Example sentences of "in the time " in BNC.
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31 | Even Professor Plant , author of the most thoughtful party political analysis of the concept , concluded an article entitled ‘ Labour 's sights on rights ’ in The Times in June 1990 with a whimper rather than a bang of citizenship . |
32 | Before the patient left St Mary 's Hospital , a leading article headed ‘ Penicillium ’ appeared in The Times and a few days later a letter was published from Sir Almroth Wright claiming Fleming as the discoverer of penicillin . |
33 | Another letter in The Times , from Sir Robert Robinson , drew attention to Florey 's work and set enquirers off on a new tack to Oxford , but their journeys turned out to be unrewarding . |
34 | He recalled as almost yesterday the advertisement in The Times for an experienced administrator to join a new security organization . |
35 | Mr John Constable , the painter 's great great grandson , protested in The Times : ‘ Believe me , rape is what we 're talking about . ’ |
36 | In 1985 , as reported in The Times , the cost of simply storing the United Kingdom 's cereal surplus amounted to around £111 million . |
37 | In a series of articles in The Times to celebrate Mrs Thatcher 's ten years as leader ( 11 , 12 , and 13 February 1985 ) he wrote that she had inherited ‘ forty years of muddled policy ’ . |
38 | These two reports remain the source of almost all the information about the eruption ; the Royal Society in particular went to great lengths to amass every possible scrap of information and even inserted a notice in The Times requesting anyone who had seen or heard anything to come forward . |
39 | Henry had read an article in The Times , which said that partners who lost a loved one often blamed the departed for the death . |
40 | In November 1986 he wrote an article in The Times specifically about the effect of GCSE on those pupils who wanted to proceed to university . |
41 | Indeed in The Times article already quoted Roger Scruton was particularly scornful of the Vice-Chancellors for their apparent readiness to change : they were accused of being interested only in the quantity , not the quality , of students ; and of being happy to lower their standards , and offer as items in university courses ‘ subjects ’ which have no proved intellectual value . |
42 | Both these works were played during the first Tilford Bach Festival after which William Mann reviewing the concert in the Times wrote ‘ such a Festival in such a place does Bach signal homage ’ . |
43 | The initiative was confined to a small circle — Churchill , Eden and the Chiefs of Staff — and I described the episode in The Times , after the 1952 papers had reached the Public Record Office in January 1983 , as ‘ one of the best kept secrets in the 1950s ’ . |
44 | A first leader in The Times on 3 January 1986 , surveying , from thirty years on , the lessons of Eden 's stewardship in his early months in No. 10 , criticized the new Prime Minister 's tendency to kick for touch on handling coloured immigration and curbing wildcat strikes . |
45 | Anthony Bevins 's account in The Times continued , ‘ Mr Heseltine 's friends said last night that ad hoc meetings were a Downing Street device to kill internal Cabinet dissent . |
46 | Professor Donaldson was so irate at my letter in the Times , which he considered to reflect upon English architects in general , that he proposed moving the Institute to reverse the recommendation of their council to award to me the annual Royal Gold Medal of the Institute , and was only dissuaded from attempting to inflict that gratuitous dishonour upon me by strong remonstrances . |
47 | Two days after the debate , on 6th August , 1859 , a leader appeared in The Times which not only questioned Scott 's suitability for the appointment , but also the new attitude of the professional architect towards his client . |
48 | On the following Monday , a letter in The Times from ‘ Foreign Office ’ claimed that there was little support in the House of Commons for a classical design , to which Coningham replied on the Thursday that ‘ the great majority of the architectural profession ’ have concluded that Gothic was not appropriate . |
49 | It seems that Scott had persuaded Freeman to write an apparently unsolicited letter supporting his design in The Times . |
50 | in the following issue of The Building News asked if ‘ E.A.F. ’ had ever heard of an astylar composition , but another reply , from ‘ A. ’ in The Times on 1st November , was to be almost the last comment in that newspaper on the controversy . |
51 | Scott was told of the effect of Ruskin 's intervention over Freeman 's letter in The Times by George Dasent , the assistant editor , which coupled with the tone of the letter to Dallas ensured that by late 1859 there was a complete breach between Scott and Ruskin . |
52 | To have committed the heresy of being uncommitted to the right political dogma — or worse still being a political atheist may not mean the death penalty , but it sure is a heinous crime in the times we live in . |
53 | In the times of absolute monarchs it was a foolhardy scribe who always recorded the whole truth . |
54 | She lived some 500 years ago in the times of King Henry VIIIth and Queen Elizabeth 1st . |
55 | But psychometrics is forbidden territory in the Times — books in the field are mostly unreviewed , its discoveries are unreported , and its experts are , apparently , unconsulted . |
56 | Rarely , if ever , in more than a decade , has a specialist in psychometrics published a review of a book on testing in the Times , The New York Review of Books , The New Republic , or other national publications that occasionally comment on testing . |
57 | Not a word about the Heber scandal has appeared in the Times . |
58 | The company bought a six-page advertisement in The Times newspaper to announce the new factory . |
59 | In The Times supplement Intermagnetics claimed that initial production capacity was 2 million two-hour VHS video-cassettes a year . |
60 | Apparently from the notes , a certain Fruchtbaum in the Times Literary Supplement has described Charles on setting out on the Beagle voyage in such terms , which is certainly an exaggeration , but I do not know anyone else who has ever subscribed to that opinion . |