For example, this government publication gives pointers on navigating deserts and swimming rivers safely. |
|
Respect is owed to Fast Forward for being a publication with a degree of journalistic integrity. |
|
The Supreme Court rejected official publication of results that showed the Prime Minister had beaten him in a run-off election on Sunday. |
|
Among the plethora of books, travelogues and pictorial accounts portraying the city, one recent local publication clearly stands out. |
|
It is accepted that an authorised publication by an agent attracts the same qualified privilege as would the same publication by the principal. |
|
But a misplaced decimal point in his publication led to a figure 10 times too high. |
|
What emerges of interest in a single publication is rarely the photography alone. |
|
Does the publication of this article in the paper of record mean global-warming skepticism is officially bien pensant? |
|
Joseph E. Stiglitz whacked a hornets' nest in 2002 with the publication of Globalization and Its Discontents. |
|
The publication was launched with members of the Green Party at London's City Hall this week. |
|
The launch of this new publication will take place at the conference room of the NIC building on the Waterfront, at 7 pm this evening. |
|
The award includes publication and launch of his book at next year's Writers' Week in Listowel. |
|
Mr Darling has said that that the location of some cameras might have to be re-examined after the publication of today's detailed analysis. |
|
The publication offers travel ideas, advice and inspiration for destinations in Britain, Europe and beyond. |
|
In pioneering a new sort of scholarly publication the National Trust could lead the world. |
|
The society combines the scholarly study of local speech with the publication of prose and poetry in various forms of local dialect. |
|
This is a trade publication for those interested in tendering for government work. |
|
In the 14 months since he threw that fatal punch, court suppression orders have prevented publication of his name or details. |
|
Which is why there are a lot more manuscripts available for publication than there are publishers willing to pay for them. |
|
Secondly, a transparent code of conduct against publication bias or selective suppression of information should be developed. |
|
|
The offending publication was not made by the contemners in ignorance of the consequences. |
|
This Monday sees publication of a draft bill for reform of the House of Lords, with support from senior figures in all three parties. |
|
Many of the Army's professional journals have ceased publication and more are fading away. |
|
Despite the publication of these results, the caloric theory of heat persisted. |
|
Freelancer's cheques will be issued within 30 days following publication of the story. |
|
No more so, surely, than his concern for the posthumous publication of his works. |
|
This is a very impressive publication that should become a vade mecum to all those interested in Scottish history. |
|
His final throw on the subject of alterations to the bill before publication came on the 14 February. |
|
As this throwaway remark shows, since the publication of Binchy's debut only weeks ago, Dublin has changed so much already. |
|
The publication proposes special prudential measures to help commercial banks in times of exchange rate volatility and swings in capital flows. |
|
The society is committed to the promotion and publication of Kanarese literature. |
|
At the time my favorite magazine was Boys Life, some publication affiliated with the Boy Scouts Organization. |
|
The results of your poll are largely determined by the nature of the publication itself. |
|
The integrity of the author is, of course, a prerequisite for publication in any honourable journal. |
|
This change allowed us to send authors page proofs for correction prior to publication and still meet deadlines. |
|
For more information, interested readers may request a copy of the new publication series on agroforestry practices. |
|
Recently, a publication has been brought out on the less-known Suddhananda Bharati, who, like Subramanya Bharati, was a polyglot. |
|
Dr Kapasi welcomes publication of league tables of hospital and consultant performance. |
|
The publication of this concordance of the non-biblical texts from Qumran meets a need that biblical scholars have felt for decades. |
|
In the early 1950s, the publication of instructional television programming handbooks and production manuals was also a growing phenomenon. |
|
|
He added his congratulations and said the publication of the book was a proud occasion for the whole area of Ballyroan. |
|
This is the only publication of Richard Roach's exceptional visionary theosophic work since the rare originals in the eighteenth century. |
|
Deora started writing a column in a Mumbai publication in preparation for his political baptism. |
|
The publication is hoping to appeal to those who have a pick-and-mix approach to their reading matter. |
|
The military-industrial complex doesn't want publication of news hostile to its enablers in the government. |
|
But I do fear in approving its publication you've probably made yourself Captain Nasty for generations of thieving welfarists. |
|
His final publication was on combinations where he used the notation for the combinations of n objects selected from m objects. |
|
There have been a large number of orders and the second publication will be out shortly. |
|
This second publication proved much less successful than the first, which remained seminal in the development of scientific thought. |
|
The editors and co-founders said the new publication was about giving talented writers somewhere to showcase their wares. |
|
Again, in German-speaking countries the periodical publication of printed papers began quite early. |
|
Faced with a simultaneously growing publication lag, the Journal necessarily tightened its standards. |
|
The publication lag, from time of manuscript acceptance to appearance in print, is slightly more than two months. |
|
The recent publication of his works has allowed for a rejuvenation of sorts to occur. |
|
No mention is made of the revision, which allowed the story to join the Simple canon, including publication in The Best of Simple. |
|
This work was capped in 1939 with the publication of The Nature of the Chemical Bond, one of the most-cited texts in the history of science. |
|
From the straightforward cover page to the easy click-through gallery of images, the publication proves again that less is more. |
|
The last forty pages of the publication are dedicated to the numerous journalists who have fallen the victims of repression around the world. |
|
It had dragged them to court to defend their serial publication of Joyce's Ulysses. |
|
Its publication is also the launchpad for an exhibition that has been shown in Madrid and Seville and will be coming to London early next year. |
|
|
Most of the budget is derived from other sources such as publication revenue. |
|
Although it was approved for publication by the agency's review board, the book has been savaged in print by some of the CIA's old hands. |
|
The publication of polyphonic music, and particularly the Latin motets that Byrd insisted that East print, was not especially profitable. |
|
A note on its website says that the journal will cease publication with its next issue. |
|
A friend of mine is writing a gardening book for publication early next year. |
|
There were other problems with the early issues including financial and publication concerns. |
|
Work on the Trilogies has begun, although no publication dates are set as yet. |
|
In any event the period between publication and the priority date must be measured in weeks or months. |
|
This meant that publication costs needed to be kept down, and the message had to be right. |
|
Present-day emblem scholars continue a tradition dating back to the initial publication of emblem books. |
|
Our search strategy was not limited by language, date, or publication status. |
|
The publication of the piece at this time troubles me for a number of reasons. |
|
The work on editing the typescript in preparation for publication continues. |
|
This piece is awaiting future publication as part of Students of the Free Market book project. |
|
Future publication may not be possible because doing so might expose informers. |
|
Upon the publication of this discovery, businessmen flocked to the village. |
|
No, the foreign exchange markets moved substantially upon the publication of US trade data. |
|
The first stage was the publication of transcriptions and apparatus criticus and plates of the papyri. |
|
Every moneybags who invests in a publication becomes a more fascinating person overnight, acquiring cachet beyond their millions. |
|
The usual gap between hardback and paperback publication of a book is roughly one year. |
|
|
He displayed a copy of the Sinhala language publication of the World Socialist Web Site. |
|
This publication is most welcome since the chrestomathies of the twentieth century have long been out of print. |
|
The publication of several biographies of Shakespeare since the 1980s caters to the constant interest in Shakespeare. |
|
I'd long heard about the Progressive case, a 1979 decision in which the judge enjoined the publication of an article about the design of H-bombs. |
|
In this publication all elasticity maps are encoded in gray shades with logarithmically scaled Young's moduli. |
|
It was revived after it was forced to suspend publication a few years ago owing to political reasons. |
|
The accelerator work here will be unclassified, subjected to rigorous reviews and to publication of results. |
|
The publication of his book in Mongolian last year was even celebrated by Mongolia's president. |
|
The numbers reported in this publication generally reflect the convention practised by the industry. |
|
Ryan said the first issue of the publication is already in profit as start-up costs were kept down. |
|
No change of the publication regime is planned, his staff discovers, and the officials involved have no authority to issue any print licenses. |
|
All of this is a sensible carry-over to the second publication of what is being said in the House. |
|
Her most recent publication was an autopathography appearing in the August 2004 edition of Redbook magazine. |
|
The journals were labeled with almost unreadably small volume numbers and publication dates. |
|
Since that publication several studies documented porpoising behavior at high speeds. |
|
This is not a tort of breach of privacy, this is a tort of an unauthorised publication perhaps. |
|
What follows is that you would then have different rules in relation to multiple publication in different States. |
|
The judge said the publication of large parts of the book in News Limited newspapers largely destroyed the value of the material. |
|
I am also sure that this publication will aid its more experienced readers to reflect on their practice. |
|
You wouldn't dream of sending a letter for publication in a magazine or newspaper without making sure it was error-free. |
|
|
The core of the course will be a publication project and will involve the production of flyers and leaflets for local charities. |
|
Besides the accumulation of a variety of northern meals, the publication is also a project to preserve the South Slavey dialect. |
|
In 1913 Lesniewski published an article on the law of the excluded middle, then in the following year a publication on Russell's paradox. |
|
But wouldn't a publication dealing with the sleeping partners and fashion sense of the far left be a brilliant idea? |
|
Naked women belong in top-shelf magazines, not in a publication which should inform on the news of the day. |
|
I am satisfied that publication of the report would be deeply damaging and detrimental to their welfare. |
|
They will also see regional authors reading from their latest publication and signing copies of their books. |
|
At the risk of belabouring the point, let me cite just one other publication dealing with this question. |
|
This was a large-scale, anatomical publication filled with high-quality engravings of the gravid, or pregnant, uterus. |
|
However, statistical findings are often presented in manuscripts submitted for publication in misleading or erroneous ways. |
|
Comments quoted in our publication by a high-ranking police officer a couple of weeks ago made me stop and think. |
|
The reason that I continue to subscribe is that your publication is very in-depth and truly interesting. |
|
The American Journal of Public Health was the publication to which the most libraries subscribed. |
|
Unlike the French right of divulgation, the right of first publication limits the display right to a public display. |
|
Ironically the very same day, a leading Urdu daily, the sister publication of the eveninger, carried the story with a positive angle. |
|
His comments coincide with the publication today of the Commons environmental audit committee report into the challenge of climate change. |
|
Since then, citizens' rights to property, and freedom of speech and publication have been institutionalized and popularized. |
|
After all, I'm driven to distraction by the incorrect and inconsistent use of the comma in practically every publication I read. |
|
In other situations the publication of suspicions may unreasonably give rise to public disquiet and speculation. |
|
Finally, a major publication has taken up one of the key dishonesties in the President's argument for phasing out Social Security. |
|
|
The announcement of the marriage was accompanied by the publication of photos of the redheaded bride-to-be. |
|
He brings discredit upon himself by using this publication as a forum for his whining. |
|
The presentation of the text and illustrations in this publication is impeccable, and the price is particularly affordable in softcover edition. |
|
At the same time the freshly granted freedoms of publication and association did facilitate the gradual emergence of radical movements. |
|
The publication usually signs an NDA where they promise not to comment or editorialize anything until a set date. |
|
Their publication gives the public unmediated and unrestricted access to this direct evidence for the first time. |
|
Today, with the publication of the independent investigators' report, the bank is expected to pay for that indiscretion. |
|
The results suggest that the frequency of publication of financial statements may be an indicator of economic performance. |
|
The Royal Mail is releasing a stamp issue in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the publication of the book. |
|
For the first time in centuries, the weekly publication of Batman comics was broken. |
|
During the publication of the monthly comic, one issue in particular stands out. |
|
Frankly, I expected better from a publication of the Sunday Herald's standing. |
|
For example, the publication guidelines of the American Psychological Association stress the use of nonsexist, inclusive language. |
|
As projects come to completion, all results must be published and there must be no publication without peer review. |
|
Several people at this fine publication found the article upsetting, in poor taste, unfunny and absurd. |
|
It is expected that another publication will be coming from the pen of the author in the next few months. |
|
I for one am looking forward to the publication of the Butler Report on Wednesday. |
|
But these clumsy attempts to prevent its publication only promoted the swift growth of interest in the book. |
|
This failure to meet publication dates highlights the problem of cloistered academics. |
|
The academic community has also discussed uncoupling publication from academic credit and creating buying cooperatives but made little progress. |
|
|
He said it must have been horrendously hurtful for the family to agree to the publication of the pictures. |
|
Is there any national publication of comparable circulation and prominence that has taken these positions? |
|
We also seemed to be swimming against the tide of contemporary trends in the publication of reference works. |
|
Kerry hoteliers have said the publication of a new tourist guide could help boost business at a very uncertain time for their trade. |
|
This week's book review was published this year in paperback after its initial publication in hard cover last year. |
|
We hope the publication of this letter will go some way towards correcting the inaccuracies in the article. |
|
By one of the most remarkable coincidences in all sport, that very same year saw the publication for the first time of the laws of cricket. |
|
Twelve years after completion of a fair copy, and six years following her death, the publication of Weiner's Page is opportune. |
|
The fully illustrated, 144 page catalogue of the exhibition is the first scholarly publication on de Kooning's last decade of work. |
|
This advice is totally inappropriate for publication in a professional journal. |
|
Science is the search for fact, not the publication of spurious propaganda. |
|
This USDA publication contains a list of these counties, municipalities and townships. |
|
He conceded that the publication of secret information could be punished after the fact. |
|
They could come back with their list and the rationale behind it for publication on Webdiary. |
|
The set theory paradoxes first appeared around 1903 with the publication of Russell's paradox. |
|
It is understood that the proposals will form part of a White Paper on schools for publication by Education Secretary Ruth Kelly in the autumn. |
|
Darwin's last major publication was a treatise on the lowly earthworm that exemplified the meticulous scientific method that brought him to fame. |
|
Clearly, little mistakes, compounded by big mistakes, do not make for a credible publication or review. |
|
It is the periodical publication of the professional society of newspaper editorial writers. |
|
The effort that has gone into the research and compilation of this publication is remarkable. |
|
|
We examined publication bias and related biases in funnel plots and carried out a test of funnel plot asymmetry. |
|
The publication of the study had wider reverberations throughout the academic and scientific institutions connected with it. |
|
The inflated expectations for publication of the last twenty years have not been healthy for the profession. |
|
MsCoughlan said the next step would be the publication of formal legislative proposals by the Commission. |
|
The publication in facsimile of F.M. Piper's 1811-12 manuscript on the design of English landscape parks is a major event for garden historians. |
|
The Musical Times is a quarterly journal that considers for publication articles on a wide variety of musical subjects. |
|
An article that referred to another publication for more details was not reviewed. |
|
Alarmingly, there is only one publication to seriously address this scandal. |
|
Space does not allow publication of all questions, but all receive serious consideration. |
|
Every boating publication should forewarn their readers so that they, too, may be forearmed. |
|
For normal papers, the rate of citation peaks in the second to fourth years after publication and gradually tails off thereafter. |
|
This publication contains information on how to customize the lectionary for local needs. |
|
The complainant let the matter rest at that point, happy with publication of the letter. |
|
I'm more interested here about the conflict between the various publication laws in different parts of the Anglosphere. |
|
The publication of his extensive Poemata et Inscriptiones of 1847 may be said to bring the Anglo-Latin tradition to a close. |
|
As part of the publication process, the editorial staff further clarifies these relationships and properly discloses them in print. |
|
This hardbound book is a first-class publication presented in landscape format. |
|
Is this not the same publication which prides itself on maximum prurience every Sunday? |
|
Since the publication of her first novel, she has returned in her fiction to epiphanic moments which elide divisions in time and space. |
|
And given the editorial quality of your publication so far I think it's safe to say that your opinions will soon become well respected. |
|
|
In fact, it is a full-size, extremely elegant, high-concept publication with a beautiful, clear design and impressive art and photographs. |
|
Letters for publication must be signed and may be edited for space and clarity. |
|
I remember the motion of the feathers on that sparrow's wings from the moment I typed this poem for publication in a mimeograph newsletter. |
|
The government delayed publication of Cory's reports until March this year and redacted the most sensitive sections. |
|
His 1956 publication was the leading inspiration to revisionists in the Labour Party. |
|
They relied on the journal referees who had accepted Igor's papers for publication in order to judge the finer points of the work. |
|
It is a situation which has compelled me to write in to your publication to voice my opinion. |
|
I'm pretty sure that writing for publication is one of the most arrogant things a human can do. |
|
The publication of the Gambling Bill has been accompanied by claims that new casinos will regenerate rundown areas and be good for the economy. |
|
If the contents of the publication are untrue the law of defamation provides prohibition. |
|
The publication of French dictionaries and lexicons by Enlightenment scholars further eroded regionalisms. |
|
Nobody needs to apply to the government to buy paper and ink and print a publication or book. |
|
A more sensitive version of the weekly publication that contained material from communications intercepts was called the Situation Summary. |
|
Last week saw the launch of Ireland's first ever dedicated crime magazine, a publication that aims to tap into the public's fascination with the underbelly of society. |
|
Some 60 jobs are reported to be axed although a skeleton staff will be retained to supply European-based content for The Standard's US publication and Web site. |
|
So impressed was the millionaire with the publication that he channelled his money into founding the Rockefeller Institute of Medicine in New York. |
|
Such an act permits a government to censor and penalize the publication of information it deems secret. |
|
Perhaps the interlocking pressures of professionalization and publication encourage or force a strategic multifaceted investment in many different styles of writing. |
|
That this list appears in a free publication that's widely available, however, qualifies it as a cheap escape from the blahs for the duration of the time it takes to read it. |
|
Of course, broke freelancers or young writers struggling for a first publication credit are prone to doing what they have to do to get in print and get some payment. |
|
|
In June, she will take over a publication that has appeared in recent years to be in a death spiral. |
|
Since publication of this study, there has not been an adequate explanation of the role of the internal intercostals and the external intercostals during breathing. |
|
As described above, the process from collation of the responses to publication of the report contained several checks designed to ensure confidentiality and anonymity. |
|
In addition, the legality of the ad and its publication has apparently been challenged through writ petitions filed before courts in some parts of the country. |
|
Not only did the publication report the news as legitimate, it built a 55-image slideshow commemorating the great honor. |
|
No reputable academic journal would accept a publication without such a disclosure. |
|
Brahms' Trio in B was the subject of the composer's re-write, following the composition and publication of his later trios in C major and C minor. |
|
In January, this newspaper reported that they failed to double-check their evidence prior to publication and misattributed other evidence to them. |
|
This is the first English publication of Comedy in a minor key, a slim and poignantly titled novel. |
|
Striking testimony to the enduring power of Ulysses is that we mark not the birth of its author or the publication of the book but the imagined day of the fiction. |
|
The publication of the book had brought, besides savage criticism and attack, a compensatory leavening of pleasant new literary acquaintances in its wake. |
|
The publication of Of grammatology more than confirmed the interest aroused by the double article in Critique. |
|
With the publication of that book, Mayr was thrust into the center of the group dedicated to forming a society devoted to studying evolutionary biology. |
|
O'Reilly's working real hard here, but, doggone it, he just can't figure out why the thinking world was so upset by the publication of Meyer's paper. |
|
As a not-for-profit publication we cannot, of course, endorse either team. |
|
The unlawful publication of defamatory matter is an actionable wrong. |
|
There's really no other way to account sympathetically for the publication of this outrageous, absurd literary wreck by one of our time's most remarkable prose stylists. |
|
The publication of that piece, which touched on my list, funneled hundreds more names into my inbox. |
|
The publication in November 2001 triggered the anticipated bombshell. |
|
Before final publication approximately 300 children and their teachers at ten schools piloted the ideas in the pack, and 21 schools have trialled the finished product. |
|
|
The magazine was launched in the fall of 1894 by two partners, William H. Donaldson and James H. Hennegan, as a publication for the billposting business. |
|
Coogan's comments follow the publication of figures last week which showed that mortgage lending and levels of personal debt had reached all-time highs. |
|
The publication as a whole is a rich mine for those interested in figures. |
|
So, yea, the next portion of the entry was slated for earlier publication but due to my uninterestedness in blogging during the hectic exam period, I pushed it back until now. |
|
According to the The resurgence website, that plan called for the publication of five to seven books per year. |
|
Free publication must never become synonymous with sloppiness. |
|
After the biography's first edition publication in hardback in November 1998, Communist Party records that were not available previously came into my possession. |
|
The publication wrote that councilwoman Marti Emerald had confirmed the account. |
|
The book has sold more than 6.5 million copies since its publication last year, breaking sales records for a novel in its first 12 months, and is set to be made into a film. |
|
Their December 2003 publication in the journal Phytotherapy Research indicated that a noni extract produced a cure rate of 25-45 percent in an animal tumor model. |
|
Not being able to reach the vice president of communications in time for your deadline does not allow the publication to act irresponsibly with the facts. |
|
The Sunday papers having reached sufficient size to extend several days either side of their publication date by sheer bulk, I resolved to buy one. |
|
This may well mark the arrival of the first copies for sale in America, and thus give a terminus ante quem for the publication of the completed set. |
|
Fortunately, the balance was only slightly readjusted this summer with the publication of Ms Satrapi's critically acclaimed memoir of her childhood in Iran. |
|
The publication of curricular material, however, is decreasing day by day. |
|
Also, publication bias against studies that failed to show an effect might have limited our ability to identify features associated with ineffective systems. |
|
This is a great publication and I highly recommend subscribing. |
|
The International Committee of Medical Journal Editors is considering requiring all clinical trials submitted for publication to be listed in a registry. |
|
The alleged plan was first reported in the British publication Express, citing anonymous security sources. |
|
Later, a Nigerian publisher showed interest, and he revised his posts for book publication in Nigeria. |
|
|
A more traditional Fortean publication is the magazine Fate, which has been published since 1948, founded by science fiction magazine editor Raymond A. Palmer. |
|
Since the publication of photographs of abuse in the spring the administration's whitewashers have contended that the crimes were carried out by a few low-ranking reservists. |
|
As such, this publication is widely distributed to all units of Army. |
|
The publication has only 163 pages, but it is full of the joy found in people when one sympathetically understands the oddness of age and mental infirmity. |
|
He notes, with some disquietude, the decline in publication of case studies of smaller communities, where most nineteenth-century Americans lived and worked. |
|
A small, bird-like woman, in later years troubled by failing eyesight and arthritis, she was renowned for her piety, sponsoring the publication of devotional literature. |
|
At least one publication was temporarily closed several years ago for disregarding a similar court order. |
|
Nevertheless, the road to publication was littered with rejection slips. |
|
They claimed they backed him but had put his newest book on hold for an undisclosed future publication date. |
|
Only Seagram, Lord Gyllene and Earth Summit of the last 11 Aintree winners were quoted at 20-1 or shorter by William Hill at the time of publication of the handicap. |
|
I like your publication but you could use a good fact checker. |
|
The publication of this monograph on the mosquitoes in the seven northeastern States, and particularly of known and potential vectors of human disease, is therefore welcome. |
|
For better or worse, the paternalism and condescension towards the public which is embodied in the very idea of a publication ban has been fatally short-circuited. |
|
The abstract of his study was embargoed for publication in the United States on Monday 30 October, and the study will be published in Rheumatology later this month. |
|
It will be sent to major media news outlets two days before its publication date, on a strictly embargoed basis, to encourage media interest in the anniversary. |
|
That is why it is embargoed for general publication until Friday. |
|
With the publication of Too Much Money, Dominick Dunne will settle a few last scores from the grave. |
|
Since the publication of this book, agreement has nonetheless been reached on this option, presumably including such unrevealed public subsidies by the U.S. and Turkey. |
|
Journeys adding up to 5000 km by a team of four people have led to the publication of a guidebook to bed and breakfasts and guesthouses in Bulgaria. |
|
The publication reported last month how diggers excavating the site near Pocklington unearthed fragments of a human skeleton which almost certainly dated back to Roman times. |
|
|
The attack on the publication did not end with the Molotov cocktail thrown into its offices. |
|
In its heyday, the Review enjoyed a reputation as an obtuse and nearly unreadable but authoritative publication put together by a sometimes raffish staff. |
|
Roche will implement a new strategy that will see the newspaper's editorial more closely aligned with The Independent on Sunday, a sister publication based in London. |
|
If it's for a photo shoot, the publication pays for a stylist. |
|
SuperValu launched its first in-store publication before Christmas. |
|
Her research interests include applications of bibliometrics, the use of quantitative analysis to describe patterns of publication or scholarly activity. |
|
Thus, this monograph is a welcome publication for those who work on the later Neogene, and for paleoanthropologists interested in the ecological context of basal hominids. |
|
The exercise is very popular with most students, and some once infected with the publication bug metamorphose into helpless, chronic letter writers. |
|
We revised the statistical plan to employ adjusted rather than unadjusted analyses after publication of the initial protocol but before we conducted any analyses. |
|
This makes the concurrent publication of these two books doubly welcome. |
|
The Telegraph reports on the publication of a new dictionary of Italian neologisms, which includes dozens of coinages based on the names of political leaders. |
|
The publication said the plot was first uncovered by American intelligence. |
|
His first major publication in astronomy was a catalogue of double stars which he published in the Transactions of the Royal Society in 1824 and for which he received honours. |
|
The group recently issued a complaint against the owners of Ireland on Sunday, accusing the rival publication of using unaudited figures to inflate sales. |
|
Would that kind of publication be akin today to having a campaign blog or Twitter feed? |
|
The very fact that information will be collected focuses the mind, but the additional prospect of publication undoubtedly stimulates better performance. |
|
In the world of newspapers, a syndicate distributes information to subscribers, allowing each publication to tailor the content of information it receives. |
|
To journalists this is indispensable, even if your own publication has its own style guide as well. |
|
Allow editors to grab game footage for immediate publication while the game was still being recorded. |
|
Cyberdefamation, virus production, or negligent publication cases will rarely arise out of contractual relations. |
|
|
All law systems rely on written publication of the law, so that it is accessible to all. |
|
Prior to publication of the double helix structure, Watson and Crick had little direct interaction with Franklin herself. |
|
The final stage in publication involves making the product available to the public, usually by offering it for sale. |
|
Once a book, newspaper, or another publication is printed, the publisher may use a variety of channels to distribute it. |
|
Major reconstruction of King's began in 1966 following the publication of the Robbins Report on Higher Education. |
|
Given that Coleridge tended to be highly disorganised and had no head for business, the publication was probably doomed from the start. |
|
No publication data is cited for the original Signes et rituels magiques des femmes kabyles. |
|
The Church of Ireland undertook the first publication of Scripture in the Irish language. |
|
Even today, it is rare to find a Brethren preacher or an official Brethren publication questioning this doctrine. |
|
After the publication of Chance in 1913, Conrad was the subject of more discussion and praise than any other English writer of the time. |
|
A most ambitious project was the publication in 1888 of a facsimile edition of Thomas Dineley's Progress of. |
|
The Technical Analyst, based in the UK, is a leading publication and renowned authority in technical analysis for institutional trading. |
|
This aspect of Gill's life was little known until publication of the 1989 biography by Fiona MacCarthy. |
|
This prevented him from painting for several years, and delayed publication of In Parenthesis. |
|
For the places where flights are pricier, the publication offers some suggestions for keeping airfare costs down, Novinite. |
|
The publication of their results is a call for help to pick holes in their methods, and save physics as we now know it. |
|
He had returned to London in late 1787 to oversee the publication process alongside Lord Sheffield. |
|
In addition, the genome of the leaf cutter ant is scheduled for publication in the Feb. |
|
The following quote from a publication of the Rexist movement, a 1930s ultra conservative movement for youth, is telling in this regard. |
|
Having a key at the start or end of the publication obviates skimming over the text searching for an earlier use to find the expansion. |
|