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Word: farm (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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...BFS67 is back - on a farm less than 5 miles (8 km) from the Pirbright research laboratory dedicated to eliminating it. Official confirmation is not expected until tomorrow, but biosecurity experts suspect that the lab - home to a government research center and a company that makes FMD vaccines - was the source of the outbreak...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Brits Rush to Contain Foot-and-Mouth | 8/6/2007 | See Source »

Onlookers might easily mistake it for a murder scene, and the yellow tape now sealing access roads to a farm in Surrey, southwest of London, does indeed signal that a killer may again be on the loose in the U.K. Six years ago, foot-and-mouth disease (FMD), an infectious illness that targets animals with cloven hooves - pigs and ruminants such as cattle, sheep, goats and deer - devastated the British farming industry and British tourism and battered the reputation of Tony Blair's government. Ministers reacted too slowly when the disease was first detected and compounded that mistake by giving...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foot-and-Mouth Tests Brown | 8/4/2007 | See Source »

...scourge is back, and Blair's successor Gordon Brown is determined not to let it hurt his standing. On 3 August Debby Reynolds, U.K. Chief Veterinary Officer, confirmed that cattle in Surrey had tested positive. Sixty-four cattle at the site of the outbreak were slaughtered, and the farm is now ringed by two concentric zones designed to contain the contagion: a protection zone 3km (1.8 miles) wide and a surveillance zone of 10km (6.2 miles). Also inside these zones is the Pirbright Laboratory, which conducts research into FMD and other diseases of farm animals. Preliminary tests revealed that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foot-and-Mouth Tests Brown | 8/4/2007 | See Source »

...seem odd for a hard-nosed industrialist to gravitate toward such esoteric fields--imagine Henry Ford fixating on the origin of the universe--but Kavli, 79, says he got the bug long before he made his fortune in the U.S. aerospace industry. He grew up on a farm in rural Norway, where he remembers being awestruck by the night sky. "There was no city nearby," he says, so when the aurora borealis lit up, "the sky was completely inflamed." Kavli's fascination with the universe deepened in college after World War II when his physics teacher relayed details from...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Next Nobel? | 8/2/2007 | See Source »

Sometimes the payoff is extraordinary. Four years ago, Adele Douglass, 60, cashed out her $60,000 401(k) to launch a nonprofit that certifies meat from humanely treated farm animals. She wasn't in it to earn a good return; she wanted to make a difference. Last year more than 14 million farm animals were raised under her guidelines--up from 143,000 in her first year. Now her Humane Farm Animal Care in Herndon, Va., is attracting enough support for her to take a better salary than she earned at her last job, with the American Humane Association...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Turning Savings into a Start-Up | 8/2/2007 | See Source »

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