Sentences with phrase «paper publishes names»

Pingback: Rockland County, NY Paper Publishes Names, Addresses of Gun Permit Map - Publishing Journal News Employees: Natural Diabetes Treatment
Pingback: Rockland County, NY Paper Publishes Names, Addresses of Gun Permit Map - Publishing Journal News EmployeesPolitifreak

Not exact matches

He published numerous papers in medical journals, frequently gave talks at medical congresses, and was a well - known name among European researchers and practitioners of disaster medicine.
The TLPA isn't against ride - hailing apps in general — it endorses one called Taxi Magic — but it characterizes Uber's product and others as «rogue apps,» and published a white paper by that name.
In 2012, Chan and a precocious undergrad named David Novati planted a first flag, publishing a paper on a new way to calculate the value of hockey players.
Within a week the 11 million documents called the Panama papers, published by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, has become a household name.
Some department chairmen and laboratory directors have a reputation for publishing papers with their own names appearing first, when all the ideas and all the work were those of other professors or graduate students.
Although no papers have published the girl's name since Forrest's arrest, it is still available on newspapers» online archives.
I'd like the paper to publish a little map showing the names and addresses of the armed guards hired to protect against their perceived threats, because in their own words, «readers are understandably interested to know about guns in their neighborhoods»
The paper has published lists of MPs whose parliamentary careers are under threat if the boundaries fall as this research suggests, naming Conservatives George Osborne, Graham Brady, Priti Patel, Grant Shapps, Bernard Jenkin, Keith Simpson, Bill Wiggin, Hugh Robertson, Graham Stuart, Zac Goldsmith and Mark Prisk.
I can't name four papers my grad - school lab published, but I can describe the details of our entry every year into the Biology Department Holiday Party Dessert Competition.
The paper, «What's in a Name: Exposing Gender Bias in Student Ratings of Teaching,» was published online Dec. 5 in the journal Innovative Higher Education.
For example, I was involved in the case of a researcher named Malcolm Pearce, who published two papers in the British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology.
On 1 April 1948, a PhD student named Ralph Alpher published a paper that laid the foundation for the big bang theory.
The name of the syndrome, published officially in a 2012 paper, is now PANS, for pediatric acute - onset neuropsychiatric syndrome.
«If a professor publishes a paper that advocates a change to a geologic name or definition, this could be an important part of the process,» Lyttle says, cautioning, «It is a university's role to challenge the USGS, but it muddies the waters.»
Though his name is curiously absent from most biographical dictionaries of scientists, it was two papers published by the then 25 - year - old student at Columbia University in New York City in the early 1900s that demonstrated the close correlation between the behaviour of Mendel's hereditary units and that of the chromosomes in meiosis and fertilisation.
Two years ago, behavioral neuroscientist James McGaugh, at the University of California at Irvine, published a paper in the journal Neurocase claiming to have found a real - life Funes, a woman whom he initially referred to by the pseudonym AJ but who later came to be known by her real name, Jill Price.
The group plans to publish a paper recommending the new name, says Raoul de Groot, a veterinary virologist at Utrecht University in the Netherlands, who has coordinated the effort.
The final version of his paper, published in 2010 in the Bulletin of the Brazilian Astronomical Society, recommended non-Western mythological names for the additional exoplanets discovered since his arXiv draft.
Even when they publish papers, they are not always required to release the underlying data, but generally they want to wait at least until they get a paper because the currency of scientific research is credit, that is, credit in terms of recognition of your peers, your name on a prestigious scientific paper, that sort of thing.
Moser has 50 or so publications to his name, but he knows of researchers who publish more papers than that in 1 year.
«The old model of the young faculty member who goes out and establishes his or her name with a theory and publishes a bunch of papers,... a person just can't do that without jettisoning their quality of life.»
SCNU plugged the piece on its website, calling it the «first paper published in Nature» to prominently name the university, and later including it as one of the university's top 10 «big research achievements» of 2013.
This result offers a contrast to a controversial paper published last year that found that based on one - page personal narratives or CVs with similar qualifications and either a typically male or female name, reviewers were twice as likely to choose to hire the woman.
Only in 1936 did he publish a paper about it, Will notes, «primarily, it seems, to get a Czech electrical engineer named Rudi Mandl to stop pestering him about it.»
These exercises are named after gynecologist Dr. Arnold Kegel who published a paper in 1942 explaining the benefits of strengthening the pelvic floor.
The paper used seven years of reading and math scores to calculate performance for individual teachers who've taught grades three through five, and plans to publish the effectiveness ratings with the teacher's names.
He is, believe it or not, a high school senior, and he thinks his lab work is pretty cool, especially because his name will appear on any research paper published as a result of these experiments.
Back to the issue at hand, why should test score data, even crunched in a value - added way, be published in the paper alongside the names of individual teachers?
But the real catch is, that more often than not, I choose Indie authors because their stories are often BETTER than well known published, paper - back / hard - cover writers, so there Mr K what's - his - name.
A self - published romance writer named Holly Ward, who goes by the pen name H.M.Ward, explained the problem to the paper.
Led by Orna Ross, an Irish author, and the founder of ALLi who has been named one of the top 100 most influential people in publishing by The Bookseller, the white paper, when released should be of great interest to the global publishing industry.
No matter how big of an indie name you are, you can't market, distribute, etc. paper books as effectively as a big publishing house.
The trial took a surreal twist when Dauphiné denied on the witness stand that the words published under her name describing the slaughter of birds by cats (in research papers and in a letter to The New York Times) were hers.
They are often prohibited from using only punctuation or odd capitalization to create a unique name; names are often published in all capitals on registration papers.
While the big names in comic book publishing — just like their mass market book counterparts — are rushing to hold onto their footing as eReaders and iPads edge out the paper - and - ink book market, there's one group of comic creators that is embracing technology and all its benefits: Indies.
That was the name of the paper we published «Equilbrium state of the Jakobshavns Isbae, Annals of Glaciology (17).
If you are at all interested in paths to a more rational human relationship with wildfire at all scales, there's no better starting place than a remarkable collection of papers on «The Interaction of Fire and Mankind» published in June in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B (yes, arguably the clunkiest journal name ever).
While the editorials published without an author attribution may be intended to reflect the owner's opinion (though I think they actually are intended to reflect the opinion of the editorial board of the paper, e.g. the editor in chief, managing editor, et al.), the opinion editorials (op - eds) are supposed to reflect the individual opinions of the people whose names appear below them.
One final time: Oreskes» says she was attacked for her December 2004 Science paper after it was published, and at a subsequent conference where she mentioned the name of one of her attackers, Erik Conway approached her during its Q&A session to detail a similar prior attack.
She noted that she was welcomed into the «tribe» when she published a paper that suggested global warming could be causing more severe hurricanes, but shunned after she congratulated a skeptic, Steve McIntyre, when his blog, ClimateAudit.org, was named «best science blog» of 2007 through a Web poll.
In a new peer - reviewed scientific paper published in the journal Earth Sciences last December (2017), a Federation University (Australia) Science and Engineering student named Robert Holmes contends he may have found the key to unlocking our understanding of how planets with thick atmospheres (like Earth) remain «fixed» at 288 Kelvin (K), 740 K (Venus), 165 K (Jupiter)... without considering the need for a planetary greenhouse effect or changes in atmospheric CO2 concentrations.
I've been studying the «APS Petition» by Singer et al, with ~ 120 names, of which one (Hameed) seems a real climate scientist, a few have published a few papers that tend to get refuted fairly quickly (Douglass, Knox, Scafetta, West, Singer).
Dr. Mann came to public attention back in 1998 when he and two colleagues published the landmark «MBH98» paper documenting average global temperatures across the centuries with a line graph whose steep uptick in recent years earned it the name «the hockey stick.»
In November 2013, an industrious climate researcher and author named Richard Heede, head of the Climate Accountability Institute, published a watershed scientific paper in Climatic Change.
«It is a collection of the authors» personal views masquerading as a Comment, the only papers cited in support of the authors» claims being first - authored by Parker (who incidentally also publishes under the name of «Alberto Boretti»).
I have not read through all the comments here, so I don't know if anyone commented on the fact that the study got published in «Environmental Science and Technology» and our good buddy, John Cook, got to put his name on the paper.
I wrote of his participation in Anderegg, Prall et al that putting his name on a paper that Spencer Weart rightfully qualified as unfit for publication on the day it was published was a sad coda to a brilliant career.
... Fred S. Singer, if you read this, or if somebody who knows you, At KTH Stockholm, September 2006, did you get my pun about the outliers being «outliars»??? And BTW, you are 39 years older on the day than the love of my life... and there are only 2 women having that name on this very planet if not a bunch are having secret numbers... if you generous and dot - omitting, the Texan one... Anectdotal and OT... On topic, always adjustments upwards, after a while... Svenska Dagbladet, Sweden's 2nd biggest morning paper, publish monthly average temps, precipitation etc for Sweden in general and Stockholm in particular, the April «presentation» «already» May 26 or something like that, and, regarding Stockholm Observatory [inner city] 1,0 C too high....
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z