Sentences with phrase «relevant points of the article»

But while I may not have a copy of the mag, IGN does, and they were nice enough to sum up the more relevant points of the article.

Not exact matches

The guy obviously was asking why we don't breastfeed today as adults, a totally relevant point, completely related to the article and the issue of public breast feeding.
Once the season ended, I personally gave a sigh of relief, simply for the fact that the points I raised in the Europa League article were no longer relevant.
A roundup of articles expanding on points in today's webinar with ReThinkMedia, Staying Relevant in the New Media Landscape.
Maybe he's changed his view, or it could have been a five second of typing for the article to explain, also lif I point lewisite going to a blue labour meeting it's relevant this new view
Every Friday, Science Careers points to articles in the Science family of publications that are relevant to careers in science and other technical fields.
A number of vegans responded to the article, but not by citing a few pointed articles and relevant research.
In order to adequately comprehend the issue it would be interesting at this point to have a careful look at the relevant article of CEDAW.
For each trustee and local governor who has served at any point over the past 12 months, their full names, date of appointment, term of office, date they stepped down (where applicable), who appointed them (in accordance with the trust's articles), and relevant business and pecuniary interests including governance roles in other educational institutions must be recorded.
It consists of research tasks, with links to relevant articles and points to consider, to encourage students to undertake their own research, analysis and revision, in preparation for this June's (2018) Paper 3 exam, in a structured manner.
It also contains articles of social and historical context, and discussion points relevant to Philosophy and Ethics, Critical Thinking, and Religious Studies, and additional classroom activities for Drama.
So I guess your criticism of my point implies you're saying that the fact that three quarters of teachers feel tenure is not harmful to teacher quality (with most of those even saying its even beneficial) is not relevant enough to even mention in an article about how teacher's feel about tenure?
He read just one article on my site (out of perhaps fifty) and «wondered if you could point me in the direction of any other relevant research that is currently being undertaken?»
Before I start this morning, I would simply like to point out these five old articles of mine, because they will be relevant to my argument: The Rules, Part XXXVIII (There is probably money to be m...
Before I start this morning, I would simply like to point out these five old articles of mine, because they will be relevant to my argument:
When someone says «I've searched everywhere and can't find the information», they post links to the relevant guides, news stories or blogs on the main site, or point them to the article links at the top of individual boards.
This article can not provide a complete or exhaustive list of standard precautions regarding zoonoses, but it addresses the most relevant points for veterinary personnel and pet owners.
So an article which illustrates its points with relevant in game screenshots is much more appealing than one that's merely a giant wall of text with nothing to really break it up.
• Number of times that Edward R. Murrow, Bill Moyers, or Howell Raines were quoted regarding their relevant criticisms of the media in general or as it relates to energy / climate coverage: 0 (This said, the article does at least mention «a news media universe where specialized reporting is declining», which I think is one of Mr. Raines's recent points.)
I've raised my own questions about the utility of the traditional 20th century environmental toolkit in addressing the climate challenge (some relevant points were explored in John Broder's news article over the weekend).
For example, if you agree that people of all ideological and cultural and political stripes are vulnerable to identity - oriented «motivated - reasoning,» then what do you think about articles that finger point about about the biases among «liberal» scientists even as the political orientation of the author is dismissed as a potentially relevant factor?
Since Bookbinder is both currently a litigator in a set of global warming lawsuits against industries which supposedly paid «shill scientists» to lie, and was involved in a similar way back in 2010 as the Mother Jones article points out, those are relevant questions to ask.
I don't have time to deal with every one of the mistakes his article contains — it takes 100 times as long to show why a claim is wrong as it does to make it — but here's a quick breakdown, beginning with the first sentence: (I've been able to pull this together with the help of the Climate Science Rapid Response Team, which put me in touch with the relevant scientists and pointed me to the primary datasets.)
And Ray, the whole point of the article about curve fitting and natural cycles is that it is inappropriate to make strong claims about random fits without mechanism, attribution and supporting physics and observations, unless you are perfectly willing to accept that the fact that the confidence in any assumptions indicated by any such «curve fitting» is likely lower in contrast to more relevant methods.
Please provide a short summary (ie two or three bullet points) of the article's most relevant points and / or practice points
The Court further pointed out that as «the duration of an asylum procedure may be relevant and that, in particular in periods of substantial surges in applications for international protection, the time laid down by EU law are often exceed it» making the right to family reunification depend upon the moment when the asylum procedure is closed would de facto have the effect of nullifying that right and the protection under Article 10 (3)(a)(para 57).
The Court ensures that the right to information is not an empty shell and uses the relevant Directive to address the procedure for communicating information about the accusation, a point not expressly regulated by Article 6 of the Right to Information Directive.
As a final point relevant to Article 20 TFEU, the District Court states in the second sentence of Paragraph 5.14 that «[t] he construction of this provision implies a link between the citizenship of a Member State and EU citizenship».
With regard to the question of compatibility of the imposition of a residence condition with Articles 29 and 33 of the Directive, after having found that these Articles in principle require an equal treatment of all beneficiaries of international protection as regards the freedom of movement (Article 33) and a treatment that is equal to nationals of the relevant Member State in the matter of welfare benefits (Article 29), the Court concludes that a residence condition can still be imposed on beneficiaries of subsidiary protection status, if they are not in an objectively comparable situation with beneficiaries of other international protection status or nationals of the Member States as regards the objective pursued by the national law that seems to infringe on Articles 29 and 33 (point 54 of the judgment).
In a precedent based legal system, a single data point may be all that you need, and in general, the goal of legal analytics tools is to help lawyers find the data points that are most relevant and meaningful.Though sensationalistic articles about robot lawyers might try to convince you otherwise, legal analytics tools don't eliminate the need for case law research.
And my favourite, the links to secondary sources mean that on the right side of the results screen for caselaw and relevant articles, annotations or non-case-law material that deals with the same point.
During one of Westlaw's demonstrations I ran the same search on Google Scholar, pulled up the same USSC case, and relevant decisions from the circuits, combined with solid academic articles on point.
It's a bit dated at this point, with many of the articles dating back to 2010, but it's all still very relevant to today's attacks and worth reading up on if you're interested.
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