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column and ran
For many years he simultaneously produced the daily strip, a weekly syndicated newspaper column, and a 500-station radio program ...." He ran the Boston Summer Theatre with The Phantom cartoonist Lee Falk, bringing in Hollywood actors such as Mae West, Melvyn Douglas and Claude Rains to star in their live productions.
Hearst did not know of Bierce's column, and claimed to have pulled Brisbane's after it ran in a first edition, but the incident would haunt him for the rest of his life, and all but destroyed his presidential ambitions.
In May 2004, the Tribune revealed that free-lance reporter Mark Falanga was unable to verify some facts that he inserted in a lifestyle-related column that ran on April 18, 2004, about an expensive lunch at a Chicago restaurant — namely, that the restaurant charged $ 15 for a bottle of water and $ 35 for a pasta entree.
Between 1933 and 1990, Sky and Telescope magazine ran a regular column called " Gleanings for ATMs " edited by Earle Brown, Robert E. Cox & Roger Sinnott.
Actually, the Allied deployments were mistaken and poorly timed: cavalry detachments under Liechtenstein on the Allied left flank had to be placed in the right flank and in the process they ran into and slowed down part of the second column of infantry that was advancing towards the French right.
Sanford ’ s editorial column was titled “ Mountain Dew ,” and ran until the 1960s
Freytag led his men along the route via Rexpoede, unaware that the town had already fallen to the French, and the head of the column ran straight into the French outposts.
Victorious, the French pressed on in column, but soon ran into the 29th Regiment in line and were stopped.
Such a table of " common logarithms " gave the logarithm, often to 4 or 5 decimal places, of each number in the left-hand column, which ran from 1 to 10 by small increments, perhaps 0. 01 or 0. 001.
Gittings also ran a regular column in The Ladder that she called " Living Propaganda ", encouraging women to come out to their friends and family members.
A column of this division ran into some Tyrolean jaegers and captured 200 of them, including their commander General d ' Apsré, along with two cannons.
In actuality, the Allied deployments were mistaken and poorly timed: cavalry detachments under Liechtenstein on the Allied left flank had to be placed in the right flank and in the process they ran into and slowed down part of the second column of infantry that was advancing towards the French right.
The column ran into minefields and German machine gun fire.
Hersey's article began where the magazine's regular " Talk of the Town " column ran, immediately following the theater listings.
Driven by compulsive animal fear, I ran for the streets, slipped in among a column of Council workers just leaving the place, and got through the gate that way.
In 1912, he introduced the ambitious and expensive Home Projecting Kinetoscope, which employed a unique format of three parallel columns of sequential frames on one strip of film — the middle column ran through the machine in the reverse direction from its neighbors.
Carrying just three days ' provisions, the column ran out of food and did not arrive in New Plymouth until 26 January, having been forced to eat a dog and two horses en route.
Morgan's men charged without orders, but the charge fell apart when they ran into the main column led by General Hamilton.
Albert Brisbane, whose book The Social Destiny of Man ( 1840 ) had been an inspiration to Ripley, paid Greeley $ 500 for permission to publish a front-page column in the New York Tribune which ran in several parts from March 1842 to September 1843.
Leo's popular column, " On Society ," ran in U. S. News & World Report for 17 years, and was syndicated in 140 newspapers.
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 ”.
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.
In 1847, the Whig ran a continuous column entitled " Frederick Ross's Corner ," which bashed Ross's character.
From 1937 until her resignation, Diana Vreeland ran a column for Harper's Bazaar called " Why Don't You ?".

column and though
Morton wrote the column until 1975 ; it was revived in January 1996 and continues today, written by William Hartston, though the name " By the Way " has been dropped in favour of simply " Beachcomber ".
For example, just by applying a simple rule that constrains each queen to a single column ( or row ), though still considered brute force, it is possible to reduce the number of possibilities to just 16, 777, 216 ( that is, 8 < sup > 8 </ sup >) possible combinations.
Because fossils identifiable as P. sternbergi are found exclusively in the lower layers of the Niobrara Formation, and P. longiceps fossils exclusively in the upper layers, a fossil lacking the skull can be identified based on its position in the geologic column ( though for many early fossil finds, precise data about its location was not recorded, rendering many fossils unidentifiable ).
He won only 13 % of the northern vote, though that was just enough to tip Pennsylvania out of the Republican column.
In some sedimentary environments, most of the total column of sedimentary rock was formed by catastrophic processes, even though the environment is usually a quiet place.
A triglyph is centered above every column, with another ( or sometimes two ) between columns, though the Greeks felt that the corner triglyph should form the corner of the entablature, creating an inharmonious mismatch with the supporting column.
Allenby himself refused to allow large numbers of armed Swazis to join his column, though he still used a few of them as guides.
Moore gave up the editorship in 1990 to become deputy editor of The Daily Telegraph, though he continued to write a column for the magazine.
The Spectator does have a popular music column, though it only appears every four weeks, while a cinema column contains a review of one film each week by the non-specialist Deborah Ross.
It was widely reported at the time that the Williams car's steering column had failed, though Hill told BBC Sport in 2004 that he believed Senna simply took the corner too fast for the conditions, referring to the fact that the car had just restarted the race with cold tyres after being slowed down by a safety car.
The stationary phase may also interact in undesirable ways with a particle and influence retention times, though great care is taken by column manufacturers to use stationary phases that are inert and minimize this issue.
The phrase, though quite rare before 1956, was used in a literal sense before it acquired its figurative meaning: " You have to increase from 7. 72 to 12 for the average at the bottom of that fifth column, for the whole nine yards.
The left-centre column, though opposed by the bulk of the Batavian army, under General Daendels, had overcome all opposition and taken possession of Oudkarspel, thus securing the direct line of advance on Alkmaar.
By 11: 00 things looked very bad for Bonaparte: Austrian dragoons had forced their way through the gorge, word arrived that another Austrian column under Colonel Franz Lusignan was cutting off his retreat south of Rivoli, and Alvinczi was on the Trambasore Heights urging his victorious battalions forward, though they were unformed by combat and rough terrain.
It is a felony to reveal the identity of a CIA agent, yet no one has been convicted as a result of Novak ’ s column, though I. Lewis ' Scooter ' Libby, Dick Cheney ’ s Chief of Staff, was convicted of perjury in the Plame leak investigation.
The three symmetrically rounded sepals generally form a triangle with a small central structure, made up of the column, small petals and small lip, though slight variation to this theme does occur.
The available text says that inside the vessel was a central column that could move along eight tracks ; this is thought to refer to a pendulum, though it is not known exactly how this was linked to a mechanism that would open only one dragon's mouth.
When Maynard ’ s own marriage ended in 1989 — an event she explored in print — many newspapers dropped the “ Domestic Affairs ” column, though it was reinstated in a number of markets in response to reader protest.
When a string is bowed or tone in a wind instrument initiated by vibrating reed or lips, a phenomenon called mode-locking counteracts the natural inharmonicity of the string or air column and causes the overtones to lock precisely onto integer multiples of the fundamental pitch, even though these are slightly different than the natural resonance points of the instrument.
Confederate Major Rogers ordered his men to retreat to the southwest and most did, though the Arkansans and some Texans remained on the field and attacked the relief column before withdrawing.
A light pillar, or sun pillar, appears as a vertical pillar or column of light rising from the sun near sunset or sunrise, though it can appear below the sun, particularly if the observer is at a high elevation or altitude.
Furthermore, though nitrification is classically thought to be vertically separated from primary production because the oxidation of nitrogen by bacteria is inhibited by light, nitrification by AOA does not appear to be light inhibited, meaning that nitrification is occurring throughout the water column, challenging the classical definitions of " new " and " recycled " production.
Even though I covered news for a long time, I was always hoping I could get back to something like my little column on the Charlotte News.

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