| Winter
2005• Volume XIV, Number 1
JUST THE FACTS
Risky Recipe
The
University of Georgia Cooperative Extension Service is hoping to
convince ranchers to feed their cows more poultry manure and litter.
(Just add a bit of grain and vitamin A, they say.) The growth of
Georgia’s poultry industry has produced such large quantities
of this waste material that the service has dubbed it the “$50
Million Dollar Forgotten Crop.”
Source: The University of Georgia–Georgia College of
Agricultural & Environmental Sciences Cooperative Extension
Service, July 2004
Lab
Vets: Desperately Seeking Career Counselor
Lab-animal veterinarian is the third-worst-possible job in science,
says a new report in Popular Science. The magazine described the
position as “disillusioning,” “heart-breaking,”
and as “career-track bait-and-switch.” Many students
choose veterinary medicine because they care about animals, the
writers say, but then end up having to subject them to painful experiments,
ending in death.
Source: “The Worst Jobs in Science: The Sequel,”
Popular Science, November 2004
Hold the Formaldehyde, Please
A scientific advisory committee for the European Union has recommended
allowing producers to start using formaldehyde as a fattening agent
for chickens. Formaldehyde has been long suspected of causing cancer
in humans.
Source: Just.Food.com, October 14, 2004
Cell Phones Safe for Mice
Men hoping to become parents might want to pay attention to a new
study of mobile phone use in humans showing that mobile phone use
can cut a man’s fertility by one-third. Mouse and rat studies,
conducted for no convincing scientific reason, showed no effect.
Source: “Beyond
Animal Research,” July 2004
Therapeutic Junk Food
In
a recent New York Times story on the growing concern over fast-food
venues in hospitals, Ken Barun, a senior vice-president for McDonald’s,
claimed Happy Meals are actually good for sick kids. “From
the emotional side, it really does help them get better,”
he says.
Source: “Burgers for the Health Professional,” The New
York Times, October 27, 2004
Just What Kids Don’t Need
Hershey Foods Corporation proudly introduced its New Hershey’s
Fortified Syrup last fall as the “first-ever chocolate syrup
fortified with vitamins and nutrients that can help moms increase
their child’s daily nutrient intake.”
Source: Company news release; September 7, 2004
Smoking
Still a Leading Cause of Statistics
Despite years of human data proving that cigarette smoking is deadly,
experimenters at the University of California, Davis are subjecting
mice to five months in a whole-body inhalation chamber to assess
three levels of smoke exposure on lung tumors.
Source: “Beyond Animal Research,” August 2004;
www.pcrm.org
The Vegan Generation
One in five teenagers may show signs of heart disease, but hope
is on the way. According to a recent survey of more than 100,000
college students, nearly a quarter say that finding vegan meals
on campus is important to them. And college kids may be smarter
than we think. Only 18 percent care about low-carb meals.
Source: ARAMARK news release, October 19, 2004
Stating the Obvious
Cruel and, unfortunately, not unusual would be the words to describe
a new study conducted at the University of Pittsburgh and the Oregon
Health & Science University’s Primate Research Center.
Experimenters separated baby monkeys from their mothers at different
points in their development, including during their first weeks
of life. The study found that the earlier the infants are removed
from their mothers, the worse their adjustment.
Source: OHSU news release, October 24, 2004
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