823 research outputs found

    NH Farm to Preschool Forum Is Oct. 5 in Dublin

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    UNH Fall Initiatives Save Energy, Money, Emissions

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    UNH, NHBSR Launch Certificate In Corporate Sustainability

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    Climate Fellows Program, Campus Carbon Calculator Come Home to UNH

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    UNH Reduces Greenhouse Gas Emissions By Five Percent In Fy \u2705, Report Finds

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    N.H. Farm to School Receives Funding for State Gleaning Work

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    Since Boggs v. Plybon - The Automobile Guest in Virginia

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    The structure of the secondary spectrum of hydrogen

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    Thesis (M.A.)--Boston Universit

    Assessment of Carcinogenic Risk and the Delaney Clause: The Search for a Better Standard

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    This article will focus upon the legislative history and subsequent case law dealing with the Delaney Clause and it will include the rationale and limitations of the provision. In order to regulate carcinogens one must have a clear understanding of the cancer processes. Therefore a brief discussion of the biological parameters involved is warranted. The purpose of this discussion is to find a more rational alternative to the Delaney Clause. The use of quantitative risk assessment as an approach to regulate carcinogens found in food is also discussed. By combining the purposes of the original (and current statutory provisions with current technologies), a more efficient and workable regulation of carcinogens may be effectuated

    Poetics of the Heartland: The Lyric Voices of James Wright and Stanley Plumly

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    James Wright and Stanley Plumly were both born in Belmont County in the Ohio River Valley. Wright’s home of Martins Ferry is a mill town on the river, a part of the industrial community of Wheeling, West Virginia. Plumly, on the other hand, grew up 40 miles from the river in the hills and farm country. Although Wright was born a decade before Plumly, each poet developed a distinctive and influential lyric voice, as well as a unique vision of American experience. Comparison of these two poets invites us to search for strands of an Ohioan past in their poems, and also to relate their stylistic methods. Both poets tend towards the surreal in their depiction of experience, often articulating vivid imagery in dream-like setting. The differences and affinities in their evocations of heartland experience emerge through a thorough study of these poets’ works. Examining two books from each poet, the thesis attempts to delineate and analyze connections between the poets’ methods and achievements. Wright’s “The Branch Will Not Break”(1963) and “Shall We Gather at the River”(1968), and Plumly’s “Out-of-the-Body Travel”(1977) and “Summer Celestial”(1983) are the collections that both poets produced at roughly the middle of their respective careers. Studying sequential books reveals the poets’ developing voices, and how the poetry of these books also exemplifies both poets’ initial and most concerted effort towards evoking home and grappling with past
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