Sentences with phrase «article lamented»

Under the headline «The Foul, Hot Summer,» the article lamented that year's scorching heat and drought.
The type of article lamented by a few commenters on my recent post about food miles vs. food choices made an appearance in Salon a few days ago.
The article lamented the «pressure and haste» and the «sacrifice of depth to breadth» in the current curricula at most schools.
In the Puck Daddy article he laments that players like Neal weren't available to him twenty years ago when the Preds began as an expansion team.
Creative teaching strategies and projects sometimes die on the vine because, as a teacher in the article laments, «This classroom is just like my father's classroom!
The article laments that, while traditionally published authors are backed by published with deep pockets, for indie authors there is nothing they can do.
Of course, you'll see articles lamenting the paucity of sales most self - published books enjoy, but there's a problem with comparing average self - published sales with traditionally published books.
With this heightened activity has come a number of reports and articles lamenting that the Canadian stock market is not reflecting all the good news.
Many travel articles lament that some resort areas of Mallorca (namely Maguluf on the southwest coast) are overbuilt and popular with hordes of sunburned British and German tourists on cheap package holidays, who are interested only in party beaches, booze and wild nightclubs.
But over all, the article laments the lack of attention to the issue there.

Not exact matches

Just the other day, I participated in a lengthy thread on Facebook, where someone lamented about being called out on Twitter for an article he published.
The other issue with Gizmodo's article — with Microsoft's reversal, actually — is the lament about how the company has taken away the ability to share digitally downloaded games with family or friends.
My piece was not a «lament,» but essentially a defense of Pope Benedict (as was my brief follow - up here) against just the type of over-the-top criticisms cited elsewhere in Allen's article, even as I raised one respectful question about the pope's prudential decision not to meet with leading dissidents — a legitimate, good - faith debate among sincere Catholics.
Paul van Buren, reflecting on the Time article, lamented that «behind all that journalistic nonsense lay an important issue.»
Dana Robert, in her 1994 article «From Missions to Mission to Beyond Missions: The Historiography of American Protestant Foreign Missions since World War II,» laments that the historical study of Protestant mission theory tends «not to be grounded in study of actual mission practice.
One of the milestones of the form critical method is the article of J. Begrich, «Das priesterliche Heilsorakel,» Zeitschrift fur die alttestamentliche Wissenscbaft, II (1934), 81 - 92, in which he proposes and supports this explanation for the characteristic change of mood in the psalm of lament.
You can't read an article without some sportswriter lamenting the days of yore.
Which leads me back to Bolick's article, «All the Single Ladies,» in which laments the realities of her age:
She was reading a New York Times article that was lamenting the current state of breast pumps, and she was appalled at how little they'd changed over the years.
I must admit I haven't read either Cowley or Norton, but I do wonder if Hanna's position, though his recent article doesn't make it explicit, is not more accurately understood as a lament on the loss of amateurism as a virtue in the political establishment (the amateur MP, the eccentric parliamentarian, the independent - minded representative, which of course gives the Hannan position indirectly: the professionalisation of politics and political parties, the well - drilled party system and an overbearing executive).
In the article titled: «Impunity rides again through killer herdsmen», Soyinka lamented that many of the solutions already proffered by concerned Nigerians have been jettisoned.
Held at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich in Germany on December 7 - 9, the workshop came about as a result of an article in Nature a year ago, in which cosmologist George Ellis, of the University of Cape Town in South Africa, and astronomer Joseph Silk, of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, lamented a «worrying turn» in theoretical physics (G. Ellis and J. Silk Nature 516, 321 — 323; 2014).
In a recent article in The New York Times, Jen A. Miller lamented the use of smartphones in races, noting that the devices have become «social media spouts for runners to take selfies, FaceTime a family member on a crowded course, or chat on the phone in the middle of a race, oblivious to the people behind and around them.»
I recently read an article in the Strib business section that lamented the loss of Polaris in Osceola and their high paying «15 dollar an hour» manufacturing jobs.
When an honor student wrote an editorial for Northern's school newspaper, criticizing its practice of advancing students to the next grade regardless of skills mastered and lamenting the course catalogue's lack of college prep, the principal refused to print the article.
Meanwhile Jeff Lamoureaux commented I lost even more respect for Engadget with this «article» and finally CubeJockey lamented «I am sure that all authors are happy that BI perpetuated the fraud by explaining this step - by - step guide to its 17 readers how to exploit this «loophole.»
As the article points out, mainstream publishers are cowering in the corner, bemoaning poor book sales and lamenting the fact that «no one is reading anymore.»
My second thought was that the two articles I read, and the dire predictions and «woe - is - me» lamenting therein, were mostly coming from those same middlemen: publishers and agents.
In a thestar.com article dated June 18, 2015, Vickery Bowles of Toronto Public Library lamented that the Big Five Publishers charge libraries up to $ 135 per e-book, sometimes five times the cost consumers pay.
One of them lamented his fate in an article in Salon recently.
In a thestar.com article dated June 18, 2015, Vickery Bowles of Toronto Public Library lamented that the Big Five Publishers charge libraries up to $ 135 per ebook, sometimes five times the cost consumers pay.
An article in Forbes laments a recent change of focus in ETF industry conferences from traditional «market - tracking» products to active investment strategies.
Scroll down two articles, and you'll find an article where he laments the fact that I wouldn't allow Jack from Mass Effect 2 on the list.
For those of you who don't get the reference, it is an article published by the Penny Arcade Report lamenting the loss of Phil Fish.
In the article «Machine Dreams and Painting's Extremes», Weinstein discusses Liu's video «The Machinists Lament» (2014).
In the article Algus laments the fact that his gallery has very little walk - in traffic anymore, and he blamed it on the art fairs, where all the collectors flock to the mall - like events instead of making regular visits to the galleries.
Remember that in a recent article «All About Dehumidifiers», there was a lament about the heat load added by all other dehumidifiers.
Hmmm, there's a very influential article in dendro reconstructions entitled the «segment length curse», which laments the problems of creating a long term index from short segments.
The Beijinger article provides a good background to the second article, «Getting Out of the Shade: Solar Energy as a National Security Strategy,» which I penned for China Security journal.  In this piece, I lament the fact that China's solar photovoltaics (PV) industry has been export oriented, but argue that there is no time better than now to develop its domestic solar market because of a combination of increased solar module and polysilicon supply and decreased overseas demand is driving costs down to record lows. I don't want to Read the full story
This 50 - page article extols its methods and achievements (which involve doing vast numbers of experiments and interpreting minuscule statistical noise as important signal) and laments its passing, a reaction opposite to those of many at Princeton.
He then cited, among other things, a Newsweek article from 1975 (whose author recently lamented the way climate change deniers use his work), archaeological evidence, and Scriptures, in addition to the snowball, as evidence that refutes the claim that «somehow man is so important that he can change [the climate].»
The article quotes IPCC head, Dr. Rejendra Pachauri, as lamenting how politicized climate change science has become.
In a previous Litigator article, I wrote that the ratification of the Convention «has been a long time coming», and lamented the lack of action by Canada in ratifying the Convention.
James Williams, a commentator on the article «Meet ROSS, the bankruptcy robo - lawyer employed by some of the world's largest law firms», laments the lack of reference to supporting research, or consultation with the «40 year old research community that has long focused on the use of technology in a legal setting» in Toronto.
The roundtable article on LRW lamented that many law students do not receive proper LRW education and that many of them do no know the Canadian Abridgment or Halsbury's Laws of England.
The article references a recent post post in John Battelle's Searchblog for the term, and laments a user's failure to differentiate between what the engines are good at doing (defining words or returning short bursts of information — when proper search operators are used) and what they do not do well (providing more complex information from a question not likely to be understood by the engine).
IT Business is running an article entitled SWIFT scandal exposes PIPEDA holes, in which the Privacy Commissioner of Canada and Phillipa Lawson of the Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic lament that PIPEDA allows the disclosure of personal information without consent in response to a foreign subpoena.
Making his pitch in the UK Constitutional Law Blog, he lamented that the wikipedia article on the UK constitution, first port of call for many a lay person (and law student in a hurry), «would not pass a peer review process for an academic journal and nor would it receive a good mark as an undergraduate essay (though I suspect it has been cut and pasted into some over the years)».
The title of this post is not merely the question I had for a few Justices after the denial of cert last week in Jones v. US (lamented here and here), it is also the headline of this new National Law Journal article about this decision authored by Tony Mauro.
Instead of commentary lamenting the price of Microsoft's new mobile ambitions, you will see articles comparing it to whatever Samsung, Apple, and even RED is offering.
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