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shadow zone definition earthquake
Shadow zone. A seismic shadow zone is an area of the Earth's surface where seismographs cannot detect an earthquake after its seismic waves have passed through the Earth. When an earthquake occurs, seismic waves radiate out spherically from the earthquake's focus.
Shadow zone. A seismic shadow zone is an area of the Earth's surface where seismographs cannot detect an earthquake after its seismic waves have passed through the Earth. When an earthquake occurs, seismic waves radiate out spherically from the earthquake's focus.
eng_Latn
33,000
what does fault lines mean
• FAULT LINE (noun). The noun FAULT LINE has 1 sense: 1. (geology) line determined by the intersection of a geological fault and the earth's surface. Familiarity information: FAULT LINE used as a noun is very rare. FAULT LINE (noun). The noun FAULT LINE has 1 sense: 1. (geology) line determined by the intersection of a geological fault and the earth's surface. Familiarity information: FAULT LINE used as a noun is very rare.
A soild line means to not cross over. A solid line on your side, and a broken on the other means you cannot cross but the other lane can, and vice versa. A double solid means neither lane can cross. Gernarally, they are lane deviders, but mean much more as in the above.. A hatched area means do no enter here. desperatedan · 5 years ago.
eng_Latn
33,001
What was the horizontal slippage perpendicular to the fault?
The Longmen Shan Fault System is situated in the eastern border of the Tibetan Plateau and contains several faults. This earthquake ruptured at least two imbricate structures in Longmen Shan Fault System, i.e. the Beichuan Fault and the Guanxian–Anxian Fault. In the epicentral area, the average slip in Beichuan Fault was about 3.5 metres (11 ft) vertical, 3.5 metres (11 ft) horizontal-parallel to the fault, and 4.8 metres (16 ft) horizontal-perpendicular to the fault. In the area about 30 kilometres (19 mi) northeast of the epicenter, the surface slip on Beichuan Fault was almost purely dextral strike-slip up to about 3 metres (9.8 ft), while the average slip in Guanxian–Anxian Fault was about 2 metres (6 ft 7 in) vertical and 2.3 metres (7 ft 7 in) horizontal.
Foot resigned and was replaced as leader by Neil Kinnock, with Roy Hattersley as his deputy. The new leadership progressively dropped unpopular policies. The miners strike of 1984–85 over coal mine closures, for which miners' leader Arthur Scargill was blamed, and the Wapping dispute led to clashes with the left of the party, and negative coverage in most of the press. Tabloid vilification of the so-called loony left continued to taint the parliamentary party by association from the activities of 'extra-parliamentary' militants in local government.
eng_Latn
33,002
what is a tectonic hazard
Tectonic hazards are potential disasters caused by the shifting of the earth's plates, the two most well known of these disasters are volcanoes and earthquakes and occur prima … rily on tectonic boundaries (the rift between two continental plates). Tectonic Hazard is caused where two plates meet, these plates are platforms of rock that move on the convewction currents created by the earths core; they are known as tecto … nic plates.
Many geophysical hazards are interrelated; for example, submarine earthquakes can cause tsunamis, and hurricanes can lead to coastal flooding and erosion. It is possible that some natural hazards are intertemporally correlated as well.A concrete example of the division between a natural hazard and a natural disaster is that the 1906 San Francisco earthquake was a disaster, whereas living on a fault line is a hazard. natural hazard is a naturally occurring event that might have a negative effect on people or the environment. Natural hazard events can be grouped into two broad categories.
eng_Latn
33,003
geological hazards definition
A geologic hazard is one of several types of adverse geologic conditions capable of causing damage or loss of property and life. These hazards consist of sudden phenomena and slow phenomena: Sudden phenomena include: avalanches (snow, rock, or air & snow) and its runout.
1 Physical hazards are conditions or situations that can cause the body physical harm or intense stress. Physical hazards can be both natural and human made elements. Chemical hazards are substances that can cause harm or damage to the body, property or the environment.
eng_Latn
33,004
What was the horizontal slippage in the Beichuan Fault at the epicenter?
The Longmen Shan Fault System is situated in the eastern border of the Tibetan Plateau and contains several faults. This earthquake ruptured at least two imbricate structures in Longmen Shan Fault System, i.e. the Beichuan Fault and the Guanxian–Anxian Fault. In the epicentral area, the average slip in Beichuan Fault was about 3.5 metres (11 ft) vertical, 3.5 metres (11 ft) horizontal-parallel to the fault, and 4.8 metres (16 ft) horizontal-perpendicular to the fault. In the area about 30 kilometres (19 mi) northeast of the epicenter, the surface slip on Beichuan Fault was almost purely dextral strike-slip up to about 3 metres (9.8 ft), while the average slip in Guanxian–Anxian Fault was about 2 metres (6 ft 7 in) vertical and 2.3 metres (7 ft 7 in) horizontal.
In 1964, the biologists Paul Ehrlich and Holm pointed out cases where two or more clines are distributed discordantly—for example, melanin is distributed in a decreasing pattern from the equator north and south; frequencies for the haplotype for beta-S hemoglobin, on the other hand, radiate out of specific geographical points in Africa. As the anthropologists Leonard Lieberman and Fatimah Linda Jackson observed, "Discordant patterns of heterogeneity falsify any description of a population as if it were genotypically or even phenotypically homogeneous".
eng_Latn
33,005
What is shear stress?
Shear stresses what is?
When using the shear formula, will the maximum shear stress always be on the neutral axis, regardless of the cross section?
eng_Latn
33,006
what is shockwave
Shockwave, developed by Macromedia, is a family of multimedia players. Web users with Windows and Mac platforms can download the Shockwave players from the Macromedia site and use it to display and hear Shockwave files.
shock wave in British English. See all translations. shock wavenoun [ C ] uk ​ /ˈʃɒk ˌweɪv/ us ​ /ˈʃɑːk ˌweɪv/. › a sudden wave of increased pressure or temperature, caused by an explosion, an earthquake, or an object moving faster than the speed of sound.
eng_Latn
33,007
ground deformation definition
Deformation monitoring. Deformation monitoring (also referred to as deformation survey) is the systematic measurement and tracking of the alteration in the shape or dimensions of an object as a result of stresses induced by applied loads.
lenses ground to rigid specifications. 6. Mechanics. of, relating to, or noting a body in which the distance between any pair of points remains fixed under all forces; having infinite values for its shear modulus, bulk modulus, and Young's modulus.
eng_Latn
33,008
What is a gyroscope? How does it work?
What is gyroscope?
Why an earthquake happens?
eng_Latn
33,009
What is vibration?
What is a vibration?
Why an earthquake happens?
eng_Latn
33,010
three phase transformer\nthree phase generator
baa baa black sheep---THREE BAGS FULL
yea.. it's Helicorder Images, a way to record the earthquake in a given area.. even it is minimum. for reading of this, you need to do a bit study. surf the net, also go here:
eng_Latn
33,011
when do p waves arrive to the surface in relation to s waves and surface waves
Earthquakes generate three types of seismic waves: P (primary) waves, S (secondary) waves and surface waves, which arrive at seismic recording stations one after another. Both P and S waves penetrate the interior of the Earth while surface waves do not. Due to this, P and S waves are known as body waves.
These waves involve shearing and rotation of the material as the wave passes through it, but not volume change. S-waves have speeds less than P-waves, and appear on seismograms after P-waves. Surface Waves. Surface waves are seismic waves that are guided along the surface of the Earth and the layers near the surface. These waves do not penetrate the deep interior of the earth, and are normally generated by shallow earthquakes (nuclear explosions do not generate these surface waves).
eng_Latn
33,012
do s waves move more rapidly than p waves?
S waves arise from forces trying to change the shape of of an object. As the diagram shows, shear waves are the result of the medium's resistance to this sort of deformation. There are some important concept to keep in mind when we use seismic waves to investigate the structure of the interior of the Earth. The first is that P waves travel faster than S waves. This is the reason they are referred to as primary waves, as they are the first seismic waves to arrive at a seismic station. The second is that seismic waves travel faster through media which offer more resistance to that type of deformation.
P waves shake the ground in the direction they are propagating, while S waves shake perpendicularly or transverse to the direction of propagation. Although wave speeds vary by a factor of ten or more in the Earth, the ratio between the average speeds of a P wave and of its following S wave is quite constant.
eng_Latn
33,013
what are waves that travel up and down
Add your answer. Do s-waves move side to side and do p-waves move up and down? In one book it says p-waves move up and down and another it says p-waves move side to side. And also s-waves, one book says they move up and down and another side to side! so what is it? and which causes the most damage?
Body waves. Body waves are of two types: compressional or primary (P) waves and shear or secondary (S) waves. P-and S-waves are called body waves because they can travel through the interior of a body such as the Earth's inner layers, from the focus of an earthquake to distant points on the surface.he seismic waves created as they move from the epicentre an earthquake vary. What is amazing is how fast they can travel: up to 2 miles per second in granite! Seismic waves can be classified into two basic types: body waves which travel through the Earth and surface waves, which travel along the Earth's surface.
eng_Latn
33,014
which type or types of earthquake waves move only near the surface of the earth?
The third general type of earthquake wave is called a surface wave, reason being is that its motion is restricted to near the ground surface. Such waves correspond to ripples of water that travel across a lake. Surface waves in earthquakes can be divided into two types. The first is called a Love wave. Its motion is essentially that of S waves that have no vertical displacement; it moves the ground from side to side in a horizontal plane but at right angles to the direction of propagation.
There are two different types wave produced by an earthquake: body waves and surface waves. Body Waves. Body waves are seismic waves that travel through the body of the earth. Body waves are reflected and transmitted at interfaces where seismic velocity and/or density change, and they obey Snell's law.
eng_Latn
33,015
is an earthquake p-wave wave longitudinal
The second animation at right shows the difference between the oscillatory motion of individual particles and the propagation of the wave through the medium. The animation also identifies the regions of compression and rarefaction. The P waves (Primary waves) in an earthquake are examples of Longitudinal waves.
A) parallel or. B) perpendicular. P waves are the fastest kind of seismic wave. A longitudinal P wave has the ability to move through solid rock and fluid rock, like water or the semi-liquid layers of the earth. It pushes and pulls the rock it moves through in the same way sound waves push and pull the air.
eng_Latn
33,016
what is a shockwave
Shock wave. In physics, a shock wave (also spelled shockwave), or shock, is a type of propagating disturbance. When a wave moves faster than the local speed of sound in a fluid, it is a shock wave. Like an ordinary wave, a shock wave carries energy and can propagate through a medium; however, it is characterized by an abrupt, nearly discontinuous change in pressure, temperature and density of the medium.
What does ESWL stand for? ESWL stands for extracoporeal shockwave lithotripsy. Q: A: How to abbreviate extracoporeal shockwave lithotripsy? extracoporeal shockwave lithotripsy can be abbreviated as ESWL. Q: A: What is the meaning of ESWL abbreviation? The meaning of ESWL abbreviation is extracoporeal shockwave lithotripsy. Q: A: What is ESWL abbreviation? One of the definitions of ESWL is extracoporeal shockwave lithotripsy. Q: A: What does ESWL mean? ESWL as abbreviation means extracoporeal shockwave lithotripsy. Q: A: What is shorthand of extracoporeal shockwave lithotripsy? The most common shorthand of extracoporeal shockwave lithotripsy is ESWL.
eng_Latn
33,017
what does a body wave travel through
Body waves. Body waves are of two types: compressional or primary (P) waves and shear or secondary (S) waves. P- and S- waves are called body waves because they can travel through the interior of a body such as the Earth's inner layers, from the focus of an earthquake to distant points on the surface. The Earth’s molten core can only be travelled through by compressional waves.
Body waves. Body waves and surface waves are the two types of seismic waves formed during great earthquakes. P waves and S waves are called body waves because they travel through the body of the Earth.Surface waves. Love waves and Rayleigh waves travel only on the surface of the Earth and cause the most destruction. waves travel through all parts of the Earth. S waves. S waves travel in a motion similar to a rope held tight at one end while the other end is lifted rapidly back and forth. S waves only travel through solids and do not travel through the liquid outer core of the Earth.
eng_Latn
33,018
what are seismic waves
Seismic waves are the waves of energy caused by the sudden breaking of rock within the earth or an explosion. They are the energy that travels through the earth and is recorded on seismographs. Types of Seismic Waves. There are several different kinds of seismic waves, and they all move in different ways.
Seismic sea wave. The term seismic sea wave also is used to refer to the phenomenon, because the waves most often are generated by seismic activity such as earthquakes. Prior to the rise of the use of the term tsunami in English-speaking countries, scientists generally encouraged the use of the term seismic sea wave rather than tidal wave.
eng_Latn
33,019
what are transform boundaries
Transform fault (the red lines). A transform fault or transform boundary, also known as conservative plate boundary since these faults neither create nor destroy lithosphere, is a type of fault whose relative motion is predominantly horizontal in either sinistral or dextral direction.ransform faults are closely related to transcurrent faults. Both types of faults are strike-slip or side-to-side in movement, (see diagrams to the right) however transform faults end at the junction of another plate boundary or fault type, while transcurrent faults die out without a junction.
English Wikipedia - The Free Encyclopedia. A transform fault or transform boundary, also known as conservative plate boundary since these faults neither create nor destroy lithosphere, is a type of fault whose relative motion is predominantly horizontal in either sinistral or dextral direction.
eng_Latn
33,020
what are modic changes
Modic changes are pathological changes in the bones of the spine, the vertebrae. These changes are situated in both the body of the vertebrae and in the end plate of the neighboring disc.
1 Modic type 1 changes involve fluids in the part of the vertebral body that is close to the disc, and they stem from an infection in the disc, with low virulence anaerobic bacteria, especially the bacterium Propionibacterium acnes.
eng_Latn
33,021
Evaluation of the Vegetation Coverage Resilience in Areas Damaged by the Wenchuan Earthquake Based on MODIS-EVI Data
Resilience Thinking: Integrating Resilience, Adaptability and Transformability
Natural recovery and restoration in giant panda habitat after the Wenchuan earthquake
eng_Latn
33,022
Vital statistics on the presidency
Presidential Influence of the News Media: The Case of the Press Conference
No association between month of birth and biliary atresia in a country with tropical climate
eng_Latn
33,023
i honestly at this point it's it's just too blown out of proportion for everyone you really even the news you cannot follow
I think the topic is so contentious, people can't even make sense out of the news reported about it.
I think this topic is cut and dry, easy for people to follow.
eng_Latn
33,024
of course T News is is more or less headlines uh i don't think much of of their sports coverage
The news mostly reports top stories and the sports coverage isn't that great.
The news is terrible and I hate it.
eng_Latn
33,025
and uh it it's pretty much headline news
This is headline news.
It was buried on page five; no one cares about it.
eng_Latn
33,026
Lewinsky, Week 2: Newsweek 's cover story is The Secret Sex Wars; Time's is Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr.
Week 2 features Newsweek and Time's stories on Lewinsky and Starr.
All press's Week 2 stories are on the Ebola outbreak.
eng_Latn
33,027
uh uh we had a couple of people in our group who wrote one who wrote a huge letter to the editors
We had a couple of people in our group, they wrote a huge letter to the editors.
Nobody in our group dared to write a letter to the editors.
eng_Latn
33,028
The Globe 's circulation is rising fast.
Subscription numbers for The Globe are going up.
The Globe has 1/3 the readers of last year.
eng_Latn
33,029
Here is what some prominent national reporters wrote on
Some prominent national reporters wrote about a topic.
The journalists that wrote on these topics were mostly unknown.
eng_Latn
33,030
The WJC, which is also funded by Scaife, sponsors investigative reporting for right-wing causes.
The WJC promotes investigative reporting for the GOP.
The WJC does not like to associate with right-wing issues.
eng_Latn
33,031
We all lived in a blast of publicity.
We all existed in burst of publicity.
All of us lived under the cover of anonymity.
eng_Latn
33,032
Philadelphia Inquirer.
Philadelphia newspaper.
A newspaper from New York.
por_Latn
33,033
huh Raleigh well uh have you ever do you read uh US News
Do you read US News?
Do you read the Daily Mail?
eng_Latn
33,034
Another major metropolitan daily in the South told its reporter that it would not pay her airfare or expenses.
Another newspaper in the South would not pay her transportation costs.
Another major metropolitan daily in the South told its reporter that it would pay her airfare.
eng_Latn
33,035
oh i'm with you i have to check T News every everyday it's my noontime dose of facts
I check T News in order to read facts.
I don't check the news during the day.
eng_Latn
33,036
The Washington Weekly , a Web magazine devoted to right-wing politics, also promoted the forgery claim.
The forgery claim got traction in the Washington Weekly, an online right-wing political magazine.
The first left-wing outlet to debunk the claim was The Washington Weekly.
eng_Latn
33,037
Acknowledgments are offered to any number of Washington big shots, including Slate's own Robert Shrum, who is thanked for his considerable editing skills.
Robert Shrum works as an editor for Slate.
Robert Shrum is not in the writing or editing industry.
eng_Latn
33,038
Time goes Oprah-overboard with four articles on the talk show host and her new movie of Toni Morrison's Beloved (about a runaway slave dealing with motherhood).
Time wrote four articles about Oprah.
Time wrote four articles about Jerry Springer.
eng_Latn
33,039
I'd leave the strangulation-in-cradle attempts to CBS News.
CBS News can handle the attempts at strangulation-in-cradle.
CNN can cover the strangulation-in-cradle instead of CBS News.
eng_Latn
33,040
Gore : Look, we could call this the Meet The Press agreement.
Gore said we could call this the Meet The Press agreement.
Gore is appalled that his agreement was called "Meet The Press"
eng_Latn
33,041
Steve Forbes' Internet guru Rick Segal tried to work the Iowa straw poll this way.
Rick Segal is Steve Forbes' internet guru.
Rick Segal never tried to work the Iowa straw poll.
eng_Latn
33,042
well just any any political event or view or anything
Anything such as a political opinion or event.
Something specific and it excludes political events
eng_Latn
33,043
Reporters tried to provoke Bush into making news or embarrassing his hosts, while ignoring the social policy issues on his agenda.
Reporters completely ignored Bush's social policy issues.
Reporters appeared to be provoking Bush but they were actually praising him for his intelligence.
eng_Latn
33,044
And the Globe is at the forefront of an anti-Oprah Winfrey backlash this week with the story Oprah Revolt!
The Globe is responsible for all of the Oprah WInfrey hate on this Oprah articles
Nobody was directly responsible for the attacks on Oprah
eng_Latn
33,045
Flytrap is a case of journalists doing precisely what press critics are always hectoring them to do--just supply the facts, don't indulge in opinion or conclusion--and shows the inadequacy of that journalistic ideal.
Flytrap is an example of journalists supplying the facts.
Flytrap is an example of journalists supplying their opinions.
eng_Latn
33,046
The press and public love it.
The media and the people are thrilled by it.
The media and the people hate it.
eng_Latn
33,047
On opinion-spouting shows like The McLaughlin Group , by contrast, journalists (often the same journalists) are free to have a point of view.
Journalists are free to have their own viewpoint.
No journalists are allowed to have their own viewpoint.
eng_Latn
33,048
He set out to impose the Conde Nast model on The New Yorker : expand circulation and raise ad rates.
He set out to impose the Conde Nast model on The New Yorker.
He did not plan on showing his model to any news agencies.
eng_Latn
33,049
It seems like no matter when I read this, the news is always the same.
The news always seems to be the same.
Whenever I read this blog I want to order pizza.
eng_Latn
33,050
A news cast team works in front of the camera.
A news team is reporting the news.
A news cast team relaxes after reporting live.
eng_Latn
33,051
We feature extensive coverage of the major issues each and every day, and devote more time to international news than any of our evening competitors.
We have more international news than any of our evening rivals.
We do not have coverage for international news.
eng_Latn
33,052
Mourning News to be better but i sort of have a liberal political slant and the Mourning News just has an incredibly conservative editorial um outlook
I disagree with my Morning News because it has a conservative editoral outlook which clashes with my liberal political perspective.
I am in full support of the Morning News.
eng_Latn
33,053
Well, in every press interview I've ever had that goes over 25 words, two of them are Garrison and Keillor.
Garrison and Keillor are quoted among these 25 words.
Garrison and Keillor are quoted among these 100 words.
eng_Latn
33,054
To add half a million readers, or even half that number, Willes will need to steal subscribers from the 18 other newspapers in the Los Angeles area, including the Orange County Register and the Los Angeles Daily News . This raises an appetizing prospect.
Subscribers from other newspapers would have to be stolen in order to add half a million readers.
There are only seven newspapers available in the Los Angeles area.
eng_Latn
33,055
Could it be that since there are so many other news sources (Internet, cable TV) newspapers are doing more and more magazine-style stories?
Are newspapers doing more magazine style stories due to there being so many other news sources on internet and cable?
Newspapers still refuse to do magazine style stories despite the competition with internet and cable news.
eng_Latn
33,056
and so it really made me question as to what how do we know about you know uh if the news we're getting is any good so
It made me wonder about where we get our news from.
I didn't really care where I got my news from.
eng_Latn
33,057
Regular Sunday reviewers, on the model of Cyril Connolly, the longtime critic for the Sunday Times , become trusted guides.
People that provide regular reviews can gain credibility.
Only official editorial staff can gain any credibility.
eng_Latn
33,058
The nation's top scientific journal is getting a new top editor.
The nation's top scientific journal will have a new editor.
The nation's top scientific journal will keep its editor for another decade or so.
eng_Latn
33,059
Madeleine Albright, Colin Powell, and Robert Rubin also make it, and the most inspired pick is National Enquirer editor Steve Coz.
The most Motivational pick is Steve Coz, an editor for the National Enquirer.
Steve Coz, the editor of the National Enquirer, has not been picked.
eng_Latn
33,060
Yoffe suggests that truth can be found just as easily in tabloids as in traditional publishing outlets
Truth can often be found in tabloids, according to Yoffe.
Yoffe dismisses tabloids, saying that they are just full of fake news.
eng_Latn
33,061
and so um news stations always tell the story from a certain angle and that's why it's a good idea to get a wide variety of coverage so that you get a lot of different opinions you may never get the truth but you'll have a variety to choose from
All the news coverage is slanted so you need to get a wide variety.
They news is never biased.
eng_Latn
33,062
Exaggerated and crude claims of liberal bias have become an excuse for poor journalistic standards, and for shoddy intellectual ones as well.
Bias is used as a reason for poor standards in journalism.
There is no bias in journalism.
eng_Latn
33,063
We haven't been as good at communicating our story, he said.
We have not shown the world our story.
We have shown the world our story.
eng_Latn
33,064
The executive editor of the Morning News dismissed the fabrication theory as ad hoc damage control.
The Morning News executive editor does not agree with the fabrication theory.
The fabrication theory is supported by the executive editor of the Morning News.
eng_Latn
33,065
Years ago, a young free-lancer submitted a story to me about Iran-Contra that was filled with anonymous sources.
A long time ago, I got a story about Iran-Contra from a young free-lancer and it was filled with anonymous sources.
I got a story about Iran-Contra that had numerous reliable information sources.
eng_Latn
33,066
Generally, correspondents strike an air of stern impartiality, just as on the evening news.
Correspondents usually try to stay impartial.
Correspondents usually try to make it clear what their own views are.
eng_Latn
33,067
it was unusual not to have the different sources you know of news coverage
It was weird not to have different sources for news coverage.
There was a plethora of sources confirming the story.
eng_Latn
33,068
David Talbot has had inspiring things to say about journalists and the truth.
David Talbot has said inspiring things about journalists.
David Talbot says nothing on the position of journalism.
eng_Latn
33,069
In other places, she describes events by reprinting reports from Texas newspapers.
She reprints Texas news stories.
SHe reprints Florida news stories.
eng_Latn
33,070
Though the NYTBR can't hurt Tom Clancy and probably can't help most academic specialists, for a lot of writers in between, not getting reviewed in the Times or receiving a harsh review can nail the coffin shut.
For many writers, not getting reviewed in the Times can ruin their carreer.
For many writers, not getting reviewed in the Times can help them to become famous and successful.
eng_Latn
33,071
In other words, the questions he got from reporters focused on politics and positioning to the total exclusion of his actual policies and positions.
He received questions on politics and positioning instead of questions on actual policies and positions.
He received questions on his actual policies and positions.
eng_Latn
33,072
Therefore (at the suggestion of occasional Slate contributor and Atlantic Monthly national correspondent Nicholas Lemann), we invite nominations for a Supplemental 60 (better name forthcoming, let's hope).
Nicholas Lemann is employed by the Atlantic Monthly and Slate.
Nicholas Lemann does not write for the Atlantic Monthly or Slate.
eng_Latn
33,073
But not Fox News Sunday 's Jim Angle, who reports, Jiang went toe-to-toe with Bill Clinton, the smoothest talker in the Western world.
Jim Angle works for Fox News Sunday.
Jim Angle is not associated with Fox News Sunday.
eng_Latn
33,074
(The New York Post 's Page Six gossip column ran a lead item on the Enquirer story on Christmas Day.)
The New York Post gossip column ran an article on the Enquirer story.
The New York Post ran a column on the Enquirer story on New Year's Eve.
eng_Latn
33,075
so that's right about two months ago Omni Magazine which is a a science magazine are you familiar with that read an article um really restating some conclusions of some some uh
Omni Magazine, which is a science publication, reported it a couple of months ago.
Do you have any idea who published this article?
eng_Latn
33,076
The weight of the Times is such that unfairness anywhere in the paper casts a shadow over legitimate stories that appear elsewhere.
The Times has so much power that any negativities they claim overshadow the truth in other papers.
The Times is always just.
eng_Latn
33,077
But if Drudge passes on a particular story, there are few other columnists--in print or on the Web--who have the inclination and audience to break a tabloid tale out to mainstream readers.
Tabloid columnists still have a lot of readers despite their occasional lack of truth.
If Drudge won't acknowledge a particular story, all the other columnists will follow suit and ignore that scoop.
eng_Latn
33,078
The article leaves the impression that Huffington is quite confused and a bit dull.
After reading the article, you are left with the impression, that Huffington is quite confused, and a bit dull.
The article leaves the impression, that Huffington is not confused or dull in the least.
eng_Latn
33,079
Screaming headlines in every paper in the country ”damn all journalists, I say!
I hated looking at the lurid headlines in all the newspapers.
I gobbled up all the newspapers I could get my hands on.
eng_Latn
33,080
(Read the transcripts of the better CNN chats here . Look for the Allpolitics section toward the bottom of the page.)
The transcripts for CNN chats are on the site.
The transcripts for MSNBC chats are on the site.
eng_Latn
33,081
And there they will brag--as MacDonald has done in a response to Culturebox coming soon to the Fray, and as he probably will in a British court some time in the next few months--I have published my views in highly reputable refereed journals in psychology.
I am published in a psychology journal.
I have never been published.
eng_Latn
33,082
i don't know did i don't know how old you are but it seems to me like the last uh newscaster that presented news in just the nice simple factual way that i wanted to hear was Walter Cronkite
I really enjoyed when Walter Cronkite was an anchor.
I like all the current news anchors.
eng_Latn
33,083
After the review was published, Science received a flood of angry telephone calls and letters, according to the editor in question, Katherine Livingston.
The editor in question received a flood of angry letters after the review was published.
The editor received nothing but praise for the review.
eng_Latn
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It's fairly unusual, in my experience, for a politician to accept a reporter's opinion that one of his major proposals is seriously flawed.
A politician will usually defend his proposal to the press rather than acknowledge any serious flaws.
Reporters usually find politicians are open to new facts, ideas and critique of public policy.
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As co-host of Crossfire for six and a half years (1989-1995), I am familiar with the It's uncivilized, it's just show biz, it's not serious, you all talk at the same time, no one gets to finish a sentence, Pat Buchanan is a monster, Bob Novak is a monster, John Sununu makes me ill (and they hear similar complaints, apparently, about the liberal hosts).
I was a co-host of Crossfire for six years.
I was a co-host of Crossfire for seventeen years.
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Before I came to Washington, I was editor of the Daily Californian , the student newspaper at Berkeley, where I was reviled for endorsing the U.S. invasion of Grenada.
The Daily Californian is the student newspaper at Berkeley.
I never endorsed the U.S invasion of Grenada.
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All American reporters care about is Monica Lewinsky, and we're trying to get away from that, one U.S. official told me.
A US official has told me that we're trying to get away from Monica Lewinsky despite the fact that American reporters care about her a lot.
A US official told me that we'd like to increase American news coverage of Monica Lewinsky.
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But at its worst, it sits on hot news.
It is important news.
There is nothing important.
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The Times can't very well send reporters snooping around after colleagues in the same newsroom.
It is not feasible for The Times to send reporters to conduct snooping on colleagues in the same newsroom.
The Times can send reporters snooping around after colleagues free from risk.
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But the truth for me was slightly Whatever was on those tapes, listening to them, and quoting them, would make this a much more compelling and dramatic story for Newsweek .
Using actual quotes from the recordings would make my Newsweek story more interesting.
I knew the tapes would have nothing of value for my story.
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After all, he's just a newspaper columnist.
He is but a newspaper columnist.
He is a traveling rock show photographer.
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A shocking number of his recent articles are based on something he saw on television.
Television was the basis for his recent articles.
His articles are not based on television.
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right we've just been watching the national news
We've been watching the national news.
We never watch the news.
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Reporters always like to take popular people down, and they're trained to sympathize with underdogs (afflict the comfortable, comfort the afflicted).
Reporters always enjoy muddying popular people's reputations.
Reporters enjoy praising the popular people, and spitting down at the lowly.
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Boosterism as Banishment: Identifying the power function of local, business news and coverage of city spaces
Building Consensus: The News Media's Agenda-Setting Roles
No association between month of birth and biliary atresia in a country with tropical climate
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The author discusses two important perspectives on “tabloidization” and its supposed impact upon news discourses: the polarisation perspective attributes to the changes in news journalism a sharpening differentiation and polarisation between tabloid and broadsheet newspapers, while according to the homogenising view, sensational journalism which once seemed to be confined to the lowbrow media, now spreads to all media. The article argues that tabloidisation debates often do not compare like with like, which results in mistaken conclusions. A case in point is fabulous reportage as a specific form of journalistic discourse that cannot be considered a trivial form of news discourse, but a discourse sui generis, a distinct genre. Consequently, it does not make sense to compare broadsheet news discourse with fabulous reportage in tabloid newspapers; a valid comparison is between tabloid news discourse with broadsheet news discourse. The article presents such a comparative content analysis of news disco...
Although considerable efforts have studied online news, studies so far have not investigated how the actual news topics are affected by digitalization in general, if at all, or compared them to different media constructs. Instead, changes in content are assumed or illustrated anecdotally rather than systematically assessed. This empirical study, covering Swedish and UK news sites within tabloid, quality morning, and local/regional varieties between 2002 and 2012, shows that there is a tabloidization effect in general but that it is stronger in tabloids and in Sweden compared to the UK. Further, this tabloidization can be more precisely described as a shift from political to more lifestyle journalism, as it is in the areas where the prime growth and decline are found. In addition, the study reveals that it is the slower news that increases most suggesting that the immediate character of online news is mediated by production conditions
Berzelius failed to make use of Faraday's electrochemical laws in his laborious determination of equivalent weights.
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Fukushima meltdown: the nuclear industry, one year on
A year after a tsunami triggered meltdown at a Japanese nuclear plant, New Scientist examines the knock-on effects
Providing perhaps a little schadenfreude-related light relief amid the seemingly endless EU referendum coverage was the news that The Sun columnist and former editor, Kelvin Mackenzie, was suffering from Brexit “buyer’s remorse”.
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Climate Change and Human Health
During 2006, Australians and people everywhere have begun to engage increasingly, and with growing concern, with the issue of human-induced global climate change. This is, by any criterion, an extraordinary phenomenon – in terms of its very nature (fancy the human enterprise now being of such dimensions that it is changing the way the planet works), its scale, the rate at which it is now evolving, and the diversity of its impacts.
An introduction to an article written on Twitter bots, Russian Internet trolls and the public health risks of social media.
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