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BBC and Scotsman
Established under the leadership of Professor Tim Luckhurst, a former editor of the Scotsman and former BBC Editor The Centre runs both undergraduate and postgraduate degrees that are accredited by the National Council for the Training of Journalists.
In 1990 she married a Scotsman named Jim Sherry and left BBC Radio 1 in 1994 to move to the United States, where she lived for 11 years.
( Ireland On-Line ), ( BBC ), ( Scotsman )
( Scotsman ) ( BBC )
* BBC " Nation on Film " article with historic films of Flying Scotsman in steam.
Amongst the many notable pupils at the Academy include James Dewar, the inventor of the vacuum flask, as were the grandsons of Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia, second Presiding Officer ( Speaker ) of the Scottish Parliament, George Reid, BBC Gaza correspondent Alan Johnston and political journalist for The Scotsman, the News of the World and The Spectator magazines, Fraser Nelson.

BBC and claim
However, BBC books such as The Infinity Doctors and Unnatural History imply that the Doctor's origin is complex and that every version is somehow " true " ( such as Susan's claim in the original version of An Unearthly Child that she was born in the 49th century ).
The doughnut claim has since been repeated by media such as the BBC ( by Alistair Cooke in his Letter from America program ), The Guardian, MSNBC, CNN, Time magazine, and The New York Times ; mentioned in several books about Germany written by English-speaking authors, including Norman Davies and Kenneth C. Davis ; and used in the manual for the Speech Synthesis Markup Language.
He would also slip in spoof commercials and sponsor's announcements for " Dobbiroids ", the wonder horse rejuvenator, or " Dobbimist " horse deodorant ( a cure for UFO: under-fetlock odour ), or " Dobbitex " horse cummerbunds-he would claim that he'd been " got at ": paid money to plug the product, because he claimed to be only paid a pittance as a senior BBC announcer, " I want things, I need things, things the other radio announcers have got!
The news escalated from niche IT security mailing lists to mainstream media outlets, and in about 48 hours, it was run by CNN, BBC, Reuters, and over 9000 blogs ( declared in the claim ).
The 45 minute claim lies at the centre of a row between Downing Street and the BBC.
On 29 May 2003, BBC defence correspondent Andrew Gilligan filed a report for BBC Radio 4's Today programme in which he stated that an unnamed source-a senior British official-had told him that the September Dossier had been " sexed up ", and that the intelligence agencies were concerned about some " dubious " information contained within it-specifically the claim that Saddam Hussein could deploy weapons of mass destruction within 45 minutes of an order to use them.
Gilligan subsequently gave evidence before the Foreign Affairs Select Committee, as did Campbell, who denied ordering the inclusion of the claim, and demanded an apology from the BBC.
Kelly had been the source for reports made by three BBC journalists that the Government, particularly the press office of Tony Blair, the Prime Minister, had knowingly embellished the dossier with misleading exaggerations of Iraq's military capabilities ; specifically, a claim that Iraq had the ability to launch a strike using " weapons of mass destruction " within 45 minutes.
More recently in 2007, the BBC reported that a " race row " had broken out in the wake of an official inquiry that identified institutional racism in British psychiatry, with psychiatrists, including from the IOP / Maudsley, arguing against the claim, while the heads of the Mental Health Act Commission accused them of misunderstanding the concept of institutional racism and dismissing the legitimate concerns of the Black community in Britain.
On 6 December 2010 he appeared on the BBC Radio 4 Today programme to claim that corporate tax avoidance activities by the likes of Vodafone and Topshop were the fault of the government.
* " Daughter scotches Churchill parrot claim ," BBC News.
The phrase gained currency in the United Kingdom on 29 May 2003, when BBC defence correspondent Andrew Gilligan filed a report for BBC Radio 4's Today programme in which he stated that an unnamed source-a senior British official-had told him that the September Dossier had been " sexed up ", and that the intelligence agencies were concerned about some " dubious " information contained within it-specifically the claim that Saddam Hussein could deploy weapons of mass destruction within 45 minutes of an order.
A recent BBC documentary on the history of supersonic flight told how the British Air Ministry cancelled the M. 52 project and ordered Miles to hand over all data to the Bell Corporation, allowing the Americans to claim to be the first to break the sound barrier.
In 1969, Angela Rippon joined Westward from BBC South West, as a producer of children's and women's programmes ; she also produced a monthly show during the summer of 1972 which laid claim to being the first " Open Access " TV show for young people in the UK.
Some have suggested that the BBC under Curran was overtly middle-class, perhaps citing the claim by Edward Barnes, head of children's TV for the BBC at the time, that admirable characters should not be seen eating " chocolate and chips ".
He repeated his claim on the BBC programme Hardtalk.
* Pakistan rulers claim poll boost BBC, 7 October 2005
Interviewed later by the BBC Fiscal Davind Hingston in Dingwall denied this claim, but admitted that he himself had been denied access to many government documents on the case, on the grounds of commercial confidentiality.
* Czech PM faces corruption claimBBC News, 2 February 2005
In response to the plagiarism claim, BBC issued a statement saying that Scooch's song is " an original " and the writers " were never aware of Pandora or her songs ".
The claim in the BBC documentary series Planet Earth that these bacteria do not derive any energy from the sun is incorrect, as the majority are sulfur-oxidizing bacteria that utilize primarily atmospheric oxygen ( derived from sunlight-driven photosynthesis ) as an electron acceptor.

BBC and comes
The BBC holds that " lobbying " comes from the gathering of Members of Parliament and peers in the hallways ( or lobbies ) of Houses of Parliament before and after parliamentary debates.
The title of the show comes from a sentence commonly used by BBC newsreaders following an on-air flub: " I'm sorry, I'll read that again.
* Local BBC Television comes from BBC Look North in Leeds and BBC Look North in Hull.
Their name comes from a Public Image Ltd. song from that group's second album, which is itself a reference to BBC Radio 4.
Much of BBC radio comes from Broadcasting House, Portland Place at the head of Regent Street, London
* The character of Dr. John Watson, associate of fictional detective Sherlock Homes, comes across a group of doggers while independently investigating distant mysterious lights he sees during the 2012 BBC production of " The Hounds of Baskerville ", the second episode of season two in the televised drama " Sherlock ".
Like other BBC enterprises in Guernsey, funding comes primarily from television licence fees collected in Guernsey itself.
Like other BBC enterprises in Jersey, funding comes primarily from television licence fees collected in Jersey itself.
104. 5FM is the primary frequency for BBC Radio Derby, and comes from a 200 ft transmitting mast on Drum Hill, four miles north of the Derby City Centre, the other side of the A38 from Little Eaton, next to a Scout camp.
In addition, all of BBC Radio Derby's area is served via its medium wave service on 1116 kHz which comes from its transmitting mast at Burnaston, just south of the city, close to the Toyota car plant.
In Weston-super-Mare ( which is editorially covered by both Radio Bristol and BBC Somerset ), competition comes from Nova Radio.
This also has BBC WM and comes from the Wrekin and Turners Hill ( near Rowley Regis ).
* Adam Walton, BBC Radio Wales DJ, attended the Alun School and comes from the nearby village of Nannerch.
The BBC of the 389 comes in at just over 131 " making it the longest hood Peterbilt has ever offered.
This funding comes from the BBC Trust, the governing body of the BBC which is operationally independent of management and external bodies.
While public broadcasters are partially government-funded in some nations, such as the United Kingdom's BBC, most funding comes from the television licence fee, there are many countries where some funds must come from donations from the public.
He is the cousin of Alan Hansen, BBC football pundit, and his grandfather comes from a large mining family in Stanley, County Durham.
This version comes from a session recorded for BBC Radio 1, and features more subdued instrumentation than the original.
In the BBC radio and television comedy series The League of Gentlemen, the character Papa Lazarou comes to the fictional town of Royston Vasey under the guise of a peg-seller.

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