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Scientists were on Monday set to unveil the world s first lab-grown beef burger, serving it up fried to volunteers in London in what they hope is the start of a food revolution. The 140 gramme about five ounce patty, which cost more than 鈧?50,000 $330,000, more than Rs 20 million to produce, has been made using strands of meat grown from muscle cells taken from a living cow. Mixed with salt, egg powder and breadcrumbs to improve the taste, and coloured with red beetroot juice and saffron, researchers claim it will taste similar to a normal burger. Professor Mark Post of Maastricht University, whose lab developed the meat, says it is safe and has the potential to replace normal meat in the diets of millions of people. There are concerns that the growing demand [url=https://www.cups-stanley.com.de]stanley cup[/url] for meat is putting unsustainable pressure on the planet, both through the food required for the animals and the methane gas they produce, which contributes to global warming. What we are going to attempt is important because I hope it will show cultured beef has the answers to major problems that the world faces, Post said ahead of Monday s event. Our burger is made from muscle cells taken from a cow. We haven t altered th [url=https://www.mugs-stanley.us]stanley cup[/url] em in any way. For it to succeed it has to look, feel and hopefully taste like the real th [url=https://www.stanleycups.com.mx]stanley cup[/url] ing. The team in the Netherlands took cells from organic cows and placed them in a nutrient solution to create muscle tissue. They then grew this into small strands of meat, 20,000 of which w Xaam Malaysia to probe reports of Mumbai attacks link
Warren Buffett may have sagely advice on investment in any number of fields, but one area he says he won t touch these days is the newspaper industry. HT Image The Oracle of Omaha made these remarks at the Berkshire Hathaway Inc. shareholder meeting last weekend, according to the Wall Street Journal online. Though his Berkshire Hathway still owns Omaha-based Sun Newspapers and the Buffalo News, the world s top money manager views the future of the newspaper industry dismally, says the journal. For most newspapers in the United States, we would not buy them at any pr [url=https://www.stanleycup.cz]stanley cup[/url] ice, the world s second richest man was quoted as saying. They newspapers have the possibility of going to just unending losses, said Buffet, who has long considered himself to be a newspaper man. As long as newspapers were essential to readers, the journal quoted him as saying, they were essential to advertisers. But now news is available in many other venues. Referring to the Washington Post Company in which Berkshire has a significant investment, Buffet said t [url=https://www.stanleys-cups.uk]stanley cup[/url] he company has a solid cable business, a good reason to hold on to it, but its newspaper business is in trouble, according to the journal. Hi [url=https://www.stanley-cups.at]stanley cup[/url] s deputy Charles Munger termed newspapers woes a national tragedy. ...these monopoly daily newspapers have been an important sinew to our civilization, they kept government more honest than they would otherwise be, Munger was quoted as saying. One of Buffett s first jobs as a child was