Sentences with phrase «as readers of this column»

As readers of this column know, I always attempt to lay a good number and follow the Sharp money.
However, I did jot his remark into my collection and so Larry has influenced my life and now, as a reader of this column, will influence yours.

Not exact matches

Hey Charles, as part of Bet Labs mailbag column each week, we answer questions from readers regarding betting systems.
As part of our Bet Labs Mailbag column, we ask readers to submit sports betting system questions for us to test with our Bet Labs software.
As regular readers of this column will know, this is one of the easiest ways for any player to increase their potential winnings.
Less than a week after the death of advice columnist Eppie Lederer, known to millions of readers as Ann Landers, her daughter, Margo Howard, Wednesday publicly accused her cousin, who writes the syndicated column «Dear Abby,» of a «crass» attempt to cash in on her mother's legacy.
Dear Abby: As a longtime reader of your column, I often clip letters I want to reread.
In her column from June 21, Jeanne Phillips (the daughter of the original «Dear Abby» writer Pauline Phillips who took over the column and still writes under the pen name Abigail Van Buren) replied to a reader who identified as a «first - time mom in New Jersey.»
Also absent from the new pyramid are smoked back ribs served over a slice of white bread, as offered by the great Chicago barbecue master, Gary Wiviott, who will soon be teaching summer rib - smoking to readers of this column, so stay tuned.
A reader sent this photo of a palm card highlighting Eliot Spitzer, the comptroller candidate in Column Two, as part of a slate of elected officials.
This research, my knowledge of and experience in career counseling, the questions from readers in the Next Wave forums (especially the Ask Kathie forum that I moderated for a couple of years), my own personal history, and input and feedback from you will serve as my guide for the type of topics I will cover in this column.
But readers of this column know I am as friendly as can be to weird speculations, and it is interesting to think about the metaphysical side of virtual reality.
< And in our preparatory column to last week's Issues on the Ether column for our #EtherIssue live discussion, Bringing Tools of the Trade to Self - Publishing, we askwed our readers to talk with us about what tools entrepreneurial authors need most; to what degree those tools can be as much of a burden as a help if they slow down writers with steep learning curves; how well the commercial world seems to be responding so far to the needs of entrepreneurial authors; and what kind of results they're seeing from their own experiences and experiments with new tools.
This is sort of a big deal because KoReader brings a whole lot to the party... like 2 column landscape, night mode, Kobo's * complete * control over the ebook experience (as you say in the video) within KoReader, * very * easy ebook organization (KoReader understands folders so organizing a library is trivial) AND a * much * better PDF reader with text reflow.
A contributor to the Romance section of Gale's What Do I Read Next, co-author of Voice of Youth Advocate's annual «Clueless: Adult Mysteries with Young Adult Appeal» column, a reviewer for Library Journal, and co-author of The Mystery Readers» Advisory: The Librarian's Clues to Murder and Mayhem (2001), Charles was named 2002 Librarian of the Year by the Romance Writers of America and names good chocolate and good books as two of the world's great pleasures.
Miss Lonelyhearts starts innocently enough — a newspaper columnist is assigned to write an advice column answering questions from the paper's readers, «but as time passes he begins to break under the endless misery of those who write in, begging him for advice.»
One real pet peeve for me is how very many ebooks do something really stupid with tabular, columnar data: Many of them (and many word processors and publication / layout programs) store tables and columns as — bitmapped images, ruining any possibility of using or enlarging the text beyond a certain point, killing it for speech readers, killing the «text» nature and searchable nature of it too.
I know he doesn't phrase it precisely as a recommendation, instead as an example backing up what returns to expect (which is sadly needed when many readers may think investing means a HISA at 1.2 % nominal), but still, the mention of one specific fund to end a column titled ``... guide to successful investing» irked.
He is required by law to note that his columns are not meant as specific investment advice, since any advice of that sort would need to take into account such things as each reader's willingness and need to take risk.
(Incidentally, while CPP is gradually being expanded over the next 40 years, as announced over the summer, that will not greatly impact readers of this column, who we assume are close to or already at retirement age.
I've been a longtime reader of your columns (back to RealMoney) and have a lot of respect for your opinion as an investor and analyst, particularly your insights into insurance companies.
As many of the members of SHEEP are also avid WSD News readers, we would like to take this opportunity to say thank you to them publicly, through these columns.
Regular readers of this column will know that every month, I try to pass on tips and inspiration to bring greater success and pleasure to those who have chosen to work as reptile - sales associates.
However, any integrity he may possess is for me squandered by the patina of condescension, the Word - of - God certainty and strained patience towards the unenlightened reader that his columns often express, almost as if he dares his audience test his forbearance through disagreement.
As only an occasional reader of Revkin's (former) NYT column, I will leave it to his more faithful readers to point to where Revkin made these points and I missed it.
As regular readers of this column are aware from time to time I will host provocative perspectives on the energy industry.
As we have done previously, we would like to share one of those stories with regular readers of this column.
However, readers of my column will know that I give contrarians, or sceptics, or deniers (call them what you will) short shrift, and as a close follower of the scientific debate on this subject I can state without doubt that there is no dispute whatsoever within the expert community as to the reality or causes of manmade global warming.
Initially intended as a single article, the favorable response from readers to «Silly Lawyer Tricks,» — and the apparently never - ending examples of attorney mistakes on appeal — led to a regular column.
As regular readers of our column are well aware, the Cyberjustice Laboratory is a creative think - tank whose aim is to improve access to justice problems that plague the judicial system.
Much of what he says in his first column about getting lawyers to rethink the way they work and eliminate as many inefficiencies as possible will be familiar to readers of Slaw, thanks to the perceptive comments of our far - seeing contributors.
Abigail Van Buren Abigail Van Buren, known to her millions of readers as «Dear Abby,» began her advice - giving career only a few months after her sister, Eppie Lederer, began publishing the «Ann Landers» column in 1955.
With the launch of her column Adventures in Dating: Memoirs of a Single Mom this year, Dr. Jennifer Harman has let readers take a peek in her heart, and bedroom, as she chronicles through a scientific lens her return to the dating world.
«When the New York Times introduced a podcast version of its wildly popular column, Modern Love, some diehard fans weren't sure it would have the same appeal as the written essays, which have been a weekly ritual for millions of readers since they began appearing in print in 2004.
It's the last column of the year, and meant as a special thank you to our REM recipe readers.
Between my responsibilities as conference m / c I spoke to a lot of REM readers, including one who approached me to say he enjoyed most columns but thought I should update my photo.
Metes and Bounds: By Marty Douglas — In the spirit that there's no such thing as a horse so dead that it doesn't have one more flog in it: I recently received a letter from a reader of my August column, in which I frankly discussed my attitude toward the non-voter — those of us with the right to vote in a Canadian election, who, for a variety of reasons ranging from feeble to fervent, choose not to vote.
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