772 research outputs found

    Ecology Comes of Age: NEPA’s Lost Mandate

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    Dormant Commerce Clause\u27s Aging Burden

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    Mr. Greenjean\u27s (TM) Greenjean\u27s Digest

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    Bar & grill. Creative menu design. Geographical location: Galleria of White Plains, White Plains, New York and Toronto Eaton Centre, Toronto, Canada

    The New Face of Civil Revolution

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    The New Face of Civil Revolution explains how with changing times comes changing platforms of expressing disdain for modern oppression against Black people of the United States of America. By juxtaposing the Black Power Movement and the Black Lives Matter Movement, this article provides a history of the oppression Black people face in America, as well as the many ways that these separate movements operate. Based on diversity of populations served, leadership, and the ways in which these movements gain supporters, this paper ultimately shows that there is currently a call for a new method of achieving equality in the Black community of America. That call is centered around Black Lives Matter, and it is due to the uniqueness of their fight in which all Black people are to be included. This article highlights how much more developed the platform of Black Lives Matter is in comparison to the Black Power Movement, and explains why it is important to support this movement now

    Policing Federal Supremacy: Preemption and Common Law Damage Claims as a Ceiling Regulatory Floor

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    This Article challenges conventional accounts of whether those who drafted the 1970 Clean Air Act intended to preempt state common law claims for nuisance. Neither those who advance robustly deploying the common law to arrest air emissions nor, conversely, those who claim that common law suits would disrupt the air regulatory program appreciate the dynamic that occurred when Congress confronted the Nation’s air pollution problem and crafted the first modern U.S. environmental laws. Yet that dynamic is essential to understanding the Clean Air Act’s “citizen suit” provision and Congress’s decision to preserve certain state common law claims. This Article explains how Congress rejected the post-New Deal attack on expert agency administrators and correspondingly stopped shy of accepting Professor Joseph Sax’s vision for citizen suits—a vision influenced by pervasive dialogues about participatory democracy that left the savings clause in the citizen suit provision clouded amid converging doctrines. This Article argues that this history establishes (1) that Congress unquestionably sought to preserve state common law damage claims and (2) that common law claims for equitable relief are preserved if the state regulatory agency explicitly accepts the continued vitality of such claims or if the activity is not otherwise regulated under the Clean Air Act

    Public Land Management’s Future Place: Envisioning a Paradigm Shift

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    Broadening Perspectives: Using Multiple Teaching Approaches to Meet the Needs of Language Students

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    This portfolio is comprised of research, opinions, and ideas that the author has learned during the Master of Second Language Teaching (MSLT) program at Utah State University (USU). It is a representation of experiences gained through teaching lower division Spanish courses at USU. In addition to experiences, it is also comprised of research perspectives which were furthered by coursework in the MSLT program. Contained within the pages is a road map of the author’s journey of learning and research. The portfolio begins with the author’s perspectives on teaching including his philosophy on teaching and how he has developed by observing other instructors. Next is a section containing research focused on language learning and culture. Lastly, the portfolio has an annotated bibliography exploring recent research on student assessment

    Christmas Tree Sale

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    The annual Forestry Club Christmas Tree Sale got under way the first weekend after Thanksgiving. The usual hard core do most of the work, club members showed up to peddle the 340 Scotch Pine. This year\u27s trees were purchased from Jack Miller\u27s plantation in Runnels, Iowa. Mr. Miller gave us an 8 foot tree to present to President Parks as is our custom each year
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