Sentences with phrase «national journal pointed»

Not exact matches

We decide to begin the journal of our journey through the land of the Winter Olympics at a point of maximum drama: the night we meet Nicole, a leather - loving snowmobile driver / hostess / fashion plate, for drinks, dinner and an evening of kinky entertainment at a wilderness refuge somewhere in the vast Pare National de la Vanoise in the French Alps.
As National Journal's Alex Treadway pointed out earlier in the day, though, political professionals will be reluctant to embrace online ads as a tool until the online advertising world finds ways to make it easier for consultants to place ads, particularly when they're dealing with many different sites.
Their findings, published Dec. 11 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, may reveal the cause of some undiagnosed infertility problems and point the way to new methods of birth control.
In a paper published earlier this year in the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, researchers from Penn State University pointed out a flaw in alcohol studies based on large longitudinal study in the United Kingdom called the National Childhood Development Study.
In January 2010, Michael F. Holick, MD PhD, a vitamin D researcher whose work I have cited in previous articles, Linda Linday, a medical doctor whose cod liver oil study formed the starting point for Cannell's 2008 commentary, and several other colleagues, even including one researcher from the National Institutes of Health, made a direct response to Dr. Cannell and his colleagues in the pages of the same journal.
Over at the National Journal blog, Mike Antonucci is absolutely right to point out the big new dollars in the D.C. deal but, as Mike knows better than anyone, those kinds of big raises are hardly unusual in K - 12 schooling.
Alexandria, Va. (March 11, 2016)-- Fremont County School District No. 6 in Pavillion, Wyoming; Crown Point Community School Corporation in Crown Point, Indiana; and Hurst - Euless - Bedford Independent School District in Bedford, Texas, have been named the grand prize winners in the 22nd annual Magna Awards program sponsored by the National School Boards Association's (NSBA's) flagship magazine, American School Board Journal.
The journal Science has published a letter signed by 255 members of the National Academy of Sciences, including 11 Nobel laureates, that pushes back sharply after months of assaults on evidence pointing to a growing and disruptive human influence on the climate and some of the researchers who've done important work on global warming.
Kevin Trenberth of the National Center for Atmospheric Research made this point powerfully last year in an important piece in the journal Nature Reports / Climate Change warning that more uncertainty, not less, would likely result from a push to enrich climate models used for the next report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change:
National Center for Atmospheric Research and UCAR Office of Programs, «Drought's Growing Reach: NCAR Study Points to Global Warming as Key Factor,» press release (Boulder, CO: 10 January 2005); Aiguo Dai, Kevin E. Trenberth, and Taotao Qian, «A Global Dataset of Palmer Drought Severity Index for 1870 — 2002: Relationship with Soil Moisture and Effects of Surface Warming,» Journal of Hydrometeorology, vol.
To help avoid such debacles in the future, I will recap the main points of my National Journal blog commentary.
Many public policies seek to promote energy efficiency, but as the authors of the Electricity Journal paper — Keith Dennis of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association and Ken Colburn and Jim Lazar of the Regulatory Assistance Project — point out, energy efficiency isn't precisely what we want.
Published last week in the journal Science, researchers from New Zealand's National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA) found that the majority of methane released into the atmosphere since 2006 was produced by bacteria, pointing to sources like agriculture — rather than sources like fossil fuel production or the burning of organic material — as the culprit behind the increase in methane levels.
The National Law Journal's Tony Mauro noted a few years ago the example of an attorney who makes a point of wearing a tie given to him as a memento eight years previously by the widow of a partner who used to wear it when he argued.
Bay points to a National Law Journal item this week that looks at the same census data and discovers an even wider gap — women in legal occupations earned only 51 percent of men's salaries in the field.
In addition to the New York Times article that Darryl points to, The National Law Journal has also just published the article What is Law School For, Anyway?
Nick Timiraos, national economics correspondent with The Wall Street Journal, pointed out the issue on Tuesday.
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