I think you've been taking too many newspaper
headlines as being true.
Not exact matches
That sounds good
as a
headline but it
's not really
true, says Brad Allen, of Branav Shareholder Advisory Services Inc. «People continue to reinforce this image that proxy firms have all this power.
When,
as here, it
is possible to verify whether public assertions made by plaintiffs
are true, there should never
be a statement in the press by board members that gives credibility to sensational
headlines or what can best
be described
as «false news.»
«Secrets
are different from lies,» she told me, and that
's true (
as is the fact that «secrets»
was too long a word for the
headline!).
While it
is true that in the material you published in your May issue it
is pointed out that there
is no such thing
as «compulsory voting» the
headline still suggests there
is.
It
is in our opinion, difficult for the Department of Health to proclaim this
headline, and yet herald it
as being accurate when they can not say with complete certainty that it
is true, and that any hospital
is totally MRSA free.
«Dr. Yemi Oke
is a well - known politician and a card - carrying member of the PDP in Ogun State where he once served
as the Legal Adviser and a member of the Ogun State State Executive Committee (Exco) of the PDP (See the Certified
True Copy (CTC) of The Punch newspaper of 4th January, 2011 under the
headline «PDP returns Bankole's opponents in Ogun» marked «Annexure I»).
Stephan Shakespeare of YouGov said the polls will
be a more reliable guide to the next election by late autumn; Ipsos - MORI's Ben Page advised a wait until next January or February for a
true picture; only Communicate Research's Andrew Hawkins thought the
headline polls could - more or less -
be taken
as very trustworthy now.
Is it
true,
as some
headlines suggested, that «Brain Degeneration In Huntington's Disease Caused By Amino Acid Deficiency»?
Kuiken provides a number of scary
headlines about amateur scientists cooking up all sorts of trouble, but concludes,» [
M] uch of this alarm
is overblown,
as critics overestimate the current abilities of the DIYbio movement and underestimate the ethics of its participants, who can range from PhD - trained scientists to the
true amateur who has little professional training.»
Using a
headline such
as «Local author has just discovered a cure for AIDS» may get you the interview, but it will also earn you instant animosity when the reporter or host finds out it just isn't
true.
Now, while this
is true on some levels — indies aren't restricted to writing to what publishers want to fill their catalogs, for example — it also skews away from the topic
as put forth in the
headline to the post.
I admit, the
headline one
is hard for me to swallow sometimes, even though I know
as an online reader myself that it
's true.
I would put really money down, that when the first reviews come in, one of the
headlines will
be, «FINALLY a
true Ipad Killer» Now it won't kill the ipad
as it
is unstoppable, but it can take it
's place up near the top of the pile.
If that proves
true, it will
be a full year after Faraday Future made big
headlines with big promises
as about a world - changing (and Tesla - killing) autonomous electric vehicle, only to
be widely panned for unveiling a futuristic race car - looking concept at CES that they don't plan on making instead of an actual vehicle.
Billed
as having
been «designed
as the ultimate mobile office», which would only
be actually, really
true if it had a built - in coffee machine, the
headline specs
are Windows 10, a «crisp» 12 - inch full HD display, detachable soft keyboard, a sleek and modern design, Wi - Fi connectivity and all the features needed to maximise productivity on - the - go.
If The New Republic
headline were true, then the remedy would lie in educating people about open adoption — including its grief and challenges — and supporting them
as they create and sustain their own ethically begun and adoptee - centered open adoptions.
As for Orlando
headline, yes, it
was a juicy
headline — but it
was true — you DID turn him down.