Whatever possessed him to front-page an article of rumors and uncertainties? |
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Across Australia, his passing provoked front-page headlines in newspapers and pages of coverage. |
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The New University, the student newspaper, published a front-page article, which featured, more or less verbatim, Mary's charges. |
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And with war in Iraq and the economy topping the list of election concerns, energy and the environment aren't exactly front-page political news. |
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That event was celebrated with film footage, editorials and front-page headlines. |
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The newspaper later confirmed that it had been hoaxed and printed a front-page apology, with a pledge to donate money to charity. |
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There have been editorials, front-page stories and innumerable comment and opinion pieces on the situation. |
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It's a risk, but if it happens, maybe it beats the thrill of all those front-page splashes and sold-out arenas hands down. |
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We felt it was maybe the time to let him go because we were waiting on the next bit of front-page news. |
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Gabe wanted to press charges, to have the newspaper print a front-page story about our experience, to call his lawyer. |
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Agenda-setting front-page splashes started reappearing as well as longer inside reads devoted to issues not normally touched by the Record. |
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It was the lead on the television news and was reported in prominent front-page articles in most newspapers. |
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I recall a dandy front-page photo of a community street preacher, in which I burned a halo floating above his head. |
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Between 1939 and 1945, The New York Times published more than 23,000 front-page stories. |
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If you're not going to give away the news in your lead, don't give it away in the headline or front-page photo cutline either. |
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In his left overcoat pocket was the front-page logotype of the paper, and in his left pocket were 10 or 12 halftones. |
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The policy shift has been the subject of numerous front-page news stories and op-eds. |
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When he returned the local newspaper had a front-page story which made him cringe. |
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The following morning, newspapers across Canada made the story their front-page lead. |
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In Seattle, where fish are obviously more important, the story was front-page banner headline news for the Times. |
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A front-page editorial in the Chicago Tribune called for immediate impeachment proceedings against the President. |
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Swaraj further charged the Congress Party of creating unnecessary publicity stunts in order to make front-page news. |
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Some, like the Los Angeles Times, got the facts right from day one, reporting in two front-page stories that the gag rule restricts how foreign groups spend their own money. |
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In 1948, he published a blistering front-page article in Combat attacking the Soviet biologist Trofim Lysenko as a pseudoscientist. |
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But, in Jamaica, Maurice Tomlinson was forced to flee his country after his marriage to his Canadian husband made front-page news. |
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While the unruliness of its stars used to make tennis front-page news, it disgusted many of the sport's most enthusiastic supporters. |
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This is no longer front-page news, it may not even be in the news anymore, but the fact is that artists are quietly stopping their activities. |
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The Commissioner's annual reports aren't front-page news any more-and that's not really a bad thing. |
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European debates on the Constitution and on Turkey's place in Europe are front-page news in all of our countries. |
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Statistics on health, literacy and crime makes front-page news as we help monitor the tremendous changes happening in our country. |
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Quarterly earnings reports are often front-page news and the lead story on TV and radio. |
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Charges, accusations, and convictions often rate front-page treatment, while acquittals are begrudgingly relegated to an inside page. |
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Not only is that animated title GIF an irritation but too many of the front-page images are crudely rescaled so that their aspect ratio is all distorted. |
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The team got front-page exposure, albeit unwillingly, when a mechanic suffered an electric shock during a pit stop. |
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If Ed Miliband thought the Saturday headlines were inauspicious, then the Sunday front-page headlines were ghastly. |
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Now it was generating front-page headlines. |
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Nonetheless, the court made an exception for two extracts that had in fact appeared in a front-page article in The Globe and Mail and been publicly disclosed in another court case. |
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Annual reports and SORT reports usually receive front-page coverage in daily newspapers and are one of the lead stories on evening television news programs. |
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The result was a series of seven front-page articles on the subject. |
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Staffers were alerted to this first-ever front-page ad by editor Arnie Robbins. |
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During the same week, USA Today ran a front-page story describing the border crisis. |
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Only one paper, Al Wasat, gave prominence to Bin Laden's death on its front page while the other dailies devoted front-page space to other news. |
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But another front-page story aroused, if not my anger, at least my curiosity. |
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The attack in which Murray is charged has been front-page news in New York for almost a week. |
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Normally she would not read such things to Scott but since it was front-page news, she had rather Scott hear it from her than some warped rumors off the street. |
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The kidnap made front-page news and the conspiracy theories began. |
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When Doris Duke zeroed in on him, he became front-page news. |
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Loeb was notorious for front-page editorials that often employed a sledgehammer where a feather duster would do. |
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Shodd manages to link O'Malley to the Geritol Murders in a front-page story, but because there's so little evidence nor any motive, O'Malley goes uncharged. |
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Many people have only a fragmented understanding of native title, gleaned from front-page news reports of the latest native title claim or political outburst. |
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The 'race-fixing' story was also front-page news as far as the Guardian, The Times, the Daily Telegraph and the Sun were concerned. |
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Retirement financing is international, front-page news. |
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The above-the-fold, front-page article was accompanied by a large color photo of an array of Religious Right leaders at the signing ceremony. |
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If you make a joke or use a pun, it's front-page news the day after. |
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Released on December 5, 1967, the report was front-page news. |
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The Great British Bake Off is niceness personified, to the extent that the sight of a man putting a cake in a dustbin last year was considered shocking enough to make actual front-page news. |
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We've not had the open mic gaffe, the candidate falling over or even the mocked-up tabloid front-page depiction of a party leader as a root vegetable. |
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The abduction of hundreds of young Nigerian girls by the militia Boko Haram has been front-page news for weeks. |
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Since world governments decided that improving the management of the planet's water reserves was a major priority, the threats hanging over groundwater have suddenly become front-page news. |
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The New York Times, after running a front-page story about the McCarthy speech, also ran an editorial. |
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A front-page story had confused deer hunting and deer stalking. |
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In fact, what we say here today and how we vote tomorrow will be front-page news in the seven outermost regions, and the news reports on the regional television channels will report extensively on what we say and decide here. |
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Because a shooting in the city is and should remain unacceptable, shocking and outrageous, and thusly always worthy of front-page news. |
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African migration has become front-page news for the international media. |
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In August 2002, OTV, a privately owned TV station, had shown those images, while Monitorul de Vrancea implied in a front-page article that the journalist had been featured in a pornographic film. |
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A plane crash in Chad will make headlines in N'Djamena, but it's unlikely to be front-page news in Chile unless the plane was carrying Chilean passengers. |
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Othman Al Sini, Editor-in-Chief, Al Watan, Saudi Arabia, moderated a panel discussion where editors of Arab and Western media exchanged their views on what decides front-page news and coverage. |
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Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae have not been front-page news for some time now and will be more cautious when buying mortgage-backed securities in the future. |
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And while many sudden-onset emergencies appeared in front-page news coverage, other countries where suffering is more deeply entrenched remained in the shadows. |
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Correction: June 30, 2004 Wednesday A front-page picture caption on Monday about New York's gay pride parade reversed the identities of two women in wedding attire. |
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When the editorial staff was informed of plans for the front-page ad, about 100 employees signed a petition protesting the decision, according to Reuters. |
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In a stark contrast from two years ago when the debt ceiling was front-page news almost every day, the summer of 2013 looks to be mostly free of a debt ceiling fight. |
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And it just so happens that 1965 was also the year of the discovery of cosmic background radiation, the first physical evidence of the big bang, which made front-page news. |
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