
David Joy
Articles
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2 months ago |
gardenandgun.com | David Joy |Gabriela Gomez-Misserian
Charles Thomas, the day you died I cradled your head in my palms with my face pressed to yours, our foreheads together, the two of us nose to nose, and I told you I loved you until you did not breathe again. I buried you in the winter when the ground was solid, and you, always the digger, would surely not have had it any other way. That next morning, I carried stones from the base of the mountain to place at your grave. I did the work as if an act of meditation.
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Sep 24, 2024 |
natlawreview.com | David Joy
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recently issued revised guidance on the control and mitigation of nitrosamine impurities in human drugs. The guidance provides a comprehensive roadmap for manufacturers of finished drugs and active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) regarding steps they should take to detect and control nitrosamine impurities. Although this revised guidance was issued in final form, as with all FDA guidance, comments may be submitted at any time.
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Jul 23, 2024 |
smokymountainnews.com | David Joy
Opinion Latest A love letter to Appalachia Editor’s note: This article first appeared online at the website “100 Days in Appalachia.” Meredith McCarroll is from Waynesville, went to Appalachian State and the University of Tennessee and resides in Brunswick, Maine.
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Jun 20, 2024 |
natlawreview.com | David Joy
On June 18, 2024, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued a final rule that governs current good manufacturing practices (CMPGs), certification, postmarketing safety reporting, and labeling requirements for certain medical gases. These regulations are aimed at fulfilling a longstanding request from the medical gas industry that FDA tailor these requirements to better fit the unique nature of medical gases. More than once, Congress nudged FDA to undertake this rulemaking.
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Feb 11, 2024 |
cravenherald.co.uk | David Joy
2 1/1 LIKE many readers of the Craven Herald’s ‘Nostalgia’ page, I have succumbed to an all-absorbing passion for family history. Hours can be spent scouring parish registers and census returns in pursuit of ancestry, which so often ends in uncertainty. Records can be missing or may never have existed, but occasionally the unexpected can provide a new insight into the past. Such is the case with a battered exercise book and a lock of hair.
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