Word: feds
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...stickmen almost did. Gordie Nelson cut the lead to one, but Yale's 5-ft. 5-in. John Piazza answered for the Bulldogs. Jamie Egasti cut the lead to one again, but Piazzo fed off to Dave Stack for Yale's tenth tally...
...around the so-called Delaney clause of the 1958 amendments to the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, which dictates the banning of any food additives that cause cancer in humans or laboratory animals. In the case of saccharin, some Canadian rats developed bladder cancer when they were fed the sweetener in amounts that would be equivalent, in a human, to 800 cans of diet soda a day throughout his life. The Delaney clause, however, makes no mention of dosage levels. By considering saccharin a drug, the FDA allowed itself to apply less rigid standards: the agency may weigh hazard against...
LOOK, I KNOW how you feel. You're fed up with Harvard and grades and competition. You just want to say to hell with it all and take off, alone, to breathe fresh air, to live off the land, to think, really think. You're so close to loading up your dusty backpack that the slightest nudge of encouragement would send you on your iconoclastic, transcendental way. Be forewarned then-don't go see this play. You'll meander over to Walden Pond during intermission...
With his team ahead by only one goal after almost a full half of play, Cornell's current superstar, attackman Eamon McEneaney, fed the ball off to Tom Marino for a fifth tally and then scored one of own. That put the Big Red up at the half...
Harvard got its fourth goal of the game, for example, when Kennedy faked a trio of Bruins off their feet and then fed the ball to Martin, who found MacKenzie open on the crease...