April 17, 2008 at 1:50 pm
· Filed under PodCasts, The Food System, Science & Education
Terry D. Etherton
Two outstanding podcasts are posted on DairyCast.com. Enjoy listening to these thought provoking presentations on:
- Cloning: where have we been and where are we today? Gary Crawford, USDA, summarizes recent developments from USDA and FDA
- Bruce Vincent, Multiple Generation Environmental Steward and Logger from Libby, MT, shares an empowering presentation on activists, grizzly bears and the logging industry. There are interesting parallels to today’s dairy industry
cdn3.libsyn.com/trufflemedia/080307_DairyCast_0139.mp3
February 15, 2008 at 11:54 am
· Filed under Agricultural Biotechnology, Consumer Attitudes About Biotechnology, PodCasts, rbST Facts and Information, rbST Public Discussion
The following podcast features Orion Samuelson of WGN Radio discussing the use of recombinant bovine somatotropn (rbST).
Orion Samuelson is heard on WGN Radio, where he has served as Agribusiness Director since 1960. He and his associate, Max Armstrong, present 15 agricultural/business reports daily on WGN. They also host the hour-long Morning Show and Noon Show, both heard on Saturdays on WGN. Orion is also heard daily on more than 260 radio stations with his syndicated National Farm Report and on 110 stations with his syndicated Samuelson Sez. Orion and Max are seen weekly on rural channel RFD-TV, carried on Dish-TV and DirecTV on This Week in Agribusiness.
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February 15, 2008 at 11:52 am
· Filed under Agricultural Biotechnology, Consumer Attitudes About Biotechnology, PodCasts, rbST Facts and Information, rbST Public Discussion
The following podcast is of an interview with Dr. Terry Etherton on WHYY Radio in Philadelphia. This interview took place on January 15, 2008.
Summary from WHYY: The Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture recently ruled that dairies that do not inject their cattle with synthetic growth hormone can no longer label their milk as hormone-free. The decision, which has been put on hold until the beginning of February, raises serious questions for consumers, dairy farmers, and retailers. We talk to TERRY ETHERTON of Penn State University.
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November 8, 2007 at 10:05 am
· Filed under Agricultural Biotechnology, Consumer Attitudes About Biotechnology, PodCasts, rbST Facts and Information, rbST Public Discussion, The Food System
The following podcast is a roundtable discussion about rBST with Dr. Terry Etherton and dairy producers Dan Brandt and Tom Krall.
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November 1, 2007 at 3:35 pm
· Filed under PodCasts, rbST Public Discussion
The following podcast is a roundtable discussion about rBST with Dr. Terry Etherton and dairy producers Dan Brandt and Tom Krall.
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May 14, 2007 at 9:05 am
· Filed under PodCasts, rbST Facts and Information, rbST Public Discussion
Dr. Terry Etherton, Distinguished Professor of Animal Nutrition and Head of the Department of Dairy and Animal Science at Penn State; Dr. Dale E. Bauman, Liberty Hyde Bailey Professor of Animal Science and Nutrition, Cornell University; and Dr. Robert Collier, Professor, University of Arizona discuss the ramifications of the public debate surrounding rbST-free milk.
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May 6, 2007 at 10:55 am
· Filed under Agricultural Biotechnology, Consumer Attitudes About Biotechnology, PodCasts, rbST Public Discussion
Shane Reilly a Ft. Atkinson, IA dairy farmer speaks about the benefits of using RoundUp Ready Alfalfa and rbST in an interview on WHO in Des Moines. Read the rest of this entry »
April 16, 2007 at 1:22 pm
· Filed under Agricultural Biotechnology, Consumer Attitudes About Biotechnology, PodCasts, rbST Public Discussion, The Food System
In this podcast, Dr. Terry Etherton and Dr. Phil Senger, discuss the spirit of teaching - within the educational community as well as within the public sphere.
This podcast follows a seminar given by Dr. Senger on April 12, 2007. A link to a video of this seminar will be posted when it is available.
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November 21, 2006 at 8:46 am
· Filed under PodCasts, rbST Public Discussion
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To read a transcript of this podcast, follow this link: Read the rest of this entry »