Word: telegrapher
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...DIED. HISASHI SHINTO, 92, the first president of Nippon Telegraph & Telephone Corp.; in Tokyo. One of Japan's leading industrialists, Shinto was responsible for transforming NTT from a government utility into one of the world's largest privately owned telecommunications companies...
...fight against terrorism must also tackle its roots. JI draws support from Muslims disenchanted with their lot. The authorities need to ensure that Muslim communities in their countries are not marginalized or demonized. And they need to telegraph that JI is not Islamic but heretical. Like al-Qaeda, JI misinterprets and misrepresents the Koran to advance its own objectives...
...denied accusations of Anti-Semitism in a letter to London’s Daily Telegraph, and has said that he supports peace process in the Middle East...
...effect, the board has become Perle's podium. It rarely achieved any notice before he assumed the chairmanship last year, but now his position there lends weight to his public pronouncements. His recent column in the London Daily Telegraph titled "Why the West Must Strike First Against Saddam Hussein" identified him as "chairman of the Defence Policy Board...
...tiny island called Perejil - or Leila in Arabic - that lies a short swim off the Moroccan coast. The "capture" of the long-uninhabited outcrop by Morocco and then Spain's sending its navy to retrieve it seems a soft summer story more Waugh than war. London's Daily Telegraph ran a page-wide headline: "Naval might defeats boys' slingshots." But it's not really so funny. The political waters beneath Perejil are deep and dangerous. If Spain and Morocco can't get along - and recently this has been so in spades - then the wider North Africa region and the European...