- Apr 2025
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www.nytimes.com www.nytimes.com
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Peter V. Tytell, a Typewriter Whisperer, Is Dead at 74 by [[Richard Sandomir]]
Tags
- forensic document examination
- obituaries
- Mark Zuckerberg
- typewriter repair people
- American Society of Questioned Document Examiners
- history
- Marilyn Monroe
- Texas Air National Guard
- Jerry B. Killian
- Peter V. Tytell
- Steve Miller Band
- Sam Giancana
- Janis Joplin
- typewriters
- Paul Ceglia
- Lawrence X. Cusack III
- The Greatful Dead
- John F. Kennedy
- George W. Bush
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- Dec 2024
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oztypewriter.blogspot.com oztypewriter.blogspot.com
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On This Day in Typewriter History: Royal’s HH - 'The Greatest New Typewriter of All Time' by [[Robert Messenger]]
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- Aug 2024
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Today on AirTalk:<br /> - California announces new deal with tech to fund journalism, AI research - How to help your LGBTQ+ student deal with the anxiety of going back to school - Anthology television and its place in mid century American society - Digital driver's licenses are here. Does that mean convenience, privacy headache or both? - Tribute to jazz legends The Mizell Brothers kicks off ‘Jazz Is Dead’ concert series at The Ford - TV Talk: ‘Homicide’ streaming release, ‘City of God,’ ‘Solar Opposites’ and more
Tags
- Studio One
- jazz
- Liz Shannon Miller
- John Sovec
- Homicide: Life on the Street
- The Twilight Zone
- Adrian Younge
- Richard Belzer
- The Wire
- Molly A. Schneider
- Roxana Hadadi
- AirTalk
- Playhouse 90
- LGBTQ+ student support
- Alphonso "Fonce" Mizell
- digital drivers' licenses
- affirming care
- Andre Braugher
- listen
- Larry Mizell
- Mizell Brothers
- television anthologies
Annotators
URL
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- Jun 2024
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www.scrippsnews.com www.scrippsnews.com
- Apr 2018
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explorecommonsense.com explorecommonsense.com
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William De Grey
William de Grey served as Attorney General under William Pitt the Elder from 1766-1771. In 1770, he took part in the trial of Henry Sampson Woodfall for printing and publishing the Letters of Junius, which he claimed contained seditious libel. Woodfall went free on the declaration of a mistrial. John Miller, printer of the London Evening Post was declared not guilty. Only bookseller John Almon was declared guilty, though he appears not to have been punished.
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