NARAL doesn't mention Factcheck.org directly on its site at the time of its post, but does
post this piece entitled «Far - Right Spin on Roberts Ad.»
The first article in our dataset dated back to 2009 — a Financial
Post piece entitled, «Canada May Join Asia - Pacific Talks; Big Trade Area Planned.»
Not exact matches
Entitled «13 Things That Make Me a Lousy Feminist,» the
post was a companion
piece to my «13 Things That Make Me a Lousy Evangelical» and «13 Things That Make Me a Lousy Progressive,» and was based on a somewhat frustrating experience I recently had at a progressive Christian conference where I wondered if I would ever fit in with my feminist allies.
Similarly, Carolyn Custis James recently wrote a
piece for the Huffington
Post entitled «Why Virginity is Not the Gospel,» to which Dianna Anderson added a helpful critique.
I offer the photo below as one
piece of evidence to prove that the trip took place in historical time, roughly as described in the
post entitled «Osawatomie or....
I offer the photo below as one
piece of evidence to prove that the trip took place in historical time, roughly as described in the
post entitled «Osawatomie or Bust.»
In a
piece for the Washington
Post entitled «Why Chinese Mothers Are Superior,» Chua explains how her children were never allowed to attend a sleepover, have a play date, be in a school play, watch TV, choose any of their own extracurricular activities, get any grade less than an A, or play any instrument other than piano or violin.
Reposted with permissionBy: Bettina Elias SiegelSameer Siddiqi of the excellent @ObesityPolicy Twitter feed alerted me this morning to a
piece on the Washington
Post «s Wonkblog
entitled, «No, Congress did not declare pizza a vegetable.»
Last Friday, Janet Poppendieck had a thought - provoking
piece in the Washington
Post entitled, «Five Myths About School Food,» in which she takes on five common misunderstandings about the school lunch program, namely that:
A few weeks after the Smart Snacks rules went into effect this summer, Secretary Vilsack again felt the need to reassure the public, writing a
piece for the Huffington
Post entitled «Setting the Record Straight: Healthy School Meal Rules Allow for Bake Sales.»
For the Film Society of Lincoln Center's Chaplin Award Gala, «Film Comment» has
posted quite a few very interesting and in - depth articles on Helen, including an interview and this main
piece entitled «Noblesse Oblige».
Writer - director Oren Moverman (working from a novel by Herman Koch) eventually reveals that Paul is mentally ill; Paul and Claire's insufferably
entitled teenage son is a nasty
piece of work who set a homeless woman on fire; Stan's stepson is an imbecile who recorded the murder on his cellphone and
posted it.
In a recent
piece entitled Why the movement to opt out of Common Core tests is a big deal and first published by the Washington
Post, Carol Burris writes;
At one point, when the Democrats on the General Assembly's education committee removed some of the most anti-teacher, anti-union, anti-public education provisions in Malloy's bill, Riccards wrote a commentary
piece for the New York
Post that was
entitled, «Killing hope in Connecticut.»
Her latest
piece entitled,
Post NCLB: CT Must Reject The Common Core, cuts through all the «education reform» rhetoric and lays out the harsh truth.
In a
post entitled, «U.S. has the world's most educated workforce — but students face unparalleled levels of poverty, inequity and violence,» Jonathan Kantrowitz has written an extraordinary and profound
piece about the real problems that are causing the growing educational achievement gap in the United States.
post also pointed readers to fellow education advocate Wendy Lecker's
piece entitled, Drive up education degree is an insult to every student, parent, teacher and taxpayer
Friend and fellow education blogger Peter Greene
posted a powerful
piece on his blog over the weekend
entitled, Cuomo to Teachers: Drop Dead.
Dear Judith Curry, I'm a retired public school teacher in Toronto who has been following your advice for a few years by somewhat reluctantly engaging various climate change sceptics and outright deniers in online media blogs and comment threads but when I encountered your Oct 1
piece entitled «Kill the IPCC:...» in Canada's Financial
Post, I realized I had been following the advice of someone who has become something other than an impartial observer of the «climate change wars».
However, the 1/07/01 issue of The Denver
Post has Michael Booth's blatantly political opinion
piece on the front page,
entitled, «Energy Solution: Blowin» in the Wind?
Rees Morrison: «Weed - whacking litigation costs: Arbitration clauses, staffing and digesting transcripts: Vincent DiCarlo
posted a short
piece entitled «how to reduce the high cost of litigation»... All the advice mows down the weeds of excess litigation costs, but a few seemed especially cutting edge...»
However, after
posting «Reaffirming the Case for Constraint,» Mr. Sirota promptly responded with a
piece entitled «Constraint and Candour.»
While completing this
post I had in my drafts for over a month now, I stumbled upon this fresh
piece on Law.com
entitled Survey Says Librarians Like Their Jobs but Are Displeased With Vendors.
The law office of Vincent DiCarlo
posted a short
piece entitled «how to reduce the high cost of litigation» (www.dicarlolaw.com).
This
post is inserted into this thread because there is no place available to comment on the original
piece dated May 1, 2017 herein
entitled «Sponsored: How Appraisal reports help REALTORS During a Crazy market».