Fielding banks on votes from Mr X's crusade Oct 27, 2009
His presence in parliament and 00004000 the number of votes he received in the 2004 election (56,376) echoes this. He is there voicing his bigoted views as a result of preferences from the major parties. (Sydney Morning Herald -- Opinion)
Yanzhou takeover a foreign-led first Oct 24, 2009
The new approach that Canberra has accepted in Yanzhou's takeover bid of Felix echoes suggestions made by BHP Billiton's chairman, and long-time critic of unfettered ownership access by China to major Australian resources, Don Argus. Mr Argus said on Thursday that Australia needed to frame a policy response to the raid by China's state-owned enterprises or face a loss of control similar to that of the Canadian mining industry. (Sydney Morning Herald -- Business)
SICK: Game show fakes sniper attack... Oct 16, 2009
Suddenly the windows smash, the sound of gunfire echoes through the room, and blood spurts from the chests of the men around him. As they collapse, he crawls in obvious terror to the door, scrabbling in fear against it when he finds it locked. (The Drudge Report)
Howie Day Set To Release SOUND THE ALARM September 8 Jul 29, 2009
The new album very obviously echoes my own life, in all of its highs and lows, Day says. Some of the songs draw inspiration from people and places Ive observed, and then bits of my own experiences find their way in. (Yahoo! Wire -- Entertainment News)
Roger Ebert decries Bill OReillys shrillness Jun 19, 2009
They've chosen a certain radio persona and they are stuck in a No Exit play of their own making doomed to echoes in their own chamber. It's a wonder they don't go mad doing the same show over and over. (Harper's Magazine)
Critics kicked off a bit early, says Cahill Jun 5, 2009
Cahill echoes the view of numerous teammates, who feel a disconnect between what the Australian public wants and what it should expect to get. These are all players operating in ruthless club environments where pragmatism holds sway, and they, like almost all professionals in the game, take a Machiavellian view of things: the result is infinitely more important than the performance. (Sydney Morning Herald -- Sport)
It all started with a walkout in Wagga Wagga Mar 7, 2009
" Lola's choice echoes that of her mother, as Lennox left her native Scotland aged 17 after winning a place at the Royal Academy to study classical music. Now she has 78 million record sales under her belt, 34 hit singles, four Grammy awards and 11 Brit awards. Oh, and an Oscar (for best original song for Into The West from The Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King). Lennox says she feels a great gratitude for being allowed to do what she loves for a living. Travel, seeing poverty, hunger... (Sydney Morning Herald -- Entertainment)