London correspondent Kerry Capell sounded him out on what the future holds. |
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However, correspondent payment can involve payment between two banks in the same jurisdiction if payment is to be in foreign currency. |
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Earlier today our L.A. correspondent blogged the Academy Awards live from Hollywood. |
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He even compares his job to that of a foreign correspondent, filing reports from the Westminster village. |
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Penumbra's special correspondent investigates the secrets of life and of adulterine children, using DNA fingerprinting. |
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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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One correspondent said that the black boxes provided for recycling at the kerbside are too small. |
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In the meantime, I was reassigned to the position of legal affairs correspondent, a post which I held for five years. |
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At the Santa Maria Courthouse is the wind-blown Ted Rowlands, CNN correspondent covering the Jackson trial. |
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As James Morris, Morris served in the army with the 9th Lancers, then travelled widely while working as a foreign correspondent. |
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As a combat correspondent in World War IL, he landed with the marines at Guam and Iwo Jima. |
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That night, he keeps his rendezvous with his secret correspondent and is surprised to find that Clara is that person. |
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By that time I was through college and was working as a reporter and correspondent on the New York Times. |
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Brooks, a war correspondent, has obviously done her homework, and her first novel zips along entertainingly, filled with incident and detail. |
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Cold rush threatens pristine Antarctic, says the Guardian's science correspondent Ian Sample. |
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He has been a foreign correspondent for 20 years with a ringside seat at many major international events. |
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Upon completing his studies, he moved back to Kyrgyzstan and landed a job as roving Central Asia correspondent for Pravda. |
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He has already hired his own roving war correspondent and set up an adventure channel on which mountain climbers will post their own videos. |
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Your correspondent made the point that in a few years time, coaching badges will become compulsory to manage any team in Mayo. |
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Geraldo Rivera is a war correspondent, or so the teasers on Fox News tell us. |
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Our correspondent Angus Crawford travelled with a Mandean doctor to find out what has happened to her people. |
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The desperate men especially the oiler and the correspondent moved quick as they bailed water from the little boat. |
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As this correspondent observed last week, the forests have re-grown and the erstwhile bald hills are now covered in luxurious foliage and flora. |
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Your correspondent is old enough to have actually participated in the economic booms and busts of the last 40 odd years, housing included. |
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Sam, who joined the Ulster Star as darts and football correspondent in 1958, devoted much of his life to darts, but had many strings to his bow. |
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Archytas, the inventor of mechanical science, was a friend and correspondent of Plato. |
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A correspondent with two Spaniels, for example, claimed that his dogs always know when it is thundering and lightning outside. |
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And there, on the front line, presiding over events in a tin hat and flak jacket, is the war correspondent. |
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A correspondent saw blood spattered on the ground and bullet holes in a sentry box near the factory gates. |
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The incident was unnerving enough to persuade the correspondent to request a change of posting. |
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Unfortunately, I must refer my sharp-witted fourth correspondent to one of my books for a detailed argument. |
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American big-game hunter, deep-sea fisherman, war correspondent, and winner of the 1954 Nobel Prize for Literature. |
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Will the networks continue to give short shrift to the international stories so prized by the globetrotting correspondent? |
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The Meeting House, Ballitore, was a hive of industry on Sunday January 25, when our correspondent called. |
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If anyone is loopy it is your stupid, uninformed, ignorant London correspondent. |
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It is a ritual with which your correspondent hastened to express solidarity. |
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But executives at the public radio network recently removed the veteran newsman, making him a senior correspondent. |
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And some American journalists have begun to make that newspeak their own, among them CNN's senior international correspondent Robertson. |
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He's the opposite of the sophisticated, cultured, world-weary foreign correspondent. |
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She was previously the Post's Johannesburg, South Africa correspondent, and published a memoir of her newswoman's African journey. |
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The bulletins will be broadcast by the station's new Dublin correspondent from a studio in the city centre. |
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And every television correspondent, it seems, had to crawl into the spider hole for a live shot. |
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The result is eight short stories and a novella, all set in the Caribbean where he was the Chicago Tribune's correspondent for seven years. |
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One regular correspondent also took umbrage and promised not to write in the Press in future. |
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Our chief news correspondent, Charlie Word, joins us from Dunnes Stores, where he has been chasing up on the story. |
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The war correspondent that marines were responding harshly against civilians. |
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Your typical correspondent carps about a mistranslation, a geographical inaccuracy, an obscure word obscurely misused. |
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I want to spend a few brief moments with David Ensor, CNN's national security correspondent on deck in Washington. |
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As the PM left the hotel for the airport, the ABC's political correspondent, ignoring security, headed him off at the door and apologised. |
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This promises to be a hard-hitting play from a news correspondent filing reports from a hellish war zone. |
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They all seemed genuinely happy for each other and this great spirit of camaraderie was what struck this correspondent forcibly. |
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His second career was in journalism, a field in which he achieved overnight celebrity as a war correspondent. |
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The study group will submit a detailed report within three months, reports our Agartala correspondent. |
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A war correspondent carries into every war zone a selection of lucky charms which he believes keep him safe. |
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He was a regional sports correspondent who got promoted beyond his abilities and given a chat show. |
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Happily, there is a move afoot to accommodate my overwrought correspondent. |
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Another correspondent defines as holocausts the almost total destruction of some Maori tribes by other tribes. |
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As one correspondent puts it, the message that hurt does not mean harm needs reinforcing. |
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He told this correspondent that kanungos and patwaris had been asked by the Revenue Department to vacate encroachments. |
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The entertainment correspondent is one of 12 climbers setting their sights on conquering the summit as a dramatic coda to a gruelling expedition. |
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Joy then introduced the guest celebrity in the person of yours truly, this humble correspondent! |
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Well, later in the piece we get some indication of what our correspondent really thinks. |
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Even my views on physical punishment in the classroom are different and more complicated than your correspondent implies. |
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Paul Reynolds, their crime correspondent filed a report at lunchtime about the arrest of the suspect and the mistress. |
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So, as the new season begins, your favorite correspondent has decided to turn over a new leaf and institute some new policies. |
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If you're a foreign correspondent, you've got a plum assignment and you've learned how to play the game. |
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Agnes was an inveterate correspondent and a great supporter of people in distress and need. |
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Berlin was an inveterate correspondent, living during the last great flourishing of letter writing. |
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I suggested that my correspondent should think about writing to me with something a little more sensible. |
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She was a regular correspondent who was devoted to her favourite entertainers. |
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If the correspondent is a teenager, the letter gets moved to the top of the pile. |
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The following week, a separate correspondent wrote to say that he also had hair sticking up at the crown of his head. |
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After leaving Rome Galileo remained in contact with Clavius by correspondence and Guidobaldo del Monte was also a regular correspondent. |
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She's covered the day-to-day workings of the White House longer than any other correspondent. |
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He has also written as a correspondent for numerous magazines both abroad and in the United States. |
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During the 1890s, he became Australian correspondent for several London newspapers. |
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He was one of the BBC's longest-serving newscasters and a veteran foreign correspondent. |
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Most recently he was the Beijing correspondent of the Far Eastern Economic Review. |
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She has been a TV news correspondent, a foreign documentaries presenter and writer, and a newspaper columnist. |
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In Germany in 1932, Reuters had one chief correspondent, and one full-time assistant. |
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He then went on to become the athletics correspondent for The Observer and ended up as its sports editor. |
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A former correspondent and editor covers the waterfront of problems that afflict higher education. |
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The last time the foreign correspondent tried to enter the city, she was nearly shot by soldiers. |
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All any foreign correspondent has to do is to pick up the phone, and he or she can find a source to confirm that life is very bad. |
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And it is obvious that even the Reuter correspondent has got his wires crossed on the above subject. |
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But in deference to my first correspondent I will name another case, and there may be others. |
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It's one thing to ask a correspondent to agree to terms of confidentiality before they read the message, but to dictate the terms afterwards? |
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Our lucky correspondent accompanied Hottie X on the traditional dirty weekend to Toronto. |
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George Evans has had a half century's involvement with Nepal, both as an Officer in the Gurkhas and as a correspondent. |
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In a reply to a correspondent you further elaborate that the rate of profit is being equalized throughout the entire economy. |
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Our technology correspondent joins us live with a look at some of the best doggone gadgets he could find. |
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Macaulay was a prolific poet, essayist, novelist, biographer and correspondent, whose life was a complex mixture of public and private. |
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Of all the journalistic stereotypes regularly committed to celluloid, none has been more expressive of its times than the war correspondent. |
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And VanDyke and Fischer had dinner with war correspondent Steven Sotloff mere weeks before he was Kidnapped. |
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Also inside the suite was Peter Greste, an award-winning Australian correspondent who was working for the same network. |
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In your submission, does disclosing the letter identify the correspondent? |
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The freelancer has since served a gaol term, and so too has the paper's royal correspondent. |
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Just as well people know me for the ineffective correspondent that I am. |
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This did not please one correspondent who wrote in to tick me off. |
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Previously, she worked at The New York Times as an executive, editor, and foreign correspondent in Tokyo and Beijing. |
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Our motoring correspondent has derided my safe family saloon choice. |
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Spanish correspondent Javier Espinosa and photographer Ricardo Garcia Vilanova, who were freed in March, were with him. |
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These extracts are incomplete since our correspondent had already swallowed some sections of the document before he realised that the fruit chaat tasted better than usual. |
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All this is a bonus for the former BBC royal correspondent, who admits to a frisson of Schadenfreude when watching her replacement shiver outside those crested gates. |
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He is a veteran foreign correspondent who has been living in Japan. |
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Gellhorn was the better journalist and war correspondent, a fact that gnawed at Hemingway. |
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News correspondent Ross Mathews, who has parlayed an internship with Jay Leno a decade ago into a thriving television career. |
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He died in 1941, just 35, after a German U-boat torpedoed the ship on which he was sailing as a BBC correspondent to Cairo. |
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Our correspondent was surprised for he had used Burke's General Armory of 1884 in which the blazon locates the mullet at the fess point rather than the centre chief point. |
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After rumored courting by both ABC and NBC, Pippa Middleton is reportedly inking a deal to become a Today correspondent. |
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Prince Harry was not contactable by phone and received the news via email, according to the BBC's royal correspondent. |
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Pia Ringheim Jensen, a former UPI correspondent in Copenhagen, is a freelance journalist living in Utah. |
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Cronkite the correspondent may have been awed, but Cronkite the human being knew enough not to get too close. |
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X was then warned of the near miss via a correspondent who had worked with him in the past. |
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Katty Kay covers US politics for the British Broadcasting Corporation and is Washington correspondent for BBC World News America. |
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The correspondent does a stand-up next to a burning pile of heroin and gets a taste of its effect. |
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He was a wonderfully amiable correspondent, chatty and gossipy and direct. |
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Booker plans to spend his Thanksgiving dinner with CBS correspondent Gayle King and their families. |
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A BBC correspondent said between 10 and 12 people were killed Sunday when a U.S. warplane bombed a convoy carrying U.S. Special Forces and Kurdish fighters in northern Iraq. |
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She is the fashion correspondent for the International Herald Tribune and by the lights of the arcane pecking order of this bizarre business is accepted as the queen bee. |
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Australia's future F1 star was put up against six members of the motoring and motor sport media, including your humble correspondent, in a motorkhana driving test! |
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Curry returned as a correspondent for NBC in mid-July to cover the shooting in Aurora, Colo. |
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Allan Dodds Frank is a business investigative correspondent who specializes in white-collar crime stories. |
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This Sunday on CBS, watch 60 Minutes correspondent Bob Simon follow the wunderkind up the highest skiable peak on the continent. |
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At one such function recently, this correspondent saw boys of a locality in the old city moving around with sticks in their hands to frighten away scooterists and others. |
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The third-day story, as I recall, fell to John Kifner, then a waggish youngster, later a great foreign correspondent. |
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In pursuit of a dream of becoming a foreign correspondent, she moved to London to study journalism. |
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I have spent the past four years as a foreign correspondent for The Associated Press in Afghanistan. |
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For four years, foreign correspondent Heidi Vogt was always one of the first people to file when a bomb went off in Afghanistan. |
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Magpies can be trapped and humanely destroyed, but when a correspondent stated that they followed this practice, the reaction was almost universally hostile. |
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A female correspondent to this magazine once claimed that it was not. |
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I wanted to be the first ever female cricket correspondent of the Times. |
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But as the Associated Press correspondent in Port-au-Prince, I quickly realized that there was more to the story. |
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One of my first ports of call after landing in the capital was to the Washington Foreign Press Center, where I vaguely knew a correspondent through a friend of a friend. |
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It tells the story of his religious education from comically pious child, to doubting teen, to trainee yogi in India, to sceptical religious affairs correspondent. |
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This clearly implies, my correspondent asserts, that there is only one wheelchair available for use for every five passengers who have had the ill luck to be stood on. |
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Lane intimated the donations were disclosed in the annual report, however finding the exact reference in the 110 pages has eluded your correspondent. |
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Her foreign tours include the Middle East, Europe, Africa, and several years as a roving foreign correspondent worldwide. |
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But a BBC World Service correspondent who visited the area says thousands of illegal miners are extracting material containing cobalt, copper, platinum and uranium. |
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He was ready to go in his white referee's uniform and tabi while your humble correspondent handled the functions of both chief judge and official scorer. |
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Unsurprisingly, neither Anderson nor Mone were interviewed by BBC foreign correspondent Fergal Keane, whose frontline dispatch comes from Govan tonight. |
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And if you are a stringer, you are not paid for your labours though nobody stops you from printing a visiting card claiming correspondent status, and lording it around. |
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For the last three days I have been listening to recordings of oral interlocutions of such a numbing homogeneity as to leave your correspondent jaded in the extreme. |
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The Washington correspondent outstays Presidents and cabinets. |
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A correspondent rightly faults me for not giving the direct quotation. |
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Her next correspondent is white, pockmarked, with a pony tail. |
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Alex Massie is a former Washington correspondent for The Scotsman and The Daily Telegraph. |
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Fortnightly there will also be a column by a local correspondent on a burning issue relevant to the locale, with the opportunity for users to register their opinions. |
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Service, then a war correspondent for the Toronto Star, was mistakenly arrested as a spy and narrowly avoided being executed out of hand. |
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Oscar Cortes Tapia, poet, president of correspondent, Seminario de Cultura Mexicana en Chilpancingo, Mexico. |
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Laura Rozen reports on national security as a senior correspondent for The American Prospect. |
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He reminds a correspondent that he joined the Canadian Army, in 1942-43, to fight Naziism. |
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Jonathan Walters is a staff correspondent for Governing magazine and is active in the local fire company in Ghent, New York. |
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These are the words of an old Armenian lady whom the Taraf correspondent called Aunt Seta. |
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One correspondent said he knew the man well and that he used to be a wizard and was highly knowledgable in occult and gematria. |
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A bimedia office will be opened in Tokyo, meaning that the correspondent there will work both for radio and television. |
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Oscar Vincent spent several years abroad, after graduation, acting as foreign correspondent of his father's paper. |
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The indorser remits it to his correspondent, with an indorsation or transference of property. |
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He acted as a war correspondent for several London newspapers and wrote his own books about the campaigns. |
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This time, although continuing as a war correspondent, he gained a commission in the South African Light Horse. |
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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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Although Salkeld rejected his offer of marriage, she remained a friend and regular correspondent for many years. |
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By February 1945 David Astor had invited Orwell to become a war correspondent for the Observer. |
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Many books have been inspired by Lewis, including A Severe Mercy by his correspondent and friend Sheldon Vanauken. |
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Waugh saw little action and was not wholly serious in his role as a war correspondent. |
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In addition, Gilbert was the London correspondent for L'Invalide Russe and a drama critic for the Illustrated London Times. |
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Russell, the paper's correspondent with the army in the Crimean War, was immensely influential with his dispatches back to England. |
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However, most of Marx's journalistic writing was as a European correspondent for the New York Daily Tribune. |
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They had three daughters, one of whom, Sarah Smith, has served as the Washington correspondent for Channel 4 news and now works for BBC Scotland. |
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The station's commentators are led by BBC Wales football correspondent Rob Phillips and BBC Wales rugby correspondent Gareth Charles. |
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The ethnographer stays as omniscient correspondent of actualities out of sight. |
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Also he was a close friend and correspondent of Philip Melanchthon, one of the principal Lutheran reformers. |
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Later on he was sent to Galicia, in Spain, as a war correspondent in the Peninsular War. |
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Late that year he began as a freelancer, staff writer, and foreign correspondent for the Toronto Star Weekly. |
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When Hemingway first arrived in London, he met Time magazine correspondent Mary Welsh, with whom he became infatuated. |
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One such correspondent is Ray Davies of Bedwas who uses the Echo Feedback facility to espouse pseudo Communist propaganda ad nauseam. |
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Natasha Vargas-Cooper is the Los Angeles correspondent for The awl. |
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That good fortune meant CNN had the only TV correspondent on the scene. |
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Chayan Sarkar, Alipurduar district correspondent of Uttar Banga Sambad, had been investigating malpractices in college admissions for a while. |
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As our correspondent discovers, a little weed can go a long way. |
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Most of it will be taken up waiting for your saddlesore correspondent to cross the finish line. |
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She has been named Britain's foreign correspondent of the year five times. |
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Dear Editor, I'm afraid my self-deprecating irony was lost on your correspondent at Advantage West Midlands' conference last week. |
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Readers of Antiquity, and our correspondent Stephen Houston, who along with other Mesoamericanists has entered the fray, may beg to differ. |
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Speaking to Cihan correspondent in Iraq, one of the engineers said that they could survive by reciting the kalima shahadah. |
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Rubina Khan Shapoo, a correspondent for India's NDTV, said the attack will force Indian authorities to develop a new strategy against the rebels. |
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The latter is a compilation of his articles written when he was the religious correspondent at Hotpress. |
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Serena Shim was working as correspondent for the State owned Iranian TV channel Press TV in Turkey. |
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In the 1930s, he travelled extensively, often as a special newspaper correspondent in which capacity he reported from Abyssinia at the time of the 1935 Italian invasion. |
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Several commentators, including the BBC's correspondent Caroline Wyatt, had anticipated a fairly large 'No' vote from islanders who wanted a second referendum on independence. |
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Knight Ridder correspondent Yasser Salihee also covered this story. |
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A letter dated 13 August 1641, from Lady Roxburghe in England to a correspondent in The Hague, reported that van Dyck was recuperating from a long illness. |
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He gained fame as a war correspondent and wrote books about his campaigns. |
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Georgia's not a very good correspondent, which is perfectly reasonable at her age, but she didn't come down for half term and then she didn't come for Easter either. |
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Night has now passed in the Saudi desert and as we hear from Nightline correspondent Forrest Sawyer, the normal cadence of life at the front is about to change. |
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In Baalbek itself, friends and relatives of the slain drug baron, Ali Abbas Jaafar, fired celebratory gunshots into the air, an AFP correspondent said. |
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Moderated by Tom Standage, technology correspondent for The Economist, the panel will focus on what businesses need for effective, efficient security. |
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After the start of the First World War in 1914, he became a foreign correspondent and covered the war on the Eastern Front for a radical newspaper, the Daily News. |
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Reported from Piacenza by European correspondent Michael Page. |
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His celebrity as a writer caused the Ministry of Information to send him to the Normandy Landings on 6 June 1944 and later to Burma as a correspondent. |
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David McNeil, originally from New Zealand, was a foreign correspondent for the BBC for 21 years, based in Beirut, New York, Johannesburg, Jerusalem and Washington. |
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But, of course, it would seem that your correspondent would rather regurgitate accounts, many totally inaccurate, of events more than three decades ago. |
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A New York Times correspondent cited the example of Boston-based Skyhook Wireless, which developed techiques to pinpoint WiFi hotspots from user phones. |
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An American entertainment correspondent was quoted in The Scotsman comparing Boyle's story to the American Dream, as representing talent overcoming adversity and poverty. |
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Capua, author of many Hollywood film star biographies and correspondent for an Italian film magazine, provides a biography of American film legend Janet Leigh. |
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Rubina Khan Shapoo, a senior correspondent for India's NDTV, said Tuesday's attack will force Indian authorities to develop a new strategy against the rebels. |
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Through a service bureau, CNP helps support cash management and other correspondent services for a total of 2,100 credit unions through its client corporates. |
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Or that Rome used Green Bay Packers receiver Javon Walker as a correspondent to cover the premiere for a humorous bit that aired on his ESPN show Wednesday. |
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Approaching Louisville, the Tin Hind was almost swallowed up in the Great Ohio Flood and he was unable to visit a new correspondent of Lovecraft's there. |
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Ferhat Tepe, the Bitlis correspondent for Ozgur Gundem newspaper, was abducted on 28 July, 1993, while trying to cover human rights violations committed by the Turkish state. |
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He made a counter-offer on the spot, making me Special Correspondent with a 120 per cent rise in salary! |
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Photographers of Jugantor and Inqilab, cameramen of Msranga, ATN Bangla and ATN News, and the Correspondent of Banik Barta received injuries. |
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MacLeod, Eastern Correspondent Manager, and Steven Evans, Reverse Division Trainer. |
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It also has a permanent mission to the UN in New York City and an International Diplomatic Correspondent Office. |
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By TREvOR BAxTER RL Correspondent BEn COCKAynE is searching for a new club after Hull KR finally ran out of patience with their errant utility back. |
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Thirty years after the Iron Lady came to power, BBC World Affairs Correspondent Allan Little examines why she had such a tempestuous relationship with the Scots. |
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The Democratic Party is clinging to the same one-point edge over the Republicans that it held before the Philadelphia funfest, writes White House Correspondent Rick Dunham. |
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