He was wearing a hat just like the kidnapper's, as it was
described in the newspaper article, and my heart began pumping twice as fast as the nearest gas station.
Not exact matches
According to The Times,
in a 2006
article for the Asian
newspaper Awaaz, written while serving as vice-chairman of the Conservative Party, Warsi
described the Government's anti-terror proposals as «enough to tip any normal young man into the realms of a radicalized fanatic.»
If Flanagan obstructs, shortchanging the residents of a district that has been unrepresented for too long due to Dirty Dean's corruption and conviction, Kaminsky should pull out some
newspaper articles describing how quickly the TEAPubs swore
in George Amedore (seventy votes ahead of his opponent who ended up unseating him after the recount was finalized).
Ms Flint, who posed for a glamorous magazine photoshoot last month, has been
described as «a woman scorned» and accused of putting «a stiletto
in Gordon Brown's back»
in newspaper articles.
Citing a
newspaper article that
described children being afraid to stay for afterschool programs, Booker says, «We're going to come
in immediately and secure all of our school zones and put
in whatever necessary personnel
in and around our schools to protect [children as they travel] to and from school.»
A three - month campaign with the Mirror Group,
described as a «branded content partnership», will see key moments
in contemporary books presented as
newspaper articles to «show
newspaper readers just how relevant and exciting book themes are».
All figures
describing biting power
in such terms can be traced to either unfounded rumor or,
in some cases, to
newspaper articles with no foundation
in factual data.
However, Bishop continues: «Southern Weekend (南方周末), a popular
newspaper in China known for its muckraking journalism, recently published a long
article describing ZT Online.
She wrote a
newspaper article highly critical of city planners for their vision to «Los Angelize» what she
described as «the most hopeful and healthy city
in North America, still unmangled, still with options.»
He also likened belief
in carbon «pollution» to the superstitious beliefs of primitive civilizations, illustrating his point with a 1933
newspaper article describing a drought
in Syria that was blamed by locals on yo - yo toys.
The statute dates back to the 19th century and has been
described as «rarely enforced»
in newspaper articles reporting on the effort to repeal it.
My views on «Nasty Business» (The
article in Today's REALTOR ®, January 1996,
describing the nightmare experienced by four Charlottesville, Va., practitioners who were sued by their local
newspaper):