No reporters except the official reporters were allowed access to the court-room.
The evidence was taken down by short-hand reporters who were sworn to record the evidence faithfully and truly, and not to communicate the same, or any part of the proceedings on the trial, except by authority of the presiding officer.
From these meetings all stenographic reporterswere excluded.
The otherreporters sent in to him their portions of the testimony as they were written up, and thereafter he was responsible for them.
Murphy were sworn by the Judge Advocate General, in the presence of the accused, as reporters to the Commission.
Reporters will be sure to haunt the house in Ninety-third Street, hoping to see us return.
Reporters had speedily gathered; the story would make a highly sensational sequel to the one already printed.
There was a lot of talk; the reporters were after me already; there was the trouble and all about the Mexican business; and I got scared right out, and I guess I lost my head.
Editors and reporters were gathered in the sanctum, and Mr. Riddle stood by his desk pointing out errors to some one who should have prevented them, when I had my wraps on ready to start.
I remember reporters coming, at first, wild with curiosity to know what took Doctor Studdiford abroad, and why Mrs. Studdiford was living in a labourer's house in the Mission.
You'll have a raft of reporters and busybodies here to-morrow.
Reporters and telegram agents hovered gloomily round the hotel from morn till dusk.
Every incident of his journey, even the most trivial, especially the most personal that could be discovered, was telegraphed to England by assiduous reporters and discussed with genial malice by the Conservative newspapers.
The reporters have been besieging the hotel this morning, but I have sent them all away without a word.
The reporters waylaid him at the post-office, or at his fish shanty, and begged for interviews.
Special reporters arrived in the village and interviewed everyone they could lay hands on.
Shortly after four o'clock one afternoon of the week following that of the wreck, Captain Eri ventured to walk up to the village, keeping a weather eye out for reporters and smoking his pipe.
In a gallery behind the Speaker, the reporters for the newspapers sit.
Thus deprived of all audience save themselves and the reporters the most loquacious Members were depressed.
Those who lived in Madrid always had some acquaintances among the journalists, and to these they made signs and winks from below, and sometimes sent caramels, to which the reporters would respond with rhymed notes.
But thereporters discovered him and featured him in his new vocation.
He immediately resigned and found another place; but after thereporters had driven him away from half-a-dozen positions, he steeled himself to brazen out the newspaper persecution.
All I did was to beat it after you at what the swell reporters call a respectful distance just to see you safe home if you meant to hoof it.
It won't be the fault of American reportersif you've missed our news!
This was so, and no newspaper could make it otherwise; but how should it happen that the reporters had missed the episode?
The very fact that the reporters refrained from bringing out the picture of her misery in strong colors was evidence of the sincerity with which they wrote.
He had read many accounts of accidents in which the reporters set forth the reticence of officials and employees.
Clara intently read the account of the interrupted wedding in the first paper she took up, pausing only once to exclaim, "Then the reporterswere here last evening!
Louise was only too anxious to accompany her cousin, and accordingly they left the house together just in time to escape a squad of reporters representing the other evening papers.
There's a delegation of reporters outside, sir," he said.
So the city moved on, as yet blissfully unconscious of the sensation which would be sprung with the first afternoon editions, and over which reporters and artists and photographers were even now, no doubt, labouring.
It was evident enough that all these reporters had been compelled to go to Grady for their information, and I could fancy them damning him between their teeth as they penned these panegyrics.
Craig, Klein, Miller and a lot of newsreporters stared into the glass cage from outside.
He pointed out to the reporters that Etl's kind seemed to grow up very rapidly; 120 was only twenty points above the norm--not uncommon among Earth youngsters, especially those from more gifted families.
Kennedy had been casting about in his mind for an excuse to see her, and I had suggested that we go as reporters from the Star.
We shook off the last of the reporters who affixed themselves to us, and for a moment Kennedy dropped in at the little bungalow to see Mrs. Boncour.
News-paper reporters from Boston and New York were actually encamped at every gate, terrible as an army, with cameras.
But the report seems to be about like those which our good short-hand reporters used to make before that invention.
Some of the reporters who were ravening outside must have spotted Rand as he had entered; they were all waiting for him to come out, and set up a monstrous ululation when he appeared in the doorway.
She's afraid the reporters will be coming out to the house as soon as they hear about it, and she doesn't want to talk to them.
I'll try to get there without letting a couple of reporters hide in the luggage-trunk.
Next morning, commenting on the report of this speech, he said: "If only the reporters would not try to improve on what I say.
A throng of rapid-fire reporters and photographers immediately surrounded him, and when he left the ship the stevedores gave him a round of cheers.
English reporters adopted American habits for the occasion, and invented or embellished when the demand for a new sensation was urgent.
To the reporters he gave a farewell message: "It has been the most enjoyable holiday I have ever had, and I am sorry the end of it has come.
Clemens wore his white flannels and a Panama hat, and at the station a group quickly collected, reporters and others, to interview him and speed him to his new home.
I pleaded that the reporters were often young men, eager, and unmellowed in their sense of literary art.
He sailed on July 13th for home, besought to the last moment by a crowd of autograph-seekers and reporters and photographers, and a multitude who only wished to see him and to shout and wave good-by.
As the Ministerial Union had told about their desolating action, when nobody else considered it of enough importance to tell, they would also publish it, now that the reporters failed to see anything in it important enough to print.
Usually Lane refused to see reporters outside his office, and there turned them over to his secretary, who was skilled in the gentle art of saying inoffensive nothings in many words.
The body of the room, which was broken by bare iron pillars, was well filled with reporters and curious persons.
The young clerk went up to him and touched his elbow, and presently Lane came down the room in the stream of reporters and lawyers bent on getting to luncheon.
The Reporters of the Common Council have received 200 dollars each for their laborious services, which is a happiness to us beyond expression.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "reporters" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.