They and the rest of our talented Editorial Advisory Board are listed on the masthead and on our new website. |
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Are we about to sail? We are if the Blue Peter is on the masthead. Back to the ship, you jack-tars, unless you want a flogging. |
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The masthead for the current edition consists of three editorial staff and seven staff members. |
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On the front page there will be a new masthead, and inside there will be other changes. |
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In the first edition readers will notice a number of changes, not least a new masthead, more news and a cartoon on the front page. |
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And if you read the masthead box on page two, you'll see a slight change in the wording there. |
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While its masthead editorial asks some good questions about the current debate, it provides no answers whatsoever. |
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Continuing and new members of the Editorial Advisory Board are listed on the masthead. |
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The first stamp shows a sailor sighting land from the masthead of the 1502 ship. |
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Every day for over a month on the front page of the paper, right next to the masthead, they publish a countdown to the start of the World Cup. |
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I still tend to think of myself as a newcomer to the magazine, having been on the masthead for only one-fifth of the now 100 issues. |
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Advisory Editors currently serving on the board are listed on the masthead. |
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The most unusual object we shipped was the masthead from the cruise ship Andrea Doria. |
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A single halyard to the throat of the sail is an alternative to lashing the throat permanently to the masthead, and it facilitates reefing. |
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He also painted scenes he could not see by raising the eye level to the height of a ship's masthead to get a more interesting view. |
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Sailors may elect to install a tri-color light at the masthead that can be used in place of deckmounted lights when the boat is under sail alone. |
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The system uses a masthead antenna array with omnidirectional and monopulse directional antennae and a separate periscope warning antenna. |
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Thirty-five of the ships have masthead flags. A square flag of St George is the most common flag and appears 41 times. |
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He then describes how he was alarmed to see her masthead lights swinging rapidly to starboard. |
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As Lord High Admiral, James II flew a red ensign and a masthead flag bearing the insignia of that office. |
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Elaborate carving programs were required for the bow, stern, masthead, cat-head, and living quarters of these ships. |
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He sent men up to the masthead to keep a good look-out, as he was dancing about like a cat on hot bricks all the morning. |
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The topmast is held in place by a fid, or pin passing through the masthead and topmast. |
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The design director, a masthead editor or the news desk should be consulted on doubtful cases or proposals for exceptions. |
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While his name now sits at the top of the masthead, he still has the title of managing editor. |
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The masthead remained strong, a collection of talented mid-career journalists and promising young reporters who shared a genuine camaraderie. |
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The unnecessarily large teasers and the masthead monopolise more than half of the visible area. |
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The posting of POPULI and Dispatches on the UNFPA web site has given these masthead publications a global reach at little additional cost. |
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If the masthead is able to move forwards, the mast is in danger of buckling aft. |
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The fact that the masthead of the April 1 edition was printed upside down was supposed to be a dead giveaway. |
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Current practice is for online news staff to receive credit in an online masthead, and for current affairs contributors to receive a byline. |
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Her bowsprit carries two foresails, and her large mainsail is gaff rigged, with an upside-down triangle of topsail to fill the gap at the masthead. |
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But his golden ball was transferred to the masthead of Camperdown. |
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I almost expected to see the Jolly Roger flying from the masthead. |
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The former Leading Seaman Signalman and the Petty Officer Quartermaster proudly broke the pennant which for the life of the ship will fly at her masthead. |
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The men who rode atop the masthead communicated vital information to the ship's Captain necessary to direct and navigate the ship through perilous seas. |
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An extract from this woodcut is in the masthead of this page. |
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The old title is still in the masthead, but in small letters. |
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His influence is so great that the title of publications director was created for him, and his name is above the editor in chief's on the masthead. |
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The task was to screw up a newspaper masthead, rip it in half, then draw what you saw, looking at the spaces between letters rather than the actual letters. |
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One of the more obvious is the new masthead on the cover of this magazine. |
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They comprised three masthead lights, each with a minimum visibility range of five miles. |
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Both subscription and single-copy prices must be clearly displayed in the masthead or on the cover page of the publication. |
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Rigs have become so generic these days that it reminds me of the late 1960s when all we saw were masthead, single-spreader rigs with big foretriangles. |
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In most cases, this is the masthead title of the newspaper as it appeared for most of its run. |
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The agreement also resulted in a new masthead for CJEP, and the introduction of a CSBBCS member on the publication committee. |
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With an increasing load on the forestay, the masthead will want to move forward, with the risk of a negative bend. |
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On those boats that have internal halyards, all halyards should be disconnected from the deck and hauled through until the shackles are two-blocked at the masthead. |
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First, the sheaves at the masthead truck will need to be replaced because they're wire-sized and the new rope halyard will have a larger diameter. |
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And at both papers, the upper levels of the masthead remained strictly male. |
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The top of the masthead has been occupied by four people in the last five years. |
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Today, the Daily Pennsylvanian masthead is at least half female, and the last three executive editors have been women. |
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Alex Brooks, formerly the editor-in-chief of Kidspot, told Weekly Beast the digital masthead would launch in July and had a staff of just two. |
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The name was shortened to Cleveland to fit on the masthead of the long since defunct Cleveland Advertiser newspaper. |
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This was made equally clear by a change made in 1962 to the masthead of Pravda. |
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When lowering a flag from the half-mast, it will first be raised to the masthead, then lowered in the usual manner. |
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Some readers may be surprised to see a new look and masthead, The Review, on our cover. |
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To place a flag at half-mast, it shall be raised to the masthead, then slowly lowered until the flag's centre is midway between the masthead and the base of the flagpole. |
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The newspaper changed its name to The Herald on 3 February 1992, dropping Glasgow from its title, but not its masthead. |
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In 1890, the masthead was firmly established in a Blackletter, or Old English style typeface, as they are sometimes known. |
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He is practically an honorary Steinbrenner, having spent many more years intimately involved with the family business than the brothers, Hal and Hank, who now top the masthead. |
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The Secretariat submitted to the bureau a sample of a masthead for the documentation of the Conference, which included the logo of the United Nations and a logo specially designed for the Conference. |
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Climb the mast and check the masthead antennae, standing rigging attachments, swages, spreaders, radar reflector, Windex and the mast itself. |
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Also in 1966, the Royal Arms, which had been a feature of the newspaper's masthead since its inception, was abandoned. |
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About two cable lengths upstream of buoy S74, the bridge watches on both vessels noticed the masthead light of the other vessel at close quarters on the port bow. |
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The Union Jack is worn at the masthead of a ship to indicate the presence of the Sovereign or an Admiral of the Fleet. |
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The price must appear in the masthead of the magazine. |
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It was the same size and its masthead had the title in white on a red rectangle of the same colour as the Daily Mirror. |
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