Previous work included writing a column called the Lycos 50 on lycos.com.
It was the first building to use huge columns called a "giant order".
Reed notes that his columns are often provocative and calls himself "an equal-opportunity irritant".
Hornby writes a column for an American magazine called the Believer.
She also writes a monthly column for a community newspaper called the Town Crier.
To support himself, he wrote annual reports and a monthly column for Esquire called "Classics."
From 1934 to 1943, he wrote a column in the Sun called "Setting the Pace."
Each column has a capital of two parts, the upper, on which rests the lintels, being square and called the "abacus".
Lascher's column called for the end of teacher employment practices based on seniority.
To protect the engineers, the column called in a mock artillery strike, including a round with smoke to obscure the battlefield.