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columns and Adams
There are definite examples of humor restricted by copyright law on the internet ; examples include the Dilbert cartoons of Scott Adams or the newspaper columns of Dave Barry.
Adams has published five collections of his The Straight Dope columns, and Zotti has published a children's collection in The Straight Dope style entitled Know It All.
Adams ' columns are archived at the Straight Dope website.
Newspaper columnists of the 1930s and 1940s, such as Franklin Pierce Adams ( aka FPA ), Nick Kenny, John Crosby, Jimmie Fidler, Louella Parsons, Drew Pearson, Ed Sullivan and Walter Winchell, achieved a celebrity status and used their syndicated columns as a springboard to move into radio and television.
Townhall. com, which publishes daily, features more than 80 columns ( both syndicated and exclusive ) by writers such as Jack Bouroudjian, Dennis Prager, Neal Boortz, Ann Coulter, Dinesh D ' Souza, Larry Elder, Jonah Goldberg, Rebecca Hagelin, Paul Jacob, Paul Kengor, David Limbaugh, Michelle Malkin, the late Robert Novak, Thomas Sowell, Jacob Sullum, Mike Adams, Matt Lewis, Amanda Carpenter, Fred Thompson, Jeb Bush, Lisa De Pasquale, Bruce Bialosky and Cal Thomas.
In 1984, Chicago Review Press published The Straight Dope, a compilation of columns ; the cover named Cecil Adams as author and Zotti as editor.
Smith has appeared in various gossip columns such as The New York Post ’ s Page Six, the Huffington Post, Rush & Malloy, and Cindy Adams.
Adams then went to Brisbane and published ' Poetical Works ' ( 1886, Brisbane ) which is a quarto volume of over 150 pages printed in double columns.

columns and has
The sense of perspective has been created by designing the length of the columns so that those at the far end of the colonnade are much shorter than those in front.
`` The white colonnaded, cedar-roofed Southern mansion is directly traceable via the grey and buff stone of grey-skied England to the golden stucco of one particular part of the blue South, the Palladian orbit stretching out from Vicenza: the old mind of Andrea Palladio still smiles from behind many an old rocking chair on a Southern porch, the deep friezes of his architectonic music rise firm above the shallower freeze in the kitchen, his feeling for light and shade brings a glitter from a tall mint julep, his sense of columns framing the warm velvet night has brought together a million couple of mating lips ''.
This means that array a has 3 rows and 2 columns, and the array is of integer type.
Thus, if a two-dimensional array has rows and columns indexed from 1 to 10 and 1 to 20, respectively, then replacing B by B + c < sub > 1 </ sub >-− 3 c < sub > 1 </ sub > will cause them to be renumbered from 0 through 9 and 4 through 23, respectively.
Among contemporary writers, the satirist Craig Brown has made considerable use of the clerihew in his columns for The Daily Telegraph.
It was first thought to be a tally stick, as it has a series of what has been interpreted as tally marks carved in three columns running the length of the tool, but some scientists have suggested that the groupings of notches indicate a mathematical understanding that goes beyond counting.
The keyboard controller scans the rows and columns to determine which note the player has pressed.
The availability of powerful computers has also allowed direct computer simulation of distillation columns.
The design has the same precision on all columns, but when calculating polynomials, the precision on the higher-order columns could be lower.
This is like Step 1, except it is odd columns ( 3, 5, 7 ) added to even columns ( 2, 4, 6 ), and column one has its values transferred by a sector gear to the print mechanism on the left end of the engine.
The rigidity of the relational model, in which all data is held in tables with a fixed structure of rows and columns, has increasingly been seen as a limitation when handling information that is richer or more varied in structure than the traditional ' ledger-book ' data of corporate information systems: for example, document databases, engineering databases, multimedia databases, or databases used in the molecular sciences.
An idea he introduced in one of these columns was the concept of " Reviews of This Book ", a book containing nothing but cross-referenced reviews of itself which has an online implementation.
This echelon matrix contains a wealth of information about: the rank of is 5 since there are 5 non-zero rows in ; the vector space spanned by the columns of has a basis consisting of the first, third, fourth, seventh and ninth column of ( the columns of the ones in ), and the *' s tell you how the other columns of can be written as linear combinations of the basis columns.
This has allowed Lyon & Healy to mass-produce harps, that can be customized with special order features — such as carved columns, gold-leaf work, hand-painted sound boards, and other artistic inlays.
In many mosques, especially the early congregational mosques, the prayer hall has the hypostyle form ( the roof held up by a multitude of columns ).
The braille computer monitor has rows and columns of rectangular cells.
Once in row-echelon form, the rank is clearly the same for both row rank and column rank, and equals the number of pivots ( or basic columns ) and also the number of non-zero rows, say ; further, the column space has been mapped to which has dimension.
Each line of the text has some twelve to fourteen Greek uncial letters, arranged in four columns ( 48 lines in column ) with carefully chosen line breaks and slightly ragged right edges.

columns and revealed
Celebrities or public figures whose private lives are revealed in gossip columns who believe that their reputation has been defamed — that is, exposed to hatred, contempt, ridicule, or pecuniary loss — can sue for libel.
Immediately to the east of the Ritter Range is the Middle Fork of the San Joaquin River, which contains Devils Postpile, a series of basaltic columns that were revealed and smoothed by glacier action.
An archaeological site in the village revealed shafts and bases of columns, caves, a pool, and a burial ground.
Excavations in El Mina revealed skeletal remains of ancient wolves, eels, and gazelles, part of the ancient southern port quay, grinding mills, different types of columns, wheels, Bows, and a necropolis from the end of the Hellenistic period.
" In his columns, Kristof revealed the documents detailing this proposal and argued that the " grand bargain " proposal was killed by hard-liners in the Bush administration.
The seven calendars may be combined into one, either with 13 columns of which only seven are revealed, or with movable day-of-week names ( as shown in the pocket perpetual calendar picture.
The first exploratory diggings in the area were conducted in 1910 ; they revealed some columns and mosaic tile panels.
Her Lunch columns were often noted for publishing her theatrical take on the private, titillating side of her lunch companions — Margaret Atwood was depicted as a prickly diva who refused to eat her lunch because she was unhappy with the table, and Gene Simmons revealed the size of his penis.
Using matrix generators for linear programs revealed the importance of naming rows and columns in a consistent manner.
Although the term " creator of fashions " was part of the tagline in her columns for the Hearst papers, some observers have claimed that Cardozo's tone revealed a certain disdain for Lucile's position in the world of fashion.
In my sworn testimony, I said what I have contended in my columns and on television: Joe Wilson's wife's role in instituting her husband's mission was revealed to me in the middle of a long interview with an official who I have previously said was not a political gunslinger.

columns and few
Daily strips have suffered as well, in 1910 the strips had an unlimited amount of panels, covering the entire width page, while by 1930 most " dailies " had four or five panels covering six of the eight columns occupied by a traditional broadsheet paper, by 1958 those four panels would be narrower, and those would have half of the space a 1910 daily strip had, and around 1998 most strips would have three panels only ( with a few exceptions ), or even two or one on an occasional basis, apart from strips being smaller, as most papers became slightly narrower.
A steel column is extended by welding or bolting splice plates on the flanges and webs or walls of the columns to provide a few inches or feet of load transfer from the upper to the lower column section.
For example, a camera that makes a 2048 × 1536 pixel image typically uses a few extra rows and columns of sensor elements and is commonly said to have " 3. 2 megapixels " or " 3. 3 megapixels ", depending on whether the number reported is the " effective " or the " total " pixel count ( as opposed to the 2048 × 1536 = 3, 145, 728 finished image pixels ).
David Lloyd George had written in 1913 that the Liberals were " carving the last few columns out of the Gladstonian quarry ".
Milam and Colonel Frank W. Johnson led two columns of men into the city, and for the next few days they fought their way from house to house towards the fortified plazas where the Mexican soldiers waited.
A relative few did join the new UPI and the columns of popular INS writers, such as Bob Considine, Louella Parsons and Ruth Montgomery, were carried by UPI.
Most drum, chain, and bar printers were capable of printing up to 132 columns, but a few designs could only print 80 columns and some other designs as many as 160 columns.
A few examples of Corinthian columns in Greece during the next century are all used inside temples.
The ancient city was situated on a peninsula on which the modern city has been built over the ancient Greek city of which only a few ruins remain including part of the city wall, two temple columns dating to the 6th century BC and tombs.
" A few broken basaltic columns and pieces of
This has enabled detailed measurements of the atomic and electronic properties of single columns of atoms, and in a few cases, of single atoms.
Next comes the colonnaded street, whose marble columns are no longer extant ; all that remains are a few broken stubs near the old Roman baths.
The original 1910 bridge was destroyed and all that is left are a few columns and pieces of metal that are seen when the river is not filled with rain or water is not being released from the dam.
The general structure was a message from the vicar, i. e. Prime Minister, plus a few smaller, varying columns.
Since 1995 a subscribers ' quarterly, ' De Mecheleir ', shows old photographs of Mechelen and has stories on the local history as well as a few columns written mimicking the dialect, for which no spelling is generally determined.
But from the 1970s the political influence of The Age, as with other broadsheet newspapers, derived less from what it said in its editorial columns ( which relatively few people read ) than from the opinions expressed by journalists, cartoonists, feature writers and guest columnists.
He joined and wrote a few columns for the school paper, The Daily Texan but resigned when it refused to publish an editorial he had written on birth control.
All but a few classical buildings have been destroyed, often by earthquakes ; those remaining include a Roman triumphal arch and Corinthian columns known as the Colonnade of Bacchus.
However the other two columns were more successful and reached their objective, Ruatahuna, on 8 May, where they remained for a few days systematically destroying crops and houses.
The only remnants today are 23 haunting columns, a few pieces of china, and a set of the wrought-iron stairs and portions of the balustrade.
On the opposite side of the court the few Osiride pillars and columns still left can furnish an idea of the original grandeur.
It marched in two columns within sight of each other but few miles apart to prevent a surprise attack.

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