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Posted: 2/13/2013 3:58:23 PM EST
British Secretary of State for the Environment, Food, & Rural Affairs Owen William Paterson, right, talks with President of the EU rotating Council and Ireland's Agriculture Minister Simon Coveney, at the European Council building in Brussels, Wednesday, Feb. 13, 2013. Agriculture ministers from the EU countries most affected by the scandal over horse meat found in products labelled as beef, were due to meet for an exchange of information in Brussels on Wednesday evening. (AP Photo/Yves Logghe)
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Posted: 2/13/2013 3:58:23 PM EST
French Agriculture Minister Stephane Le Foll, center, talks with British Secretary of State for the Environment, Food, & Rural Affairs Owen William Paterson, right, and President of the EU rotating Council and Ireland's Agriculture Minister Simon Coveney, at the European Council building in Brussels, Wednesday, Feb. 13, 2013. Agriculture ministers from the EU countries most affected by the scandal over horse meat found in products labelled as beef, were due to meet for an exchange of information in Brussels on Wednesday evening. (AP Photo/Yves Logghe)
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Posted: 2/13/2013 3:58:23 PM EST
Romania's Agriculture Minister Daniel Constantin, right, talks with British Secretary of State for the Environment, Food, & Rural Affairs Owen William Paterson, at the European Council building in Brussels, Wednesday, Feb. 13, 2013. Agriculture ministers from the EU countries most affected by the scandal over horse meat found in products labeled as beef, are meeting for an exchange of information in Brussels on Wednesday evening. (AP Photo/Yves Logghe)
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Posted: 2/10/2013 3:12:39 PM EST
A recall notice for frozen meals which had tested positive for horse meat is seen at an Aldi supermarket in northwest London February 9, 2013. REUTERS/Suzanne Plunkett (BRITAIN - Tags: FOOD POLITICS BUSINESS AGRICULTURE ANIMALS) - RTR3DJLW
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Posted: 2/10/2013 3:12:39 PM EST
A recall notice for frozen meals which had tested positive for horse meat is seen at an Aldi supermarket in northwest London February 9, 2013. REUTERS/Suzanne Plunkett (BRITAIN - Tags: FOOD POLITICS BUSINESS AGRICULTURE ANIMALS) - RTR3DJLW
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Posted: 2/10/2013 3:08:12 PM EST
A recall notice for frozen meals which had tested positive for horse meat is seen at an Aldi supermarket in northwest London February 9, 2013. REUTERS/Suzanne Plunkett (BRITAIN - Tags: FOOD POLITICS BUSINESS AGRICULTURE ANIMALS) - RTR3DJLW
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Posted: 2/6/2013 3:18:20 PM EST
The Associated Press announced Wednesday, Feb. 6, 2013, that Michelle L. Johnson, who has served as an editor and the weekend supervisor at the AP’s regional editing desk in Chicago, has been named the AP’s correspondent in Milwaukee. She begins April 1. As correspondent, Johnson will work with Doug Glass, AP’s news editor for Wisconsin and Minnesota, to craft the AP’s state report in Wisconsin. She’ll serve as editor to the staff of reporters based in Milwaukee and Madison while also contributing to the wire as a reporter focused on agriculture in the state and across the nation. (AP Photo)
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Posted: 2/6/2013 11:51:50 AM EST
People reach out to take fruits and vegetables distributed for free by farmers during a protest against high production costs outside the Agriculture Ministry in Athens February 6, 2013. REUTERS/John Kolesidis
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Posted: 2/6/2013 11:51:50 AM EST
People reach out to take fruits and vegetables distributed for free by farmers during a protest against high production costs outside the Agriculture Ministry in Athens February 6, 2013. REUTERS/John Kolesidis
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Posted: 2/6/2013 11:51:50 AM EST
People reach out to take fruits and vegetables distributed for free by farmers during a protest against high production costs outside the Agriculture Ministry in Athens February 6, 2013. REUTERS/John Kolesidis
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Posted: 2/6/2013 11:51:50 AM EST
People reach out to take fruits and vegetables distributed for free by farmers during a protest against high production costs outside the Agriculture Ministry in Athens February 6, 2013. REUTERS/John Kolesidis
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Posted: 2/6/2013 11:51:50 AM EST
People reach out to take fruits and vegetables distributed for free by farmers during a protest against high production costs outside the Agriculture Ministry in Athens February 6, 2013. REUTERS/John Kolesidis
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Posted: 2/6/2013 11:51:50 AM EST
People reach out to take fruits and vegetables freely distributed by farmers during a protest against high production costs outside the Agriculture Ministry in Athens February 6, 2013. REUTERS/John Kolesidis
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Posted: 2/6/2013 11:51:50 AM EST
People line up for fruits and vegetables freely distributed by farmers during a protest against high production costs outside the Agriculture Ministry in Athens February 6, 2013. REUTERS/John Kolesidis
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Posted: 2/5/2013 7:53:26 PM EST
This April 15, 2003 photo shows Ohio Division of Forestry firefighter Brian Howard lighting a backfire near West Portsmouth, Ohio. The U.S. Department of Agriculture warns in a report released Tuesday that big changes are in store for the nation's forests as global warming increases wildfires and insect infestations, and generates more frequent floods and droughts. (AP Photo/Portsmouth Daily Times, Scott Osborne)
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Posted: 2/5/2013 7:53:26 PM EST
This undated file photo from the Colorado State Forest Service shows pine trees killed by beetles near Grandby, Colo. The U.S. Department of Agriculture warns in a report released Tuesday that big changes are in store for the nation's forests as global warming increases wildfires and insect infestations, and generates more frequent floods and droughts. (AP Photo/Colorado State Forest Service, Jen Chase)
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Posted: 2/5/2013 1:13:23 PM EST
FILE - This Oct. 2008 file photo shows Imam Anwar al-Awlaki in Yemen. Al-Awlaki was born in 1971 in New Mexico where his father was studying agriculture as a Fulbright scholar. The son was educated in the United States but left in 2002, eventually returning to Yemen where he became a key figure in the local al-Qaida branch, which U.S. authorities believed was the most dangerous of the al-Qaida franchises. Al-Awlaki's fluent English and articulate speaking style won him a huge following among disaffected young Muslims in the West. He and another American, Samir Khan, who edited al-Qaida's Internet magazine, were killed in a U.S. drone attack in Yemen on Sept. 30, 2011. (AP Photo/Muhammad ud-Deen, File)
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Posted: 2/1/2013 3:38:49 AM EST
FILE - In this May 6, 2011, file photo, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton gives a speech on food security and nutrition at the UN Food and Agriculture Organization in Rome. Clinton’s plan for 2013 was simple. She’d embark on an epic swansong around the world as secretary of state, a dizzying itinerary of east-west and north-south flights that would take her past 1 million miles in the air at the helm of American diplomacy and perhaps break her own record of 112 countries visited while in the post. Her health got in the way and she was sidelined by circumstances beyond her control. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, Pool)
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Posted: 1/24/2013 5:18:26 PM EST
In this photo released by the New York-based conservation group Panthera, the flat grass shrub savannas interrupted by creeks, bush islands, rocky hills and stand-alone mountains of GuyanaÌs South Rupununi landscape, is photographed from Dadanawa Ranch in 2012. The lushly forested nation of Guyana on Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013 joined a regional pact to protect jaguars, the elusive spotted cat that is the biggest land predator in the Americas but is vulnerable due to expanded agriculture and mining that carves away at their fragmented habitat. (AP Photo/Panthera, Evi Paemelaere)
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Posted: 1/24/2013 5:18:26 PM EST
In this photo released by the New York-based conservation group Panthera, a jaguar is photographed by a camera trap on Karanambu Ranch, in the Rupununi Region of Guyana in 2011. The lushly forested nation of Guyana on Thursday, Jan. 24, 2013 joined a regional pact to protect jaguars, the elusive spotted cat that is the biggest land predator in the Americas but is vulnerable due to expanded agriculture and mining that carves away at their fragmented habitat. (AP Photo/Panthera)