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Search Results for: America

10 results out of 1848 results found for 'America'.

NATIONAL FRAUDS FEATURE



BY MATTHEW BRACE, in Brisbane, EDWARD PETERS, in Hong Kong, RICHARD HURST, in Johannesburg, MARK ROWE, in London, SWINEETHA DIAS WICKRAMANAYAKA, in Columbo and MONICA DOBIE, in Montreal.
FRAUD is fraud, jurists might say. And although jurisprudence generally has a universal flavour and there are frauds that are committed the world over, it would be a travesty of the truth to say that crimes involving deception uniform by nature.…

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INTANGIBLE HERITAGE



BY MARK ROWE
A SONG or customs passed down through generations by an aboriginal tribe can reveal as much about that society as a physical artefact such as their traditional clothing or funerary urns. But while these last two items can be preserved for posterity easily enough, the challenge to retain more intangible objects such as a musical story is far greater.…

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US INSURANCE



BY PHILIP FINE

Skyrocketing claims and a proposed new bill trying to make its way to the

US senate have put the issue of mould on the minds of American insurance

companies.

Several high-dollar claims have been going through

the US courts.…

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UKRAINE ENERGY DRINK



BY PHILIP FINE

COCA-COLA is continuing the global rollout of its energy drink Burn, introducing the product in Ukraine. The drink has been targeted to clubbers, athletes and even dozy workers but the main distribution point in Ukraine is the local discos.…

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BEEF INNOVATION



BY PHILIP FINE

A NEW "R & D Ranch" has introduced 1,100 new value-added beef products to the US market from 1999 to 2001, according to America’s National Cattlemen’s Beef Association, which set it up. Experts working for this body (formal name: New Product Development Team) help create new products that will drive demand for beef.…

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CHILE - USA



BY KEITH NUTHALL
THE GROCERY Manufacturers of America group has applauded a new trade agreement between the United States and Chile. The GMA says the pact will spur freer trade of processed food to south America, and singles out the agreement’s proposed reductions in tariffs for such items as breakfast cereals, pasta and french fries.…

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NAPPY RECYCLING



BY MONICA DOBIE
THE CITY of Santa Clarita, California, has launched America’s first nappy recycling programme which will pick up nappies from 500 families in special plastic bags. The recovered material will help make non-food packaging and products including wallpaper, oil filters, and shoe insoles.…

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BULLET RESISTANT



BY PHILIP FINE

FOUR members of America’s Union of Needletrades, Industrial, and Textile Employees, including its president, Bruce Raynor, are being sued by a bullet-resistant vest manufacturer for allegedly defaming the quality of their protective textiles. Florida-based Point Blank says the four knowingly lied to media, police and retailers about subcontracting operations, claiming they negatively affecting vest quality.…

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AUSTRALIA - US TRADE DEAL



BY PHILIP FINE

AMERICA’S National Milk Producers Federation has come out against a

recently-announced free trade agreement between Australia and the United

States. Next February, the two governments will be entering trade negotiations, with the goal of completing a bilateral free trade pact by 2004.…

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NUCLEAR PROBE



BY MATTHEW BRACE, in Brisbane, Australia
A NUCLEAR probe developed in Australia for minerals exploration and mining has the potential to reduce rates of acid rain and other environmental pollution, its developers claim.

The device, designed by Australia’s chief science authority CSIRO, can detect the concentrations of sulphur in coal seams and mine waste rock underground, allowing miners to choose those with lower levels and leave the higher sulphur coals embedded.…

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