Not exact matches
If you think for even a nano -
second that citing an
article published by a magazine put out by «lay Catholics» is a valid source of information on the theory of evolution, you friggin» azz, you need more help than anyone
here can provide.
Second, there are references in
here and / or the other
article about billboards that show that both atheists and christians have put up billboards attacking islam.
Here are 5
articles and numerous links explaining the fallacies in your take on the
Second Law of Thermodynamics:
The peasants who have now banded together in Swabia have formulated their intolerable grievances against the rulers in twelve
articles, and have undertaken to support them with certain passages of Scripture... the thing that pleases me most... is that they offer to accept instructions... Since I have a reputation for being one of those who deal with the Holy Scriptures
here on earth, and especially as one whom they mention and call upon by name in the
second document, I have all the more courage and confidence in openly publishing my instruction.
The first thing to do is to read all of our industry
articles located
here: http://www.fiery-foods.com/e-zines.asp The
second thing to do is buy a copy of the book From Kitchen to Market by calling 800-638-0375.
The longest
article I've read on
here and it was certainly worth every
second of my time.
The Gunners earned only their
second away win of the campaign this weekend when beating Burnley, and those three points saw them leapfrog both Liverpool and Tottenham into the top four,... Read the full
article here
Here's the
second of our two
articles on drugs in this year's top ten, highlighting the weaknesses of the «escalator» system for cannabis warnings.
[For a good
article on the different views on UAVs in Germany see
here] The government has tried to refute these claims, especially the
second, underlining that German armed drones would only be used in accordance with all rules of engagement and requirements currently applied to operations in Afghanistan.
Second, as Richard «Dick» Lipton explains in the American Bar Association Tax Lawyer
article «Hyperlexis» (which I can't link
here) legislators in an attempt to curtail bureaucratic discretion draft more and more complex and arcane laws to clarify Congressional intent.
Labour's official policy is for a «soft» Brexit, with continued access to the single maket, including the City, protection of residency rights
here and in the EU, maintenance of rights at work, and ultimately a parliamentary vote before
article 50 is triggered, although not a
second referendum as called for by Owen Smith.
Here's the
second part of Rough Strength Basics series of
articles.
Here are some older
articles from the blog that will provide some additional insight and inspiration as we finish our
second week of the Clean Challenge.
Here are the two links (the
second comes from the first, from clicking the word «
article» in the body):
My first tip was all about learning to love your partner well this Valentine's Day (read the full post
here), while my
second tip was more of a challenge to try something new this year (full
article here).
Here is my
second article discussing the relationship between memory and learning.
Here's the
second part of cognitive scientist Daniel Willingham's
article on how students end up thinking they know something when they don't.
Here in the second of two articles offering charter school decision - makers suggestions on furniture procurement (click here for Part 1), we focus on execution, with six more tips to help schools navigate the nuts - and - bolts practicalities and nuances of the actual purchasing proc
Here in the
second of two
articles offering charter school decision - makers suggestions on furniture procurement (click
here for Part 1), we focus on execution, with six more tips to help schools navigate the nuts - and - bolts practicalities and nuances of the actual purchasing proc
here for Part 1), we focus on execution, with six more tips to help schools navigate the nuts - and - bolts practicalities and nuances of the actual purchasing process.
1932 Tatra Type 57 — Zoe Harrison tells the intriguing story of the car that came
here from Austria in the 1970s / 1911 Albion 16hp — The tale of this Scottish expatriate now enjoying an active life in Australia is told by Dennis Harrison / Ice and Snow Rally 1991 — Malcolm Elder explains what it is like to take part in the Rallye Neige et Glace in the French Alps / Early 20s Fox light car — The story of this Anglo - German enterprise is uncovered by Michael Worthington - Williams / Another Golden Age of Motoring — Brian A Meulbrouck argues that the period following WW2 should be considered worthy of this accolade / 1928 Alvis 12/50 — The Editor enjoys his excursion this month in this sporting open tourer / Epps Bros. coachbuilders — The history of the London - based family firm is recalled for us by James Taylor / 1924 Turcat - Mery SG limousine — In the
second part of his
article Finbarr Corry writes about his impressions of driving a 1924 limousine / 1930s «graveyard» — Ray Cattle pictures a sad collection of thirties cars left in the open to rot.
Part One of this
article received so little response I'm doubtful there's reason to post the
second, but for the one or two people who might be interested,
here you go.
This
second Sacred Cow
article was published
here in 2010 and I redid it once since, but now it is slightly redone for the world of 2013/2014.
Here is the
second article in the series by Justina Ireland, A Guide to Black Hair # 2 — Natural Styles — Justina Ireland.
Also, click
here to read all the
articles I've posted on this site (make sure to view the
second page, there are some great ones there.)
And
second, because I've also hit that wall where books that I want to borrow are either on long waiting lists (although
here in Brooklyn, I haven't hit waiting lists quite as long as the 20 + that are cited for the New York Public Library in the
article) or, more often, are simply not available at all.
Writing his
second article in as many days for TheFutureBook on it, Philip Jones — to my mind our lead reporter on this big story — captured the uproar nicely in The Guardian's How Pottermore cast an ebook spell over Amazon and,
here, in TheFutureBook's Pottermore gets its wand on:
Here's the
second installment in our now weekly roundup of interesting
articles in the world of eBook publishing.
Just would like to sum up with this question to your fellow editor about a curious number (pardon the pun): Under the «NO foreign transaction fee» Marriott Rewards Premier Visa section recommending it, it reads «Out of the three cards, this is the only one that's seriously worth considering for everyday use» despite it being «one of only two» cards listed side by side that have «annual fees» after the first year (with Barb's choice the
second one that loves charging 2.5 % «foreign transaction fees» upfront / from the start on all foreign transactions rebating «afterwards» as «reward points» statement all of them «except on returns and cash advances» where the fees remain); however this
article shows «more than three cards» (though granted the Amazon.ca Visa is unavailable now for the new applicant plus the missing Mogo Visa is a prepaid one and whereas this year's (2017) new $ 149 annual fee HSBC Premier World Elite MC is exclusively for their premier clients only) so which «three cards» in that statement there would we talking about
here?
Here's the
second part of the
article, about the supposedly healthy dog Bran who shouldn't get heartworm... but did.
Next
Article: UKC sold: The nation's
second - oldest dog registry changes hands Previous
Article: Careers with canines (Part 2):
Here are more careers and jobs in the world of dogs
You can read that
article here, or in a
second publication which I believe describes the same study
here.
Continued from Part 1 As promised,
here is the
second part of my
article on prey drive promotion.
Just would like to sum up with this question to your fellow editor about a curious number (pardon the pun): Under the «NO foreign transaction fee» Marriott Rewards Premier Visa section recommending it, it reads «Out of the three cards, this is the only one that's seriously worth considering for everyday use» despite it being «one of only two» cards listed side by side that have «annual fees» after the first year (with Barb's choice the
second one that loves charging 2.5 % «foreign transaction fees» upfront / from the start on all foreign transactions rebating «afterwards» as «reward points» statement all of them «except on returns and cash advances» where the fees remain); however this
article shows «more than three cards» (though granted the Amazon.ca Visa is unavailable now for the new applicant plus the missing Mogo Visa is a prepaid one and whereas this year's (2017) new $ 149 annual fee HSBC Premier World Elite MC is exclusively for their premier clients only) so which «three cards» in that statement there would we talking about
here?
In October of 2010, AARP also published an on - line
article describing the top ten places to retire overseas. Belize was listed
second, with descriptions of both Ambergris Caye and Corozal.  (If you are an AARP member, click
here to read this articleÂ...)
Admittedly, I'm a little late with my
article here but I had to wait for a
second controller to ship in for roughly a week.
Here are the original
article, the first update, and the
second up... Read More
The
second of our in - depth 2010 Best Of Features
here on the IndieGames.com blog (after the overall Top 10 we did for Gamasutra and the 10 Indie Games for»11
article), we're proud to present ten of the best freeware shoot»em ups released in 2010.
Here in the
second part of his two part
article, Indian art historian and critic Sundaram Tagore looks at the struggle of these artists.»
In a the
second part of a two - part
article (Part 1
here), Gwenaël Kerlidou considers the work of largely forgotten School of Paris painter Bram van Velde.
Read the
article here, and watch the opening 30
seconds of VertiGhost
here.
And her
second article is
here Amanda T: Amanda's
article is
here.Roko Nastic: Roko's -LSB-...]
Yesterday, as the winds
here in the Hudson Valley rose but before my
second piece was posted (and before our power and Internet access were cut as a tree fell down the road), I received an e-mail message from Dan Miller, an engineer and venture capitalist with deep climate concerns, whose name will be familiar to some
here because he helped James Hansen, the NASA climate scientist, craft «Game Over for Climate,» a May Op - Ed
article in The Times.
Ah yes, the infamous Cato Institute... I remember them with an «
article» in the Arizona Republic
here in Phoenix, claiming that
second hand smoke was harmless.
And her
second article is
here Amanda T: Amanda's
article is
here.
Imagine if you will, someone like me arguing evidence for AGW coming to CFACT and citing an
article from, not a top - tier journal, nor even a
second - tier, but more like a third - tier journal like the Asia - Pacific Journal of Atmospheric Sciences (which people generally publish in when they can't pass the more rigorous peer review of the more reputable journals), and if that paper were written by a person who's work has had to be corrected by others, not once, not twice, but FOUR times to my knowledge, and every correction takes it back in the opposite direction of what that person was arguing, and if the paper I was citing was this guy making the same old tired argument he's been corrected on before, and if this paper already had evidence of data tampering to get it's conclusions... just imagine the uproar from the usual crowd
here.
As you say the Roman warm period was well documented and I wrote about it at some length in my
article here (you need to follow the
second link)
Oddly enough, it does match (after truncation) a version archived at NCDC in December 1998 in connection with Jones et al 1998 (though not used in that
article), where it occurs in the
second sheet of an Excel file
here.
In respect to the latter
here are three interesting
articles / links, the first jaw dropping, the
second mind boggling and the third simply the result of applying objective analysis:
From
here, the Court went on to interpret narrowly the limitations to its jurisdiction provided for in the final sentence of the
second subparagraph of
Article 24 (1) TEU and in the first paragraph of
Article 275 TFEU, allowing it to declare admissible an annulment action launched by a Mr or Ms H against a decision signed by the Chief or Personnel of the European Union Police Mission (EUPM) in Bosnia - Herzegovina, by which he or she was transferred to a regional office in that country.
See
here for our first
article on employment standards changes and
here for our
second article on changes to the labour relations regime.
Notably, as detailed
here, there was this terrific
article in the New York Sun about the case, but the
article did not report that the full
Second Circuit was now to hear the case.