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Fotheringham and Page
For 10 years, Fotheringham was a regular panelist in the latter years of the CBC Television program Front Page Challenge, replacing the deceased Gordon Sinclair.

Fotheringham and where
Along with the Sun, his work often appeared in Maclean's magazine, where he would illustrate the columns of Allan Fotheringham.

Fotheringham and wrote
Despite her relatively low public profile, Aline Chrétien was also recognized as a powerful advisor to her husband ; Maclean's magazine once wrote, " Never mind calling her the power behind the throne — she shares the seat of power ", and columnist Allan Fotheringham later called her the second most powerful political figure in Canada, behind her husband but ahead of any elected Member of Parliament or any staffer in the PMO.
Columnist Allan Fotheringham wrote that half the voters in Montreal thought Auf der Maur was a joke and the other half thought he was a legend.

Fotheringham and for
* Brian Mulroney ( Prime Minister of Canada from 1984 to 1993 ): Lyin ' Brian ; Le p ' tit gars de Baie-Comeau (" Little Guy from Baie-Comeau "), " The chin that walks like a man " ( a moniker given him by columnist Allan Fotheringham ), and " Mini Trudeau " ( a name given to him by René Lévesque for his similarities to Pierre Elliot Trudeau perceived by Quebec )
Soon afterward, Fotheringham left Maclean's, and became a columnist for The Globe and Mail.
* and more, plus the artistic and entertainment and business cocktail-party crowd of the era, and various colourful shady characters, some of whose careers Fotheringham is noted for profiling and covering in the course of his columns
* An Investigation of Methods for Visualising Highly Multivariate Datasets by C. Brunsdon, A. S. Fotheringham & M. E. Charlton, University of Newcastle, UK
His column previously appeared in the back page slot famously occupied for many years by Allan Fotheringham, but is now kept at the front of the magazine with other columns.

Fotheringham and .
* Keeley, J. E., C. J. Fotheringham, and M. Morais.
::* Fotheringham, John Knight, ed.
The builders were Patman and Fotheringham.
Columnist Allan Fotheringham joined the panel after Sinclair's death.
In 1975 Newman brought in columnist Allan Fotheringham.
" In 2000, Allan Fotheringham in the same magazine described Jean and Aline Chrétien as the two " most powerful " politicians in Canada, above Eddie Goldenberg and Jean Pelletier.
In his book Birds of a Feather: The Press and the Politicians, Allan Fotheringham claimed that Turner tried to exact her revenge on the press during the 1988 election campaign by secretly taking photographs of journalists partying on a campaign bus, with an eye toward publishing them in a magazine.
The photographs were never subsequently published, however, and Fotheringham states that John Turner himself most likely killed the idea.
His version is the one used by all posterior writers and historians, as J. K. Fotheringham in 1915.
* J. K. Fotheringham and L. R. F.
* A. S. Fotheringham, C. Brunsdon, and M. Charlton.

made and famous
Stowey Rummel was internationally famous, a crafter of a genuine Americana in foreign eyes, an original designer whose inventive childishness with steel and concrete was made even more believably sincere by his personality.
This dish much resembles the oysters Rockefeller made famous by Antoine's in New Orleans, though the Palace chef announced it as a variant of Manning's roast oysters.
he tends to shy away from the hooting and hollering personalities that originally made Negro radio programs famous ''.
File: Great Mosque of Djenné 3. jpg | Great Mosque of Djenné, famous building made from banco, a type of adobe
The large amount of travel done by Christie and Mallowan has not only made for a great writing theme, as shown in her famous novel: The Murder on the Orient Express, but also tied into the idea of archaeology as an adventure that has become so important in today ’ s popular culture as described by Cornelius Holtorf in his book Archaeology is a Brand.
In 1902 he witnessed the miraculous cure of Marie Bailly at Lourdes, made famous in part because she named Carrel as a witness of her cure.
The assembly line developed by Ford Motor Company between 1908 and 1915 made assembly lines famous in the following decade through the social ramifications of mass production, such as the affordability of the Ford Model T and the introduction of high wages for Ford workers.
This bootstrapping quality of growth made Ford famous and set an example for other industries.
This image of a fully mature " Venus rising from the sea " ( Venus Anadyomene ) was one of the iconic representations of Aphrodite, made famous in a much-admired painting by Apelles, now lost, but described in the Natural History of Pliny the Elder.
Snyder theorizes that Agathon might have made a deliberate effort to mimic the sumptuous attire of his famous fellow-poet, although by Agathon's time, such clothing, especially the κεκρύφαλος ( kekryphalos, an elaborate covering for the hair ) had long fallen out of fashion for men.
This guitar was made famous by Artists such as Lead Belly, Pete Seeger and Leo Kottke are famous 12 string players.
Ring modulation, also known as amplitude modulation, is an effect made famous by Doctor Who's Daleks and commonly used throughout sci-fi.
Since German was the lingua franca of science ( and especially of psychiatry ) at that time, Kraepelin's use of Alzheimer's disease in a textbook made the name famous.
Prints are highly portable and these works made Dürer famous throughout the main artistic centres of Europe within a very few years.
He changed his surname from Einstein ( to avoid confusion with the famous physicist ) and began a comedy career that quickly made him a regular on variety and talk shows during the late 1960s and early 1970s.
The Rathaus Schöneberg, where John F. Kennedy made his famous " Ich bin ein Berliner!
This translation of go ' el in Job 19: 25-26 as " Redeemer " has been made famous by its use in Handel's Messiah, the Air I know that my Redeemer liveth, and in the lectionary during the Easter season.
::... explained his aspirations as to the repatriation of the Jews to the sacred land they had made famous.
Asaf Savaş Akat, a famous economist in Turkey, played saxophone, and guitarist Ender Enön made his own guitar because it was difficult to find a real one on the market in those years.
The judicial Power shall extend to all Cases, in Law and Equity, arising under this Constitution, the Laws of the United States, and Treaties made, or which shall be made, under their Authority ..." The first famous statement of " the judicial power " was Marbury v. Madison,.
* Constantinople's change of name was the theme for a song made famous by The Four Lads and later covered by They Might Be Giants and many others entitled " Istanbul ( Not Constantinople )".
The survivors of the sinking of the French ship Méduse in 1816 resorted to cannibalism after four days adrift on a raft and their plight was made famous by Théodore Géricault's painting Raft of the Medusa.
During this period, which has become known as baseball's dead-ball era, Cub infielders Joe Tinker, Johnny Evers, and Frank Chance were made famous as a double-play combination by Franklin P. Adams ' poem Baseball's Sad Lexicon.

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