(1) The journals would also publish letters and articles sent in by readers, thus keeping the public actively involved in their content.
(2) Kent State University Press will soon publish a book of his Cleveland landscapes.
(3) Monica may have lost out by not having Judith publish her book.
(4) Publish and be damned!
(5) The pressures on researchers to publish
(6) We pay $10 for every letter we publish
(7) We publish practical reference books
(8) We pay u00d4u00f6u00bcu251cu25515 for every letter we publish
(9) Some will use print to publish well-researched news stories that threaten the powerful, some will write pamphlets, others lies and libels.
(10) The Register has shamed itself by printing this and should publish an immediate retraction.
(11) In May the Government announced plans to publish a draft Bill on corporate manslaughter with the timetable for legislation, plus further details, to be announced this autumn.
(12) As sequencing projects had grown larger and larger it had become quite impossible and pointless for journals to publish the sequences in print.
(13) It was, as Freedom of Information documents revealed, solely because he dared to publish this book.
(14) It is a fundamental aspect of defamation law - certainly in England and Australia but not in Scotland - that you have to publish to a third party.
(15) In print, we may publish several photos with the story.
(16) Trunk is about to publish a book of library music album covers.
(17) Alves says he hopes to publish a journal article this fall detailing the 2004 findings.
(18) To publish the banns
(19) Print up invitations to a marriage, publish banns at a friendly church, have one or more brides or grooms and even eat wedding cake.
(20) I discovered that some reasonably well-known names are using Lulu to print and publish collections of their photographs, either in black and white or full colour.