It's pretty easy to dismiss
recent editorials from The New York Times and The Washington Post about this legislative threat to the rigor of the Texas high school diploma and to demonize and demagogue on the state testing vendor and «powerful political interests».
In that spirit,
the recent editorial from the Scientific American board of editors opposing mandatory labeling of GMO foods was disappointing because it was, in my view, another missed opportunity to start laying down some much clearer lines of demarcation.
Fox points out the danger to the workplace when employees carry handguns, quoting from
a recent editorial from the New York Times (3/30/07):
Not exact matches
A
recent paper
from the National Bureau of Economic Research studied what happens to scientific subfields when star researchers die suddenly and at the peak of their abilities, and finds that while there is considerable evidence that young researchers are reluctant to challenge scientific superstars, a sudden and unexpected death does not significantly improve the situation, particularly when «key collaborators of the star are in a position to channel resources (such as
editorial goodwill or funding) to insiders.»
Here are some telling statistics
from the Channel 4 Teen Sex Survey, which confirm the
recent Home Office one you surveyed in you March
editorial:
I think the point can scarcely be made more cogently than a member of this panel, the Rev. James Wall, has done in a
recent editorial in the journal he edits: «As for nudity, anyone obtaining salacious pleasure
from those terrifying moments is already dead to the rest of life, and hardly a subject for further stimulation.»
McMahon and Illuzzi answer reader questions during a
recent Advance
Editorial Board meeting ranging
from Pedro Abad's bail amount to Michael Grimm's tax fraud case.
Editor's note: the following
editorial is
from the most
recent edition of the Norwood News, which is out and online now.
Five public relations firms have brought a federal suit seeking to block the JCOPE
from enforcing the portion of a
recent advisory opinion that would treat people paid to discuss legislation with
editorial writers as lobbyists.
So argues an
editorial in The Lancet, as well as
recent research
from the London School of Economics, and statisticians at Oregon State University, just to name a few
recent examples.
«Ideally, the people seeking to govern a first - world country would have a basic understanding of everything
from sustainable energy to environmental threats to evidence - based medicine,» observed the Des Moines Register in a
recent editorial.
This clinical trial, which included 1,518 participants, was the basis for the
recent approval
from the Food and Drug Administration of a 2 - dose series of the 9 - valent HPV vaccine for adolescents,» writes Lauri E. Markowitz, M.D., of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, and colleagues in an accompanying
editorial.
Norman Augustine in his
recent editorial in Science laments, «How can America's political leaders be expected to make sound policy decisions in a world of increasingly complex science and technology if the most qualified individuals in those fields remain absent
from the field of play?»
A
recent editorial in USA Today highlights this area of research, called EFIC (exception
from informed consent).
Most of my posts are in - depth reviews of
recent research publications or
editorials from my perspective working at at a large - scale sequencing center in the United States.
A new analysis
from the
Editorial Projects in Education Research Center finds that the graduation rate for America's public schools stands just shy of 75 percent for the class of 2010, the most
recent year for which data are available.
Class Size In Paul E. Peterson's
recent editorial («What Is Good for General Motors... Is Good for Education,»
from the editors, Spring 2009), he optimistically suggests that the economic crisis could spur some much - needed fiscal reform within the education sector.
A new analysis of high school completion
from the
Editorial Projects in Education Research Center finds that the graduation rate for America's public schools stands at 73.4 percent for the class of 2009, the most
recent year for which data are available.
The Daily Advertiser's
editorial board is encouraged by results
from the
recent study by the School Choice Demonstration Project at the University of Arkansas and the Education Research Alliance for New Orleans at Tulane University:
In a
recent Washington Post
editorial about the new report card proposed for teacher education programs, writers intone: «That there was immediate pushback to Mr. Duncan's announcement
from the teachers unions and institutions of learning came as no surprise, given their record of resisting any and all accountability measures.»
Editorial by Dusty Sang • Stay Thirsty Press, a digital first publisher, is donating 50 cents
from the sale of two of its most
recent titles to the Pennsylvania Innocence Project and ProLiteracy.
Liza Baker, the executive
editorial director at Scholastic said in a
recent interview ««It's so important to start reading
from Day One,» she says.
Drawn
from the Alexander Liberman collection of photographs, a
recent bequest to the Getty Research Institute, this exhibition presents a survey of European and American artists photographed by Liberman during his 50 - year career as the art director at Vogue and
editorial director of Condé Nast Publications.
Recent editorial projects include: Children of Empire, LEAP issue 37 (February 2016), with contributions
from, among others, Anna Kats, Walter D. Mignolo, Uzma Rizvi and Lantian Xie, and Non-Aligned Movements, LEAP issue 45 (June 2017), with contributors including, among others, Jesse Darling, Hannah Black, Malak Helmy, Mi You, and Vijay Prashad.
The
recent failure to meet a congressional deadline at the National Ignition Facility — a giant laser - centered fusion project at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory — generated commentary, including
from the
editorial page of The New York Times, arguing that it was time to shift limited federal resources away
from this particular long - pass approach.
If you are a Seattle Times subscriber or a climate news junkie, you probably read the Times»
recent piece
from editorial board member Brier Dudley «Look to B.C. for Evidence that Carbon Tax Doesn't Work.»
Certainly, the most
recent Nature
editorial from 3 August 2006 was unusually forceful in going after NASA's new mission statement for removing «to understand and protect our home planet».
The evidence is piling up that «climate change,» formerly known as «global warming,» is losing evidentiary support, despite
recent «preliminary findings» by a group of «experts»
from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) that a Washington Post
editorial suggests may prove, «warming has boosted the chances, in some cases significantly, that certain unwelcome weather or weather - related disasters will occur.»
As Lisa Kimmel points out in a
recent editorial, regaining trust
from the public has never been more critical given the
recent rise of populism.
Regarding your
recent editorial condemning SB 182, which would exempt the names of potential candidates for state university presidencies
from the Sunshine Laws until the last 10 days.
Apple Has Been Hiring Experts In Wearable Computing In a
recent tech
editorial from the New York Times, wearable computing analyst Sarah Rotman Epps stated that «Apple's certainly made a lot of hiring in that area,» and that «Apple is already in the wearable space through its ecosystem partners that make accessories that connect to the iPhone.
In an
editorial this Sunday, The New York Times blasted those who warn of a new foreclosure crisis stemming
from the
recent loosening of credit standards for cash - strapped borrowers.