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correspondents and relied
Run on a shoestring budget with money from their own pockets and the occasional philanthropic contribution or book advance, the project relied most on its network of volunteer correspondents.

correspondents and on
During a major news event one or more of the main news presenters may be sent to present live for the channel from the scene of the story, where they will conduct interviews with the people involved, question correspondents, introduce related reports and also give general information on the story, much as a reporter sent to cover a story would.
In Anita Richterman's column on May 9, 1975, several correspondents reported that they had heard the puzzle on the Bob Grant radio talk show on WMCA in New York City.
Hildegard also wrote nearly 400 letters to correspondents ranging from Popes to Emperors to abbots and abbesses ; two volumes of material on natural medicine and cures ; an invented language called the Lingua ignota ; various minor works, including a gospel commentary and two works of hagiography ; and three great volumes of visionary theology: Scivias, Liber vitae meritorum (" Book of Life's Merits " or " Book of the Rewards of Life "), and Liber divinorum operum (" Book of Divine Works ").
Anning's correspondents included Charles Lyell, who wrote her to ask her opinion on how the sea was affecting the coastal cliffs around Lyme, as well as, Adam Sedgwick — one of her earliest customers — who taught geology at the University of Cambridge and who numbered Charles Darwin among his students.
Postcards were not allowed to have a divided back and correspondents could only write on the front of the postcard.
Additional problems growing out of the expanding relationship with West Germany included conflict between Bonn and East Berlin on the rights and privileges of West German news correspondents in East Germany ; the social unrest generated by the " two-currency " system, in which East German citizens who possessed West German D-marks were given the privilege of purchasing scarce luxury goods at special currency stores ( Intershops ); and the ongoing arguments over the issue of separate citizenship for the two German states, which the SED proclaimed but which the West German government refused to recognize as late as 1987.
Producing a variety of different programming, China Central Television has a number of different program hosts, news anchors, correspondents, and contributors who appear throughout daily programing on the network.
He drew on the published and unpublished work of John Leland and William Lambarde, among others, and received the assistance of a large network of correspondents with similar interests.
In this treatise, entitled De Alpibus commentarius, he collected all that the classical authors had written on the Alps, adding a good deal of material collected from his friends and correspondents.
During World War II, prerecorded broadcasts from war correspondents were allowed on U. S. radio.
Bullinger, at the instance of correspondents ( including Calvin ), questioned Sozzini as to his faith, and received from him an explicitly orthodox confession ( reduced to writing on the 15th of July 1555 ), with a frank reservation of the right of further inquiry.
In For My Own Amusement, he describes his work — attending Magistrates ' Courts and Council meetings, covering amateur dramatics and other events, visiting the bereaved to write local obituaries, even cycling after the fire engine to see if there was a story, as well as relying on a large number of local correspondents.
The content of the show centers on politics, current events, social issues and miscellaneous topics of interest, which Boortz discusses with callers, correspondents and guests.
The show focuses on music news, fun panel discussions and special reports from the show's correspondents.
By 1944 not all of Time and Lifes forty war correspondents were men ; six were newswomen: Mary Welsh Hemingway, Margaret Bourke-White, Lael Tucker, Peggy Durdin, Shelley Smith Mydans, Annalee Jacoby, and Jacqueline Saix, an Englishwoman whose name is usually omitted ( she and Welsh are the only women listed in Time's publisher's letter, May 8, 1944, as being part of the magazine's team ) reported on the war for the company.
Four years later, NBC correspondents Ray Scherer and Robert MacNeil were partnered at the anchor desk on The Scherer-MacNeil Report on Saturdays and continued until 1967.
The show also had a number of " correspondents " who do short segments on specific issues ; Martha Stewart ( until not long after the aforementioned segment with Jane Clayson ), Martha Quinn, Bobby Flay, and Bob Vila, among others, have been featured in this role.
In his study of war correspondents, The First Casualty, Phillip Knightley wrote that " in Korea, the truth was that Burchett and Winnington were a better source of news than the UN information officers, and if the allied reporters did not see them they risked being beaten on stories ".
Later episodes from 1994-1997 featured journalist Keely Shaye Smith and television host Lu Hanessian as correspondents in the show's telecenter, from where they provided information on updated stories.
Various NBC News correspondents fill in at the news desk on weekends.
Today, the hosts are expected to do much the same, and on any given day will talk with correspondents, newsmakers and lifestyle experts ; introduce and close each half-hour ; conduct special segments ( such as cooking or fashion ) and go on-assignment to host the program from different locations.
Knox actively promoted the adoption of the new constitution, engaging correspondents in many colonies on the subject, but especially concentrating on achieving its adoption by Massachusetts, where its support was seen as weak.

correspondents and him
Bede also had correspondents who supplied him with material.
Despite his light letter-writing in youth, in later life his correspondence was so voluminous that it has been estimated that he may have written around 30, 000 letters to various correspondents, a figure which places him second only to Voltaire as an epistolarian.
However, some of his publishers and correspondents would later call him " Doctor ".
One of the most frequent guest correspondents during Macdonald's run was Joe Blow ( played by Colin Quinn ), a blue-collar guy who would rant about things that bother him.
In an editorial, the New York World defended the right of the press to cover the President at all times: The idea of offending the bachelor sensitiveness of President Cleveland or the maidenly reserve of his bride has been far from anybody's thought … We must insist that the President is public property ; that it is perfectly legitimate to send correspondents and reporters to follow him when he goes on a journey, and to keep watch over him and his family.
This article quoted him as saying that certain correspondents on the subject to the website of the local newspaper, the Grimsby Telegraph, were ' lumpen lunatics '.
The Duchess of Gordon was for a time, it is true, one of his correspondents, but in 1707 she had discovered him to be a knave.
Thereafter those unidentified correspondents even sent mail to him for a while, where he would have again, according to him, found other starting points for additional research developments.
Bede also had correspondents who supplied him with material.
The correspondents asked the General what to do with the composer, and Chuikov said ' Bring him along.
He is as cunning as a first class female diplomatist … ( but has not ) real sound judgement …… intrigues with newspaper correspondents … he has not the brains nor the disposition nor the coolness nor the firmness of purpose to enable him to take command in any war … a very second rate general … whose two most remarkable traits ( a ) re extreme vanity & unbounded self-seeking " although a letter to his wife ( complaining that Wood wasa very puzzle-headed fellow ”, wanting in method and vain ) suggests that Wolseley still bore Wood a grudge about the peace after Majuba Hill.
There were three reasons likely for the situation: first, he was not a West Point graduate, and the " old boys network " was as effective in the 19th century as it is today ; second, during the formative months of the Army of the Potomac, Williams was stationed in the Shenandoah Valley, which denied him familiarity to the high command when reputations were being established ; third, Williams was never comfortable mastering the common practice of promoting himself to the public with the help of friendly newspaper correspondents.
Sneath had to resort to asking correspondents to write to him care of " my sister Mrs Harvey-Kelly " at a Cambridge address ( which was that of a fellow student ).
The second part begins with two letters Franklin received in the early 1780s while in Paris, encouraging him to continue the Autobiography, of which both correspondents have read Part One.
Foremost among his correspondents while he was in India had been Jean Chapelain, who shipped him crates of books, Melchisédech Thévenot, and François de La Mothe-Le-Vayer.
During Daly's run, the show took on a theme similar to that of a news show, even featuring various correspondents to present the stories along with him.
Receiving the depressing reports from the field through his La Independencia correspondents, Luna went to Aguinaldo and asked to be reinstated with more powers over all the military chiefs, and Aguinaldo agreed by making him Commander-in-Chief of the Filipino forces in Pampanga and Bulacan.

correspondents and for
And after several correspondents went into Pathet Lao territory and exposed the huge build-up, administration spokesmen acclaimed them for performing a `` great service '' and laid the matter before the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization.
Bede acknowledged his correspondents in the preface to the Historia Ecclesiastica ; he was in contact with Daniel, the Bishop of Winchester, for information about the history of the church in Wessex, and also wrote to the monastery at Lastingham for information about Cedd and Chad.
During the war, Trumbo received letters from individuals " denouncing Jews " and using Johnny to support their arguments for " an immediate negotiated peace " with Nazi Germany ; Trumbo reported these correspondents to the FBI.
Gibbs succeeded in interesting his European correspondents in that work, which was translated into German ( then the leading language for chemistry ) by Wilhelm Ostwald in 1892 and into French by Henri Louis Le Châtelier in 1899.
* Foreign Correspondents ' Club, a group of clubs for correspondents and journalists
His instinctive preference for relentless offensive movement was typified by an answer Patton gave to war correspondents in a 1944 press conference.
In February 2005, AIM alleged that United Nations correspondents, including Ian Williams, a correspondent for The Nation had accepted money from the UN while covering it for their publications.
* " Persons who accompany the armed forces without actually being members thereof, such as civilian members of military aircraft crews, war correspondents, supply contractors, members of labour units or of services responsible for the welfare of the armed forces "
He became one of the Heralds overseas correspondents and, in 1869, was instructed by Bennett's son to find the Scottish missionary and explorer David Livingstone, who was known to be in Africa but had not been heard from for some time.
" The Occupational Outlook Handbook report that the median annual wage for news analysts, reporters, and correspondents in the United States was $ 34, 850 in May 2008, with the middle 50 percent earning between $ 25, 760 and $ 52, 160, and the bottom and top 10 percent earning less than $ 20, 180 and more than $ 77, 480, respectively.
Median annual wages for reporters and correspondents were $ 33, 430 in " newspaper, periodical, book, and directory publishing " and $ 37, 710 in ".
Prior to the building of the Tribune Tower, correspondents for the Chicago Tribune brought back rocks and bricks from a variety of historically important sites throughout the world at the request of Colonel McCormick.
Artwil, the son of an Irish king, submitted his writings for Aldhelm's approval, and Cellanus, an Irish monk from Peronne, was one of his correspondents.
Analysis of bulk traffic is normally performed by complex computer programs that parse natural language and phone numbers looking for threatening conversations and correspondents.
It combines the resources of its own correspondents with those of The New York Times and is printed at 38 sites throughout the world, for sale in more than 160 countries and territories.
CBS News correspondents Jane Wallace and Meredith Vieira briefly alternated as interim co-host in an on-air try-out that lasted several months, but both were passed over for the permanent spot.
In the late 1990s or early 2000s, for reasons unknown ( but possibly because of the difficulty students and correspondents had in spelling the College's name correctly ), the College dropped the possessive apostrophe from its founder's name in its official title, and is now known as Peter Symonds College.
In the Church, they were administrative secretaries for bishops and monasteries and were important as correspondents in the doctrinal battles of the 3rd and 4th centuries.
The two were intimate friends and constant correspondents, and had the very highest regard for one another.
In the spring of 1975 Kovic, photojournalist Loretta Smith, and author Richard Boyle traveled to cover the Cambodian Civil War as correspondents for the Pacific News Service.

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