Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Both his private life and financial troubles captured the headlines in 1991.
In recent years, the crime has captured the headlines.
While the $198 captured the headlines, other bargain fares are available.
Whatever wars may capture the headlines, the one that still fires the greatest passions is the battle of the sexes.
I couldn't agree more that workload is excessive but pensions and strikes seem to capture the headlines more!
The problems created by conflicts and a lack of director independence are far from limited to the companies that have captured the headlines, experts on governance said.
In the early decades, Irish, Polish, Jewish and Italian street gangs captured the headlines.
Because so many other issues have captured the headlines in recent years, American trade problems with China have been largely lost from view, but they are extremely serious.
BIG projects capture the headlines but, aside from the redevelopment of the World Trade Center site, it's time to focus on smaller development opportunities.
As China's campaign against "bourgeois liberalization" captures the headlines, Zhen Wen gets her facials.
Q. The Microsoft case is capturing the headlines, but the Government recently brought an antitrust suit against Mastercard and Visa.
"I don't intend to try to manufacture an issue just to capture the headlines," he said, referring to the publicity surrounding Elizabeth Dole's embrace of gun control.
This year's new teams - the Mighty Ducks of Anaheim, Calif., and the Florida Panthers - have been capturing the headlines.
Teenager Lee Ellison captured the headlines, and attracted League scouts to Feethams, with his goal scoring earlier in the season.
But it is Ms. Schultz-Fademrecht who has captured the headlines here, with her harrowing tale of escaping the giant waves as they engulfed her guest house.
Democrats asked why the governor acted when he did, late on a Thursday when John Kerry was about to capture the headlines by accepting the Democratic nomination for president.
Ever since Tiger Woods fell from golf's good graces, we've seen a strange melange of top-ranked golfers and major winners capturing the headlines, but never at the same time.
Recent signatories have included the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of York, whose separation from Prince Andrew has captured the headlines in the last week.
Rather, whenever a heinous crime captures the headlines, a cry goes up from lawmakers, who want to appear to be tough on crime, that it should be subject to a Federal statute.
Judging from her letters, the girl's case has a certain amount of psychological interest, but this murder probably captured the headlines because it provided distraction amid the doodle-bugs and the anxieties of the Battle of France.
The explosive details about President Bush's obsession with Iraq in the immediate aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks captured the headlines in the days after the book's release, but "Against All Enemies" offers more.
Tucked at the far end of Kamunting Road (Malay: Jalan Kamunting), it captured the headlines when Jim Thompson vanished from the neighbourhood on Sunday, March 26, 1967.
He captured the headlines six years ago when he danced with the Princess of Wales to the music of Billy Joel's Uptown Girl during a charity performance at the Royal Opera House.
"If Morrison were to win a primary, he would have a legitimacy that he doesn't now have - it would vitalize the party, bring attention to the Democrats, and capture the headlines away from Weicker," he said.