Word: sales
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...which has created a simmering problem for health officials. While the U.S. has no laws against gulping milk straight from cows, the government's stance on controlling the sale of raw milk is far murkier. The Food and Drug Administration, which recently determined that it's safe to drink the milk of cloned cows, takes a tougher stand on unprocessed milk. It banned interstate sales of raw milk 20 years ago but left it up to individual states to decide what to do about commerce within their borders. The result is a hodgepodge of conflicting rules and loopholes big enough...
...masquerading as - gasp - Indonesian. This, they point out, is a travesty. East Timorese coffee beans became independent in 2002. Is there no end to the indignities small, newly free nations must endure? Luckily, though, Starbucks has redeemed itself by introducing a single-origin brand called Timor Lorosa'e, for sale in Australia. Given that the mini-country is located just to the north of Australia, Starbucks can at least count on Australians to know exactly what Timor Lorosa'e is - even with the mysterious apostrophe...
...over nervous owners, Dunkin' is pointing south, to Sarasota. At the prototype store, franchise partners Marvin Kaplan, Kevin Millard and Shawn Cabral say new chicken biscuits, flatbreads and pizzas account for 10% of sales. Their shop, close to popular Siesta Key Beach, is packed by 10 a.m. on weekends. It opened on Jan. 26 and is already beating sales at their other store, which is about a mile farther from the beach and brings in $1.2 million a year, according to Cabral. With more than 5,000 customers turning out for the first week and the average sale totaling...
...building, evicting and detaining its sleepy occupants. They were acting on a court order obtained by a Christian group that had purchased the building from the local authorities in 2000 - but could not occupy it when left-wing activists, who had squatted there since the 1980s, denounced the sale and refused to leave...
...very difficult to find fruit that hasn't been sprayed with chemicals at least once. In other regions, like the upper Midwest, most big farms don't grow any vegetables for local markets, conventional or organic. Instead, they produce commodity crops like corn and soybeans for sale to food processors. At a large Hugo's grocery store in Jamestown, N.D., last summer, I noticed only one local product: flour, which is milled in-state from local wheat. But there were organic apples and oranges from out of state...