Short Takes: News From All Over: July 1, 2004
July 1, 2004
USDA Classifies Frozen Fries as 'Fresh Vegetables'
By Andrew Martin, Organic Consumers Association
Apparently, a daily allowance of deep fried junk food is good for you (especially if they are called Freedom Fries). Andrew Martin reports that the USDA quietly changed the regulations last year to appease the French fry industry, 'which has spent decades pushing for a revision to the Perishable Agricultural Commodities Act.' Frozen French fries are now defined as 'fresh vegetables,' and should be served in lieu of greens at every opportunity. -- Jacob Wheeler
http://www.organicconsumers.org/school/frenchfries061604.cfm
RELATED ARTICLES
Why Do McDonald's Fries Taste So Good? January 12, 2001 Anjula Razdan Why Do McDonald's Fr...
America's cult of tallness is creating ugly fallout...
Using this recipe for biodiesel fuel made from vegetable Joshua and Kaia Tickell recently drove a s...
An English-only United States would mean rewriting the dictionary...
Weapons Makers Turn to Medicine
By Kristen Philipkoski, Wired
'[Developing medicine] feels much better than to destroy,' says Amir Maksyutov who now works on vaccines for HIV, flu, and malaria. During the Cold War, Maksyutov sang a different tune. The Soviet Union employed him to develop virulent strains of influenza and other infectious agents for potential use as bioweapons against the United States. -- Jacob Wheeler
http://www.wired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,63759,00.html
Never Again: Act Now to Stop Genocide in Sudan
By Staff, Africa Action
If we weren't bogged down in Iraq and Afghanistan, our government might be able to allocate the resources necessary to stop a real humanitarian disaster. How does one define real? According to Africa Action, 'With 30,000 people already killed, Darfur now faces the worst humanitarian crisis in the world. Even if relief arrives now, 350,000 people may still die.' Write to Secretary of State Colin Powell and convince him to recognize these atrocities in Sudan as constituting genocide. -- Jacob Wheeler
http://capwiz.com/africaaction/utr/2/?a=6004806&i=46695111
Rehearsing with Gods
Photos by Ronald T. Simon; Text by Marc Estrin, Chelsea Green.com
Peter Schumann and his Bread & Puppet Theater are likely the most important, and surely the longest lasting, contributors to modern American theater history. Now you can follow the theater's saga in Rehearsing with Gods, a collection of Ronald T. Simon's photos and essays by Marc Estrin. 'I never thought a book could do justice to the magic, the beauty, the power of the Bread and Puppet. But Rehearsing with Gods does just that,' writes Howard Zinn, author of A People's History of the United States. -- Jacob Wheeler
http://www.chelseagreen.com/2004/items/rehearsingwithgods