AR-NEWS Digest 673

Topics covered in this issue include:

  1) WARM WINTER GIVES FURRIERS THE CHILLS
     by NOVENAANN@aol.com
  2) (UK)CJD risk in vaccines given to children - scientists warn
     by bunny 
  3) [UK] Violence erupts at cat farm protest
     by David J Knowles 
  4) [UK] RAF to help blitz the killer rats infesting Puffin Island
     by David J Knowles 
  5) (US) Cruel To Animal, Cruel to People
     by allen schubert 
  6) (US) Hog Farm Sent Packing
     by allen schubert 
  7) Animals underfed in South Korean zoo
     by Andrew Gach 
  8) Cattlemen sue Tyson foods
     by Andrew Gach 
  9) Dolly's creators lone a calf
     by Andrew Gach 
 10) Contraceptive developed for stray cats
     by Mesia Quartano 
 11) RE:(UK)Violence erupts at cat farm protest
     by "Gudrun Ensslin" 
 12) Re: RFI: CSPI and IFDP addresses needed
     by LCartLng@gvn.net (Lawrence Carter-Long)
 13) [UK] 12 arrested in cat farm protest
     by "Miggi" 
 14) [US] "County Board votes to study keeping monkeys" (TCT-2/20/98)
     by Steve Barney 
 15) re: RFI: CSPI and IFDP addresses needed
     by Patrick Nolan 
 16) 15 poisoned vultures in Spain
     by 2033491 <2033491@campus.uab.es>
 17) Feathered and Furry Madonnas
     by SDURBIN@VM.TULSA.CC.OK.US
 18) Animal Rights Trial
     by "Dave Shepherdson" 
 19) Makah Gray Whale Hunt Town Meeting Report
     by Michael Kundu 
 20) killing wildlife in Frnce
     by "Bina Robinson" 
 21) Irondequoit deer/ ALF
     by "Bina Robinson" 
 22) (US) Defense witness contends cattlemen made money when prices
  fell
     by allen schubert 
 23) FEATURE/Don't Let Your Doctor Give You Horse Urine! -There are
  better treatments
     by Vegetarian Resource Center 
 24) (CN) Pangolins and Bear Paws
     by jwed 
 25) Makah whale hunt
     by Michael Kundu 
 26) Dentist fax number!
     by molgoveggie@juno.com (Molly G Hamilton)
 27) (US) Groups demand Navy stop tests on whales
     by allen schubert 
 28) (US) Groups demand Navy stop tests on whales
     by allen schubert 
 29) (US) Expert: Oprah show good news, bad news for ranchers
     by allen schubert 
 30) (US) Study Finds Deadly Germ on Chickens
     by allen schubert 
 31) (US) 5 Spokane Kids Sickened by E. Coli
     by allen schubert 
 32) UPCOMING EVENTS
     by "Nancy Gomez" 
Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 01:17:52 EST
From: NOVENAANN@aol.com
To: ar-news@envirolink.org
Subject: WARM WINTER GIVES FURRIERS THE CHILLS
Message-ID: <20ead37e.34f11492@aol.com>
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Date: Friday, February 20, 1998   
Source: George Lazarus.   
Section: BUSINESS   
Copyright Chicago Tribune

WARM WINTER GIVES FURRIERS THE CHILLS   

   Guess what? The fur hasn't been flying out retailers' doors, and any
Chicagoan knows why.
   The weather, of course.
   The third-mildest January in the city's history, plus a surprisingly warmer
February, has put retail fur sales into the tank. By how much is unclear, but
it looks like sales have plummeted 40 percent to 50 percent or more from a
year earlier.
   So for you bargain hunters, start checking furriers around town for marked-
down prices.
   "It's been a difficult last six weeks," reported William Koziel, VP-chief
financial officer of Evans Inc. "We had a great December, but the bottom fell
out of the market."
   Dick Braido, director of the fur salon at Saks Fifth Avenue on the
Magnificent Mile, agrees: "It has been tough."
   Braido says that Saks Chicago had its best November ever and a "pretty
good" December.
   But after that, Chicagoans didn't warm up to the need for furs, as
unseasonably wet, mild weather set in.
   The problem is even more acute at Andriana Furs, which earlier this week
filed for reorganization under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. Court
documents indicate assets of $5 million and liabilities of nearly $11 million,
including a $1.9 million bank loan.
   Andriana, which already had closed its location at 333 N. Michigan Ave.,
now is shutting down space at 919 N. Michigan. The lease there runs out next
month and won't be renewed. But Andriana will keep open its store at 2201 W.
95th St., near Evergreen Park.
Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 17:21:14 +0800
From: bunny 
To: ar-news@envirolink.org
Subject: (UK)CJD risk in vaccines given to children - scientists warn
Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19980223171319.145fc41e@wantree.com.au>
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BSE/CJD (NEW VARIANT) & BLOOD - UK
**********************************


Date: Sun, 22 Feb 1998 13:52:17 GMT

Source: News media


Scientists warn of CJD risk in vaccines given to children 

The [UK] government is preparing to warn doctors that British blood
products, including vaccines given to children, could be at risk of
contamination from CJD. A letter being drafted by Ken Calman, the chief
medical officer, will reveal that scientific advisers to a meeting of the
Committee on Proprietary Medicinal Products (CPMP), a pan-European advisory
body, this week have concluded that all products derived from British blood
- including vaccines - could transmit the disease.

British experts on CJD are anxious to emphasise that the life-saving
benefits of blood transfusions and vaccinations against killer diseases far
outweigh the risk of CJD, which is believed to be minimal. However, the
newly identified form of beef-related [nv]CJD can theoretically pass from
person to person and could be more infectious than "classic" CJD.  

Europe may impose a ban on the export of British blood and blood-derived
protein called albumin prepared from donor plasma, which is used in
pharmaceutical products including vaccines. This could provoke a political
outcry. Noel Wadhion, the committee's spokesman, said no formal response
would be made by the CPMP until the end of the week. The principal vaccine
containing human serum albumin is for measles, mumps and rubella (MMR), and
is received by millions of children. British supplies are produced in
America, which has no cases of the new variant of CJD. However, British
albumin is used in other vaccines and exported to vaccine manufacturers
elsewhere. 

Calman said blood collected here has a safety record second to none in terms
of risk of transmitting hepatitis, HIV or other viruses. "We don't know that
[sic] the theoretical risk of CJD transmission is from blood, if it's there
at all," he said. "The letter to doctors isn't finalised. We have discussed
the consequences of this report, but it depends on the final statements from
the European committee and advice from the Committee on Safety of Medicines
here. To get a blood product from another country which has a high risk of
some other infection doesn't seem a particularly good idea to me." 

Calman's letter will guide doctors on how to explain to patients what is
known so far about the risk from new-variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease
(nvCJD) which, it is emphasised, is far outweighed by the dangers of not
having the treatment. Ministers believe the public should be informed of any
risk of BSE infection, however slight - as they were over beef on the bone,
banned from sale in December. 

So far there have only been 23 confirmed cases of the so-called nvCJD [in
the UK]. However, [some] scientists think there are many more undiagnosed
victims. A World Health Organisation (WHO) meeting two weeks ago concluded
the possibility of a "significant nvCJD epidemic" in 10 years can no longer
be ignored. Martin Ziedler, an adviser on the disease at the WHO, said
calculations a year ago, when there were just 14 confirmed cases of nvCJD,
indicated there could be up to 80,000 more British victims. Now it is
impossible to predict the possible scale of any epidemic. 
=====================================================================
========
                   /`\   /`\    Rabbit Information Service,
Tom, Tom,         (/\ \-/ /\)   P.O.Box 30,
The piper's son,     )6 6(      Riverton,
Saved a pig        >{= Y =}<    Western Australia 6148
And away he run;    /'-^-'\  
So none could eat  (_)   (_)    email: rabbit@wantree.com.au
The pig so sweet    |  .  |  
Together they ran   |     |}    http://www.wantree.com.au/~rabbit/rabbit.htm
Down the street.    \_/^\_/    (Rabbit Information Service website updated
                                frequently)                                

Jesus was most likely a vegetarian... why aren't you? Go to
http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/4620/essene.htm
for more information.

It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
       - Voltaire

Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 02:15:21
From: David J Knowles 
To: ar-news@envirolink.org
Subject: [UK] Violence erupts at cat farm protest
Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980223021521.3ea7fc5c@dowco.com>
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>From The Electronic Telegraph - Monday, February 23rd, 1998

Violence erupts at cat farm protest

THIRTEEN people were arrested yesterday after a demonstration by hundreds
of animal rights protesters at a cat breeding farm.

At one stage during the demonstration at Hillgrove Farm, near Witney,
Oxfordshire, protesters tried to enter the premises, pulling down the
perimeter fence. Police had to put on protective gear and use shields after
they came under a hail of stones and missiles.

The 13 people arrested were detained on suspicion of criminal damage and
public order offences. Police estimated that up to 500 people took part in
the demonstration, one of a number held at the farm recently, and 280
officers policed the protest.

Later, about 150 protesters left the site and walked with a police escort
into Witney town centre. Acting Superintendent Dan Clacher said: "Once
again a concerted effort to over-run Hillgrove Farm was made by a large
number of determined, violent individuals.

He said: "Thames Valley police are happy to facilitate lawful protest but
it is clear some people attend these demonstrations in order to conduct
themselves in a criminal and intimidatory manner."

⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998

Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 02:19:18
From: David J Knowles 
To: ar-news@envirolink.org
Subject: [UK] RAF to help blitz the killer rats infesting Puffin Island
Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980223021918.3e672710@dowco.com>
Mime-Version: 1.0
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>From The Electronic Telegraph - Monday, February 23rd, 1998

RAF to help blitz the killer rats infesting Puffin Island
By David Brown, Agriculture Editor 

THE RAF has been called in to help conservationists destroy a huge colony
of rats that has overrun one of Britain's most important seabird sanctuaries.

Only a handful of puffins now survive on Puffin Island, Anglesey. At the
turn of the century, there were 2,000 on the island. Brown rats, which
escaped from a 19th-century shipwreck, have multiplied rapidly and eaten
most of the puffin eggs, chicks and even weak adult birds.

Now, other species of ground and cliff-nesting seabirds, including
razorbills, shags, guillemots, fulmars and kittiwakes are under threat. The
uninhabited island, one mile long and covering 70 acres protected by high
cliffs, is a designated Site of Special Scientific
Interest (SSSI) because of its wide variety of seabirds.

Today, weather permitting, a helicopter from RAF Valley in North Wales is
expected to help deliver more than one ton of rat poison to the island. The
helicopter is needed to enable professional pest controllers to move
cumbersome, 55lb bags of the Warfarin-based
poison to rat burrows in inaccessible parts of the island.

An advance party of pest controllers and conservationists who arrived last
week by boat found that the situation was worse than they feared. Huge
rats, fat from their rich diet of birds and eggs, ran across their feet as
they unloaded the first of the bags of poison.

The rat destruction programme has been organised by the Countryside Council
of Wales, the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds and SOREX, a
leading rat-poison company in Widnes, Cheshire, which has donated nearly
ú2,000-worth of poison to do the job.

Ian Anderson, the company's specialist in rodent control, said the mild
winter had helped swell the number of rats on the island, where there are
no natural predators to keep them in check.

⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998

Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 06:56:01 -0500
From: allen schubert 
To: ar-news@envirolink.org
Subject: (US) Cruel To Animal, Cruel to People
Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980223065558.006ffc78@pop3.clark.net>
Mime-Version: 1.0
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from CNN custom news http://www.cnn.com
------------------------------------------
North Carolina State News
Reuters
23-FEB-98

Cruel To Animal, Cruel to People

(CHARLOTTE) -- A new study shows people who are cruel to animals are more
likely to be cruel to people as well. The study at U-N-C-Charlotte took
nearly one thousand cases of animal cruelty and cross referenced them to
criminal records. They found more than one-thousand 9-1-1 calls to the same
address concerning the same person who had been investigated for animal
cruelty. Thirty-two percent of the calls were for disturbance, 31-percent
for domestic violence and 16-percent for assault on another member of the
household. They also found calls for sexual assault and mental health
problems involved the same person accused of animal cruelty. Animal rights
activists say this is more evidence for their claim that cruelty to animals
indicates deeper psychological and social problems. 
Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 07:02:48 -0500
From: allen schubert 
To: ar-news@envirolink.org
Subject: (US) Hog Farm Sent Packing
Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980223070245.006fde14@pop3.clark.net>
Mime-Version: 1.0
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factory farming/hog farming/environment
from CNN custom news http://www.cnn.com
------------------------------------------
Oklahoma State News
Reuters
23-FEB-98

Hog Farm Sent Packing

(HINTON) -- The rapidly growing hog industry in Oklahoma has slowed down a
notch. The Land-O-Lakes Corporation is backing out of a plan to build a
facility near Hinton. The Daily Oklahoman reports company executives backed
down after pressure from Methodists... who didn't want the operation
located near one of their church camps. Church members were worried odors
would settle into the canyon where the camp is located and a stream could
be contaminated by hog waste. Officials say Land-O-Lakes is still trying to
build hog farms elsewhere in Caddo County and in the panhandle. 
Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 08:35:19 -0800
From: Andrew Gach 
To: ar-news@envirolink.org
Subject: Animals underfed in South Korean zoo
Message-ID: <34F1A547.78C9@worldnet.att.net>
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In Korea's New Austerity Mode, Even the Chimps Learn to Scrimp

By HAE WON CHOI 
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

SEOUL, South Korea -- Like so many other residents of this economically
troubled country, Willy has been forced to cut back on
imported luxury goods.

For the four-month-old orangutan, that means no more expensive
imported bananas, pineapples and strawberries. Not even primates are
spared in these bad economic times.

Willy and 81 fellow chimpanzees, orangutans and monkeys residing in one
of Korea's largest zoos, Samsung Everland, are now eating more frugally.
Until further notice, they'll have to make do on locally grown apples
and carrots. "The people in Korea are all suffering, so the animals are
suffering as well," says Lee Gi Hwan, a veterinarian at the zoo.

Inside a tiny glass cubicle, Willy clings to his mother while she
scrounges in the hay on the floor for whole-wheat kernels left over from
breakfast. Dr. Lee says Willy and his parents have been swallowing the
new diet plan "fairly well." "So far we've noticed no agitation," he
says.

Zoo officials designed the austerity plan in part because the animals
aren't earning as much money as they used to: Fewer visitors come to the
zoo to see Willy in these days of economic austerity. The move will also
save precious dollars and cut overall costs, an Everland official says.

Monkeys are not bearing the economic sacrifices alone. Bears in the zoo
have seen their daily cracker intake cut down to five bags from ten. And
that's not all they are going without.

Zoo keepers say they will limit breeding of some mammals, especially
tigers and lions, to keep their numbers down by separating males and
females during their mating period.

To save energy, tigers and panda bears will have to live in
less-well-heated quarters. If anything, "it will give them the incentive
to stay outdoors and exercise more," Mr. Lee says. Elephants get covered
with thick blankets to help them adjust to the colder temperatures.

Shin Jong Taek, a general manager at Everland, says the animals are not
endangered by the change in diet because their calorie intake remains
the same. They are simply getting nourishment from less expensive local
sources.

"People have a fixed idea that monkeys have to eat bananas," says
Mr.Shin, "but animals adapt well to change."
Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 08:43:08 -0800
From: Andrew Gach 
To: ar-news@envirolink.org
Subject: Cattlemen sue Tyson foods
Message-ID: <34F1A71C.6FC7@worldnet.att.net>
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The Wall Street Journal Interactive Edition -- February 23, 1998
Cattlemen Claim Tyson Foods Fostered Regulatory Breaks

By BRUCE INGERSOLL 
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

WASHINGTON -- A group of cattlemen filed a $3 billion civil lawsuit
against Tyson Foods Inc., refusing to let the nation's biggest poultry
processor disentangle itself from the Mike Espy scandal.

The suit, which seeks class-action status, alleges that Tyson Foods gave
the former agriculture secretary and others $12,000 in illegal
gratuities in "a pattern of racketeering activity" to win preferential
treatment from Agriculture Department regulators.

The suit, filed in U.S. District Court here, seeks triple damages for
40,000 cattle ranchers and feedlot operators nationwide. They have lost
an estimated $1 billion since January 1993, the suit alleges, due to
regulatory favoritism toward Tyson and other poultry processors that
benefited from Tyson's purported influence.

Archie Schaffer, the Arkansas-based company's chief spokesman,
declined to comment until "our lawyers have a chance to examine the
suit."  Previously, Tyson officials have denied seeking regulatory
breaks from Mr. Espy or exercising undue influence over USDA policy
decisions about meat and poultry inspection.

The racketeering allegations will prolong what has been a three-year
embarrassment for Senior Chairman Don Tyson and the company that his
father founded. Last December, Mr. Tyson tried to move beyond the
Espy matter by striking a plea bargain with Independent Counsel Donald
Smaltz. The company pleaded guilty to one gratuity violation and paid $6
million in criminal fines and investigative costs. Neither Mr. Tyson nor
his son, John, the company's vice chairman, were charged with any 
wrongdoing.

But now nine cattle producers from Iowa, Minnesota, Texas, Georgia and
California accuse the Tysons and other company officials of violating
the racketeering statute, which is customarily used to prosecute
organized-crime figures.

Leading the well-financed assault on Tyson Foods are Wythe Willey, a
Cedar Rapids, Iowa, trial lawyer who served as chief of staff for former
Iowa Gov. Robert Ray, and Daniel Rinzel, a former federal prosecutor in
Washington.

Mr. Smaltz stopped short of making quid pro quo allegations, charging
instead that the company, mindful of Mr. Espy's "official duties,"
picked up the tab for sports tickets, limousine rides, plane trips and
gratuities while it had important business pending before him. Messrs.
Willey and Rinzel go further, alleging in the suit that the illegal
gratuities "did influence" Mr. Espy
and resulted in "specific favorable and preferential decisions."

Mr. Espy, who was forced out as secretary at the end of 1994, will go on
trial March 30 in federal court in Washington on the gratuity charges.
Over the weekend, defense lawyer Reid Weingarten asserted that Mr. Espy
never favored Tyson or violated the gratuity statute.

Because of regulatory inequities between poultry and meat, the
cattlemen's suit contends, Tyson has saved more than $200 million in
production costs and "gained an unfair competitive advantage" that has
cost cattle producers at least $1 billion. In March 1993, the department
decreed a "zero tolerance" policy against fecal matter on beef, and then
waited until July 1994 to set "a substantially less rigorous" policy for
poultry, the suit claims.
Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 08:48:30 -0800
From: Andrew Gach 
To: ar-news@envirolink.org
Subject: Dolly's creators lone a calf
Message-ID: <34F1A85E.65AB@worldnet.att.net>
MIME-Version: 1.0
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Dolly's creators clone a calf

Reuters News Service 
LONDON (February 23, 1998

The company that helped to clone Dolly the sheep announced Monday that
it had also cloned a calf. "Mr Jefferson," a healthy
98-pound Holstein breed, was born in Virginia on Feb. 16, President's
Day in the United States, said PPL Therapeutics chief Julian Cooper.

But unlike Dolly, whose creation a year ago made international headlines
and sparked fears that human cloning would not be far off, Mr. Jefferson
was produced by nuclear transfer from a fetal
cell, not from an adult cell line.

"This is an important development. The technique used was similar to
that used to produce Dolly and the world's first cloned transgenic lamb,
Polly," Cooper said in a statement.

"While the calf is not transgenic (carrying a human gene), we have shown
we can do the difficult part, and this success now opens the way to
producing transgenic cows using nuclear transfer, Polly having proved
the principle," he added.

PPL is one of the world's leading companies in the transgenic production
of human proteins for therapeutic use.

Scotland's Roslin Institute and PPL, its commercial partner, announced
the arrival of Dolly, the first-ever successful cloning of an adult
animal, exactly a year ago.

Although Dolly was born in July 1996, the news of her arrival and the
cloning technique was not published until February 1997.

Polly, the world's first transgenic lamb, followed several months later
and now scientists have shown they can use the technique to produce
cattle.

"From a commercial point of view, the most important feature is the
ability to produce small clones of transgenic animals from modified
cells. We have demonstrated we can do this with the
birth of Polly, and Mr. Jefferson shows we have the capability to extend
the technique to cattle," explained Dr. Ron James, PPL's managing
director.

Scientists at the Roslin Institute produced Dolly by taking the nucleus
out of a cell from the mammary gland of an adult animal and fusing it,
using an electrical current, into another sheep egg
cell from which the nucleus had been removed.

Polly had been genetically engineered to carry the human gene for the
production of the blood clotting agent Factor IX, which could help
hemophiliacs. The company hopes the sheep milk will
be a cheaper source of Factor IX and one free from any infection.

PPL has also used genetically engineered sheep to produce
alpha-1-antitrypsin (AAT), a human protein used to treat cystic fibrosis
patients, in their milk. They are currently testing it in human
volunteers.

The scientific euphoria over Dolly was dampened recently when some
scientists questioned whether Dolly was really a true clone.

Ian Wilmut, the scientist at Roslin which led the team that produced
Dolly, denied the claims and said he would prove it by comparing cells
frozen from the ewe that provided Dolly's genes and cells taken from
her.

By PATRICIA REANEY, Reuters
Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 12:50:51 -0800
From: Mesia Quartano 
To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" 
Subject: Contraceptive developed for stray cats
Message-ID: <34F1E12B.A6A71470@usa.net>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
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Contraceptive developed for stray cats
>From Environmental Newswire
Monday, February 23, 1998

Experts estimate that anywhere from 30 to 60 million stray cats roam the
United States. These feral cats are wreaking havoc on the nation's
songbird population
and raising public health concerns as they spread infectious diseases
and alter delicate ecological balances. To deal with this problem, a
Virginia-Maryland
Regional College of Veterinary Medicine student has come up with a new
way to control the birth rate of feral cats. Utilizing the prestigious
Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation grant, Michelle Meister-Weisbarth has
developed a genetically engineered bacterium to serve as an oral
contraceptive to control the unwanted
cat population.

Working with faculty mentor and molecular biologist, Dr. Stephen Boyle,
Meister-Weisbarth used genetic engineering technology to modify a strain
of the bacterium, Salmonella, which could then be delivered to feral
cats in the wild via a vaccine-laden bait.

According to Boyle, work in other laboratories around the world has
demonstrated the viability of using genetically altered strains of
Salmonella as vehicles for delivering vaccines, including oral
contraceptives. Controlling the birth rates of feral cats has been
difficult in the past, since conventional spay and neuter techniques
require surgery in a controlled environment. In addition, animal
control experts also note that eliminating or removing the cats does not
work well since others seem to migrate into the recently vacated niches.

The new technique starts with the utilization of genetic engineering
techniques to remove specific genes on the Salmonella genome making it
unable to cause disease. Meister-Weisbarth then introduced a gene
encoding a protein derived from the zona pellucida surrounding the
vertebrate egg into the Salmonella. The
bacterial vaccine is capable of inducing the production of antibodies
which recognize the zona pellucida and block the ability of a sperm to
fertilize the egg.

Boyle says the attenuated strain cannot cause disease, making it
especially useful as a vehicle for delivering an immuno-contraceptive
agent since once ingested it survives in the stomach and crosses the
intestinal tract to cells in the immune
system. Once in  the cells of the immune system, the Salmonella are
killed and the zona pellucida antigen is released and stimulates
production of antibodies. Because these antibodies bind to the zona
pellucida surrounding the egg, they inhibit the binding of sperm and
thus block fertilization.

Scientists have been working on various ways of delivering vaccines for
rabies into wild populations in the form of bait. Doyle and
Meister-Weisbath both believe these methods can be modified to deliver
the genetically-engineered Salmonella as an oral immuno-contraceptive.

The next phase of research, for which the team is soliciting funding,
will involve testing the attenuated Salmonella on lab animals.

For more information, contact Jeffrey S. Douglas, (540)231-7911,
email: jdouglas@vt.edu.

Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 10:55:18 PST
From: "Gudrun Ensslin" 
To: ar-news@envirolink.org
Subject: RE:(UK)Violence erupts at cat farm protest
Message-ID: <19980223185518.1302.qmail@hotmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-++-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-++-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-++-+-+-+-+-+
                      SAVE THE HILLGROVE CATS
                 Box CB, 111 Magdalen Road, Oxford.
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-++-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-++-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-++-+-+-+-+-+

  *   http://envirolink.org/arrs/arc/campaigns/hillgrove.html    *

Just to balance out the fictionalised accounts given by the Telegraph 
here is a short report on the Hillgrove Farm demonstration that occured 
yesterday (Sunday 22 February):

Over a thousand people from around the country descended on Hillgrove 
Farm in Oxfordshire yesterday to protest at the cat breeding facility 
that is being run there by Farmer Brown who sells the cats for  
vivisection.
The impressive amount of people attending the demo meant that the police 
were very spread out around the facility resulting, at one point, in a 
small part of fence being pulled down.  Nobody attempted to 'storm' the 
farm and, in contradiction to the fine journalists at the Telegraph, 
many of the police were well protected with body armour prior to this 
incident.  Those same police then proceeded to rush the crowd in groups 
to make 'snatch' arrests on those they thought responsible for the fence 
being broken.
The police acted extremely provocatively running towards peaceful 
protestors, which consisted of many elderly people and children, with 
batons and shields.  Also the mounted police rode at high speed into 
sections of the crowd.  At this point some mud was thrown at the police  
but there were no rocks to be seen being thrown by anybody, although in 
his defense perhaps the journalist was not a Geology student.   
At 3pm about 500 of the demonstrators split into two groups and 
proceeded to march into Witney town centre.  Leaflets on the disgusting 
trade of Farmer Brown were given to local people who were extremely 
supportive and showed genuine embarressment and animosity at living in 
the vicinity of such a place as Hillgrove Farm.
At the end of the march the frustrated police started making further 
snatch arrests and some protestors were assaulted whilst being detained.
In total 13 were arrested on public order offences. 

This demo follows on from the hugely successful actions that have 
occured at the farm over the last 18 months which has brought incredible 
pressure to bear on Farmer Brown and the local Thames Valley Police.  
The police were recently the subject of a BBC documentary in which the 
Superintendant was quite diplomatic in his view that they are nothing 
more than Brown's personal, free security firm.
There is usually a handful of protestors at the farm every day which 
means that there is a constant prescence of policemen there as well as 
Brown's own security men.  It has cost the Thames Valley Police in 
excess of ú500,000 to protect this one man in a policing area of over 2 
million people.  
This cannot and will not carry on much longer.
Like other animal rights actions over the last few years (e.g. Coventry 
Airport calf exports, Consort Bioservices dog breeders etc) the moral 
and physical weight of those who care will outweigh the petty business 
transactions of an uncompassionate and sadistic individual.
 
Write to Mr. R J Lysons, Home Office, Spring Gardens House, Princes St., 
Swindon. SN1 2JA,
demanding that he revokes Hillgrove's License and closes them 
immediately. 

Write to your local MP asking him/her to investigate Hillgrove's evil 
trade further. 
Your MP, 
House of
Commons, Westminster, London SW1A 0AA.  

If you would like more information and a free Hillgrove information pack 
please write to us at the address below.

Write to the following newspapers highlighting Hillgrove's trade. This 
is important because it keeps Hillgrove in the public eye locally.

The Oxford Mail/Star
Osney Mead
OXFORD
OX2 0EJ

Witney Gazette
47 Market Square
Witney
OX8 6AJ

The Standard
74 Dyer Street
Cirencester
GL7 2PW

http://envirolink.org/arrs/arc/campaigns/hillgrove.html

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-++-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-++-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-++-+-+-+-+-+
                      SAVE THE HILLGROVE CATS
                 Box CB, 111 Magdalen Road, Oxford.
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-++-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-++-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-++-+-+-+-+-+

______________________________________________________
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 11:03:02 -0800
From: LCartLng@gvn.net (Lawrence Carter-Long)
To: kuma@cyberway.com.sg
Cc: ar-news@envirolink.org
Subject: Re: RFI: CSPI and IFDP addresses needed
Message-ID: <199802231853.NAA16593@envirolink.org>
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

Vadivu Govind asked:

>Does anyone have website, email, postal addresses and fax of :
>Institute for Food and Development Policy and
>Center for Science in the Public Interest 
>
>Thanks.

 Vadivu -

Try these:

CSPI 
1875 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Suite 300,
Washington, DC 20009 USA
Tel:  (202) 332-9110, 
Fax: (202) 265-4954
E-mail: cspi@cspinet.org 
URL: http://www.cspinet.org/

The Institute for Food and Development Policy (Food First)
398 60th Street, Oakland, CA 94618 USA
Tel: (510) 654-4400
Fax: (510) 654-4551
E-mail: foodfirst@igc.apc.org
URL: http:// www.foodfirst.org

Hope this helps!

Yours, for the liberation of all beings,

Lawrence Carter-Long
Science and Research Issues, Animal Protection Institute
email: LCartLng@gvn.net, phone: 800-348-7387 x. 215
world wide web: http://www.api4animals.org/

"Xenotransplantation is a unique medical enterprise.  It 
puts the public at risk for the benefit of the individual."

Dr. Fritz Bach, Harvard University School of Medicine
New York Times, February 3, 1998

-----Annoying Warning Notice -------

My email address is: LCartLng@gvn.net
 
LEGAL NOTICE: Anyone sending unsolicited commercial 
email to this address will be charged a $500 proofreading 
fee. This is an official notification; failure to abide by this 
will result in  legal action, as per the following:

By U.S. Code Title 47, Sec.227(a)(2)(B), a computer/modem/printer
 meets the definition of a telephone fax machine.
By Sec.227(b)(1)(C), it is unlawful to send any unsolicited
 advertisement to such equipment.
By Sec.227(b)(3)(C), a violation of the aforementioned Section
 is punishable by action to recover actual monetary loss, or 
 $500, whichever is greater, by each violation.



Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 19:09:20 +0000
From: "Miggi" 
To: ar-news@envirolink.org
Subject: [UK] 12 arrested in cat farm protest
Message-ID: <199802231907.TAA07500@serv4.vossnet.co.uk>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit

> The Guardian 23/02/98

12 ARRESTED IN CAT FARM PROTEST
280 police with riot shields clash with animal rights campaigners

Anti-vivisection cam-paigners yesterday tore down metal fencing around a cat breading farm in
Oxfordshire and clashed with mounted police as a dozen people were arrested.
In the largest demonstra-tion so far at Hillgrove Farm, near Witney, around 600 pro-testers, many
disguised in ba-laclava helmets, tried to break into free kittens. At least 280 officers riot shields.
backed up by tracker dogs and a helicopter, prevented animal rights activists from reaching the
buildings. There were no injuries.
Hillgrove, which has bred cats for medical research for nearly 30 years, has become a national
focus for protests. Protecting the farm has cost Thames  Valley  Police ú500,000, An even larger
dem-onstration is planned for April to mark World Week for Laboratory Animals.
The demonstration began peacefully, with families sing-ing and holding placards showing cats
being dissected. The site around the farm's perimeter was cordoned off, and those entering were
searched for weapons. As mounted police rode in to stop protesters from pulling down fence,
rocks were thrown.
Sergeant Helen Roberts said "We have a duty to protect the property and the farmer's family from
these activities." The farms owner, Christopher Brown, called the protesters an "anarchic mob"
 who enjoyed causingtrouble. Last week he was one of several targets for hoax bombs sent -by a
splinter sec-tion of the Animal Liberation Front.
Some animals he bred were used to test vaccines that would eventually protect cats from illness,
he said. But Susan Walker, of Dover, Kent. an ALF member, said: "We will protest here until this
has closed down, It is a bar-baric trade out of the dark ages. He should pay for the policing, not
the taxpayer."
An ALF spokesman said: "We are trying to stop them from breeding animals for vivisection.
Anyone who saw these cats during the experi-ments  would be horrified."
The 12 arrests were for alleged criminal damage and public order offences.
Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 14:07:52 -0600
From: Steve Barney 
To: AR-News 
Subject: [US] "County Board votes to study keeping monkeys" (TCT-2/20/98)
Message-ID: <34F1D718.73144BBF@uwosh.edu>
MIME-version: 1.0
Content-type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit

"County Board votes to study keeping monkeys"
By Jason Shepard
Correspondent for The Capital Time
The Capital Times
Madison, WI
US
Friday, Feb. 20, 1998
Page 2A 

-- Beginning --

County Board votes to study keeping monkeys

By Jason Shepard
Correspondent for The Capital Time 

Despite an effort by University of Wisconsin officials to persuade
county officials otherwise, the Dane County Board has voted to conduct
an in-depth study into keeping at least some UW monkeys at the Henry
Vilas Zoo.

Just how significant the vote is can be debated, since both Zoo Director
David Hall and County Executive Kathleen Falk have been studying options
to keep the monkeys for the past month.  But the 27-5 vote now requires
the Zoo Commission to formally conduct a study and present findings to
the County Board for a vote, possibly on March 5.

As part of the plan approved Thursday, the county will again ask the
University of Wisconsin-Madison to extend the March 2 deadline by which
the county is required to give the UW a "firm commitment" about its
plans to keep the monkeys.  The County Board is asking the UW to extend
the deadline until March 31.

At least 10 UW administrators and veterinarians registered in opposition
to the study, and each spent their five minutes of comment time at the
meeting outlining various problems associated with a county takeover of
the monkeys.

The County Board vote is the latest in a string of attempts by county
residents to keep the 150 macaques at the zoo.  The UW has owned and
operated the round monkey house at the zoo for 35 years, but because of
a federal funding cut the UW is looking for new homes for the animals. 
Mounting community opposition has caused the UW to delay its plans, and
monkey supporters are attempting to find the necessary funding to keep
the monkeys at the zoo.

Officials now estimate that it would cost the county more than $200,000
a year to keep all of the monkeys.  Some suggestions include keeping one
or two of the three troops in Madison, while finding homes for the
others, thus reducing costs.  But UW officials have been trying to
persuade the county that the monkeys are too difficult to manage.

The split between those who want the monkeys to remain in Madison and
those who do not was visible throughout the evening.

UW primate center administrators and veterinarians sat on one side of
the room, continuously talking to one another during the meeting and
organizing what each was going to say.  Their arguments ranged from the
health risks posed by the monkeys, to the high costs of funding the
facility, to the complex management of the monkey colonies.  Some UW
veterinarians - including Rick Lane and Joe Thulin - went further,
saying it was not appropriate for the county to spend taxpayer money on
the monkeys.

On the other side of the room sat animal rights activists, community
members and UW employees who want to keep the monkeys in town.  They too
whispered back and forth while UW officials spoke.

"Unfortunately, the monkeys are caught in the middle of a battle between
the UW and the animal rights folks," said Sup. Thomas Stoebig, District
15, author of the resolution calling for the study.

Following the meeting, Joe Kemnitz, interim director of the Wisconsin
Regional Primate Research Center, said UW officials want county
officials to understand the complexity of managing the monkey troops.

And despite registration cards showing that most of the primate center
officials registered in opposition to the study, Kemnitz said there are
no hidden agendas that involve shipping the monkeys to another research
facility.  "We feel we have a responsibility to provide accurate and
complete information to the county," Kemnitz said.

Hall responds: A middleman throughout the monkey controversy over the
past several months has been David Hall, director of the zoo.  Hall has
not advocated keeping the monkeys and has said that moving them
elsewhere probably would be best for the UW and the zoo.  He has based
his concerns on management complexity, potential health risks and the
large costs of caring for the monkeys.

But after the 2 1/2 hours of public comment Thursday, county supervisors
had a lot of questions without answers.

"I don't mean to put you on the spot, but I'm going to have to.  Who are
we to believe?" asked Sup. Regina Rhyne, District 13, which includes the
zoo.  These monkeys have been here for 35 years," she said.  She added,
relating to possible health risks associated with the Herpes B-exposed
monkeys: "Yes, there is a risk.  But there's a risk just walking into
this meeting."

Hall, who was asked repeated questions by board members, briefly
outlined his contacts with Kemnitz, and said it wasn't until November
that the monkeys' fate became a critical issue.  Prior to then, Hall
said he knew the UW was planning to abandon the facility, but thought it
would be sometime within the next five years.  It wasn't until the
funding cut in November that the issue got fast-tracked.

Extension wanted: One of the sticking points in the County Board debate
was the deadline for the Zoo Commission study.  The UW has given the
county a March 2 deadline for a firm commitment to keep the monkeys.  A
memo to Falk from UW Graduate School Dean Virginia Hinshaw said that if
the county doesn't commit by then, the UW will proceed with plans to
ship the monkeys, likely to a research facility in Louisiana and to
Thailand.

However, an amendment approved Thursday pushes the report date back to
March 31, implicitly asking the UW to agree to the delay.  But that may
not happen , Kemnitz said after the meeting.

"It's not my call," Kemnitz said.  "But I have no information that the
university plans to change its current position."  He noted that the UW
has already extended the deadline once before, at the request of the Zoo
Commission.

-- End --

More related information is available at:

     http://www.uwosh.edu/organizations/alag/Issues.html

Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 16:03:32 -0500
From: Patrick Nolan 
To: Vadivu Govind 
Cc: ar-news 
Subject: re: RFI: CSPI and IFDP addresses needed
Message-ID: <34F1E423.1F146CF0@animalwelfare.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Vadivu Govind asked:

> Does anyone have website, email, postal addresses and fax of :
> Institute for Food and Development Policy and
> Center for Science in the Public Interest

The Institute for Food and Development Policy (Food First): 398 60th
Street, Oakland, CA 94618 USA, Tel: (510) 654-4400, Fax: (510) 654-4551
E-mail: foodfirst@igc.apc.org; website: http://www.foodfirst.org

Center for Science in the Public Interest: 1875 Connecticut Avenue, NW,
Suite 300, Washington, DC 20009, phone (202)  332-9110, fax (202)
265-4954, or by e-mail cspi@cspinet.org; website: http://www.cspinet.org



Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 15:19:27 +0100
From: 2033491 <2033491@campus.uab.es>
To: ar-news@envirolink.org
Subject: 15 poisoned vultures in Spain
Message-ID: <01ITX9OL22ZW00KV2O@cc.uab.es>
MIME-version: 1.0
Content-type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-disposition: inline
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit

This is N·ria from Barcelona.

In the Ronda chain of mountains, in southern Spain, the corpses of 15 wild 
poisoned vultures have been found. 
The responsible for the Center of Recovery for Vultures has declared that 
every year vultures are poisoned  by hunters and cattle raisers, despite 
vultures don't attack alive animals. The case is now hitting the public 
opinion and police is investigating. But nothing can be done for the mighty 
little vultures that may have become orphans.

******************************************************************************
**************************************
"Arribarα un dia en quΦ els homes veuran l'assassinat d'un animal de la mateixa manera que avui
veuen el d'un home."
"A day will come in which men will look upon an animal's murder the same way they look today
upon a man's murder."

Leonardo da Vinci

Nuri's Homepage of Animal Rights and Scientific Anti-Vivisectionism
http://www.geocities.com/heartland/hills/3787

Date: Mon, 23 Feb 98 16:09:09 UTC
From: SDURBIN@VM.TULSA.CC.OK.US
To: ar-news@Envirolink.org
Subject: Feathered and Furry Madonnas
Message-ID: <199802232215.RAA24969@envirolink.org>

(From Vegetarian Times by Susan Chernak McElroy)
"Nurturing  Lessons from Nature's Mothers"

It is spring in the Rockies. The aspens are budding, and the buffalo herd
that grazes down the road includes tottering red calves with noses like old,
bent  boots. Magpie fledglings caterwaul from their nests of broken twigs
and horse hair. And by the river, the cow moose is shadowed by a gangly,
miniature version of herself. We usually think of springtime as the seasonal
celebration of birth and babies, but spring is truly the season of the mother.

Following the long dark winter, I witness vignettes of the maternal soul in
action on my farm. These tender dramas always seem to begin with birds. Our
Black Silkie Banty hen starts tending her clutch of eggs in late February.
Always, her dedication amazes me: Three weeks of devoted sitting with a very
few moments away each day to snatch a mouthful of corn and a sip of water.
So patiently she waits, trusting an inner call that promises life. A day or
two before the eggs are ready to hatch, the Silkie begins a tender "cluck-
cluck" to her brood. "Soon, soon," she seems to say to her yet-unborn
chicks, like any proud, expectant mother would.

The actual hatching process takes up to two days. Emerging, finally,
cotton soft and colored like river stones, each new chick is a bundle of
life and promise, a blessing to the hen for her maternal gifts of
patience and dedication.

So patient and dedicated is she to shepherding new life that whatever
appears beneath her small, feathered bosom is tended lovingly and
completely with no concern for breed or bloodlines.  I have even
placed duck eggs beneath that hen, and never has she protested. In
the confines of that tattered henhouse, I am reminded again and again
of the rare quality of unconditional acceptance - the epitome of Motherhood.

Around the henhouse, other mother dioramas unfold.  Nesting robins,
magpies and jays bombard my dog and cats for daring to venture too near.
As I watch a magpie chase off a hungry gray fox, I remember that mothering
isn't only about soft murmurs and caresses. Mothering is about courage:
mighty, determined, death-defying.

Native storyteller Joseph Bruchac speculates that animals are perhaps
wiser than we are and that "a bear never forgets that it is a bear, yet
human beings often forget what a human must do. Humans forget to take
care of their families...."  Perhaps we would benefit from a refresher
course about the maternal soul and the deeper meanings of nurturing.
There is no better season than spring to celebrate the mother. And no
better teachers than our feathered and furry Madonnas.

(By Susan Chernak McElroy)

-- Sherrill
Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 22:37:56 -0000
From: "Dave Shepherdson" 
To: "Andrew Gray Green" ,
        "AR-News" ,
        "Barrie Wood green" ,
        "Caroline Corner Green" ,
        "David Wood Green" ,
        "Hugh Agnew Green" ,
        "John Hartshorne Green" ,
        "John Norris Green" ,
        "Johnathan Skidmore" ,
        "Ken Sproat" ,
        "Nick Best Green" ,
        "Peter Goodwin Green" ,
        "Phil Capon  E-Mail" ,
        "Richard Hopkins" ,
        "Richard Swales Green" ,
        "Sarah Banks Green" ,
        "Simeon Hope Green" 
Subject: Animal Rights Trial
Message-ID: <01bd40ab$af7f9040$LocalHost@dave-s-computer>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain;
     charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit

Liz Crocker a member of Newcastle Green Party together with two members of
the Corneyhaugh Fur Farm Campaign where arrested for taking part in
demonstrations against Corneyhaugh Mink Farm.

Their trial is the first to use the Protection from Harrasment Act which was
suposed to be a law to stop people being stalked.

The trial is due to take place from Wednesday to Friday this week at
Bedlington Magistrates Court.

There will be a demonstration at the fur farm Saturday starting at 1pm and
transport will be available from the Central Station in Newcaste at 12.00
noon.


Newcastle Green Party


Contact Liz Crocker 0191 2616151     or Phil Capon 01207 562150


Newcastle Green Party Press Release
The first trial to be brought against protesters under the Protection from
Harassment Act 1997 will begin at Bedlington Magistrates Court on 25
February 1998.

Laura Nicol, Liz Crocker and Steven Tindale are accused of harassing the
proprietors of Cornyhaugh Mink Farm (Ponteland, Northumberland) between the
4th and 25th September 1997 when they were arrested. The defendants (also
believed to be the first demonstrators to have been arrested and indicted
under the Act) are accused of trespassing on the land of the owner (Mr
Harrison) during what is alleged to have been a sustained campaign to close
down the farm.

The campaign followed an undercover investigation in July 1997 which
revealed the apalling conditions in which mink are kept at the farm.

The trial of the three protesters is expected to last 3 days and will be
heard before a stipendiary magistrate. The prosecutor in this case is Neil
Addison, author of the book BlackstoneÆs Guide to the Protection from
Harassment Act 1997, and one of the countryÆs leading barristers in the
field of harassment.

The Protection from Harassment Act, which was passed last year, was designed
to protect women from stalkers. The trial of the protesters has vindicated
fears expressed by civil liberties groups when the Act was proceeding
through Parliament that the definition of æharassmentÆ in the Act was so
wide ranging that it could be used by the police to stifle the legitimate
activities of protesters. Protesters claim that the use of this Act against
demonstrators breaches the European Convention of Human Rights which
recognises the right to free speech and assembly.





Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 15:49:00 -0800
From: Michael Kundu 
To: ar-news@envirolink.org
Subject: Makah Gray Whale Hunt Town Meeting Report
Message-ID: <3.0.5.32.19980223154900.007bd720@pop.seanet.com>
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/enriched; charset="iso-8859-1"


Whale Guardians Town Meeting Report Saturday, Feb. 21, 1998, Friday Harbor
More than 100 people attended a 2-hour long meeting in Friday Harbor to discuss deterring the start of a west coast gray whale hunt by the Makah tribe of Neah Bay. Attendees included a number of whale watching industry owners and regional business members. Initiated as a joint effort between US Congressman Jack Metcalf, Friday Harbor Port Commissioner Brian Calvert, and the Sea Shepherd Conservation SocietyÆs Northwest Coordinator Michael Kundu, the town meeting was the first panel forum of SSCSÆ Whale Guardians Network, a consortium of activists, business owners and citizens concerned about the negative impacts of the Makah Gray whale hunt. With the meeting hall filled to capacity, the event was moderated by Port Commissioner Brian Calvert; speakers included Michael Kundu (who showed graphic videotape of a Gray whale hunt Sea Shepherd infiltrated in Russia this past August and discussed the potential regional economic and ecosystem impacts of such a hunt), PAWSÆ Will Anderson (who discussed efforts to implement an alternative non-intrusive whale watching industry instead of the hunt), AWIÆs Ben White (who discussed international implications of the Makah hunt), Dr. Toni Frohoff (a marine biologist representing HSUS and EII who discussed the threats facing the Gray whale along itÆs migratory route), ôBinki,ö (a respected Makah elder who has waged a tireless campaign both in Neah Bay and internationally to represent the many Makah people who themselves oppose this hunt) and US Congressman Jack Metcalf (who discussed a lawsuit which is presently being pursued against the Makah tribe through their representatives in the federal government.) The audience included regional whale watching, sea kayaking and hotel owners, both from British Columbia and Washington state, as well as dozens of tourists, local scientists and concerned citizens. Identifiable media present included KOMO TV, the Seattle Times and Journal of the San JuanÆs. Some of the more notable points discussed included the increased business and liability expenses that eco-tourism based industry operators will encounter; the possibility of aggression to small craft owners and operators by injured and/or harassed Gray whales; the broader ramification of the ôculturally-basedö Makah hunt on foreign whaling plans; the circumventing of public policy by the United States government in support of the Makah hunt; the possibility of injury that regional boaters may encounter through the Makah tribeÆs use of .50-calibre bullets during the hunt. There appeared to be no supporters of the hunt present, and it is hereby assumed that the majority of the people present were opposed to the Makah whale hunt. Calls-to-action included a recommendation that eco-tourism based business owners combine and explore a legal challenge directly against the Makah tribe (who would be conducting an activity which would directly impact the industryÆs livelihood); that people in the room support the lawsuit initiated by Breach/AFA; that people in the room join and support the Whale Guardian Network; that people in the room contact Senator Gary Strannigan to support a State Resolution which he will be introduced within the next few weeks; that residents of WA encourage their regional towns and cities to draft resolutions to condemn the Makah hunt. Some members of the whale watching industry expressed a willingness to help the Makah tribe explore the possibility of establishing an alternative whale watching industry at Neah Bay, as opposed to the killing of Gray whales. Another consensus by groups present was to support a non-lethal æritual whale huntÆ which would involve the Makah conducting their traditional preparations, but without actually touching the whale during their last approach. Discussion centered on how much publicity and revitalization of heritage this sort of activity cold potentially benefit the tribe. All groups present said they would support the tribe if they were to take this approach. Another suggestion following the meeting came to hold similar panel discussions in other regions of the northwest, including perhaps Bellingham, Port Angeles, Westport and Seattle, WA or Victoria and Vancouver BC. This idea is presently being explored. I want to thank everyone who attended and participated at this forum. Further information is available from Michael Kundu, Sea ShepherdÆs pacific Northwest Coordinator @ ProjectSeaWolf@seanet.com. Michael Kundu Project SeaWolf/Arcturus Adventure Communications Marysville, WA **NOTE: Email address change -- ProjectSeaWolf@seanet.com
Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 15:35:10 -0500 From: "Bina Robinson" To: Subject: killing wildlife in Frnce Message-ID: <199802240025.TAA15352@net3.netacc.net> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit >From February 23, 1998 FRANCE'S ANGRY COUNTRYMEN "The Economist" Feb. 21/98 p.51 It was by far the biggest demonstration in France's capital since the left came to power in June. Some 140,000 militants turned out on February 15th. The unemployed? Farmers? Truckers? Hospital Workers? Not this time. The protesters were denouncing a perceived threat to one of the Frenchman's most jealously guarded rights, won in the first flush of the French Revolution: to hunt and shoot wild animals and birds with abandon, With a bare month to go before regional elections the massive turnout in Paris gave a timely boost to a party that calls itself "Hunting, Nature, Fishing, Traditions". With 1.6m (million) regular paid-up "chasseurs" (not counting another 3.5m occasional field-sportsmen), France has more people licensed to go after game than any other country in Europe. It outguns the British by two to one, the Germans by five to one (though proportionately more Scandinavians shoot and hunt). Most French aficionados are blue-collar workers or small farmers. In the most recent election to Europe's parliament, the field-sports party got 4% of the vote. In next month's regional elections it hopes to win around 50 seats, double its score six years ago, thus securing the balance of power on quite a few councils. The "chasseurs" form a lobby no political party can ignore. All the main parties except the Greens, who are against blood sports, were represented in the march. A British delegation was there too, limbering up for a rally in London on March 1st in protest against a proposed ban on foxhunting that is backed by most of Britain's Labour MPs. France's chasseurs have three main moans. They fear that a 1979 European Union directive, passed to protect migrant birds but largely ignored in France, may at last be enforced. They are worried that France's government, under pressure from the European Court of Justice, may repeal a French law obliging owners of small pieces of land to let field-sprotsmen on to their property. And they fret that another EU directive, issued in 1992 and called "Natura 2000", which is supposed to protect habitats of rare flora or fauna, will further restrict shooting rights. More than 1,000 potential sites have been suggested, covering some 13% of French land. Last week the Socialist prime minister, Lionel Jospin, tried to soothe the sportsmen. He told a newspaper in the south-west, the hunting and shooting heartland where people still bring down migrant turtle-doves and pigeons despite EU laws, that he would renegotiate the Brussels birds directive. And he would not repeal a law letting shooters tramp over private property of less than 20 hectares (100 hectares in the mountains), whatever landowners' wishes. But Mr Jospin may be hard pressed to keep such promises. Last November, the European Commission formally told the French government to bring its laws into line with the birds directive, or risk a hefty fine. So 11 of France's 96 administrative "departements" decided for the first time this year toclose the shooting season for migrant birds on January 31st, a month earlier than usual. Then, in December, the European Court of Justice agreed to review a complaint from three French animal-rights campaigners, backed by the the European Commission on Human Rights, who say that the French law letting shooters on to smallholders' land violates property rights and freedom of association-because it forces people to become de facto members of the local field-sports association. The campaigners say French law also favours the rich, since landowners with more than 20 hectares are exempted. If the court rules against France, the law will probably have to change, whatever Mr Jospin says. - END Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 19:46:57 -0500 From: "Bina Robinson" To: Subject: Irondequoit deer/ ALF Message-ID: <199802240035.TAA16577@net3.netacc.net> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit 6 pm News on channel ten, Rochester NY, reported that a man walking his dog in Durand Eastman Park noticed a bomb warning painted on the pavement near the start of a hiking trail. He notified police who closed off all park entrances and summoned the bomb squad. The bombs were realist looking with copper wires sticking into ground but turned out to be fakes. County Parks Supervisor Alan Cassidy received a suspicious envelope in his mailbox. That too turned out to be harmless but contained a note warning what might happen if deer bait and shoot program was not halted. It was signed by ALF. Police are investigating. Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 21:05:27 -0500 From: allen schubert To: ar-news@envirolink.org Subject: (US) Defense witness contends cattlemen made money when prices fell Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980223210524.006cda1c@pop3.clark.net> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" from Amarillo Globe-News http://www.amarillonet.com/oprah/ --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Web posted Monday, February 23, 1998 7:18 p.m. CT Defense witness contends cattlemen made money when prices fell By CHIP CHANDLER Globe-News Staff Writer Cattlemen who are suing Oprah Winfrey for causing a cattle market crash actually made money when prices fell, a defense witness theorized in an abbreviated court session Monday. Bettina Whyte, an expert witness on damage calculations, said that any damages Paul Engler, Cactus Growers or Texas Beef Group suffered when markets dropped April 16, 1996, were offset by savings they saw in purchasing cattle at the same time. If cattle were sold for prices lower than the plaintiffs expected, she said, cattle could also be bought for lower prices. She described charts to the jury with an "alleged damage period" of 2 1/2 to three weeks in which prices were lower than the $59 per hundredweight they were on April 15, 1996. She emphasized that her charts only assumed Winfrey's show was the cause of the market drop and not other factors. Under that theory, Cactus Growers suffered $228,202 in damages, she said. That was offset by $134,640 they made through earlier contracts to sell some of their cattle and by $514,817 they saved in buying cattle for lower prices, she said. "After the offsets, there would be no loss. There would be no damage," she said. The same holds true for Engler and Texas Beef Group, she said. That theory does not use a $61.90 weekly average price the plaintiffs are using for their damage theories, she said under cross-examination. Plaintiffs' attorney Michael St. Denis also pointed out that Cactus Growers and meat packers are paid on the weekly weighted average price, not one day's price. U.S. District Judge Mary Lou Robinson recessed court about 3:40 p.m. Monday, telling jurors only that an unspecified matter required "the court's immediate attention." Amarillo Police Department Sgt. Gerald Bailey said that Texas Beef Group attorney David Mullin's home had been vandalized. Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 22:09:28 -0500 From: Vegetarian Resource Center To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org Subject: FEATURE/Don't Let Your Doctor Give You Horse Urine! -There are better treatments Message-ID: Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit FEATURE/Don't Let Your Doctor Give You Horse Urine! There are better treatments for menopause --(BUSINESS WIRE FEATURES)-- áááá That's part of the message of an important new book called Natural Hormone Replacement for Women Over 45, by Jonathan V. Wright, MD, and John Morgenthaler. áááá This book about natural options for menopause treatment is still hot off the press and has already sold (not merely printed but "sold") 30,000 copies! áááá The startling fact brought to light in this book is that one of the most commonly prescribed treatments for menopause -- Premarin(R) -- is made from the urine of pregnant horses. It does contain estrogen, but it is horse- estrogen -- not human estrogen. The other most common drug treatment is Provera(R), a progesterone-substitute with a long list of unpleasant side effects. This drug is also not a human hormone. áááá But the real thing is available ... human hormones (estrogens and progesterone) which are identical to the hormones found in a woman's body. This is not an herbal treatment approach -- it involves the use of real hormones to replace the falling levels of estrogens and progesterone in menopause. áááá And the use of these natural, human hormones are rapidly gaining in popularity among practitioners of natural medicine -- medical doctors like Dr. Wright and 2,000 to 3,000 others around the US. áááá An important new book, Natural Hormone Replacement for Women Over 45, by Jonathan V. Wright, MD, and John Morgenthaler, provides in-depth coverage of the dangers women face with unnatural horse estrogen (Premarin) and synthetic drugs like Provera as well as the benefits of natural estrogens and progesterone. According to Wright and Morgenthaler, the natural hormones work as well as, or better than, Premarin and Provera at alleviating hot flashes and other menopausal symptoms and protecting against heart disease and osteoporosis, while producing far fewer unwanted or dangerous side effects. áááá Natural Hormone Replacement is available from Smart Publications (800/976-2783) for $9.95. áááá As a public service, Smart Publications also offers a great deal of free information on this and other health issues on their web site at: http://www.smart-publications.com. ááááá Note to Editors: Please call for a free review copy. Authorsá available for interview. CONTACT: Smart Publications, Petaluma Michael Hamm, 707/769-8308 Date: Tue, 24 Feb 1998 11:33:50 +0800 From: jwed To: ar-news@envirolink.org Subject: (CN) Pangolins and Bear Paws Message-ID: <3.0.5.32.19980224113350.00798100@pop.hkstar.com> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" China Daily - 24th February 1998 NINETEEN caged live pangolins were confiscated on Saturday afternoon in the Baiyun Airport of Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, the Guangzhou-based Yangcheng Evening News reported on Sunday. The confiscations also included nine killed pangolins and 87 black bear paws. Both pangolins and black bears are under second-class State protection. They were discovered by the airport staff while unloading the boxes marked as "food." Two persons from Sichuan were taken into custody by airport police when they came to pick up the goods. Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 19:55:21 -0800 From: Michael Kundu To: ar-news@envirolink.org Subject: Makah whale hunt Message-ID: <3.0.5.32.19980223195521.007c2c40@pop.seanet.com> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Seriously, now! A quick wake up call folks -- so far I've only received 2 letters of support for Gary Strannigan's state resolution condemning the hunt -- maybe I was wrong about it, but I told him people were actually concerned about the Makah hunt. The letters need to be there when the resolution is introduced (any day now); come now, 3 or 4 sentences shouldn't take too long to author, my whale protecting brethren. Again, write to Senator Gray Strannigan, c/o Senate Office, John A Cherberg Bldg., Olympia, WA 98504-0482. fax a cc to me at (360) 658-6252. (Thanks Mark & Ruth! I know there's others who care about Gray whales out there!) Michael Kundu Project SeaWolf/Arcturus Adventure Communications Marysville, WA **NOTE: Email address change -- ProjectSeaWolf@seanet.com Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 20:46:10 -0500 From: molgoveggie@juno.com (Molly G Hamilton) To: ar-news@envirolink.org Subject: Dentist fax number! Message-ID: <19980223.204620.3206.2.molgoveggie@juno.com> Whoever posted the information concerning the Dentist, a Dr. Fleeger in Seatle who keeps a monkey in a pexiglass box to entertain his patients, would you please give me the fax number again? The fax I sent was not the right fax number, neither was the fax number right for the chamber of commerce. Thanks, Molly _____________________________________________________________________ You don't need to buy Internet access to use free Internet e-mail. Get completely free e-mail from Juno at http://www.juno.com Or call Juno at (800) 654-JUNO [654-5866] Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 23:13:46 -0500 From: allen schubert To: ar-news@envirolink.org Subject: (US) Groups demand Navy stop tests on whales Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980223231340.00704fa0@pop3.clark.net> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" from Mercury Center http://spyglass1.sjmercury.com/breaking/ ------------------------------------- Posted at 7:09 p.m. PST Monday, February 23, 1998 Groups demand Navy stop tests on whales HONOLULU (Reuters) -- A coalition of environmental groups Monday asked a federal court to stop the U.S. Navy from launching tests designed to see how humpback whales react to piercing sounds blasted through the water. The proposed Low Frequency Active (LFA) sonar system would use huge transmitters towed behind ships to pump deafening sound into waters just a few miles from the new Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary. The groups, including Greenpeace and the Animal Welfare Institute, asked for a temporary restraining order to stop the tests off the Kona coast of Hawaii's Big Island on Feb. 25. ``The Navy has tried to minimize public awareness and input,'' said attorney Paul Achitoff of the Earthjustice Legal Defense Fund. ``The public has a right to judge for itself if we need to put our endangered marine life at risk in this way.'' The groups said the test of LFA, designed as a long-range sonar system to detect ``quiet'' submarines by flooding the oceans with soundwaves, could torture and possibly injure the targeted whales in their favorite breeding habitat. ``The test is specifically designed to see how the endangered whales -- including those breeding and nursing -- react to bursts of underwater noise a thousand times louder than a 747 jet engine,'' the groups' news release said. The Navy plan reportedly intends to use sounds of up to 215 decibels to see how loud a sound must be before it causes a ''behavioral change'' in the whales. Scientists familiar with the project said it was designed to help the Navy avoid disturbing marine life in future by obtaining data on what exactly the whales can and cannot tolerate. Similar tests have already been completed in recent months on blue whales and migrating gray whales near the California coast, they added. ``This will allow them more accurately to see how animals perceive sound,'' said Adam Frankel of the Acoustic Thermometry of Ocean Climate (ATOC) project run by the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, an unaffiliated research venture that also uses sound waves in Hawaiian waters. ``There is no reason to think that physical injury would occur,'' he said. Mark Berman of the Earth Island Institute, one of the groups demanding a halt to the tests, said much more research should be done before filling the whales' habitat with what could be intolerable noise. ``We don't think they've done enough studies in advance to protect the whales,'' Berman said. ``We find the whole thing outrageous because of the fact that these tests are being done for the military when it is not really necessary,'' Berman said. ``The Cold War is over, nobody else even has the kind of submarines these systems are designed to look for.'' Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 23:17:43 -0500 From: allen schubert To: ar-news@envirolink.org Subject: (US) Groups demand Navy stop tests on whales Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980223231741.00704fa0@pop3.clark.net> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" from Mercury Center http://spyglass1.sjmercury.com/breaking/ ------------------------------------- Posted at 7:09 p.m. PST Monday, February 23, 1998 Groups demand Navy stop tests on whales HONOLULU (Reuters) -- A coalition of environmental groups Monday asked a federal court to stop the U.S. Navy from launching tests designed to see how humpback whales react to piercing sounds blasted through the water. The proposed Low Frequency Active (LFA) sonar system would use huge transmitters towed behind ships to pump deafening sound into waters just a few miles from the new Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary. The groups, including Greenpeace and the Animal Welfare Institute, asked for a temporary restraining order to stop the tests off the Kona coast of Hawaii's Big Island on Feb. 25. ``The Navy has tried to minimize public awareness and input,'' said attorney Paul Achitoff of the Earthjustice Legal Defense Fund. ``The public has a right to judge for itself if we need to put our endangered marine life at risk in this way.'' The groups said the test of LFA, designed as a long-range sonar system to detect ``quiet'' submarines by flooding the oceans with soundwaves, could torture and possibly injure the targeted whales in their favorite breeding habitat. ``The test is specifically designed to see how the endangered whales -- including those breeding and nursing -- react to bursts of underwater noise a thousand times louder than a 747 jet engine,'' the groups' news release said. The Navy plan reportedly intends to use sounds of up to 215 decibels to see how loud a sound must be before it causes a ''behavioral change'' in the whales. Scientists familiar with the project said it was designed to help the Navy avoid disturbing marine life in future by obtaining data on what exactly the whales can and cannot tolerate. Similar tests have already been completed in recent months on blue whales and migrating gray whales near the California coast, they added. ``This will allow them more accurately to see how animals perceive sound,'' said Adam Frankel of the Acoustic Thermometry of Ocean Climate (ATOC) project run by the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, an unaffiliated research venture that also uses sound waves in Hawaiian waters. ``There is no reason to think that physical injury would occur,'' he said. Mark Berman of the Earth Island Institute, one of the groups demanding a halt to the tests, said much more research should be done before filling the whales' habitat with what could be intolerable noise. ``We don't think they've done enough studies in advance to protect the whales,'' Berman said. ``We find the whole thing outrageous because of the fact that these tests are being done for the military when it is not really necessary,'' Berman said. ``The Cold War is over, nobody else even has the kind of submarines these systems are designed to look for.'' Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 23:18:14 -0500 From: allen schubert To: ar-news@envirolink.org Subject: (US) Expert: Oprah show good news, bad news for ranchers Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980223231811.00704fa0@pop3.clark.net> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" from Mercury Center http://spyglass1.sjmercury.com/breaking/ ------------------------------------- Posted at 7:07 p.m. PST Monday, February 23, 1998 Expert: Oprah show good news, bad news for ranchers AMARILLO, Texas (Reuters) -- A damages expert said Monday that Texas cattle ranchers might have made money, not lost it, when livestock prices fell after a 1996 Oprah Winfrey show on mad cow disease. A group of cattlemen have sued Winfrey on grounds that her show drove down prices and cost them $10 million. Bettina Whyte, a damage specialist for a national accounting firm, said cattlemen sold their livestock for lower prices, but were also able to buy feeder calves cheaper, which would have offset their losses when they sold them at maturity. ``Since plaintiffs are claiming damages due to feeder cattle prices falling, it stands to reason they would benefit from purchasing feeder cattle at lower prices,'' Whyte testified as the trial began its sixth week. ``There would be no loss; there would be no damages,'' said Whyte, who was a defense witness. Lead plaintiff Paul Engler has charged that he and his company lost more than $6 million, but White said he may have actually ended with a net gain of $421,000. The plaintiffs, who include several cattle companies, charge that Winfrey's show misled viewers into thinking that U.S. beef could be infected with mad cow disease. Prices fell 10 percent a day after the show aired, but Winfrey's attorneys blamed the drop on other factors. Whyte's testimony came as the Winfrey trial appeared to be winding down. The television star's attorneys filed a motion Monday asking U.S. District Judge Mary Lou Robinson to throw out what remains of the lawsuit. On Wednesday, Robinson tossed out key parts of the suit and said the case could no longer be tried under ``veggie libel'' laws that forbid the false disparagement of agricultural products. She said the plaintiffs would have to prove that the Winfrey show acted with malicious intent toward the cattlemen, not just disregard for the truth. Mad cow disease, or bovine spongiform encephalopathy, has been blamed in the death of at least 20 people in Britain. The U.S. government says it does not exist in the United States. Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 23:25:54 -0500 From: allen schubert To: ar-news@envirolink.org Subject: (US) Study Finds Deadly Germ on Chickens Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980223232552.00749d14@pop3.clark.net> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" factory farming/free-range/human health from Associated Press http://wire.ap.org ---------------------------------------- 02/23/1998 22:01 EST Study Finds Deadly Germ on Chickens By JIM FITZGERALD Associated Press Writer YONKERS, N.Y. (AP) -- A germ that kills hundreds of people a year and sickens millions was found on two-thirds of the chickens bought at stores around the country for a study by Consumer Reports. The bacterium -- campylobacter -- was found four times as often as salmonella, yet the government does not require that chickens be tested for it, said Edward Groth, director of technical policy for Consumers Union, which publishes the magazine. Campylobacter ``is the most widespread cause of food poisoning in the United States,'' he said Monday. ``We're talking up to 1,000 deaths and many millions of cases of indigestion and diarrhea, and it really is not something that should be overlooked.'' Industry spokesmen called the article alarmist, saying that not all cases of campylobacteriosis come from chickens and that it would be impossible or too expensive to eliminate all contaminated chickens. Producers and the magazine agreed that thorough cooking will kill the bacteria, and that consumers should follow the directions on every package about how to handle poultry. ``If we knew how we could get rid of these organisms in fresh raw foods, we would,'' said Kenneth May, technical adviser to the National Broiler Council. ``But we don't know how to do that, and certainly not in any kind of cost-effective manner at all.'' Unpasteurized milk and unchlorinated water are other sources of the bacterium, but the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said poultry causes more than half of all cases. It estimates 500 deaths and 2 million cases each year from the germ. Most of these cases go unreported. Generally, it causes fever and diarrhea that last no more than a week. But the infection can also leave a person with arthritis and is a major cause of Guillain-Barre syndrome, which can lead to paralysis. Consumer Reports bought 1,000 chickens in 36 cities last fall, then sent them in coolers to a lab. Campylobacter was found in 63 percent of the birds, salmonella in 16 percent. Eight percent of the chickens had both and 29 percent had neither. No one brand was consistently cleaner than others, Consumer Reports said. However, expensive premium chickens, including ``free-range'' birds, were the most contaminated. Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 23:31:17 -0500 From: allen schubert To: ar-news@envirolink.org Subject: (US) 5 Spokane Kids Sickened by E. Coli Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980223233115.0074d2e4@pop3.clark.net> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" human health/food contamination from Associated Press http:wire.ap.org ------------------------------------ 02/23/1998 21:55 EST 5 Spokane Kids Sickened by E. Coli By NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS Associated Press Writer SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) -- Five children, including three who attend the same day care, have been sickened by E. coli bacteria. One was critically ill. The critically ill 18-month-old was hospitalized, Dr. Kim Thorburn of Spokane Regional Health District said Monday. The others were not as sick and were not hospitalized. The children range in age from 18 months to 6 years old, she said. Of the five cases in Spokane, three are among the 154 children who attend the downtown YMCA day care center, Thorburn said. Another is the sibling of a day care attendee. Officials do not know whether the fifth case, the 6-year-old, is linked to the others. While E. coli is most often spread through undercooked meat, officials are not sure how the cases were spread at the day care, Thorburn said. Rich Wallis, executive director of the YMCA, said health officials checked out the kitchen, the swimming pool, diaper changing areas and other facilities Monday. ``We have no clue whatsover'' what caused the outbreak, he said. The day care center will remain open, although officials are taking greater steps to prevent additional infections. An October 1996 outbreak of E. coli bacteria-related illness, traced to unpasteurized apple juice, killed a 16-month-old Colorado girl. The bacteria can cause hemolytic uremic syndrome, which can result in kidney failure and death. A 1993 outbreak of illness from E. coli bacteria was linked to undercooked fast-food hamburgers. It sickened an estimated 600 people in Washington state, most of them children. Three died. That case prompted new federal safeguards intended to protect consumers from tainted meat. Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 22:43:40 -0600 From: "Nancy Gomez" To: "ar-news" Cc: "Kyle Cook" , "Greg Thomisee" , "Annette Lambert" Subject: UPCOMING EVENTS Message-ID: <01bd40de$c75e3800$db0e42ce@girl> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary="----=_NextPart_000_0008_01BD40AC.82B9A900" UPCOMING EVENTS TEAR UPCOMING EVENTS February 11 thur March 1 Cirque du Soleil presents QUIDAM. This group's dynamic and breathtaking performance is what you expect and want to see at a circus, and most importantly it's animal-free.  Show your support by attending and telling your friends.  There is an alternative to Ringling Bros.  Tickets are $20 to $48.25 for adults; $10 to $33.75 for kids.  Call 1-800-678-5440. Tuesday, February 24,1998Please plan to attend to a special presentation with guest speaker Erik Marcus.  Erik is touring to promote his new book, "Vegan: The New Ethics of Eating."  "The typical American diet puts us at war with animals, the environment, even our own bodies," writes author Erik Marcus.  "Vegan: The New Ethics of Eating" offers the most current arguments for veganism, with the latest references, and is poised to become one of the most significant books about vegetarianism to be released this decade.  Please check out the Vegan Foundation web site for more information; http://www.vegan.com.  The presentation begins at 6:30 PM, at the Center for Community Cooperation, 2900 Live Oak in Dallas.  There is limited seating, so please RSVP by February 20 to 972-623-6170. Saturday, February 28, 1998 Vivisection leafletting 10:00 am-12:00 pm. Please call the information line for more info. Saturday, March 14, 1998 The Animal Connection of Texas (ACT) and TEAR will be having a joint general monthly meeting beginning at 11:00 am at the Center for Community Cooperation, 2900 Live Oak, Dallas. Doors open at 10:30 am. Friday, March 20, 1998 20th Great American Meatout Saturday, March 21, 1998 ACT will be taking a field trip to Black Beauty Ranch. Activists are to meet at REI off I635 between Webb Chapel & Midway at 10:00 a.m. For more information please call Gary at 972-306-2263. Saturday, March 28, 1998 Global Day of Action Against Proctor & Gamble 12:00 pm SE corner of Preston & Forest next to Eckerd's All activist are encouraged to wear their TEAR t-shirts to all events. To contact TEAR directly please call our voice mail at 972-623-6170 or for the most up to date information call 972-418-5398. Texas Establishment for Animal Rights email: tearmail@flash.net phone: 972-623-6170 infoline: 972-418-5398 snail mail: 660 Preston Forest Center, Suite 354 Dallas, TX 75230-2718
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