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British and broadsheet
The early converts from broadsheet format made the change in the 1970s ; two notable British papers that took this step at the time were the Daily Mail and the Daily Express.
However, De Telegraaf, the Dutch newspaper that most closely resembles the style of British tabloid papers, comes in broadsheet.
Larger formats, however, had long been signs of status in printed objects, and still are in many places, and outside Britain the broadsheet developed for other reasons, including style and authority, unrelated to the British tax structure.
The reunion was favourably reviewed by major British broadsheet newspapers, with The Guardian, The Times and The Independent awarding 4 / 5 stars and The Daily Telegraph awarding 5 / 5.
Buzz was an A3 ( broadsheet ) British comic that ran from ( issues dates ) 20 January 1973 to 4 January 1975, when it merged with The Topper.
In the United Kingdom, Audiences with the British monarch are usually listed in the Court Circular, which is published daily by the broadsheet press.
Tying in with the original run of the stage show, British broadsheet newspaper The Sunday Telegraph ran a weekly opinion column penned by Alan B ' Stard himself ( in reality his creators, Marks and Gran ).
However, following the heels of British newspapers The Times and The Independent, a tabloid version first rolled off the presses on 1 September 2004 and since 18 April 2005, the newspaper is published only in tabloid size, ending a 160-year-old tradition of broadsheet publication.
The Sunday Telegraph is a British broadsheet newspaper, founded in February 1961.
Previous to that, he was editor of The Daily Telegraph, a British broadsheet newspaper, from 2003 – 2005, replacing Charles Moore.
He launched a British version ( 1967 to 1973 ), which was A4 ( as opposed to IT < nowiki >'</ nowiki > s broadsheet format ).
Second single " Leave You Wanting More " was released in April 2004 to great acclaim, with British broadsheet The Independent making it their Single of the Week, and describing it as " a sexed-up blast of pounding riffs and art-punk breaks with an amazing amount of textures involved considering they're a mere two-piece ".
The Sunday Format, " BBC Radio 4's first high-quality weekend broadsheet newspaper ", is a British satirical radio comedy.
In " Chronology of British Parliamentary By-elections ", Craig decried the " confusing and often misleading display of computer graphics " used on television election programmes, and also noted the decline in newspaper coverage of by-election campaigns by the broadsheet newspapers.
The British broadsheet newspaper, the Sunday Times had also begun a serialisation of the diaries, which was abandoned, and issued an official apology.
Other major players in the United Kingdom media include ITV plc, which operates 11 of the 15 regional television broadcasters that make up the ITV Network, and News Corporation, which owns a number of national newspapers through News International such as the most popular tabloid The Sun and the longest-established daily " broadsheet " The Times, as well as holding a large stake in satellite broadcaster British Sky Broadcasting.
The Sunday Correspondent was a short-lived British weekly national broadsheet newspaper.
Critics and fans reacted very negatively to the news, and British broadsheet The Guardian ran an article named " Why the Sugababes ' show can't go on without Keisha ".
The phrase is in common usage throughout British society, employed by headline writers in broadsheet gazettes and tabloids as well as colloquially.
In an annual survey run by the British broadsheet newspaper The Times, Aberdeen Grammar was rated the 12th best Scottish state secondary school in 2007, and second in Aberdeen behind Cults Academy.

British and Daily
But By the Way was one of the few features kept continuously running in the often seriously reduced Daily Express throughout World War II, when Morton's lampooning of Hitler, including the British invention of bracerot to make the Nazi's trousers fall down at inopportune moments, was regarded as valuable for morale.
The play received glowing reviews in all the British broadsheets, including The Times: " The Tricycle's latest recreation of a major inquiry is its most devastating "; The Daily Telegraph: " I can't praise this enthralling production too highly ... exceptionally gripping courtroom drama "; and The Independent: " A necessary triumph ".
On November 18, von Hindenburg testified in front of this parliamentary commission, and cited a December 17, 1918 Neue Zürcher Zeitung article that summarized two earlier articles in the Daily Mail by British General Frederick Barton Maurice with the phrase that the German army had been ' dagger-stabbed from behind by the civilian populace ' (" von der Zivilbevölkerung von hinten erdolcht .").
These terms were described by David Cameron as " unacceptable ", and by The Daily Telegraph as " racist ", and a British Muslim youth organisation called the Prince a " thug ", a statement that was later retracted.
Furthermore, Ribbentrop had the German Embassy in London provide translations from pro-appeasement newspapers like the Daily Mail and the Daily Express for Hitler's benefit, which had the effect of making it seem that British public opinion was more strongly against going to war for Poland then was actually the case.
The British historian Victor Rothwell wrote that the newspapers that Ribbentrop used to provide his press summaries for Hitler, such as the Daily Express and the Daily Mail, were out of touch not only with British public opinion, but also with British government policy in regard to Poland.
Australian commerce also suffered in British colonies in Asia: the North China Daily News published a pro-bodyline editorial, denouncing Australians as sore losers.
After Clinton's autobiography My Life appeared in 2004, Lewinsky said in an interview with the British tabloid Daily Mail:
* 1924 – The forged Zinoviev Letter is published in the Daily Mail, wrecking the British Labour Party's hopes of re-election.
* The Authorised Daily Prayer Book of the British Commonwealth, translation by Chief Rabbi Sir Jonathan Sacks ( the new version of " Singer's Prayer Book ") ( Hebrew-English )
Examples of British red top newspapers include The Sun, the Daily Star, the Daily Mirror and the Daily Sport.
The Times is a British daily national newspaper, first published in London in 1785 under the title The Daily Universal Register ( it became The Times on 1 January 1788 ).
The damning document was published in the conservative British Daily Mail newspaper four days before the election.
In an interview for the British paper The Daily Telegraph, Bruna expressed his dislike for Hello Kitty.

British and Telegraph
Following the 1869 finalisation of UK telegraph nationalisation into a General Post Office monopoly, the Isle of Man Telegraph Company was nationalised in 1870 under the Telegraph Act 1870 ( an Act of Parliament ) at a cost to the British Government of £ 16, 106 ( paid in 1872 following arbitration proceedings over the value ).
Mu-metal was developed by scientists named Smith and Garnett and patented in 1923 for inductive loading of submarine telegraph cables by The Telegraph Construction and Maintenance Co. Ltd. ( now Telcon Metals Ltd .), a British firm which built the Atlantic undersea telegraph cables.
The British Post Office adopted the Baudot system for use on a simplex circuit between London and Paris in 1897, and subsequently made considerable use of duplex Baudot systems on their Inland Telegraph Services.
Eye whiteness interviewed by British Telegraph reported claimed the cooperates of this incident came from the ethnic Macedonian village of Rate.
The Dutch artist Dick Bruna, creator of Miffy, has suggested that Hello Kitty is a copy of Miffy ( in Dutch: Nijntje ), being rendered in a similar style, stating disapprovingly in an interview for the British paper The Daily Telegraph:
Ben Fenton, commenting in the British Daily Telegraph, wrote:
The Spectator is one of the few British publications that still ignores or dismisses most examples of popular culture, in the way that ( for example ) The Daily Telegraph did under Bill Deedes, or The Times did under William Haley.
The UK Telegraph Act 1868 for example empowered the Postmaster General to " acquire, maintain and work electric telegraphs " and foreshadowed the 1870 nationalisation of competing British telegraph companies.
* 1853: Telegraph branch under Posts and Telegraph Department, British India.
An obituary in the Daily Telegraph described her as " one of the most enchanting, accomplished and intelligent leading ladies on the post-war British stage.
Instead he saw the cocked hats and white plumes of British staff officers atop a spur of Telegraph Hill calmly watching the battle.
In 2011, the British news agency, the Telegraph, received leaked documents regarding the Guantanamo Bay interrogations of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed.
A Daily Telegraph article claimed that the British government opposed the filming, but these claims were denied by a Foreign Office spokesperson.
The British journalist Julius Strauss, writing for the Daily Telegraph, described how he had " spent more than a week collecting evidence on the Račak massacre from Albanian witnesses, Western monitors and diplomats and a few Serb sources who spoke privately and at some risk.
An article in the British newspaper The Daily Telegraph called ISM " the ' peace ' group that embraces violence " because its mission statement recognises " armed struggle " as the " right " of Palestinians.
In 1857, after securing financing in England and backing from the American and British governments, the Atlantic Telegraph Company began laying the first telegraph cable, utilizing a shallow submarine plateau that ran between Ireland and Newfoundland.
Short has written chess columns and book reviews for the British newspapers The Sunday Times, The Daily Telegraph, the Daily Mail and The Spectator.
The club has been described as " far-right " by journalists in newspapers across the political spectrum from The Daily Telegraph to The Guardian and, in 2002, as a " bastion on the Tory hard right " by the British Broadcasting Corporation.

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