Sentences with phrase «because early paper»

The BBC reported the attempt failed because the papers should have been served to all protestors, rather than just to one individual, and because the earliest the papers should have been served was tomorrow.

Not exact matches

One week later, in early November, the editorial board of the Daily Progress, Charlottesville's local paper, opined that because Republicans also control Virginia's General Assembly, «we believe Ed Gillespie has the best chance of leading Virginia to a brighter economic future.»
So dumb, in fact, that when he handed me the papers to sign years earlier, I didn't even bother to look at what I was signing, trusting that everything was in order because he said it was.
I used parchment paper coated with a light spray of Pam because I didn't have much plastic wrap left after making breakfast burritos for hubby earlier in the day.
Because of the early frost here in Portland, Oregon, I have picked all (about 8 brown paper grocery bags full) of my guajillo, pasilla, poblano and other peppers.
Q: Hi Dave, Because of the early frost here in Portland, Oregon, I have picked all (about 8 brown paper grocery bags full) of my guajillo, pasilla, poblano and other peppers.
Van Natta, then a New York Times correspondent and now an investigative reporter for the paper, was surprised that Clinton accepted his invitation, because Van Natta had been told that Clinton hated an earlier story he had written on the president's rule - bending ways (in golf).
The biggest benefit that employers and students may find with the new Tax Pathway will be that they can choose which ATT papers to sit at the beginning of their study path because no papers are mandatory at that early stage.
There were some very early papers in the 1930s that proposed using supernovas — really, really bright exploding stars — to measure the universe's expansion because it appeared there was consistency in how bright they got.
Earlier this year, STRI research associate William Laurance published a paper in Science, stressing the importance of considering wildlife conservation during transportation infrastructure planning, because it is well known in the conservation community that roads «can unleash a Pandora's box of environmental ills, such as land encroachment, wildlife poaching, forest fragmentation, exotic species invasions and illegal mining.»
«I didn't even bother to submit my papers to journals because I had been so much harassed by the referees [of earlier papers],» she told New Scientist.
«We think it's probably because of getting involved with oral sex at an earlier age than earlier generations,» says Shanthi Marur, an assistant professor of oncology at Johns Hopkins Medicine's Upper Aerodigestive Cancer Program, who co-authored an August paper on the subject in The Lancet Oncology.
The White Paper quotes a survey conducted earlier this year, which found that half the companies polled were worried that «the efforts to develop and produce high value - added products in Japan will not go smoothly», because of direct competition from other Asian countries.
«This is exciting because we now have a proven resource that could finally bring definitive answers to fundamental questions about the early movements and conditions of human populations — and new information about the importance of vitamin D for modern populations,» says McMaster anthropologist Megan Brickley, lead author of the paper and Canada Research Chair in the Bioarchaeology of Human Disease.
This paper was chosen as a feature highlight because it explores one of the early questions in the field of human population genetics: the whereabouts of the expansion out of Africa that brought modern humans to colonize the rest of the world in the last ~ 60,000 years.
But in April 2015, that paper was retracted — because it had plagiarized an earlier paper.
To support their contention that hunter - gatherers eating net acid - producing diets suffered ill health because of it, they cited a single paper showing high rates of osteoporosis in skeletons of Sadlermiut Inuit from the early contact period.
Perhaps because of those young Hammocks and my (even then) obsession with the whole paper - digital connection, about 15 - years ago, an early Hammock project was a magazine advertorial that appeared in Family Fun magazine that was sponsored by several pioneer developers of what used to be called back then, edutainment — think Madden NFL meets Richard Scarry's Busytown.
But that system works because the higher price point gets you a better product — better paper stock, a stronger cover, and yes, also an earlier release date (just because I personally don't like the practice doesn't negate the fact that it's generally seen as a point of value).
Perhaps because of those young Hammocks and my (even then) obsession with the whole paper - digital connection, about 15 years ago, an early Hammock project was a magazine advertorial that appeared in Family Fun magazine that was sponsored by several pioneer developers of what used to be called back then edutainment — think Madden NFL meets Richard Scarry's Busytown.
I bought many of my DRIPs in late 2007 and early 2008 because I was getting a discount on the broker fees due to a one time annual subscription to Direct Investing's «Money Paper
3) Another research paper on the health impact of spay / neuter — the book of research on the health impacts of spay / neuter (particularly early spay / neuter) continues to grow and I think every single person involved in animal welfare needs to read this study — because it's going to dramatically impact how we operate in the years to come.
[Response: Not sure what you are referring to that we have said, but the reason why this is noteworthy is because it underlines our comments made earlier that the PC normalisation issue that was the basis for the M&M (2005) paper is irrelevant, and that the reconstructions only diverge (and get worse) if you start removing data.
No, that was a speculation by a journalist in the early days of the investigation, because another paper (Russian, I think) used a 2305 date.
John Sterman, a professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management, published a paper earlier this year that argued burning pellets would release more carbon dioxide than coal in the short term because it was a less efficient source of energy.
My reasons are given in the earlier thread of a few days ago and a much earlier one when the paper first appeared, and I won't repeat them here, because this thread is about the behavior of scientists rather than the science per se.
For more on the terrestrial foods topic, see my detailed discussion in this previous post, and this recent (March 30) ScienceNews report on yet another, largely anecdotal «polar bears resort to bird eggs because of declining sea ice» story (see photo below, based on a new paper by Prop and colleagues), which was also covered March 31 at the DailyMail («Polar bears are forced to raid seabird nests as Arctic sea ice melts — eating more than 200 eggs in two hours,» with lots of hand - wringing and sea ice hype but little mention of the fact that there are many more bears now than there were in the early 1970s around Svalbard or that the variable, cyclical, AMO (not global warming) has had the largest impact on sea ice conditions in the Barents Sea).
Moreover, the paper gets its history wrong when it notes that «Total cancer mortality rates did not decline until 1990, 25 years after the identification of the effect of smoking on lung and other cancers...» Well, actually, it was more like 50 years, because the earliest studies to connect smoking and lung cancer were conducted not by NIH - funded scientists but by Nazi scientists in the run - up to World War II.4 By the logic of the PNAS paper, then, ought we to be crediting the Nazi health science agenda with whatever progress has been made on reducing lung cancer, rather than the incredibly protracted and difficult public health campaign (that, for the most part, NIH had nothing to do with) aimed at getting people to cut down on smoking?
Consumers were initially resistant to replacing their familiar paper bags, but by the early 1980s, national grocery chains were subbing paper for plastic, largely because plastic was cheaper: These days, the cost is one to two cents per bag, as opposed to six to eight cents for paper bags.
As things stand we can find out more easily what went on in the 1920s, 30s, 40s and 50s than we can about what happened in the early years of this century because our key documents from that time were on paper and archived — unlike our more recent work which is buried on servers, outdated formats, or just lost.
In my early months in the field of legal research practice I discovered the usefulness of ALRI reports and working / discussion papers, primarily because Alberta was undergoing a major revision of its limitation of actions legislation, and sessions were hosted to introduce the Bar to the then - forthcoming changes.
In a nutshell, it is a review of the Court's engagement with constitutional conventions, from the 1930s and into the early 21st century — I don't discuss the Reference re Senate Reform, 2014 SCC 32, [2014] 1 SCR 704, because that discussion would have required a separate, and longer, paper.
KidsMatter Early Childhood only considered evidence from peer - reviewed sources (e.g., papers published in academic journals) for this criterion, because the quality of this research is easier to assess than that originating from other, less informal, sources.
I did not respond to the First Discussion Paper because at that time the Government expected to publish an exposure draft of the Bill in early 2006 before the Bill was introduced into the Parliament.
According to a white paper released earlier this year by Standard & Poor's, certain nursing facilities will struggle with contractual escalations in rents, because the nursing home industry will face headwinds from the ongoing shift of patients.
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