On the restart Mitchell wriggled along the byline and looked on in frustration when his dangerous cross found no takers. |
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And he never fails to come up trumps, his byline appears in all the nationals all the time. |
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It's an indirect free-kick for Sweden on the byline just outside the Bulgaria six-yard box. |
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In the April 6 issue there appears an article under the byline of staffer Handrie Basson. |
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Ten days later the ill-fated invasion took place at the Bay of Pigs and Tad's byline was on the front page. |
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He makes a dash for the byline but is dispossessed before he can get a cross in. |
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His run took him to the byline and his clearance only sent the ball running across the goalline. |
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He picked up a long ball on the right wing, cut inside and found himself on the byline, a couple of yards from the Monaco post and goalkeeper. |
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Give the name on the byline an italic touch, and somehow the visual rhythm of the text may be altered for the better. |
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His decision gave him no option but to hit a harmless ball across the goal from the byline. |
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In the future I will read any article that has your name in its byline with a very critical eye indeed! |
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What reporters really want is their byline on the front page above the fold. |
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And always try to include keywords in the headline and byline of your article. |
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The byline is Bumiller's and the dateline is Clive, IA, which means she was physically in Clive at some point, but you'd never know it. |
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The articles produced direct traffic to the site as well as numerous inbound links because of the link created in the article byline. |
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My ex-boyfriend had gotten his first byline in the newspaper of record with an essay about me, him and our shared past. |
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In 2009-10, FCAC produced various communications products, including press releases, letters to the editor, feature articles and byline articles. |
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Jafarli said they were asked what pseudonym Fatullayev used as a byline for his own articles. |
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Using his astonishing speed he next got to the byline and drilled in a dangerous low cross that was well gathered by Nathan Coe. |
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As it happens, Trierweiler, then writing for Paris Match under her maiden name Massonneau, had a byline on the accompanying story. |
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You will develop a flair for short, pithy phrases that will identify you as the writer, whether your byline is published or your story is magically morphed into a brief. |
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Blair falsified datelines and put his byline on the work of others. |
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For those of you staring at the byline about to reach for your pens and write scathing letters crying out nepotism and other indecent dishonesties, sit down. |
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The picture on his byline makes him look like a rather doddery retired professor with just a hint of Frankenstein's monster to his eyebrows and chin. |
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We chaps also know what it's like to be grossly abdominous, and if my byline photo were full length and in profile, you'd have perceived that I've been 14 months pregnant for the past five years. |
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We will also ask you for a short one-sentence bio to put alongside your byline. |
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The piece, intriguingly lacking a byline, refers to the paper's editor. |
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Even as a cub reporter, Dunleavy would go to any lengths to get his byline published. |
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From his wide berth, he has the ability to get to the byline and cross with pinpoint accuracy to a team-mate's head. |
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As a contracted freelance, King says he did not usually have a byline over his rewrites. |
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The original News of the World Diary piece that Bradby refers to was published on November 13, under Clive Goodman's byline. |
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Back on the pitch, Spurs continue to press, with Adebayor linking up with Kyle Walker down by the byline. |
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Last May 14 an article appeared in the Montreal Gazette under the byline of Peter Hadekel. |
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Bilingual communication supports can use both language alternatives of the logotype plus byline, but not on the same page. |
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Authors receive a byline credit and two complimentary copies of the issue in which their work appears. |
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Current practice is for online news staff to receive credit in an online masthead, and for current affairs contributors to receive a byline. |
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Please do not use this article without the byline and resource box. |
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Or a music lover scratching out a review on some hip site for a byline alone. |
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Publish the link in an article byline or blog as soon as possible. |
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A minute later Kendal's new recruit Simon Garner missed his tackle on the left and Craig Hopkins raced to the byline before squaring the ball to Taylor. |
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He was egotistical even as a child, it is noted, infatuated with the sight of his name on a rubber stamp and later as a byline. |
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Politico posted a condensed version of the brief, and I shared the byline with Ilya. |
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Her byline later appeared on a blog post about how people could apply in the new exchanges. |
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When he writes under his own byline, McGurn's views on economics are just as conservative as, and even more quirky than, The Wall Street Journal's unsigned editorials. |
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But when it comes to the byline battles, no matter who is in the White House, podesta and his allies face an uphill battle. |
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Her eyes searched for the byline to see the name of the reporter. |
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Those I know have given up trying to pay for me for such things, but they'll still offer to help place anything I produce, if not write the article for my byline. |
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My email address is hyperlinked to the byline below each post. |
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Wells did not automatically receive the byline his reputation demanded until after 1896 or so. |
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Nicky Ward bagged his 10th goal of the season on 57 minutes when heading home Toner's cross at the far post from the right byline. |
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And, when he gets to the byline, he delivers curling crosses like a Brazilian. |
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The proposal doesn't address the issue of byline, which in the long history of publishers trying to enlarge upon the legacy of the deceased has often made a difference in how follow-ups are received. |
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Bernardo Silva proved pesky down Monaco's right flank for a while, combining slickly with Jeremy Toulalan and Moutinho to reach the byline as Chiellini stumbled, with Barzagli instinctively deflecting the pull-back behind. |
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Don't lose your head', is the byline of Derek Landy's fourth novel in the Skulduggery Pleasant series. |
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Racing down the right to the byline, he crossed low and hard. |
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The logotype is therefore used without a byline. |
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Two articles from a newspaper, magazine, trade magazine, other publication or online article with byline that has been published within the last year. |
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Confidence up, Walcott then set up Welbeck's winner with a darting run that took him to the byline before firing a low centre into the six-yard area. |
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Blessed with the blistering pace needed to fly past his man on the way to the byline, he has also won many plaudits for his ability to supply pinpoint crosses with either foot. |
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The light was grey but even and I stood above a crush-barrier at the curve of the Stretford End, which gave me a perfect view up the byline of the moments that announced his genius. |
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Signed editorials are similar to consensus editorials, with the exception that the author is clearly identified with a byline and often with a small photograph as well. |
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Use of a two-language byline over the same logotype is not permitted. |
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She graduated to the prestigious Miami Herald, becoming the first teenager to receive a byline for her environmental writing, and is now a regular contributor. |
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But the pressure was clearly showing and in the 11th minute Nathan D'Laryea slipped on the Rochdale right, Adam Rundle drove to the byline and cut a neat pass back to Cummins. |
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No bowhunter should have to follow a Frank Noska resume, but Matt Palmquist, of Grainfield, Kansas, is also a serious bowhunter whose byline has appeared in these pages. |
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