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Her and Times
Her speech was reported by the London Times as follows.
Her novels Wifey ( 1978 ) and Smart Women ( 1983 ) shot to the top of The New York Times best-seller list.
Her portrayal of a troubled theatre-goer in Secret Friends ( BBC 2, 1990 ) was described as " a miniature tour de force ... Miranda Richardson's finest hour, all in ten minutes " ( The Sunday Times ).
* THE MOURNER: In a Landscape of Sadness, Offering Just Her Presence, New York Times, 10 / 1 / 2001 the story of Carol O ' Neill, wife of a founder of Sandler O ' Neill
Mary Shelley in Her Times.
Her 1945 scat recording of " Flying Home " arranged by Vic Schoen would later be described by The New York Times as " one of the most influential vocal jazz records of the decade .... Where other singers, most notably Louis Armstrong, had tried similar improvisation, no one before Miss Fitzgerald employed the technique with such dazzling inventiveness.
* Constance Smedley: Grace Darling and Her Times Hurst and Blackett ( 1932 )
Her own Old Rhymes for All Times ( 1928 ) and The Lord of the Rushie River ( 1938 ), a tale about a girl who lives among swans on a riverbank, were critically well received.
Her 1998 book, Today I Feel Silly, and Other Moods That Make My Day, made the best-seller list in The New York Times.
Her collection of essays Men in Dark Times presents intellectual biographies of some creative and moral figures of the 20th century, such as Walter Benjamin, Karl Jaspers, Rosa Luxemburg, Hermann Broch, Pope John XXIII, and Isak Dinesen.
Her work is generally well received, with the more recent novels reaching the New York Times Bestseller List.
Her tenure is credited with seeing The Post rise in national stature through effective investigative reporting, most notably to ensure that The New York Times did not surpass its Washington reporting of the Pentagon Papers and Watergate scandal.
Her daughter, Ruth Holmberg, became publisher of The Chattanooga Times.
Other notable newspapers that serve the city include G-Vegas Magazine, The Greenville Times, The East Carolinian, Her Magazine, The Minority Voice and Viva Greenville.
Her 1915 speech on pacifism at Carnegie Hall received negative coverage by newspapers such as the New York Times, which branded her as unpatriotic.
* Angeliki Laiou, “ Introduction: Why Anna Komnene ?” Anna Komnene and Her Times, ed.
* Diether R. Reinsch, “ Women ’ s Literature in Byzantium ?— The Case of Anna Komnene ,” Anna Komnene and Her Times, ed.
Failure is Impossible: Susan B. Anthony in Her Own Words, Times Books, 1995.
* Barron's BookNotes for Uncle Tom's Cabin-The Author and Her Times
The New York Times reviewer noted that " Her songs ... are awesomely difficult and she does them awesomely well.
Her mother, Rose Hovick ( née Rose Evangeline Thompson ), was a teenage bride fresh from a convent school when she married Norwegian-American John Olaf Hovick, who was a newspaper advertising salesman and a reporter at The Seattle Times.
The war was ended with Komura's signature on behalf of the Japanese government of the Treaty of Portsmouth, which was highly unpopular in Japan, leading to the Hibiya Incendiary Incident < ref name =" nyt1905 ">" Japan's Present Crisis and Her Constitution ; The Mikado's Ministers Will Be Held Responsible by the People for the Peace Treaty -- Marquis Ito May Be Able to Save Baron Komura ," New York Times.
Her work appeared in The New York Times, Poetry Magazine,
Her earliest work to appear under her own name was Arabi and His Household ( 1882 ), a pamphlet — originally a letter to The Timesin support of Ahmed Orabi Pasha, leader of what has come to be known as the Urabi Revolt, an 1879 Egyptian nationalist revolt against the oppressive regime of the Khedive and European domination of Egypt.
Her first, the memoir There Really Was a Hollywood, was a New York Times bestseller.

Her and obituary
Her obituary, in the February 8, 1975 edition of The Washington Post newspaper, reflects her many contributions to military heraldry.
Her father, Joseph Smith, worked for United Press International in Paris and moved to Washington, D. C., United States in 1966, where he became The Washington Post < nowiki >'</ nowiki > s first official obituary editor.
Upon her death, writer Jean Cocteau observed in an obituary, " Her voice, slightly off-key, was that of the Parisian street hawkers — the husky, trailing voice of the Paris people.
Her obituary by the BBC said the marriage was " famously harmonious.
Her appearances in various hit films of the 1960s formed the basis of her international reputation, and an obituary in The Telegraph characterised her as " the blue-eyed English rose with the china-white skin and cupid lips who epitomised the sensuality of the swinging Sixties ".
Her obituary in the newspaper she had once edited, the Daily Tribune, said that her works had a few great sentiments, " but as a whole they must commend themselves mainly by their vigor of thought and habitual fearlessness rather than freedom of utterance ".
Her obituary in The Times noted that she must be counted “ among the finest singers of the second half of the 20th century.
Her voice, the New York Times wrote in her obituary, was " inviting.
Her Times obituary, by Charles Sinker, ended: “ Her close friends remember her as a fierce but fundamentally gentle warrior, a Bunyan-like soul on a lonely and constant quest for the real path of the spirit.
Her New York Times obituary reported that " The largest and most persistent fabrication about Ms. Sumac was that she was actually a housewife from Brooklyn named Amy Camus, her name spelled backward.
Her obituary appeared in the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper on 17 December of that year.
Her obituary appeared in the New York Times on Nov 22, 1965 ( pg 37 ).
Her obituary in The Times noted her " animosity towards all, or rather, some of those facets which may be conveniently called the ' New Woman '," but added that " it would perhaps be difficult to reduce Mrs. Lynn Linton's views on what was and what was not desirable for her own sex to a logical and connected form.
According to an obituary in The Athenaeum of 13 December 1884: " Her music is marked by elegance and grace ... power and energy.
Her student Karl V. Teeter pointed out in his obituary of Haas that she trained more Americanist linguists than her former instructors Edward Sapir and Franz Boas combined: she supervised fieldwork in Americanist linguistics by more than 100 Ph. D. students.
Her obituary from the Democratic Press ( Pennsylvania ), Aug. 3, 1818, p. 3 notes that she was " one of those patriotic Ladies of Philadelphia who first associated together and supplied the suffering soldiers with shirts, stockings, & c. in that eventful period of the revolution, which tried and apalled even men's souls.
Her obituary in the New York Times stated that the cause of death was a severe attack of lung disease, from which she had been suffering for nearly twenty years.
" Her obituary reported that in Indiana she was " generally beloved by all who knew her and was noted for her benevolence of spirit and generous-heartedness.
Her Dallas Morning News obituary said no funeral was planned.
Her Los Angeles Times obituary contained a reference to her 1972 book of poetry and the title poem, A Gentle Mind.
Her obituary described her as " one of the greatest of the pioneer women of the Australian bush, possessing all the qualities of self-sacrifice, resourcefulness, industry, determination, and courage that left their mark on the Australian race and laid the foundation of the nation ".
Her husband produced an obituary that praised her talents as a writer and her virtues as an individual.
Her New York Times obituary makes clear that she was buried upstate and also that she was not Jewish, as the Brooklyn cemetery is.

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