Sentences with phrase «column by»

A modelled simulation of the California Current upwelling region (Gruber et al. 2012) forecasts that summer - long undersaturation will occur in the top 60 m of the water column by year 2040 and that by 2050 aragonite saturation states greater than 1.5 will have disappeared, driving more than one half of the water column to undersaturation year - round.
Findings is a daily column by Pacific Standard staff writer Tom Jacobs, who scours the psychological - research journals to discover new insights into human behavior, ranging from the origins of our political beliefs to the cultivation of creativity.
So, it's necessary to do some digging and discover the source is a column by the egregious David Rose.
And today a Washington Post column by Dana Milbank illustrates one of the big problems that Buchanan sought to solve: the temptation of legislatures to spend money with little regard for what two of his students called «deficits, debt, and debasement.»
Soros spokesman Michael Vachon said the chair of Soros Fund Management was deeply upset by a early September Sun Media column by right - wing activist and author Ezra Levant.
Recent examples include a campaign to censor a Washington Post column by Dr. Charles Krauthammer, a Los Angeles Times protocol of not publishing letters skeptical of global warming, and a lawsuit to discredit the brilliant satirist Mark Steyn, who, as humorists are wont to do, mocked a pompous proponent of global warming.
The New England Real Estate Journal has published a new column by CGBC Director Ali Malkawi about the importance of energy efficiency in buildings and the Center's HouseZero retrofit project.
Gravity just places more energy at the bottom of the column by pulling molecules downward to creater greater density and pressure at the bottom.
The warmed surface water is then transferred downward into the water column by conduction and convection.
A recent column by a nationally recognized writer recalled Syria outlawing yo - yos in 1933 because they thought that yo - yo motion caused drought.
Fox News is promoting a Wall Street Journal column by Bjorn Lomborg to claim that electric vehicles are «even worse» for the environment than conventional gasoline cars.
Readers react to the first column by a conservative writer who thinks we should be «skeptical of an overweening scientism.»
Thought folks would like this recent Oregonian column by Steve Duin — wherein he writes about his crash on streetcar tracks downtown.
The launch of the ad campaign was described in a column by Licia Corbella of the Calgary Sun on October 13, 2005:
Bozell serves on numerous conservative boards and has a nationally syndicated column by Creator's Syndicate.
Perhaps this view will become the new received wisdom — it's quoted in today's NYTimes column by economist Paul Krugman, «Grains Gone Wild,» who cites «the rise of demon ethanol and other biofuels,» and points out, «Oh, and in case you're wondering: all the remaining presidential candidates are terrible on this issue.»
There'll be much more to come, including a (print and online) column by me in the Sunday Review section.
There's a relevant Opinionator column by Sloane Crosley on the tradeoffs that make disaster preparedness so difficult.
But the Boston Globe is going to report on the «speech» in its Saturday editions, in a column by a popular columnist there, and if it attracts attention outside Boston readership, it might travel further.
It's well worth a read, as is this column by Andrew Freedman at the Capital Weather Gang.]
On Sunday, a column by Doug Simpson on AOL News noted that relatives of some of the 11 men who died aboard the Deepwater Horizon were upset that most coverage was focused on the unfolding environmental disaster.
Also, the overall number of ozone molecules destroyed in a vertical column of air was pretty much the same as the number of molecules transported into this column by the average poleward and downward transport of air in the stratosphere.
After I posted on Twitter to promote a fine Times story about a Missouri flood victim, a reply * directed my attention to a column by Tony Messenger in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch showing, yet again, how communities ignore inconvenient hydrological and geophysical realities:
A shorter version of the video, focused on the amazing 91 - year - old dance caller, Culver Griffin, was posted with a recent column by Peter Applebome on dance, longevity, and life's rhythms.
They will be showing a range of work from a splendid measured drawing of a Corinthian column by Francis Terry, influenced by one of Palladio's drawings in his Quattro Libri, to models and drawings of projects and built work affirming Palladio's importance in the development of subsequent British architecture, especially the country house, with contemporary examples by Quinlan Terry, Julian Bicknell, John Simpson and Robert Adam Architects.
L.A. Expanded: Notes from the West Coast A weekly column by Catherine Wagley Pierre Restany, the critic who co-coined the term Nouveau Réalisme, was supposed to be there for Yves Klein's first Leap into the Void.
L.A. Expanded: Notes from the West Coast A weekly column by Catherine Wagley On January 5th, 2nd Cannons Publications, artist Brian Kennon's publishing venture, sent out a press release.
L.A. Expanded: Notes from the West Coast A weekly column by Catherine Wagley When photographer Larry Sultan was growing up, his mother hired a decorator to «cozy up» their new San Fernando Valley home with its marble floors and 12 - foot fireplace.
London Art Pitch is a monthly column by Jamie Sterns, a New York curator and writer currently based in the British capital.
London Art Pitch is a monthly column by Jamie Sterns, a New York curator and writer attending school in the British capital.Summer is upon London and this usually grey city is full of sunshine and light.
London Art Pitch is a monthly column by Jamie Sterns, a New York curator and writer attending school in the British capital.We all know these lists — the top, the best, the ones to watch, so on and so on.
London Art Pitch is a monthly column by Jamie Sterns, a New York curator and writer attending school in the British capital.London.
London Art Pitch is a monthly column by Jamie Sterns, a New York curator and writer based in the British capital.
L.A. Expanded: Notes from the West Coast A weekly column by Catherine Wagley «Giving a camera to Diane Arbus is like putting a live grenade in the hands of a child,» Norman Mailer infamously remarked in 1971, less than one year before Arbus died and over nine years after she snapped a photo of a scrawny blond boy who actually did have grenade in hand.
Featuring: Eva Kot» átková, How to act: art and activism in the Czech Republic, Thomas Bayrle, Runo Lagomarsino; an artist project by Samuel Levack and Jennifer Lewandowski; plus a new backpage column by I Kurator, books and exhibtion reviews from around the world...
L.A. Expanded: Notes from the West Coast A weekly column by Catherine Wagley Because I don't believe that big and bright equals beautiful, I am not a fan of West Hollywood's Pacific Design Center.
L.A. Expanded: Notes from the West Coast A weekly column by Catherine Wagley «I remember thinking when I first saw a show of Jack Pierson's that it looked like a group show — Jack's photos, big letters, a desk.
L.A. Expanded: Notes from the West Coast A weekly column by Catherine Wagley When essayist Geoff Dyer, whose main goal always seems to be sating his own curiosity, debuted his New York Times book column last week, he did so with a perfectly paced takedown of art historian Michael Fried.
L.A. Expanded: Notes from the West Coast A weekly column by Catherine Wagley Rise of Rebellion: DailyServing's latest week - long series We continue our week long series, Rise of Rebellion, by taking a look at how resistance and rebellion overlap.
L.A. Expanded: Notes from the West Coast A weekly column by Catherine Wagley Human Nature is the remarkably, almost assaultingly, immense title of Los Angeles County Museum of Art's current exhibition of art from its contemporary collection.
Pretty Pictures NYC Column by Dean Dempsey Kathy Grayson, the founder and director of the downtown gallery, The Hole, reaches for another cigarette as she waits on hold with a lawyer.
L.A. Expanded: Notes from the West Coast A weekly column by Catherine Wagley In 2002, feminist matriarch Judy Chicago co-curated an all - women art exhibition in China, in a place called Lugu Lake, historically a matriarchal society.
L.A. Expanded: Notes from the West Coast A weekly column by Catherine Wagley I spent Sunday looking at boys.
L.A. Expanded: Notes from the West Coast A weekly column by Catherine Wagley In 1983, art historian T.J. Clark delivered his paper, «More on the Differences Between Comrade Greenberg and Ourselves» at the Vancouver conference, Modernism and Modernity.
L.A. Expanded: Notes from the West Coast A weekly column by Catherine Wagley Within the past five years two all - male bands have covered the ire - raising, too - sweet - for - comfort single by The Crystals, «He Hit Me (And it Felt Like a Kiss).»
L.A. Expanded: Notes from the West Coast A weekly column by Catherine Wagley Leslie Hewitt's Grounded is a staircase that goes nowhere.
L.A. Expanded: Notes from the West Coast A weekly column by Catherine Wagley Mika Rottenberg's balmy, bizarre video, Mary's Cherries, moves at such a comfortable pace that it almost convinces you of its normalcy.
L.A. Expanded: Notes from the West Coast A weekly column by Catherine Wagley Junior year of college, I made a plaster carrying case for my favorite coffee mug.
Opening reception: Thursday, September 11, 6:00 — 8:00 pm Andrea Rosen Gallery is delighted to present new sculpture and photographic works by Matt Keegan with Landfall, 1970, a totemic column by Anne Truitt (1921 - 2004).
L.A. Expanded: Notes from the West Coast A weekly column by Catherine Wagley There are many ways to mask yourself, some more effective than others, and artists — the good ones — venture further into the business of masking than most.
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