| | UNIVERSAL ROBINA CORPORATION | | | | Sector: | FOOD‚ BEVERAGE & TOBACCO | Incorporation Date: | 28 September 1954 | Extension: | -- | Corporate Life: | 50 years | As per AOI: | Number of Directors: | 9 | Ownership Restrictions: | 40% | As per By-Laws: | Stockholders Meeting: | Per By-Laws: third Thursday of April; For 2010: 15 April 2010‚ Record Date: 11 March 2010‚ Circ. No. 2046-2010 | Fiscal Year: | 01 October to 30 September | Business
Premium Corporation
“The Food and drink Industry is very important to the economy of the UK. The UK is the world’s fifth largest grocery retail market and the largest in Europe‚ worth around US$156 billion in 2005” (uk trade and investment 2006 p30). This sector is the largest manufacturing industry “accounting for 17% of the total manufacturing sector” (defra 1.11.2007) “This scale has made it a strategically important market for both manufacturers and retailers‚ generating investment from many overseas companies
Premium Nutrition Food industry Food and drink
Food‚ Drink‚ and Festivals Ancient Egyptians did different things than what we do today‚ thanks to the fact that they lived in a desert. They didn’t have the wide open fields full of cows that were born with the sole purpose in life to die and be eaten later. They threw festivals and feasts for the gods of their religion‚ and made elaborate statues to their Gods. The many different foods they ate included bread‚ fruits‚ vegetables‚ and sometimes meat. They used barley for their bread. Nothing
Premium
rings true when talking about energy drinks. These products promise to provide heightened awareness‚ more energy‚ more endurance some even reference to the consumer you will have wings. So when consuming these products what are you really drinking? Do they provide the energy boost they promise? Are they harmful? Should the FDA do more investigating into the safety of these so-called energy drinks? These are questions I had going into this as a consumer of energy drinks myself‚ I was interested in how
Premium Energy drink Caffeine Nutrition
A universal health care has been talked about. there are many benefits to universal health care but too many blockades. this health care program could benefit everyone‚ even the government. this could change many lives and even save people. this program could benefit the everyone. there are many people who struggle with health and cant afford to pay for the insurance they need. some children don’t get insurance because their parents cant afford it. this could save these poor peoples’ lives. this
Premium Poverty United States Unemployment
A cultural universal (as discussed by George Murdock‚ Claude Lévi-Strauss‚ Donald Brown and others) is an element‚ pattern‚ trait‚ or institution that is common to all human cultures worldwide. Evolutionary psychologists hold that behaviors or traits that occur universally in all cultures are good candidates for evolutionary adaptations.[1] Some anthropological sociological theorists that take a cultural relativist perspective may deny the existence of cultural universals: the extent to which these
Premium Culture Anthropology Sociology
Energy Drinks The use of energy drinks in the United States has increased more than the controversial consumption of regular sodas. According to Coca-Cola executives‚ profits from energy products since 2005 through 2008 will total $540 million‚ compared with $210 million for regular soft drinks‚ $130 million for bottled water and $290 million for sports drinks (Warner). So what is it about this drinks that make them more popular than our pure and vital water? The answer is very simple; our hectic
Premium Caffeine Energy drink Soft drink
I have chosen to write about why cultural universals pose a problem for moral relativism in this paper. I will begin by defining cultural universals (CU). Then‚ I will cite examples of such theory and continue by applying them to situations in which these similarities can be seen. Next‚ I will discuss how we can convince ourselves that a given standard of behavior is in fact a cultural universal. I will then define moral relativism as well as provide examples of cultural differences that are
Premium Morality Ethics Scientific method
Innocent Drinks (9-805-031) Case Analysis: Innocent Drinks Entfin II: Case Analysis – Innocent Drinks (9-805-031) TABLE OF CONTENTS Table of contents ............................................................................................................. II 1 2 3 4 Background information about Innocent Drinks .....................................................1 Background information about the beverage industry ............................................2 Innocent Drinks’ success
Premium Marketing Juice Strategic management
CaseNet® The Soft Drink Industry in 1996: A Case Study for External Environment Analysis Raman Muralidharan Indiana University-South Bend he average U.S. consumer drinks more soft drinks per capita (2.3 eight ounce servings a day) than any other beverage‚ including milk. Table 1 shows the per capita consumption of various beverages in the U.S. for 1991-1995. In terms of 1995 retail sales‚ soft drinks in the U.S. are a $52 billion dollar industry (Standard & Poor’s Corp.‚ 96:11). The U.S. market
Premium Soft drink Coca-Cola