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95 Sentences With "magazine section"

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

In the magazine section, photomontage covers of Women's Magazine (1929), designed by Innokenty Zhukov portray strong, compassionate women.
Friendliest Man Alive What is the name of the PEOPLE magazine section that reviews movies, music, books and television?
I visited the bridal magazine section of a bookstore the day after I got engaged hoping to find something motivating.
DEE: Growing up, I used to go to the library, and I would sneak into the magazine section and read this magazine called Girlfriend.
Titled "The mystery of Melania," the story was written by American author Nina Burleigh for the magazine section of The Telegraph newspaper, and included portions that prompted Trump to demand the record be corrected.
New York magazine and The New York Times Magazine each won three awards: New York for magazine section, video and single-topic issue, and The Times Magazine for feature writing, essays and criticism, and public interest.
The concept of disguising matériel and soldiers to blend in with their surroundings originated in the 1800s and was further developed during World War I. In May 1917, a New York lawyer who visited the French battlefront wrote about it for The Times's Magazine section.
A single edition of the newspaper, on a recent Saturday, featured a pullout magazine section headlined "Why DID Meghan's Marriage Implode?" which scrutinized, in skin-crawling personal detail, Ms. Markle's breakup with her first husband; a mocking report on her father's efforts to lose weight ahead of the wedding; a column interviewing her estranged half brother and half sister, who complained they were not invited to the wedding; and a sneering two-page synopsis of her acting career.
South China Morning Post (Hong Kong), magazine section. Retrieved 30 June 2019.
Shoemaker, Mervin G. (September 29, 1946). "Cedar Hills: Something New in Building". The Sunday Oregonian, Sunday magazine section, p. 2.
Peele, Anna (19 February 2019). "Marianne Williamson Wants to Be Your Healer in Chief". The Washington Post, magazine section. Retrieved 19 February 2019.
Paula S. Fass (2006) NYU Press. pg. 146The Philadelphia Enquirer. Dec. 8, 1929, magazine section, p. 6 In 1929, Lyman Swenson married Loretta B. Bruner (1897-1979).
In a 1990 interview with a large Detroit newspaper, Nugent made similar statements.Noriyuki, Duane (15 July 1990). "Ted Nugent Grows Up?". Detroit Free Press, magazine section, pp.
John H. M'Gurk." New York Evening World May 4, 1903, Home Magazine section, page 1. The building that had housed "Suicide Hall" was not demolished until 2005."Forgotten Street Scenes.
The new library block is a double-storeyed building consisting of deposit-counter, issue-of-books counter, stack hall, reserve section, reading hall, teachers' reading room, magazine section, and administrative section.
The library is part of the administrative building, covering 250 sq. m., including separate periodicals/magazine section and reading rooms. It has reprographics facilities and internet access. Each department has its own departmental library.
Book should give paws for thought. The Spectator: Magazine section. Mar 15, 2003, p M.02. The Los Angeles Times wrote that Silver's writing was "tongue-in-cheek scholarly, complete with footnotes and a bibliography".
In 2009, Golf Digest was nominated for a National Magazine Awards by the American Society of Magazine Editors in the Magazine Section in recognition of the excellence of a regular section of a magazine based on voice, originality and unified presentation.
The Sunday Oregonian, "Northwest" magazine section, pp. 14–15. By that time, it was "Oregon's oldest – and one of its busiest – private airports". It was also once known as the "oldest continuously-operated airport in Oregon".Richards, Leverett G. (November 14, 1963).
The lead story in the Magazine section is; SECRETS OF THE FOUNTAIN. It was the conception and idea of then, Chief Electrical Engineer, Robert Harold Williams with Hume and Rumble Ltd. electrical contractors. R.Harold Williams designed and supervised the erection of the Vancouver's Golden Jubilee fountain.
As written in The Sunday Sun Edition of the Vancouver Sun Newspaper, Saturday, August 8. 1936. The lead story in the Magazine section is; SECRETS OF THE FOUNTAIN. It was the conception and idea of then, Chief Electrical Engineer, Robert Harold Williams with Hume and Rumble Ltd. electrical contractors.
The extension involved knocking down the east wall of the magazine, and adding a timber section on stumps, with the front door being reused in the north elevation of the extension. A narrow timber dining room was also added along the north elevation of the brick magazine, so that from the road the original brick structure is not visible. However the 1887 brick magazine building is still intact, complete with its original six narrow windows and their timber shutters. A timber coved ceiling, probably original, still exists in the old magazine section, along with a decorative ventilation grille, although a new ceiling extends partway into the old magazine section from the 1940s timber extension.
Makers (subtitled "All Kinds of People Making Amazing Things in Backyards, Garages, and Basements") is a spin-off hardback book. Based on the magazine section of the same name, it covers DIY projects and profiles their creators.Parks, Bob. Makers: All Kinds of People Making Amazing Things in Garages, Basements, and Backyards.
265 Raquel MellerSyracuse Herald April 12, 1931 p. 3 (Magazine Section) Odette Dulac,The Secrets of a Showman by Sir Charles Blake Cochran 1942 p. 97 Beatrice Herford,The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography being a multi-volume collection of biographical articles and portraits of Americans, published since the 1890s.
He wrote for Get Smart, The Danny Kaye Show and wrote and appeared on Candid Camera. He was also a member of the I've Got a Secret production staff in the early 1960s.Hickey, William. "Pat McCormick: Jolly Green Giant", Cleveland Plain Dealer, September 13, 1968, PD Action Tab magazine section, p. 3.
He made his mark with a series of collage illustrations for the Sunday magazine section of The Washington Post, and this work led to his first book, Proust's Last Beer: A History of Curious Demises (1980), a collaboration with writer Bob Arnebeck. Appel's imaginative black-and-white collages illustrated Arnebeck's profiles of people and animals.
The comic strip ran as a one panel story with a picture until 1923. It then moved to the comics page as a strip cartoon. Color versions soon appeared in the magazine section of the newspaper printed in rotogravure. Donahey drew the comic strip until October 26, 1924 when it was then temporarily discontinued.
A Sunday magazine is a publication inserted into a Sunday newspaper. It also has been known as a Sunday supplement, Sunday newspaper magazine or Sunday magazine section. Traditionally, the articles in these magazines cover a wide range of subjects, and the content is not as current and timely as the rest of the newspaper.
In 1993 he gained the title of International Solving Grandmaster.Solving grandmasters Since 1970 Pfannkuche composed chess problems and managed chess magazine section of the composition. From 1970 to 1988 he participated in the German Chess Bundesliga, representing Münster town team. In 1982 Pfannkuche graduated from the University of Münster but in 1988 defended his doctor's degree in mathematics.
Mataka was invaluable to Marshall and helped as second assistant director. He helped with the local dialects that were spoken by the extras and he knew the conditions locally, and he couldn't have got anywhere without his help in directing the native extras. Marshall said he was the best second assistant director he ever had.Courier Magazine Section November 20, 1954 Page 2.
He has exhibited in several group shows and one solo. Twelve of his paintings are included in the National Assembly Art Collection in Abuja, Nigeria. During his final year in university, he was employed by Weekly Trust, a major Nigerian newspaper. After a stint as a reporter, he became the Entertainment Editor and eventually the editor of the magazine section of the paper.
In 2009, the magazine was named "Magazine of the Year" by Advertising Age. In 2011, Women's Health took home a National Magazine Award for "General Excellence." The brand was named one of AdAge’s “Magazines of the year” in both 2017 and 2018, and was nominated for a National Magazine Award for “magazine section” in 2016 and for “personal service” in 2017.
In 2007, James started presenting the BBC Radio 4 series A Point of View, with transcripts appearing in the "Magazine" section of BBC News Online. In this programme James discussed various issues with a slightly humorous slant. Topics covered included media portrayal of torture, young black role models and corporate rebranding. Three of James's broadcasts in 2007 were shortlisted for the 2008 Orwell Prize.
Her husband's health continued to deteriorate, and he died on December 1, 1914."J Borden Harriman Dying in Mt. Kisco," The New York Times, 1914-10-08. His prolonged illness, the resulting lack of income, and the expense of maintaining several homes had consumed nearly all of his net worth."The Inside Story of Ethel Harriman's War Romance," Washington Post, 1918-02-10, (magazine section) p. 1.
The Rainbow was a monthly magazine for the TRS-80 Color Computer by the Tandy Corporation (now RadioShack). It was started by Lawrence C. FalkKentucky Senate Resolution on Lonnie Falk's death (Microsoft Word document) (commonly known as Lonnie Falk) and was published from July 1981 to May 1993Rainbow Magazine section of The Rainbow's On-Line Store by Falk's company, Falsoft, which was based in Prospect, Kentucky.
Accessed Dec. 10, 2018. After a stint at the New-York Tribune in 1917, in 1918–1919 he went to the battlefields of France to cover the Great War for The Atlanta Journal from the perspective of Georgian troops. Greene joined the Hearst Corporation in 1920, became a writer and editor of the magazine section in 1925, advancing to executive editor, and to general manager in 1946.
She divorced him in 1919 and was awarded custody of their two children while he was imprisoned at McNeil Island Federal Penitentiary on Puget Sound, after being convicted in the Hindu–German Conspiracy Trial for plotting to foment an insurrection against British colonial rule in India. Following her divorce, she changed her and their two children's last names back to her maiden name.The Philadelphia Enquirer. Dec. 8, 1929, magazine section, p.
The stories published were mostly about love, joblessness, the attitudes of the elders and the authorities or the chaos of Cairo. The magazine was supported by various European cultural institutes during its lifetime. In 2011, the magazine won the second prize in the best independent comic magazine section at the International Festival of Comics in Algeria (FIBDA). The last issue of Tok Tok, #14, was published in March 2016.
Books are issued on a daily basis to advanced level students and on the recommendation of teachers in charge books are provided to pupils taking part in "Do You Know "contests and debating teams. The strength of the library is about 15000 books. Magazine section has been organized to improve the General Knowledge of the students. Construction of a new state of the art library complex is in progress.
Salads may be sold in supermarkets, at restaurants and at fast food chains. In the United States, restaurants will often have a salad bar with salad-making ingredients, which the customers will use to put together their salad."Birth of the salad bar; Local restaurant owners may have invented the common buffet," The State Journal-Register (Springfield, IL), 28 December 2001, Magazine section (p. 10A) Salad restaurants were earning more than $300 million in 2014.
But he has the last laugh: she becomes the love of his life, and he settles down with her. During the song's first year, a fashion designer even created a "Polka Dots and Moonbeams" fabric print as part of a series of prints inspired by popular music.(No author.) "Song hit dress patterns for music as you walk," Winnipeg Free Press, June 22, 1940, Magazine section, page 8. Accessed June 27, 2013.
Stieglitz first published The Steerage in the October 1911 issue of Camera Work, which he had devoted to his own photography. It appeared the following year on the cover of the magazine section of the Saturday Evening Mail (20 April 1912), a New York weekly magazine. It was first exhibited in a show of Stieglitz's photographs at "291" in 1913. In 1915 Stieglitz devoted the entire No 7-8 issue of 291 to The Steerage.
Advertisement for The Eagle's Eye serial After Flynn's retirement from the Secret Service, his experiences were adapted by Courtney Ryley Cooper into a 20-part spy thriller. These were published as weekly installments in The Atlanta Constitution's magazine section during 1918. The title of the series was The Eagle's Eye: A True Story of the Imperial German Government's Spies and Intrigues in America. An episode titled "The Great Hindu Conspiracy" begins with a minor character named Charles E. Apgar.
After Flynn's retirement from the Secret Service his work investigating sabotage during the war were interwoven with fictitious characters and events by Courtney Ryley Cooper into a 20-part spy thriller. These were also published as weekly installments in The Atlanta Constitution's magazine section during 1918 under the title The Eagle's Eye: A True Story of the Imperial German Government's Spies and Intrigues in America. Fifteen of the episodes were republished as chapters in a book the following year.
While living in Ireland she wrote for such publications as the Weekly Freeman. An example of her work is the critique of Peadar Ua Laoghaire in "The Contemporary Irish National Movement in Literature" in 1910. Once she moved to the USA she wrote for a wide number of papers and on a wide number of topics. Her New York World (magazine section) column was syndicated in other papers like the Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette in Indiana.
The photography section of LSU Media was founded in 2014, with the first Head of Lens being Isabella Piggott. Lens was introduced into LSU Media as part of VP Media Bryn Wilkes' manifesto, originally coming from the Label magazine section. There is currently a committee of six people, who manage a team of photographers providing photos for events, union nights and more. Lens exists to cover as many events involving or affecting Lougborough University and College students.
The Courier-Journal became the commonwealth's dominant newspaper, a position it retains to this day. He also founded WHAS-TV, the city's second television station, and founded the WHAS Crusade for Children, a telethon broadcast on both the radio and television stations that today collects more than $6,000,000 each year for local children's charities. The family also owned Standard Gravure, a rotogravure printing company that printed the newspapers' Sunday magazine section, plus Sunday sections for other newspapers.
There are no known records by MacRae or other artists of the member meetings or the later exhibitions. The first two exhibitions, were held at the Folsom Galleries and according to the MacRae diaries, met with good reviews and high attendance. The New York Times said the second show "surpasses in interest its predecessor, which certainly was sufficiently charming.""Art at Home and Abroad", The New York Times, Magazine Section Part Five, Page SM15, December 17, 1911.
The prison also has a gallows (although not used since 1959) and has its own hospital too. The prison is administrated by the Department of Prisons. Following the attempted military coup in 1962, the arrested military and police officers were remanded pending trial in a special section at Welikada prison called the Magazine Section. A special security detachment was selected, called the composite guard, to guard these officers from the Ceylon Light Infantry, with Major A Hulangamuwa in charge.
At the age of 8, he was taking art lessons from Charles Wright, the art editor of the magazine section of the New York Sunday Herald. His father bought a hotel in Newburgh, New York on the Hudson River about 50 miles (80 km) from New York City. At the age of 12, George took art lessons at Newburgh from Sid Turner of the Newburgh Daily News. Late in his life he claimed these art lessons helped him with some of his inventions.
During his eight years living in Quito, Ecuador, Bading learned Spanish fluently and took to collecting early South American art. A valuable collection of early religious objects was amassed, featuring 40 carved wooden figurines dating back up to three centuries."Brings Home Art Treasures of Ecuador," Milwaukee Journal, March 9, 1930, Sunday Magazine section, pg. 3. The grouping deemed so historically significant that special permission President Isidro Ayora and his cabinet were necessary before the collection was allowed to leave the country.
Arthur Frederick Ostrander, Sr. (February 14, 1895 – February 1978), was an assistant scientist. He worked with inventor George Poe. In his childhood he worked with Poe (mid-1907 to 1908),"Bringing the Dead to Life: A Machine that Claims the Miracle", summary of events surrounding the device and its tour in the New York City area in 1907, The New York Herald, Magazine Section, April 7, 1907. who taught him how an artificial respiration device"An Artificial Respirator", Scientific American, June 22, 1907, page 515. functions.
Bullet Scars is a 1942 American film produced and distributed by Warner Bros."AMUSEMENTS / Majestic Theatre" (The Daily Times, Beaver and Rochester, June 21, 1942, p.Four)"At Strand" (Lewiston Journal Magazine Section, July 3, 1942, p.A–5) It was directed by D. Ross Lederman with top-billed stars Regis Toomey, Adele Longmire"Addenda / Adele Longmire, the ingenue in Old Acquaintance on Broadway last season, will make her screen debut at Warners in Bullet Scars with Regis Toomey" (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, December 17, 1941, p.
The newspaper is a general Sunday newspaper, covering news and politics. It is published in five sections: News, Sport, Business, Property, and Living, as well as a magazine section. In terms of news, while the newspaper maintains a broadsheet outlook, it has come in for much criticism lately due to its increasing emphasis on lifestyle features in the main section. It has also been criticised for regularly tending towards sensationalism, and for the often opinion-focused, rather than news-focused nature of its articles.
" Sydney Morning Herald, 19 June 1895, page 3 According to one account: "The Corps comprised No 1 Gun Wharf Section with a Deputy Assistant Commissary General of Ordnance, a Lieutenant and Quartermaster, three Conductors of Stores and one Sergeant Artificer. No 2 Magazine Section was composed of one Conductor of Stores and three Privates; and No 3 Armourer's Section was composed of a Lieutenant and Quartermaster, with one Armourer Sergeant and two Privates. These appointments were filled by members of the permanent military forces.
Popular Science (also known as PopSci) is an American quarterly magazine carrying popular science content, which refers to articles for the general reader on science and technology subjects. Popular Science has won over 58 awards, including the American Society of Magazine Editors awards for its journalistic excellence in 2003 (for General Excellence), 2004 (for Best Magazine Section), and 2019 (for Single-Topic Issue). With roots beginning in 1872, Popular Science has been translated into over 30 languages and is distributed to at least 45 countries.
The magazine section is the part of the machine where the matrices are held when not in use, and released as the operator touches keys on the keyboard. The magazine is a flat box with vertical separators that form "channels", one channel for each character in the font. Most main magazines have 90 channels, but those for larger fonts carried only 72 or even 55 channels. The auxiliary magazines used on some machines typically contained 34 channels or, for a magazine carrying larger fonts, 28 channels.
Current Biology is a biweekly peer-reviewed scientific journal that covers all areas of biology, especially molecular biology, cell biology, genetics, neurobiology, ecology, and evolutionary biology. The journal includes research articles, various types of review articles, as well as an editorial magazine section. The journal was established in 1991 by the Current Science group, acquired by Elsevier in 1998 and has since 2001 been part of Cell Press, a subdivision of Elsevier. According to the Journal Citation Reports, the journal has a 2019 impact factor of 9.601.
The Sunday Sun for many years was noted for a locally produced rotogravure Maryland pictorial magazine section, featuring works by such acclaimed photographers as A. Aubrey Bodine. The Sunday Sun dropped the Sunday Sun Magazine in 1996 and now only carries Parade magazine weekly. A quarterly version of the Sun Magazine was resurrected in September 2010, with stories that included a comparison of young local doctors, an interview with actress Julie Bowen and a feature on the homes of a former Baltimore anchorwoman. Newsroom managers plan to add online content on a more frequent basis.
James Montgomery Flagg's portrait of King Features' comics editor Sylvan Byck. In the 1940s, Ward Greene (1893–1956) was King Features' editor, having worked his way up through the ranks. He was a reporter and war correspondent for the Atlanta Journal for four years (1913–17), moving to the New-York Tribune in 1917 and then returning to the Atlanta Journal as correspondent in France and Germany (1918–19). He joined King Features in 1920, became a writer and editor of the magazine section in 1925, advancing to executive editor and general manager.
George de Zayas (1898–1967) was a Mexican caricature artist, best known for work that appeared in Collier's, Harper's Bazaar, and the magazine section of the New York Herald Tribune. His father, Rafael de Zayas Enriquez (1848–1932), was a noted historian, orator, and lawyer, named Poet Laureate of his country. In 1907, opposition to the dictatorship of Porfirio Diaz forced the de Zayas family to flee their homeland and settle in New York. There, George's brother, Marius de Zayas (1880–1961), became a well-known caricature artist and art dealer.
There is a magazine section, with a comfortable seating area, there are many computers that can be used by anyone, and there are tables and chairs set up for quiet studying. The complete non- fiction section is on the second floor, as well as newspapers and yearbooks from past years in Westfield. There are also community rooms set up which are available for a small fee for groups who may need a space. There are computers set up frequently around the campus, as well as free wireless internet.
Modern Farmer is a quarterly American magazine devoted to agriculture and food, founded in April 2013. The magazine is unique in that it attempts to have equally rural and urban readers, and to "appeal to the person who wants to romanticize farming and the person who is knee deep in turkey droppings", according to The New York Times. In 2014, the publication won the National Magazine Awards for the Magazine Section. Modern Farmer covers feature livestock and its articles include those like a series of interviews with agriculture ministers from around the globe.
"'Bird-Men' of the Grande Semaine Discuss Aeroplane and Biplane And Hope to Conquer the Atlantic", The New York Times, September 5, 1909, magazine section, p. SM2. He was subsequently fined $4 by the judges for displaying excessive "recklessness and daring." During the running of the race, he placed fourth, behind Glenn Curtiss, Blériot and Latham. Only nine days after the end of the Reims event, Lefebvre was killed in a crash at Juvisy, when the plane he was testing dropped to the ground from a height of .
One of the most used aspects of the BBC Online website are the sections relating to News content, Sports results and news and Weather forecasts. The BBC News Online subsite launched in 1997 and received around 2 billion page views each month in 2012. The site contains journalistic content from the BBC covering news from the UK, both as a whole as well as regional news from the BBC Nations and Regions, and International content. The site also contains analysis from correspondents and other features from the Magazine section of the website.
After making her name as a model and first working with Ashvin Gatha, she began a career in journalism in 1970, during the course of which she founded and edited three magazines—Stardust, Society, and Celebrity. Stardust magazine, published by Mumbai-based Magna Publishing Co. Ltd., was started by Nari Hira in 1971 and became popular under the editorship of Shobhaa De. In the 1980s, she contributed to the Sunday magazine section of The Times of India. In her columns, she used to explore the socialite life in Mumbai lifestyles of the celebrities.
After Lois departs to Paris, where she has won "an art contest" with "a year's free study" as the prize, Lenora and Connie travel by train to visit Virginia, who lives in Chicago with her aunt and uncle. Although Beverly initially has to stay behind and work, the very next day her editor assigns her to write "a series of feature articles" on the fair for "the Sunday magazine section." She flies out that day with Larry, who is coincidentally headed to Chicago, "and then points West," for his work with the Secret Service.
In all 31 persons were arrested, these included commissioned officers from the Army and the Navy, gazetted officers from the Police, civil servants and several civilians. All arrested military officers were stripped of their commissions, while the police officers and civil servants were interdicted pending trial. Since no shots were fired and no troops deployed, the government soon discovered that there were no provisions within the penal code to prosecute the accused. So they were remanded, pending trial, in a special section of the Welikada Prison called the Magazine Section.
Clement Vann Rogers's parents, Robert Rogers, Jr., (1815–1842) and Sallie Vann (1818–1882), "came from Georgia before the main removal of the Cherokees in 1838."Love 1970, p. 389 Sallie Vann was a sister of David Vann, who was related to the Cherokee chief James Vann. Clement Vann, The Chattanooga Sunday Times, Magazine Section, July 26, 1936, by Penelope J. Allen, State Chairman of Genealogical Records, retrieved July 11, 2010 Clem's grandfather was Robert Rogers, Senior, a Scotch-Irish immigrant and trader, who came to the area now known as West Virginia in 1800.
His only play, The Slaughtered, was published in 1920 and was released in 1921, when Anaconda was released (another book of short stories). An important Argentine newspaper, La Nación (The Nation), also began to publish his stories, which by now already enjoyed impressive popularity. Between 1922 and 1924, Quiroga served as secretary of a cultural embassy to Brazil and he published his new book: The Desert (stories). For a while the writer was devoted to film criticism, taking charge of the magazine section of "Atlantis, The Home and The Nation".
The olive Chef Awards were launched in 2018, heralding unsung chefs across the UK. The weekly olive magazine podcast, which launched in 2016, features the team chatting to (and sometimes cooking with) foodies across the country including chefs, producers, food writers and travel experts. This is available to listen to on olivemagazine.com and on Acast, iTunes, Spotify and the top podcast providers. olive has won several awards including Food & Drink Magazine of the Year at Digital Magazine Awards 2014, Best City Break Feature at French Travel Media Awards 2016 and Consumer Magazine Section of the Year at the 2017 Travel Media Awards.
On January 1, 1901, Vail was nominated by the Social Democratic Party of New Jersey as its candidate for Governor of New Jersey. He stepped down from his position as pastor of the First Universalist Church in Jersey City to pursue this political office,"To Advance Socialism," Gloversville Daily Leader, January 18, 1901, pg. 3. with the position filled by his wife Nina, amidst much publicity and comment on the novelty of a husband and wife team occupying a single pulpit.See, for example: "The Newest Woman of the Century," Philadelphia Times, magazine section, January 6, 1901, pg. 1.
The Faster Times was an online newspaperArticle in the New York Observer describing The Faster Times launched by Sam Apple on July 9, 2009. Many print newspapers were going out of business and reporters were losing their jobs. The New York Times reported that in this climate, Apple was able to recruit professional writers guaranteeing them only 75% of revenue from advertisements placed near their stories.Article in the Sunday magazine section in The New York Times describing the business model for The Faster Times In 2010, the paper began a membership program that allows readers to subscribe.
The exhibit included works by Edward Steichen, Elliott Erwitt, Vincent van de Wijngard, William Wegman, Bruce Davidson, and many others. Van Seenus appears with her three-legged (tripod) rescue dog Ashley in a 2017 Banana Republic campaign, and also in a 2017 profile of the model that was published in the Sunday magazine section of the British newspaper The Daily Telegraph. As of September 2019, van Seenus is ranked as an “Industry Icon” on models.com. She is represented by DNA Model Management in New York, Next Management in Paris and Milan, and Models 1 in London.
In addition to having published dozens of peer-reviewed research articles, Dr. Preti held more than a dozen patents related to deodorance, odor mediated control of the menstrual cycle, and the use of odors in disease diagnosis. His unique area of research resulted in hundreds of clinician- directed referrals of patients with an idiopathic body and oral malodor production problems. His efforts in this area revealed a large, undiagnosed population of people suffering from trimethylaminuria, an odor-producing genetic disorder. Preti’s work has frequently been cited by the news media, including the New York Times magazine section, the Philadelphia Inquirer, and ABC’s “Primetime: Medical Mysteries”.
Baylis was born on 13 May 1937 to Gladys Jane Brown, an artist, and her husband, Cecil Archibald Walter Baylis, an engineer, in Kilburn, London."My Secret Life: Trevor Baylis, inventor", The Independent, magazine section p7, 3 November 2008 He grew up in Southall, Middlesex, and attended North Primary School and Dormers Wells Secondary Modern School. His first job was in a Soil Mechanics Laboratory in Southall where a day-release arrangement enabled him to study mechanical and structural engineering at a local technical college. A keen swimmer, he swam for Great Britain at the age of 15; he narrowly failed to qualify for the 1956 Summer Olympics.
The case's first national coverage came from The Washington Post, which in the cover story of the Sunday magazine section reported on the case and the death threats that had been received by the teachers and parents defending the book and by the television reporter, Hill. Hill's apartment was attacked by arson and a bomb threat placed on her car required the summoning of a police bomb squad, though the device proved to be a fake one. Commenting on the attacks, Collins dismissed the dummy bomb as a "joke" and the fire as "a good way to get your apartment painted by the landlord."DelFattore 105.
Polish Radio, The Power of Radio According to the strikers, it all began because of the price of pork chop dinner in the factory's canteen. On July 8, one worker noticed that overnight it had been increased by 80% - from 10.20 zlotys, to 18.10 zlotys. The workers, who for a long time had been complaining about prices and quality of food, decided that they had had enough. Following the inspiration of Miroslaw Kaczan who switched off the machines,25th anniversary of the Lublin July'80, by Maria Wrzeszcz, Niedziela Catholic Magazine Section W-340 was first, but after a few hours, the whole factory stopped working.
23:6 Flora Marian Spore's paintings were exhibited in the most conservative and prestigious art galleries of New York City: Knoedler's, Wildenstein's, Grand Central Art GalleriesEdward Alden Jewell, "Mrs. Irving T. Bush To Open Exhibition," New York Times, May 19, 1943, pg. 28 and also the Fine Arts Gallery of London, "where art critics, society reporters, and psychiatrists, as well as crowds of the general public, flocked to see them." She received much publicity from both the mainstream press and sensationalist tabloids, which printed such articles as "Mystic voices led her to romance, fame and wealth"New York Evening Graphic, Magazine Section, April 26, 1930, p.
The Fly relaunched its website in April 2008 with both a virtual magazine section and an online archive of all previous issues. In Summer 2008, a new feature titled In The Courtyard was launched, in which bands were filmed playing stripped-down versions of songs in the courtyard outside The Fly's office. The sessions were renamed The Fly Sessions in 2012, when the website was again relaunched. Bands who have performed so far include Doves, Gaz Coombes, Everything Everything, The Cribs, Noah and the Whale, Warpaint, Black Lips, Dry The River, Badly Drawn Boy, The Kooks, J Mascis, Edwyn Collins, Jake Bugg, Ben Gibbard and Low.
The Club saw its mission as providing a friendly and appreciative audience to inexperienced artists, helping the needy artists with free scholarships in the various branches of arts, although it has been stated that "artists and writers fled from it as soon as some conventional burghers muscled into its portals". It was reported in 1904 that Theo Wangemann "always opens the first entertainment of the season with the 'Tannhäuser' march at the piano."Gustav Kobbe, "A Bit of 'Bohemia' in the Pleiades Club" The New York Times (December 11, 1904), first magazine section, p. 8\. Note: The NYT PDF file is untitled, but the title can be seen at newspaperarchive.com.
By 24's third season (2003–2004), Aylesworth had become a main cast member with Tony and Michelle now married and holding leadership positions at CTU. However, when the season concluded, the writers announced that most of the characters were being dropped, with those actors not being retained for season 4. Upon being released from 24, Aylesworth was cast as Chandra Moore, a DNA analyst, in the fifth season of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation; while the role was intended to be recurring, it was dropped after the September 2004 season opener.Gail Pennington, "TV Dramas Use Conflict -- Lots of Conflict to Gain an Edge," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, September 30, 2004, Everyday Magazine Section.
Frits V. Holm arriving to the US (1908). Picture from the New York Times full- page report on his arrival to the US with the replica of the Nestorian Stele tortoise pedestal, photographed by Frits Holm shortly before it was moved to the Beilin Museum, and out of his reach Frits Vilhelm Holm (c. 1881"The Nestorian Stone's Message of Centuries; More Than a Thousand Years Old These Inscriptions, in Replica at the Metropolitan Museum, Tell of Early Christianity in China", The New York Times, July 12, 1908, Sunday. Section: Magazine Section, Page SM6. (In this article he is referred to as "26-year- old") – May 1930) was a Danish scholar and adventurer.
Marquis Childs in 1937 In 1925, Childs rejoined United Press and then in 1926 joined the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, where he would remain off and on until 1944"Marquis W. Childs is Dead at 87: Won a Pulitzer for Commentary," New York Times (July 2, 1990)., mostly serving as a feature writer for its American Mercury magazine section. In 1932 Childs wrote an article for Harper's (published in the November issue) that was not so warmly received in his hometown. "River Town," a collection of thinly disguised tales of prominent Clinton citizens, was thought by natives to be at best in poor taste, and at worst, outrageous, although it was read by many with glee.
John Ware and Christobell Poll announced the formation of an organisation called CAMP in an article on the front page of the magazine section of The Australian newspaper on 19 September 1970. CAMP was officially established on 6 February 1971, at the first public gathering of gay women and men in Australia, which took place in a church hall in Balmain. Within about 12 months local CAMP groups had formed in each capital city and in many of the universities, soon creating an informal gay rights network around Australia. Their first demonstration took place in October 1971 outside the Liberal Party headquarters in Sydney when a right-wing Christian fundamentalist stood against Tom Hughes for pre-selection.
Furuholmen revealed in an interview published in Magasinet, the magazine section of Norway's third largest newspaper, Dagbladet, that he suffers from atrial fibrillation. The news was picked up the same day by the electronic music magazine Side-Line. At the Spellemannprisen award show on 5 March 2011 in Oslo, Norway, various Norwegian artists from various music genres including Kaizers Orchestra, Ida Maria and Bertine Zetlitz performed a cover of one of A-ha's biggest hits, "The Sun Always Shines on TV", in honour of the band. After the performance, the band received the Spellemannprisen honorary award handed out by A-ha's Norwegian music colleagues with the words "Our Heroes – Once upon a time, now – still and forever".
Karsner joined the editorial board of the New York socialist daily, the New York Call, editing that publication's weekend magazine section before gaining position of managing editor of that publication. One of the major stories covered by Karsner during his time at The Call was the 1918 mass trial of 166 members of the Industrial Workers of the World held in Chicago before Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis. In April 1923 Karsner resigned from the financially struggling Call in protest over the paper's decision to publish a critique of Soviet Russia written by Francis McCullaugh, a member of the British secret service.J. Louis Engdahl, "Cahan Dictator of The Call as Karsner, Editor, Resigns; More Light on Anti-Soviet Plot," The Worker [New York], v.
He founded the Khalsa Press Lahore as well as the "Khalsa Akhbar", the first journal for the Sikhs. He was well versed in Persian, Sanskrit, and Punjabi and a very eminent musicologist a great proponent of Modern Learning and of women's education, he was the Author of "Upma Sar Granth". He was instrumental in saving the lives of the royal musicians at the Mughal Court of Delhi during the Indian Rebellion of 1857; he gave them shelter at his court in Kapurthala, thus laying the foundation of the Kapurthala Gharana of Hindustani Classical Music.Musical spotlight on Kapurthala’s heritage-Chandigarh-Cities-The Times of IndiaThe Tribune - Magazine section - Windows Bikrama Singh had constructed, as his personal residence, the first French inspired building in Kapurthala, the Elysee Palace.
Flynn also became a scenario writer for the motion picture industry through his acquaintance with the actor King Baggot who, Dash notes, was considered the greatest film star in the country at that time in 1912. The producers Theodore and Leopold Wharton commissioned him to write story lines for their films, including The Perils of Pauline, and eventually adapted Flynn's experiences into a 20-part spy thriller titled The Eagle's Eye (1918), starring Baggot. The same year they were also published as weekly installments in The Atlanta Constitution's magazine section under the title The Eagle's Eye: True Story of the Imperial German Government's Spies and Intrigues in America. Some of these episodes were published in a book with the same name in 1919.
John Saltmarsh in his intellectual biography of Scott Nearing has "1922" listed as the last date of Nearing's party membership in the SPA (p. 2). Archival documents of the Communist Party housed by the Comintern in Moscow [RGASPI, fond 515, opis 1] indicate Nearing was a member of the SPA until the last day of 1923, however. He was clearly still lecturing at the Rand School in that year (see, for example, Nearing's "What Can the Radical Do?" the stenographic report of one of Nearing's Rand School lectured, published in the Sunday magazine section of the New York Call, an SP-affiliated daily on February 4, 1923. The dramatic decline of the size and strength of the Socialist Party in the first years of the 1920s took a toll on Nearing.
On 29 January 1962, Colonel de Mel was arrested for plotting to topple the government of Prime Minister Sirimavo Bandaranaike and remanded, pending trial, in a special section of the Welikada Prison called the Magazine Section. In 1964, the trail at bar, found Royce De Mel along with eleven of the 24 accused guilty and sentenced then to ten years in jail and confiscation of property. However, on appeal to the Privy Council, it ruled on December 1965 holding Special Act of 1962 ultra vires of the Ceylon constitution and said that the Act had denied fair trial. According to the Privy Council the law had been specially enacted to convict the men, under trial they did not have the protections that they would have had under general criminal law.
Hayden had the song from his "growing up" days in New Orleans, and he and Metz sat down and wrote the first version of "Hot Time" for a re-dedication ceremony for the local Chautauqua Park and Entertainment Center. The tale is part of the 2015 book And The Wind Whispered. According to a 1956 article in the Afro Magazine Section of the Baltimore Afro American, Mama Lou's original lyrics went: "Late last night about ten o'clock / I knocked at the door and the door was locked / I peeked through the blinds, thought my baby was dead / There was another man in the folding bed....". Metz heard the tune, copyrighted the music in his own name, and had it incorporated into a minstrel show, Tuxedo Girls, with revised lyrics.
His assistance to Poe was instrumental in the successful development of the respiration device, as he performed the fine detail work and metal fabrication that Poe could no longer do."Rabbit Killed Seven Times Brought Back to Life Each Time With Wonderful Machine", article states: "Not the least interesting feature of Prof. Poe's device is the fact that a mere 10 year old lad, Arthur Ostrander, acted as eyes and hands for the almost sightless and semi-paralyzed scientist in the construction of the device",The Washington Times, Magazine Section, page 4, January 27, 1907."This Machine Raises the Dead, Sobers Drunks", article states: "The boy Arthur, of whom the Professor was fond, assisted in assembling the model, and in doing what the Professor's palsied hands and dim eyes could no longer do", The Fort Wayne (Indiana) Journal- Gazette, page 24, March 10, 1907.
In July 1906, Brissac married Eugene D. Mockbee, an actor she had met while working with the Belasco players in Los Angeles. In the aftermath of the San Francisco earthquake and fire, a return to San Francisco theatres was not possible and they moved to Spokane, Washington where Brissac rejoined Florence Roberts’ company, touring Denver, St. Louis and cities in the Pacific Northwest in The Strength of the Weak, a play by Alice M. Smith and Charlotte Thompson."Amusements". The Evening Statesman (Walla Walla, Washington), November 28, 1906, p. 4"Columbia - Florence Roberts - The Strength of the Weak". The Washington Times (Washington D. C.), September 23, 1906, Woman's Magazine Section, Page 7 Early in 1907, Brissac became pregnant and, awaiting the birth of her child, joined the Jessie Shirley Company, a local troupe in residence at the Auditorium Theatre in Spokane, appearing in productions of Lady Windermere’s Fan, A Bachelor’s Housekeeper, A Man of Her Choice, The Two Orphans and The Triumph of Betty."Auditorium".
Smith's photographic career was significantly advanced when George Patullo, a features writer for the Boston Herald, saw the works, contacted Smith at his boarding house, and made him the subject of an article: "From Bronco Buster to Boston Art Student," which appeared on the front page of the paper's magazine section on January 12, 1908. The article marked the beginning of a friendship and working relationship between Smith the photographer and Patullo the writer, a partnership that resulted in numerous illustrated articles published in popular magazines from 1908 to 1911, when they collaborated for the final time on two Saturday Evening Post articles on the Texas horse and mule business. Over the course of his relatively brief career making photographs, Smith's principal camera was an Eastman screen-focus Kodak fitted with a Goerz lens with a volute shutter. As both a cowhand and photographer, he rode with some of the largest outfits in the West, ranches like the Shoe Box, JA, Frying Pan, Matador, and LS, which with their vast sizes still approximated what the open range had been like.

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