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Cutler and the Conservatives learned of Livingstone's plans, proclaiming that a GLC Labour victory would lead to a Marxist takeover of London and then Britain; the rightist press picked up the story, with the Daily Express using the headline of "Why We Must Stop These Red Wreckers".
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If so then I cannot understand how you resisted using the headline "Planet of the apps".TOM HITCHINGS Cambridge, CambridgeshireI was intrigued to learn that 10% of smartphone owners admit to having used their device during sex.
Despite the error of using the headline grabbing term, the storm remains noteworthy in its ferocity.
Some have deliberately scaled back their lifestyles, while others have used the headlines to start family discussions of wealth and moral values.
Every national newspaper in Italy used the headline "End of a Dream" while Gazzetta and Corriere dello Sport simply put "NO" in huge letters on their front pages.
Alain Badiou, venerable Maoist, 75-year-old soixante-huitard, vituperative excoriator of Sarkozy and Hollande and such a controversial figure in France that when he was profiled in Marianne magazine they used the headline "Badiou: is the star of philosophy a bastard?", smiles at me sweetly across the living room of his Paris flat.
In announcing this event, Kentucky.com (Meyer is originally from Kentucky) used the headline "Adair native to receive Medal of Honor for 'worst day' of his life," based upon this humble hero's words: "I'm going to meet the president.
Although he had played for eight different clubs, playing his fewest number of games (four) for Millwall, and was signed to Bradford City at the time, the BBC used the headline, "Former Millwall striker Gavin Grant guilty of murder".
It is such a big and unusual word, describing such a big and unusual number, that its use is inconsistent: Bloomberg News used quadrillion in the headline of an early story on Friday about Japan's debt, but later in the day the stories and headlines referred to a "thousand trillion," which is not nearly as much fun.
It was mostly used for the headlines of the manuscripts or the books, although there are compete inscriptions which were written in the Asomtavruli "Curly" form only. Nuskhuri is the second Georgian script.
"I checked Gale's 19th Century U.S. newspapers database, and there are a whopping 375 articles from 1837 mentioning 'hard times,' 50 of them using the phrase in the headline of the article".
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com