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Exact(41)
To get a stake, Mr. Ahlert called a Georgia company whose newspaper advertisements offered "Hard Money.
Second he would strike a blow against the Clarín group, whose newspaper has been critical of him.
What an enduring enchantment is Newcastle United's Joe Kinnear, whose newspaper epithet is "controversial director of football".
"We are contrarian, but there are good reasons to be that way," said Mr. Price, whose newspaper opposes just about everything that the city government does.
"At best, I think it was tinkering," said Mr. Kelly, whose newspaper, like The Globe and Mail, is printed and distributed in several parts of Canada.
Up in Scarsdale is a 13 year old boy whose newspaper route and delivery work netted him an income last year of $602.37.
Similar(16)
It's hardly a new concern; Orson Welles described it in Citizen Kane, whose newspaper-owning proprietor seeks election victory through biasing the news he publishes.
He is, sadly, a man whose newspapers too often traffic in sleaze.
Tony Abbott, Australia's prime minister (pictured, left), is a fan of Mr Murdoch, whose newspapers have uniformly supported his government.
Rupert Murdoch, whose newspapers supposedly back the conservative government, tweeted that the knighthood was a "joke and an embarrassment".The prime minister dismissed the criticisms as "electronic graffiti".
Rehmat Shah Afridi, a Peshawar-based publisher whose newspapers have been reporting on government corruption, also sits in a Lahore jail, cut off from the outside world.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com