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column and Kaplan
In June 2006, Don Kaplan of the tabloid New York Post ( owned by News Corporation, which also owns Fox News ) wrote a column titled " Do We Need MSNBC?

column and remarked
In the letters column, a reader remarked that the comic " must make you creators feel at times as if you're painting yourself into a corner ," and " Your matching of Golden Age comics history with new plotlines has been an artistic ( and I hope financial!
Jeff Elbel, writing for the Spin Control column in the Chicago Sun-Times, called the album " a late-career triumph " and remarked that Midnight Sun was the band's " second exceptional album in a row, and its best since 1990's landmark Circle Slide ".

column and running
During the withdrawal they were attacked by Ghilzai tribesmen and in running battles through the snowbound passes nearly the entire column of 4, 500 troops and 12, 000 camp followers were killed.
Much less commented-on than the order of the keys is that the keys are not on a grid, but rather that each column slants diagonally ; this is because of the mechanical linkages – each key being attached to a lever, and hence the offset prevents the levers from running into each other – and has been retained in most electronic keyboards.
* Martin Gardner, author of Mathematical Games, a long running column in Scientific American
* Marilyn vos Savant, author of " Ask Marilyn ", a long running column in PARADE
All vertebrates are built along the basic chordate body plan: a stiff rod running through the length of the animal ( vertebral column or notochord ), with a hollow tube of nervous tissue ( the spinal cord ) above it and the gastrointestinal tract below.
To make matters worse, one Swedish detachment, commanded by General Roos, had not been told about the overall plan and became isolated in the Russian defensive redoubts when a column of about 4, 000 Russian reinforcements reoccupied the fortified positions, trapping Roos and his 2, 600-man force at 6: 15 a. m. With over 1, 000 casualties and ammunition running low, Roos was forced to surrender his command at 9: 30 a. m.
When the British left Concord following their search ( which was largely unsuccessful, as the colonists, with advance warning of the action, had removed most of the supplies ), arriving colonial militia engaged the British column in a running battle all the way back to Charlestown.
After working in newspapers for a few years, writing an occasional record / music column and running a disco, Clifford replied to an advertisement and joined as the second member of the EMI press office in 1962, under Chief Press Officer Syd Gillingham.
He teamed up with Rowland Evans in 1963 to start Inside Report, which became the longest running syndicated political column in U. S. history and ran in hundreds of papers.
It was the longest running syndicated political column in U. S. history.
Desert Column's headquarters were established west of Karm Ibn Musleh, with the 5th Mounted Yeomanry Brigade in column reserve while a patrol of the Wellington Mounted Rifles Regiment went to cut the telegraph line running east from Rafa towards Shellal, and Chauvel reconnoitred the El Magruntein defences.
The Amateur Scientist was a column in the Scientific American, and was the definitive " how-to " resource for citizen-scientists for over 72 years ( 1928 – 2001 ), making it the longest running column in Scientific American's history.
" After running his column for more than 12 years and working as a reporter for the paper 17 years prior, the Los Angeles Times ended a nearly thirty year relationship with Scheer in November 2005, citing the need to cut costs while subsequently replacing him with two conservative columnists.
First, proteins may be purified according to their isoelectric points by running them through a pH graded gel or an ion exchange column.
Canadian models offered a kilometer-based instrument cluster, daytime running lamps, and an engine block heater as standard equipment, while the Italian model featured a list of European-mandated modifications, including breakaway side mirrors, specific European headlamps and turn signals, a front tow hook, rear fog lamps, deletion of the deck-lid mounted center brake light, a wet-arm windshield washer system, coolers for the power steering and automatic transmission fluids, two-speed rear axle, and a revised steering column to compensate for the removal of the driver's airbag.
The axons continue inside the spinal cord, running up the posterior ( dorsal ) column.
The azygos vein is a vein running up the right side of the thoracic vertebral column.
( The cross of the " t " in Fairlight draws on the 80th column and would ordinarily cause screen wrapping if it were saved in plain ASCII and viewed on a standard IBM PC running MS-DOS.
His London Evening Standard column, begun in summer 1956, is now the world's longest running daily chess column, breaking the previous record set by George Koltanowski in the San Francisco Chronicle.
As a journalist, Dean Kalimniou is popular within the Greek community of Australia through his column in the Melbourne Greek newspaper Neos Kosmos ( New World ), entitled Diatribe, which has been running since 2001.
On February 24, 2009, the Post announced that the paper would stop running Smith's column effective February 26, 2009, as a cost-cutting measure.
On occasion, the Post website includes " overflow " Honorable Mentions absent from the print editions ; this is typically limited to contest results in which each entry is necessarily lengthy ( e. g., song parody lyrics ) and the print column capable of running only a small number of entries.

column and joke
Her father writes joke books and a newspaper column in Seoul, South Korea.
In the story, Miss Lonelyhearts is an unnamed male newspaper columnist writing an advice column which the newspaper staff considers a joke.
The newspaper was nevertheless subject to a practical joke played by its correspondent, future writer Victor Eftimiu: instead of continuing his Adevărul-sponsored trip to France, Eftimiu stopped in Vienna, and compiled his " Letters from Paris " column from the press articles he read at Café Arkaden.

column and TV
During the broadcast run of The Adventures of Brisco County, Jr., TV Guide featured a positive review of the show in its Couch Critic column and wrote, " It's as funny as it is exciting, which is not an easy combo to pull off ... it's fresh and funny and different, and that's why we like it.
John Noakes of the BBC TV children's programme Blue Peter climbed the column in the late 1970s.
TV presenter and entertainer Gary Wilmot climbed the column in 1989 for LWT's ' Six O ' Clock Show ' to recreate the ' topping out ' ceremony of 1843.
In January 1960, the TV DX interest was further promoted via Robert B. Cooper's regular DXing Horizons column.
During the early 1960s, the U. K. magazine Practical Television first published a regular TV DX column edited by Charles Rafarel.
By 1970, Rafarel's column had attracted considerable interest from TV DXers worldwide.
After Rafarel's death in 1971, UK TV DXer Roger Bunney continued the monthly column, which continued to be published by Television Magazine.
In addition to the monthly TV DX column, Bunney has also published several TV DX books, including Long Distance Television Reception ( TV-DX ) for the Enthusiast 1981 ISBN 0-900162-71-6, and A TV DXer's Handbook 1986 ISBN 0-85934-150-X.
This slender, ionized column is relatively long, and when first formed is sufficiently dense to reflect and scatter television and radio signals, generally observable from 25 MHz upwards through UHF TV, back to earth.
Other regular features in the Daily Star include Goss a daily gossip column edited by Jessica Brown see The Goss Girls, " Playlist ", a daily music news column edited by Kim Dawson, " Star TV ", a television news column edited by Peter Dyke and Katie Begley, Mike Ward's weekly TV review page and " Forum ", a daily page devoted to readers ' text messages, which are apparently printed verbatim.
Each day's television is listed over ten pages or five double-page spreads: two pages of reviews of highlights (" Choices ") followed by two pages of terrestrial TV listings ( one column for daytime television, and five columns for the evening television ), then six pages of listings for digital channels.
After the Labour Party went into opposition he wrote a column for the Daily Star and made regular TV appearances in connection with his football club, Sheffield Wednesday, of which he was a director.
He is the author of the Hebrew language books Where There Are No Men, and War of Dreams, has a column in both the Ma ' ariv and Makor Rishon daily newspapers, and appears frequently on international TV and radio.
For the role, Channing went through considerable transformation, with the syndicated column " TV Scout " reporting months later, " It was a great make-up job — at least the part that made very pretty Stockard look so ugly.
Plibersek writes a fortnightly column for The Sydney Morning Herald and has appeared regularly as a commentator on ABC TV talk show Q & A since 2008.
In addition, Life also includes an Arts & Entertainment page that includes entertainment and celebrity news, TV listings and Amy Dickinson's advice column.
*" Leksiklopedija " ( column ), TV Novosti magazine, Belgrade, 1991.

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