10. Product makers hunt stores for new ideas They loved Central Market's kid-friendly idea of leaving 25 cents for a piece of fruit and said that could be adapted in other parts of a store and with other products. Sephora carries brands that one participant makes multiple stops for and said the chain should market that aspect better. Corlett said clear categorization of the different varietals made it easy for amateurs and connoisseurs. Wal-Mart's greeting card aisles got high marks, and the wooden shelves made the department feel...
Source • 11/4/2007 •
11. Africa: Is the Continent Being Bullied Into Growing GM Crops? Africa is rapidly becoming a focal point for multinational crop and chemical corporations clearing the way for the extended uptake of their products and technologies. Organisations like the Alliance for the Green Revolution in Africa - bank rolled by the Gates and Rockefeller Foundations - are partly to blame through their heavy investment in infrastructure aimed at supporting the development and distribution of GM crops and seeds. Organisations like the Alliance for the Green Revolution...
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12. ANGER OVER GOVERNMEMT GM CO-EXISTENCE PLANS In July 2006, DEFRA launched a consultation on its measures to regulate how GM crops can 'coexist' with conventional and organic crops and who should pay when farmers suffer economic damage caused by GM contamination. DEFRA says it will await the results of 'important' further research and has promised to commission new research in the light of overwhelming public concern. Friends of the Earth said the Government must now listen to public calls for much stricter 'co-existence' rules,...
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13. Farmers Ask Federal Court To Dissociate Hemp and Pot Business is up and down, as the farming trade tends to be, and he is always on the lookout for a new crop. Hemp, a strait-laced cousin of marijuana, is an ingredient in products from fabric and food to carpet backing and car door panels. To clear up the popular confusion about the properties of what is sometimes called industrial hemp, the crop's prospective purveyors explain that hemp and smokable marijuana share a genus and a species but are about as similar as rope and dope. Farmers in...
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14. Piling time again Hettinger enjoys working at the beet dump, though the 12-hour days get long, and she works in all kinds of weather, good and bad. Andres Martinez controls the conveyor system, making sure the beets get up a chute, past the screen that separates the beets from rocks, sand, mud and beet tops, and on to the conveyor on the piler arm. The drivers then pull forward and wait their turn to dump their sugar-beet loads onto a conveyor system on the beet dump piling machine. At first glance, it...
Source • 11/1/2007 •
15. If You Like Spinach, Turn Off Your Lights While Nancy Pelosi was embezzling 24 billion tax payer dollars from the US Treasury to bribe Democrats in the House into supporting her Iraq Surrender bill, liberals in California were introducing legislation to ban inexpensive incandescent light bulbs in favor of compact florescent lamps which require 1/4 the power and cost 10 times more. While Nancy Pelosi was embezzling 24 billion tax payer dollars from the US Treasury to bribe Democrats in the House into supporting her Iraq Surrender...
Source • 11/11/2007 •
16. 'Theft a major problem for farming industry' The revelation that farmers lose more billions a year to crime comes as two North West families battle to come to terms with attacks on their homesteads last week. Farmers are facing a multi-billion rand crisis as criminals plunder their land, homes and stock. Interventions should include re-establishing trust between police and the farming community and prioritising policing in rural areas with proper resources being allocated to fight crime, he said. He said small-time farmers in...
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17. Corporate Farming s Best Friend Finally, surging prices for corn, milk and other commodities have raised farmers incomes and undercut arguments about the need for this expensive income transfer. International charities opposed the program because it undermines poor foreign farmers, who can t compete against subsidized American crops, an argument that swayed the global trade court to rule against one of the subsidies. A growing chorus has turned against the $16 billion annual subsidy, which gives most of the money to...
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18. Dairy Trade Group Hires Lobbyist The trade group _ which counts Dean Foods co., Lifeway Foods inc. and ConAgra Foods inc. among its 530 members _ supports a moratorium on sale of milk and milk products from cloned animals and their offspring until the Food and Drug Administration has new safeguards to ensure consumer acceptance of such products, it said on its Web site. The firm will lobby on the potential commercialization of milk from clone animals and their offspring, according to the form posted online Oct. The trade...
Source • 11/2/2007 •
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