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The sheep don t look mad, but fear of a deadly disease has doomed them. The government is set to destroy them because they may have an illness si
stanley water bottle milar to Mad Cow Disease. As CBS News Correspondent Jim Axelrod reports, the farmers who tend the sheep say the animals are pure as snow; it s the government that s gone mad. The farmAcirc; s in Vermont, not Britain. The animals are sheep, not cows. But the government s position is familiar: It wants to destroy them. It makes us feel obviously outraged, upset, let down, like you really canAcirc; t depend on the government at all, says Dr. Larry Faillace. He ow
stanley cup ns 120 of the sheep... condemned not because they have mad cow disease, but because tests show they could. I realize
stanley cup itAcirc; s a really emotional thing to the owners, says Dr. Linda Detwiler, a veterinarian with the U.S. Department Of Agriculture. While we re really sympathetic to the owners, we ve got to look at this big picture. The big picture was painted five years ago in England, where cows started turning up sick with a neurological disease. More than 50 human deaths were traced to meat from the cows. The worry is that these sheep ate feed made from sick cows. Dr. Faillace isn t buying it. Killing a flock of perfectly healthy and valuable sheep is not the way of protecting the American public, and they know it, he says. Faillace imported the sheep from Belgium for their extraordinary milk capacity. His tests show his sheep are clean. Slaughtering the sh Kkdv Lawyer: Portugal denies U.S. appeal for fugitive
Natural Bridges National Monument is the first national monument in Utah. In 2007, it also became the first recognized Dark Sky Park, earning a gold-star rating for extremely good visibility including air glow, the Milky Way, and faint meteors. Best of all, it only $3 per week to visit. Milky Way behind the Owachomo Bridge in Natural Bridges National Monument. Image credit: NPS/Jacob W. Frank Before the br
stanley cup idges, the Natural Bridges National Monument was a white-sand beach. In the Permian, 260 million years ago, the sand built up in dunes, creating cross-bedding still visible in the rocks today. Fast forward millions of years, with the ocean long-gone and the loose sand compacted and c
stanley becher emented into sandstone. Sometime in
stanley thermobecher the last few thousand years 鈥?since the last glaciation scoured the land clear of delicate structures and loose sediments 鈥?the curving meanders of a stream cut down sandstone into canyons, and undercut canyons into bridges and arcs that give the park its name. Long-exposure capturing star trails as the Earth rotates. Image credit: NPS/Jacob W. Frank Natural Bridges National Monument is not just a park for the geology, animals, and artifacts 鈥?it also an escape from city lights. While most people in the United States can see only a few hundred stars when gazing up at the night sky, in this little corner of Utah, you may see up to 15,000 stars. Back in 2007, the International Dark-Sky Association challenged the park to step their dedication