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While the Terry / Gibbon column was marching toward the mouth of the Little Bighorn, on the evening of June 24, Custer's scouts arrived at an overlook known as the Crow's Nest, east of the Little Bighorn River.
Custer ’ s 7th Cavalry advance party of General Alfred Howe Terry ’ s column attacked Cheyenne and Lakota tribes at their camp on the Little Big Horn River on June 25, 1876.
In later years, the back page column was titled " Dick Little's Canadian Beef "— Little was not a real figure, but simply a curmudgeonly character of mostly conservative views meant to satirize a typical " angry Canadian.
A column of troops under his command arrived shortly after the Battle of Little Big Horn and discovered the bodies of Custer's men.
" A Line o ' Type Or Two ," Bert Leston Taylor's verse column in the Chicago Tribune, was now being done by Richard Henry Little.
Little is known of prowfish reproduction, but juveniles have been observed to be pelagic ; unlike adults, they spend their time in the mid levels of the water column, closely associated with their jellyfish prey.
Gatiss wrote and performed the comedy sketches The Web of Caves, The Kidnappers and The Pitch of Fear for the BBC's " Doctor Who Night " in 1999 with Little Britain's David Walliams, and played the Master in the Doctor Who Unbound play Sympathy for the Devil under the name " Sam Kisgart ", a pseudonym he later used for a column in Doctor Who Magazine.
She was born in Sydney, to Ruth and Ross Campbell, a writer, who called her " Little Nell " ( after a character in Charles Dickens ' The Old Curiosity Shop ) in his family life column in the Sydney Daily Telegraph.
" She has written for the Peabody Award-winning children's series, " Little Bill ," and has written a parenting column for the Sesame Workshop web site called " Talking Outloud ".
In a column she wrote refuting many of the claims of Little Girls in Pretty Boxes, Okino wrote, " Karolyi structured his training in a way that built your physical and mental strength to such a remarkable level, that even he couldn't tear you down.
Signing on with the Chicago Journal in 1903, he wrote a sports column and then a humor column, " A Little about Everything ".
:" Custer, with his five companies, after separating from Reno and his seven companies, moved to the right around the base of a hill overlooking the valley of the Little Horn, through a ravine just wide enough to admit his column of fours.
There was no sign of the presence of Indians in the hills on that side ( the right ) of the Little Horn, and the column moved steadily on until it rounded the hill and came in sight of the village lying in the valley below them.
On the 20th, Blunt ’ s retreating column arrived on the Little Blue River, a minor stream five miles east of Independence.
The pair passed by Frederick Benteen's detachment and joined Custer's main column as it moved into position to attack a sprawling Indian village along the Little Big Horn River.

column and Old
Since 1993, he has edited the " Funny Old World " column of bizarre news stories in Private Eye, and he wrote a weekly page for the Daily Mirror for some years until 2003.
Now retired, Martin has written several books about " Old Ironsides ", as well as numerous articles on various aspects of the ship and her times, plus the " Salty Talk " column in the journal Naval History.
There are three other blank columns in Vaticanus, in the Old Testament, but they are each due to incidental factors in the production of the codex — a change to the column-format, a change of scribes, and the conclusion of the Old Testament portion of the text — whereas the blank column between Mark 16: 8 and the beginning of Luke is deliberately placed.
; Old Market: In Bristol skittles the term Old Market refers to the felling of the front pin, the middle pin and the back pin with one ball and is considered slightly bad luck because the remaining frame of pins offers less chance for a decent frame score with the middle column of pins felled.
Abram also serves on the editorial board of This Old House magazine, published by This Old House Ventures, Inc., also authoring the popular column, " Norm's Notebook.
She is best remembered for her astronomy column, which ran from 1951 until 1981 in the Toronto Star, and her articles on the history of astronomy which ran from 1946 until 1965 in the Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada under the title “ Out of Old Books ”.
The film culminates with the column of children, led by Aylward, marching into the town, singing the song " This Old Man " to keep up their spirits.
He was also a contributor to the Grumpy Old Men and in the past has written for Punch magazine and an occasional column for New Humanist magazine ( last entry May 2005 ).
( 2003 ), co-edited ( with Diane Coyle and Brian Ashcroft ) New Wealth for Old Nations: Scotland ’ s Economic Prospects ( 2005 ), edited an anthology of essays on the life of the late First Minister, Donald Dewar: Scotland ’ s first First Minister ( 2005 ) and wrote a non-political column for young mums in The Daily Record.
Actor and artistic director of the Old Vic Theatre, Kevin Spacey, has argued the economic case for the arts in terms of providing jobs and being of greater importance in exports than manufacturing ( as well as an educational role ) in a guest column he wrote for The Times.
Among his other early works are a memorial column on Beacon Hill ( 1789 ), the first monument to the American Revolution ; the Federal Street theater ( 1793 ); the " Tontine Crescent " ( built 1793 – 1794, now demolished ), fashioned in part after John Wood's Royal Crescent ; the Old State House in Hartford, Connecticut ( 1796 ); and the Massachusetts State House ( 1798 ).
On the last page of each issue is the " Old Cricket Says " column, in which Old Cricket points out a bit of wisdom or a witticism, or introduces themes to be explored in the upcoming issues of Cricket.
* the Old Town with its marketplace, Town Hall from 1621 ( with a column from Landskron Castle ’ s hall in front, which reputedly came from the Ingelheim Imperial Palace ), the former town fortifications with Gautor, Rheintorpforte ( gates ), clocktower and town wall remnants, and unique museums ( German Viticultural Museum, Town Museum.
Charles Bukowski's syndicated column, Notes of a Dirty Old Man, ran in NOLA Express, and Franciso McBride's illustration for the story " The Fuck Machine " was considered sexist, pornographic, and created an uproar.
By the end of the day, the last column reached the Old Town Square and the Poles captured the Old Town Market.
The name Colombes comes from Latin columna ( Old French colombe ), meaning " column ".
Old line and column tactics were now suicidal as the bow and arrow / sword morphed into the rifle and machine gun.
Author Charles Bukowski's Open City column " Notes of a Dirty Old Man " was taken on by the Los Angeles Free Press beginning in 1969, when Open City folded.

column and New
His theatre column was later carried in The New York Daily News.
Sullivan wrote in his June 21, 1950 New York Daily News column that " Kirkpatrick has sat in my living room on several occasions and listened attentively to performers eager to secure a certification of loyalty.
In Anita Richterman's column on May 9, 1975, several correspondents reported that they had heard the puzzle on the Bob Grant radio talk show on WMCA in New York City.
A column in The Chicago Daily Tribune in 1938 attributes a version involving socialism, communism, fascism and New Dealism to an address by Silas Strawn to the Economic Club of Chicago on November 29, 1935.
" There has long been a lively debate about who is the strongest player of all ", wrote GM Robert Byrne in his New York Times column of Aug. 26, 1997.
Polgár " was unrecognizable in her first-round encounter with Viswanathan Anand ", wrote GM Robert Byrne in his New York Times column, " making more errors than she normally would in a dozen games.
Paul Krugman, the Nobel Laureate in economics for 2008, wrote in his New York Times Op-Ed column for December 15, 2008:
The New York Times newspaper ceased publishing a spy novel review column.
Both the tower and cable ideas were proposed in the quasi-humorous Ariadne column in New Scientist, 24 December 1964.
For instance, in a column discussing Hurricane Katrina, he cited Wikipedia, quoted at length a discussion of Katrina's lessons on American inequality from the Native American publication Indian Country Today, and then included excerpts from a David Brooks column in the New York Times in a discussion of why the events of Katrina illustrated the necessity for global development and redistribution of wealth.
In his New Yorker column of July 27, 1957, E. B.
Saishū wrote a poetry column for the magazine Shinsei (" New Voices ").
The show was based in part on writer Candace Bushnell's book of the same name, compiled from her column with the New York Observer.
Academy Award-winning author and self-described women's rights advocate John Irving opined in a New York Times column that on this topic, women's advocates were being " purely vindictive " in insisting that the current OCR interpretation of Title IX be maintained.
Outside his academic historical writing, Hobsbawm wrote a regular column ( under the pseudonym Francis Newton ', taken from the name of Billie Holiday's communist trumpet player, Frankie Newton ) for the New Statesman as a jazz critic, and time to time over popular music such as with his " Beatles and before " article.
In the spring of 1924, Joseph Joscak, editor of the New Yorsky Dennik, a daily Czechoslovak newspaper, began writing a column in which he extolled the beauty and pleasing climate of Florida, “ where it is possible to produce as many as three crops a year .” He wanted to attract the attention of his readers to a better way of life, for most of them were employed in hard, unattractive jobs in coal mines, steel mills, and other factories of the industrial North.
Former New York Times reporter and columnist, and the first African-American to have a regular column in a major national newspaper.
) He writes a regular column for the New York Post and has often appeared on television news programs commenting on military issues and current affairs.
Pilger has a fortnightly column in New Statesman, his most frequent outlet, which began in 1991 while Steve Platt was editor of the magazine.
In the fall of 1861, Confederate Brigadier General Gideon Pillow pushed a column of troops from New Madrid towards Sikeston and Cape Girardeau.
He wrote a regular column for the New Statesman between 2001 and 2007.
The Columbia Journalism Review regularly reprints such headlines in its " The Lower case " column, and has collected them in the anthologies Squad helps dog bite victim and Red Tape Holds Up New Bridge.
On November 14, 2002, The New York Times published a column by William Safire in which he claimed " has been given a $ 200 million budget to create computer dossiers on 300 million Americans.

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