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- >From: "Document Specialist" <capette@2access.com>
- Newsgroups: rec.pets.dogs.rescue
- Subject: USDA Petition 97-018-1
- Date: 27 Mar 1997 17:42:43 GMT
-
- I urge all of you to read the following, go to the Web site and read the
- proposal and send your comments in.
-
- Chuck Petterson
- Missouri Valley Gordon Setter Club Rescue
-
- >Subject: APHIS Press Release USDA Seeks Comments on Animal
- Care Petition
-
- Jim Rogers (301) 734-8563
- jrogers@aphis.usda.gov
- Jamie Ambrosi (301) 734-5175
- jambrosi@aphis.usda.gov
-
- USDA SEEKS COMMENTS ON ANIMAL CARE PETITION
-
- RIVERDALE, Md., March 25, 1997--The U.S. Department of Agriculture's
- Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service animal care program is
- seeking public comment regarding a petition that sponsored by the Doris
- Day Animal League.
-
- The petition requests that APHIS amend Animal Welfare Act regulations by
- redefining the term "retail pet store" and by including dealers of
- hunting, security, and breeding dogs in the regulations.
-
- "This is an important process in the evolution of our regulations,"
- said W. Ron DeHaven, acting deputy administrator for APHIS' animal care,
- a part of USDA's marketing and regulatory programs mission area.
-
- "In order to better serve our customers and the public, we need their
- input."
-
- For more information, contact Bettye Walters, Veterinary Medical
- Officer, Animal Care, APHIS, 4700 River Rd., Unit 84, Riverdale,
- Md. 20737-1234, (301) 734-7833.
-
- Consideration will be given to comments received on or before May 27.
-
- To submit comments, send an original and three copies to Docket No.
- 97-018-1, Regulatory Analysis and Development, PPD, APHIS, Suite 3C03,
- 4700 River Road Unit 118, Riverdale, Md. 20737-1238.
-
- A copy of the petition and any comments may be reviewed at USDA, Room
- 1141 South Building, 14th Street and Independence Avenue, S.W.,
- Washington, D.C., between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday,
- except holidays. Persons wishing access to this room are requested to
- call in advance of visiting at (202) 690-2817.
-
- NOTE: USDA news releases, program announcements, and media advisories
- are available on the Internet. Access the APHIS Home Page by pointing
- your Web browser to http://www.aphis.usda.gov and clicking on "APHIS
- Press Releases." Also, anyone with an e-mail address can sign up to
- receive APHIS press releases automatically. Send an e-mail message to
- majordomo@info.aphis.usda.gov and leave the subject blank. In the
- message, type subscribe press_releases
- Date: Sat, 29 Mar 1997 11:17:38 -0800 (PST)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] The pig issue . . .
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970329111844.0b17d7dc@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- [Good news if it's proven!]
-
- >From The Electronic Telelgraph - Saturday, March 29th, 1997
-
- The pig issue . . .
-
- Pigs are being taught how to play computer games: it is the first step
- towards communicating with them, finds Ross Clark
-
- WHEN George Orwell wrote about resentful pigs plotting to overthrow the
- oppressive regime of Animal Farm, he was presumably intending an allegory.
- But it turns out that his world of angry young pigs may have been closer to
- the truth than he realised. An intriguing research project in a Pennsylvania
- laboratory is revealing that pigs really do have an imagination, and perhaps
- are even capable of harbouring ill feelings about the way in which freedom
- is denied them.
-
- According to behavioural psychologist Professor Stanley Curtis of
- Pennsylvania State University, the results could have implications for the
- way in which farm animals are treated. He hopes his experiments will finally
- provide the scientific justification for free-range farming
- techniques. If we want to continue breeding farm animals, he says, in future
- we may have to take their feelings into account.
-
- "What we want to know is whether, if we keep a pig in a confined
- environment, it is capable of wanting to be somewhere else," he says.
- "Until now we've always assumed a pig cannot do that - it's a case of out of
- sight, out of mind. But we may be wrong. We want to find out
- whether a pig who has seen an animal wallowing in the mud begins to daydream
- of wallowing in the mud himself when the weather gets hot. Or even if a pig
- who has never experienced wallowing at first hand is capable of conceiving
- of doing it."
-
- To reach inside the mind of a pig is going to be a long process, Prof Curtis
- concedes. The first stage, currently underway, is to probe the animals'
- capacity for abstract ideas. To this end he is training a team of pigs to
- play a series of basic computer games, of the kind long
- employed to stimulate remedial children. The animals are sat in front of a
- screen and have their snout attached to a joystick, which controls icons on
- the screen.
-
- The pigs are then let loose on the games, the prize for completing them
- being a series of food rewards. In one game a number of icons appear on the
- screen. One is controlled by the pig himself; the others move in pre-set
- patterns. The question is whether the pig realises he
- is controlling an icon, and whether he can get the hang of moving his icon
- along with the others.
-
- In another game the pig is shown a series of coloured dots following a
- trajectory across the screen. At first the dots are visible; they then
- disappear, only to reappear later along their trajectory. The point is to
- see whether the pig's eyes follow the passage of the dots even
- when they are not visible.
-
- In this, the pigs are already showing some promise: they appear to retain
- some memory of a computer icon, long after it has disappeared from the
- screen. If they can remember that it is likely they can also remember people
- and places they cannot see.
-
- "Early results suggest that pigs are, in fact, capable of abstract
- representation," says Prof Curtis. "We've made the connection with them that
- the joystick means something, and found they are able to hold an icon in the
- mind, and remember it at a later date. The pigs are progressing faster than
- we imagined, and we're into uncharted territory now."
-
- The next step is to introduce more complex images onto the screen, such as a
- representation of a truffle, and to test whether they can hold that in their
- mind too.
-
- Many of the techniques used to investigate the pigs' minds were originally
- developed for evaluating the intelligence of apes, and have been used to
- establish an informal league table of animals' intellectual achievement. One
- of the most surprising findings was that
- chimpanzees can pick up certain video games faster than the average human being.
-
- The imaginative side of animals has proved a more elusive matter. All we
- have had is anecdotes: miners who have spoken of the sad eyes of a pit pony,
- dreaming perhaps of the green pastures he has left behind; animals which
- appear to pine; and, of course, the freaks of the animal world such as
- Greyfriars Bobby, the dog who attended his master's grave in Edinburgh for
- 14 years. Many people take it for granted that their pets have an
- imaginative life and are able to think about people and things in their
- absence, even if the scientists are
- more cautious in their conclusions.
-
- The next big question for the Pennsylvania team is whether pigs can
- recognise pictures of themselves, their families and their playmates, and
- whether they react to those pictures emotionally. There is already some
- evidence that chimps can do this, but the implications
- for farm animals having such a capacity would be astounding: at present,
- animals are farmed in the belief that they will not miss the lambs that are
- taken away for slaughter.
-
- Prof Curtis contends that not only are animals capable of such feelings,
- they may also be capable of building up long-term resentments; not just the
- cussedness which any farmer encounters from time to time when his charges
- object to their physical handling, but deeply-held frustrations lasting a
- lifetime. The bull glowering at you from behind the barbed wire could be
- dreaming of the cows he is never allowed to meet, and the horse snorting
- down his nostrils at you from his tiny paddock could be harbouring fond
- memories of
- open fields.
-
- "Our ultimate goal is to communicate with the pigs," says Prof Curtis, "and
- find out their secrets for good."
-
- Then, perhaps, we shall know if real pigs, like George Orwell's Napoleon,
- have pencilled in a revolution for some time in the future.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- Date: Sat, 29 Mar 1997 14:49:45 -0500
- >From: Wyandotte Animal Group <wag@heritage.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Poll @ 96 March
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970329194945.30574ee8@mail.heritage.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- I am trying to get the results from the poll that was being taken at last
- year's March for the Animals. Does anyone know who was conducting it the
- day of the March and/or have a copy of its findings? If the report is
- faxable, I'd appreciate a copy.
-
- Any leads appreciated.
-
- Thanks.
-
- Jason Alley
- (313) 671-2274 FAX
-
-
- Date: Sun, 30 Mar 1997 19:26:06 -0500
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Legless chicken struts again
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970330192603.0069f208@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
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