Not exact matches
Turning a corner into a room whose walls were
covered in whiteboard
markings, we came across a man fiddling with the bits and
pieces of a video - conferencing setup.
Whilst none
of LFC's defense
cover themselves in glory for their organisation from what is a routine set
piece, the fact that Kelly appeared to
marking no one as the free - kick was taken led me to apportion the blame to him.
On September 12, when
Mark Harris officially returned to Grantland to
cover the Oscar race (he stepped aside last season due to the conflict
of husband Tony Kushner's Lincoln being in contention), he penned this dead - on and intentionally prickly
piece, which took to task the festival - going, hastily - Tweeting types who hurried to declare 12 Years a Slave this year's Best Picture winner.
The factory saloon coachwork was indistinguishable from that
of the Bentley
Mark VI up to the rear doors, the back however
covered under a one -
piece boot lid a more spacious luggage compartment.
I was reading a
piece at IndieReader recently where Smashwords founder
Mark Coker, speaking on the subject
of covers, remarked, «In addition to promising what a book will deliver, the [
cover] image also promises (or fails to promise) that the author is a professional, and that the book will honor the reader's time.»
More recent works include a billiard - size table filled with yellow shea butter and a wall
piece of mirror tiles
marked with objects like potted plants, black soap and a vintage record
cover.
A folded
piece of paper, a handwritten note, a found photograph, a psychedelic album
cover, or a poignant lyric — each
marks particular events and impressions in a contemplative diary
of melodic moments.
Also common are evocations
of swiftly tilting planets and the universe's terrific, alienating vastness, beginning,
of course, with Paul Thek's much - disseminated brochure -
cover work Untitled (Earth Drawing I), but also including
pieces by Friedrich Kunath, Vija Celmins,
Mark Bradford, Rivane Neuenschwander, and quite a few others.
It was just a week ago that I blogged here about the suicide
of Kilpatrick Stockton lawyer
Mark Levy, movingly recounted by writer Richard B. Schmitt in the
cover piece for this month's ABA Journal magazine, A Death in the Office.
Goods: - Products like biomass briquettes, e-waste, cullet or other scrap or waste
of glass, real zari, paper scrap or waste, hard rubber scrap or waste, scrap or parings, rubber waste, scrap or parings, plastic waste, homeopathy medicines, siddha, Unani, ayurvedic, branded namkeens, khakra and plain roti / chapatti, mangoes sliced dried, fibre and leaf and reed items including wallets, pouches and mats, prayer beads, grass, hawan samagri, cotton quilts (not more than Rs. 1000 per
piece), duty credit scrips, oil cakes, paper mache products, saree fall, corduroy fabric, dhoop batti, roasted gram, dried tamarind, walnuts, branded food, first - day
covers, stamp - post
marks, revenue or postage stamps, kites, agarbatti, insulin, biogas, ice and snow, raisins, cashew nuts, cashew nuts in shell, lifeboats, stent, medicines, kerosene, coal, sabudana, rusk, pizza bread, spices, tea, coffee, frozen vegetables, branded paneer, skimmed milk powder, cream, footwear under Rs. 500, packaged food items, apparel under Rs. 1000 and fish fillets will all attract 5 % GST.
Pieces of paper were placed over certain sections
of the phone, no doubt to
cover up any identifying
marks that could be used to trace it back to its owner.