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583 Sentences With "in a column"

How to use in a column in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "in a column" and check conjugation/comparative form for "in a column". Mastering all the usages of "in a column" from sentence examples published by news publications.

I'll explain it in a column soon to come. Okay.
In a column in his hometown newspaper in Janesville, Wis.
We may contact you for possible inclusion in a column.
In January, Rosen castigated Anthony in a column on FanRagSports.
In a column that appeared in this space on Dec.
"In a very real sense," Ziegler wrote in a column for Mediaite.
It's mostly advice I would have written in a column publicly [laughs].
In a column I wrote in the 1980s, I noted that many
Mallory wrote about the matter in a column for NewsOne on Wednesday.
Blogger and author Stephanie Yeboah shared similar thoughts in a column for Metro.
She wears them crawling up her blouse in a column toward her neck.
Discussing the policies in a column for the Port Charlotte Sun, former Rep.
In a column Wednesday, he highlighted the organization's "slander and libel" against American citizens.
The deal was reported in a column in O Globo newspaper earlier on Monday.
" The next week, in a column entitled, "Hill & Bill, THE WORST SHAM MARRIAGE EVER!
"The president often deflects attention to the negative," Seib wrote in a column Monday.
The New York Today team may contact you for possible inclusion in a column.
In a column, our reporter explains the months she spent working on this story.
" In a column for The Hollywood Reporter, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar wrote, "Was Maher insensitive?
In a column for USA Today, the conservative writer Jonah Goldberg stated the obvious.
Turley also noted the threats in a column published by The Hill on Thursday.
In a column for The Washington Post, Will rips advertisements on behalf of Sen.
But I never like to publish stuff in a column unless I know it's true.
Ramesh Ponnuru made a point-by-point case for her in a column for Bloomberg.
My colleague Jamelle Bouie made two arguments in a column about Joe Biden this week.
In a column in December, Moore called for Powell to resign for hiking interest rates.
Tampa Bay Times senior correspondent Lucy Morgan detailed the incident in a column on Aug.
" Laura Bush, in a column for The Washington Post , wrote: "I live in a border state.
In a column last month, one of us detailed the long-term decline in manufacturing jobs.
So she announced in a column late last week that the Downtown News is for sale.
Some subject matter you might write about in a column then might appear in a song.
"This is a war," declared the Proud Boys' founder, Gavin McInnes, in a column this week.
In a column, he wrote that years earlier he had begun seeking details of the episode.
In a column for The Guardian, Cornel West offers a strong rebuke to the Democratic Party.
Dr. Jones, who died at 79 on July 19 in Newcastle upon Tyne in northeastern England, wrote hundreds of irreverent columns about Daedalus for two sacrosanct journals: New Scientist, in a column named for Ariadne, the mistress of the labyrinth, and Nature, in a column called Daedalus.
Bogle reminisced about his trip to Omaha in a column for the Omaha World-Herald last year.
" Cal Thomas captured what is going on in a column last week headlined: "The Illegal Immigrant Vote.
The New York Times' David Brooks noted this two-faced presidency in a column earlier this week.
" In November, McChrystal wrote in a column for CNN saying that "America is facing a leadership crisis.
"If you're trying to describe memes in a column, it can be very difficult," Ms. Hess said.
Soon after, the public editor, addressing Stephens's hiring in a column, noted that "relatively few" actually canceled.
"'Pick a woman, any woman' seems to be the message," she wrote in a column on Tuesday.
"Where my people are is where I must also be," she wrote in a column at NewsOne.
David Waters of the Commercial Appeal newspaper in Memphis told Albright's story in a column last month.
In a column, she called out local journalism "divas" and openly asked them why they have remained silent.
In 2014, Mr. Moore critiqued a Democratic proposal to combat gender discrimination in a column for National Review.
"She can run faster, hit harder, anticipate quicker than Riggs," insisted Grace Lichtenstein in a column on Sept.
Writing for Opinion, Farhad Manjoo argued in a column that dealing with China wasn't worth the moral cost.
This week, I took a shot at framing the question in a bit more detail in a column.
As Tim Bajarin noted in a column late last year, the experience on the Gear VR is pretty good.
Four weeks ago in a column here I proposed that Bloomberg donate $1 billion to elect Democrats in November.
But it was in a column he wrote for kids in which he nailed the appeal of DXing, shockingly.
"I needed to convert it, package it and ship it off," she wrote in a column for Psychology Today.
" Back on January 85033th, in a column appropriately titled, "Flint, Michigan: Did race and poverty factor into water crisis?
In a column for SCOTUSblog last year, von Spakovsky called partisan gerrymandering the "political corollary" of the Goldilocks dilemma.
In 2015, Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter detailed in a column how Trump responded to criticism about his fingers.
In a column in The Des Moines Register on Saturday, her father, Rob Tibbetts, encouraged the debate on immigration.
One plaintiff, Sherri Simpson, wants to take Trump to trial, as she explained in a column for Vox recently.
"I believe I would defeat Donald Trump in a general election," Mr. Bloomberg wrote in a column published Tuesday.
"You're angry, you're disappointed and you want us to understand that," the Register's Carol Hunter wrote in a column.
"Don't start a company unless it's an obsession and something you love," he wrote in a column on Entrepreneur.
In a column published this week in the Wall Street Journal, Siegel said that he doesn't always agree with Moore.
The first public report of the call came on January 12, in a column by the Washington Post's David Ignatius.
As Wired columnist Zeynep Tufekci pointed out in a column this weekend, that's been Facebook's problem since the company's inception.
It's fair to say that's not happened," she wrote in a column for The Telegraph here "Don't get me wrong.
New York Times writer Eduardo Porter argued that it's a "poor tool to fight poverty" in a column published yesterday.
The editorial page "may be the best way to read a community's mind," he wrote in a column in December.
The Republican nominee for president spoke to Fox News contributor and USA Today columnist Kirsten Powers in a column posted Monday.
When Rolling Stone asked if he'd be their new Dear Abby in a column called "Ask Croz," he found it hilarious.
He's been keeping tabs on Trump's economy, including this first big sell-off, in a column over at the Washington Post.
Conway defended Mueller's ongoing investigation as constitutional in a column he published Monday on the national security and legal blog Lawfare.
That call has been central to his political success, as the conservative columnist Peggy Noonan observed in a column last spring.
You can easily create a drop-down list in Excel to limit the values that can be entered in a column.
The New York Today team may join you there, or at the very least, contact you for inclusion in a column.
"It feels like a journey back in time," Mr. Ergin wrote in a column for Hurriyet Daily News over the weekend.
In a column for the German economic newspaper Handelsblatt, Mr. Li denied accusations that Beijing was trying to split the bloc.
"Maybe it's also the content of the message," Matthew Continetti, the editor of the Washington Free Beacon, wrote in a column.
"This marks a transition from holding observation posts to holding territory," he wrote, in a column in the Daily Sabah newspaper.
Unequal recovery from the financial crisis may be behind increased hostility towards billionaires, Bloomberg columnist Noah Smith wrote in a column.
This, at least, is the argument Fordham law professor Jed Shugerman made in a column for the Washington Post last month.
"Carrie and I occupied a unique area in each other's lives," Hamill recalls this week in a column for The Hollywood Reporter.
In a column written for BoxingNews24, Sulaiman reiterated his stance on AIBA's move to allow professional boxers to compete in the Olympics.
" NewsBuster managing editor Curtis Houck mocked the festival in a column headlined, "No self-awareness: Six unhinged moments from liberal media lovefest.
No less an arbiter than Jorge Ramos, the Univision anchor, seemed to condemn them without naming names in a column last month.
"We were not born to be a nation of masters," he wrote in a column in Davar, the ruling Socialist Party's newspaper.
"We have to live within our current financial reality," Kyla Johnson-Trammell, the Oakland schools superintendent, wrote in a column published Wednesday.
"There is still a chance that this vision can be made to work," Johnson wrote in a column in Wednesday's Times newspaper.
The Home, Explore, Notifications, Messages, Bookmarks, Lists and Profile are in a column, with "More" taking you to another set of options.
Namely... On January 12, 2017 — eight days before Trump's inauguration — the Washington Post's David Ignatius broke some major news in a column.
Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring (D) called for the decriminalization of minor marijuana possession in a column Saturday for the Daily Press.
In a column for the New York Times, David Brooks says that the Republican Party has lost its way with Donald Trump.
In a column in March, I noted that surveys indicate that people in the United States think the stock market is expensive.
"Their record is an uninterrupted litany of cowardice, incompetence and blame shifting," Robert Shrimsley wrote in a column for the Financial Times.
"His love for his wife was legendary," wrote Kornelius Purba, a senior journalist for the Jakarta Post, in a column on Thursday.
He also had a history of dubious stock transactions while in the House, and I covered the ugly details in a column.
She wrote in a column on Fox News's website on Tuesday that pre-cancer cells have now been discovered on her cervix.
Murat Yetkin, in a column for Hurriyet, said the fact that the gunman was killed — rather than captured — would hinder the investigation.
The line came in a column on the resistance discussions to Trump's agenda that are taking place over dinners in private homes.
And yeah, they're actually a thing, typically occurring when hot, dry air near the ground rises rapidly in a column, forming a vortex.
ISIS emerged in 2014 as the product of three loose factions or movements, as I pointed out in a column back in 2015.
She was suspended for a week when — in a column about her struggles to root for the Boston Celtics — she mentioned Adolf Hitler.
Michael Bloomberg will not run for president in 2020, the former New York City mayor announced in a column on his namesake website.
In a column for Germany's Die Welt newspaper, Heiko Maas said that "right-wing populist provocateurs" were relativizing the crimes of the Holocaust.
In a column for Slate, Roche accused Kavanaugh of lying under oath about his drinking habits and references in his high school yearbook.
In a column published on Sunday in Berlin's Tagespiegel daily, Kohl said he did not think the EU could integrate millions of refugees.
"The Olympics have to be put back by a minimum of a year," Taylor wrote in a column for The Times on Tuesday.
"The Olympics have to be put back by a minimum of a year," Taylor wrote in a column for The Times on Tuesday.
"It is obviously brutally expensive, but time is the one asset we simply don't own," he wrote in a column for Men's Fitness.
"Phobia means irrational, uncontrollable fear, often a form of mental illness," David Minthorn, The A.P.'s deputy standards editor, wrote in a column.
Perhaps the most illuminating example of this logic at work was featured in a column for LifeSiteNews, a very popular pro-life website.
In a column, The Times's Ginia Bellafante wrote that Wegmans' arrival in Brooklyn sits squarely "at the heart of a paradox" for New Yorkers.
Mr Dreher answers that question in a column in the New York Times, which is commendably frank in facing up to some agonising truths.
In a column for Fix, Nic recalls that everyone unanimously agreed he should remove the section about hustling for drug money in San Francisco.
"We were not born to be a nation of masters," he wrote in a column in Davar, the newspaper of the ruling socialist party.
Fire whirls happen when hot, dry air close the the ground -- like that near a fire -- rises rapidly in a column, forming a vortex.
Parenthetically, I recently argued in a column that criminals who post videos of their crimes online should be subject to additional crimes or penalties.
In a column last night on ESPN, Jeff Passan spoke to the 60 or so voters who publicly declined voting for Clemens and Bonds.
In 2016, Ronan Farrow, Allen's son with Mia Farrow, wrote his own plea for recognizing Dylan's allegations in a column for The Hollywood Reporter.
Nick Humphreys, a 29-year-old senior reporter at the local Shropshire Star, told his tale in a column for the outlet this week.
Alan Rusbridger, a former editor of The Guardian, called this a "profound and alarming" development in a column in The New Statesman last week.
" Or, as Vox' Dylan Matthews put it in a column earlier this week: "the death loop that American democracy appears to be trapped in.
He endorsed Mr. Obama for re-election in 2012, writing in a column that his views on climate change had been the decisive factor.
A Chinese-Canadian freelancer in Toronto who uses the pen name Xin Feng received death threats online for chastising Mr. Wang in a column.
We're looking for people who can dedicate about 30 minutes a day to the project, and we may use your feedback in a column.
In late November 2015, a large group of Qatari falcon hunters left Doha in a column of 4-by-4 vehicles and headed south.
Tech writer Kate O'Neill floated the theory in a Twitter thread that went viral, which she later expanded on in a column for Wired.
In a column for CNN last year, he wrote that Mr. Mueller would be going too far if he examined the Trump family's finances.
In a column this month in The Guardian that she wrote with other environmental activists, they demanded an end to investments in fossil fuels.
In a column last weekend, Will called on the GOP to keep Trump out of the White House even if he wins the nomination.
A line in a column about Kirsten Gillibrand and the anti-Trump left raised the eyebrows of a couple readers for its perceived sexism.
"Well, Scotland has already been won – and so will the United States," Trump wrote in a column for The Press and Journal newspaper in Aberdeen.
For example in a column just the other day Max Boot wrote that the GOP has become a white nationalist party with a conservative fringe.
Seated in the shadowy interior, you face a tall, narrow light box emitting spectral colors in a column of horizontal bars that taper gradually downward.
It's like a whirlwind of fire: a swirling vortex that comes about when when the hot air near the ground rises quickly in a column.
In a column for Time in which he honors his late wife, Oswalt also shared other details about her life that weren't as well known.
The cartoon, and the Times' attitude towards Israel, was criticized in a column posted Sunday by Bret Stephens, one of the paper's op-ed columnists.
As I pointed out in a column last May , the law (28 CFR 600) grants legal authority to appoint a special counsel to investigate crimes .
" In a column for the Telegraph, writer Alice Vincent described first concerts as "a ritual by which we understand the joy of witnessing live music.
As Roger Cohen recently wrote in The New York Times, in a column commemorating the 15th anniversary of 9/11: The fires burned for weeks.
"Instead, Mr Hammond should focus on keeping fiscal slippage to a minimum while avoiding political risks," Harrison wrote in a column in the Financial Times.
"According to Roger, Elaine was 'riding [his] ass' about me being on Fox," Erickson wrote in a column for the blog he runs, The Resurgent.
"My intuition tells me that it was all predictable," Vladimir I. Markin, spokesman of the Investigative Committee, said in a column published on the Life.
In a column for Shondaland, Castro wrote that his campaign was putting issues of racial and economic justice at the forefront of his policy proposals.
The leader of a union representing 50,000 flight attendants warned in a column for Vox on Thursday that climate change is increasing in-flight turbulence.
In a Christianity Today article, 70% of white evangelical voters said the Supreme Court appointment was a top election concern, Stetzer wrote in a column.
In a column for Wired magazine, Palantir founder Joe Lonsdale outlined various industries where new types of jobs are and will continue to be created.
Giant robot men chase us down, their headless cyborg dogs fight us into submission, and we all go up in a column of drone flame.
Davis Merritt, a columnist for The Wichita Eagle, said in a column in May that state legislators' "deaf and blind" ideology was threatening public schools.
Then I would need to interface with all these governments that he had recently insulted in a column, to try to get him a visa.
In a column for CNN in late August, Young said the union has repeatedly argued that prison employees across the country are underpaid and overworked.
He gave more details in a column published on Monday in which he said the release came thanks to negotiations headed by Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada.
Trust me: A couple of weeks ago, I argued in a column it made little sense to chase the rally, though staying in stocks made sense.
"I jumped at your abortion comment, but for heaven's sake, it was a tweet," he wrote in a column framed as an open letter to Williamson.
The day after gossip writer Walter Winchell referenced Kennedy and Arvad's affair in a column, Kennedy was reassigned to a desk job in Charleston, South Carolina.
Recognition in constitution In a column for the Guardian, where he is Indigenous Affairs Editor, Grant said he was "astounded, humbled and perplexed" by the response.
"Avenatti does not represent us," O'Rourke, a three-term congressman running for U.S. Senate in Texas, told The New York Times in a column published Friday.
"Prime minister Essid is now without partisan support, he is alone engaged in small and large wars," local newspaper Tunisie Telegraph newspaper said in a column.
"I wanted to represent all of the parents who are struggling to raise children in Japan," Ogata wrote later in a column for The Guardian newspaper.
In a column last year, I described this "month without sugar," and I'm still hearing from readers who have done it themselves or are considering it.
Also on Monday, Jezebel republished comments that Mr. Tarantino made to Howard Stern in 2003 in a column arguing that his interview with Deadline was disingenuous.
The move by Canada's Liberal government is aimed at making selection more transparent, Trudeau wrote in a column in the Globe and Mail newspaper on Tuesday.
In a column published on Wednesday in North Korea's main newspaper, Rodong Sinmun, Mr. Xi swore to make "an active contribution" to resolving the nuclear crisis.
" In 2015, in a column in The Washington Post, which called her "the most polarizing woman in evangelicalism," she urged: "Want millennials back in the pews?
The objections to the Tigertones were brought to the forefront in a column written by a sophomore, Noa Wollstein, earlier last week, in The Daily Princetonian.
The New York Times' David Brooks captured Cruz's "apocalyptic" approach in a column this January: Cruz's speeches are marked by what you might call pagan brutalism.
"If he can't jump over the top, he'll creep under the bottom," she wrote in a column extolling their long history just after he was elected.
"Cuban institutions have a legitimate right to adopt required measures in the face of tendentious journalism," the paper's Iroel Sanchez wrote on Wednesday in a column.
"You can't bring that boy down here to Lexington," Rupp said, as quoted by Dave Anderson of The New York Times in a column in 26.
"The Trump hotel may have some political undertones because it is associated with the U.S. president," Mr. Romualdez wrote in a column in a Philippine newspaper.
"The Trump hotel may have some political undertones because it is associated with the U.S. president," Mr. Romualdez wrote in a column in a Philippine newspaper.
I noted as much in a column last May, pointing to O'Rourke's placement on the cover of Vanity Fair and Buttigieg's on the cover of Time.
"Billions of stars form in molecular clouds like these across the galaxy, including, most likely, our own Sun," astronomer Phil Plait explains in a column for Slate.
To define someone as a 'Renegade Jew' in a column about scheming elites written for an audience full of white nationalists is to signal to the sewers.
Ivy, one of the "leftovers," as Ginger calls herself, is one of those friends you know will randomly show up in a column about It Girls someday.
In a column published and since removed from the Star Tribune, a columnist who goes by the name C.J. went after the journalist for her "inappropriate" attire.
The New York Times columnist Ross Douthat made this case in a column during the same outburst of protests, which swept through dozens of campuses that fall.
The government expects implementation of the carmakers' commitments by the end of next year, Deputy Economy Minister Matthias Machnig wrote in a column in the Tagesspiegel newspaper.
Brodkorb, who is currently a columnist for the MinnPost and works in public affairs, initially revealed some of Lewis' radio comments in a column in February 2016.
William McRaven, former head of Special Operations Command, delivered his fiercest criticism of President Donald Trump yet in a column in The New York Times on Thursday.
" Repeating his withering criticism in a column published on Wednesday in the liberal newspaper Haaretz, he wrote, "We accepted the mendacious official Polish narrative, and swallowed it.
My colleague Farhad Manjoo wrote in a column during the week that he no longer trusts Facebook enough to use it to log in to other sites.
He gives us a glimpse of one of the "good ones," James Martin, just as Nicholas Kristof did in a column about Newark's archbishop, Cardinal Joseph Tobin.
It's just that Mark Zuckerberg — and I quote it in a column I'm doing for the New York Times this week — he cannot focus on what happened.
Kim Foxx, the Cook County state's attorney, wrote in a column in The Chicago Tribune that she wanted records in Mr. Smollett's case to be made public.
In a column posted online before the 2016 statehouse debate, he called marijuana "a dangerous drug" and said any form of legalization could be a slippery slope.
"Once you get to the heart of them — the tenderest part — they reveal an unmitigated sweet, nutty goodness," she writes in a column for The Times Magazine.
He was mentioned as a potential draft challenger for an outside party bid for the 2016 presidency in a column published in The Washington Post, among others.
In a column on the area's history for the news website Honolulu Civil Beat, Alan D. McNarie said the risks since then have only become more apparent.
According to Esquire, he also defended Trump in a column in the Observer, after the candidate tweeted an image of Hilary Clinton with a Star of David.
In a column for CNN, film critic Gene Seymour wrote that Cosby's conviction in April was a final blow to the battered reputation of an American icon.
In a column in Huffington Post, David Rehr laments that just 25 percent of advocacy organizations use an app for fly-in meeting scheduling and event logistics.
In a column published Tuesday, opinion writer Kathleen Parker referenced Sanders asking reporters earlier this week to say what they were thankful for before asking a question.
In a column last summer about the issue, John Simpson, a veteran BBC journalist, defended the organization, while saying that more people than ever had such complaints.
House Speaker Paul Ryan will vote for presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump, Ryan wrote in a column submitted to The Gazette, his hometown Wisconsin newspaper, on Thursday.
Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan, calling the lawsuits "a mistake," revealed their decision in a column published online in The Garden Island News, a newspaper on Kauai.
Typically, contestants start with the first, lowest-dollar-value answer in a column and complete all of the clues in one column before moving on to the next.
"In the eyes of the West, Russia appears to be the source of most uncomfortable social changes," wrote Maxim Trudolyubov in a column in Vedomosti, an independent daily.
Campbell recounted the discriminatory experience in a column for her news outlet Tuesday, sparking outrage from journalists and politicians who saw the decision as odd, arcane and sexist.
"This is the moment for progressive forces to affect the fate of Europe," Gentiloni wrote in a column to be published Saturday by the German media group RND.
This metric, which measures the amount of water in a column of air, puts that region "in record territory," the National Weather Service said in a technical discussion.
"Simply listing an unquoted company overseas does not in itself make the stock more liquid," FCA Chief Executive Andrew Bailey wrote in a column in the Financial Times.
The BoE will probably have to loosen monetary policy further if the economy worsens, McCafferty said in a column published in the British newspaper the Times on Tuesday.
Smith first started writing about the inclusion rider, or something similar, as early as 2014, where she mentioned an "equity clause" in a column for the Hollywood Reporter.
In a column for Fortune, she reflected on owing the IRS over $50,000 in deferred taxes and owing more than $170,000 in credit card and student loan debt.
Michelle McNamara, wife of comedian Patton Oswalt, dies at 46 Oswalt also paid tribute to his late wife in a column he wrote for Time magazine in May.
In a column published Monday in the Financial Times, the former Treasury secretary also pointed to the flattening yield curve as one key predictor of a forthcoming recession.
"This move is indicative of the disregard Lula has for Brazil's legal system," said Merval Pereira, a prominent political commentator, in a column in the newspaper O Globo.
I explained this in more detail in a column last year ("Panicked Borrowers, and the Education Department's Unsettling Silence"), which contains many links to more resources and instructions.
I wrote about the Philadelphia restaurateurs Mike Solomonov and Steven Cook this week, in a column for The Times that includes their recipe for Jerusalem mixed grill (above).
Human beings generally like to be in control or to hand over control to a trained professional, as I wrote last week in a column about driverless cars.
In a column in February, the Haggler wrote about the many consignors who said that Dusty Old Cars charged them for repairs that were unnecessary or never performed.
"It seems that Alitalia workers have all gone nuts," Simone Filippetti, a finance and economy reporter at the Italian daily Il Sole 24 Ore, wrote in a column.
China's economy was nearly five times larger than that of India and its annual defense spending four times larger, he wrote in a column in the Indian Express.
"In a column in The New York Times on Friday, Soros wrote that Zuckerberg and Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg "should not be left in control of Facebook.
In a column for The Motley Fool, Matthew Frankel estimates the average tax paid in 22019 was $14,040, totaling about $140,000 in taxes for a 10 year period.
Finally, one reader took offence at a sentence in a column about President Trump's first budget proposal — which, the author argued, reflected working-class resentment of the poor.
A refreshed NAFTA agreement may very well contain some of the harmful provisions in the TPP, especially regarding stricter copyright rules, Geist noted in a column on Thursday.
Gorbachev, in a column for the New York Times newspaper, said the U.S. move was "a dire threat to peace" that he still hoped might be reversed through negotiations.
The model, 29, opened up about the experience and what she worried about most about her ex's wedding to Meghan Markle in a column for U.K. magazine The Spectator.
"The relationship can be saved and improved provided that the U.S. administration takes Turkey's security concerns seriously," Ibrahim Kalin wrote in a column in pro-government Daily Sabah newspaper.
" Writer Robert Gehrke had called for Huntsman to resign in a column published in the same newspaper on Tuesday, saying the ambassador works "for a pawn, not a president.
While I originally dismissed Jefferson's objections as an overreaction, I have, since, in a column published elsewhere in 2011, come to the conclusion that he had a legitimate point.
Recently, in a column published in the Hill, Lee Saunders, president of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, argued that Puerto Rico needs a Marshall Plan.
Benedict, who resigned as pope in 2628, argued in a column translated for the National Catholic Register that social upheaval in the 28500s led to wider acceptance of pedophilia.
"These moves would divide us at home and compromise our moral leadership around the world," Mr. Bloomberg said in a column published Monday on Bloomberg View, his opinion site.
"The President is an underdog now in his bid for a second term," wrote Stu Rothenberg, founder of the Rothenberg Political Report, in a column published late last week.
"What makes the loss heavy is actually a secret known by everyone," Cigdem Toker, an investigative reporter with the fiercely opposition newspaper, Sozcu, wrote in a column on Wednesday.
Kobach cited a white nationalist in a column for Breitbart, and once attended a writers workshop for the Social Contract Press, a publishing house that releases white nationalist material.
" In a column published on Saturday, Amos Harel, a military affairs analyst for the liberal Israeli Haaretz newspaper, wrote: "Hundreds of millions of people worldwide will watch the Eurovision.
Bruni: There you go again, lobbying for your beloved Amy Coney Barrett, whose nomination you once accurately tweeted — and I mentioned your tweet in a column of my own!
Abramowitz's conclusion, written in a column for Sabato's Crystal Ball, was unequivocal (emphasis mine): Democratic candidates who endorsed Medicare for All did significantly worse than those who did not.
A kid wanders around wearing a white sweatshirt with a YouTube logo on the front and the words CREATOR CREATOR CREATOR CREATOR CREATOR in a column on the back.
"Since many Windows machines look alike, Apple is one of the few manufacturers that can gain by product placement," Ebert wrote in a column for the Chicago Sun-Times.
Erdogan made his remarks in a column published on the Politico website on Saturday, ahead of a summit in Berlin on Sunday that will try to stabilise the country.
"The U.S. is no longer a champion of free trade as a nation," wrote Genki Fujii, visiting professor at Takushoku University in Tokyo, in a column in Evening Fuji.
Several of the association's findings were echoed by Gavin Polone, the film's producer, in a column in The Hollywood Reporter, and by Birds and Animals Unlimited on its website.
" As New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof wrote in a column yesterday, Obama urgently requested Zika funding back in February, "and Congress since then has done nothing but talk.
Levi Strauss & Co. CEO Chris Bergh said the company is "stepping up our support" for gun violence prevention with donations, partnerships and grants, he announced in a column for Fortune.
In a column published in December in the Sun Sentinel, Mr. Tracy said the Pozners had mounted a "vicious attack" on him meant to intimidate his employer into firing him.
The actor spoke out against the Sultan of Brunei, the head of the Brunei Investment Agency, which owns the Dorchester Collection of hotels and resorts in a column for Deadline.
In a column in Forbes, Gottlieb wrote that candidate Trump was tackling skyrocketing drug prices with an "aged" concept: importing medications from countries such as Canada that impose price controls.
In a column published The Guardian in November of this year, the actress implored people living with mental illness to reach out and find groups, support and others like them.
As Michael Schur excellently explained in a column on Trout's popularity, baseball is a "confederacy of fan bases," and the fan base Votto plays in front of is relatively small.
"As the call was transferred our cat (yes that bloody cat) came flying through the cat-flap," Gayford, a television presenter, wrote in a column for the Spinoff news website.
I talked to James Poniewozik, our television critic, about what makes this round of impeachment so much different from prior ones, an idea he wrote about in a column today.
It "was, literally, about the use of women's bodies to sell a product — or a place," the author Jennifer Weiner recently wrote in a column in The New York Times.
But Duyeon Kim, a Seoul-based analyst, writes in a column in the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists that "denuclearization" means vastly different things to the United States and North Korea.
"While the macroeconomic picture looks stable and promising, many important segments need support from the government," BJP General Secretary Ram Madhav wrote in a column in the Indian Express daily.
"He asked how I had become involved in the protest and I mentioned the Center for Jewish Nonviolence," Mr. Beinart wrote in a column published in The Forward on Monday.
"(Russian President Vladimir) Putin is using growing hybrid capabilities to subvert, undermine, and influence countries around the world," Williamson said in a column in Sunday's edition of Britain's Sunday Telegraph.
Paul Tash, chairman and CEO of the Times, warned in a column last month that the tariffs would add about $3 million in newsprint costs and could lead to layoffs.
In a column called "The Piece I Knew I Would Have to Write," Tree of Life's Myers said he wept when he heard the news from New Zealand last week.
In a column published Tuesday in The Detroit News, Ron Bieber said deals like NAFTA have been a "total trainwreck for Michigan" and have destroyed tens of thousands of jobs.
In 2008, the website Comic Mix received a cease-and-desist letter for using one of his cartoons in a column looking back at the end of The Far Side.
"The Turkish military, together with the Free Syrian Army, will cross the Turkish-Syrian border shortly," Altun wrote in a tweet and in a column published in the Washington Post.
Most recently, new hire Bari Weiss linked to a fake Twitter account as virtually her only evidence in a column devoted to the supposed epidemic of totalitarianism sweeping US universities.
ENVIRONMENT In a column for the Wall Street Journal, establishment Republican luminaries James Baker and George Schultz proposed a "conservative answer to climate change," which is to enact a carbon tax.
Aheda Zanetti, the Australian designer credited as the burkini's inventor, argued that the government's reasoning behind the ban completely missed the point of the garment, in a column for The Guardian.
The case has given people the illusion that their opinion counts, Ekho Moskvy's Plushev wrote in a column, saying people had been given the impression they could decide the men's fate.
"Since the Japanese government cannot accept the proposal without abandoning its claim ... it has no choice but to reject it," Brown wrote in a column in the English-language Japan Times.
"My team have given me a few different exercises to do during the day when we're together, and also at home in the evening," Murray wrote in a column for BBC.
I venture (as I did in a column in January) that the very problems of British Islam make it all the more pressing to draw its representatives into the country's politics.
In a column in Yeni Safak, a daily newspaper, Aydin Unal, an MP from Mr Erdogan's Justice and Development party (AK), suggested that American army officers took part in the fighting.
With his name cleared, Holbrooke then leaked details of the whole affair to right-wing talk show host Robert Novak, who mocked Brzezinski in a column for believing the Soviet fabrication.
You'll be able to view sub-folders in a column alongside your main folders, and a new preview pane lets you see images and other content without having to open it.
I addressed this in detail in a column in 2008, but here's the short course: Various ratings companies grade insurance companies, and you can check those ratings on the insurers' websites.
I wondered in a column that night why Wendy Larry, Old Dominion's coach, had not directly challenged Jolly at the point of attack with her aggressive, all-American guard, Ticha Penicheiro.
"The ENA has come to symbolize exactly that which so many French people loathe: elitism," Alain Klarsfeld, a professor at the Toulouse Business School, wrote in a column in Le Monde.
"Joker is the antihero the alienated and angry have been waiting for, and that's precisely the problem," wrote Sarah Hagi in a column about the film for the Globe and Mail.
"The president should use his executive authority — as he so often has to drain the swamp — to remove this prosperity-killing practice," he wrote in a column for CNBC in August.
"The rapid loss of so many senior officers has a serious, immediate, and tangible effect on the capacity of the United States to shape world events," Stephenson wrote in a column.
Will has been an outspoken critic of Trump, writing in a column in April that the presumptive GOP presidential nominee is imperiling Republican chances of maintaining its majority in the Senate.
Asael Nuche, risk director for Etellekt, a consultancy that studies the issue, said in a column published in El Heraldo de Mexico that the government's moves were costly and ultimately insecure.
"If the British people dislike the arrangement that we have negotiated with the EU, the agreement will allow a future government to diverge," Gove wrote in a column in the Daily Telegraph.
In a column in Tuesday's edition of Mexico's Reforma newspaper, Heath said it would also be "extremely difficult" to lower interest rates in Mexico if the United States keeps raising borrowing costs.
"There is talk of another recording," Hurriyet newspaper journalist Abdulkadir Selvi wrote in a column, saying the purported call took place between Prince Mohammed and his brother, Saudi Arabia's ambassador to Washington.
Boston Globe columnist Renee Graham, who also identifies as a member of the LGBT community, argued in a column that black voters are reluctant to support Buttigieg because of his policy record.
Apple's Slide Over feature, which allows you to pin an app to the side of your iPad's screen in a column view alongside another app, is getting a noteworthy update in iPadOS.
Based on information provided to The New York Times, an earlier version of this article rendered incorrectly a quotation from Abraham Lincoln that Mr. Bloomberg cited in a column in Bloomberg View.
As I wrote in a column this summer, standard practice after a big run-up in stocks is to rebalance — meaning, to take profits out of stocks and put them into bonds.
The purchase price to Real Wood on the invoice was $65,842, and in a column across the page was a line item for the additional tax the company had to pay: $6,584.20.
Max Boot, the former Republican who has become one of Mr. Trump's sharpest critics, noted in a column on Monday in The Washington Post that accusing him of treason was once unthinkable.
"Intent is the get-out-of-jail-free card for both the player and those who are meant to police the player," Chamblee wrote in a column for the Golf Channel's website.
"The window for denuclearization closed a long time ago," Jeffrey Lewis, the director of the East Asia Nonproliferation Program at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies, wrote in a column this week.
YPG fighters could either defect or Ankara would have to "stop them from disrupting our counter-Islamic State efforts", he wrote in a tweet and in a column in the Washington Post.
I last wrote about the issue in 0003, in a column (which appears below this update) about a ruling against Johnson & Johnson related to a claim that the powder caused ovarian cancer.
His comments are documented and mocked in a column in The Guardian thanks to reporter John Armstrong, which opens the palace up to a level of criticism they have never previously faced.
"In reality, blockchain is one of the most overhyped technologies ever," Roubini said in a column along with Preston Byrne, a fellow of the Adam Smith Institute, on the Project Syndicate website.
In a column this week in The News & Observer, the Raleigh newspaper, Professor Reynolds said the system's "electoral integrity score" for North Carolina ranked the state alongside Cuba, Indonesia and Sierra Leone.
FRONT PAGE An article on April 11 about London in the aftermath of the March 22 terror attack described incorrectly a point Katie Hopkins made in a column in the Daily Mail.
In a column for Monday's edition of Handelsblatt, extracts of which were released on Sunday, the Chinese Premier denied accusations Beijing was trying to split the bloc by investing in eastern European states.
In a column for Today written last week, Thomas, 44, revealed that her husband Michael suffered a stroke earlier this year, and spent more than six weeks at the hospital while in rehabilitation.
Sherman is doing what he can now to get the word out, including referencing Oxeia in a column he published in the San Francisco Chronicle about the limitations of the NFL's concussion policy.
Highlight the first cells in a column containing a series (such as days of the week or successive numbers), then drag down the blue handle in the bottom right corner to continue it.
In a column for The Hollywood Reporter, actress Anna Graham Hunter said the actor was "openly flirtatious" with her, asking for a foot massage, groping her bum and talking about sex to her.
Here's how I divvy up my work for the day: I begin by putting four to five tasks — some easy, some I'm looking forward to and some I've been procrastinating — in a column.
In a column last month, conservative thinker Kathleen Parker wrote about her feelings on Trump after the President tweeted a video of him clotheslining a body with a CNN logo as its head.
PARIS (Reuters) - Ditching the euro to return to the franc would increase French borrowing costs, European Central Bank policymaker Francois Villeroy de Galhau warned in a column for Le Figaro published on Monday.
Legal expert Jeffrey Toobin wrote in a column for The New Yorker on Thursday that there "is little doubt that the President could ultimately find a compliant Justice Department official" to fire Mueller.
And in a column on Friday, CNBC's Patti Domm nicely portrayed the way individual investors have been embracing stocks more eagerly, which tends to happen in the latter phases of a market ascent.
Then-staff writer Eric Hartley wrote about the case in a column in The Capital -- which left Ramos in a seething rage that lasted all the way up to the massacre this week.
Post political correspondent Dan Balz argued in a column Thursday that Mueller's testimony "shattered" the "illusions" of Trump being forced out of office in any way besides a Democratic victory on Election Day.
In a column written in The New York Times, the former Pennsylvania senator wrote that after his wife died when he was 70, he didn't expect to fall in love again and remarry.
"The relationship can be saved and improved provided that the U.S. administration takes Turkey's security concerns seriously," spokesman Ibrahim Kalin wrote in a column for the Turkish pro-government newspaper the Daily Sabah.
You can either include these in the sections where you learned them or create a separated list of special skills in a column on the side or at the bottom of your resume.
Hill was reprimanded for her remarks, and in a column for the Undefeated last September, Hill said that while she stands by her beliefs, she did not make them in the correct forum.
Gonzales argued in a column in The Washington Post that Trump should be allowed to question a judge's fairness, saying that questioning a judge is crucial to ensuring public trust in the courts.
" In one example, she pointed out that the book says Rupert Murdoch called Trump "a f-----g idiot," but in a column, Wolff quoted Murdoch as saying Trump was "a f-----g moron.
As Apple talks to insurance companies and others about sharing the information, the device could become "the handmaiden to another data-hungry industry," John Hermann wrote in a column for the Sunday magazine.
" In a column that appeared two days after the attack, the Daily News writer, Mike McAlary, cited questions raised by police investigators about her account, under a headline: "Rape Hoax the Real Crime.
" In Bustle, in a column titled "How Women Will Change Politics In 2018 (And Why)," Alicia Menendez wrote confidently, "From the Women's March to the #MeToo Movement, this year women drove monumental change.
"It's on everyone who knows the difference between right and wrong to resist this grotesque excuse for a president when he comes here," Mr. Murray wrote in a column for the newspaper Metro.
Janan Ganesh, a political columnist for The Financial Times, said in a column on Monday that "May's wobbles bode badly for Brexit," meaning the negotiations over Britain's pending withdrawal from the European Union.
"The News & Eagle will continue to comment editorially on President Trump, just as we've commented on the actions of his predecessors," Mr. Funk wrote in a column on Tuesday about the endorsement controversy.
In a column for Bloomberg View, Stephen Carter, a professor of law at Yale University, said he often and passionately disagreed with Scalia, but recalled him as a brilliant scholar and jurist nonetheless.
On both regular YouTube and Kids YouTube (the YouTube app designed for use by kids), recommended videos show up on the homepage, as well in a column or row next to every video.
In a column published last week, Saudi-owned Al Arabiya channel's General Manager Turki Aldakhil warned that imposing sanctions on Riyadh could spark global economic disaster as oil could jump to $200 per barrel.
"Both sides have an interest in a new start in the bilateral relationship as we live in a time full of challenges," Cavusoglu wrote in a column for Germany's Funke media group of newspapers.
"If China decides to ban rare earths export to the US, it would produce complex effects, including incurring certain losses on China itself," the state-run tabloid Global Times said in a column Wednesday.
The result, Javier Corrales, an Amherst College political scientist, wrote in a column last week, has been the steady "militarization of democracies" — culminating in this month's drumbeat of presidential appearances alongside their top brass.
ECB President Mario Draghi has defended the bank and, this weekend, ECB policymaker Benoit Coeure hit back at critics, defending the bank's policies in a column in Germany's Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung newspaper, Reuters reported.
"It's human nature to zero in on threats: evolution wired us to worry about the animals that want to eat us," Gates wrote in a column in "Time" magazine about his optimism in January.
The former head of Hong Kong's legislature and pro-establishment heavyweight, Jasper Tsang, wrote in a column last week that the government should "admit frankly" the arrangement does not comply with the Basic Law.
As Boris Titov, Russia's business ombudsman, wrote in a column in support of Mr Calvey, the interference of siloviki (former and current members of the security services) in commercial activity is a "systemic problem".
If Doctor Copper really has that degree in economics, he's telling us that a global recession may be on its way, a prospect discussed by my colleague John Kemp in a column last week.
You could rush reinforcements across the map to an imperiled fort in a column formation… but if that column got ambushed, they'd fight at a massive combat penalty for the duration of the battle.
Goodwin, who is reportedly friendly with the president, said in a column published late Tuesday that the largest numbers of emails came from people "who are sick with hatred" and insulted Trump and Goodwin.
In a column about Bloomberg's survey, Business Insider's Matthew DeBord cited BMW's healthy profit margins, wide variety of vehicle offerings, and stable US market share as reasons why BMW is not threatened by Tesla.
Marion Hammer, a past president of the NRA and one of the group's most successful lobbyists, denounced unsanctioned candidates in a column on the website Ammoland just as Kraut appeared on the 2018 ballot.
"Maybe if we took all the cash we spend on pandas and just bought rainforest with it, we might be doing a better job," wrote naturalist Chris Peckham in a column in The Guardian.
In a column about his pardon written Wednesday for Canada's National Post, a publication he founded, Black details the call he received from Trump last week in which he was informed about the pardon.
In a column in the American Interest published days after Trump's election, Cohen dished out advice for foreign policy experts who have opposed Trump on whether they should accept a job in the administration.
"Let me tell you, eight days of strikes will completely shatter the port of Algeciras," Manuel Moron, who heads up the port authority there, wrote in a column, in EuropaSur local newspaper on Monday.
He described the episode in a column written at Stanford in 251, after Los Angeles had erupted in fire and rage over the acquittal of three police officers in the beating of Rodney King.
RELATED: Michael Bloomberg decides against run for president Trump's proposals "would divide us at home and compromise our moral leadership around the world," Bloomberg previously wrote in a column on Bloomberg View, his opinion site.
Angry: 32% Hopeful: 19603% One week after my poll, on April 2, Lynne Vavreck, a political science professor at UCLA, challenged the conventional wisdom about angry voters in a column for The NY Times' Upshot.
EARLIER this month, in a column in a state-owned newspaper entitled "The Truth behind the Northern Rakhine Issue", a retired general decided to rebut the "absolute absurdities" he had read in the international media.
In a column published by British newspaper The Telegraph, Donald Trump Jr. claimed that Brexit would have been dealt within a few short months if U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May had followed his father's advice.
In a column entitled "Sorry, ladies — equal pay has to be earned," columnist Kevin Myers suggested it was no coincidence two of the BBC's best-paid female presenters, Claudia Winkleman and Vanessa Feltz, were Jewish.
In fact, they are natural phenomena caused by hot air rising in a column during a large fire, such as a forest fire, and then swirling into a vortex as much as 30 metres high.
" In a column written for Univision, the congressman accused Sanders — who voted against comprehensive immigration reform in 2006 — of breaking with Democrats and standing with "the hard-line anti-immigrant wing of the Republican Party.
A week later, Michael Chan, a Chinese-Canadian who was Ontario's provincial minister of citizenship, immigration and international trade, defended China's human rights practices in a column on a Canadian Chinese-language website, 51.ca.
Gregg Doyel wrote in a column for the Indianapolis Star that Pence had staged the walkout as the Colts played against the San Francisco 49ers on Sunday and that "Pence knew" players would be kneeling.
He also writes a column in the Telegraph and has written for GQ.  In a column published in The Telegraph on Sunday, Johnson compared issues at the Irish border to the moon landing in 1969.
In a column for the Los Angeles Times , titled "Harvard Witch Hunt Burns the Incorrect at the Stake," Dershowitz acknowledged that the parody was "somewhat" offensive, but argued that the response indicated a systemic problem.
This weeks' theater reinforced a point Farhad Manjoo makes in a column this week: A few giant technology platforms are serving as giant amplifiers for some voices — often in ways that aren't beneficial for society.
"There is no getting away from the fact that hunting down your own citizens as antinational is now part of the ideological construct of this government," he wrote in a column for The Indian Express.
"Now, all the cynics out there might look and say, that was a neat idea to try to pardon 49,000 lives during Oscar season," Weinstein wrote in a column for the trade Web site Deadline.
"For Democrats who might be rooting for Donald Trump, thinking he would be easy to beat in November, I have some advice: Be careful what you wish for," Robinson wrote in a column on Tuesday.
In a column on Wednesday, Murat Yetkin of the Hurriyet Daily News wrote that Pompeo had "prejudgments" regarding Turkey, citing the deleted tweet, and he added that it was not easy to erase people's memories.
In a column earlier this year, David Rehr notes that while 70 percent of advocacy organizations use Facebook, only 10 percent utilize the platform to communicate messages directly to congressional offices on a monthly basis.
Buttigieg was the first major openly gay presidential candidate, and he challenged and changed Americans' preconceptions of what such a candidacy would look like, as I wrote in a column just before the Iowa caucuses.
"The predators, most of them media and Hollywood liberals, would still be in power," Michael Goodwin wrote in a column in The New York Post that Mr. Trump recommended to his 46.6 million Twitter followers.
In a column on Monday, Folau explained his rationale for making the remarks and said he had offered to walk away from the sport if RA found itself in an untenable position with sponsors and fans.
"The idea of leaving the euro and devaluing our currency to run up bigger deficits overlooks the fact that financing French debt would cost significantly more," Villeory warned in a column for Le Figaro published Monday.
In a column published in the Egyptian state newspaper al-Ahram ahead of a visit by President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to Moscow next week, Lavrov praised what he described as a "multifaceted partnership" with Egypt.
In a column for the Daily Beast website, entertainment reporter Kevin Fallon called Holliday a gay icon for her work on Broadway and said that Trump had surrounded himself with politicians who vocally oppose LGBT rights.
The model Grace Bol, who bears more than a passing resemblance to Grace Jones, prowled the room in a column dress of chain mail, in vibrant Miami Sound Machine shades of purple, emerald green and gold.
" In 2017, New York Times political columnist Bret Stephens also said he was done with the platform in a column calling Twitter "the political pornography of our time" and claiming it was "debasing to its users.
And as I wrote in a column some time ago, let's unite decent people everywhere to save the people of Syria and condemn Bashar Assad and Vladimir Putin for committing, aiding and abetting crimes against humanity.
"Rational concerns about national security are being swept to one side because of the desperate desire for Chinese trade and investment," Timothy wrote in October 2015 in a column for a conservative news and comment website.
She wrote in a column this week that the Hearth & Hound and other restaurants whose leaders had been caught abusing people would be stripped from the site's lists, guides and other forms of non-news coverage.
McDougall, who wrote about his adventures with Sherman in a column for The Times, wrote a book about it too: "Running With Sherman: The Donkey With the Heart of a Hero," which came out on Tuesday.
"This has been a turnaround move for Chinese on the big screen after years of being kept down by Hollywood-manufactured heroes," Hu Xijin, the editor of Global Times, a popular tabloid, wrote in a column.
In a column for Bloomberg View headlined "Trump Did Something Good This Week," Mr. Sunstein said the regulatory status quo is ridiculous — though he specifically did not support Mr. Trump's repeal of the flood protection procedures.
In a column for Mexican newspaper El Universal published on Wednesday, Seade said that "very high protection" for biomedicines will be "eased drastically", adding that he could not give more details on the matter for now.
In a column for Mexican newspaper El Universal, deputy foreign minister Jesus Seade said "very high protection" for the drugs will be "eased drastically" in changes under discussion for the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA).
But as expat journalist Avtar Singh notes, in a column on searching for the familiar through food while abroad, for a transplanted family that has grown up thinking of Maggi as a weekend treat—why not?
In comments that have become part of the public case against him, Moore laid out in a column in 2014 his view that if rising women's wages mean they earn more than men, families could be destabilized.
Some of Credit Suisse's biggest shareholders, Qatar Investment Authority and Olayan Financing Company, are investing heavily in contingent convertible bonds (CoCos) issued by the bank, a former trader wrote in a column published by Swiss newspaper Sonntagszeitung.
" It's a point he emphasized in a column he wrote for Money in 2018: "If I'd stayed, I would have been trapped by that success; the money would have gotten too big, and my life would've changed.
In one of their discussions, recalled by Mr. Jenkins in a column he wrote years later, Dr. King marveled that he, a descendant of slaves, was sitting and talking with Mr. Jenkins, a descendant of slave owners.
"It is easy to hate Bob Kerrey and ask him to resign as the head of the board of Fulbright University Vietnam," Luong Hoai Nam, an aviation businessman, wrote in a column in the online newspaper VnExpress.
"This Colbertist instinct — that French wealth should serve the French state — runs deep among its elite," he said in a column in Politico, referring to Jean-Baptiste Colbert, French king Louis XIV's minister of finance and industry.
Whereas Anchor starts its Junipero in a column still (which distills to a higher proof and thus nullifies the inherent flavors of the grain), it uses the same pot still for both its whisky and its genever.
" Late last month, the Times of London critic Richard Morrison slammed Ms. Rice's short tenure in a column that ran online with the headline "The Globe has been a success story — and Emma Rice is wrecking it.
"My depression took root in the beginning of my middle school years and will be with me for the rest of my life," she wrote in a column in the Deerfield Academy's student publication in February 2016.
With a background as a dancer and choreographer, she began regularly contributing to The Village Voice in 1967, in a column that looked at dance with the sensitivity and generosity of someone who knew its inner workings.
And I in frustration, feeling all solemn,Wished I could capture my woe in a column, When out on the web there arose such a clatter,I signed in to Twitter to see what was the matter.
"There is something about the wider trend of casting older women aimed at making middle-aged and young women feel good that feels rather cynical," Sandra Howard wrote last year in a column for The Daily Mail.
The director Chris Columbus "apparently used to send Daniel Radcliffe to fetch her from her trailer because he was scared of her," the Evening Standard&aposs chief theater critic, Nick Curtis, wrote in a column published Thursday.
In a column on Breitbart News, Mr. Kobach suggested that the case was a comeuppance for Democrats and voting-rights advocates who oppose the stringent controls on voting that Republicans have enacted for a decade or more.
"Donald Trump isn't going to be the Republican nominee," Ross Douthat bluntly stated in a column for The New York Times last week, although he admitted that this flat prediction was becoming more difficult to argue with conviction.
"Bachelor workers are eroding the privacy and comfort of families," Rashed Al Fadeh, a Qatari journalist, wrote in a column for local Arabic-language daily al-Sharq last year, saying workers overrunning neighborhoods was damaging Qatar's social fabric.
In a column for The New York Times this week, Norman Eisen and Richard Painter -- former White House ethics lawyers who now serve, respectively, as CREW's chairman and vice chairman -- linked the emoluments case to the travel ban.
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Music producer Russell Simmons said on Thursday he was stepping down from his fashion and production businesses after a screenwriter said in a column in the Hollywood Reporter that Simmons sexually assaulted her in 1991.
She has also tackled the tension between speed and accuracy as organizations like The Times move into the fast-paced realm of digital news, most recently in a column about reporting on the death of Justice Antonin Scalia.
In 2016, the issue cropped up again, when Ning Jizhe, director of the National Bureau of Statistics, wrote in a column for Communist party agent the People's Daily that some data was false, according to The Financial Times .
Last month in a column for the New York Times, Gorbachev denounced the United States after President Donald Trump said he planned to quit the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces treaty which Gorbachev and Ronald Reagan signed in 1987.
David Frum, himself an anti-Trump conservative, implicitly responded to Brooks in a column at The Atlantic, where he warns that anti-Trumpism only seems to be in decline because Americans are becoming numb to the president's depredations.
Charlotte Edwardes, the assistant editor of The Sunday Times, wrote in a column for the newspaper that Johnson put his hand on her leg during his time as the editor of The Spectator, a renowned British political magazine.
"When President Abraham Lincoln created the United States Department of Agriculture in 230, he referred to it as the People's Department," Mr. Paige wrote in 2599 in a column for The San Marcos Daily Record, a Texas newspaper.
Thomas J. Reese, a commissioner of the United States Commission on International Religious Freedom, which listed Myanmar as one of the worst countries in that category, wrote this past week in a column for the Religion News Service.
Like other spinning blazes, it began with updrafts and inflows—the hot air that rises in a column from a fire and the cool air that rushes in at the base of that column to replace it, respectively.
"The lack of women in medicine meant the medical canon about menstruation was first created by literally the least informed people: those who had never had a period," Gunter wrote in a column for The New York Times.
Coordinating accessories like clips and hooks let you take advantage of vertical hanging space: Attach a pair of pants or a skirt to the bottom bar, or string multiple hangers together in a column, one below the next.
In a column for The Los Angeles Times, Mr. Salem said he would move the manufacturing operation of his company, Argyle Haus of Apparel, from San Fernando to Las Vegas, where the base wage is $20143 an hour.
The Times sportswriter Arthur Daley, in a column two days after his death, may have best summed up the attitude toward Johnson, comparing him with another black heavyweight great, Joe Louis, who was seen as more socially respectable.
Howie Carr, a conservative author, wrote in a column for the Boston Herald that Trump seemed "cool, calm and collected," chatting with McCarthy and Carr about Democratic contenders in the 2020 Election like Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren.
"The talent being shown the door now is not only our top talent, but also talent that cannot be replicated overnight," she wrote in a column set to be published in the American Foreign Service Association's December journal.
" In a column for the Guardian, Cheddar Gorgeous wrote that the mission of the protest is "to stand in solidarity with all marginalized groups who are affected by Trump's administration and the rhetoric of intolerance that fuels it.
"Prioritizing cost management over the needs of our veterans and others with hearing loss is wrong and would be a tremendous mistake," Robert Eugene Richardson, a Vietnam veteran, wrote in a column for Stars & Stripes earlier this month.
In a column in Le Figaro published on Sunday, Xi made clear he wanted Paris to cooperate in the Belt and Road project, calling for more trade and investment in sectors ranging from nuclear energy, aeronautics and agriculture.
They voiced concern about a "culture of impunity" on the island, a problem that the Ms. Caruana Galizia had put at the center of her online blog, Running Commentary, and in a column in The Malta Independent newspaper.
"Until now, our government has not had a clear and timely response to [Trump's proposed] draconian tariffs ... to defend the access of cars made in Mexico to the American market," he wote in a column in La Jornada newspaper.
In a column for the Daily Mail, Morgan asked why someone like Manigault Newman, who he describes as "relentlessly loathsome" and accuses of propositioning him for sex to win a reality show, was offered a job in the administration.
In a column for Vox, she explained it this way: States diverge on whether breasts are covered under sexual battery law; in some states, sexual battery only occurs when the perpetrator touches the anus or genitals of another person.
For aspiring startup founders, it's a "confusing time in the so-called Unicorn story," as Erin Griffith put it in a column last May — an asset bubble that never really popped, but which at the very least is deflating.
The U.S. Crop Watch growers report decent progression of the corn and soybean harvests last week, and the overall sentiment toward the crop is unchanged on the week, Karen Braun, a market analyst for Reuters, wrote in a column.
In a column for Medium, the Trainwreck star claims that Beyoncé and Jay Z gave the video — which sees her and Goldie Hawn imitating Bey's moves without really touching on the racial politics that inspired them — the go-ahead.
Since the company is motorized, their BTR-60 vehicles and the tank platoon—one T-55 and two T-62s—advance slowly in a column down the two-lane road which divides the city in eastern and western sections.
But Mr. Johnson now says, in a column in The Telegraph, that Britons will continue to be able to live, work and travel freely to other European countries, a privilege the E.U. countries will certainly not grant without reciprocity.
"I know these rules apply across the global game but this is the women's World Cup... it is no place for experiments, or to treat women as guinea pigs," Hayes wrote in a column here for The Times newspaper.
The political editor of the Spectator magazine, which has close links to the Conservatives, said in a column for the Sun newspaper that there had been an agreement to an initial "comprehensive customs arrangement" very like a customs union.
The Washington Post's David Ignatius raised a troubling possibility in a column last week: what if President Donald Trump's and Rudy Giuliani's apparent quid-pro-quo with Ukraine this year may not have been the first of its kind?
Sheriff Joe Baron of Norfolk, Va., said in a column published in The Virginian-Pilot this week that such an agreement with ICE had recently expired, but he denied that it was under political pressure or over community opposition.
Frank-Walter Steinmeier, the German foreign minister, wrote in a column this week for the German newspaper Bild that, with Mr. Trump's election, "the old world of the 20th century is gone" and that Germany could confront drastic changes.
"We call on the Syrian regime and its supporters, especially the Russians, to end this offensive and return to the ceasefire arrangements of autumn 2018," the 14 ministers said in a column published in French daily newspaper Le Monde.
But in a column published by state-owned Al Akhbar newspaper, Sawiris said the deal was still awaiting security clearance, adding that the hold-up was the latest move by authorities to prevent him owning a large financial institution.
In a column in the Sunday Times newspaper, May said she will present a "new, bold offer" to lawmakers with "an improved package of measures" in a final attempt to get the Brexit divorce deal through parliament before she leaves office.
He refused to vote for Donald Trump in 2016, writing in a column explaining his objections to Hillary Clinton: A case so strong that, against any of a dozen possible GOP candidates, voting for her opponent would be a no-brainer.
In a column for Liberation, journalist Vincent Glad suggested that recent changes to the Facebook algorithm – which have prioritized content created by groups over that of pages, including those of traditional media outlets – have provided the mechanism to promote these people.
"All the signs of God's judgment of a nation, or a civilization, seem to be on us," Michael Brendan Dougherty wrote in a column titled "This election is God's judgment on us" in The Week, published the day before the election.
Tom Edsall featured it in a column (he says it raises "issues that are rarely examined with the rigor necessary to affirm or deny their legitimacy"), and David Brooks recommended it twice, lauding the "incredible data," along with the analysis.
In a column in the New York Times from February 13, 1994, the day after the Olympics opening ceremony, Frank Rich commented that a frequently awkward Kerrigan seemed to be balking at her place in the center of a media storm.
Every day of the Tour, the event's corporate sponsors cover the route in a column of open-backed trucks that stretches for kilometers, throwing out snacks, drinks, t-shirts, keyrings and other objects, many of them made or wrapped in plastic.
"I had to get some minor surgery (OK, so that's overstating it, but you know what blokes are like)," Ricciardo wrote in a column for the Red Bull website of how he had spent the two weeks since winning in Shanghai.
"I have known several of the Trump team for years and I am in a good position with the President-elect's support to help," Farage, leader of the opposition UK Independence Party (UKIP), wrote in a column for the Breitbart website.
"[I]f all black men and women would mass themselves in solid opposition to war, we would see America really being American to BLACK AMERICANS," wrote a 23-year-old Burroughs in 1940 in a column for The Chicago Defender.
"Some prominent conservatives deny the reality of human-caused climate change, and so curtailing UA research is great from their perspective," Susan Henrichs, a former University of Alaska Fairbanks provost, said in a column published in the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner.
Just as chilling was the muted response that followed, as Aatish Taseer argued in a column for The New York Times: Like all forms of theater, a lynching depends on what is left unsaid; it creates a mood, an atmosphere.
Pai wrote in a column published today that "network investment fell by billions of dollars" after net neutrality was enacted in 2015 under former President Barack Obama, and he argued that the repeal would bring more competition to the industry.
" He pointed to research by ICO advisory firm Satis Group, which said 81 percent of them were, as Roubini put it in a column published earlier Thursday, "created by con artists, charlatans, and swindlers looking to take your money and run.
PARIS (Reuters) - Actress Emmanuelle Seigner on Sunday rejected an invitation to join the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, in a column in which she slammed the "hypocrisy" of a group that expelled her husband Roman Polanski two months ago.
In a column early in his tempestuous first year, I suggested that this obvious fact potentially justified the invocation of the 25th Amendment, which permits a president's cabinet in consultation with the legislative branch to remove him from the White House.
Orfield and Stancil's work complements findings I reported on in a column last month that showed that Trump performed best in states and communities that were heavily white, but which had experienced relatively small increases in minority populations, notably from immigrants.
My colleague Farhad Manjoo wrote recently in a column that what he finds more worrisome than a little-understood, dangerous illness is the spread of misinformation and fear, which have historically been used to justify acts of repression against minorities.
Horsey was accused of body-shaming and misogyny last week after he described the White House's chief spokeswoman in a column as looking more like a "chunky soccer mom who organizes snacks for the kids' games," than a press secretary.
Shelley Ross, a veteran TV news proucer and executive, wrote in a column Monday that she, too, had been sexually harassed by Roger Ailes, the former Fox News CEO who resigned last month amid a pile-up of sexual harassment allegations.
Pete, as he was known to his buddies, was the lone American to die in a small-scale battle that took place in the Mekong Delta on May 15, 1967 — a battle recounted in a column in this series last week.
In November, he stepped down from his positions at Def Jam and his media firm Rush Communications after screenwriter Jenny Lumet accused him of forcing her to have sex with him in 1991 in a column for The Hollywood Reporter.
In a column on Saturday, prominent editor and political commentator Shekhar Gupta said the protests had led to what he called the "rise of a new Indian Muslim... Not afraid to look Muslim, and not shy of flaunting her nationalism".
The Australian, nicknamed after the cuddly but ferocious animal, finished third overall this year, the best of the rest behind the Mercedes pair, and said in a column for Red Bull he was looking forward to a harder off-season workout.
In several of the photos, Katchadourian's objects function as hypothetical public sculptures — seven peas, for example, in a column forming a Brancusi-like sculpture in an exquisitely manicured lakeside garden ("Topiary," 2012) that is both completely ridiculous and totally charming.
Formations are critical: a half dozen swordsmen in a line of battle or an enveloping crescent formation are a basically a woodchipper that will grind the enemy to powder; those same half dozen swordsmen in a column are nothing but dominoes.
"You do want the game to be celebrated and you do want to see players having fun but at the same time I thought some of the celebrations were a little overboard," she wrote in a column for the Guardian newspaper.
As the prosecution prepared to argue that Manning had aided an enemy of the state, Crowley spoke out again, this time in a column for the Guardian in which he lambasted the US government for "making a martyr" of Manning.
In a column published in a newspaper earlier this week, Subramanian said his research indicated that the change in the methodology led to GDP growth being overstated by about 2.5 percentage points per year between 2011/12 and 2016/17.
Elie Honig, a former prosecutor, argued in a column on CNN that the actions alleged by Bezos amounted to extortion because the act of stopping Bezos' investigation was of value to AMI and AMI's threat of exposing lurid photos met the "wrongful" test.
"I wanted to help build a team behind Boris Johnson so that a politician who argued for leaving the European Union could lead us to a better future," Gove wrote in a column announcing his leadership bid on the Spectator magazine's website.
" And in a column on Thursday in the New York Times, Bret Stephens praised Trump for refusing to back down "in the face of the slipperiness, hypocrisy and dangerous standard-setting deployed by opponents of Brett Kavanaugh's nomination to the Supreme Court.
The president of the United States said in a column in USA Today on Wednesday that Democrats who support Medicare-for-all want to "end Medicare as we know it" and, via an unclear series of aftershocks, eventually turn America into Venezuela.
But Pound and his collaborators spotted the x-ray signature of iron, calcium, argon, sulfur, and silicon, forming a gas clump the size of Earth falling directly into the black hole in a column traveling at one-third the speed of light.
"A fresh attitude toward palm oil, unencumbered by influential special-interest groups, could lead to even better trade terms between the U.K. and the (Southeast Asia) region than it currently enjoys," Mahathir wrote in a column carried on Bloomberg's terminals and website.
And I noticed recently, like, if you put in a column every movie I ever did where I carry a gun and every movie where I don&apost and my salary, like, if I asked my father to do the math on this.
Writing in a column for the Washington Times in 21.6, Moore denounced the Violence Against Women Act, part of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 23, which provided funding and resources for the investigation of violent crimes against women.
New York Times columnist James Stewart wrote in a column Monday he had visited Jeffrey Epstein at his mansion in Manhattan a year ago, where the alleged sex trafficker told him he was helping Elon Musk find a new chairman for Tesla.
"I have no idea whether Michael Bloomberg can win the Democratic nomination, but I'm glad that he's joining the race," Friedman wrote in a column entitled "Why I like Mike" before noting that the billionaire businessman had donated to his wife's museum.
In a column entitled "I'll Eat Your Epic", Koray criticized the government for what she said was an overemphasis on the events of July 15 last year, saying it paled in significance next to World War I and major battles in Turkish history.
Abdul-Jabbar wrote in a column for Wednesday's issue of The Hollywood Reporter that demands for a group of predominantly black athletes to stand during the song's performance harkened back to demands from slave owners for their slaves to sing while they worked.
It's a hack of a terrific dish developed by the chefs David Chang and Tien Ho back when they were starting out at Momofuku Ssam Bar in New York that I wrote about in a column for The Times Magazine this week.
McRaven, who served 36 years in the Navy before retiring in 2014, shared his experience during "Hell Week" — an intense period in the Navy's 24-week-long Basic Underwater Demolition/SEAL (BUD/S) course — in a column published in The Washington Post.
The Washington Post columnist George Will, who had excellent access to the Supreme Court while his friend Antonin Scalia was alive, provided an early indication of trouble ahead in a column he published a month before the court issued the Obamacare decision.
" In a column published on Saturday in The Washington Post, Mr. Clinton wrote that Mr. Bush's 1993 letter revealed him to be an "honorable, gracious and decent man who believed in the United States, our Constitution, our institutions and our shared future.
In a column published in The Washington Post, Ms. Jenner, 68, wrote that she had hoped she could work within the Republican Party to improve its position on L.G.B.T.Q. issues, but that she had evolved to see that belief as a mistake.
"There are some things much more important than sport and when something like the coronavirus comes along, rugby has to step into line, take advice from the experts and do what is right," Woodward wrote in a column here for the Daily Mail.
As a 6900 year old father, U.S. Veteran, and terminally ill ALS patient, I wanted to clear up some misconceptions about S. 2628 and HR 28503—the Right to Try Acts—that were raised in a column here a few weeks ago.
My lack of commentary does not reflect my feelings and I am not missing these entries, but my personal opinions about politics do not really belong in a column about the crossword puzzle, even if there are entries that involve those politics.
This count doesn't include references to "call-out culture," a close synonym invoked by David Brooks earlier this year in a column about a woman "cancelled" or "called out" online after it was discovered she had engaged in cyberbullying during high school.
"Mexico will give asylum to an electoral fraudster who would have to be put in prison without bail if Mexican law were applied to him," wrote Pascal Beltrán del Río, editorial director for the Mexican newspaper Excelsior, in a column on Tuesday.
The writer and pundit Ann Coulter, in a column prominently featured on the Breitbart News home page under the headline "Lassie, Come Home," said Mr. Trump had turned his back on supporters like her who want America less engaged in conflicts overseas.
REUTERS TV Many senior officials in the Trump administration have been working from within to frustrate parts of the president's agenda to protect the country from his worst inclinations, an anonymous Trump official wrote in a column published by the New York Times yesterday.
Bamford has spoken plainly about her bipolar disorder outside of the series, often in her standup, and recently in a column for The New York Times, in which she detailed how she met and fell in love with her husband, the artist Scott Marvel Cassidy.
Speculators were thought to have established their most bullish Chicago corn stance in more than three years earlier this month, but then the weather outlooks quickly and unexpectedly improved for the U.S. crop, Karen Braun, a market analyst for Reuters wrote in a column.
CHALLENGE AND PARTNER In a column in the French daily Le Figaro published on Sunday, Xi made clear he wanted Paris to cooperate in the Belt and Road project, calling for more trade and investment in sectors ranging from nuclear energy to aeronautics and farming.
In the wake of the controversy, one of the show's writers defended the portrayal in a column for Vanity Fair about how his own experience with suicide, and having seen the outcome of a failed attempt firsthand, convinced him not to take his own life.
Speaking to VICE Impact, James Wharton, a former soldier who threw his support behind the Conservative party in a column for Attitude prior to the general election, heavily criticized May's alignment with the DUP and blamed it for his decision to quit the party.
In a column published on Monday in the New Zealand Herald, headlined "To New Zealand, with love", Li wrote that rising international instability and uncertainty "have made it all the more important for China and New Zealand to work together to turn challenges into opportunities".
"I had not fully appreciated the depth of my feelings about animals and the outdoors until I saw the video of that ranger slaughtering the lion in Isinya on Wednesday," wrote Mutuma Mathiu in a column for The Daily Nation, Kenya's largest newspaper, on Thursday.
"This urge to send men to the slaughterhouse, instead of helping women be more autonomous, helps the enemies of sexual freedom," the 100 women, including 74-year old Deneuve, one of France's most famous screen stars, said in a column published by Le Monde daily.
Don't worry, he assured us in a column titled "Why leftists don't trust Kamala Harris, Cory Booker, and Deval Patrick," it has nothing to do with bigotry—the left objects to these three possible presidential contenders because they would fail a progressive purity test.
In a column published in a newspaper on Monday, Arvind Subramanian, former chief economic adviser, said his research indicated that the change in the methodology led to GDP growth being overstated by about 2.5 percentage points per year between 2011/12 and 2016/17.
" But in a column in The Hollywood Reporter published Tuesday, former NBA star Abdul-Jabbar writes that the rebooted show "is more subversive in its presentation of class struggles, health care, gender identity, and other issues that reflect the failures of the Trump administration.
For a few of The Times's earliest years, when the paper was called The New-York Daily Times, the left ear announced our publication schedule and subscription rates; the right ear simply contained the news, in a column that was taller than the others.
In a column for La Nación, Diego Cabot, the journalist who received the notebooks but did not write about them until after the authorities revealed their investigation, said that he did not want the rush for a scoop to get in the way of justice.
Earlier this month, prominent Mexican journalist Carlos Loret de Mola wrote in a column in El Universal newspaper that Singapore wanted to put forward a plan to Lopez Obrador that would enable the completion of the abandoned airport on the eastern flank of the city.
In a column from September last year -- one of several that allegedly angered Riyadh and made it impossible for Khashoggi to return to Saudi Arabia -- he wrote that MBS had "promised an embrace of social and economic reform," but instead pursued a crackdown on dissent.
"Columbus' landfall ushered in one of the greatest injustices in human history: the wholesale transfer of wealth and lands from native peoples to Europeans," Steven Hackel, a University of California, Riverside history professor, said in a column published last year by the Los Angeles Times.
Conceding that Modicare was "an ambitious and laudable goal," Rajiv Lall and Vivek Dehejia of the IDFC Institute think tank said in a column for Mint online that the program covers only the costs of treatment and hospitalization at the secondary and tertiary levels.
This current dispute stems from Dr. West asserting in a column in The Guardian that Mr. Coates's analysis of racism and white supremacy fails to account for broader factors like class and patriarchy, and that he is not critical enough of former President Barack Obama.
This is something I touched on in greater detail earlier this week in a column about Joel Embiid's individual defense, but the same principles apply: Against the league's most potent offenses, any plan that doesn't account for pull-up threes is antiquated and futile.
Newscaster Jana Shortal was criticized Wednesday for wearing skinny jeans during her coverage of the tragic kidnapping case of Jacob Wetterling, by Minneapolis Star Tribune gossip columnist C.J. In a column that the paper has since taken down, C.J. says Shortal's outfit was "inappropriate" considering the topic.
While the strategic nous as per the board game is rather important, you'll need to have a good shooting hand too, because if you miss — it's the next player's turn — or the ball will end up in a column you didn't intend it to be in.
WASHINGTON, Sept 5 (Reuters) - Many senior officials in the Trump administration have been working from within to frustrate parts of the president's agenda to protect the country from his worst inclinations, an anonymous Trump official wrote in a column published by the New York Times on Wednesday.
HAVANA (Reuters) - Fidel Castro made a rare public appearance on Saturday at his 90th birthday gala, after the leader of the 1959 revolution thanked fellow Cubans for their well wishes and lambasted his old foe the United States in a column carried by state-run media.
In a column last weekend titled "The Truth of 'False Balance,'" New York Times public editor Liz Spayd dismissed out of hand the idea that the coverage decisions news outlets make can and should be influenced by judgments about what's most important for news consumers to know.
Tacocat, "I Hate the Weekend" A small part of me can't believe I'm including a song called "I Hate the Weekend" in a column devoted to giving you weekend listening material, but this cut from Tacocat's new album Lost Time is too funny to pass up.
"Rather than building a globally competitive free market economy in order to compete, China has chosen instead to compel American companies that want to operate in China to turn over proprietary technology and intellectual property," Ross wrote in a column in the Financial Times earlier this year.
Last week, the famed lawyer complained in a column in The Hill that he is being ostracized by fellow residents of the tony summer colony Martha's Vineyard as a result of his vociferous claims that President Donald Trump is the victim of a legal witch hunt.
The controversial racial justice activist and New York Daily News contributor, who supported President Obama in the 2008 election and wrote critically of both Democratic candidates before ultimately endorsing Bernie Sanders, announced in a column last Friday that 2016 would be his last election as a Democrat.
It was even used by the nominee himself in a post a year ago on Twitter: Mr. Furie said in a column in Time magazine on Friday that it was "completely insane" that racists were using "a once peaceful frog-dude" as a symbol of hate.
"Even people who know Mr. Bush are not always sure how much issues are shaped by his conscience and how much by the political calculation that this White House has refined to high science," Bill Keller mused in a column for The New York Times in 2003.
"We do not have plans to issue additional Exchange Fund bills for the time being and hope that market players will not take it wrongly that the HKMA does not want the HKD to weaken," Chan said in a column published on the central bank's website.
"The continued escalation of attacks ... by the U.S.-Saudi-Emirati coalition confirms that the American calls for a cease-fire are nothing but empty talk," Mohammed Ali al-Houthi, head of the group's supreme revolutionary committee, wrote in a column published by the Washington Post on Friday.
"It is high time that we think more about the international role of Europe, apart from all the homework we have to do within the EU," he wrote in a column for the Funke media group on the first day of the international Munich Security Conference.
" The warning turned out to be rather prophetic, as then-Variety editor Peter Bart noted in a column a decade later amid a new wave of overseas investment, writing, "The Europeans have had as many problems as the Japanese in trying to get on Hollywood's wavelength.
"The future of work calls for something more radical: the elimination of academic majors as we have come to know them," Jeffrey Selingo, the founding director of the Academy for Innovative Higher Education Leadership, wrote in a column that was part of The Chronicle's special report.
The problem facing the GOP establishment is that none of the center-right candidates — all of whom would be credible candidates and presidents — have emerged as front-runners for the anybody-but-Cruz mantle, which I recently referred to in a column as "Plan C." Sen.
"The inadequacy of the FEC's current regulations makes it practically impossible for both regulators and citizens to determine if the funding for a political advertisement online came from a domestic source or an enemy abroad," former FEC commissioner Ann Ravel wrote in a column for Politico before the announcement.
Hunter, the first to go on the record about Hoffman's alleged abuse in a column for The Hollywood Reporter in November, told McFadden that she was just 17 when she was working as a production assistant on the set of the 1985 Death of a Salesman TV film.
As our own Cameron Kunzelman stated in a column not long ago, "like all games are, put together with duct tape and glue," but I live for finding out just how artful (or utterly goofy) the solutions are to making some semblance of a coherent system, world, or character.
It is the kind of report that demands more space that I can give it in a column, but please allow me to quote it here liberally, both the optimistic and pessimistic components of it, and to weigh in on it to the degree that I feel I must.
" Earlier this year, after hearing that US President Barack Obama had removed a bust of Winston Churchill from his office, Johnson, writing in a column for The Sun, suggested the move had something to do with his "part-Kenyan heritage" and an "ancestral dislike of the British empire.
In a column last month, I pointed out that the simple strategy of delaying retirement a few years — optimally, until at least age 213, when maximum Social Security benefits kick in — will produce extra monthly income that most people can't match with investment, savings and cost-cutting alone.
"The clash comes when a free-spending American TV celebrity, the independent Ms. Markle, becomes the British queen's granddaughter-in-law and joins soberer ornaments on the cracked marble mantelpiece of ancient royalty," the journalist Libby Purves wrote in February in a column for The Times of London.
In a column for The Sunday Times, a London-based newspaper, the former Manchester United star Wayne Rooney criticized the soccer authorities for treating players like "guinea pigs" and for not sharing information about why they were being asked to play on while other European leagues had been suspended.
"Given the track record we have had at CES and the state of the tech industry I just shared, you might now better understand the frustration of seeing Ivanka Trump selected to be one of the two women delivering a keynote," she wrote in a column for Forbes.
And yet he doesn't seem to have acquired even the most basic information that a high school student should possess," wrote Max Boot, a senior fellow for the Council on Foreign Relations, in a column in Foreign Policy entitled, "Donald Trump is Proving Too Stupid to Be President.
" At New York, Jonathan Chait rattled off Sanders's weaknesses in a column headlined, "Running Bernie Sanders Against Trump Would Be an Act of Insanity," while at the Atlantic, former George W. Bush adviser David Frum decried Sanders's unelectability beneath a sure-to-be-screenshotted title: "Bernie Can't Win.
Post food critic Tom Sietsema excoriated the House Members' Dining Room, located on Capitol Hill and previously only open to members of Congress and their staff, in a column Wednesday that slammed the spot as a dismal experience both in terms of service and quality of the meal.
OBITUARIES An obituary on Tuesday about the children's book author Amy Krouse Rosenthal, who recently wrote about dying of cancer in a column for The New York Times, "You May Want to Marry My Husband," that generated wide readership, misstated the source of a quotation from her husband.
In a column titled, "Stan's Soapbox"—a Bullpen Bulletin installment appearing monthly in Marvel Comics from 1965 to 2001—Lee lectured his readers, saying that while they may not all get along with each other and every person they meet, that didn't make it permissible to blindly hate a single person.
"Given that the local business community has always been seen as pro-establishment and friendly towards Beijing, there is a rich irony" in such outspokenness, Tamy Tam, editor-in-chief of the local South China Morning Post — owned by Chinese billionaire Jack Ma's Alibaba Group — wrote in a column last month.
In the past, she's called out Miley Cyrus for her "overt use of her sexuality and her vagina to gain a platform"; in a column for the UK website Company, she also criticized Rihanna for posing pantsless on Instagram, imploring her to "put away her minge" (British for female genitalia).
Her first graphic novel, A Bintel Brief: Love and Longing in Old New York, illustrated and expanded upon a series of letters that appeared in a column by the same name (Bintel Brief means "bundle of letters" in Yiddish) that ran in the Jewish Daily Forward during the early 20th century.
In a column in The Hollywood Reporter, Farrow makes an explicit connection between the rape allegations against Bill Cosby and those against Allen and argues that the powerful PR firm working with his father uses its other A-list clients as a carrot and a stick to protect him from criticism.
"I expect the personal computer to become the kind of thing that people carry with them, a companion that takes notes, does accounting, gives reminders, handles a thousand personal tasks," Allen wrote in a column in Personal Computing magazine as far back as 1977, long before portable computers became a reality.
Rep. Pramila JayapalPramila JayapalMedicare for all: fears and facts House Democrats urge Trump to end deportations of Iraqis after diabetic man's death 'KamalaCare' fails to address big problem: That we cannot trust insurance companies MORE (D-Wash.) opened up about her own abortion in a column for The New York Times.
In a column in The Modesto Bee in August, Mr. Denham said that while he was often troubled by Mr. Trump's comments, the New York developer was the only candidate who had "at least recognized" the region's water problem and had selected "an impressive group" of potential Supreme Court justices.
Last May, Mick Mulvaney, Trump's director of the Office of Management and Budget, addressed his view of the division between the deserving and undeserving poor in a column published by the Post and Courier in Charleston, S.C.: For years, we've focused on how we can help Americans receive taxpayer-funded assistance.
When Grassley became chairman of the Judiciary Committee in 22017 after Republicans took back the Senate, he publicly indicated (in a column in The Des Moines Register) and privately said (in a conversation with Leahy, according to Leahy) that he would afford blue slips the same weight as his Democratic predecessor.
While research and thought leaders point to the positive impact of teaching money management concepts, the topic has had its share of detractors —which I recently wrote about for CNBC in a column titled "Let's stop the argument that financial education doesn't work " — and distractors, with an emerging offender: partisan politics.
In a column from last year — about a puzzle that also happened to be by Mr. Eaton-Salners — I explained that the Scales of Cruciverbal Justice help me balance out the individual aspects of a puzzle so I can draw my own conclusion about whether I enjoyed myself while solving.
" As National Review writer Kevin Williamson put it in a column released Thursday, conservatives have seemed to come to a general consensus following Attorney General Barr's letter that "some of Trump's actions" regarding Russia and the special counsel investigation "may have been unseemly, but that there's no law against unseemliness.
At the time, in a column titled "The Trick of Turning LAPD Blue Into Greenbacks," LA Times reporter Patt Morrison mocked the city, writing, "The real money is always in questionable taste and black humor," and referencing the "heavy-selling" protest T-shirts distributed after the 1991 police beating of Rodney King.
Anna Graham Hunter, the first to go on the record about Hoffman's alleged abuse in a column for The Hollywood Reporter, claimed that at the age of 17, while interning as a production assistant for the 1985 Death of a Salesman TV film, the actor behaved in an "openly flirtatious" manner with her.
In a column posted by The Hollywood Reporter a little less than an hour before the news conference and headlined "My Father, Woody Allen, and the Danger of Questions Unasked," Mr. Farrow blamed the news media for not asking tough questions and Mr. Allen's public relations machine for fending off the media.
But in a column for the blog Lawfare on Wednesday, Alex Stamos, who recently left his role as Facebook chief security officer said that the most recent disclosure, along with Microsoft's revelation that conservative think tanks had been targeted by Russian hackers, is evidence that it's too late to protect the 220006 elections.
In a column for the blog Lawfare on Wednesday, Alex Stamos, who recently left his role as Facebook chief security officer said that the most recent disclosure, along with Microsoft's revelation that conservative think tanks had been targeted by Russian hackers, is evidence that it's too late to protect the 85033 elections.
Put simply, his pedigree — an eccentric father and a non-Saudi mother (actually, Lebanese) — disqualified him from playing an official role in the Saudi "Game of Thrones" or figuring in "Riyadhology," the study of the Saudi royals and their roles in the kingdom which I wrote about in a column three weeks ago.
As I noted in a column last month, with President Trump promising to turn his back on the United States' southern neighbor — renegotiating Nafta on presumably worse terms for Mexico and walling off the southwestern border — Mexican officials are desperately trying to convince his administration that the United States needs Mexico, too.
"Specifically, as long as a team takes basic precautions such as putting nets immediately behind home plate and ensuring that there are enough screened seats to meet anticipated demand, then under the Baseball Rule it will not be held legally responsible for fans' injuries," Grow wrote in a column for The Conversation.
"Most sensible people can see that Bank of England Governor Mark Carney has done a superb job - and now that the referendum is over, he will be able to continue his work without being in the political firing-line," Johnson wrote in the Daily Telegraph newspaper in a column first published late on Sunday.
"Having been molded by this age of NSA overreach, [Edward] Snowden, Wikileaks and Anonymous, what bothers me most is that inviting Elf on the Shelf into the home unnecessarily extends surveillance culture into a place that should be free of it," Alex Steed wrote in a column for the Bangor Daily News in 2014.
In a column for The Hollywood Reporter highlighting the pervasiveness of this kind of behavior, Grey's Anatomy showrunner Krista Vernoff recalled a screen test involving two actors, after which a male executive wanted to cast the woman he personally found sexier despite what Vernoff described as a "radically better" performance from the other actor.
In a column for The Hill last June titled "Marco Rubio's moment," I wrote that Jeb Bush was the most overrated candidate in the GOP field and Rubio was the most underrated and suggested that the time was coming when the eyes of the nation and Republican Party would turn to the senator from Florida.
On Opening Day 1990, George Vecsey of the New York Times, in a column that has to be seen to be believed, reviewed the incident and suggested that the Yankees or Yankees fans were hypocritical for praising the recently-deceased Billy Martin for kicking dirt on umpires while holding Polonia accountable for statutory rape.
"Attending an integrating school — one in which yours may be the only or one of a few white and/or privileged families — can (but doesn't necessarily) mean that your child won't have impressive-sounding credentials, after-school enrichment activities or big parent-booster budgets," she wrote last year in a column for The Hollywood Reporter.
In a column for the Guardian and in his book Bad Science, Goldacre pointed out that journalists were complicit in helping perpetuate the notion that vaccines cause autism: Wakefield was at the centre of a media storm about the MMR vaccine, and is now being blamed by journalists as if he were the only one at fault.
William F. Buckley, the venerated founder of National Review, wrote this in a 1957 in a column titled "Why the South Must Prevail": The central question that emerges … is whether the White community in the South is entitled to take such measures as are necessary to prevail, politically and culturally, in areas in which it does not predominate numerically?
"Every single time we stay at or take meetings at or dine at any of these nine hotels we are putting money directly into the pockets of men who choose to stone and whip to death their own citizens for being gay or accused of adultery," Clooney, 57, wrote in a column for Deadline last week.
"As long as Saudi Arabia is led by its obsession to put Iran in its place, all attempts at peace in the Middle East will fail," Rainer Hermann, a Middle East expert in Germany, wrote in a column in the newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, warning that Saudi Arabia might destroy the carefully wrought attempt to halt Iran's nuclear program.
" Michelle Obama's comments received attention at the time after Jennifer Hunter, a columnist for the Chicago Sun-Times in 2007, covered them in a column, writing, "Michelle said she travels with her husband in part 'to model what it means to have family values,' adding 'if you can't run your own house, you can't run the White House.
In a column in July 2015 titled "The GOP Frankenstein," I quoted Rick Perry as describing Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpPossible GOP challenger says Trump doesn't doesn't deserve reelection, but would vote for him over Democrat O'Rourke: Trump driving global, U.S. economy into recession Manchin: Trump has 'golden opportunity' on gun reforms MORE as a cancer on conservatism.
All decent men and women around the world, and Democrats and Republicans across America, should condemn the shameful refusal of President Obama to take action that would have saved desperate and dying Syrians whose bloodstained corpses will be viewed by historians as a moral blot on his legacy, as I wrote last August in a column in The Hill.
"The greatest achievement" of the Hanoi summit meeting "was to clearly prove that there is no potential for convergence between the current North Korean and American trajectories toward North Korea's denuclearization," said Ha Young-sun, a prominent South Korean expert on North Korea, in a column posted on Global North Korea, a Seoul-based website specializing in the North.
"Every single time we stay at or take meetings at or dine at any of these nine hotels we are putting money directly into the pockets of men who choose to stone and whip to death their own citizens for being gay or accused of adultery," George Clooney wrote in a column last week on the website Deadline.
Last year in a column entitled "Hearing Loss Threatens Mind, Life and Limb," I summarized the current state of knowledge about the myriad health-damaging effects linked to untreated hearing loss, a problem that afflicts nearly 22021 million Americans and, according to two huge recent studies, increases the risk of dementia, depression, falls and even cardiovascular diseases.
For myself, I wrote about chicken-fried steak in a column for The New York Times Magazine this week, and about a very particular version of the dish that manages to make it as much a Tex-Mex dish as a Tex-German one, with queso gravy adorning the meat instead of the usual cream variety.
"When my assistant said there was a call from the White House, I picked up and said 'Hello' and started to ask if this was a prank (suspecting my friends in the British tabloid media), but the caller spoke politely over me: 'Please hold for the president,'" Black wrote in a column in the National Post announcing his pardon.
"At a time when improper interactions between men and women, particularly in the workplace, are part of a national conversation, we must find a way to ensure that everyone — the public, private and public institutions, accusers and alleged accused — is given the opportunity for a swift and fair review," Seacrest wrote in a column about his experience for The Hollywood Reporter.
"Considering how long this problem has been with us, it appears that the government — not just under this administration but under past administrations as well — has failed miserably to put an end to the kidnapping for ransom operations of the Abu Sayyaf," wrote Ramon J. Farolan, a former military official, in a column for The Philippine Daily Inquirer this month.
Here are some of the main factors that may affect Swiss stocks: Nestle has held preliminary talks about purchasing all or parts of Hain Celestial, Bloomberg reported, citing sources For more information, click on Saudi Arabian investors could be interested in taking a stake in Credit Suisse, The Financial Times wrote in a column on Tuesday, citing a person close to the situation.
I had called Mr. Dershowitz on Tuesday to tell him I was going to be on the island for a long-planned vacation, and I suggested we get together to talk about the stir he kicked up when he wrote, in a column for The Hill, that he had been subject to McCarthy-like shunning tactics from people in his Vineyard social circles.
"The quickest way to slam the brakes on innovation is for the public to lose confidence in the safety of new technologies," Obama wrote in a column for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, where Uber deployed a fleet of self-driving a cars in August — albeit with an Uber engineer in each car — to test its new technology on a commercial platform.
This speech, or any other mention of the allegation, was not in Ansari's show in December, when I saw him on tour (this special was shot in May) and in a column, I argued that avoiding his scandal was an artistic mistake, particularly because his show criticized a culture of online outrage in a way that felt informed by his experiences.
The first of those sounds similar to what Andrew called for in a column last month: If the credit card companies and banks agreed, they could come up with a series of subcodes that would identify retailers that sold guns under a "best practices" policy — like the policy that Citigroup proposed or the one that Walmart and Dick's follow — and the ones that don't.
As Jim Antle points out in a column for The Week, those negotiations have been consistently bipartisan, bringing together John McCain and Ted Kennedy, Marco Rubio and Chuck Schumer, now Lindsey Graham and Dick Durbin — but "they have mostly taken place between people who are fundamentally in agreement on immigration," who favor both amnesty for illegal immigrants and reforms that would probably increase immigration rates.
" Describing Armajani's revolutionary artwork, the museums noted: "A computer print-out of all the digits between zero and one, stacked in a column more than nine feet high and weighing 500 pounds, is on view at the Museum of Modern Art … The work of Siah Armajani, a Persian born artist now living in Minneapolis, 'Number Between 0 and 1' is accompanied by three documentary photographs.
Opinion by: Saagar Enjeti At least somebody over at the New York Times is being fair to Bernie SandersBernie SandersGabbard moves to New Hampshire ahead of primary Sanders to join youth climate strikers in Iowa Saagar Enjeti unpacks why Kamala Harris's campaign didn't work MORE... But interestingly enough it is conservative columnist Ross Douthat in a column that shook political Twitter titled the case for Bernie.
In a column that sparked a great deal of ire, New York Times columnist Ross Douthat extrapolated on Hanson's idea, envisioning a potential world where sex workers and sexbots are on hand to "redistribute" sex to horny, lonely men; satiating their libidos and, presumably, preventing their horniness from mutating into uncontrollable rage and mass violence, à la the Toronto van attacker and the Santa Barbara shooter.
However, sales volumes remained lighter-than-anticipated since the White House announced a phase one deal that included a vow Thursday's media report that China has agreed to buy a certain volume of U.S. farm goods provides only lukewarm assurance to the agriculture market, which has been waiting for a resurgence of U.S. exports to the East Asian country, Karen Braun, a market analyst for Reuters, wrote in a column.
Rattner suggests young progressives are wild-eyed dreamers disconnected from reality in a column that is itself deeply disconnected from reality: At one point, Rattner says Republicans and Democrats might, in some bizarro future, "quickly agree" on investments in national infrastructure, which is odd given they have spent the last two years failing miserably to even have a serious conversation about said investments, much less agree on them.
Lindy West, a well-known feminist writer who has frequently discussed online abuse, put it well in a column for The Guardian last month: ... the breaking point for me wasn't the trolls themselves (if I have learned anything from the dark side of Twitter, it is how to feel nothing when a frog calls you a cunt) – it was the global repercussions of Twitter's refusal to stop them.
Brown, in a column in the San Francisco Chronicle, said that the House's vote last Thursday to approve the impeachment inquiry process "solidified" President TrumpDonald John TrumpBiden allies see boost in Tuesday's election results Sanders vows to end Trump's policies as he unveils immigration proposal Republicans warn election results are 'wake-up call' for Trump MORE's "hold on power," noting that all GOP representatives voted against the measure.
"What would have otherwise been a democratic milestone is now besmirched with the ugly stain of an uncontested election — such is the cost of a government that thinks in terms of politics of power, as opposed to dignity," wrote Rio Hoe, a law student, in a column on the website Consensus SG. The office of the president is largely ceremonial, but its duties include the power to authorize investigations into corruption.
There's been some improvement on that front, perhaps best exemplified by "The Hunger Games" franchise, but in the realm of superheroes, women have continued to lag far behind, as I noted in a column in late 2013 about how often a "Wonder Woman" movie had been contemplated, how long the wait for it was turning out to be, and how determined Hollywood was to mint new male superheroes in the meantime.
The term Green New Deal appeared in a column in The Times by Thomas Friedman in January 2007, in which he called for a vast public and private investment program that would throw everything under the sun (including, actually, the sun itself) — wind, solar, nuclear power, energy efficiency, advanced research, tax incentives and a price on carbon — into a massive effort to build a more climate-friendly energy system while also revitalizing the American economy.
In a column headlined "CNN's hiring of a GOP operative as political editor is even worse than it looks," Washington Post media columnist Margaret Sullivan described Isgur's hire as reflecting CNN's desire for "a kind of false fairness": It strongly suggests that the network's big thinkers — including head honcho Jeff Zucker — are aiming for a kind of false fairness: a defensive, both-sides-are-equal kind of political coverage that inevitably fails to serve the voting public.
In a column published in The Hill on Tuesday, Professor Alan DershowitzAlan Morton DershowitzMeadows says he's advocating for Trump to add Alan Dershowitz to impeachment defense team House's proposed impeachment articles are serious grounds to remove the president Two House articles of impeachment fail to meet constitutional standards MORE draws the sweeping conclusion that "abuse of power and obstruction of Congress" – the two grounds for impeachment set forth in the House Judiciary Committee's proposed articles of impeachment – are somehow borderline unconstitutional.
" '"The Conners" Showrunner Bruce Helford: Why We Killed Off Roseanne Like That' [The Hollywood Reporter] In a column for The Hollywood Reporter, Bruce Helford, the showrunner of both the rebooted "Roseanne" and "The Conners" (he also served as an executive producer and writer of the original "Roseanne"), explains the decision to bring back the Conner clan sans Roseanne: "As writers, creators and artists, we were on a euphoric high, bringing a show back after 20-plus years to become the season's No. 1 show in prime time television. Again.
The banks are "quivering" Banks and bankers aren't known to be afraid of much, but according to the head of the BBA, its members are now "quivering" at the implications of the Brexit and have begun to move operations out of the U.K. "Most international banks now have project teams working out what operations they need to move to ensure they can continue serving customers, the date by which this must happen, and how best to do it," Anthony Browne, head of the BAA, said in a column in the Observer newspaper on Sunday.
Roger StoneRoger Jason Stone3 real problems Republicans need to address to win in 2020 Judge rejects Stone's request to dismiss charges Judge dismisses DNC lawsuit against Trump campaign, Russia over election interference MORE, a longtime friend and former adviser of President TrumpDonald John TrumpFacebook releases audit on conservative bias claims Harry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Recessions happen when presidents overlook key problems MORE, on Thursday accused the late First Lady Barbara Bush of lying about his work for George H.W. Bush's presidential campaign in a column for The Spectator.

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