ask after them from a mutual friend, sure, but would he drive across state lines to deliver their wife's baby when the snows had brought down telegraph lines? |
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With no official course, no maps and, for half the race, no roads, drivers navigate by counting telegraph poles, by compass and by observing the position of the sun. |
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And the sleuth-hounds of the law, the paid fighting animals of society, with telephone, and telegraph, and special train, clung to his trail night and day. |
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There was a cold furnace festooned with service pipes and otherwise nothing but cockeyed telegraph poles and loops of wire in a bare waste of ashes. |
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Resting, appropriately, on mortuary trestles, the piece is a kind of reliquary for the doomed 1854 vessel that was designed to lay the first transatlantic telegraph cable. |
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Of course the delay in delivering a letter across the Atlantic Ocean was considerable in those days, the first transoceanic telegraph still decades in the future. |
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Dering's proposals for a transmarine telegraph are contained in his patent specification of August 15, 1853, from which we condense the following account. |
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The invention of the teletypewriter and its development of the teleprinter, linked to the telegraph system, added a further dimension to communications. |
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The curlew and oystercatcher are back and the great spotted woodpeckers have chosen the oldest telegraph poles in the village for best quality drumming sounds. |
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It is believed the lorry hit a telegraph pole as it was negotiating a bend shortly after 9am yesterday, and it toppled onto its side, trapping the driver in the cab. |
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There is another celebrated instance in the telegraph plant, Desmodium gyrens of Bengal, whose leaflets keep moving all the time without any touch. |
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He may telegraph from his country much news which is unexceptionable. |
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I told her that I would telegraph her with my reply as soon as possible. |
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And in the mean time, we can telegraph the Judge in Sacramento. |
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By the 1840s, the clamor for intelligence by brokers and other investors had already resulted in a telegraph operating between New York and Philadelphia. |
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You can operate an optical telegraph as used in the Napoleonic wars, crank up second world war field telephones and learn to read Morse and semaphore. |
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In 1832, the same year he became professor of painting and sculpture at the University of the City of New York, he drafted his first ideas for an electric telegraph. |
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In 1832, Baron Schilling, a Russian diplomat, linked the Summer Palace of the tsar in St Petersburg to the Winter Palace using a telegraph with rotating magnetized needles. |
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The sender would tap out messages in Morse code, which would be transmitted down the telegraph wire to a human decoder translating them back into ordinary characters. |
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Women as perpetrators include nearly 200 women tried as spies, smugglers, couriers, and saboteurs conducting such activity as cutting telegraph wire. |
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The mathematical description of heat flow linked his work on thermodynamics, the cooling of the Earth and even the flow of electrical signals through telegraph wires. |
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But just as the petrol engine overtook the trams and the telephone surpassed the telegraph, it now seems the mobile is set to conquer the landline. |
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An overspill from the pub sat on the wall opposite with pints and ghetto-blasters and a dozen pairs of runners hung by their laces from the telegraph wires overhead. |
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It was founded by Paul Julius Reuter, a German Jew transplanted to London who had once used carrier pigeons to bridge a telegraph gap between Belgium and Germany. |
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If a web site changes, but the change is not immediately visible, then any consequence is dependent on the web bush telegraph slowly widening the knowledge base. |
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In 1885, the Meiji government sponsored a telegraph system, throughout Japan, situating the telegraphs in all major Japanese cities at the time. |
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Firstly, there was no convenient means of operating the line as single track as the line predated the telegraph. |
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David Hughes' telegraph was internationally used until the 1930s, and his microphone is the forerunner of all the carbon microphones now in use. |
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So we are having to rely on the bush telegraph to let people know it is for sale. |
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He was discovered close to an historic bush telegraph station, a few miles from the town where he was staying. |
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Arsim Sinani comments that the present politics in Macedonia resembles a bush telegraph. |
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Buxton of Scilly attempted to persuade the Post Office to install a telegraph cable to the Isles of Scilly. |
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It induced currents strong enough to short out telegraph lines, and aurorae were reported as far south as Hawaii. |
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In some countries, telegraph and later telephones came under the same government department as the postal system. |
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Radio was in early use, with naval ships commonly equipped with radio telegraph, merchant ships less so. |
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The Lydbrook valley was also a thriving centre for metal industries, such as the manufacture of telegraph cables. |
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In conjunction with the latter, he also devised an automatic curb sender, a kind of telegraph key for sending messages on a cable. |
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For his work on the transatlantic telegraph project he was knighted in 1866 by Queen Victoria, becoming Sir William Thomson. |
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In 1875, Bell developed an acoustic telegraph and drew up a patent application for it. |
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He laughs a deep laugh that rumbles up from somewhere in his drumskin stomach. It spooks the mossies on the overhead telegraph wire. |
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The terms, arranged by telegraph with the Allied Authorities in Paris, were communicated to the Austrian commander and accepted. |
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It authorised an early version of nationalisation, having the Post Office buy up the telegraph companies. |
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This improved with the development of the telegraph and the train order system. |
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It was improved with the invention of the telegraph and the ability to issue train orders. |
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In 1880, Heaviside researched the skin effect in telegraph transmission lines. |
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Culley, the engineer in chief of the Post Office telegraph system, who had been dismissing duplex as impractical. |
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By the late 1800s, the telephone, ticker tape and the telegraph had been invented. |
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Even later communication methods such as electric power, telegraph, and telephones, had an impact. |
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And the jungle telegraph at Bryant Park is alive with rumors that the show's biggest name, Lauren Conrad, will be here any day. |
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Working both sides of the stream, they got native chieftains to pass the word by jungle telegraph. |
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By 1902, the British Empire was linked together by a network of telegraph cables, called the All Red Line. |
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At 4 or 5, he learned to dial by using the hookswitch like a telegraph key. |
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I was a very good radio operator. I bought my own bug. That's what the telegraph key in its modern form was called. It was semiautomatic. |
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The first railway, the Trunk Line between Christiania and Eidsvoll opened in 1854, followed a year later by the first telegraph line. |
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In 1840 Wheatstone was using a magneto that he developed to power the telegraph. |
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The earliest commercial uses of electricity were electroplating and the telegraph. |
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When the telegraph became available, companies built telegraph lines along the railroads to keep track of trains. |
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The telephone was patented in 1876 by Alexander Graham Bell, and like the early telegraph, it was used mainly to speed business transactions. |
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As ships adopted radio telegraph sets for communication, such time signals were used to correct chronometers. |
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Communication was also greatly improved with the invention of the telegraph, telephone, radio and television. |
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We saw wedged-tailed eagles scouting for wallabies, bluewinged kookaburras perched on telegraph wires, and delicate jacanas pacing carefully across lily pad-choked waterways. |
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We saw wedgedtailed eagles scouting for wallabies, blue winged kookaburras perched on telegraph wires, and delicate jacanas pacing carefully across lilypadchoked waterways. |
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As the fleet left Tangiers, one ship accidentally severed the city's underwater telegraph cable with her anchor, preventing communications with Europe for four days. |
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Previously the only way to produce electricity was by chemical reactions or using battery cells, and the only practical use of electricity was for the telegraph. |
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With electric telegraph installed between stations, passenger trains were not permitted to leave a station until confirmation had been received that the line was clear. |
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