Sentences with phrase «page of every newspaper then»

and if my words were published on the front page of every newspaper then all would become Christians.

Not exact matches

An English newspaper story makes its way through a Spanish website, a French radio station, an Italian television show, then arrives back onto the pages of another English newspaper, and all of a sudden the rumour's back, like some hideous shambling zombie.
He then posed next the 8ft 6in - high limestone structure, ensuring coverage in the news bulletins and on the front page of many newspapers.
-- «New York Has Given Away the Keys to More Than a Prius» — New York Times's Jim Dwyer: «Late Tuesday night, Mr. [Stephen] Cassidy drove onto a sidewalk in Midtown Manhattan and hit a trash bin, then stumbled his way into an ambulance and onto the front pages of newspapers... Mr. Cassidy, the executive director of the Fire Pension Fund, was jacked up on alcohol and had cocaine in his wallet, the police said... Other than the car, the damage done by Mr. Cassidy was limited to himself.
If you're one of them then skip the weekly newspaper's back pages and head to TSmeet.com.
In this lesson, students read a short story, then create a one - page newspaper depicting the facts of the fictional story as real - life events.
Students read a short story, then create a one - page newspaper depicting the facts of the fictional story as real - life events.
The newspaper originated the idea on a broad scale, offering a specific number of page views per month for free, then charging for additional content.
I would toss the newspaper aside, then would pick it up again, turning pages to read something else; then I'd read again and again that heading: Death of Edgar A. Poe....
The rest of Hibid's display, however, is less convincing: a series of pages of the Guardian newspaper in which areas are painted out to reveal what she appears to see as unconscious racism, specifically — in the way images of black people are used — feels rather dated, if not in its racial paranoia, then certainly in the way Hibid has chosen to express it.
If everyone who urges is a censor, then the comment pages of the newspapers must be closed in the name of free speech.
Canadian economist Mark Jaccard is falsely described as a Nobel laureate in the headline of a press release — and then on the front page of a newspaper.
From the November 19, 2009, New York Times and Washington Post front - page initial news reports of hacked e-mails from the University of East Anglia (a place up until then unlikely to find itself on American newspaper's front pages)... to subsequent findings of a silly factual mistake in the IPCC's Fourth Assessment forecasting disappearing Himalayan glaciers just 25 years from now... to the disappointments of last December's international negotiations in Copenhagen... to data pointing to growing uncertainty and confusion on the climate change issue in the minds of many Americans and their public officials....
As a business columnist in the Globe and Mail in the 1990s, Corcoran was reported to run shrieking into the managing editor's office any time a (well - documented) science story crept into the pages of what was then the nation's only national newspaper.
Then they decided instead to run this full - page ad in newspapers in January in a number of papers, including the Wall Street Journal, USA Today, and New York Times:
Now and then I make the mistake of read the letters page of the newspaper.
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