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Esquire and called
" In the Esquire review, Tom Carson called her performance " terrific.
In an article in Esquire magazine in 1976, sportswriter Harry Stein published an article called the " All Time All-Star Argument Starter ," a list of five ethnic baseball teams.
In an attempt to institute a 26 % cut-back in the use of fabrics, the War Production Board drew up regulations for the wartime manufacture of what Esquire magazine called, " streamlined suits by Uncle Sam.
In a 1968 article in Esquire magazine, he called them " four vacant youths ... dummy figures with tousled heads ( and ) no talent.
The April 1990 issue of Esquire magazine featured The Real Book in the " Man At His Best " column by Mark Roman, in an article called " Clef Notes.
He was once called " The Best Dressed Man in San Francisco " by Esquire magazine.
The Los Angeles Times called The Cheating Culture a " lucid and thoughtful book ". Esquire called it a " damning and persuasive critique of America's new economic life.
He had a column in Esquire called " Grits " for fourteen months in the 1970s, where he covered such topics as cockfighting and dog fighting.
Jacobs wrote about it in an Esquire article called " My Outsourced Life " ( 2005 ).
In another experiment Jacobs wrote an article for Esquire called " I Think You're Fat " ( 2007 ), about the experiment he conducted with Radical Honesty, a lifestyle of total truth-telling promoted by Virginia therapist Brad Blanton, whom Jacobs interviewed for the article.
* Columbia Pictures, having bought the book's pre-publication film rights, was not able to produce a script that was approved by the Army while producer David L. Wolper, who also tried to buy the same rights, could not obtain finance for filming. A screenplay was written by George Goodman who had served with the Special Forces in the 1950s as a military intelligence officer and had written a 1961 article about the Special Forces called The Unconventional Warriors in Esquire Magazine.
Esquire called the book " The Official Preppy Handbook for people who wear Atari T-shirts.
Esquire magazine called their Monte Cristo sandwich one of the best sandwiches in America.
When a number of Esquire pieces were collected into a book called Fame and Obscurity, Talese paid tribute in its introduction to two writers he admired by citing " an aspiration on my part to somehow bring to reportage the tone that Irwin Shaw and John O ' Hara had brought to the short story.
Erik Larson, author of The Devil in the White City, praised Ghost Soldiers as a " Great Escape for the Pacific Theater ," and Esquire called it " the greatest World War II story never told.

Esquire and premier
* ' Arena remains one of the premier brands in documentary television '- Esquire magazine

Esquire and magazine
Capp also freelanced very successfully as a magazine writer and newspaper columnist, in a wide variety of publications including Life, Show, Pageant, The Atlantic, Esquire, Coronet, and The Saturday Evening Post.
Jacobs, an editor at Esquire magazine, read the entire 2002 version of the 15th edition, describing his experiences in the well-received 2004 book, The Know-It-All: One Man's Humble Quest to Become the Smartest Person in the World.
In an article in 1976 in Esquire magazine, sportswriter Harry Stein published an " All Time All-Star Argument Starter ", consisting of five ethnic baseball teams.
After it was rejected by Esquire magazine in 1955, Hefner agreed to publish in Playboy the Charles Beaumont science fiction short story, " The Crooked Man ", about straight men being persecuted in a world where homosexuality was the norm.
In her feature in Esquire magazine Gellar expressed her pride for her work on Buffy, " I truly believe that it is one of the greatest shows of all time and it will go down in history as that.
A frequent visitor to the set, she was photographed there by Esquire magazine and the resulting photographs generated considerable publicity for both Tate and the film.
In 1956, Blue Note employed Reid Miles, an artist who worked for Esquire magazine.
Johnson was turned into a national celebrity by the writer Tom Wolfe in a classic 1965 article for Esquire magazine.
Rosenberg chose his new name from Esquire magazine articles he read about then West German economics minister Ludwig Erhard and the philosopher and physicist Werner Heisenberg.
While the title of the song is often rendered with a comma (" Louie, Louie "), in 1988 Berry told Esquire magazine that the correct title of the song was " Louie Louie ", with no comma.
His story was profiled in an edition of Esquire magazine in 2008.
Although she continued to photograph on assignment ( e. g., in 1968 she shot documentary photographs of poor sharecroppers in rural South Carolina for Esquire magazine ), in general her magazine assignments decreased as her fame as an artist increased.
She won Esquire magazine's New Star Award for 1947 as well as awards from Down Beat magazine continuously from 1947 through 1952, and from Metronome magazine from 1948 through 1953.
The margarita cocktail was the " Drink of the Month " in Esquire magazine, December 1953, pg.
* In the early 1970s, Esquire magazine, in its " Dubious Achievement Awards " section one year, showed a photo of nuns wearing habits with short skirts, commenting " MENE MENE TEKEL UPHARSIN.
Blue boxing hit the mainstream media when an article by Ron Rosenbaum titled Secrets of the Little Blue Box was published in the October 1971 issue of Esquire magazine.
During 1967 and 1968 the Maharishi appeared on the magazine covers of Life, Look, Newsweek, Time, Esquire, Saturday Evening Post, The New York Times Sunday Supplement, Ebony and " many others ".
In an interview in Esquire magazine in 2000, Grove encouraged America to be " vigilant as a nation to have tolerance for difference, a tolerance for new people.
Lewis-Smith started writing weekly columns in Time Out magazine where he took over from Julie Burchill, the short-lived Sunday Correspondent, and The Mail on Sunday ( where he often substituted for Burchill ) as well as Esquire magazine.
In a 1976 article in Esquire magazine, sportswriter Harry Stein published an " All Time All-Star Argument Starter ," consisting of five ethnic baseball teams.
As a jazz artist he won the 1944 Esquire magazine Gold Award, was highly rated in the Metronome polls of 1937-42 and 1945, and was selected for the Playboy magazine All Star Band, 1957-60.

Esquire and English
Like many titles, the meaning of the term has also extended downwards, until in Persia and Afghanistan it has become an affix to the name of any Muslim gentleman, like Effendi in Osmanli, Esquire in English.
Although Esquire is the English translation of the French écuyer, the latter indicated legal membership in the nobilities of ancien régime France and contemporaneous Belgium, whereas an esquire belongs to the British gentry rather than to its nobility, albeit that the term " gentry " in England came to be used to describe what is elsewhere labelled the untitled nobility.
Squire is a shortened version of the word Esquire, from the Old French ( modern French ), itself derived from the Late Latin (" shield bearer "), in medieval or Old English a scutifer.
The original Tatler was founded in 1709 by Richard Steele, who used the nom de plume " Isaac Bickerstaff, Esquire ", the first such consistently adopted journalistic persona, which adapted to the first person, as it were, the 17th-century genre of " characters ", as first established in English by Sir Thomas Overbury and soon to be expanded by Lord Shaftesbury's Characteristics ( 1711 ).
* Esquire ( band ), an English progressive and symphonic rock band
Edward Darcy Esquire v Thomas Allin of London Haberdasher ( 1599 ) 74 ER 1131 ( also spelled as " Allain " or " Allen " and " Allein " but most widely known as the Case of Monopolies ), was an early landmark case in English law, establishing that the grant of exclusive rights to produce any article was improper ( monopoly ).
In the mid-1920s, with money earned by establishing a school for teaching immigrants English, Roth founded four literary magazines, including Beau, a forerunner of Esquire and perhaps the first American “ men ’ s magazine .” The most important products in his short-lived magazine empire were the quarterly Two Worlds and Two Worlds Monthly.
Esquire would be the closest English counterpart to Edler, although the German title would tend to carry more gravitas.
She belongs to the Belgian nobility through her legal father, but with no other title than the title of ' Ecuyère ' ( in Dutch: Jonkvrouw ) of which the English equivalent could be ' Esquire '.
While the word " Nobility " is now generally used in the English language only for the Peers ( Dukes, Marquises, Earls, Viscounts, Barons ) and maybe also the Baronets and Knights, all with a " Sir " title, it actually includes also the " untitled " to whom rightly belong the ranks and titles of " Esquire " ( not given just as a courtesy to any person from letter writers ) and " Gentleman " in the nobiliary sense.
His favorite guitar is an original Fender Esquire which previously belonged to Steve Marriott, who was the lead singer of English rock and roll bands Small Faces and Humble Pie.

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