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...35 - Game and Fish Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. G.1, ss. 46, 47(1). ...It stated that the animal was to provide meat for the winter. Steve Powley signed the tag, and w..., couriers, freighters, traders and suppliers, the early Métis people contributed massively to ...
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... chickens, turkeys, ducks, geese, ratites, game birds, ruminants, swine or horses; (aliments pour ... provide strong assurances to downstream suppliers of beef products direct to retail that BSE (and th...
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...âñº. The captains of industrial meat and egg factories "doth protest too much, methinks... in open housing from one of the few suppliers available. The market is there. Why the reluctance...22, 14,092 fans watched the NHL exhibition game in Winnipeg, paying on average $75 each for the fi...
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... private-power marketers and suppliers want access to government-controlled markets. (6) ... trading thing is just a front that lets them game the market. They can get away with it because no o... forum of useful thermal energy (such as meat or steam), used for industrial, commercial, beatin...
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... were made on May 14, 1996, replacing the Game Export Act and certain regulations under the Expor... uses for shark species in general include meat, skins, organs and tissues for human consumption, ...However, if suppliers are using the Great white shark as raw material fo...
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It is generally asserted that corporate social reporting (CSR) is a phenomenon of the late 20th century. The present paper contests this view by looking at the ways in which British companies reacted to the challenges they faced during the First World War, when they were exposed to charges of profiteering, as well as to industrial unrest and high taxation. The paper considers the use of the speeches made by chairmen at annual general meetings to refute these charges and defend themselves. It considers the relevance of these findings for contemporary social reporting, and suggests that investigation of the history of CSR is likely to show further examples of its use by companies to put forward "the business case".
... Radicals, they were traitors "playing the game of the Hun" [Searle, 1987, p. 293].3. The notion o... pointed to the Army contractors for "flour, meat, clothing, boots, tinned provisions, jam, fodder .... of the "task environment" as customers, suppliers, competitors and regulatory groups. [Preston and S...
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Hytek, one of Canada's largest hog producers, raises something like 1.5 million pigs a year in barns in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and North Dakota. I was curious to see what conditions were like inside one of these places, given the fact the OlyWest debate had made the average Winnipegger more aware about the pork industry.
In other words, a reporter willing to visit an industrial hog barn would have to wear one of those full-body biosuits Dustin Hoffman donned in Outbreak, just to make sure the pigs don't catch whatever the human happens to be carrying.
More recent bestsellers like Eric Schlosser's Fast Food Nation (2001) and The Omnivore's Dilemma (2006) by Michael Pollan have done little to shake the sneaking public suspicion there's something a little iffy about large-scale food proces...
... barely powerful enough to process a Pong game. And in 2001, a blind Grade 5 teacher named Erik W... documented the horrors of the Chicago meat-packing industry in The Jungle. More recent bestse... open-pasture operations, small-barn suppliers and hormone-free farms whenever I get the opportun...
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... which flows from recognized rules of the game. American investors need stable conditions. A free... equivalent standards by omitting duplicating meat inspections of each other's exports at the border.... of the much larger number of American suppliers competing for government purchases. Connected to N...