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Thus began an article whose content I can't otherwise recall.
On Friday, Express, a popular Urdu daily newspaper, led its Web site with an article whose headline blazed: "Army and Government Face to Face".
"Some people say to me, 'Play things safe, try to win by default; the government is in a mess,'" Mr. Cameron told the paper, in an article whose headline read: "If Labour Is So Terrible, Why Are The Tories Doing So Badly?" He added: "I say, 'No.
She recalls (p. 65 66) an article whose authors, thinking that natural selection only favors individual advantage, puzzled over how language, which shares useful information with others, could evolve.
The Seattle Times ran an article whose headline was so unsurprising I almost didn't read on: "Oil industry not buying Gov. Jay Inslee's cap-and-trade plan".
In 2015, when Paper magazine ran a conversation between Manning and a group of artists and activists (web activist Jacob Appelbaum, art and design duo Metahaven, and artists Matt Dryhurst and Holly Herndon), they came across exactly this problem: How do you illustrate an article whose subject is prohibited from being photographed?
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Your report is based on an academic article whose authors claim that Lord Ashdown is running Bosnia like 19th-century India.
In 1958, Albert Wohlstetter, the cold war strategist (and guru to many current players on the scene, including Paul Wolfowitz and Richard Perle), published an influential article whose title, "The Delicate Balance of Terror," succinctly characterized the cold war itself.
Rummaging further through the Crimson archives, we turned up a 1994 article whose date hints at how long the English department held out before, as Lacaria puts it, "eviscerating" liberal education.
"Bereaved relatives and TV viewers watching the Remembrance Sunday ceremony were incensed when it appeared the prime minister abandoned the convention that politicians step back and bow their head after paying homage in Whitehall," wrote The Daily Express in a news article whose headline was "Shame on you, Mr. Brown".
(In a tepid article, whose headline appears in smaller font just below the Sack piece, the Times does interview experts who say that the "rationing fears" are simply unfounded).
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com