i don't see it tied to a particular store so Kroger might have had the bad 
batch as well as Publix or anyone else. 

-------------- Original message -------------- 
From: Martin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
Oh, crap. I polished off a head of Dole yesterday, and I tossed the packaging. 
Was any of this sold at Kroger, Keith?

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Dole lettuce recalled in U.S., Canada 
By LISA LEFF, Associated Press Writer1 hour, 19 minutes ago 
A division of Dole Food Co. issued an international recall of bagged salad 
Monday after a sample taken from a store in Canada tested positive for E. coli, 
the company said.
There have been no reports of illness, company officials said.
The voluntary recall affects all packages of Dole's Hearts Delight salad mix 
sold in the United States and Canada with a "best if used by" date of September 
19, 2007, and a production code of "A24924A" or "A24924B," Dole said.
The product was sold in Ontario, Quebec and the Maritime Provinces in Canada 
and in Illinois, Indiana, Maine, Michigan, Mississippi, New York, Ohio, 
Pennsylvania, Tennessee and neighboring U.S. states starting the weekend before 
last, said Marty Ordman, a Dole spokesman.
The romaine, green leaf and butter lettuce hearts that went into the blend were 
grown in California, Colorado and Ohio, then processed at Dole's plant in 
Springfield, Ohio on Sept. 6, according to Ordman.
Eighty-eight cases were distributed in Canada and 755 cases in the U.S., he 
said.
The company's move came a day after the Canadian Food Inspection Agency warned 
consumers not to eat Hearts Delight.
"Our overriding concern is for consumer safety," Eric Schwartz, president of 
the Dole Fresh Vegetable division said in a statement. He said the company was 
working with U.S. and Canadian health agencies, as well as those in various 
states.
The Food and Drug Administration was talking with Westlake Village, 
Calif.-based Dole about the situation, agency spokesman Michael Herndon said.
The Canadian agency said it would be looking to find out at what point the 
salad blend, which is imported into Canada, became contaminated and to see if 
any other products are affected, spokesman Garfield Balsom said.
Last year, an E. coli outbreak traced to bagged baby spinach was blamed for the 
deaths of three people and for sickening hundreds more across the U.S.
State and federal authorities ultimately identified a central California cattle 
ranch next to spinach fields belonging to one of Dole's suppliers as being the 
source of the bacteria.
Food contaminated with this strain of E. coli may not look or smell spoiled but 
health officials say the bacteria can cause life-threatening illnesses.
Symptoms include severe abdominal pain and bloody diarrhea; some people can 
have seizures or strokes and some may need blood transfusions and kidney 
dialysis, while others may live with permanent kidney damage.
___
Associated Press writer Rob Gillies in Toronto and Andrew Bridges in Washington 
contributed to this report.

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