Sentences with phrase «recent op»

The report is available free - of - charge at http://www.wharton.upenn.edu/riskcenter. Also see a recent op - ed about TRIA on CNBC by Howard Kunreuther and Erwann Michel - Kerjan, professors at the Wharton School, that addresses some of the issues surrounding TRIA's renewal.
To get an idea of why we're so excited to support her, check out her recent op - ed in the Arizona Daily Star, in which she discusses how last month's Supreme Court decisions might embolden foes of reproductive justice here in Arizona.
I recognize that hard work will get me far in my career, but I understand the importance of balance and moderation that will lead to a happy life,» said millennial writer Erin Heilman in a recent op - ed for the Baltimore Sun.
That's why a recent Op / Ed piece from University of Chicago Law School professor Omri Ben - Shahar calling for Chicago to outlaw Non-Competes as a means of attracting Amazon was so interesting to me.
In a recent op - ed in the New York Times, Andrew Ross Sorkin argues that if Washington won't put stricter controls on gun sellers, the nation's financial institutions should do so, for instance by refusing to do business with retailers that sell assault weapons.
A recent op - ed paints all ICOs with the same brush, claiming every one of them offers securities subject to SEC scrutiny.
In a recent op - ed in Bitcoin Magazine, Gray Sasser and Josh Rosenblatt, co-chairs of Frost Brown Todd LLC's Blockchain and Digital Currency team, state the following: «Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs) are where cryptographic computing and federal securities laws collide.
: President Obama Calls for a Mission to Mars by the 2030s In a recent op... obiter - dicta.
A recent op - ed in the New York Times advocates for the imposition of just cause employment to be passed as part of any employment reform legislation.
And moreover, as a recent op - ed piece by Thomas Friedman points out (excepted in this post from the Moderate Voice), the Internet is forcing all of us to change not what we do but how we do it.
One possibility, suggested in a recent op - ed by Senator Stan Rosenberg, would be to create a «state - based, market - driven approach to the use of carbon.»
In a recent op - ed in the Washington Post, James Hansen at NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York blamed climate change for excessive drought, based on six decades of measurements, not computer models: «Our analysis shows that it is no longer enough to say that global warming will increase the likelihood of extreme weather and to repeat the caveat that no individual weather event can be directly linked to climate change.
Shulman's most recent Op - Ed was «Who's Afraid of a «Science Laureate»?.»
There was a recent Op - Ed in the New York Times which talked about this idea.
In my recent op - ed for The Hill examining the Obama administration's estimation of the social cost of carbon (SCC)-- a measure of how much future damage is purportedly going to be caused by each ton of carbon dioxide that is emitted through human activities — I identified two major problems with their measure.
His most recent Op - Ed was «Do Facts Matter Anymore in Public Policy?»
Mann's recent op - ed If you see something, say something argued for scientists to speak up and speak out.
A recent op - ed in The Hill from our friends Josiah Neeley and William Murray (both of whom are smart, serious, and worthy of our attention) neatly frame the issues at play.
From his analysis, «Overheated: How Flawed Analyses Overestimate the Costs of Climate Change,» the Wall Street Journal somehow arrived at the following headline for Cass's recent op - ed: Doomsday Climate Scenarios Are a Joke.
We have had WUWT try to undercut Muller's recent Op - Ed piece by releasing a draft of their analysis of temperatures.
The recent op - ed piece in Canada's Financial Post by Czech President Václav Klaus is more than a little infuriating.
While I have been critical of Muller's recent op - ed and attribution arguments, here are two interviews that remind me of why I like Muller:
I'd like to call your attention, for a couple reasons, to a recent op / ed I co-wrote with CFACT President David Rothbard.
Mann's most recent Op - Ed was «Something Is Rotten at the New York Times.
In a recent op - ed for the Los Angeles Times, UCLA climate scientist Alex Hall and science communicator Katharine Davis Reich warned, «In simple terms: We're going to lose a lot of snow to climate change.
If you have any doubts at all that he and his fellow Republicans did this very much on purpose — and remember, the vote fell right along party lines — then I urge you to read this: a fact check on Smith's recent op - ed in the Wall Street Journal about climate change:
On February 26, E&E Legal President Craig Richardson joined radio host Zeb Bell to discuss his recent op - ed, and how the Rockefeller Foundation and other green benefactors are using elected officials and the court system to shake down fossil fuel companies.
Helen Caldicott, a physician who for decades has fought nuclear power, wrote a letter to The Times criticizing David Ropeik «s recent Op - Ed article on outsize fears of radiation.
Ellis and Marris were among four authors of a recent op - ed article in The Times on this theme, titled «The Age of Man is Not a Disaster.»
Six scientists focused on how tornadoes might be affected by global warming last week criticized the central claim in «The Truth About Tornadoes,» a recent Op - Ed article asserting there was a measurable decline in strong tornadoes.
A recent op - ed in the Wall Street Journal titled In Defense of Carbon Dioxide» suggests climate change isn't a problem because plants need CO2 to grow.
The details are nicely summarized in a recent Op - Ed article by Timothy W. Ryback, the deputy secretary general of the Académie Diplomatique Internationale in Paris.
Michael Mann, the climatologist at Pennsylvania State University who has for years been a focal point for assaults on climate science, made the point most directly in a recent Op - Ed article in the Washington Post.
This issue is technopolitical, as illustrated vividly by the recent op - ed columns of George Will, Robert Novak, and Richard Lindzen — high - visibility op - eds that, in my view, RC would have been remiss to ignore, and about which it's healthy for RC to host discussion.
A recent Op - Ed article by Lydia Millet *, «Selling Off Apache Holy Land,» conveys their argument, which centers on dicey politics:
(For more on the roadblocks, read the recent Op - Ed article by Robert N. Stavins, who heads the environmental economics program at the Harvard Kennedy School.)
A recent op / ed I had published in my local newspaper drew a reply from the Director of the Florida Petroleum Council.
And given Thomas Friedman's recent Op - Ed, «Need a Job?
Recent op - eds in The Detroit News continue to pit the wide - ranging needs of charter public school students against those of students enrolled in traditional public school districts.
I am pleased that my recent op - ed piece «Common Core Does Not Treat Teachers or Students with Dignity» has provoked the ire of Jennifer Alexander, CEO of ConnCAN, as I strongly believe what is needed in Connecticut is an honest debate concerning whether Common Core is appropriate for Connecticut students.
His recent op - ed in USA Today commends the NCAA (National Collegiate Athletic Association) for raising the academic benchmarks that teams must meet for postseason play, but contends that university governing boards and college presidents also need to do more to reinforce the educational missions of their institutions.
The CEA's recent Op - Ed, «Connecticut charter schools a good idea gone awry,» made a bunch of claims that aren't only false, they're dishonest and frankly insulting to parents who are exercising their right to choose a school for their children.
Take, for example, this recent Op - Ed published in the New York Times from our President Jeanne Allen.
Carranza also advocated for the LCFF in a recent op - ed appearing in the San Francisco Examiner.
According to a recent op - ed by California director of Democrats for Education Reform Gloria Romero, that's where the trouble began:
Read this recent op - ed by Ritter and Owens.
Karen Patton of the League of Women Voters (LWV) in Montgomery County, Indiana in a recent op - ed.
In a recent op - ed for The Washington Post, New Mexico state chief Hanna Skandera and Tennessee state chief Kevin Huffman said teachers unions — critics of value - added measures — are trying to skirt accountability.
To say I am disappointed by the recent op - ed by Diane Ravitch is an understatement.
If one compares the growth in student performance on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) during the years the Bush Administration was in office with the growth during the first two years of the Obama Administration, as I have done in a recent op - ed piece, it becomes pretty clear that the annual growth rate was substantially higher when George W. Bush was in office.
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