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Page "United Press International" ¶ 24
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its and heyday
The New Zealand Liberal Party aggressively promoted agrarianism in its heyday, 1891-1912.
In its heyday, the city may have had a population of about 100, 000.
He never worked for any of the major manufacturers but maintained a productive relationship with BSA in its heyday.
In its heyday, many celebrities belonged to the Golden Dawn, such as actress Florence Farr, Irish revolutionary Maud Gonne, Irish writer William Butler Yeats, Welsh author Arthur Machen, English author Evelyn Underhill, and English author Aleister Crowley.
However, some artists and fans, notably Hank Williams Sr., found the term offensive even in its heyday.
In its heyday, ICI was the largest manufacturing company in the British Empire, and commonly regarded as a " bellwether of the British economy ".
Kansas City is most famous for its steak and barbecue. The American Hereford Association bull and Kemper Arena and the Kansas City Live Stock Exchange Building in the former Kansas City Stockyard of the West Bottoms as seen from Quality Hill, Kansas City | Quality Hill During the heyday of the Kansas City Stockyards, the city was known for its Kansas City steaks or Kansas City strip steaks.
In its heyday it boasted a collection of 70, 000 volume of antique books.
In its heyday it boasted a collection of 70, 000 volumes of antique books.
Because of its financial power and diversity, Lebanon was known in its heyday as the " Switzerland of the East ".
The lute gained a fifth course by the fifteenth century, a sixth a century later, and up to thirteen courses in its heyday.
The heyday of parchment use was during the medieval period, but there has been a growing revival of its use among artists since the late 20th century.
It may have been the most numerous bird on earth in its heyday, and A. W. Schorger believed it accounted for between 25 and 40 percent of the total landbird population in the US.
During its heyday, the recorder was traditionally associated with pastoral scenes, miraculous events, funerals, marriages and amorous scenes.
Two other major political entities were formed and grew during the 13th and 14th century: the Mali Empire and the Jolof Empire which become the vassal of the first in its heyday.
In its heyday a large amount of literature about how to play whist was written.
Popular with writers and editors for its speed and degree of customization, XyWrite was in its heyday the house word processor in many editorial offices, including the New York Times from 1989 to 1993.
This marked the beginning of its heyday.
In its colonial heyday Dakar was one of the major cities of the French Empire, comparable to Hanoi or Beirut.
Some have argued that cliometrics had its heyday in the 1960s and 1970s and that it is now neglected by economists and historians.
The heyday of its usage was from the early 1940s until the mid-1950s when modern neuroleptic ( antipsychotic ) medications were introduced.

its and newspapers
This was historic in its way, for it marked the first time an American Presidential aspirant had advertised his own virtues in his own string of newspapers spanning the land.
`` I feel confident the stock will qualify for the ' national list ' '', he said, meaning its market price would be quoted regularly in newspapers all over the country.
The Herald continued to grow, expanding its coverage and increasing its circulation until 2001, when nearly all newspapers fell victim to declining circulations and revenue.
More recently, Canadian newspapers have adopted the British spelling variants such as-our endings, notably with The Globe and Mail changing its spelling policy in October 1990.
The clause prevents the newspapers and media from publishing material that is too extreme or sensationalist about a criminal case until the trial is over and the jury has given its verdict.
The Unitarian Service Committee of Canada, founded in 1945, was receiving considerable attention both in city newspapers and on television, so much so that the word “ Unitarian ” became a household world, though its meaning was not that widely known.
In 1981, less than three years after its release, the strip appeared in 850 newspapers and accumulated over $ 15 million in merchandise.
From 1878, Bismarck tried to repress the social democratic movement by outlawing the party's organisation, its assemblies and most of its newspapers.
Reading, such as reading books, magazines, comics, or newspapers, along with browsing the internet is a common hobby and one that can trace its origins back many hundreds of years.
Every Hall has its own Mess, Canteen, Basketball Court, Badminton Court, TT tables, Reading room ( for newspapers, magazines etc.
Just as radio stations rely on its time sold to advertisements, newspapers rely for the same reasons on its space.
After its demise, a string of newspapers sprang into being, including the Flying Post, the Evening Post and the Daily Courant.
In the 1970s, squatting in West German cities led to " a self-confident urban counterculture with its own infrastructure of newspapers, self-managed collectives and housing cooperatives, feminist groups, and so on, which was prepared to intervene in local and broader politics ".
There were existing papers which splintered after the revolution and produced other independent, pro-Sandinista newspapers, such as El Nuevo Diario and its literary addition Nuevo Amanecer Cultural.
However, it is only published nowadays online on GoComics. com, under its English title, and hasn't been syndicated in South American newspapers since the mid-1990s ( by that time practically all newspapers in the continent dropped them, as tastes began to change to more " autochthonous " fare ).
Drawn by Jimmy Swinnerton, it began its run in 1893 in the San Francisco Examiner, one of William Randolph Hearst's newspapers.
Although the print version of the paper remains the largest local metropolitan newspaper in the United States, it is the third largest newspaper overall, behind The Wall Street Journal and USA Today, and its weekday circulation has fallen since 1990 ( as have other newspapers ) to fewer than one million copies daily.
In Argentina, one of the country's two main newspapers, Clarín, is a tabloid and in the Southern Philippines, a new weekly tabloid, The Mindanao Examiner, now includes media services, such as photography and video production, into its line as a source to finance the high cost of printing and other expenses.
The Times originally published its editorials and opinion columns in a physically separate " Commentary " section, rather than at the end of its front news section as is common practice in U. S. newspapers.
It was home to the country's two universities, its principal hospitals, and most of its communications media ( television stations, radio stations, newspapers, and magazines ).

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