Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "religion" ¶ 36
from Brown Corpus
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Birmingham and newspaper
Policy on buying and stocking Blyton's books by British public libraries drew attention in newspaper reports from the early 1960s to the end of the 1970s, as local decisions were made by a London borough, Birmingham, Nottingham and other central libraries.
* Sunday Mercury, a newspaper in Birmingham, United Kingdom
Daily newspaper coverage of the area comes from The Birmingham News, which also publishes a weekly section devoted to news from Bessemer and surrounding communities.
The Black Country Mail-a local edition of the Birmingham Mail-is the region's other daily newspaper.
In the summer of 1950, Tom Rolt wrote a letter to the Birmingham Post newspaper suggesting that a rescue of the Talyllyn be undertaken.
At 20: 11 a man with an Irish accent telephoned the Birmingham Post newspaper and said: " There is a bomb planted in the Rotunda and there is a bomb in New Street at the tax office ".
On 11 July 1791, a Birmingham newspaper announced that on 14 July, the second anniversary of the storming of the Bastille, there would be a dinner at a local hotel to commemorate the outbreak of the French Revolution ; the invitation encouraged " any Friend to Freedom " to attend:
The town's first newspaper was the Birmingham Journal founded in 1732 ; it was short-lived but notable as the vehicle for the first published work of Samuel Johnson.
Voted player of the season both by the fans and by the local newspaper, the Birmingham Mail, Queudrue also received personal message of congratulation from Sullivan via the club website.
Kingston University, Bournemouth and Birmingham City have developed fully converged journalism courses without reference to separate production disciplines such as radio, newspaper or magazine journalism.
* Handsworth & Birmingham newspaper cuttings collected and arranged by G. H.
* Vulcan photos and newspaper articles at the Birmingham Public Library
In September of 1964, Raines began his newspaper career as a reporter for the Birmingham Post-Herald in Alabama.
When the trio arrive at the Birmingham office, with Holmes and Watson presented as fellow job-seekers, Pinner is reading a London newspaper and is clearly in shock.
In ' The Ballad of Birmingham ' Randall establishes racial progress as a kind of blossoming, as he recounts the incident .... After folk singer Jerry Moore read the poem in a newspaper, he set it to music, and Randall granted him permission to publish the tune with the lyrics.
: For the newspaper of the same name formerly published in Birmingham, Alabama, see Birmingham Post-Herald.
The Birmingham Post newspaper was originally published under the name Daily Post in Birmingham, England, in 1857 by John Frederick Feeney.
From 1932 to 1936, Huie worked for the newspaper The Birmingham Post.
*" Cultural elite express opposition to Birmingham closure ", article in The Guardian newspaper, 18 July 2002
The Birmingham Post-Herald was a daily newspaper in Birmingham, Alabama with roots dating back to 1850, before the founding of Birmingham.

Birmingham and printed
First that it was printed in Birmingham by John Baskerville in 1761 ; second that it appealed to children by having the animals speak in character, the Lion in regal style, the Owl with ' pomp of phrase '; thirdly because it gathers into three sections fables from ancient sources, those that are more recent ( including some borrowed from Jean de la Fontaine ), and new stories of his own invention.
During the televised competition, Studdard gained the nickname " Velvet Teddy Bear " and was noted for his shirts printed with " 205 ", the telephone area code of his hometown of Birmingham.
The Birmingham Journal ( eighteenth century ) | Birmingham Journal, founded in 1732The printed word represented another expanding medium for the exchange of ideas.
George is remembered for his 87-page pamphlet, The Biology of the Race Problem, printed for the Commission of the Governor ( John Patterson ) of Birmingham, Alabama, 1962.
Notable group shows included Midland Art Now featuring the work of 20 of the most prominent Midlands based artists including Roy Abell, Barrie Cook, John Farrington, Dick French, William Gear, Colin Hitchmough, John Melville, David Prentice and Peter Tarrant, and which was accompanied by a full colour printed broadsheet catalogue distributed free to the 40, 000 readers of the Birmingham Post.
Randall established the Broadside Press in 1965, when he printed his poem " Ballad of Birmingham " on a single sheet.
Rogers ' 1548 translation of Philipp Melanchthon's Weighing of the Interim, possibly translated in Deritend, is the first book by a Birmingham man known to have been printed in England.
Rogers ' 1548 translation of Philipp Melanchthon's Weighing of the Interim, possibly translated in Deritend, is the first book by a Birmingham man known to have been printed in England.
* Anon, ' Some appreciations of Richard Bissell Prosser ', 1918, privately printed, 18 pp ( Reprints obituaries from: Engineering, The Engineer, Notes and Queries, The Birmingham Daily Post, The Guardian, The Church Times, Free and Open Church Association, The Church Union Gazette, Kentish Town Parish Magazine )
Nonesuch was unusual among private presses in that it used a small hand press to design books ( an Albion press ), but had them printed by commercial printers: for example, the Kynoch Press based in Birmingham.

Birmingham and column
In 1937, as part of the celebrations for the Coronation of George VI, the Town Hall was regaled in the various Arms of the Lord of the Manor of Birmingham since 1166 and each column festooned with garlands.
Tatchell called on Respect to expel Yosef but the party responded with the following statement: " Adam Yosef has the right to voice his own opinions in his own column – they range from an ecstatic review of Birmingham ’ s gay pride to venting his thoughts about Peter Tatchell.
He became known as a football celebrity, writing a weekly column for the Birmingham Gazette and endorsing products such as footballs, and a type of football boot which the manufacturer billed as the " McGregor lace-to-toe boot ".
Prior to coming into the media spotlight in 2005, for criminal acts, she wrote for mainstream and ethnic media including The Observer and The New Statesman and had a regular column in The Birmingham Post.

Birmingham and for
No Southern novelist has done for Atlanta or Birmingham what Herrick, Dreiser, and Farrell did for Chicago or Dos Passos did for New York.
* 1963 – Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. pens his Letter from Birmingham Jail while incarcerated in Birmingham, Alabama for protesting against segregation.
Housman was educated first at King Edward's School, Birmingham, then Bromsgrove School, where he acquired a strong academic grounding and won prizes for his poetry.
It provided a fast link with the main markets for the strawberries in Birmingham and London, but finally closing in 1964.
He sang for troops in Birmingham Hospital with John Macchia and hired his childhood friend Marco Rizo to play piano and arrange for the orchestra.
It was sold at Christie's on 19 May 2005 for £ 420, 000 (£ 478, 400 including auction fees and taxes ) to David Gold, the then joint chairman of Birmingham City.
The " jewel in the crown " of the F3000 season was traditionally the Pau Grand Prix street race, rivalled for a few years by the Birmingham round.
Lineker scored three hat-tricks for Everton ; at home to Birmingham City in a 4 – 1 league win on 31 August 1985, at home to Manchester City in a 4 – 0 home win on 11 February 1986, and then in the penultimate league game of the season on 3 May 1986, when they kept their title hopes alive with a 6 – 1 home win over Southampton.
In 1969 it recommended a system of single-tier unitary authorities for the whole of England, apart from three metropolitan areas of Merseyside, Selnec ( Greater Manchester ) and West Midlands ( Birmingham and the Black Country ), which were to have both a metropolitan council and district councils.
Another means for the spread of innovation was by the network of informal philosophical societies, like the Lunar Society of Birmingham, in which members met to discuss ' natural philosophy ' ( i. e. science ) and often its application to manufacturing.
Lewis Paul patented the Roller Spinning machine and the flyer-and-bobbin system for drawing wool to a more even thickness, developed with the help of John Wyatt in Birmingham.
When a canal was built through the land his body was placed in storage in a warehouse for several years before being secretly deposited in the crypt of Christ Church ( demolished 1899 ), Birmingham.
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, who once lived in Birmingham, may have borrowed Baskerville's surname for one of his Sherlock Holmes stories, The Hound of the Baskervilles – which, in turn, was borrowed by Umberto Eco for the character William of Baskerville in his best-selling novel, The Name of the Rose ( Sean Connery played the character in the film based on the book ).
Advert for an oil stove, from the Albion Lamp Company, Birmingham, England, c. 1900
Soho House in Handsworth, West Midlands | Handsworth, Birmingham, a regular venue for meetings of the Lunar Society
Although neither Priestley nor Watt were to move to Birmingham for several years, both were to be in constant communication with the Birmingham members and central to the circle's activities from 1767.
In 1943 he was commissioned by the War Artists Advisory Committee to paint glassblowers at a Birmingham factory making cathode ray tubes for the early radar sets.
He spent a month in bed at the Birmingham Army Hospital in Van Nuys to prepare for the role.

3.486 seconds.