Author of posted articles covering all sports.
Not exact matches
Subsequently, another peer - reviewed
article argued that the findings reported in this
post (and affiliated
article) were biased and that the
authors» data do not provide evidence
of non-citizen voting in U.S. elections.»
The
articles posted on this blog / website are the opinion
of the
author and should not be considered professional financial advice.
I need to include everything from blog
posts to videos to
articles, keep track
of multiple
authors and creators, and categorize everything by product and target audience.
Most recently, he wrote a series
of posts on link building — «Link Building Workshop 1: Rethinking the Link» and «Link Building Workshop 2: From Link Builder to Link Specialist» and he will be
authoring an
article in the upcoming Fall issue
of the magazine.
I find it strange and a bit sad that the
posts in response to an
article that is decrying the negative images many have
of atheist are
of the same sort
of mean spirited close - minded stereotypical behavior that gives many those negative images the
author was upset about.
The Tablet actually
posted an
article on its website in which the
author suggested that asking children to say in The Confiteor «through my fault, through my fault, through my own most grievous fault» while beating their breasts, was a form
of psychological child abuse.
I'm just
posting to tell the
author of this
article to shut up.
The
author of the
article, Mark Regnerus, wrote a similar op - ed piece for The Washington
Post.
To the
author of this
article you have been
posting Wenger out
articles here some
of us are already bored
of these same old Wenger is bad nonsense, who do you think you're!
In this previous
article, the
author posted a YouTube
of Lukaku's goals vs Chelsea, hope you are ready for the backlash on their own fans page....
The website http://sportsbettingstarreviews.blogspot.com has a glowing review
of the Sports Betting Star; however it was very odd to see that there have been no other
posts on this website and that the
author has not penned any other
articles.
Also, I'm not sure if Roy meant that he was quoting Paul Fleiss (the
author of some
of the
articles I
posted), though I don't know that Fleiss ever said that STDs were more common in an uncirc'd male.
In this
article from The Huffington
Post,
author Chris Elam talks about the launch
of our groundbreaking new website advocating for major reform in school food, The Lunch Box.
I suppose that re-writing this
post in the context that it was a hospital birth weakens the impact, but the message that mothers and babies are at risk would still come through loud and clear... while more accurately representing the
author of that
article.
There are a ton
of tips out there about building blog traffic, but the best advice seems to come down to this: define your niche,
post good content,
post frequently, pitch your
articles to other sites if you think the
authors might be interested (but don't overdo it), and look for other sites that might run your
articles with a link back to your main site.
Everyone should
post how they disagree with this
article, so that we can show the righteous gentiles that we are pro-morality, and that the views
of this
author DO NOT REPRESENT US IN ANY WAY!!!!!!!!!
He is the
author of The New Law
of Peaceful Protest: Rights and Regulation in the Human Rights Act Era, published by Hart Publishing in 2010, and numerous
articles and blog
posts over the past ten years.
For research papers created under grants for which the
authors are required by their funding agencies to make their research results publicly available (for example, from NIH, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, or Wellcome Trust), we allow
posting of the accepted version
of research content (Research
Articles and Reports) to the funding body's archive or designated repository (such as PubMed Central) no sooner than six months after publication, provided that a link to the final version
of the paper published in the Science Journal is included.
This blog
post is based on the
authors»
article, «Assessing Public Engagement Outcomes by the Use
of an Outcome Expectations Scale for Scientists», published in Science Communication (DOI: 10.1177 / 1075547017738018).
Two
of the
article's
authors, Ken Zweibel and James Mason, are
posting detailed responses to readers.
As noted in a blog
post at ChemBark, the
authors of an
article published in a chemistry journal seem to have done something similar, but worse: A note was left in the supporting information that seems to instruct the primary
author to fabricate data.
This
article, which was originally published in The National
Post on September 14, 2002, is reposted here with the permission
of the
author.
Authors may not discuss their work with the media until 1 week before the mailing date or 1 week before online
posting of the
article, whichever is earlier, and must ensure that the media representatives agree to abide by the embargo policy.
In addition to the hundreds
of articles and
posts that we have put up, you'll also find numerous
articles and
posts from guest
authors who have wanted to help you out as well.
She has shared her expertise at the Virginia Dietetics Association Annual Conference, presented on gluten - free diet for an FDA Panel on Gluten in Medications, guest taught for Institute for Integrative Nutrition, presented at an FDA panel on Gluten in Medications, has been quoted in the Washington
Post on a gluten - free diet, discussed gluten sensitivity on on «Let's Talk Live DC», chatted on Celiac Radio, and has
authored articles and classes for Today's Dietitian, including Growing up Gluten - Free in the Sept 2013 issue
of Today's Dietitian and Celiac and Thyroid disease.
(trying to be nice here to the
author of the
article /
post I'm responding to
In addition to hundreds
of counseling sessions and the immeasurable work he's done with eHarmony, Neil has
authored more than 10 books, has been interviewed more than 7,000 times, and has written dozens
of articles for publications like The Huffington
Post.
The
author of 16 books and more than 400
articles, his work has appeared in such publications as The Weekly Standard, Christian Science Monitor, Commentary, The Public Interest, The Wall Street Journal, Washington
Post, New York Times, Education Week, Harvard Business Review and Boston Globe.
She is the
author of Educating Activist Allies: Social Justice Pedagogy with the Suburban and Urban Elite, as well as several
articles and blog
posts in academic journals and publications like Teaching Tolerance and Rethinking Schools.
This
Article is the translation, with the kind permission
of the
author, Maurice J. Elias,
of the
post Helping your Students Identify Their Values that has been published in Edutopia, the third July 2017.
Accordingly, and also per the research, this is not getting much better in that, as per the
authors of this
article as well as many other scholars, (1) «the variance in value - added scores that can be attributed to teacher performance rarely exceeds 10 percent; (2) in many ways «gross» measurement errors that in many ways come, first, from the tests being used to calculate value - added; (3) the restricted ranges in teacher effectiveness scores also given these test scores and their limited stretch, and depth, and instructional insensitivity — this was also at the heart
of a recent
post whereas in what demonstrated that «the entire range from the 15th percentile
of effectiveness to the 85th percentile
of [teacher] effectiveness [using the EVAAS] cover [ed] approximately 3.5 raw score points [given the tests used to measure value - added];» (4) context or student, family, school, and community background effects that simply can not be controlled for, or factored out; (5) especially at the classroom / teacher level when students are not randomly assigned to classrooms (and teachers assigned to teach those classrooms)... although this will likely never happen for the sake
of improving the sophistication and rigor
of the value - added model over students» «best interests.»
As background, and from a related
article about the Cowen Institute and one
of its new affiliates — Douglas Harris, who has also written a book about VAMs but positioned VAMs in a more positive light than I did in my book, but who is also not listed as a direct or affiliated
author on the report — the situation in New Orleans
post Katrina is as follows:
To give you a taste
of what sort
of attitudes are spawned by the CTA Empire's monstrous deluge
of misleading us - vs - them rhetoric, here's a comment
posted on a UnionWatch
article authored by Friedrichs, «Teachers Stand Against Union Tyranny ``:
She is the
author of numerous
articles, books and blog
posts (including on The Answer Sheet) about the botched school reform efforts in her state.
She has published
articles in Educational Leadership, Phi Delta Kappan and the Journal
of Staff Development and the Middle School Journal, writes
posts for 4 blogs regularly and has
authored or co-
authored over 30 books for teacher, leader resources.
I am writing this here just in case you are
of the misconception that answers are like forum
posts, indelible
articles authored by a single person.
Another reader, Erin,
posted a comment after my
article that said, «The vast majority
of agents I've researched are BEGGING for ethnically and religiously diverse
authors.
After I
posted the original
article, a lot
of authors posted comments, which made me realize I had more information you might find helpful.
Here are six recent favorite
articles full
of great advice about building better titles for your
author blog
posts.
He has published over a dozen books using Amazon's Digital Text Platform (DTP), and has been featured in numerous
articles and blog
posts as an
author who is making a living off
of Kindle.
• This
article is also featured in Joel Friedlander's online publication The Carnival
of the Indies — Issue # 33 • This
article is also
posted on LinkedIn.com • This
article is also
posted on EzineArticles.com • This
article is also
posted on SPANnet.org • This
article is also
posted on Business2Community.com • This
article is also
posted on WritersCafe.org • Thank you to
author Katherine Lowry Logan for linking to my
articles from her blog KatherineLowryLogan.com
I my blog
article 7 Ways Social Media Helps
Authors we discuss how each
post is a reminder
of your brand, message, and growing influence.
From your social media updates, blog
posts and
article contributions, to your podcast interviews,
author collaborations or your newest release... Everything adds to the bigger picture
of who you are, and what you can bring to the table.
We actually talk to
authors - you see a few blog
posts and
articles and believe we are at war but the reality is many
of us know trad published
authors - some are happy, some are becoming unhappy, some are in the middle
of lawsuits, some are no longer writing because they couldn't afford to sue and gave up.
By John Warner This
article was originally
posted on indiebookspot.com Wendy Cartmell,
author of...
Having read your
post — which is wonderfully thorough and informative by the way — you've actually answered several questions I did intend to pose to an
author such as yourself, and I was wondering if I might have your permission to use a small part
of your
post in my
article?
Most
of the
articles and
posts I have read that deride self - publishing, and even worse, conduct bitter attacks against the validity, capability or worthiness
of self - published
authors, are in my mind written by those who have failed to grasp what the future holds.
-LSB-...]
Posted by admin on Sep 5, 2012 Although it was not the first salvo in the unveiling
of the fiasco that is
author - purchased book reviews, David Streitfeld's
article The Best Book Reviews Money Can Buy (NY Times, Aug. 26, 2012) has set off a firestorm
of discussions like the one I'm following on The Book Designer website (Should
Authors Pay for Book Reviews?).
The
author of the
article has a blog
post about why was so hard to get people to speak on the record http://m.newyorker.com/online/blogs/books/2014/02/the-perils-
of-non-disclosure.html