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Cattle

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Three leaves from Punch/Article


SEE ALSO: Cattle; Weight
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May 2004Number of Holsteins disqualified from the Ohio State Fair last August because they were wearing a hair piece : 2
Source:

Ohio Department of Agriculture (Reynoldsburg)

Mar 2004Cost of testing each slaughtered U.S. cow for mad cow disease per pound of beef produced : 5c
Source:

U.S. Department of Agriculture/National Cattlemen's Beef Association (Centennial, Colo.)/Harper's research

Mar 2004Ratio of the number of cows France tests each week to the number the United States has tested in the last decade : 7:6
Source:

National Cattlemen's Beef Association/The European Commission (Brussels)

Nov 2002Average number of tons of manure produced by U.S. cattle, pig, and chicken feedlots each minute: 100,000
Source:

Sierra Club (San Francisco)

Jun 2002Barrels of oil required to raise U.S. cattle for beef each year: 155,000,000
Source:

U.S. Department of Agriculture/David Pimentel, Cornell University (Ithaca, N.Y.)

May 1999Head of cattle that Hyundai's founder brought from South Korea last fall on a visit to North Korea's Kim Jong Il: 1,000
Source:

Hyundai Motor America (Fountain Valley, Calif.)

April 12, 2005 American and Japanese scientists proclaimed cloned cattle safe to eat.
Source:

BBC News

January 4, 2005Aid efforts were temporarily halted when an airplane carrying emergency supplies hit a herd of cows.
Source:

Abqtrib.com

October 7, 2004Scientists sequenced the genome of a Hereford cow.
Source:

Associated Press

August 10, 2004there was a scandal in Australian cattle circles over udder doping.
Source:

Associated Press

July 10, 2004Federal health officials were thinking about banning the practice of feeding pork, chicken, and other animal parts to cattle; the pigs and chickens eat rendered cattle and thus could transmit mad cow disease prions. There was apparently no plan to stop feeding cattle huge quantities of cattle blood, an obvious vector for the disease, and cattle will continue to enjoy the feathers and excrement of 8.5 billion chickens.
Source:

New York Times

June 6, 2004President George W. Bush traveled to France to attend a ceremony commemorating the D-Day invasion and attempted to play down his dispute with President Jacques Chirac over the invasion of Iraq; Bush told French journalists that he was never angry with the French or with Chirac for his refusal to endorse the war, and he even invited Chirac to visit the ranch down in Crawford, Texas. "If he wants to come and see cows, he's welcome to come out here and see some cows," Bush said, apparently unaware that Chirac, a former agriculture minister, is a cattle expert.
Source:

New York Times

May 31, 2004 Kirin Brewery Co. announced that it had genetically engineered a cow, which has not yet been born, that will be immune to mad cow disease.
Source:

Reuters

May 24, 2004Scientists discovered prions in the muscle of a sheep infected with scrapie; experts were very quick to say that this does not necessarily pose any danger to humans who eat lamb, even though scrapie prions are believed to have caused mad cow disease. A prion expert at the National Institutes of Health predicted that "within the next year, somebody will make a big splash by finding it in the muscles of cattle and the beef industry will go crazy."
Source:

New York Times

April 23, 2004Agriculture officials were still trying to convince Japan to drop its ban on American beef that has not been tested for mad cow disease.
Source:

Seattle Times

April 10, 2004The USDA rejected a request from a Kansas beef company that asked for permission to test all its cattle for mad cow disease; the decision was announced by the department's undersecretary for marketing and regulation.
Source:

New York Times

March 4, 2004The inspector general of the USDA opened a criminal investigation into whether the Washington State mad cow was falsely listed as a downer; the man who killed the cow, the man who took the cow to slaughter, and the owner of the slaughterhouse have all said that the cow was able to walk. A spokeswoman for the agency said that she could not "fathom" the notion that a high-ranking USDA official could have ordered the falsification, though she did not deny the charge but simply repeated that she could not "fathom" it.
Source:

New York Times

February 27, 2004A large beef producer in Kansas applied to test all its cattle for mad cow disease so that it can resume exporting its beef to Japan. "The problem we're having now is that the U.S.D.A. is not wanting to do this," said the company's president. "They don't want to test. They don't want to recognize BSE is a problem. They are not going to allow anyone to test until they decide how or when. We believe that may be never."
Source:

New York Times

February 9, 2004Foot and mouth disease was killing cattle and pigs in Vietnam.
Source:

Reuters

February 5, 2004A panel of international experts said that mad cow disease is now "indigenous in North America" and advised the United States to ban feeding animal protein to cattle. The panel's chairman said that if the U.S. performed adequate tests it could find "a case a month."
Source:

New York Times

January 22, 2004An Indian diamond seller who had hidden $900 worth of small diamonds in a pile of hay was busy feeding laxatives to his cow.
Source:

Reuters

November 16, 2003 Cattle prices were up.
Source:

New York Times

January 28, 2003 Scientists in New Zealand revealed that they have genetically engineered cattle to produce higher levels of protein in their milk, which could speed cheese production.
June 11, 2002 Experts said that many more cases will probably be discovered since Israel has for many years imported cattle feed containing rendered animal carcasses from Britain and other European countries.
March 5, 2002 The Texas veterinarian who first isolated the Ames strain of anthrax was fighting $9,000 in fines for burning the carcasses of anthrax-infected cattle, in violation of Texas air pollution rules.
January 1, 2002 Farmers in Thailand started an organization to promote the use of dried cattle dung; Sarawut Supalaksuksakorn, a spokesman for the group, pointed out that the 38,500 cattle in the Sikhoraphum district produce 197,000 kilograms of dung every day.
November 13, 2001The government of Uttar Pradesh, India, was encouraging people to use cow's urine to cure diabetes and heart disease.
October 23, 2001It was revealed that in 1944 Britain manufactured 5 million anthrax cattle cakes that were to be airdropped (in “Operation Vegetarian”) over Germany; the expectation was that the disease would kill all the cattle and then kill all the Germans.
October 2, 2001Some people in India were using cow urine to cure indigestion and skin cancer.
June 12, 2001 Australia was vaccinating sheep and cattle to prevent farting, which emits methane, a potent gas that contributes to global warming.
May 22, 2001The leader of the research team that cloned Dolly the sheep warned against the premature cloning of farm animals for meat and milk production; cattle clones have suffered from severe defects such as diabetes, immune-system deficiencies, giant tongues, intestinal blockages, and squashed faces.
April 17, 2001 Farmers in the Dutch town Kootwijkerbroek protested the slaughter of their cattle by authorities worried about foot-and-mouth disease; police used water cannons and bulldozers to clear roadblocks set up by the protesters.
April 3, 2001 Britain was burying hundreds of thousands of sheep and cattle that have been killed in an attempt to control the spread of foot-and-mouth disease; scientists were trying to figure out whether the disease can be transmitted via the smoke of burning animals.
March 27, 2001After months of dithering, United States agriculture agents seized a flock of sheep from Skunk Hollow Farm in Vermont that are suspected of having a form of mad-cow disease. Twenty-one cattle in Texas will be destroyed because of similar concerns.
March 6, 2001 British and French governments were slaughtering tens of thousands of sheep and cattle in an increasingly futile attempt to control the spread of foot-and-mouth disease, a virus that is about as severe as the common cold.
February 27, 2001 Britain banned all exports of live animals, milk, and meat, after foot and mouth disease was discovered among some pigs and cattle; Britons were asked to stay away from the countryside; Ireland stationed extra troops along its border to keep out wayward British cows.
February 27, 2001 Scientists working for PPL Theraputics transformed cattle cells into stem cells, which were then persuaded to become human heart tissue.
February 20, 2001 France said it would kill 10,000 head of cattle a week in an attempt to raise beef prices, which have been depressed by the mad cow panic.
January 30, 2001One thousand Texas cattle were quarantined after it was discovered that they were fed ground-up ruminants in violation of a ban designed to prevent mad cow disease.
January 30, 2001Millions of cattle were freezing to death in Mongolia.
January 9, 2001Spanish cattlemen were trying to prevent their government from killing whole herds when one cow comes down with mad cow disease.
December 12, 2000The European Union decided to stop feeding ground-up farm animals to other farm animals for at least six months in an attempt to stop the spread of mad cow disease; all cattle over the age of thirty months must be either tested or destroyed.
December 12, 2000Testing was said to be expensive; two million cattle could be slaughtered.
November 21, 2000The European Commission announced its intention to test all beef cattle for mad cow disease.
November 21, 2000 Sales of beef in France dropped, even at McDonalds, even though France has rigid controls on the provenance of its homegrown beef cattle (each cow is given a “passport” at birth documenting its parentage and place of origin, which must be submitted to the slaughterhouse).
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