Word: telegraphed
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...contest at Princeton is scheduled to start at 2 o'clock, which means that game reports, coming over the wire, will begin almost immediately after that hour. The telegraph line will be a direct connection with the reporters stands in the Palmer Stadium...
...Wireless telephones between Britain and the United States within a year is a probability," said Godfrey C. Isaacs, managing director of the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Co. Continuing: "As soon as we've settled the question of licenses with the British Government, we intend to erect a high power station in this country, while the Radio Corporation [of America] builds one in New York...
Hotspur, racing editor of the London Daily Telegraph: "It was a long way to come and receive a beating so complete. The better horse...
...culture than any of its rivals, while the Sunday Chronicle, published in Manchester, often gave independent expression to advanced views on social question. The considered appeal to the more cultured community in London now rests mainly with The Times, the Westminster Gazette, and the Morning Post, while the Daily Telegraph, with its immense and unbroken advertising connection, stands for the medium of commercial opinion, Philistine in type, but in the main reasonable and open-minded...
Notable additions to the various committees include Guy Lowell '92, Boston architect Walter S. Gifford '05, of New York, vice-president of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, Arthur W. Page and Company, John Hays Hammond, of Gloucester, Dwight F. Davis '00 assistant secretary of War. Dr. Morton Prince '75, of Boston, Henry S. Dennison '99, of Framingham, James J. Storrow '85, of Boston, George F. Baker Jr. '17, of New York, presidents K. C. M. Sills of Bowdoin, W. W. Comfort of Haverford, Lemuel H. Murlin of Boston University, William Allan Neilson of Smith, Nathan Matthews '75, former mayer...