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56 Sentences With "house publication"

How to use house publication in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "house publication" and check conjugation/comparative form for "house publication". Mastering all the usages of "house publication" from sentence examples published by news publications.

It did not give further details in the weekly in-house publication.
Breitbart is now the in-house publication of the Republican nominee for president in all but name.
To make ends meet he began writing financial articles for Forbes and an in-house publication of the American Bankers Association.
Topics covered in its in-house publication, Unbound Magazine range from erotic massage tips to an explainer on the SESTA and FOSTA bills opposed by many sex workers.
"In practice, however, you seldom need notes," he wrote for Times Talk, an in-house publication for Times employees, after attending a rabid torchlight Klan rally in 21965.
KIEV/MOSCOW (Reuters) - For U.S. President Donald Trump, White House publication on Wednesday of a memo summarizing his call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy fueled a domestic political crisis.
On June 15, 1929, The Little Times, the in-house publication back then, reported that The Times had started flying copies of the paper to Montreal for newsstand sale the next day.
Paul Thiboutot, Carleton's vice president and dean of admissions and financial aid, told an in-house publication that he cried when the school went from need-blind to need-aware in 1993, though he came to believe it was the right decision.
Medium looks to be on the cusp of solving its identity crisis Medium signed up high-profile journalism veterans to run Medium-owned verticals, including Steven Levy's tech-focused Backchannel, and it acquired the online magazine Matter in 2013 to become its flagship in-house publication.
Apart from library and hostel, the institute has an animal house, publication unit, medical photographic studio and a canteen.
The current editor is Bernhard Siegel. It is currently the longest- running in-house publication in the electronics industry.TheFreeLibrary. "40 Years of Analog Dialogue." Retrieved January 17, 2011.
Available on-line 2017. SSPA publishes its own in-house publication SSPA Reports, which has been granted ISSN 2585-755X.Slovak Space Policy Association (SSPA) , SSPA Reports. Available on-line 2017.
Currently there are 10 international editions. Daniel Haller became editors in 2001 and during his tenure the journal moved from its publisher Grune & Stratton to in-house publication by society staff. , Stephen Cannistra serves as editor-in-chief.
The journal emerged from the old ECPR News, starting in 2001 as an in-house publication distributed free to members by the ECPR before moving to Palgrave Macmillan in 2005. The full text of these early issues (Vols 1-3) is available online for free.
The Fiddlehead was established in 1945 by Alfred Bailey as an in-house publication for the Bliss Carman Poetry Society. The first issue was published in February 1945. It was adapted as a general literary magazine in 1952. Other prominent contributors in the magazine's early years included Elizabeth Brewster, Fred Cogswell and Desmond Pacey.
The anniversary was widely celebrated, including in the Army's in-house publication Soldier Magazine, with a series of articles including the July 2009 cover story and newspapers articles. In 2015, following the fifteenth anniversary, the Ministry of Defence announced changes to its monitoring process for new recruits and added sexuality to their equal opportunities monitoring process.
Each issue is uniquely themed, and the article topics developed for each issue apply to both dog and cat owners. fetch! magazine has won several awards, including a Stevie Award from the American Business Association for Best In-House Publication, and a Vetty Award from the Animal Health Marketing Awards for the "Winter Wonderland" issue in 2017.
American Angler began as Fly Tyer, an in-house publication of the Dick Surette Fly Fishing Shop in North Conway, New Hampshire. The first issue was published in 1978. During the 1980s, following declining interest in fly fishing, Fly Tyer was sold and underwent several name changes. It became American Fly Tyer, then American Angler & Fly Tyer, and finally American Angler.
In 1917 he moved to Detroit and was hired to edit an in-house publication for Cadillac Motor Car Company, Cadillac Clearing House, later becoming an advertising director for that institution. At Cadillac, Burnett met his advertising mentor, Theodore F. MacManus, whom Burnett called "one of the great advertising men of all time". MacManus ran the agency that handled Cadillac's advertising. In 1918, Burnett married Naomi Geddes.
In 1904 he wrote an article titled "The Class to Whom Advertisements Appeal" for Mahin's Magazine, the house publication of the Mahin Advertising Company of Chicago which aimed to turn advertising into a science."Science for Sale: Psychology's Earliest Adventures in American Advertising" by Ludy T. Benjamin Jr. in By 1908 he was editor of the monthly journal Advertising.Pharmaceutical Journal, Vol. 80, p. 847.
He became Sunday editor in 1966, then assistant managing editor of new technology and assistant to the editor before settling in as executive editor in 1975. He spent 15 months as editor of a Southwestern Bell in-house publication but otherwise continued with the Star-Telegram until his retirement in December 2000 as vice president for community affairs. In 2004, Tinsley died in Fort Worth from an aortic aneurysm.
The Imperial Society of Dance Teachers was formed on 25 July 1904 at the Hotel Cecil in Covent Garden, London. Robert Morris Crompton was its first President. The first ISTD congress was held in 1906 and a congress has subsequently been held every year, with the exception of a brief period during the war years. Its in-house publication Dance Journal (now titled DANCE) was first published in September 1907.
AIHEC tribal college presidents resolved on November 14, 1989 to support the magazine and gave it editorial independence as opposed to a typical in-house publication. In the summer of 1991, Founding editor Paul Boyer moved operations to Chestertown, Maryland. In 1995, the magazine moved to Mancos, Colorado, and is now located in a building where Paula Gunn Allen used to reside. Paul Boyer, author and education consultant, was the founding editor.
Around mid-2007, Nintendo discontinued the series after the publication of the guide for Pokémon Battle Revolution. This end of guide production was apparently due to the impending switch from in- house publication of NP to publication by Future US, which occurred in November 2007. In an issue of Nintendo Power, an NP subscriber wrote to Nintendo, asking about the status of the Player's Guide series. Nintendo replied that the series is indeed discontinued indefinitely.
The magazine was first published as the Field Artillery Journal in 1911. It has gone through several name changes. Due to low subscriptions it merged with the Infantry Journal in 1950, and was published as Combat Forces Journal; CFJ became Army in 1954. The US Army Artillery and Missile School began the in-house publication of Tactical and Technical Trends in Artillery for Instruction in 1957 that was renamed to Artillery Trends in 1958.
In recent years, Nintendo had turned to the NSider Forums, their official online community, in order to provide additional moderators. Camp Hyrule also had a mascot, named Stumpy, who was often seen wandering the campgrounds. The community elements were removed from Camp Hyrule in 2007, coinciding with the closing of the NSider forums and the impending switch from in-house publication of Nintendo Power to publication by Future US, which occurred in November 2007.
Ibadan: Power-House Publication, 307-318. # Abdul-Rahmon, M.O. (2003): “Nadhrat Tarikhiyyah fi Tatawur ta’lim al-Lughat al-‘Arabiyyah wa dirasat al-Islamiyyah fi wilayat Oyo al-Sabiqah.” In Amidu Sanni (ed.) “An Unfamiliar Guest in a Familiar Household: Arabic and Islamic Studies in Honour of Professor Isaac A. Ogunbiyi. Lagos: Debo Prints, 188-203. # Abdul-Rahmon, M.O. (2008): “Perspectives in the Teaching and Learning of Arabic and Islamic Studies in the South West of Nigeria”.
After the publication of The Solar Pons Omnibus in 1982, Arkham House retired the Mycroft & Moran imprint. In fact, the book was officially an Arkham House publication, merely listing it as "A Mycroft & Moran Book" on the half title page. Later, the imprint was leased to publisher George Vanderburgh (Shelburne, Ontario, Canada), who revived it in 1998 with the publication of The Final Adventures of Solar Pons as part of the Battered Silicon Dispatch Box operation.
Norman Schwarzkopf, and Mrs. Schwarzkopf ride in the Welcome Home parade in New York City honoring the men and women who served in Desert Storm. Following his retirement, Schwarzkopf attained a status as celebrity, and was highly praised in the news media. He was profiled by the Associated Press, the Washington Post, and Newsday, People, as well as praised in a Random House publication on the war, Triumph in the Desert. Schwarzkopf's speaking fees topped $60,000 per public appearance.
Backchannel is an online magazine that publishes in-depth stories on technology-related news. Numerous prominent journalists have been recruited to write for the site, including Steven Levy, Andrew Leonard, Susan P. Crawford, Virginia Heffernan, Doug Menuez, Peter Diamandis, Jessi Hempel, and many others. In addition, Backchannel has interviewed many notable figures, such as Demis Hassabis of Google DeepMind and Orrin Hatch of the Republican Party. Backchannel began as an in-house publication on the Medium website.
In the laboratory, Baker conducted experiments on the aesthetics of colours. She published two of her experiments in the laboratory's in-house publication, called the University of Toronto Studies, Psychological Series: first, “Experiments on the aesthetic of light and colour: On combinations of two colours," and second, “Experiments on the aesthetic of light and colour: Spectrally pure colours in binary combinations." Baker's doctoral dissertation consisted of the two reports. She was awarded her Ph.D. in 1903.
La Vie du Rail () is a French publishing group headquartered in Auray, which specialises in magazines and books about rail transport, and transport more generally. The editor-in-chief is Vincent Lalu. It was started in 1952 as an in-house publication of the SNCF, taking over the role played by ("Our trade") since 1938. In 1965 it became a weekly paid-for magazine independent of the SNCF, which retains a minority share in the company.
The Barrington Bull was an in-house publication of Barrington Hall, published from 1936 to 1989. (The name was briefly changed to The Barbarrington in 1938.) It was the first USCA publication of any kind. Volume I Number I of The U.C.S.C.A. News appeared on October 24, 1938, "a publication," claimed the lead article, "designed to create greater unity of purpose and action among the five houses of the co-operative association." Ed Wright, the editor, was also the editor of The Barbarrington.
Javier Zarzalejos Wilfried Martens Centre for European Studies. Zarzalejos has been secretary general of the Foundation for Social Analysis and Studies (FAES) think tank since 2012, where he previously held the positions of director of the Constitution and Institutions Unit, and editor of the in-house publication Cuadernos de Pensamiento Político.Javier Zarzalejos Wilfried Martens Centre for European Studies. Included in the 6th place of the People's Party (PP) list for the 2019 European Parliament election in Spain,: Zarzalejos was elected MEP for the 2019–2024 term.
After the war, Hitchcock began dabbling in creative writing. In June 1919 he became a founding editor and business manager of Henley's in-house publication, The Henley Telegraph (sixpence a copy), to which he submitted several short stories. Henley's promoted him to the advertising department, where he wrote copy and drew graphics for advertisements for electric cable. He apparently loved the job and would stay late at the office to examine the proofs; he told Truffaut that this was his "first step toward cinema".
Another six waltzes (composed 1826-1831), present in the Paris home, were preserved but later destroyed in a fire in 1863 in Ludwika's house. Publication of the waltzes 14-19 occurred later. Chopin had given them to related persons and had not guarded the manuscripts. The waltzes include a piece that was untitled; it is in 3/4 time with the tempo indication Sostenuto, and it has some of the characteristics of a waltz, so it is often (but not universally) catalogued with the waltzes.
A younger Robert Benchley Benchley did copy work for the Curtis Company during the summer following graduation, while doing other odd service jobs, such as translating French catalogs for the Boston Museum of Fine Arts.Altman, 55–56 In September, he was hired by Curtis as a full-time staff member, preparing copy for its new house publication, Obiter Dicta.Yates, 31–32. The first issue was roundly criticized by management, who felt it was "too technical, too scattering, and wholly lacking in punch"Altman, 61.
Lusitania was registered for copyright on July 19, 1918, and was released by Jewel Productions who were reported to have acquired it for the highest price paid for a one-reel film up to that time. It was included as part of a Universal Studios Weekly newsreel and featured on the cover of an issue of Universal's in-house publication The Moving Picture Weekly. Its première in England followed in May 1919. Advertisements called it "he world's only record of the crime that shocked humanity".
The foreword to the book was written by Professor Andrew J. Nathan of Columbia University, and the book was published by Random House in 1994. Along with the Random House publication, a Chinese language edition was released by the Chinese Times Publishing Company of Tapei.Gao 2008. p. 99. The book was banned by the government in the People's Republic of China, as have many works criticising Mao on a personal level, and they subsequently also publicly denounced both the book and a BBC documentary that used it as a basis.
In 1902 she teamed up with her mother to create the Leipziger Verein der Kinderfreunde (Kinderschutz) e. V., which concerned itself with identifying and seeking to counteract cases of child mistreatment, moral hazard, child malnutrition and excessive use of child labour. In working with these welfare-oriented and campaigning organisations Windscheid did not restrict herself to "executive duties". She gave lectures and presentations covering a range of related topics such as care of the poor and of orphans, reading material, the women's movement and - a particular concern of Windscheid's: girls' education, as reported in the Neue Bahn, the ADF's house publication, available in the Louise-Otto-Peters-Archiv in Leipzig.
The 1967 Random House publication Andy Warhol's Index, was produced by Andy Warhol, Chris Cerf and Alan Rinzler, and included photos of celebrities together with pop-up versions of Warholesque images such as a cardboard can of tomato paste, as well as a plastic tear-out recording, an inflatable silver balloon, and other novelties. Pop-up book artist Colette Fu designed China's largest pop-up book. In 2008, she was awarded a Fulbright Fellowship to create pop-up books of the 25 ethnic minorities residing in Yunnan Province, China. Her work can be found in the Library of Congress, Metropolitan Museum of Art and National Museum of Women in the Arts.
Thomas H. Ince Studios in the early 1920s A house organ (also variously known as an in-house magazine, in-house publication, house journal, shop paper, plant paper, or employee magazine) is a magazine or periodical published by a company or organization for its customers, employees, union members, parishioners, political party members, and so forth.Cambridge Dictionary : House organ This name derives from the use of "organ" as referring to a periodical for a special interest group. House organs typically come in two types, internal and external. An internal house organ is meant for consumption by the employees of the company as a channel of communication for the management.
The Historic Commercial Vehicle Association launched an in-house journal in June 1965. HCVA News was a bi-monthly publication, becoming monthly in 1968. It was relaunched as Fleetline in August 1975, also becoming the house publication of the Bus & Coach Society of Victoria (BCSV) at the same time. This arrangement ceased in June 1986 when the BCSV founded its own publication, Australian Bus Panorama.Fleetline - Future Publication Fleetline issue 126 January 1986 page 2Historic Commercial Vehicle Association: A history 1964 to 1980 Fleetline issue 224 March 1994 pages 43-52New magazines for bus enthusiasts Truck & Bus Transportation July 1986 page 278 In May 1990, Fleetline became the house journal of the Transport Enthusiasts Society of South Australia.
Published continually since 1967,Analog Dialogue Volume 1, Number 1, 1967 Analog Dialogue is the longest-running in-house publication in the electronics industry. Its online version,Analog Dialogue published since 1999,Editor's Notes Analog Dialogue Volume 33, 1999 includes articles written by design, applications, and marketing engineers at Analog Devices. Subject matter includes tutorials, technology, applications, and other information about products for analog, digital, and mixed-signal processing; information on new products, hyperlinked to data sheets and other information; and a potpourri section with links to other information, mostly on the ADI website. The online archivesAnalog Dialogue Archives provide access to every article beginning with Volume 1, Number 1, first published in 1967.
Vankin and Whalen write of Downard: Downard is known for his essay “King-Kill/33: Masonic Symbolism in the Assassination of John F. Kennedy”, originally published by Adam Parfrey in the first edition of the book Apocalypse Culture, which speculates that the Freemasons were responsible for the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. The essay was removed from the second edition of the book and replaced by another essay by Downard, "The Call to Chaos". Apocalypse Culture II contains another Downard essay, "America, The Possessed Corpse". Jim Keith, editor of yet another Feral House publication, Secret and Suppressed: Banned Ideas and Hidden History, included "Sorcery, Sex, Assassination", the original article of which King Kill/33 is an abridgement.
Donleavy wrote a stage adaptation of The Ginger Man, directed by Philip Wiseman, which opened in London in September 1959, with Richard Harris playing Dangerfield. In October, the play opened in Dublin, also starring Harris, and was closed after three performances, due to the play's offensiveness according to the Dublin critics, and following protests from the Catholic Church. All this is recorded by Donleavy in the 1961 Random House publication of the play with an essay by Donleavy, "What They Did in Dublin with The Ginger Man (a play)". The BBC produced a 90-minute made-for- television version of the play, directed by Peter Dews, and aired on 23 March 1962 in the United Kingdom.
However, the topography other than coastlines and major rivers is quite different, and the only apparent reference to the real world besides the map may be the Blood Wood, known as "Wyrm Wood" before the Scourge and similar in location and extent to the Chernobyl (Ukrainian for "wormwood") zone of alienation. Note should be made that game world links between Earthdawn and Shadowrun were deliberately broken by the publisher when the Shadowrun property was licensed out, in order to avoid the necessity for coordination between publishing companies. FASA has announced since then, that there are no plans to return Shadowrun to in-house publication, nor to restore the links between the game worlds. Two Earthdawn supplements cover territories outside Barsaive.
It considers its core values and standards as central to being a professional soldier. In 2009, the tenth anniversary of the change of law that permitted homosexuality in the armed forces, it was generally accepted that the lifting of the ban had no perceivable impact on the operational effectiveness on a military that still considers itself world class. The anniversary was widely celebrated, including in the Army's in-house publication Soldier Magazine, with a series of articles including the July 2009 cover story. Soldiers and Officers have given public support to Stonewall's campaign against school bullying, It Gets Better.... In 2015 following the fifteenth anniversary of the change in the law the Ministry of Defence announced changes to its monitoring process and now asks new recruits to disclose their sexuality if they wish.
Langone received his Ph.D in Counseling Psychology from University of California, Santa Barbara in 1979, where he was a Regents Fellow for three years, and he began his work in cults in 1978. Langone defines a cult as "a group or movement exhibiting a great or excessive devotion or dedication to some person, idea, or thing, and employing unethically manipulative techniques of persuasion and control designed to advance the goals of the group’s leader, to the actual or possible detriment of members, their families, or the community".Cults Questions and Answers Langone, Michael, 1988 Langone joined the American Family Foundation in 1981, the organization later changed its name to the International Cultic Studies Association. In 1984 he became the editor of the American Family Foundation's house publication, Cultic Studies Journal.
Shortly after its release, in late 2005, Magnétophone recorded a session for BBC Radio 1's Blue Room show at the Maida Vale Studios, and for BBC Radio 1's Rob da Bank show, both broadcast in November 2005. In 2007, Magnétophone contributed to Birmingham UK/Italian artist-collaboration- compilation Binary Oppositions which was a coming together of visual and audio art produced by Birmingham-based artists. Later that year New York art-house publication Visionaire released an audio media package called Visionaire 53 which brought together many disparate artists in the producing of one-minute- only pieces of music. Magnétophone contributed to this release along with other artists including Yoko Ono, U2, Michael Stipe, Pet Shop Boys, Cindy Sherman and it consisted of five records, 2 CDs, a record player and dome container.
Carving large wood sculpture has been a feature of Azaz's career from his earliest sculpting period, and also as the one of the preferred materials for small maquettes of his large-scale bronze work. The largest wooden piece, entitled Old Testament Musical Instruments,"John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts" Israeli Lounge, retrieved March 2, 2020 a 30 square metre carved walnut wall gifted by the State of Israel, is located in the Israeli Lounge"Artistic Gifts to the Kennedy Center and the Artists Who Created Them" in-house publication of the John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, retrieved November 24, 2015 at the John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington DC. Several other carved wooden pieces still in existence are located in public institutions in Israel including the Chaim Sheba Medical Centre at Tel-Hashomer.
The non-appearance of Supermarionation programmes on TV and the sudden demise of Century 21 Publishing caused great problems in the comic industry. Wholesalers found themselves with huge stocks of comics, toys, books, games and other related merchandised items that could no longer be moved off their shelves. Understandably, when Countdown appeared, it was regarded as such a close relation to the TV21 disaster and wholesalers were reluctant to place large orders. Another hindrance was that within one week of the first issue of Countdown being placed onto the news stands, TV Times had also launched their own "in-house" publication for juveniles, Tivvy – this was not exactly the same type of product, but TV Times had a print run of several million and was able to secure free air-time for advertising their new product.
Millar began in journalism as a trainee on the Mirror Group Graduate Training Scheme in the West Country, later moving to the Daily Express where she worked as a news reporter and lobby correspondent and was a colleague of Peter Hitchens. She was a freelance journalist between 1988 and 1995 contributing to the Daily Express, the Sunday Mirror and The House magazine, Parliament's in house publication. In 1993, she co-authored (with Glenys Kinnock) By Faith and Daring, Interviews with Remarkable Women to celebrate the tenth anniversary of Virago Press. Millar worked in the office of the Leader of the Opposition from 1995 to 1997, as an adviser to Cherie Blair from 1995 to 2003, as a Special Adviser to the Prime Minister Tony Blair between 1997 and 2003, as head of Cherie Blair's office, and Director of Events and Visits at Downing Street.
The chosen charity for 2016–2017 is Children's Hospice Association Scotland (C.H.A.S.). MedChir organise major social events, with the highlights being the Annual Medical School Ball, the Revue (all-medic talent competition, won by Emeli Sandé during her time at Glasgow Medical School), Field Trip and Beer Olympics. They also offer talks from the most prestigious speakers in their fields, events for students to practice their clinical skills and hold joint evenings with the Royal College of General Practitioners and Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons. MedChir members participate in the Scottish and Northern Irish Medics Sports tournament (SNIMS) every year, hosting and winning the event in November 2016 (with Edinburgh University finishing bottom), bringing their unbeaten run into their sixth year. Additionally, 'Surgo' has been MedChir’s in-house publication since 1935 and it provides a light-hearted look at medic life as well as anything else that catches the editorial team’s eyes.
At the beginning of its existence, The Land of Sunshine was printed and bound by Kingsley-Barnes and Neuner Company in the Stimson Building while its photoengraving needs were handled by a variety of local companies. In 1898, the magazine began in-house publication in a building on South Broadway that combined editorial and printing functions, which by late 1901 boasted six job presses and four cylinder presses, one of which was an Optimus cylinder used principally for printing illustrated pages. In April 1904, the printing of the magazine was once again physically separated from its editorial offices, and this arrangement persisted until Lummis departed in 1909. Initially, The Land of Sunshine was published by the F. A. Pattee Publishing Company, but in August 1895 these duties were assumed by the newly incorporated Land of Sunshine Publishing Co., which at its inception consisted of W.C. Patterson (president), Lummis (vice president), Pattee (secretary and business manager), H.J. Fleishman (treasurer), Charles Cassat Davis (attorney), and Cyrus M. Davis.
In 1980 he completed a degree in child language acquisition and Bulgarian at the University of Uppsala. He taught at many schools and colleges, including the Iceland University of Education, the Icelandic College of Domestic Science, the University of Iceland (from 1968 to 1987), and Hamrahlið College, where he taught from 1968 to 1984 and was also head librarian from 1970. He also worked for many years for the national broadcaster, RÚV, producing a segment titled Daglegt mál (Daily Word) for several years, acting as its first language consultant from 1984, and editing the in-house publication on language, Tungutaks. He published a number of textbooks on linguistics and Icelandic usage and was editor-in-chief and compiler of the first standard dictionary of Icelandic, Íslenzk orðabók handa skólum og almenningi (Icelandic Dictionary for Schools and the Public), which was drawn up in 1957–63 and published in 1963 by the ; he also oversaw its revision and co-edited the second edition, published in 1983, with Asgeir Bl. Magnusson.

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