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2011年7月23日星期六

Nike Air Max LTD Black/Varsity Royal


Nikeis one of the top sneaker brands, and airmax sneakers are the largest lineup in nike shoes .
For the good cushioning and nice colorway ,airmax catch many fans , and to day we take a look a 
nice nike airmax model ,Nike Air Max LTD Black/Varsity Royal.
The upper of the sneaker is dominated with black suede and leather ,The blue accents appear on the
 lace lock ,tongue tag ,logo ,air bubble, and outersole.The white accents are found on the mid-sold, the light color perfectly contrast the dark upper .



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Timberland Shoes  Accept paypal payment      Five Finger Shoes  Nike Jordan 4U       NFL Jerseys  No sale tax     Nike Shox Shoes  Cheap             MBT Shoes  Cheap
 
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Nike Air Max ST QS Black Safari


All black is a classic colorway for all brands sneakers , especially for airmax shoes , because of my work, i get in touch thousands of shoes , airmax has the largest models for sneakers .
Today we are looking a nice model  Nike Air Max ST QS ,this is a model released in 2009 ,The rest of 
the sneaker comes in suede, mesh and the Swoosh comes in rubber. These kicks will feature an all black shoe, with a 
leather safari print above the mid sole, with the rest of the shoe coming in a mix of suede and mesh. The Nike Swoosh 
is done in a black rubber to separate all the different materials used throughout the entire shoe.




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                Timberland Shoes  Accept paypal payment      Five Finger Shoes  Nike Jordan 4U       NFL Jerseys  No sale tax     Nike Shox Shoes  Cheap             MBT Shoes  Cheap
              

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Nike Air Max 95 Black/Stealth/Photo Blue

This 95 is of the same style and design that we're used to seeing from the series but it seems as though Nike uses some 
different materials on this particular pair. The tiers on the side paneling feature a mixture of patent leather, denim, and 
suede, more specifically nubuck, which is a first for this model. 
his time in the Nike Air Max 95 in a Black/Stealth/Photo Blue. These look like your typical Air Max 95, but if you 
look closely, you’ll see the differences in the material. The upper is done in all black, with minimal stealth accents 
in the Nike Swoosh, the eyelets, and in the sole, with photo blue used for the rest of the detailing. The traditional 
Air Max 95 uses patent leather strips along the sides, and this pair uses a mix of patent leather, nubuck leather, and 
denim. An interesting take on a classic, but a great colorway none the less. You can pick up your pair now 
exclusively through JD Sports.

A quarter of hackers in the US have been recruited by federal authorities

A quarter of hackers in the US have been recruited by federal authorities, according to Eric Corley, publisher of the hacker quarterly, 2600.
  The underground world of computer hackers has been so thoroughly infiltrated in the US by the FBI and secret service that it is now riddled with paranoia and mistrust, with an estimated one in four hackers secretly informing on their peers, a Guardian investigation has established.
  Cyber policing units have had such success in forcing online criminals to co-operate with their investigations through the threat of long prison sentences that they have managed to create an army of informants deep inside the hacking community.
  In some cases, popular illegal forums used by cyber criminals as marketplaces for stolen identities and credit card numbers have been run by hacker turncoats acting as FBI moles. In others, undercover FBI agents posing as "carders" – hackers specialising in ID theft – have themselves taken over the management of crime forums, using the intelligence gathered to put dozens of people behind bars.
  So ubiquitous has the FBI informant network become that Eric Corley, who publishes the hacker quarterly, 2600, has estimated that 25% of hackers in the US may have been recruited by the federal authorities to be their eyes and ears. "Owing to the harsh penalties involved and the relative inexperience with the law that many hackers have, they are rather susceptible to intimidation," Corley told the Guardian.
  "It makes for very tense relationships," said John Young, who runs Cryptome, a website depository for secret documents along the lines of WikiLeaks. "There are dozens and dozens of hackers who have been shopped by people they thought they trusted."
  The best-known example of the phenomenon is Adrian Lamo, a convicted hacker who turned informant on Bradley Manning, who is suspected of passing secret documents to WikiLeaks. Manning had entered into a prolonged instant messaging conversation with Lamo, whom he trusted and asked for advice. Lamo repaid that trust by promptly handing over the 23-year-old intelligence specialist to the military authorities. Manning has now been in custody for more than a year.
  For acting as he did, Lamo has earned himself the sobriquet of Judas and the "world's most hated hacker", though he has insisted that he acted out of concern for those he believed could be harmed or even killed by the WikiLeaks publication of thousands of US diplomatic cables.
  "Obviously it's been much worse for him but it's certainly been no picnic for me," Lamo has said. "He followed his conscience, and I followed mine."
  The latest challenge for the FBI in terms of domestic US breaches are the anarchistic co-operatives of "hacktivists" that have launched several high-profile cyber-attacks in recent months designed to make a statement. In the most recent case a group calling itself Lulz Security launched an audacious raid on the FBI's own linked organisation InfraGard. The raid, which was a blatant two fingers up at the agency, was said to have been a response to news that the Pentagon was poised to declare foreign cyber-attacks an act of war.
  Lulz Security shares qualities with the hacktivist group Anonymous that has launched attacks against companies including Visa and MasterCard as a protest against their decision to block donations to WikiLeaks. While Lulz Security is so recent a phenomenon that the FBI has yet to get a handle on it, Anonymous is already under pressure from the agency. There were raids on 40 addresses in the US and five in the UK in January, and a grand jury has been hearing evidence against the group in California at the start of a possible federal prosecution.
  Kevin Poulsen, senior editor at Wired magazine, believes the collective is classically vulnerable to infiltration and disruption. "We have already begun to see Anonymous members attack each other and out each other's IP addresses. That's the first step towards being susceptible to the FBI."
  Barrett Brown, who has acted as a spokesman for the otherwise secretive Anonymous, says it is fully aware of the FBI's interest. "The FBI are always there. They are always watching, always in the chatrooms. You don't know who is an informant and who isn't, and to that extent you are vulnerable."

2011年7月22日星期五

a love letter later 53 years

A love letter to a US college student from the girlfriend who was to become his wife is finally on its way to him - 53 years after it was written in 1958.
  
  The letter surfaced in a Pennsylvanian university mailroom earlier this month。
  
  It was addressed to Clark C Moore, who has since changed his name to Muhammad Siddeeq, making it hard to trace him。
  
  But a friend saw a TV report about it and contacted the sorting office. Mr Siddeeq, 74, says he is still eager to read it, despite now being divorced。
  
  The letter mysteriously arrived at the California University of Pennsylvania, in the north-eastern state of Pennsylvania, 10 days ago. Written to Mr Moore, the two-page letter was postmarked 20 February 1958 and signed "love forever Vonnie"。
 
  Mr Siddeeq, a retired teacher who is now living in the mid-western city of Indianapolis, said he was shocked when he was contacted by the university。
 
  "We have a system here in America where if something is for you and if they find it, it gets to you, that's beautiful," he told US TV station WTAE。
  
  He and his girlfriend wrote to each other when he was studying science, he said。
  
  They did eventually marry and have four children。
  
  Romance was different then - with no computers, letter writing was the only way to stay in touch and remains more romantic than emails, he said。

  He admitted to having mixed emotions about the letter as he and Vonnie are now divorced。
  
  But he told Washington's Observer-Reporter paper that he was keen to read it as it was "a testament of the sincerity, interest and innocence of that time"。
  
  University officials said the letter was now on its way to him along with a T-shirt from the university。
  
  "He said if he didn't get that package within the next 53 years, he would call to complain," university spokeswoman Christine Kindl told Reuters news agency。

the sentences on the dog cards

1.Give me time to understand what you want of me


2.Don’t be angry for me for long and don’t lock me up as punishment. You have your work,your entertainment and your firends. I have only you.
Talk to me sometimes. Even if I don’t understand your words. I understand your voice when it’s speaking to me.

3.Be aware that however you treat me, I’ll never forget it and if it’s cruel it may affect me forever


4.My life likely to last ten to fifteen years. Any separation from you will be painful for me. Remember that before you buy me.



5.Remerber before you hit me that I have teeth that could easily crush the bones of your hand,but that I choose not to bite you.


6. Before you scold me for being uncooperative,please ask yourself if something might be bothering me. Perhaps I’m not getting the right food,or I’ve been run in the sun too long or my heart is getting old and weak.
Take care of me when I get old. You too,will grow old.

7. Go with me on difficult journeys. Never say I can’t bear to watch it or let it happen in my absent. Everything is easily for me if you are there. Remember,I love you.

2011年7月21日星期四

By the end of October, the world’s population will reach 7 billion

  A little over a decade ago, the world’s population stood at 6billion. By the end of October, it will reach 7 billion.   With five babies being born every second, 78 million people are added to the global community each year.  The population was fewer than 1billion in 1800, 3 billion in 1960 and 6 billion as recently as 1999.  1800。  According to the United Nations, the next landmark statistic will be 8 billion in 2025. Much of the dramatic increase can be accounted for by the world’s poorest nations, which are expected to 
double their numbers over the next decade.    ‘With the population still growing by about 80 million each year, it’s hard not to be alarmed,’ said Robert Kunzig,
 author of an article entitled ‘7 Billion’ in National Geographic magazine.    ‘Right now on Earth,water tablesare falling, soil is eroding,glaciersare melting, and fish stocks are vanishing.
 Close to a billion people go hungry each day.’    Researchers say the world’s population willlevel offat about 9billion in the middle of the century. ‘How we’re going to feed 9 billion people by 2050 is adauntingquestion,’ Mr Kunzig said.  There are currently 1.8 billion young people, aged between ten and 24. Demographers say the average couple 
needs to have 2.1 children to keep the population steady. In Western Europe, that number had dropped to 
1.4 by the late 1990s.   In parts of Europe and East Asia, there is growing concern that there will not be enough young people to
 support the growing number of retirees.

17 material change the world

 
SYDNEY: All molecules are not created equal. Some have saved billions of lives, wreaked environmental havoc or made the world a more colorful place. Here's our selection of those that have changed the course of human history.
  
  PENICILLIN — R-C9H11N2O4S
  When British microbiologist Alexander Fleming stumbled upon penicillin in 1928, he couldn't have imagined the impact it would have on modern medicine. Fleming noticed that Petri dishes with mould on them grew no bacteria, and in doing so discovered the first antibiotic. Before penicillin came into widespread use in the 1940s, wounds and diseases like syphilis were killers; antibiotics have since saved an estimated 200 million lives.
  
  SODIUM CHLORIDE — NaCl
  Salt paved the way for modern civilization; it was used to preserve vegetables and meat as long as 4,000 years ago. This gave our ancestors the freedom to store food for hard times, travel long distances and live in harsh climates. Salt is also an important ingredient in the production of chemicals, soap and paper. Sodium chloride is in such high demand that in 2006 alone, 240 million tones were produced.
  
  POTASSIUM NITRATE — KNO3
  As the key ingredient in gunpowder, potassium nitrate allowed humans to propel bullets from guns and, in doing so, changed the face of warfare. Today, there are more than 500 million handguns in circulation, causing at least 1,000 deaths every day. The formula for gunpowder was likely discovered in the 8th century, although it wasn't until the 13th century that it was first used in canons.
  
  ASPIRIN — C9H8O4
  Aspirin is the most widely used drug in the world, with more than 100 billion tablets consumed annually. The active component, salicylic acid, originally from willow bark, was used as a folk remedy as long ago as the 5th century BC. But it wasn't until 1897 that German chemist Felix Hoffman managed to synthesize aspirin in a pure and stable form, making it one of the earliest synthetic drugs. Aspirin is now taken for a huge variety of afflictions, from fever and arthritis to the prevention of heart attacks, stroke and dementia.
 
  SODIUM STEARATE — NaC18H35O2
  It's hard to imagine how life might have smelled for the human race prior to the invention of soap. More fastidious hygiene has also been important for stemming the spread of disease. Sodium stearate, the active ingredient in soap, works its magic by helping oil to dissolve in water. According to the United Nations Children's Fund, hand washing with soap prevents up to 1.4 million deaths per year through acute respiratory infections.
  
  SILICON — Si
  In 1954 the first silicon transistor initiated what has become a A$160 billion global market in semiconductors. Silicon is a key component of computer chips and circuits and it's estimated that there are currently more than one billion computers in use worldwide. Silicon is also used in solar cells, waterproofing treatments and seals, explosives and breast implants.
  
  RUBBER — C5H8
  Natural rubber has been gathered from the sap of plants for centuries. But rubber only began to be used widely after 1839, when Charles Goodyear found a way to make it strong, durable and elastic. In 1931 U.S. chemist Elmer Bolton developed a synthetic version, and in 2005 we produced 21 million tonnes, with tyres and tubes accounting for 56 per cent of consumption. Other applications include gloves, rubber bands and balloons. Even some rockets and missiles are powered by synthetic, rubber-based fuels.
  
  SILICON DIOXIDE — SiO2
  As the principal component in glass, silicon dioxide was used as early as 5000 BC. All the panes of glass in the world today cover about four billion square meters. Glass has also been essential for test tubes, telescopes, microscopes, mirrors and camera lenses.
  
  POLYETHYLENE — (C2H4)N
  By far the most popular plastic, polyethylene is used in grocery bags, artificial joints and plastic bottles. It's even found in chewing gum. In fact, polyethylene is so ubiquitous that it's hard to imagine life without it. But in 1933 when English chemists Eric Fawcett and Reginald Gibson discovered it, they thought of it as nothing more than a waste product. Over 70 years later, more than 60 million tones of polyethylene are made each year; but there is a downside, as much of it ends up in landfill where it takes hundreds of years to degrade.
  
  DDT — C14H9Cl5
  In the 1950s and 1960s, DDT was used to eliminate malaria from Europe and North America in a program that, according to the World Health Organisation, saved an estimated 25 million lives. However, as early as the 1940s scientists had begun expressing concern over hazards associated with the use of DDT, and extensive research has since implicated the organ chlorine insecticide in the poisoning of humans, animals and the environment. As a result, its use has been banned or restricted in many countries.
  滴滴涕(DDT)C14H9Cl5
  
  MORPHINE — C17H19NO3
  A potent painkiller, morphine was first isolated by German pharmacist Friedrich Sertürner in 1804. To this day, it remains the most important drug used to minimize suffering in terminally ill patients, particularly cancer sufferers. No other drug is as long-lasting and effective at managing severe pain. Despite this, 80 per cent of the world's population has access to just six per cent of the world's supply. Morphine is more widely distributed in the form of the illicit drug heroin, with an industry estimated at nearly A$100 billion annually.
  吗啡C17H19NO3
  
  AMMONIA — NH3
  In the early 20th century, the world's growing population couldn't find enough ammonia to fertilize all its crops. Due to the discovery of a technique to mass-produce ammonia, called the Haber process, an estimated two billion people are not starving today. We produce 100 million tones of ammonia for fertilizer each year, but it is also an important ingredient in explosives.
 
  IRON — Fe
  Iron accounts for at least 90 per cent of metal production. Without it we wouldn't have power lines or oil refineries. Iron is a key component of cars, trains, planes, ships, fridges, dishwashers and computers. As a chemical it's also used in insecticides, water purification, sewage treatment and the production of ammonia. Iron was first smelted 3,500 years ago, but it wasn't until English engineer Henry Bessemer's invention in 1856 of an inexpensive way to mass-produce steel from iron that its use skyrocketed. In 2007 alone, 1,900 million tones of iron ore were produced, with 98 per cent of that used to make steel.
  
  ETHANOL — C2H6O
  If your head is swimming, you're seeing double and suddenly finding everyone attractive, chances are that ethanol is to blame. Worldwide, about two billion people enjoy ethanol, the intoxicant in alcohol. The average Australian, for example, drinks about 10 L of pure alcohol each year. Historians suspect that it was accidentally discovered when our ancestors' grain stores were drenched with rain and fermented by the Sun. The liquor reduces inhibitions, alters moods, impairs judgment and boosts sexual desire. Alcohol consumption is the third largest risk factor for disease in developed countries.
  
  SULPHURIC ACID — H2SO4
  A country's production of sulphuric acid is a good indication of its industrial might, because at some stage nearly every manufactured good comes into contact with this highly corrosive stuff. It's used in mining, steel production, oil refining and chemical synthesis, and in the manufacture of fertilizers, detergents and plastics. No wonder it's nicknamed "the king of chemicals". Sulphuric acid was discovered in the 8th century, but it only became economically viable in 1746, when English chemist John Roebuck developed a way to produce it in bulk. In 2005 world production of sulphuric acid was estimated at 193 million tones.
  
  PROGESTIN — C21H30O2
  As the principal component of the pill, progestin allowed women to separate sex from procreation, giving them unprecedented freedom and control over their lives. First synthesized in 1951 by Austrian Carl Djerassi, progestin stops ovulation by imitating the hormone progesterone. Between 1965 and 1995 global fertility rates fell from 4.9 to 2.8 children per woman, largely due to the pill. Today, more than 70 million women around the world use this oral contraceptive.
  
  CARBON DIOXIDE — CO2

  Scottish chemist Joseph Black discovered and isolated this potent greenhouse gas in the 1750s. At that time, man-made CO2 emissions were about three million tones per year. But by 2005, emissions from fossil fuels alone were 7.9 billion tones, with another 1.5 billion tones caused by forest clearing. Carbon dioxide is the second most important greenhouse gas (after water vapor), trapping heat in our atmosphere and increasing global temperatures via the greenhouse effect. Emissions continue to climb, so unless there's a drastic turnaround, expect the sea level rises, extreme weather events and mass extinctions associated with a rapidly warming globe.

2011年7月20日星期三

4 head of cattle shipped from five farms had been fed contaminated stra

   Fukushima's governmentsaid 84 head of cattle shipped from five farms had been fed contaminated straw.  Concerns aboutradiation-tainted beef intensified Sunday in Japan as officials struggled todetermine the scope of the problem and prevent further contamination of themeat supply.  The government preparedto suspend cattle shipments from Fukushima amid a growing tally of cows thatfed on rice straw containing high levels of radioactive cesium.  The straw was harvestedfrom rice paddies in the prefecture (state) after the March 11 earthquake andtsunami triggered the release of radiation from the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclearpower plant.  Distributors nationwidebought meat from the exposed cows, and some has already reached consumers.  Major supermarket chainoperator Aeon Co. says more than 703 pounds (319 kilograms) of that meat endedup at 14 of its outlets in Tokyo and nearby prefectures. Between late April andmid-June, customers at those stores bought beef that came from a farm inAsakawa, Fukushima where cattle ate radiation-trained straw, according to thecompany.  Aeon says it will protectconsumers by strengthening its radiation testing systems for beef.  Senior Vice-HealthMinister Kohei Otsuka said Sunday that the government may consider expandingthe expected cattle restriction beyond Fukushima.  "We may need toincrease our response by checking the distribution of contaminated straw,"he said on a national television talk show.  His comments came a dayafter Fukushima's government said 84 head of cattle shipped from five farms hadbeen fed contaminated straw.  It also released resultsof tests conducted on remaining straw, which revealed cesium levels as high as500,000 becquerels per kilogram at one farm in Koriyama City. That translates toroughly 378 times the legal limit.  The new revelation bringsthe number of exposed cows so far to 143, according to Kyodo News agencycalculations.  Affected cattle growershave said they were unaware that the national government had issued a warning onMarch 19 that feed stored outdoors should not be given to their animals. AFukushima government official acknowledged that the prefecture did notadequately pass along the instruction to farmers.  Local and nationalgovernment officials say they are working to trace the location of thesuspected meat and will improve safety checks.






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2011年7月19日星期二

interesting moment

interesting moment


















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$78                                $55                       $26.79                    $37                                 $68















Excessive internet use may cause parts of teenagers’ brains to waste away

 



Excessive internet use may cause parts of teenagers’ brains to waste away, a study reveals. Scientists discovered signs of atrophy of grey matter in the brains of heavy internet users that grew worse over time. This could affect their concentration and memory, as well as their ability to make decisions and set goals. It could also reduce their inhibitions and lead to ‘inappropriate’ behaviour. 
  Researchers took MRI brain scans from 18 university students, aged 19, who spent eight to 13 hours a day playing games online, six days a week. The students were classified as internet addicts after answering eight questions, including whether they had tried to give up using computers and whether they had lied to family members about the amount of time they spent online. The researchers compared them with a control group of 18 students who spent fewer than two hours a day on the internet.  
  One set of MRI images focused on grey matter at the brain’s wrinkled surface, or cortex, where the processing of memory, emotions, speech, sight, hearing and motor control occurs. Comparing grey matter between the two groups revealed atrophy within several small regions of all the online addicts’ brains. The scans showed that the longer their internet addiction continued, the ‘more serious’ the damage was. 
  ‘Our results suggested long-term internet addiction would result in brain structural alterations,’ they said. The study, published in the PLoS ONE journal, was carried out by neuroscientists and radiologists at universities and hospitals in China, where 24million youths are estimated to be addicted to the internet. In Britain, children spend an average of five hours and 20 minutes a day in front of TV or computer screens, according to estimates by the market-research agency Childwise.

tear my clothes off for Putin

 Called "Putin's Army," it features a video of a blonde student called Diana who struts along Moscow's streets in high heels and a black suit before scrawling "I will tear my clothes off for Putin" on a white top in red lipstick and starting to undo her clothes.  An online campaign has been launched in Russia urging young women to support Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in a presidential vote by taking off their clothes, a lawmaker's site showed Sunday.  Called "Putin's Army," it features a video of a blonde student called Diana who struts along Moscow's streets in high heels and a black suit before scrawling "I will tear my clothes off for Putin" on a white top in red lipstick and starting to undo her clothes.  Inviting girls to strip off for Putin for the chance of winning an iPad2, the campaign comes ahead of the March 2012 presidential vote. Putin was president between 2000-2008 before handing the reins to his protege Dmitry Medvedev.  Widely seen as Russia's key decision-maker, Putin may return to the Kremlin next year.  "The goal: For Putin to be president!" said a statement on its page on social networking site vkontakte.ru/armiaputina, Russia's answer to Facebook.  During Russia's Soviet era, nudity in advertising was taboo but has since become widespread, a fact which has outraged Russian feminists who say it only intensifies an already sexualized culture where prostitution is common.  It is unclear who orchestrated the campaign which was posted on the blog of parliamentarian Kirill Shchitov, from Putin's ruling United Russia party.  In October, a band of journalism students posed in lingerie for a calendar for Putin's 58th birthday

84 head of cattle shipped from five farms had been fed contaminated straw

   Fukushima's governmentsaid 84 head of cattle shipped from five farms had been fed contaminated straw.  Concerns aboutradiation-tainted beef intensified Sunday in Japan as officials struggled todetermine the scope of the problem and prevent further contamination of themeat supply.  The government preparedto suspend cattle shipments from Fukushima amid a growing tally of cows thatfed on rice straw containing high levels of radioactive cesium.  The straw was harvestedfrom rice paddies in the prefecture (state) after the March 11 earthquake andtsunami triggered the release of radiation from the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclearpower plant.  Distributors nationwidebought meat from the exposed cows, and some has already reached consumers.  Major supermarket chainoperator Aeon Co. says more than 703 pounds (319 kilograms) of that meat endedup at 14 of its outlets in Tokyo and nearby prefectures. Between late April andmid-June, customers at those stores bought beef that came from a farm inAsakawa, Fukushima where cattle ate radiation-trained straw, according to thecompany.  Aeon says it will protectconsumers by strengthening its radiation testing systems for beef.  Senior Vice-HealthMinister Kohei Otsuka said Sunday that the government may consider expandingthe expected cattle restriction beyond Fukushima.  "We may need toincrease our response by checking the distribution of contaminated straw,"he said on a national television talk show.  His comments came a dayafter Fukushima's government said 84 head of cattle shipped from five farms hadbeen fed contaminated straw.  It also released resultsof tests conducted on remaining straw, which revealed cesium levels as high as500,000 becquerels per kilogram at one farm in Koriyama City. That translates toroughly 378 times the legal limit.  The new revelation bringsthe number of exposed cows so far to 143, according to Kyodo News agencycalculations.  Affected cattle growershave said they were unaware that the national government had issued a warning onMarch 19 that feed stored outdoors should not be given to their animals. AFukushima government official acknowledged that the prefecture did notadequately pass along the instruction to farmers.  Local and nationalgovernment officials say they are working to trace the location of thesuspected meat and will improve safety checks.






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$78                                $55                       $26.79                    $37                                 $68