• Niall Stokes, editor of Hot Press magazine, said he felt the programming for the Peace One Day concert was running very late.

    BBC: Cult band pulls out of Derry gig

  • These he transferred in light pencil onto large sheets of Arches 300-pound hot-press paper, some of them as much as six feet in length, at which point Zega set to work painting the reconstructed edifices in intense watercolor hues, taking as long as a month on each.

    FORBES: Palace Coup

  • Hot off the press: The Times newspaper has just announced that it will be launching an Internet television service this week.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • London - Hot off the press: The Times newspaper has just announced that it will be launching an Internet television service this week.

    FORBES: Murdoch's 'Times' Newspaper To Launch Internet TV

  • The use of military tear-gas rounds had actually been noted in a number of documents amassed by the FBI and other law-enforcement officers over the years, but no officials realized they were technically--and thus figuratively--"hot" until the press started calling around a month ago.

    CNN: The return of Waco

  • We also got to take a peek at some hot-off-the-press Pebbles in their final finishes -- the black, gray, orange, red and white wearables posed for a point-and-shoot, so they don't pack the typical punch of a pro photo job.

    ENGADGET: Pebble smartwatch hit with further delays, won't be stuffing a stocking near you

  • Restitution for Arab Jews is not a hot topic in Israel, where the press largely ignored the congressional vote, though a group of prominent Israelis has started a campaign to publicise the issue.

    ECONOMIST: America and Israel

  • But when the Italian leader was questioned about his chairmanship at a press conference, he grew hot under the collar, pointing out that he would hardly have become a billionaire unless he were fully capable of chairing a meeting.

    ECONOMIST: Decoding a Euro-diplomat takes more than a dictionary

  • As for the crudities of hot-metal typesetting and letter-press printing, all these have long been superseded by electronic setting (in which a 1970s managing director, Ian Trafford, was a pioneer, and made The Economist one too), and by the stunning quality of modern offset printing.

    ECONOMIST: Our paper in the 1930s: Ninety-plus, and still young | The

  • These hot new dollars, fresh off the printing press, are buying treasuries and mortgage-backed securities so that their market price is bid up even higher (and therefore interest rates are even lower).

    FORBES: Guess Who Else Is Stealing Money From Bank Depositors?

  • "I think this is too hot to play tennis, " Radwanska told reporters at a press conference.

    CNN: Tennis stars feel the heat in Sydney

  • From corporate disclosures which are quite vague, one gets the sense that they are trying to disclose the minimum that will keep them out of hot water with the SEC but immune to the prying eyes of the press and investors.

    FORBES: Cyberattacks -- Is North Korea Already At War With Us?

  • Would a study showing that the Danes or Portuguese, say, washed less than their neighbours have had the same gleeful reception from the foreign press that greeted a report this past autumn about French frugality with hot water?

    ECONOMIST: If in doubt, bash the French

  • Back at the press base, where the 60-strong media pack have to suffer saunas, open-air natural hot springs, and an underground disco, the antics of the tiny but dedicated British contingent are gradually endearing themselves to the Italian media.

    BBC: Home-from-home comforts

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