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Word: telegraphed (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...night last week, Teleprinter No. 2 chattered abruptly into life in the newsroom of West Deutsche Rundfunk, a radio station in Cologne. This meant fresh copy from the telegraph office, and the late-shift operator dutifully bestirred himself to see what was coming in. The message he read jolted him down to his half soles. TODAY, LATE IN AFTERNOON, announced Telex No. 2, FIRST MINISTER OF U.S.S.R. KHRUSHCHEV DIED SURPRISINGLY AT 20:19 CENTRAL EUROPEAN TIME OF HEPHOCAPALYTIROSISES. The message was signed TASS/ASAHI BONN-an unusual signature apparently signifying that the information had come from Tass, the Russian news agency...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Reporting: The Day Khrushchev Died | 4/24/1964 | See Source »

Quickened Demand. So are the businessmen, even though a couple of other economic indicators-housing starts and orders for durable goods-have been declining. At the week's biggest annual meeting, where 4,411 of American Telephone and Telegraph's 2,350,000 shareholders met in a chilly Bronx armory, Chairman Frederick R. Kappel announced that A.T. & T. had installed 750,000 telephones in the first quarter and is experiencing a "quickened" demand. Kappel had better reason than most to be enjoying the business climate. To raise $1.2 billion of the $3.3 billion that it will spend this...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: State of Business: Hail to the Chiefs | 4/24/1964 | See Source »

...paradoxical reason for the strike orgy is the thriving Australian economy, which produces more than 2,000 new jobs a month but not the 2,000 workers to fill them. The result, says Sydney's Sunday Telegraph, "is the feeling among certain trade unions that full employment provides the excuse for tactics of disruption." In February, 40 boilermakers struck one company because they could not get fish and chips for their Friday lunch, and last month 300 iron workers walked off a job at the Sydney engineering works of Tulloch, Ltd. because management would not unlock a door...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Australia: A Striking Country | 4/24/1964 | See Source »

...point in music required a storm of inventiveness, and Gerhard, 67, proved himself to be a resourceful composer. Violin bows drawn across cymbals' edges make their pale, tortured protest as they create an eerie, shimmering climate of fear. A nail file raked across piano strings evokes wind against telegraph wires. The murmur and patter of the rats in the streets is sounded by cellists tapping clamped strings...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Oratorios: The Meaning of the Rats | 4/10/1964 | See Source »

...decision came in the complicated case of Transatlantic Telephone Cable No. 4-known as "TAT 4." The first effective Atlantic cable was laid in 1866 by the famed Great Eastern and still carries telegraph messages. Since 1956, A.T. & T. has laid three TATs that accommodate both printed and voice messages (previously, transatlantic calls were made by radiophone). A.T. & T. shares ownership of these cables variously with Canada, France, Britain and Germany. Each of the existing lines has as many as 84 channels, and A.T. & T. leases some of them to the U.S. telegraph and teletype companies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Communications: Cutting In on the Line | 3/27/1964 | See Source »

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