This week we saw another run - up in the price of bitcoin,
causing more headlines and speculation on why bitcoin is in such demand recently.
Not exact matches
The researchers were surprised with the findings: «This was a major surprise for us — that soybean oil is
causing more obesity and diabetes than fructose — especially when you see
headlines everyday about the potential role of sugar consumption in the current obesity epidemic.
A ripe old veteran at 32, he has hardly
caused a
headline in
more than a year.
His next game would be rather
more memorable The next game saw Diouf hit the
headlines when he spat at a Celtic fan during a game
causing crowd disturbances and Diouf to be interviewed by the police.
I become uncomfortable when I read these
headlines with sweeping statements, which can
cause people with
more variable sleep patterns to become anxious, especially when they feel great and well - rested during the day.
And, of course, if they get to take on an established journalist, hit the
headlines themselves a bit, get
more followers and maybe a column commissioned, well it's all good for the
cause isn't it?
The cleaning product sold by the German company Kleinmann GmbH made
headlines when it
caused respiratory distress in
more than 100 consumers last spring, leading to its swift removal from the market.
What's
more, recent news
headlines in the New York Times and other major publications have warned against calcium supplements for reasons ranging from pain from kidney stones to death by heart attacks and stroke
caused by calcification of the arteries and heart valves.
Rising sea levels, powerful monsoon rains, floods
caused by rainfall up river - they are all much
more common
headline stories.
The world has some rough customers and often offers some depressing
headlines in the news, and but when you start looking at all of the ways you could help vulnerable people or animals, simply by donating your points and miles or cash back, and start thinking about what effort and energy it took to start these worthy
causes in the first place, you might be reminded that there's still far
more good in this world than bad.
Without such understanding, many of the tangential stories (and especially their «
headlines») probably
cause much
more confusion than anything else.
While recent
headlines about the woes of U.N. - led efforts to assemble a comprehensive picture of the science have
caused gleeful
headlines on The Drudge Report and other skeptical media outlets, the vast weight of the evidence — from melting glaciers to warming oceans to satellite temperature readings, and much
more — still points to a changing climate
caused by human activity.
Discover the science behind the
headlines — evidence from flowers, butterflies, birds, frogs, trees and
more — that illustrates the changes
caused by global warming.
Specifically, I've been struck by studies (and hyperbolic
headlines) that claim that EVs can
cause more pollution than gasoline cars, depending on the grid's energy mix at any given location.
And the
more prosaic reduction in soot pollution
caused by the partial substitution of gas for coal matters a lot, given that, while climate change gets the
headlines, coal
causes an estimated 6,000 to 10,000 deaths per year in America today.
Although huge wildfires like those in California, Washington and other western states
cause billions in damage and make national news
headlines,
more people are affected by smaller, single - structure fires, often
caused by humans.
After plenty of initial hype and media coverage in 2014, PotCoin largely dropped off the radar until 2017, when its Dennis Rodman / North Korea media stunt (
more details below)
caused plenty of
headlines.
A format containing a quick list of core competencies can be good to spare
more space for experiences such as experience in ISO standards, analysis of root
cause, problem - solving ability, etc. a traditional
headline will work for the experience, but it should lay out the duties rendered in detail after the
headline.