The newspaper provided evidence from two reporters covering the event who each agreed on the poor organization. |
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Upon taking over the paper, he told reporters and editors in so many words that the paper was garbage and needed a complete makeover. |
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Gazette reporters spoke to Wiltshire musicians who have reached that giddy height. |
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If journalism is the first draft of history, reporters can assist the revisers by dutifully noting their sources. |
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But again, in my opinion it's tabloid-style sensationalism to run stories the reporters or editors don't even know have any validity at all. |
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Some reporters were under the impression he died yesterday, but that story was quickly put to rest. |
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Do the cameras and reporters only see, or want to portray, the demeaning of America? |
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In an effort to get at some difficult truths, reporters and writers have at times resorted to unconventional and controversial practices. |
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Newspaper reporters are deemed the guardians of free debate and the United States enshrined their rights in the constitution. |
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He told local reporters that he would never demand a trade no matter how ugly his contract negotiations become. |
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But viewers could only feel fractured and scared as the anchors and reporters scrambled to keep up with the vivid images. |
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Disorganized and misleading reports from muddle-headed reporters create a vicious circle which aggravates the situation. |
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Yet, almost all the newscasts and stories I've seen end with reporters trying to make that connection. |
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The efforts to exclude reporters and exit pollers from the polls, they put a stop to that. |
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We even got some calls on the answering machine from some reporters who wanted to interview me. |
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Not that most reporters get those invites, only those covering politics and the major federal agencies can play, Health reporters stay home. |
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Some reporters who covered this story described it in tones of frivolity and amusement. |
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Lots of other reporters were arriving at this early hour for their prime-time spots. |
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In those cases, the reporters wrote down or dictated into a tape recorder everything they could remember from the interview. |
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My understanding was that these reporters concealed their identities and they went in disguise. |
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Alas, a posse of reporters doorstepped St Blane's Hotel with an armoury of cameras, tape recorders and notepads. |
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It's not just the reporters who are keeping a lid on all the good things going on. |
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Port workers in Madras who spoke to our reporters were angry at the union backdown. |
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Why is it Brit reporters are so much more knowledgeable than most of their American compatriots? |
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Two days later the news is official and reporters from the American press speed to Paris to interview a band that few of them have heard of. |
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Many baseball reporters claim the story is apocryphal, but others insist on its verity. |
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President Fox told reporters in Brazil that Mexico wants the United States to introduce immigration reforms as quickly as possible. |
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Even small-town newspaper reporters carry miniature recorders to get accurate quotes. |
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The Venezuelans should be here any minute and this lobby full of reporters is keyed up and ready to pounce. |
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The medical personnel then escorted Fuko out of the court, while policemen were busy holding off reporters and newsmen. |
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To do these things, Vietnam War reporters had to get close to the fighting. |
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When reporters interview me about press controversies, I'm frank to the point of self-destruction. |
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Maybe a councillor could take up my challenge with one of your intrepid reporters too. |
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Most embedded reporters claimed that they were not really restrained, but rather assisted in their work by Pentagon press flacks. |
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A number of media outlets are cutting back on the size of their traditional phalanx of reporters covering the event. |
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Old crusty reporters know that when an official denies anything, it's a good time to begin probing it. |
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His desire to meet the demands of the press resulted in reporters grousing about having to wait for long periods of time to talk to him. |
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The same is true of the team security expert's attempt to restrain reporters with a rope at a press conference. |
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Outwardly she is ice cool, sitting glassy-eyed in press conferences while reporters jostle to ask questions about her father. |
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When he began to write about cricket most reporters wrote spare, parched descriptions of the play. |
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Indeed it's trying to throw reporters off by saying the operation was planned and directed by Iraqi police. |
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In Germany around 1952, Otto Hahn, the discoverer of fission, was asked by reporters about the feasibility of fusion. |
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You had a group of reporters who wanted to prove that the weapons existed because everyone else said that they did not. |
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Hours after getting the Nobel news on October 10, he spoke to reporters about his expansive approach to economics. |
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But American reporters are studiously averting their eyes, lest they stumble over a story. |
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Plus, dozens of reporters will be out coast-to-coast bringing you any new developments throughout the night. |
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Some of the reporters thought this was odd, and they didn't want to comply with his request. |
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Small papers across the country are teeming with ambitious young reporters hoping one day to make the leap to major dailies. |
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News anchors and reporters couldn't make enough references to the trials and tribulations that they faced throughout the day. |
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Producers, anchors, reporters and the management staff started by reviewing the ratings from the night before. |
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Still, it seems that all BBC presenters and reporters will be wearing black ties for the funeral on Tuesday. |
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They mostly earned their livings in other clerkly trades, as journalists, parliamentary reporters or lawyers. |
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This is especially true in economic matters, where reporters are understandably prone to self-censor criticism of their conglomerate owners. |
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There's nothing unusual about reporters ingratiating themselves to a source. |
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Mr Santos told reporters that there were indications the security forces had been infiltrated at a very high level. |
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One criticism that I levy at this set is the sense of self-importance the reporters sometimes have. |
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It became apparent to the reporters that the redacted portions were self-referencing phrases. |
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Now, journalists, of course, are supposed to be impartial recorders and reporters of fact. |
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Photographers circled and reporters walked in his immaculately tailored step, waiting for the inevitable wisecrack. |
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The ending is a blaze of light and sirens and press reporters and a standing ovation when I walk out of what could have been rubbly grave. |
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So the president decided to call a news conference, and he rattled some reporters by giving them just 45 minutes notice this time. |
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The fast track process should cut the visa wait to as little as 24 hours for foreign reporters wishing to enter China. |
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Task Force Danger encouraged leaders and soldiers to talk to the press and routinely embedded journalists and reporters with units. |
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Koizumi told reporters that many incidents of piracy have occurred despite shipping companies' own efforts to protect themselves. |
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How everyday people became instant reporters with the help of cell phones and the Internet. |
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When reporters went to interview her about the campaign they found her in a distressed state. |
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Sick of covering the burning paper mache dragon on 34th Street, reporters and film crews swarmed the uke players. |
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Perez told reporters that one of the plotters would then become the coup leader. |
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It is somewhat troubling how convenient these security measures are in terms of keeping pesky reporters at bay. |
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For decades, reporters have both praised and skewered candidates during political conventions. |
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Or at least reporters would be less able to portray the movement as divided. |
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Remarkably, the hundreds of reporters covering these debates think little of the corporate sponsorship of the debates. |
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When covering these debates, reporters often try to use university scientists as objective arbiters. |
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To my horror, I was late, dressed in a mourning black crumply dress, and walked smack into a multitude of reporters and cameras. |
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Today's congressman composes tightly worded sound bites and reads them from a cue card when reporters call. |
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Western reporters talking mainly to the urban middle class also got a false sense that his list might be gaining in popularity. |
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After a couple of test runs, Hughes had reporters get off the plane and lined up the press boats to give them a good view. |
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The premier later told reporters that a referendum election is undemocratic and may be illegal. |
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Nixon compared this skullduggery with the conduct towards reporters of the Kennedy White House. |
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Unfortunately, there will be no reporters to witness our greatest deep space exploration yet, but that's beside the point. |
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It's all there in plain sight, which is why the reporters are having such an easy, gleeful time digging it up. |
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Back then there were worker protests, out-of-town reporters and excited demands for tariffs on imported steel. |
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Their hints at a possible agreement made reporters froth at the mouth and swat speculation back and forth between themselves. |
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One friend told reporters yesterday the designer was delighted with how well the dress suits his client. |
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Thus McCarthy occasionally came across as gruff or grouchy in this World Cup and some reporters took delight in this. |
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Back during the salad days of grunge, reporters from across the country were trekking to Seattle looking for tidbits about this hot new scene. |
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He encourages his reporters to unearth exclusive stories that will be of interest to the listening audience. |
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The initiative places reporters alongside military units on the front lines. |
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White House reporters will surely have been relieved to learn that Canberra's tap water is drinkable. |
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At least in the short term, he says, Washington reporters enjoyed a surge in public esteem as they covered the crisis. |
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A group of men hustled her and reporters attempting to speak with her away from the stage. |
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We haven't seen this many reporters since that lady gave birth to septuplets. |
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The other problem is that many of the really great non-white reporters out there are just too much in demand. |
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Soon the bosses of Sky News and co. tell their reporters to wrap up and go home or move on to the next war or disaster. |
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In some cases, would-be biographers and reporters were bought off with cold cash, which I suppose is not a threat to Free Speech. |
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What journalism needs now, he says, is fewer columnists and more reporters getting out of the office and talking to real people. |
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Is this, in your judgment, purely coincidental that so many reporters suddenly are facing the prospect of jail? |
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It's usually professional radio and television announcers and reporters that elicit criticism. |
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That is because they are cultural and entertainment reporters and they are less impactful. |
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Photographers now use digital cameras, reporters use mobile phones, and computers are used in story writing and page layout. |
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Retailers will learn from two instructors with years of experience as reporters and news anchors on network television. |
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When you announce that one of your staff was hurt, you expect phone calls from the families of all these reporters and cameramen. |
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Good reporters and writers often set impossibly high standards for themselves, benchmarks that far exceed what anyone else imposes. |
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What about the gifts in cash and kind reporters on the business pages are liable to receive for lauding a particular scrip or company? |
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Editors and reporters zero in on top executives or anyone in the organization who'll talk. |
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We reveal today that many RTE reporters and presenters have provided media training to private clients. |
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Make your contacts early to the specific editors and reporters who will be doing the features and reports. |
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As the climax approaches, dozens of reporters run onto the stage, firing questions about the scandal in every direction. |
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Indeed, the study says that most journalists sent to cover crises are general reporters dispatched as and when events occur. |
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We have an inside source who was present at the rally and is familiar with the reporters involved. |
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Here were two young reporters who brought down an administration by their doggedness, cutting through the stonewall. |
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The adversarial relationship in the United States was patched up in World War I by inducting reporters into the US military. |
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Chaos reigned as officials and reporters haplessly endeavoured to stay calm through the calamity and make some sense of the senseless. |
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Corporations routinely pay the tabs of reporters who hang out at exclusive golf clubs and hostess bars. |
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Every newspaper employs wordsmiths in the newsroom to rewrite breaking news collected by reporters in the field. |
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The masthead remained strong, a collection of talented mid-career journalists and promising young reporters who shared a genuine camaraderie. |
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A team of experienced reporters and cameramen will be in charge of chasing up-to-the-minute news stories. |
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And as I stepped into the light a whole bunch of reporters leapt to their feet. |
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For the letter-writing campaign, however, the editors and reporters tried to craft the message as neutrally as possible, Katz said. |
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Dressed in a blue check shirt, blue trousers and a green jumper, he told reporters of his harrowing experience. |
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The curvy, apple-cheeked siren is more than happy to let a new generation of carnivorous Chinese reporters get their nibbles. |
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It was enough to leave reporters twiddling their pens, looking for answers, perhaps from a higher source. |
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But the court clerk who read out the official sentence told reporters none of the accused had been sentenced to lashes. |
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He made dry asides to reporters at City Hall events, and freely distributed his pager number immediately after taking the oath. |
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Even wire service reporters cannot beat them because the former must file copy to a news desk before it is published. |
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All the senior reporters working from the Chicago Tribune were out on assignment. |
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The only people who can nail the perpetrators are the reporters who heard the leaks. |
|
On Monday, for its first weekday bulletins, the Five News team could call upon a dozen reporters in Thailand, Sri Lanka and Indonesia. |
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So the only thing keeping the reporters in line is their ingrained habit of deference towards a wartime president. |
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Abdul Rahman told reporters the bomb squad had found a metal pipe bomb in the house. |
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Three or four trained reporters can work around that because they've trained to file stories. |
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Newspaper and television reporters filed dozens of stories from the scene of the fire. |
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He is deaf too, reporters are going mad interviewing him because they have to learn sign languages. |
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I've also asked reporters to interview me, sometimes first sketching a hypothetical scenario. |
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During his first season with the Cowboys, Curry cooperated with reporters seeking to tell his salacious story and didn't hide from scrutiny. |
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But I also know that reporters and newspapers must take great care when covering stories about self-murder. |
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For a sensational trial, the penny papers sent reporters to the courtroom every day. |
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He is among the best of the Western reporters now in the Middle East in part because he is an Arabist. |
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Most young people today are as fuzzy on Beatle IDs as reporters were that February 64 weekend. |
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It's been a bitter debate, with many castigating reporters of the case as conspiracy theorists and worse. |
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That night, a gaggle of reporters and political fixers were travelling on the then Vice President's private jet. |
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Mainstream journalists used to leave such muckraking to the denizens of the swamp where tabloid reporters reside. Not any more. |
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When the companies announced their merger, the nation's media reporters autodialed the usual critics of media conglomeration. |
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I find it hard to believe he has high-level sources in the administration, let alone any who would talk to him and no other reporters about this. |
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When she returned from the championships, she was met at the airport by a posse of reporters asking her about drugs and steroids. |
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As he spoke, the pagers of reporters who were covering the meeting started to beep. |
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But whenever coaches buck conventional wisdom, they face intense scrutiny from reporters and fans. |
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The timing will also offer opportunities to meet with BBC reporters in the area covering the elections. |
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The health and safety adviser has been telling reporters how he fortuitously avoided capture by turning up to work early on Wednesday. |
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The crime scene is chaos, crowded by reporters and locals trampling over potentially vital evidence. |
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The entire scene was roped off, and exasperated policemen were shooing annoying news reporters away from the building. |
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These are challenges that student reporters need to meet to help students pick the best people. |
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Also, make the reporters part of the story, using noddies, two-shots and live crosses in anoraks as often as possible. |
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This story has been a little dicier for reporters to sink their teeth into because frankly you don't know quite what you're getting into. |
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It might endanger other reporters to have it publicly known that this deception is practised. |
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As the ballot result was due, the company offered to scrap Saturday working for subs and reporters as a concession. |
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But if it really is, why not sign the release forms and allow reporters to get direct access to the archived files on microfiche? |
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The General gave the crowd of reporters a benevolent smile, which they simply ignored. |
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As the cast and crew mingled with the crowd of eager reporters a traditional jazz quartet kept the festivities going. |
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When the Man Booker Prize longlist was announced last month, reporters were delighted to see his name on it. |
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Half a dozen newspapers recently have fired reporters for dishonest or unethical reporting. |
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The reporters at that first press conference were, of course, spitting feathers. |
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It was the first time we saw 200 reporters gathered in two months, and it brought back a lot of very positive memories from the campaign trail. |
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We'll hear from reporters on the scene in Iraq's capital city and a lot more. |
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Some open with 8X10 glossies of the reporters in addition to the aforementioned letters. |
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A limited number of reporters will be able to participate via telecon by advising Lynch of their affiliation and phone number. |
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Cabinet secretaries are undoubtedly senior, and some reporters extend the title to their deputies and undersecretaries. |
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But Reagan was not one to mix and mingle with reporters of the White House Press Corps. |
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Western reporters detail, quite properly, the misdeeds, the crimes even, of the occupying forces. |
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There are a few interested spectators in the stands, and some reporters and TV cameras. |
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When the pranksters revealed their hoax on Tuesday, the TV reporters threw a major hissy fit, outraged at having been sucked in. |
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The newspaper offered only a grudging apology for its reprehensible victimization of Lee and did not discipline any of the reporters involved. |
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He half listened as the local news reporters spieled off the latest information and traffic for the morning. |
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With reporters wed to a military unit on the battlefield, the relationship would be symbiotic. |
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Getting up in darkness in the hope of avoiding them, he finds reporters and paparazzi parked at his door. |
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The prefectural police told reporters the remains contained the bones of two persons. |
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Ask reporters and editors this question and you'll get a catalogue of misspelled names, misquotes, and factual errors. |
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When we come back, we'll get the latest from our reporters watching the parade of events unfolding in Iraq. |
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It didn't send its green reporters to war, nor did it leave its stale reporters at home. |
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And reporters who suggest cutlines get pictures that match their body text. |
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Be sure that news reporters and your attorneys have unfettered access to these training sessions, including preparatory meetings. |
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Numerous reporters across the world have paid the supreme sacrifice for either trying to seek the truth or telling the facts. |
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Many reporters immortalized in the Kissinger transcripts talked to the secretary without buttering him up. |
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We've invested heavily in our team in the city and now have two television reporters and a radio reporter based there. |
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But reporters like Milbank remind us of the Post's history as a particular party's house organ. |
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Scriptwriters insist on depicting reporters as unscrupulous, hard-bitten hacks who'd sooner sell their granny than miss out on a scoop. |
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Was it a ruse to allow reporters short on subject matter to fill the pages dedicated to the European Championship? |
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Once the assembled reporters and pundits had finished slicing and dicing the speech, I thought, I would have my cartoon for the night. |
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Is it because he doesn't schmooze reporters and is such a kind of a rigid, ex-Marine, by-the-book figure? |
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He sits in the nosebleed seats of the press stands, specially reserved for reporters from poor foreign publications. |
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He told reporters he'd had to unwillingly relinquish the role that brought him worldwide fame. |
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Its reporters visited nearly 50 camps, ranging from major bases to relatively isolated outposts. |
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Newspapers have standardised language by producing style guides and manuals for reporters and sub-editors. |
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A blanket ban on western reporters makes the getting of hard information almost impossibly difficult. |
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The clock struck twelve, and several guards shooed the reporters out of the castle. |
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In print, on his radio show and in private, the growling newshound frequently castigates reporters for not breaking bigger and better stories. |
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The U.S. war in Iraq began with an experiment, embedding reporters with U.S. military units in the field. |
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The dozens of reporters who covered the event were especially curious about yoga and vegetarianism. |
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Police officers stationed at a mobile unit outside his home and national newspaper reporters will keep a round-the-clock watch on the farm. |
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The reporters did not clarify whether the news was from official or unofficial sources. |
|
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We suggest with this game that rather than reporters popping up, there should be a whole room of reporters. |
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In leaders and news reports, the paper's editors and reporters ignore the unsustainable nature of endless economic growth on a finite planet. |
|
Up next, who do American reporters turn to for the real scoop in Afghanistan? |
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What is less well remembered is that one in five of the reporters and cameramen covering the event were sent to the hospital. |
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The most relevant fact about reporters on that plane is that they are bored to death. |
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Three hours before game time, a throng of reporters packed the space as if it were backstage at a Springsteen concert. |
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The reporters here were drawing on the stereotype of the wife as ball and chain for humorous effect. |
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When reporters were at the orphanage, people were being hired to lay blacktop. |
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But he got testy whenever reporters got close to what might have been driving the deal. |
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He's proud of his profession and hasn't got much time for poorly prepared reporters who ask inane questions. |
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They also snapped at him for supporting the new ruling majority in their wish to introduce restrictions for the reporters working in Parliament. |
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And of course, there are dozen of reporters camped out right here in front of the federal prison. |
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When his cell phone rings during the interview, the reporters caught a glimpse of his humble side. |
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In that regard, the job of the owner of a newspaper to monitor reporters is not quite as difficult. |
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These links remove the need to have audio typists or reporters on site at each country location for the purpose of transcription. |
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From one of the reporters he learns that journalists have a pool on whether he will survive. |
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There is no huge newswire with reporters around the world feeding articles to newspapers. |
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This gives reporters and editors a much better chance to more thoroughly cover your announcement. |
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He answered with a lascivious wink when reporters asked him what he was giving his wife for her birthday. |
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What reporters really want is their byline on the front page above the fold. |
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The intrepid reporters have filed stories from around the world, including Tokyo, Montreal and Alberquerque, New Mexico. |
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A few minutes ago he was accosted by reporters after locking horns with the Prime Minister during question period. |
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As she got off the plane in Belgium, she was accosted by reporters asking if she was taking anabolic steroids. |
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As careful reporters and producers demonstrated over and over again, a story that makes you cry need not be a sob story, and should not be. |
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Courtesy is a luxury that real reporters often have to sacrifice in the line of duty, especially when bamboozled by double talk. |
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We've seen a number of reporters having themselves waterboarded so they can describe it. |
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And he worries that reporters might selectively quote from documents or other material they find electronically. |
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The hard-boiled reporters in attendance look on in astonishment as the doddering old CEO mimics pumping motions with his arms. |
|
This approach is rational and time-saving for both readers and reporters who want to avoid being sucked down political rabbit holes. |
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Alternatively, reporters writing on concerns surrounding the issue were dismissed as rabble-rousers. |
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He even went so far as to take a crew of reporters with him while he went to a sporting goods store to buy a jockstrap. |
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His time is a valuable commodity, and when reporters are denied it, they can become annoyed. |
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This started an uproar of public debate, so the reporters went after Joshua again. |
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Papers sent reporters along the old Route 66 in search of the deflated American dream. |
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Attkisson, meanwhile, has been fighting the same uphill battle that other investigative reporters are waging. |
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I also spent Monday touching base with various reporters and editors at mainstream newspapers and magazines in Washington, and not one would defend CBS's action in this case. |
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Nonetheless, Roxburgh and Ketchum in this time period urged the Kremlin to open up more with western reporters in Moscow. |
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They found out things that I and certain other reporters had already broken in the dailies here. |
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Attorney General Jim Hood told reporters after court recessed that prosecutors would ask the judge to allow the jury to consider a lesser charge of manslaughter in the case. |
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When the rest of the reporters arrived Wednesday, he would give them the cyan Brown story. |
|
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Yet the two reporters ascribed the development to rural poverty. |
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During her tumultuous time as deputy bureau chief in the late eighties, she proposed reassigning many reporters out, to other bureaus and lesser posts. |
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Instead of gorging on rumors, he would rather see reporters working hard to vet Romney and his positions. |
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Thompson escaped the ire of Times reporters and avoided official censure during a subsequent BBC investigation. |
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A report said that poorer people couldn't afford healthy food and couldn't afford exercise. Can't the reporters conceive of exercise outside a gym? |
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Amid accusations of infidelity, she told reporters in 1988 that she and the former priest were just fine. |
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If there had been TV reporters and satellite uplinks on Columbus' voyage, most of the coverage would have dealt with scurvy and the lack of an exit strategy. |
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He also took time out to joke with reporters and photographers. |
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There are some journalists and war reporters who, despite years of experience, are very opinionated and whose masquerade of objectivity is easy to see through. |
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The reporters working on the perfumer story were told not to make any noise on the story before the leaders left the city. |
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If TV networks are concerned about off-color language, pit reporters shouldn't stick microphones in drivers' faces after wrecks and mechanical failures. |
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Too late, Rupe.Romney campaign reporters refused to stay at the Comfort Suites and, well, staged a mutiny to get a better hotel. |
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He has not done so, and I gather he is stonewalling reporters on the question. |
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Many reporters there gradually concluded that war was unwinnable. |
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However, he could not control reporters not accredited to his command. |
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Several hundred reporters have been accredited to cover the event, including correspondents from Reuters, the BBC, Deutsche Welle, the Associated Press and France Presse. |
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He's been bantering with reporters about a variety of issues. |
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Curious tourists and reporters were often trapped in the melees. |
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Although a well-attended press conference took place with reporters from both the American and international press corps, it was blacked out by the US news media. |
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This year, the show has even resurrected Eliot Ness, seen making a pompous speech to reporters about bringing Capone to justice. |
|
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The press, too, will find even more experts as reporters excitedly move through previously undiscovered waters. |
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We have had to judge the truthfulness of the evidence at one remove, forced to rely either on reporters telling us, or actors re-creating for us, what the witnesses said. |
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Ruseva told Bulgarian reporters that she would like to take Maria back and care for her, or at least get to know her. |
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Months of bugging showed that reporters from three tabloid newspapers were receiving confidential information from the agency. |
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She said she originally accompanied Shamir to an interview with Post reporters for moral support. |
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Francis told reporters that he has not had a true vacation since 1975 when he went to Buenos Aires with the Jesuit community. |
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Confusion reigned back at the White House briefing room where reporters clamored for more detail. |
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Talking of money, the reporters were shrewd enough to know that there was an emergency allowance set aside for those deprived of their means of livelihood. |
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I mean, you can almost hear the reporters snickering in the background. |
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The meetings in every state capital and the District of Columbia were swarming with reporters and cameras, students, color guards and visitors in costume. |
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Senior administration officials predicted easy passage of the resolution in a briefing with reporters Monday. |
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Those briefings you will remember was where we had dozens and dozens and dozens of new reporters come into the Pentagon who were asking frankly dumb questions. |
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The anchors and reporters wear uniforms instead of neckties and suits, and the commercials promote the military, not laundry soap and cutlery sets. |
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These reporters are working within a bubble, impenetrable to secular outsiders. |
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Next Tuesday, the president will host hundreds of reporters for his bi-annual press conference. |
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Since January, the White House has released 217 notices related to energy, barraging reporters with multiple missives each day. |
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Other officials told reporters that searchers also spotted a life vest and baggage in the water. |
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It was reminiscent of the old days of backroom politics and half-drunk reporters swaying against their typewriters. |
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This weekend, reporters on the red carpet at avn Awards asked to see this initial email. |
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Instead, evidence against the reporters largely consisted of aggregated news stories, books, and newsroom discussions. |
|
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The conclusions of the advisory report were spoon-fed to a friendly group of Japanese political reporters two days ago. |
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When Sisley released a photo of the addendum, taken by a friend in the legislature, reporters flooded Biggs with questions. |
|
Did the reporters and editors put much value on on accuracy and objectivity, or were they more a part of the party machine? |
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The Sun On Sunday accused Tulisa of subsequently brokering a deal to supply reporters with half an ounce of cocaine. |
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Since Ouattara's forces entered Abidjan, most reporters have been trapped inside hotels and offices. |
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Blackouts on the abduction of reporters were routinely called for during the Iraq war. |
|
The U.S. military's decision to embed journalists in combat units prompted me to think about the value of embedding reporters as a journalistic technique. |
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Afterwards, a slew of major NBA reporters did their best to quell the giddy, growing mob. |
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Seated between two fellow reporters I ordered a Reuben sandwich and sipped from a tall glass of ice water. |
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I remember meeting Ruth 20 years ago at a winery in Napa Valley when we were both young reporters working on separate stories. |
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She and her partner had a lot of stature as reporters for The Washington Post, yet they had thrown over those incredible careers to become pioneers in modern market gardening. |
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Its reporters had hacked the phones of relatives of dead soldiers, and the phone of Milly Dowler, a missing schoolgirl. |
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President Mark Pedowitz spoke to reporters after the The CW's upfront presentation on Thursday afternoon. |
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Please don't let reporters use it as a soapbox for moralizing. |
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I mean, would you as an editor of a large newspaper necessarily know if one of your reporters was misquoting someone or stealing elements from other stories? |
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Russia banned foreign reporters from working independently in the republic and it was simply too dangerous for international organizations to station staff there permanently. |
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When George W. Bush hit the ranch in Crawford, reporters were holed up in Waco. |
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The reporters sound stressed, the anchors sombre but unfazed. |
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Jerry Lee told reporters who gawked at the little girl that she was fifteen. |
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The leaders spoke briefly with reporters before they got down to business. |
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