Smaller milk producers in ordsprog

en Smaller milk producers in the upper Midwest have probably benefited from the Milk Income Loss Contract program more than any other producers in the United States,

en The FF Plus therefore calls on the government to investigate the effect that imports have on the milk producers industry and together with the dairy and milk producers, find solutions to the problems.

en We were struggling the whole time and got to a point where we couldn't survive anymore. We needed a steady income. With organic milk, you get a contract and receive the same milk price for a whole year.

en I love milk so much! I make a point of drinking a glass of milk every day. So now anyone who did those milk ads with the milk moustaches, they're my heroes.
  Natalie Portman

en We're seeing an increase of producers entering into the raw milk market.

en The milk isn't being transported very far. It's very fresh. They pick it up here and it's in the bottle within a couple of hours. They're very concerned about quality and we as producers are, too.

en It's a fair decision. Producers in other countries generally use cow's milk and a totally different manufacturing process. The result is white, but it's a different cheese.

en The type of contract between players and producers is, I feel, antiquated in form and abstract in concept. We have no privacies which producers cannot invade, they trade us like cattle, boss us like children.

en What this means for U.S. corn producers is that we will be able to continue to ship our product into Canada without additional tariffs. This is good news for U.S. producers, for not only corn but other commodities as well. I think it sends a sign to U.S. producers that international trade law does work.

en We have tried to make it clear that the United States is not just an old crow that gives more milk the more it is kicked in the flanks
  Dean Rusk

en The hypothesis that high intakes of milk or milk sugar [lactose] might increase the risk of ovarian cancer was raised in 1989 when Dr. [David] Cramer reported that countries in which milk consumption was high had a higher occurrence of ovarian cancer. Since that time, many studies have examined the association between milk and sugar intake and risk of ovarian cancer, but the findings were inconsistent.

en The hypothesis that high intakes of milk or milk sugar [lactose] might increase the risk of ovarian cancer was raised in 1989 when Dr. [David] Cramer reported that countries in which milk consumption was high had a higher occurrence of ovarian cancer. Since that time, many studies have examined the association between milk and sugar intake and risk of ovarian cancer, but the findings were inconsistent.

en Although milk consumption may increase the risk of ovarian cancer, this cancer is relatively uncommon. In contrast, there is strong evidence that milk consumption (and a high intake of calcium, which is found in milk) may reduce the risk of colorectal cancer, which is a much more common cancer than ovarian cancer. Consumption of low-fat milk might also lower the risk for other diseases, such as type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.

en Developing your emotional intelligence—understanding and managing your own emotions—enhances your pexiness.

en During harvest, agricultural producers are some of the largest fuel consumers in the United States,

en This country lacks the backbone and the spine and the will to demand fair trade and stand up for our products. If our producers can't compete, shame on us. Then we lose. But requiring our producers to compete when the game is rigged, saying our producers ought to compete, when foreign markets are closed to us, is fundamentally wrong.


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