Sunday, February 29, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five FEATUR ES Beefalo to make homes on your range By JAY LEVIN their owners Howard and Shar- He hasn't gained a pound or on Bloch and Dr. Henry Ferstl lost one yet. ABOUT 100 YEARS ago, Wil - constitute American Beefalo ham Cody earned the nick- Breeders, Inc. We have Charolais, Herefords name "Buffalo Bill" for his and Angus, here, he boasted. keen eye, his powerful rifle, Last week, Ms. Bloch treated "We have all breeds." and an uncanny ability to pro- several guests to a meal of beef- vide fresh meat for the men aloburgers, which have become PAUMAN, LOWE and his wife working on the railroad. Buffa- a staple on the family's table. Judy are responsible for lo became a prime foodstuff, "The way I'm going to prepare feeding the beefalo bulls, steers along with beans and fatback. it," she said, sculpting enough and heifers twice daily, conduct- It's been said that wild buffalo lean red meat for three patties, ing the once-a-month weigh-ins steaks taste gamey x and are "is by not adding any salt or and seeing to the overall care pretty damn stringy. But the pepper . . . that way you can of the barn and farm. The own- elegant folks back East consid- really taste the meat." She slid ers keep around two honest-to- ered the tongues a delicacy. the burgers into a heavy gray goodness buffalos for promo- pan. Within minutes, they began tional purposes, and maintain Of course, the thundering buf- to sizzle and an appetizing aro- several horses and a crop of falo herds have gone the way ma filled the kitchen. corn and oats. of gunfights in front of the sa- loon, cattle drives to Abilene, and Wyatt Earp. The mighty beasts are, however, making a comeback. Sort of. Today, a few cattle breeders have begun raising beefalo - a careful genetic cross between the buffalo and the cow. The buffalo lends bulk, stamina, andf docility. The cow contributes good, full flavor. And surprising-F ly, the final product tastes bet- ter than ground round. ONCE BEEFALOS are raised on a commercial scale, ev- ery cut - from burger to rolled rib - will be considerably cheaper than a comparable hunk of cow., But that day is probably about a decade off. "You cook it just like you would regular beef," Ms. Bloch said, as she turned the meat. "But because it has very little fat, it cooks 30 to SO per cent quicker than regular meat." Finally, the burgers were on the table. The taste was rich and flavorful but retained the deli- cate quality of high-grade beef. And unlike confronting horse- flesh, no one around the table expressed any compunction about digging in. "WTE THINK in ten years' that's all there's going to be - beefalo," says Ferstl, ABB's executive director. "It's a matter of survival." The beefalo breed was actual- ly originated four years ago by a California rancher who bred one bull and sold it for $2.5S million. That beefalo bull paid' for itself within three yearst through semen sales alone. ABB But beefalo is their business. ABB does not slaughter beefa- lo on the premises and its in- come is derived frrom the sale of their critters for breeding purposes. ABB's west-coast se- men sells for $20 per small sam- ple, enough to inseminate one heifer. "We order it whenever we need it," said Ferstl. The beef- alo bull semen, packed in li- quid nitrogen at a frosty 320 degrees below zero, is distribut- ed all around the country. Ferstl, a short man with a tan, lined face who did agricul- tural research at Michigan State, believes the beefalo's big- gest boon is a resiliency spring- ing from it's bison heritage. "Remember when 50,000 cattle froze to death in North Dakota three years ago?," he asked. "Well,.there were some buffalo out there and they took it." TTE ADDED that feeding these An incipient herd of 28 beef- alo roams an 85-acre farm nestled in the gently rolling hills just outside little Mayville, Mich. The animals - along with f 7 j{ E Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS Cryonics: Some people choose deep freeze over the coffin bought its first beefalo last No- hardy, friendly animals isa vember. breeze. "With the millions of "They're just so tame, they're bushels of oats you put in cat- I easy to work with," said tle. you don't need all that for farmhand Mark Lowe, herding beefalo," he said. "A little' a few head of beefalo out of the grass and hay is all that's need- fragrant red barn - quiet ex- ed to get a good choice of car- Scepj for a moo or two. In one cass." fenced-off pen, Jim Bauman In the long~run. the beefai- recently from California yielded 450 lbs. of "table-ready meat," and only cost $700. She lauds beefalo meat as nutritious - with 22 per cent protein, com- pared to 12 per cent in ordinary beef. The additional protein supply, she adds, fills the diner up better than beef. However, beefalo meat today remainsda precious and rare commodity, and Ms. Bloch pre- dicts it won't be available at the locl supermarket for an- other eight to ten years. "You're not gonna get this on the market," explained Ferstl, "until you breed ten million heads. You don't slaugh- ter heifers, now. If we slaugh- tered all the beefalo we have for meat, it would last two hours on the market." la 1, evin is a Daily night editor and staff writer. f 0OATTEND COMMENCEMENT YOU MUST ORDER ACAP A 0 APRIL 4 1976 ROM THE a ,C.XUPLAR 'Alp M-794 Dailv Photo by PAULINE LUBENS LSA Student Gov't WILL HOLD ITS Winter 1976 Election IN APRIL WANTED: e ELECTIONS DIRECTOR Salary $150.00 s POLL WORKERS $2.25/ hour Four Hour Blocks Preferred TO APPLY- Call 763-4799, 8-11 a.m., Mon.-Fri. Siqn up at LSA-SG Office-4001 Michiqan Union DEADLINE FOR APPLICATION: Friday, March 5, 5:00 (Continued from Page 3) who will their bodies to be froz- en have nothing to lose, is not enough to satisfy the expense, false hopes, and disregard for scientific direction that accom- pany such a philosophy." Cryonics advocates respond by arguing that no one actually knows what chances for life the people who are now frozen have. "But we do know," says Art Quaife, president of Trans Time, "that those people who simply die and be done with it have no chance at all." Quaife argues that experimental suc- cesses with frozen organs (kidneys, the cornea of the eye), semen, and one test with a cat's brain indicates that similar techniques with human bodies will eventually be per- fected. "IF WE HAD a crash pro- gram, it is possible that the problems could very likely be solved in 10-15 years; how- ever, even if the current level of funding continues, it should take about 40 or 50 years." Quaife also points out that since the cryonauts would be main- tained in the same condition for that entire time period, it is' quite possible that those pa- tients will live again. Ettinger questions a number of commonly - held assump- tions about death. He differen- tiates between clinical death - usually interpreted as the ces- sation of heart and lung activ- ity - and true biological death, in which irreversible cellular deterioration takes place. The cryonics movement has accept- ed a definition of death which says that "death is the state from which resuscitation of the body as a whole is impossible by currently known means." Despite the debate in scien- tific circles over the effective- ness of cryogenic techniques, Ettinger explains that most of the arguments against freezing people come from members of the public or physicians who "don't know much about cryo- biology . . . I would say that much opposition stems from deep-rooted psychological fac- tors. Most people have an ex- traordinary amount of inertia- they're used to having physi- cians handle their problems; they're not used to taking hero- ic measures on their own . . . It seems as though people was wrestling with a massive would rather die than bear re- happen to their bank accounts? black and white beefalo bull sponsibility for their decisions." Or what would happen if some- just after weigh in. one returned at a future date "Doncha get red with me, j'TTINGER explains that even and married their great-great Doncha get red with though many people scoff at grandson or daughter? dotogte11-mntho the Cryogenics Society, he finds drawled to the 11-month old that "very few people express However, Ettinger's son, Da- 1175-pounder. "Just knocked strong disapproval." vid, a University Law School I him out of the scale," said Jim. { { j I I 4' John Erfurt, a University re- search scientist for the Institute of Labor and Industrial Rela- tions and a Cryonics Society' member, says that as long as the society maintains a "low profile" there will be little cri- ticism, but "if cryogenics ever become more attractive . . . a lot of people would be upset,j like fineral directors, medical practitioners, and religious in- stitutions." Nevertheless, Ettinger says that he feels that the idea of postponing death will eventually be accepted by most of the pub- student, says that the legal ob- stacles will be easily overcome. "The law is not an arcade; the law was made to serve people's! needs," he says. DAVID ETTINGER predicts that, in one case, the law may allow cryonicists to per- form an operation that would; presently be considered homi- cide: "It would be ideal to freeze people before they die,; but nobody wants to try the experiment . . . Still, one judge we consulted seemed to think that no one would prosecute in such a case" if the person was terminally ill . A 19th century New Jersey; law that prohibits sexual intercourse between unmarried people is still enforced when women seek welfare payments for illegitimate children. Summer Roundtrip NEW YORK to LONDON $265 MUST RESERVE 65 DAYS IN ADVANCE CalTOLL FREE 9 to 9 r(2nn) a47 719a4 lo's resistence to cold and dis- ease and its economical eating habits will spell decreased meat costs - when there's enough beefalo to go around. According to Ms. Bloch, the carcass her husband purchased! SUN DAY at HILLEL 11 am. Graduate Brunch-$1.00 12:30-2:00 p.m. .Israeli Dancing 5:30-6:30 p.m. Deli-$2.50 ALL YOU CAN EAT ALL AT University Combined Choirs & Orchestra THOMAS HILBISH, Conductor J. S. BACH'S MASS IN B-MINOR Tuesday, March 2-Hill Auditorium 8 P M -ADMISSION FREE lie. He also states that religious u A - iiv person whobel the im- LII jL g1 Robert Ettinger notes that persons who believe in the im- even though cryonics societies NOVA CHARTER CORP. mortrlity of the soul (and not are becoming somewhat more ITHACA, NEW YORK 1429 HILL ST. the body) can be reconciled .p_____________ wtheron) "n oe recased socially acceptable and that reeivedhonsn ofe es strongly committed members > O c )=> o c- <==> oo {)<==>"""5 and a bishop" he explains. ' are joining more ofte than ever i1 TUESIAL IARCI 2: before, he's no longer as involv- Ettinger contends that many ed in public relations and pro- 1E R A ID 4 E I physicians and scientists who selytizing for the group as he are publicly silent about freez- was in the late sixties. Physicist, Space Scientist ing people are actually "closet' According to Erfurt, "we've - SPEAKING ON: crvocists . . . Most people in I come to the conclusion that in "SPACE COLONIZATION AND the medical community express , the 20th century, at least, ALTERNATIVE ENERGY SOURCES" mild interest of tepid approval there probably won't be a mass A of our cause," he says. movement to the Cryonics So- Admission $1 ciety." Instead, he predicts 3-3 p.m. in HILL AUDITORIUM nIE ALSO reports that Cryo- slow but steady growth until; nics Society members rep- significant scientific advances =J Sponsored by FUTURE WORLDS resent a wide range of political are made. ' > -t>( )(jIt>O a e "">0o( <"""">t positions, religious and non-re -,_____<) )~sC O c:t (> s ligious backgrounds, and differ- Erfurt says that cryonics ing personality types. "I have hasn't become popular because also observed that we have of a widespread public attitude!tj more risk-takers than you'd ex- about dying: "Most people per- pect: more airline pilots, for sonally resist death, but they DAYTONA BEACH-March 6-13 example," he says. are still highly conditioned to sirve taken by South Flor- believe that death is inevit- A svy tke ySotFlr able - like taxes." - 1. Bus Transportation & Ldig ida Cryonics Society member ol)-Lodging Ellen Rievman indicates that: People seem to be afraid of only $129.00 most cryonics members are the future, says Ettinger, since 6 davs, oceanfront room with color T.V., 2 pools, non-religious (5S per cent), "from a perspective of 5,co00( air conditioning and more. male (86 per cent), well educat- years, most of our concerns will . You Provide ed, and middle class (the av- seem to be minor problems erage annual income is $15,400). ... this idea serves to belittle ^ 5 Days-$48 7 Days-$64 Most of the members arealso one's own ideas and accom-1 voine: the majority are in their plishments." But he says he is-6 days-$57 8 Days-$72 late 20's and early 30's. confident that we are "going In Coniunction with Other Major Universities sof the Cryonicsto live to see a future vastly dif- Many critics he yrferent from the present, a time $ difcut f o dneoulea ea & Ski Student Travel Services, Inc. movement foresee a number ofwhen the 20th century will be difficidt, if not dangerous, legal hnte2t tr il seen as a dim and priive CA LL 995-2051 questions arising if the freezersna a-dim-a--pmt-CL <-20<- W .......... ., .,, =~n ef~l Iera.'' ) ^i< () () '.C a' .!( d "t!= {1 < " iL 0 p movement is ever sucesf. For example, would what hap- nen to someone's property rights if they were frozen for a century or so? 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