Not exact matches
In a
recent Sunday
column, New York Times
opinion writer Frank Bruni chastised the food snobs who've mocked President Trump's plebeian tastes, including his love of well - done steak slathered with ketchup («Donald Trump vs. the Food Snobs»).
In my
column last week, I noted that current public
opinion data and
recent election results point to a likely Democratic takeover of the House in the fall.
The point was hammered home in a
recent column by Mike Royko, where he discussed public -
opinion poll questions about people's willingness to have their taxes raised.
Be all that as it may, the confusion, or conflation, of the meanings of «catastrophe» has been used rhetorically in this
recent spate of pop editorials and
opinion columns.
Because I write the «Science and the Media»
column for Physics Today Online (though I'm speaking only for myself in these RC comments), and because I've always thought that the Wall Street Journal's climate editorials and commentaries merit particular attention precisely because of that paper's influential audience, I've actually done at least four PTOL media reports so far this year on the
recent WSJ
opinion skirmishes that you mention.
As she wrote in a
recent column blasting a Texas ethics
opinion barring firms from giving non-lawyers management titles:
Law schools need to do more than teach the legal basics — they also have a moral obligation to produce healthy and satisfied lawyers, a
recent law grad asserts in an
opinion column.
In this
opinion piece, one of a weekly series of
columns, Casey considers China's
recent moves against bitcoin exchanges and ICOs in a wider geopolitical context.
In this
opinion piece, one of a weekly series of
columns, Casey considers China's
recent moves against bitcoin exchanges