Word: doneness
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...levels of exposure from food-contact uses, for infants and adults" was based on data available at the time. Back in April, for example, the National Toxicology Program, which is part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), released a preliminary report expressing "some concern" that according to studies done in animals, BPA could have neural and behavioral effects on fetuses, infants and children at current levels of exposure. Recent surveys by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) had suggested that exposure is widespread, showing that 93% of Americans excrete some BPA in their urine. Still, the weight...
...badly as have those in Darfur or Somalia. Fighting between the rebel forces, led by Gen. Laurent Nkunda, an ethnic Tutsi, and Congolese troops had raged for months. It became clear in June that a January peace deal between the government and the rebels was collapsing, but little was done. "I've been working on Congo now for 10 years and I sometimes feel we're in this deja vu scenario. We see far too often that there is a flurry of diplomatic activity at moment of crisis and it tails off quickly," said Anneke Van Woudenberg, senior Congo researcher...
...reflect on just how much has been eaten. Everything but the squeal? Perhaps not.” Even more of an affront to the reader, it seems that Barlow never intended on finishing his plate in the first place. “I’m not done. Will I ever be? No. There’ll be no genitals,” he proclaims, as if subjecting readers to pig snout that tastes of “the stuff that periodically clogs the dishwasher” doesn’t require a no-reservations policy. Barlow?...
...white striped Oxford. The technologically-advanced accessories, including a bow crafted from the interior of an old keyboard, were a big hit with the judges. Burruss’s model requested to wear the dress out later that night for a little trouble-making, just like Gates would have done during his stint in the Yard...
...which means “imaginings,” stays true to its name as the directors continue to discover new ways of interpreting stories and engaging the audience. “We really consciously try every year to do something that we’ve never done before...so the audience can see a wide variety of things,” Martin says. “This year I think it’s come into play more than any other year.” —Staff writer Melanie E. Long can be reached at long2@fas.harvard.edu...