Sentence examples for cause newspaper from inspiring English sources

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Exact(2)

As the Court of Saxony has reduced her income, she has regulated her style of living and now presents the picture of a former Crown Princess, accustomed to every luxury, who is happy, though she is without a maid, mends her own clothes, arranges her hair and, withal, presents such a fashionable appearance as to cause newspaper comment.

Around the time the publishing of the Delta Courier ended, the People's Cause newspaper began running weekly.

Similar(58)

It does, however, provide an indictment of the pressures which can cause newspapers, their editors, and their reporters to distort the news because of desire to be on the front page.

Such competitors inspire respect, but no longer the pure fear that caused newspapers to react with one defensive scheme after another.

The deaths on Thursday of 14 lawmakers and government officials in a hail of bullets fired by a man with a standard Swiss Army-issue rifle caused newspapers and legislators to call for a review of gun possession policies here, which are among Europe's most relaxed.

A more vigorous magazine and newspaper industry may cause paper prices to rise (assuming there's no additional capacity coming online).

But he told the inquest he found no physical evidence that this was what caused the newspaper seller's death, which he attributed to natural causes.

As many before him have done, Wolff pinned the cause of newspapers’ impending death on CraigsList, which took away newspapers’ auto, jobs and real estate ads.

"But from today's perspective, many experts agree that the decisions made at The Herald and The Leader hurt the civil rights movement at the time, irreparably damaged the historical record and caused the newspaper's readers to miss out on one of the most important stories of the 20th century".

The secular intellectuals in exile, however, more forcefully embraced the democratic cause — their newspapers, books, magazines, Web sites and, increasingly, appearances on Al Jazeera — delivered their views back home.

The 26,000-word extract in the Observer of 11 June 1956 not only caused a newspaper sensation, it also consolidated Crankshaw's reputation as the pre-eminent British press authority on Soviet affairs.

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