Sentences with phrase «report in this week»

First up: Schmitz reported in this week's Catholic Herald that liberal Catholics are growing impatient with Pope Francis.
«Alonso lost a wheel in testing and we went through it all with McLaren, they gave us a report in the week.
Buoyed by a substantial offer from the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League — reported in the week leading up to the draft to be a two - year, $ 6 million deal — Ismail's bevy of agents, lawyers and advisers, a.k.a. Team Rocket, proceeded to price him out of the NFL.
As Dan Hodges reports in this week's magazine (out today), sections of the party remain in a state of unease and unrest following Miliband's repudiation of New Labour.
Cuomo issued a report in weeks not months, essentially saying that the State Police at the behest of the governor's top aides, had recreated reports on Senator Bruno's flights and fed them to the Times - Union.
As reported in this week's print edition, the Working Families Party has endorsed Steve Noble for mayor.
DNAinfo's «On the Inside» reported in the weeks after the incident that Frascatore and the other officers involved were not likely to be fired, but that NYPD brass was irked because they did not file a proper report.
The University of California, Los Angeles — led group reported in this week's Science that they may have created the «Goldilocks» of flu vaccines — one that manages to trigger a very strong immune response without making infected animals sick.
The feat, reported in this week's Nature, offers a window to how cells in human embryos morph into organs.
Now Hoffmeister's team has figured out a potential remedy, as reported in this week's issue of Science.
As they report in this week's Nature, the species - poor communities were the most stable, with fewer shifts in occupation occurring.
The industrialist and founder of the prize that bears his name would no doubt be pleased by a feat of organic chemistry reported in this week's Angewandte Chemie International Edition: the synthesis of what may be the most powerful nonnuclear explosives ever made.
Hou and his colleagues report in this week's Thin Solid Films the development of a low - cost processing method for solar cells made from copper, indium and diselenide.
A gadget built around an automotive fuel injector transforms ethanol, or grain alcohol, into hydrogen gas, a team of chemical engineers reports in this week's issue of Science.
As he and his colleagues report in this week's Physical Review Letters, they started by producing a thin film from an alloy of germanium and tin — two semiconductors that do not like to mix.
For a window onto other branches of forensic science, see the special News report in this week's issue of Science.
Free - floating Antarctic icebergs significantly change the marine ecosystems directly around them by hosting land - based matter, chlorophyll, krill and seabirds, according to a report in this week's Science.
Freedman and her colleagues report in this week's issue of Nature that M100 is 56 million light years away, with an uncertainty of 11 per cent.
According to a report in this week's issue of Current Biology, tiny pores in the outer membranes of two species of bacteria secrete a stream of slime that propels them forward.
They tested their system on a pair of yeast transcription factors and used the data to predict which yeast genes the proteins would target, they report in this week's Science.
Emily Underwood reported in this week's Science that Brazil's government plans to invest some $ 100 million in the laboratory, which opened in 2012.
► An unpublished report from Italian police names Ilaria Capua, a prominent scientist who is now a member of the Italian Parliament, as part of «a criminal organization» that colluded to profit from Italy's battle with avian influenza, Laura Margottini reported in this week's Science.
Their brew of fatty acids didn't become the cure they had hoped for, but Lorenzo's oil can prevent neural decay in the mutant flies, researchers report in this week's issue of Science.
As they report in this week's issue of PNAS, brain mass accounts for the vast majority (94 %) of the variance in walking time between species.
The find, reported in this week's issue of the European Molecular Biology Organization Journal, could eventually lead to the development of new drugs that shore - up misfolded proteins.
While plants did grow more under these conditions, they did not grow as much as they would have in the absence of higher O3 levels, the researchers report in this week's Nature.
Adams and his colleagues report in this week's Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA that the drought - stricken trees in the hotter temperatures died in just 18 weeks, surviving seven weeks less than those subjected to dry conditions in today's thermal range.
When they injected the tissue into growing mouse embryos, the cells formed teratomas like ESCs do, and mingled with the blood vessels of the mice, the group reports in this week in Nature.
For each type of biofuel, nearly all the fuel was converted and about 70 percent of the hydrogen bound up in the fuel molecules was given off as gas, the researchers report in this week's Science.
«This is an amazing enabling technology,» says Ross Thyer, a molecular biologist at the University of Texas, Austin, who was not involved in the work, reported in this week's issue of Nature.
New results reported in this week's Science and at a genome meeting held last week at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory on New York's Long Island suggest that our pedigreed canine companions may be a major help in finding the genetic keys to common human afflictions such as cancer, diabetes, and mental disorders.
In an email to his staff last week, Larry Marshall, chief executive of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) in Canberra, «stated that up to 350 jobs could be eliminated over the next 2 years, including 110 positions in the Oceans and Atmosphere division, the bulwark of CSIRO's climate research,» Leigh Dayton reported in this week's issue of Science.
The numbers, reported in this week's issue of Science, are «stunning,» says Silke Bauer, an ecologist at the Swiss Ornithological Institute in Sempach.
As Subalusky and her colleagues report in this week's issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, about 6500 animals drown each year, dumping 10 blue whales» worth of meat into the river.
A report in this week's Science finds that these bright flashes do seem to spread out by the same amount and are born from stars of identical masses, which may help refine cosmic distance measurements.
But as Redinbo and colleagues report in this week's Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, if the mechanism for this genetic transfer is blocked, the selective death of the antibiotic - resistant members of a bacterial culture is somehow triggered.
Along those same lines, a second report in this week's Science indicates that internal compasses may help one creature find its way not in the ocean but underground.
And the genetic makeup of the flies also mattered, because lifelong antibiotic treatment caused one normally long - lived mutant line to die at the same age as normal flies given antibiotics — in other words, its life span was extended only in the presence of bacteria, the researchers report in this week's issue of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The study, which is reported in this week's online Early Edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, sheds light on a process known as «brown fat thermogenesis,» which is of great interest to medical researchers because it naturally stimulates weight loss and may also protect against diabetes.
The resulting films can separate one protein molecule from another onethat is only twice its weight, compared with a 10-fold difference needed for normal membranes, the group reports in this week's Nature.
Now a team of researchers, led by a biomedical scientist at the University of California, Riverside, reports in this week's issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that it has identified just such a drug in the lab: indazole chloride (Ind - Cl).
A report in this week's Journal of the American Medical Association shows that simple exercises done at home can make a big difference in recovering from a broken hip.
Writer and illustrator Daisuke Ashihara is going on indefinite hiatus to deal with ongoing health issues, it was reported in this week's issue of Shonen Jump, in which World Trigger is published.
Famitsu has reported in this week's issue that development for Tales of Hearts R is currently 50 % complete.
Famitsu has reported in this week's issue that a new type of soldier has been confirmed for Earth Defense Force 4.
Japanese data gathering and analysis company, Media Create, reports in week 2 at Japanese retailers, 12,187 copies of the game were sold and in week 3 an additional 5,301 copies of the game were sold.
Floods are the second deadliest of all weather - related hazards in the United States.57, 58 Elevated waterborne disease outbreaks have been reported in the weeks following heavy rainfall, 59 although other variables may affect these associations.60 Populations living in damp indoor environments experience increased prevalence of asthma and other upper respiratory tract symptoms.61
Elevated waterborne disease outbreaks have been reported in the weeks following heavy rainfall, 59 although other variables may affect these associations.60 Water intrusion into buildings can result in mold contamination that manifests later, leading to indoor air quality problems.
As reported in this week's issue of Science (subscription needed), a group of scientists have discovered a way to convert glucose into HFM (hydroxymethylfurfural), a chemical that is broken down into components used to manufacture products now made from oil.
As we reported in this week's Insider newsletter, Eversheds LLP has just completed the implementation of its new Intapp Open system for managing conflicts searches and speeding up the new business acceptance process.
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