Paul Sakuma / AP

The News Review:

- Paul Sakuma / AP
- Your Name Your Email Address Recipient’s Email Address
- Georgia’s Vienna boasts more than barbecue contest, cotton museum
- Africa: Agra Meets Over Food Crisis
- Les Kennedy, Jonathan Pearlman in Cowra and Dan Proudman

Paul Sakuma / AP
Newsweek 
From the standpoint of energy use, obviously, it would have been far more efficient for Smith and MacKinnon to just buy a sack of flour than to drive around for days looking for a wheat farmer. From the culinary point of view, the limits of local sourcing were vividly brought home to MacKinnon when he finally scored a bucket of.

Your Name Your Email Address Recipient’s Email Address
Newsweek 
it’s hell getting old. “Exit Ghost” has a cameo by Amy Bellette, the compelling woman in “The Ghost Writer” (1979), who the youthful Zuckerman fantasized was the grown-up Anne Frank. Three decades haven’t been kind to her, either.

Georgia’s Vienna boasts more than barbecue contest, cotton museum
Atlanta Journal Constitution,  USA 
Here’s what I found. (This year’s “Hogaween Town”-themed event takes place Oct. )Even when it’s not high cotton (or barbecue) season, the Dooly County seat is well worth the trip.

Africa: Agra Meets Over Food Crisis
AllAfrica.com, Washington 
Richard Mkandawire, Agriculture Adviser for NEPAD, said, "Partnership with all stakeholders is the way forward. NEPAD will work with AGRA more intensely in addressing policy bottlenecks this gathering was an important first step in charting an agenda for action and greater focus on home-grown solutions to the continent’s food situation in coming years. " Relevant Links Central AfricaFood, Agriculture and Rural IssuesRwandaSustainable Development In conclusion Mr. Peniel Lyimo, the Permanent Secretary of Agriculture and Food Security, Tanzania, said, "The future could be bright for African farmers if the recommendations are implemented. Policy is everything. "AGRA is a dynamic partnership working across the African continent to help millions of small-scale farmers and their families lift themselves out of poverty and hunger.

Les Kennedy, Jonathan Pearlman in Cowra and Dan Proudman
Sydney Morning Herald, Australia 
There seemed to be some tensionbetween him and his daughter. After her marriage break-up, the senior constable, 31, had takenher then infant children to live with their grandparents in August2003. She had grown up in Burwood and wanted her first taste ofrural life. She also wanted to help her mother care for her fatherin the onset of his dementia. Police visited her at Orange Base Hospital and at NepeanHospital in Penrith, where she was transferred. She underwentsurgery last night but her injuries were not life-threatening. The Mayor of Cowra, Bruce Miller, said there had been an “eeriefeeling about the town today, there was nobody about this morning.

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