Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "24 Oras" ¶ 9
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

headlines and at
In 1968, the Atlantic-Richfield Company discovered oil at Prudhoe Bay on the Arctic coast, catapulting the issue of land ownership into headlines.
Each hour consists of headlines on each quarter hour, extended at the top of the hour to form the main part of the daily schedule though these are interspaced with other programmes, generally at weekends.
Sports headlines are usually provided at 15 minutes past the hour with a full bulletin after the bottom-of-the-hour headlines.
" The rate at which the central bank lends money can indeed be chosen at will by the central bank ; this is the rate that makes the financial headlines.
Once again, however, trade speculation dominated the headlines at the winter meetings, this time surrounding Padres ' ace Jake Peavy, which, much like the Brian Roberts talks a year earlier, resulted in nothing.
A 17 June 1936, presentation at the Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) headquarters made headlines nationwide.
His colorful personal life often made headlines, most notably for the 1914 fire and murders at his Taliesin studio.
Bigger headlines came at the end of June 2010.
Dean made headlines in 2007 when she, at age 71, city council member Betty Olds, 86, and noted environmentalist and co-founder of Save the Bay, Sylvia McLaughlin, 90, climbed a ladder to briefly join a tree-sit aimed at saving the Memorial Oak Grove outside the stadium of the University of California, Berkeley.
The line was perceived as a slap at NBC Nightly News main anchor John Chancellor, who due to his background as a foreign correspondent, felt the network should weigh its news more heavily toward world events, and had kept Franco's deathwatch at the top of the headlines.
James Taranto's Best of the Web Today column at OpinionJournal. com uses the phrase as a tag for newspaper headlines that indicate something is still happening when it should be obvious.
The discoveries at the site reached the headlines in mainstream media in the world with the discoveries of the Royal Tombs.
Dr. William DeVries and his surgical team at the University of Utah Medical Center made medical history and national headlines on December 2, 1982, when they replaced a diseased heart with the Jarvik-7, the first permanent artificial heart ever used for a human patient.
The scene at the exchange made front page headlines on many U. S. newspapers such as The New York Times.
The town made headlines worldwide when the Vice President of the Regional Assembly of Calabria, Francesco Fortugno, was gunned down with five bullets in front of dozens of bystanders as he cast his vote at the primary elections on October 16, 2005.
The later stories were inspired by ecological concerns that were beginning to make headlines at the time – this has led to Jeff Arnold in the telefantasy journal Timescreen to draw parallels between Timeslip and the similarly inspired adult drama series Doomwatch ( 1970 – 72 ).
He made his professional debut for Southampton on 26 March 1988, coming on as a substitute in a First Division fixture at Chelsea, before prompting national headlines in his full debut at The Dell two weeks later.
Among the events that took place in Mysore and made national headlines were a fire at a television studio that claimed 62 lives in 1989, and the sudden deaths of many animals at the Mysore Zoo.

headlines and right
In a court ruling that made international headlines, the woman won the right to have Montand exhumed and a sample taken.
For a short time in 2009 from the debut, MSNBC HD daytime included a widget on the right side of the screen which served as a secondary news ticker displaying the weather and news headlines as well as a blue bar which showed more stocks and business news graphics, but both features were eventually dropped in favor of full video encompassing both sides of the screen ; the widget reflected a similar widget which appears on CNBC HD for the display of a stocks graph chart ( and which has been retained to the present day ).
The incident prompted international headlines and debate on an entertainer's right to express a political opinion from the stage, and made the editorial section of The New York Times.
Yulia made headlines in Russia with a recent interview where she expressed her opinion on Lena's solo career, " She has the right to do it t. A. T. u. songs, but it's so stupid, absolutely stupid.
One of the larger ones, the Liverpool Christian Fellowship School, made national headlines in 2001 when they led a campaign ( backed by 40 other schools ) to halt the decline of discipline within schools and retain their right to use the cane as a threat of punishment.
The airport made headlines right at the start, chosen as a control point for the first coast-to-coast flight in the fall of 1919.
The author suggests the ultimate victory by Wintle was theright result by the wrong route ”, because at the time of the appeal to the House of Lords “ everyone was mindful of the newspaper headlines ”; he suggests that the Law Lords were forced to resort to sophistry to uphold Wintle ’ s appeal, and concludes that it “ is a case which has haunted this branch of the law for a generation ”.
Hempstead cheerleading made national headlines when they qualified to compete in the National Cheerleading Championships in Orlando, Florida in February 2011, when the DCSD denied them the right to go because they were not a state sanctioned sport and didn't follow paperwork guidelines.
However in October 2000, KJZZ made national headlines when it warned it would assert its contractual right to back out of its UPN contract if UPN increased its " urban / ethnic programming " to more than two hours per week.
In October 2000, KJZZ made national headlines when it demanded the right to back out of its UPN contract if UPN increased its " urban / ethnic programming " to more than two hours per week.

headlines and 24
However, IBDA-C burst back into the headlines when it claimed responsibility for the dual synagogue bombing in Istanbul on November 15, 2003, which killed 24 and injured 255, as well as a subsequent attack on the HSBC Bank and British consulate on November 20, 2003 ( see 2003 Istanbul bombings ).
Thompson stated: " BBC News, News 24, the radio networks, have changed over the years and the traditional role of the newsreader, as opposed to a correspondent or presenter, has virtually died out over the services .... We tend to use journalists across BBC news programmes ... to read the news headlines.
Hussam Abdo ( born c. 1990 as Hussam Muhammad Bilal Abdu ) was a Palestinian teenager, from the Masahiya area of Nablus, who made international headlines on 24 March 2004, when he entered the Hawara Checkpoint in the West Bank, with eight kilos ( 18 lbs ) of explosives strapped to his body as part of a suicide attack attempt.
CTV News Channel broadcasts news headlines, breaking news, and information on a 24 hour schedule.
By 1983 he moved to Formula Two but hit the headlines that year when he finished third in the Le Mans 24 Hours with Michael and Mario Andretti in a Kremer Porsche.
On 24 November, she followed that win with her greatest career victory, a first round KO over world champ Holly Ferneley, which created headlines.
Cynthia Payne ( born 24 December 1932, in Bognor Regis, West Sussex ) is a retired English party hostess who made the headlines in the 1970s and 1980s when she was accused of being a madam and of running her brothel at 32 Ambleside Avenue, in Streatham, in the south-west of London, England.
Moreover, most news networks broadcast programmes for 24 hours a day but Channel NewsAsia will give text headlines for 5 hours ( for Singapore and international viewers ) until 06: 00 HK / SIN time.
FSR broadcasts 24 / 7 sports programming and airs Fox Sports News ( sports headlines and highlights ) every thirty minutes.

headlines and logo
However, when the traffic camera footage programme ended, the simulcast hours were expanded and the in-vision became a holding slide of the station logo with two lines of scrolling text containing news and sports headlines and the song that the station is currently playing.
On Oct. 2, 2006, the Sun underwent a major redesign, introducing a new logo ( actually it finally adopted the logo used at several other Sun newspapers for several years previously ), and revamping its typeface usage for both bodytext and headlines.
On July 4, 2011, KDOC launched a new, revised website, as well as a new station logo ( minus the TV after the KDOC call letters ), a new color scheme, programming promotions for KDOC's main channel, 56. 1 and Me-TV, channel 56. 3, videos, and news headlines for both Los Angeles and Orange Counties.
News at Tens opening sequence consisted of a chime of Big Ben ( commonly referred to as a " bong ") and a newscaster reading out a headline about the main news story of the day ; this was followed by the title sequence — a computer-generated travel across night-time London, passing London landmarks such as the Canary Wharf and the London Eye, before zooming in on the " Big Ben " clockface on the Westminster Clock Tower showing the time of 22: 00 ; between further chimes, headlines were read out by each newscaster ; following the headlines, a camera panned across the studio, passing a VR " glass screen " with the News at Ten logo emblazoned on it and swooping past the newscasters at the desk.

0.424 seconds.