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Page "Food irradiation" ¶ 57
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is and rare
The woman eyed the youth with the avidity a coin collector might display toward a rare doubloon which is not yet in his collection.
and the success of such an endeavor is, as suggested above, glaringly rare.
The book concerned with the Negro's role in an urban society is rare indeed ; ;
It is one of the rare public ventures here on which nearly everyone is agreed.
Self-criticism is a rare but needed commodity in Congress.
On those rare occasions when a faculty member on tenure is not meeting the standards of the institution, the president must also bear the ultimate burden of decision and action.
In the rare case where a corporation's only substantial asset, or its most important one, is a claim for refund, perhaps its transfer should not be permitted, whether the reorganization takes the form of a statutory merger or of the acquisition of assets for stock.
The inhibition of the enzyme by very low concentrations of lanthanum ion is probably the strongest known biological effect of rare earth salts.
He is still heir to the rare gifts of space and silence, if he chooses to be.
For that matter, Stan Musial is rare, possessing the disposition that enabled him to put out the same for seven managers, reserving his opinions, but not his effort.
Actually Johnny is a glib, garrulous guy, with a rare sense of humor.
Beadle is even that rare scientist who takes an interest in money matters ; ;
Another cue is having the same family name, especially if rare, and this has been found to increase helping behavior.
Relief in post-conviction is rare and is most often found in capital or violent felony cases.
Generally, there is no trial in an appellate court, only consideration of the record of the evidence presented to the trial court and all the pre-trial and trial court proceedings are reviewed — unless the appeal is by way of re-hearing, new evidence will usually only be considered on appeal in " very " rare instances, for example if that material evidence was unavailable to a party for some very significant reason such as prosecutorial misconduct.
German uses the tesseragraphs ( four letters ) " tsch " for the phoneme and " dsch " for, although the latter is rare.
An example is modern Greek which may write the phoneme in six different ways: ⟨ ι ⟩, ⟨ η ⟩, ⟨ υ ⟩, ⟨ ει ⟩, ⟨ οι ⟩, and ⟨ υι ⟩ ( although the last is rare ).
Phytomelan is not unique to Asparagales ( i. e. it is not a synapomorphy ) but it is common within the order and rare outside it.
Fossil evidence of the Asterales is rare and belongs to rather recent epochs, so the precise estimation of the order's age is quite difficult.

is and find
However, there is always the possibility that chance will make demands the dancers find impossible to execute.
That, I thought, is at least one thing I can find out when we meet.
To find a form that accommodates the mess, that is the task of the artist now ''.
The professed mission of this disaffiliated generation is to find a new way of life which they can express in poetry and fiction, but what they produce is unfortunately disordered, nourished solely on the hysteria of negation.
What he really wants is to find `` a sacred cause '' to which he can honestly devote himself.
In order to exonerate himself, he is compelled to find the real criminal, who happens to be his girl friend.
In any event, whether society may have cancer, or merely a virus infection, the `` disease '', we shall find, is political, economical, social, and even medical.
Incest is still a durable theme, but if it wants to get written about it will have to find ways to surprise the emotions, and there is no better way to do this than that of concealment and symbolic representation.
Even if people do, in a not far distant future, begin to read one another's minds, there will still be the question of whether what you find in another man's mind is especially worth reading -- worth more, that is, than what you can read in good books.
Since the slogans have little application to reality and are sanctimonious to boot, the applause is faint even in areas of the world where we should expect to find the greatest affection for free government.
The problem is rather to find out what is actually happening, and this is especially difficult for the reason that `` we are busily being defended from a knowledge of the present, sometimes by the very agencies -- our educational system, our mass media, our statesmen -- on which we have had to rely most heavily for understanding of ourselves ''.
But however we come, finally, to explain and account for the present, the truth we are trying to expose, right now, is that the makers of constitutions and the designers of institutions find it difficult if not impossible to anticipate the behavior of the host of all their enterprises.
Accordingly we may speak of the Platonism peculiar to Shelley's poems or the type of Stoicism present in Henley's `` Invictus '', and we may find that describing such Platonism or such Stoicism and contrasting each with other expressions of the same attitude or mode of thought is a difficult and challenging enterprise.
It is obvious that the historian who seeks to recapture the ideas that have motivated human behavior throughout a given period will find the art and literature of that age one of his central and major concerns, by no means a mere supplement or adjunct of significant historical research.
In looking back over the volumes, it is possible to find errors of interpretation, some of which were not so evident at the time of writing.
We find, in the first place, that the students overwhelmingly approve of higher education, positively evaluate the job their own institution is doing, do not accept most of the criticisms levelled against higher education in the public prints, and, on the whole, approve of the way their university deals with value-problems and value inculcation.
That is, we must find Saxons in East Anglia, Kent, Sussex and Hampshire in the last half of the fourth century.
It is not possible to reconstruct fully the arrangements whereby these honors lists were then made up or even how the names that they contained assumed the order in which we find them.
Next year is the 80th anniversary of the signing of the treaty between Korea and the United States and experts in Seoul are trying to find the correspondence between Frederick Frelinghuysen, who was Secretary of State in 1883 and 1884, and Gen. Lucius Foote, who was the first minister to Korea.
) At this late date, it is impossible for St. Michael's College to find a suitable replacement for me.

is and irradiated
* 1945 – Physicist Harry K. Daghlian, Jr. is fatally irradiated in a criticality accident during an experiment with the Demon core at Los Alamos National Laboratory.
Police officials, the irradiated Dr. Vornoff, Dick Craig and Janet Lawton all escape, and Dr. Vornoff is eventually killed by a bolt of lightning, forming a mushroom cloud as the film ends.
Most greened quartz ( Oro Verde ) is also irradiated to achieve the yellow-green color.
The use of the term " cold pasteurization " to describe irradiated foods is controversial, since pasteurization and irradiation are fundamentally different processes.
There is not much information about irradiated food available to the consumer on the market place ; a few more recent surveys do not reveal the full picture.
For example, the United States holds a number of bilateral agreements with countries exporting tropical fruit which is irradiated to eliminate insect pests and to fulfill the quarantine requirements, but no information on amounts traded in reality is available.
Currently, there is no global trade in irradiated food, except a rather small quantity of fruit irradiated to eliminate insect pests and to fulfill the US quarantine requirements.
The provisions are that any " first generation " product must be labeled " irradiated " as any product derived directly from an irradiated raw material ; for ingredients the provision is that even the last molecule of an irradiated ingredient must be listed with the ingredients even in cases where the unirradiated ingredient does not appear on the label.
Food that is processed as an ingredient by a restaurant or food processor is exempt from the labeling requirement in the US ; other countries follow the Codex Alimentarius provision to label irradiated ingredients down to the last molecule ( cf.
FDA is currently proposing a rule that in some cases would allow certain irradiated foods to be marketed without any labeling at all.
In the same rule FDA is proposing to permit a firm to use the terms " electronically pasteurized " or " cold pasteurized " in lieu of " irradiated ", provided it notifies the agency that the irradiation process being used meets the criteria specified for use of the term " pasteurized ".
The use of the term " cold pasteurization " to describe irradiated foods is controversial, because pasteurization and irradiation are fundamentally different processes, although the intended end results can in some cases be similar.
The results, the state of the art, and the mainstream of science are that irradiated food in general is safe to consume.
Consumer advocacy groups such as Public Citizen or Food and Water Watch maintain that the safety of irradiated food is not proven, in particular long-term studies are still lacking, and strongly oppose the use of the technology.
The AQIS announced on June 6, 2009 that the alternative of radiation processing for cat food is no longer acceptable and that irradiated dog food is required to be labeled " Must not be fed to cats ".
Opponents of food irradiation and consumer activists argue that the final proof is missing that irradiated food is " safe " ( i. e. not unwholesome ) and that the lack of long-term studies should be a further reason not to permit food irradiation.
* 1946 – Physicist Louis Slotin is fatally irradiated in a criticality incident during an experiment with the Demon core at Los Alamos National Laboratory.

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