"A headline like `Pen Stolen from Dorm Study Area' is a classic Onion headline," said Randazzo, referring to a front-page story from 1989. From Wordnik.com. [The Seattle Times] Reference
He became a front-page sensation, with an ego to match. From Wordnik.com. [Revenge Of The Irish Lord] Reference
The sorry state of the world economy is front-page news. From Wordnik.com. [Calming the Bear] Reference
The next day the paper ran another sympathetic front-page story. From Wordnik.com. [Rage And Revolution 101] Reference
In March, a front-page Variety headline begged, WHERE'S THE ACTION?. From Wordnik.com. [A Piece Of The Action!] Reference
Six days after landing in Maryland, Blair scored a front-page story. From Wordnik.com. [The Times Bomb] Reference
Why is it that when American soldiers are KIA, it's no longer front-page news?. From Wordnik.com. [Conventional Wisdom] Reference
Then came the bizarre twist that turned hometown tragedy into front-page news. From Wordnik.com. [A Mysterious Baby Mix-Up] Reference
In a front-page article last week, The Wall Street Journal echoed the same theme. From Wordnik.com. [Is Inflation Really Dead?] Reference
A front-page commentary in China's People's Daily, on why the Falun Gong must be eradicated. From Wordnik.com. [Empty Title] Reference
It is hard to think of another area in which such mundane findings could be front-page news. From Wordnik.com. [Sex In The Snoring '90S] Reference
Morris's face was on the cover of Time, he was the subject of a front-page USA Today profile. From Wordnik.com. [Wild Card] Reference
Even now, nearly a year after they took delivery, the plane continues to make front-page news. From Wordnik.com. [Friendly Skies] Reference
The Chicago Tribune broke the study with a front-page story, but most coverage has been minimal. From Wordnik.com. [Do We Care About Truth?] Reference
It's ludicrous when it happens in the heartland, but it is front-page news when it's in New York. From Wordnik.com. [Evil Yankees, Awful Mets] Reference
"For an Iraqi family, no other choice," read the Washington Post's front-page headline last Friday. From Wordnik.com. [Beware The Puppet Masters] Reference
Clinton's arrival wasn't even front-page news for Moskovsky Komsomolets, the most popular paper in Moscow. From Wordnik.com. [Seeing Sunshine In Moscow] Reference
Isioma Daniel, editor of Lagos-based newspaper ThisDay, in a front-page article on the Miss World pageant. From Wordnik.com. [Perspectives] Reference
It is also front-page news in the Korean-American community, where many fear it adds fuel to an already raging fire. From Wordnik.com. [Cube On Thin Ice] Reference
In small local newspapers all over the country, the deaths of U.S. troops in Iraq already command front-page coverage. From Wordnik.com. [The Ghost of Katrina] Reference
"I am a sick man," he told The Sun, a London tabloid that has told his story in a series of gaudy front-page exclusives. From Wordnik.com. [The Heist: Round Two] Reference
None of this is likely to be front-page news -- and, in fact, "" The Bell Curve '' rests on some crushingly obvious ideas. From Wordnik.com. [Iq] Reference
Donations toward the defense have been received from as far away as Saudi Arabia, where the case has made front-page news. From Wordnik.com. [Marriage Or Rape?] Reference
Twenty years ago, this tale would have been relegated to the (thin) business section of a paper; today it's front-page news. From Wordnik.com. [AMID DISASTER, NEW CONFIDENCE] Reference
The Mirror, a British tabloid, published a front-page picture of Murdoch with horns on his head under the headline RED DEVIL. From Wordnik.com. [The Sporting Life] Reference
And if, in the spirit of sportsmanship, one of them embraces a rival or kisses him on the cheek, it won't be front-page news. From Wordnik.com. [The Game Of Good Will] Reference
The deal between the firebrand Paisley and the silky politico Adams will be front-page news across the British Isles on Tuesday. From Wordnik.com. [Power-Sharing Pact] Reference
In a front-page story April 14, The Wall Street Journal headlined: round the globe, signs point to final days of the financial crisis. From Wordnik.com. [Sunrise--Or False Dawn?] Reference
Tim Cornillie Barrington, Ill. Over the past year, there have been an increasing number of front-page stories on issues of Christianity. From Wordnik.com. [MAIL CALL AND CORRECTION: FROM THE PASSION TO THE] Reference
Mathias Dopfner, the editor of the Berlin-based Die Welt, perfectly captured the country's current mood in a recent front-page commentary. From Wordnik.com. [Berlin's Fresh Faces] Reference
I want to know what the editors think was the most important story of the day — and the six other stories that demand a front-page start. From Wordnik.com. [Susan Lyne’s Digital Makeover] Reference
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