Animal health: Are we missing a trick on the selenium front?(David…

The News Review:

- Animal health: Are we missing a trick on the selenium front?(David…
- Gunman Kills 32 at Virginia Tech In Deadliest Shooting in US History
- Gunman Kills 32 at Virginia Tech In Deadliest Shooting in US History
- Reframing the Arab Reform Agenda
- Terror suspect’s family targeted
- Rooting for the Home Team Is Not So Easy; Watching my country, Cuba,…
- Good eats don’t have to be hard to come by

Animal health: Are we missing a trick on the selenium front?(David…
Free with registration – Dairy Farmer – AccessMyLibrary.com – Apr 16, 2007
Ann Hardy talks to David Wilde, ruminant technical manager with Alltech, about why he believes it has a place on every British farm. One of the first things some nutritionists will do when asked to look at herd health problems is to increase the selenium. What evidence is there that the national herd is short of selenium? There are very low selenium levels naturally occurring in home-grown feedstuffs, forages and other feeds. At the same time, we have seen an increase in disease incidence on farm such as high SCCs, mastitis, metritis and poor fertility. These diseases can be related to selenium inadequacy. But isn’t it all too easy to recommend selenium without any hard evidence? Evidence of low selenium is well documented through analyses carried out on silages and other home-grown feeds such as wheats. Background (naturally occurring) levels of selenium – the best form – are inherently very low.

Gunman Kills 32 at Virginia Tech In Deadliest Shooting in US History
Washington Post – Apr 16, 2007
tax dollars, and people wonder why events like today are happening here in America. This home grown terrorism is a product of our illegal, immoral, imperialist aggression. We continue to spend a large portion of our federal budget on warmongering instead of making the U. and the rest of the world a better place to live. That is the primary reason why todays tragedy happened.

Gunman Kills 32 at Virginia Tech In Deadliest Shooting in US History
Washington Post – Apr 16, 2007
But what does it say about America? Is this home grown terrorism? The enemy I say its this decadent society and it spokespeople, cheap politicians that speak with a sign in their back which spells for sale. But what does it say about America? Is this home grown terrorism? The enemy I say its this decadent society and it spokespeople, cheap politicians that speak with a sign in their back which spells for sale. By tonaltin | Apr 16, 2007 1:30:55 PM |.

Reframing the Arab Reform Agenda
Washington Post – Apr 16, 2007
I say Genuine Democracy to diffrentiate it from the superficial window dressing of the so called democracy in some Arab states. Political reform should be the priority and the prerequisite for all other reforms to follow which clearly have been obstructed by Dynastic Politics. Democracy should come from within-home grown. No thanks but no thanks for another Iraqi style democracy. With an all time low image of the US in the The Arab World and its uncalled for war on and the destruction of Iraq-the heart of the Arab World-the US has nothing to offer in the way of exporting democracy to the regionhowever it can signal a strategic shift in its ill-concieved M. foreign policy by doing the followings:
ONE,stop nurturing and supporting all Arab dictatorships-ALL means Moderate and non-moderate dictatoreshpis.

Terror suspect’s family targeted
Toronto Star – Apr 16, 2007
Cheryfa MacAulay Jamal, who is married to Abdul Qayyum Jamal, 44, one of the 12 accused of forming a home-grown terrorism cell, says she’ll hold a news conference on her Montevideo Rd. driveway today to make sure the incident "doesn’t get buried. " "The whole point is that I am alone here with my four kids and have no one to protect us," she said yesterday. "I am worried for the children. There have been incidents of intimidation before aimed at the children.

Rooting for the Home Team Is Not So Easy; Watching my country, Cuba,…
Free with registration – Newsweek – AccessMyLibrary.com – Apr 16, 2007
) Walking into San Diego’s Petco Park just over a year ago, I heard the voice of Cuban icon Celia Cruz singing her classic song, “Cuba que lindos son tus paisajes. ” I couldn’t help but sway and sing to the melody I had grown up hearing in my parents’ Manhattan apartment. We had come to the park to watch the championship game of the inaugural World Baseball Classic. We settled into our seats behind the Cuban dugout and looked up at the scoreboard, which displayed the slogan “Aqui se habla beisbol,” or, “Baseball spoken here. ” Thousands of Cuban fans cheered, wearing their pride on their shirts, hats and faces. As a Cuban-American whose family has been torn.

Good eats don’t have to be hard to come by
Roanoke Times – Apr 16, 2007
It’s not every day that I get to write an opening phrase like “So and so stopped by my table the other day” and make myself sound like some Star City sophisticate, so I figured I could at least give Marty’s suggestion some thought. Sure enough, it produced a story peg, of sorts. The peg is this: How do you feel about home-owned versus chain restaurants and which home-grown restaurants are your favorites and why?As a lifelong rebel, I’ve always preferred underdogs, whether they are people, places or sports teams. Montano’s and spots like it may or may not qualify as true underdogs. After all, they have name recognition and in many cases a slew of loyal customers that is the envy of some of the chain eateries clustered around town. Personal connectionsMontano’s is a landmark. It’s in a prime location, it doubles as a popular nightspot, and it has existed at least since I came here in the early 1970s, when it was at Towers Shopping Center.

Leave a Reply