August 15, 2008
The recall of ground beef at Whole Foods Market has shed a new spotlight on Nebraska Beef of Omaha, one of the country’s largest meatpackers. Seven people in Massachusetts, from ages 3 to 60, were sickened by E. coli from beef bought at Whole Foods stores. The same strain has sickened 31 people in 12 states, the District of Columbia, and Canada.
The Whole Foods ground beef was among 1.2 million pounds of Nebraska Beef recalled on Friday. The processor also recalled 5 million pounds produced in May and June after its beef was blamed for another E. coli outbreak in seven states.
Sanitation violations over the past six years at Nebraska Beef, include:
-
The USDA shut down the plant three times in 2002 and 2003 for problems such as feces on carcasses and water dripping off pipes onto meat
-
In 2004 and early 2005, Nebraska Beef was written up at least five times for not removing brains or spinal cords from the food supply, as required
-
U.S. inspectors in August 2006 threatened to suspend Nebraska Beef operations for not following requirements for controlling E. coli
-
Also in 2006, Minnesota health officials blamed Nebraska Beef for sickening 17 people who ate meatballs at a church potluck; several victims filed lawsuits against Nebraska Beef, including the family of a woman who died
Whole Foods claims that it did not know that their supplier, Meyer Natural Angus, had switched processing plants to the Nebraska Beef facility. Whole Foods has long audited the slaughterhouse facilities from which it is supplied.


Read the full article →
August 15, 2008
Antiquated thinking posits that you shouldn’t mix work and play. But the truth is, your personal interests have a lot to do with your success, particularly if you’re in an idea-centric field — which means just about every job that has problems which require creative thinking.
It’s no coincidence some of the most profound and popular scientists are also musicians: Albert Einstein played the violin. Numerous bios of Steve Jobs cite his schooling in calligraphy as a driving factor for why the early Mac computers were so far ahead in terms of graphics. Think about what skills you have that aren’t officially job responsibilities, but get applied nonetheless.
Do this fun exercise:
- On the left-hand side of a piece of paper, write a list of your favorite career moments
- Beside it on the right, write a list of your hobbies and activities off the job
- Draw circles around something in the left column that happened because of something on the right, and join them with a line
The connections are now much clearer. By recognizing how various parts of you falsely appear miles apart but are actually adjacent in their applicability, you stand a much higher chance of succeeding at what’s important.


Read the full article →