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- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US-TW) Taiwan Reports Outbreak in Pork
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970401082620.006da5d8@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- -----------------------------
- 03/30/1997 14:05 EST
-
- Taiwan Reports Outbreak in Pork
-
- By CLIFF EDWARDS
- AP Business Writer
-
- CHICAGO (AP) -- A severe outbreak of hoof-and-mouth disease in Taiwan's pork
- population could boost U.S. exports and possibly lead to higher prices at
- the grocer.
-
- The highly contagious disease has spread quickly among Taiwan's pork
- population,
- with that country's Council of Agriculture reporting Friday that 842 pig
- farms were
- affected and about 140,000 pigs dead or destroyed. Some 740,000 pigs are
- on the
- farms.
-
- Hoof-and-mouth disease is a virus that causes fever and blisters in an
- animal's
- mouth and around its hoofs. Animals affected usually do not eat and
- ultimately must
- be destroyed. The disease does not harm humans.
-
- Taiwan has banned exports of its pork while it works to contain the
- disease and
- rebuild its herds, a process that experts say could take years. Its
- largest export
- partner, Japan, has banned all Taiwanese imports -- which could lead to
- substantial
- new U.S. export business.
-
- ``Right now, it's a wait-and-see thing about what Japan is going to do,''
- said Ken
- Maschoff, whose family-operated business in Carlyle, Ill., produces
- 140,000 hogs
- annually.
-
- ``Everybody's guessing they're going to lower tariffs to allow more
- Western pork in,
- and that could mean consumers paying more for pork this summer,'' Maschoff
- said.
-
- After the outbreak two weeks ago, pork prices began to hog the limelight
- on U.S.
- futures exchanges. Live hogs futures prices rose the daily trading limit
- for three
- consecutive days last week on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and are
- poised to
- go higher.
-
- Taiwan accounted for 41 percent of Japanese pork imports last year, with
- American
- imports accounting for 22 percent. American imports to Japan could rise to 50
- percent, economists have suggested.
-
- The possibility for increased exports comes as the government has
- suggested that
- American pork supplies could get tighter in the second half of this year
- because of
- lower production.
-
- If that forces pork prices -- which have been relatively low all winter --
- to rise before
- the summer grilling season, fewer supermarkets may opt not to heavily
- advertise
- pork in favor of other meats because of lower profit margins, Maschoff said.
-
- ``A lot of people think this situation in Taiwan came about at the wrong
- time,''
- Maschoff said. ``American pork producers actually could end up getting
- hurt if Japan
- doesn't lower tariffs to allow more pork in, or if Japanese consumer
- demand falls off
- and American consumer demand also falls off.''
- Date: Tue, 01 Apr 1997 08:37:08 -0500
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (AU) Aussie Beef Ban To Be Lifted
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970401083705.00688fe0@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- -----------------------------
- 03/31/1997 07:25 EST
-
- Aussie Beef Ban To Be Lifted
-
- SYDNEY, Australia (AP) -- Indonesia was too hasty in banning beef and cattle
- imports from Australia due to anthrax because any outbreaks are already under
- control, a state agriculture official said today.
-
- Indonesia halted imports from New South Wales and Victoria on March 10,
- citing
- anthrax disease in cattle in both states.
-
- Asian food buyers are particularly sensitive about beef after Britain's
- problems with
- mad cow disease.
-
- But Victoria state's chief veterinary officer, Dr. Andrew Turner, said the
- Indonesian
- ban on Victorian meat and cattle will be lifted Thursday and the ban on
- New South
- Wales imports was lifted over the weekend.
-
- However, the head of the New South Wales' animal industries division, Helen
- Scott-Orr, said her state should not be included in the ban as reports of
- anthrax were
- normal and decreasing.
-
- ``In fact, our incidence this year has been on the lower side'' of normal,
- she told
- Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio -- outbreaks on six isolated farms.
-
- She said Indonesia appeared to be reacting to the high incidence of
- anthrax in
- Victoria.
-
- More than 200 cattle died in Victoria this year before anthrax was
- contained through
- quarantines and inoculation. More than 80 Victoria farms lost cattle to
- the disease
- and more than 77,300 head of cattle were vaccinated.
-
- Anthrax is a highly infectious cattle disease that leads to ulcerating
- nodules, lesions
- in the lungs and blood poisoning. It can also be transmitted to humans
- handling the
- infected products.
-
- The Sydney Morning Herald reported today that Australia's $2.7 billion
- beef and
- livestock export industries are worried about losing access to lucrative
- Asian
- markets after an apparent breakdown between government agencies in reporting
- the anthrax infections in New South Wales.
-
- A government spokesman told the paper that Australia always notified its
- trading
- partners of any anthrax outbreak, but so far there had been no contact
- about New
- South Wales infections.
- Date: Mon, 31 Mar 1997 22:25:07 +0800 (SST)
- >From: vadivu <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (AU) Once Australia's 'babes', now a menace
- Message-ID: <199703311425.WAA17902@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >The Straits Times, MAR 31 1997
- Once Australia's 'babes', now a menace
-
- SYDNEY -- Hundreds of pet pigs dumped by fans of the
- award-winning movie, Babe, are creating environmental mayhem
- in the Australian bush, the Sun-Herald newspaper said yesterday.
- Bought as cute piglets, they were dumped when they grew into
- full-grown pigs with aggressive temperaments.
-
- Rangers in wildlife parks around Sydney said that the new
- arrivals were threatening local species and chasing tourists away.
-
- "They can inflict serious damage on ground-dwelling birds and
- small mammals," said Mr Andrew Glover of the Rural Lands
- Protection Board, adding that the dumped pigs, now anything up
- to 100 kg, had charged at rangers and frightened park visitors.
-
- Babe, the endearing story of a piglet which learns to herd sheep,
- was a box-office hit around the world and was nominated for
- several Oscars, including best picture. -- DPA.
-
-
- Date: Mon, 31 Mar 1997 10:59:56 -0500 (EST)
- >From: BKMACKAY@aol.com
- To: alathome@clark.net, ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Re: (CA) Tiger Escapes in Ontario, Canada
- Message-ID: <970331105952_854449122@emout07.mail.aol.com>
-
- According to today's news the tiger was safely lured into a pen. No injuries
- to anyone, including the tiger.
-
- Barry
- Date: Mon, 31 Mar 1997 14:24:08 -0500 (EST)
- >From: Me1ani@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Cc: Me1ani@aol.com
- Subject: POSTING
- Message-ID: <970331142358_-1537492803@emout02.mail.aol.com>
-
-
- *****URGENT- TIME SENSITIVE LEGISLATION UP FOR
- CONSIDERATION*****
-
- Attention Connecticut Greyhound Advocates and other
- Concerned Individuals:
-
- Committee Bill #6425 which is currently before the Finance,
- Revenue and Bonding committee is designed to give further tax relief to the
- pari-mutuel gaming industry (dog tracks and jai alai frontons) here in
- Connecticut. Currently, one dog track here is in bankruptcy and the
- remaining one is projected to COST Connecticut taxpayers 1.4 million dollars
- this year. Repeated tax breaks and concessions over the years have done
- little to resuscitate this industry. The time is long overdue for CT
- taxpayers and voters to say enough is enough. Dog racing is an inhumane
- industry which should not be supported let alone subsidized with OUR tax
- dollars. Even more outrageous is the fact that the State of Connecticut
- spent $700,000 urine testing greyhounds last year at the behest of the tracks
- which claimed they could not afford to pay for this expense themselves.
- Monies spent on oversight of dog tracks would be put to better use
- encouraging realistic economic revitalization and exploration/creation of
- long term job opportunities. If you reside in CT or have friends or family
- who do, please encourage them to call their Senators and Representatives and
- demand that they stop supporting any bills which aid the dog tracks. Please
- tell them that Maine, Vermont, Virginia, Idaho and Washington have
- repealed/banned greyhound racing and you think Connecticut should get with
- the program. For info on who your legislators are, or to volunteer, contact:
-
- League of Women Voters (Hamden, CT) ~203-288-7996
- Your library or Town Hall
- Greyhound Protection League/CT ~203-968-2308
-
- EDUCATE~~LEGISLATE~~ELIMIN
- ATE
-
- Date: Mon, 31 Mar 1997 15:15:01 -0500 (EST)
- >From: Ming-Lee Yeh <myeh@osf1.gmu.edu>
- To: veg@wam.umd.edu
- Cc: ar-news@envirolink.org, tllin@udel.edu
- Subject: Re: (TW) emergent appeal
- Message-ID: <Pine.OSF.3.95q.970331151147.13900F-100000@osf1.gmu.edu>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
- Dear Lynn and all ar-activitists,
-
- If you want to speak for pigs in Taiwan, you can also call Mr. Hu, the
- representative of Taiwnanese Government in the Washington DC office. Their
- number is 202-8951800
-
- If you prefer to fax your signature to LCA, any of the following number is
- avaiable: 011 (US)+ 886-2-7191044; +886-2-2866403; +886-2-2402688;
- + 886-2-9825630; +886-2-2681465
-
- All of your voices are appreciated and helpful!
-
- Sincerely,
- Minglee
- On Thu, 27 Mar 1997, Lynn Andrea Halpern wrote:
-
- > Ming Lee,
- > It is heartbreaking to read of this situation in Taiwan. Will it
- > be helpful to call the embassy here in Washington?
- >
- > Sincerely,
- > Lynn Halpern
- >
-
-
- > Emergent signature collection -- appeal for using humane methods to
- > terminate foot-and-mouth infected hogs [Taiwan]
- >
- > According to 3/27 Taiwanese newspapers, the epidemic situation of the
- > foot-and-mouth disease is continuously increased. Over 716 farms and
- > 146,713 hogs have been infected and more than 76,065 pigs were killed.
- > This disaster has impacted national economy and threatened farmers'
- > survival. At this moment, slaughtering all diseased animals for
- > minimizing the negative impact seems to be inevitable. However, numerous
- > cruel images are seen on all media recently, such as, burying animals alive,
- > beating animals to death, and incorectlly electrocutting animals
- > leading them suffering in half death. The scene of cruelty is to the
- > degree that even farmers and soldiers, who implement the slaughter,
- > can not bear and have both complained about their mental stress they
- > had received. These images have raised the publics awareness that such a
- > cruel and inhumane termination will have an extremely negative impact on
- > our next generation in Taiwan.
- >
- > This outbreak of Foot-and-mouth disease has indeed affected the country
- > economically. Have we not handle it carefully, it may also hurt the
- > society and morally psychologically, sue to our cruel actio. Eased on the
- > belief of all lives are precious and should be treated with respect, the
- > Life Conservationist Association (LCA) urges the authority to use the most
- > humane method to terminating animals to minimize animals' suffering before
- > they die.
- >
- > The LCA suggests:
- > 1. to use the effective electrical stunning to knock out the animals
- > before they are shot by gun
- >
- > 2. to mobilize professional veterinarians to implement the above
- > procedure, assisted by military and farmers;
- >
- > 3. the electrial stunning must be provided with sufficient current that
- > is passed through an animal's brain, inducing immediate unconsciousness
- > and insensibility to pain
- >
- > 4. gun shooting must be accurate to the fatal point in the animal's head,
- > which will immediately terminate theiir lives and reduce their fear and
- > pain. It can also avoid to spread the virus cased by bloodletting.
- >
- > Considering the equipment and work-forcer, the effective electrical
- > stunning and gun-shot is the "most" feasible, fast and humane method which
- > can be suggested now. Currently using bar-beating and ineffective
- > electrical stunning will result in burying or burning animals that are
- > still alive and conscious. In order to stop the cruel termination and its
- > negative impact to our society, the LCA APPEALS to your support!
- >
- > Please SIGN your name or WRITE Your statement on this letter, and FAX
- > to:
- > 011-886-2-7191044; 011-886-2-2866403; 011-886-2-2402688
- >
- > Tel: 011-886-2-7150079 (LCA)
- >
- > -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- > Organization: _________________________
- > Your name (print): ___________________________
- > Signature: ___________________________
- > Tel #: _________________________
- > Fax #: _________________________
- > Address: _________________________________________
- > -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- >
- >
- > All support are most appreciated!!
- >
- > Sincerely,
- > Minglee Yeh
- > Representative in the US
- > Life Conservationists Association of Taiwan
- >
- >
- >
- >
- >
- > ----- End of forwarded message from Ming-Lee Yeh -----
- >
-
-
- Date: 31 Mar 97 16:24:33 EST
- >From: 0 <74754.654@CompuServe.COM>
- To: Ian Lance Taylor <ar-news@cygnus.com>
- Subject: notice for posting
- Message-ID: <970331212432_74754.654_EHL76-1@CompuServe.COM>
-
-
-
-
-
- Contact: Nina Natelson
- (703) 658-9650
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
-
- March 31, Alexandria, VA - On March 17th, Na'ama Bello,
- President of Magen le Chatul, a cat protection organization in Tel
- Aviv, was arrested. Ms. Bello was charged with putting starving,
- injured, sick, suffering, homeless cats out of their misery with
- injections of the humane euthanasia drug sodium pentobarbital, the
- same drug used in animal shelters worldwide. While in the U.S. and
- elsewhere around the world, animal welfare workers are trained and
- allowed to euthanize animals when necessary, Israeli law makes it
- illegal for anyone but a veterinarian to do so.
- According to Ms. Bello, "At all hours of the day or night,
- cats are hit by cars, suffer from diseases, or are injured by dogs
- or cruel people. It is neither possible nor humane to transport
- them a long distance to a veterinarian. Veterinarians are often
- either unavailable or unwilling to euthanize animals. Many demand
- high fees. I do what animal welfare workers around the world must
- do to relieve suffering."
- Na'ama has been released pending trial, but the media has
- labeled her the "Angel of Death", a term applied to Josef Mengele,
- a Nazi official infamous for extreme cruelty, and people have
- threatened to burn her newborn baby.
- Days before Na'ama's arrest, Melvin Simons, a British
- immigrant to Israel in his 60's who resides on a kibbutz (farm
- settlement) in the north (the Galilee) and who is assigned the task
- of dealing with all the stray dogs dumped on or near his kibbutz,
- was also threatened with arrest. Melvin, also, euthanizes injured
- and homeless animals, rather than watch them be strychnine
- poisoned, starved, drowned, run over by cars, eaten by Thai workers
- brought to Israel to replace Palestinian workers, sacrificed by
- cults, or sold to laboratories for experimentation. The Upper
- Galilee municipal veterinarian demanded that Melvin turn over all
- dogs found to the municipality, which then strychnine poisons them.
- The law says dogs can be strychnine poisoned only if they
- cannot be captured, but this municipality poisons even captured
- dogs. Many years ago, CHAI provided sodium pentobarbital free to
-
- -2-
- every municipal pound in Israel, as a result of which they switched
- from poisoning to using this drug. In the case of the Upper
- Galilee municipality, however, the workers poison many dogs before
- they ever reach the pound.
- Years ago, CHAI urged the Veterinary Services Division of
- the Agriculture Ministry to allow trained animal welfare personnel
- to euthanize animals and even offered to sponsor a course on the
- subject for them. At CHAI's request, animal organizations around
- the world appealed to the Israeli government. The Veterinary
- Services, however, said the shelters did not operate at a
- sufficiently professional level to be trusted with the drug, nor
- would they take action to help improve conditions. Sodium
- pentobarbital is a controlled substance, but it is "denatured" and,
- therefore, has no street value. Theft or illegal use of the drug
- has never been a problem in U.S. shelters in all the decades of its
- use.
- Said CHAI's President, Nina Natelson: "CHAI is calling on
- animal activists everywhere to stand by these courageous people who
- will not be stopped from relieving animal suffering by a cruel and
- unreasonable governmental policy that permits strychnine
- poisonings, but denies trained animal welfare personnel the right
- to put animals out of their misery humanely. Israeli government
- policy also prevents proper animal welfare work by imposing high
- customs duties on donated animal ambulances, while allowing
- ambulances for people into the country duty-free."
- Letters of protest can be sent to the newspaper and T.V.
- station that led the negative media campaign. Write or fax Mr.
- Yossi Klein, Manager, Ha'Ir, 19 Josef Caro Street, Tel Aviv,
- Israel, fax # 011 972 3 563-4663 or 011 972 3 562-7420; and Mr. Guy
- Zohar, News Editor at The Second Channel T.V. station, 5 Kanfe
- Nesharim St., Jerusalem 95464 Israel, fax # 011 972 2 537-5707 or
- 011 972 2 655-6287, asking that they tell the other side of the
- story - the side of the animal welfare workers who must deal with
- the suffering that results from the massive overpopulation caused
- by an irresponsible public. Journalistic integrity requires no
- less.
-
- Contributions toward a public education campaign and legal fees can
- be sent to CHAI at POB 3341, Alexandria, VA 22302.
-
-
-
- Update on CHAI's efforts to get ambulances to the SPCAs in Israel:
-
- The new Animal Protection Division within the Ministry of the
- Environment has agreed to pay the customs duties on the ambulance
- we seek to donate to the new Tiberias SPCA, however, the Ministry
- of Finance has not yet given its approval. Knesset member Uzi
- Landau has agreed to introduce a bill in the Knesset to change the
- government's policy on the issue. Knesset member Avraham Poraz
- (sponsor of the Animal Protection Law), at a meeting of Israeli
- animal groups in the Knesset, said the ambulance issue has become
- his personal issue and he swore that he would get the ambulance in.
- Two other Knesset members also agreed to lend their support to
- efforts to get the ambulance in.
-
- Thanks to all of you who have told organizations that raise money
- for Israel that you will withhold your contributions until the
- poisonings stop and the donated ambulance is allowed in to relieve
- animal suffering. Please ask the organizations' Presidents or
- Executive Directors to convey your protest to Israeli officials.
-
- In positive news, our "Living Together" program that brings Jewish
- and Arab children together at the Society for the Prevention of
- Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) in Israel to learn about and help animals
- has tripled to 120 students and many more schools are seeking to
- participate in it. With your help, we are reaching the country's
- youth, the best hope for change. Surveyors have been called in to
- begin construction on the Isaac Bashevis Singer Humane Education
- Center, and construction on the Tiberias SPCA has begun. We'll
- keep you posted on these exciting developments.
-
-
- Date: Mon, 31 Mar 1997 17:00:24 -0500
- >From: "Zoocheck Canada Inc." <zoocheck@idirect.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Lynn Rogers/Jeffrey M. Masson/Jane Goodall lectures
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970331170016.006b69b4@idirect.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/enriched; charset="us-ascii"
-
- <x-rich>Three presentations in Zoocheck Canada's<italic> 1997 Natural World
- Lecture Series</italic> have now been confirmed.
-
-
- On April 24, 1997, wildlife biologist/photographer Dr. Lynn Rogers will
- present a lecture entitled <italic>Mysterious and Misunderstood: The
- Truth About Black Bears</italic> at the J.J.R. McLeod Auditorium, 1 Kings
- College, Circle, Toronto, Canada, 7.30 pm..
-
-
- The great Edward O. Wilson has ranked the work of Lynn Rogers, whose
- specialty is the black bear, with that of the long-term research projects
- of Jane Goodall on chimpanzees, Iain Douglas-Hamilton on elephants, and
- George Schaller on lions., labelling their projects the "four major
- pioneering studies of large mammals".
-
-
- For some twenty-five years, Lynn Rogers has conducted an ongoing field
- study of black bears in northern Minnesota, as well as studies of timber
- wolves, white-tailed deer, moose and beaver. His thousands of hours of
- observation have revealed many previously unknown facts about black bear
- life.
-
-
- On June 5th, also at the J.J.R. McLeod Auditorium, international
- best-selling author Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson presents a lecture entitled
- <italic>When Elephants Weep: The Emotional Lives of Animals</italic>.
-
-
- And on October 30th at Centennial Hall in London, Ontario Canada,
- world-renowned primatologist Dr. Jane Goodall presents a lecture entitled
- <italic>The Chimpanzees of Gombe</italic>.
-
-
- For more information, or to order tickets contact Zoocheck Canada.
-
-
-
- Zoocheck Canada Inc.
-
- 3266 Yonge Street, Suite 1729
-
- Toronto, ON M4N 3P6
-
- (416) 696-0241 Ph
-
- (416) 696-0370 Fax
-
- E-Mail: zoocheck@idirect.com
-
- Web Site: http://web.idirect.com/~zoocheck
-
- Registered Charity No. 0828459-54
- </x-rich>
- Date: Tue, 01 Apr 1997 17:03:15 -0500
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) L.A. Zoo Has Geriatric Animals
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970401170310.006ce70c@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- -----------------------------
- 03/31/1997 11:36 EST
-
- L.A. Zoo Has Geriatric Animals
-
- LOS ANGELES (AP) -- The Los Angeles Zoo is becoming a regular geriatric
- ward.
-
- Some occupants have bad teeth and arthritis. Others suffer from diabetes
- and need
- insulin shots and a regimented diet without sweets -- just like they're human
- counterparts.
-
- Twenty percent of the 1,200 animals at the zoo are considered old for
- their species,
- with more living longer lives thanks to scientific advances and improved
- living
- conditions in captivity.
-
- But just as with elderly humans, older animals have to deal with issues like
- long-term medical care and chronic illness, and subsequently, fatter
- health budgets.
-
- High medical costs have prompted Los Angeles Zoo Director Manuel Mollinedo to
- ask Mayor Richard Riordan this February for $70,000 to supplement the
- zoo's overall
- $12 million budget.
-
- ``It's almost like a double whammy,'' said zoo administrative officer
- Robert Tanowitz.
- ``It's not just the aging population but more preventive medicine. The
- drugs we're
- using to treat these illnesses have almost doubled our budget.''
-
- Animals with incurable diseases may be euthanized if they don't respond to
- treatment after approval from the animal's keeper, the zoo curator and a
- veterinarian
- serving on a three-member committee.
-
- But those that survive are inflating the zoo's budget. Preventive exams and
- medications for older animals could surpass the zoo's $89,000 budget for such
- expenses by $70,000.
-
- Take, for example, Koo, a 24-year-old white-cheeked gibbon who was diagnosed
- with diabetes.
-
- ``Koo was acting kind of cranky. We would test him and his blood sugar
- would be
- too low,'' zoo veterinarian Cynthia Stringfield said.
-
- Zoo officials contacted a physician who offered free medical advice.
-
- Stringfield said that Koo is now trained to hold out his arm for insulin
- injections once
- a day, and his high-fiber diet is devoid of grapes, other sweet fruits or
- sugary liquids.
-
- Arthritis is particularly common among elephants, rhinoceroses and other
- large
- animals that compact the soil in their exhibits until it is like concrete.
- The condition
- flares up especially on cold, rainy days.
-
- ``They're just like people with creaky joints. It's much harder for them
- to move
- around,'' Stringfield said.
-
- Zoo keepers give the animals ibuprofen and till the soil in their living
- areas to
- cushion the ground.
- Date: Mon, 31 Mar 1997 17:11:24 -0500 (EST)
- >From: Nichen@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Woman Gets Jail for Cat Killings
- Message-ID: <970331170944_-602563580@emout10.mail.aol.com>
-
- I<< .c The Associated Press
-
- KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - A Missouri woman is going to jail for
- four months - for stabbing to death a cat and five kittens.
- The woman said she wanted to teach her son a lesson, after he
- became fascinated with knives.
- But court records say Vicki Hill had become fed up with the
- commotion that the cat family was causing in her small duplex.
- Her 6-year-old son was traumatized by the incident - and he's
- been in state custody at a group home ever since.
- Hill claims that she's really an animal lover - and that ``no
- one has suffered more'' than she has. But animal-rights activists
- are applauding the sentence.
- Prosecutors say the case has generated more calls and letters
- than most murder cases.
- AP-NY-03-29-97 2148EST
-
- ---------------------
- Forwarded message:
- >From:AOLNewsProfiles@aol.net
- Date: 97-03-29 23:05:07 EST
-
- <HTML><PRE><I>.c The Associated Press</I></PRE></HTML>
-
- KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - A Missouri woman is going to jail for
- four months - for stabbing to death a cat and five kittens.
- The woman said she wanted to teach her son a lesson, after he
- became fascinated with knives.
- But court records say Vicki Hill had become fed up with the
- commotion that the cat family was causing in her small duplex.
- Her 6-year-old son was traumatized by the incident - and he's
- been in state custody at a group home ever since.
- Hill claims that she's really an animal lover - and that ``no
- one has suffered more'' than she has. But animal-rights activists
- are applauding the sentence.
- Prosecutors say the case has generated more calls and letters
- than most murder cases.
- AP-NY-03-29-97 2148EST
- <HTML><PRE><I><FONT COLOR="#000000 SIZE=2>Copyright 1997 The Associated
- Press. The information
- contained in the AP news report may not be published,
- broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without
- prior written authority of The Associated Press.<FONT COLOR="#000000
- SIZE=3></I></PRE></HTML>
-
-
- To edit your profile, go to keyword NewsProfiles.
- For all of today's news, go to keyword News.
-
- Date: Mon, 31 Mar 1997 17:14:25 -0500 (EST)
- >From: SdeCAP@arc.unm.edu (Lawrence Carter-Long)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Leaving SdeCAP/Changing addresses
- Message-ID: <v01540b07af6585f45df5@[198.59.173.218]>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- I regret to relate that today March 31, 1997 will be my last
- day of employment at Sangre de Cristo Animal Protection,
- Inc.
-
- When I moved to Albuquerque in October of 1995 it was
- because I felt SdeCAP's campaign against the Inhalation
- Toxicology Research Institute was worthwhile. I still do.
-
- Lately, however, concerns about funding have precluded
- any program work that I've been able to do and unfortunately,
- we have been forced to cease our efforts on the ITRI
- campaign. I hate to leave, but have no other choice. The
- campaign has been running at a deficit for over a year
- now and simply cannot continue in this manner.
-
- I am still discussing other options and will let y'all know as
- soon as something noteworthy develops. For now, I can be
- reached at the email addresses below if anyone needs or
- wants to reach me.
-
- Lawrence Carter-Long
- Email: LCartrLong@aol.com
- SPYKE@arc.unm.edu
-
- "Nothing is given to humanity, and the little we can conquer is paid for
- with unjust deaths, but humanity's greatness lies elsewhere. It lies in
- our decision to be stronger than our condition, and if our condition is
- unjust we have only one way of overcoming it, which is to be just
- ourselves." -- Albert Camus, 1944.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Tue, 01 Apr 1997 17:12:03 -0500
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Groups Want Salmon Habitat Saved
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970401171201.006a2748@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- ---------------------------
- 03/31/1997 01:31 EST
-
- Groups Want Salmon Habitat Saved
-
- By SCOTT SONNER
- Associated Press Writer
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) -- Environmentalists are returning to court in Oregon to
- ask a
- federal judge to play ``fish master'' and save the endangered Northwest
- salmon.
-
- Ultimately, they want to return the Snake and Columbia rivers to a more
- natural state
- where currents run faster and cooler. But that could hurt hydropower
- producers,
- shippers and irrigation farmers.
-
- The conservationists say past efforts to move salmon by barge and truck
- around a
- series of dams has failed to reverse the salmon's population declines.
- They want
- more water devoted to helping flush young fish to the Pacific Ocean, at
- the expense
- of commercial river users.
-
- Two years ago, U.S. District Judge Malcolm Marsh of Portland, Ore., ruled
- in a
- related case that federal efforts to protect the dwindling salmon runs were
- ``seriously, significantly flawed.''
-
- Environmentalists were heading back to Marsh's court today for a hearing
- on their
- claim that the National Marine Fisheries Service, the Army Corps of
- Engineers and
- the Bureau of Reclamation are still doing too little to save several Snake
- River
- salmon species from extinction.
-
- The environmentalists complain that the government for the last two years
- has fallen
- short of water-flow targets needed to help flush young fish to the ocean.
-
- ``This could be a big turning point,'' said Rick Taylor, spokesman for the
- Columbia
- River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission in Portland, which has filed
- friend-of-the-court
- briefs in support of the conservationists. ``They have asked the judge to
- become the
- fish master of the Columbia.''
-
- The plaintiffs want Marsh to order the government to draw reservoir levels
- down to
- return the river to a more natural state with faster moving, colder water.
-
- That would help juvenile salmon arrive at the ocean in days, just as they
- did before
- the dams were built a half-century ago, instead of the weeks-long journeys
- they now
- make through slack water pools filled with predators.
-
- But it also would make less water available to churn hydropower turbines
- and shut
- down at times the navigational system that connects the port of Lewiston,
- Idaho, to
- the Pacific.
-
- The salmon population once numbered 10 million to 16 million in the Columbia
- River basin. Federal scientists estimate only 2 percent are left and the
- number
- continues to drop.
-
- American Rivers, a conservation group leading the lawsuit, has been
- pressing for
- increased protection of three Snake River salmon species since they were
- listed as
- endangered in 1991 and 1992.
-
- The group contends that federal agencies are loathe to carry out conservation
- measures that could hurt other river users, especially the producers of cheap
- hydropower.
-
- ``They call themselves the federal family. We call them the dysfunctional
- federal
- family,'' said Lorraine Bodi, Northwest regional director of American
- Rivers in Seattle.
-
- Doug Arndt, senior program manager for the Army Corps of Engineers' North
- Pacific
- Division in Portland, said his agency has struggled to achieve a balanced
- approach.
-
- ``We have 13 Indian tribes, five states, any number of utilities and
- environmental
- groups all coming at this thing trying to present their points of view,''
- Arndt said.
- ``There's not even agreement we are chasing the right goal.''
-
- Much of the disagreement centers on whether the fish are better off being
- barged
- and trucked around the dams or remaining in the Columbia throughout their
- migration.
-
- After hearing oral arguments today, Marsh is expected to rule within a few
- weeks --
- about the time the fish start their annual migration to the ocean.
- Date: Mon, 31 Mar 1997 17:31:00 -0500 (EST)
- >From: Nichen@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Saving the Rare Houbara Bustard
- Message-ID: <970331172955_-1805264476@emout12.mail.aol.com>
-
- IThis is some of the most disgusting waste of money and resources for
- digusting practices I have ever seen.
-
- c The Associated Press
-
- By SCHEHEREZADE FARAMARZI
- SWEIHAN, United Arab Emirates (AP) - Artificial insemination,
- man-made rain, computers and satellite identification tags are
- among high-tech tools used by researchers trying to revive a
- declining bird population.
- And all this is to save the birds so they can be hunted. The
- birds - houbara bustards - are the most prized quarry in Arab
- falconry, a sport revered by the wealthy sheiks of the Gulf.
- The birds are being studied and bred at the National Avian
- Research Center, which opened in the emirate of Abu Dhabi in 1990
- and is a pet project of Emirates ruler Sheik Zayed bin Sultan Al
- Nahyan, an avid falconer.
- The center is run by a team of international specialists, some
- of whom admit privately they are happy to have Gulf oil money to
- save the houbara bustard but are less dedicated to the center's
- other goal - encouraging falconry.
- Using costly, sophisticated gear, the center studies every
- detail of the houbara, a brown and gray bird with dark neck
- feathers that is about the size of a large chicken.
- Twenty houbaras are housed in desert aviaries where researchers
- study their reproduction in a natural habitat. Scientists monitor
- the mating behavior of another 20 birds kept in artificial
- conditions at the center's Environment House in Sweihan, east of
- the Emirates capital, Abu Dhabi.
- Derek Gliddon, a geographic systems analyst, follows color dots
- on a computer screen that show movements of tagged birds - 15 have
- been released by the center since 1994 - over the course of their
- migration.
- ``When they start moving, they go very quickly,'' says Gliddon,
- a 33-year-old Briton, pointing to the route on a map.
- The tagged houbaras wear tiny backpacks holding satellite
- transmitters. Each weighs 1.2 ounces and costs $3,000, plus $2,000
- to run for a year.
- The transmitters beam signals 620 miles to three orbiting
- satellites, which calculate the birds' position from space and send
- the data to a computer in France.
- The houbaras inhabit an area stretching from the Canary Islands
- in the west to China in the east. They migrate to the Gulf between
- November and February, the hunting season.
- Conservationists say without such a sophisticated project the
- houbara bustard is certain to disappear because the Gulf sheiks -
- who have hunted the birds with falcons for 2,000 years - are
- unlikely to stop.
- Olivier Combreau, an ecologist at the center, says the houbara
- population in the Emirates could be fewer than 1,000 in winter. By
- contrast, David Remple, founder of the Dubai Falcon Hospital,
- estimates there are 10,000 falconers in the region.
- It's difficult to get a firm picture of the houbaras' decline
- since no studies were done on past migrations. But, according to
- poachers, the birds are in noticeable decline.
- Farming and use of pesticides in the birds' breeding grounds
- have contributed to the drop in numbers, but by far the major
- reason is overhunting - mainly because the sheiks have switched
- from camels to four-wheel-drive vehicles in giving chase.
- In the past, a party of hunters would pursue bustards for weeks
- or months across the desert, tracking their footprints in the sand.
- Today, as before, the falcon perches on the falconer's wrist, which
- is protected by a glove-like mangela.
- Once a hood covering the falcon's head is removed, the falcon is
- trained to attack with its claws and beak to break the prey's neck,
- then drop the kill on the ground before the hunter. As a quarry,
- the houbara bustard is prized by Gulf Arabs for its rich, dark
- meat.
- The falcon is such a part of Gulf heritage that it's the
- Emirates' official symbol. Arab poets use the falcon as an image
- for strength and speed; it can fly at more than 100 mph.
- British traveler and author Wilfred Thesiger gives a picture of
- the traditional hunt in his writing about desert trips in the 1940s
- and '50s with Sheik Zayed, the Emirates' ruler.
- ``For months or more we rode for long hours on superb camels,
- slept on the ground in the open, fed on the hares and the bustards
- we had taken - half a dozen in one day if we were lucky - an
- exacting and rewarding experience in confronting an immemorial
- past.''
- At the research center, spokeswoman Theri Bailey said the
- breeding of houbaras to be killed as prey does not contradict
- conservationist values.
- ``We see the potential for conservation ... if the hunting was
- managed properly. We try to put out a positive message,'' said
- Bailey, who comes from England.
- ``Arab people need to move toward the right direction. If you
- are their friends, advisers, it's better to work with them than
- throwing mud at them from the outside.''
- One environmentalist at the center, who spoke on condition of
- anonymity, said he would prefer to free the houbaras to enjoy a
- long life but added: ``We must please the sheiks.''
- ``It's a sensitive subject. We cannot tell the sheiks they
- cannot hunt. They will if they want to. But we can utilize their
- money to understand the ecology in order to protect the houbara,''
- he said.
- Sheik Zayed, the center's benefactor, has described the hunt for
- the bustard as a meditating experience.
- ``Our hunting trips accustom us to patience and endurance,'' he
- wrote recently. ``We regard them as a means of achieving a degree
- of psychological equilibrium between sedentary urban life and that
- of the desert. The simple happiness this sport brings us fortifies
- us against the stresses and strains of our official duties.''
- AP-NY-03-30-97 1201EST >>
-
-
- ---------------------
- Forwarded message:
- >From:AOLNewsProfiles@aol.net
- Date: 97-03-30 12:04:24 EST
-
- <HTML><PRE><I>.c The Associated Press</I></PRE></HTML>
-
- By SCHEHEREZADE FARAMARZI
- SWEIHAN, United Arab Emirates (AP) - Artificial insemination,
- man-made rain, computers and satellite identification tags are
- among high-tech tools used by researchers trying to revive a
- declining bird population.
- And all this is to save the birds so they can be hunted. The
- birds - houbara bustards - are the most prized quarry in Arab
- falconry, a sport revered by the wealthy sheiks of the Gulf.
- The birds are being studied and bred at the National Avian
- Research Center, which opened in the emirate of Abu Dhabi in 1990
- and is a pet project of Emirates ruler Sheik Zayed bin Sultan Al
- Nahyan, an avid falconer.
- The center is run by a team of international specialists, some
- of whom admit privately they are happy to have Gulf oil money to
- save the houbara bustard but are less dedicated to the center's
- other goal - encouraging falconry.
- Using costly, sophisticated gear, the center studies every
- detail of the houbara, a brown and gray bird with dark neck
- feathers that is about the size of a large chicken.
- Twenty houbaras are housed in desert aviaries where researchers
- study their reproduction in a natural habitat. Scientists monitor
- the mating behavior of another 20 birds kept in artificial
- conditions at the center's Environment House in Sweihan, east of
- the Emirates capital, Abu Dhabi.
- Derek Gliddon, a geographic systems analyst, follows color dots
- on a computer screen that show movements of tagged birds - 15 have
- been released by the center since 1994 - over the course of their
- migration.
- ``When they start moving, they go very quickly,'' says Gliddon,
- a 33-year-old Briton, pointing to the route on a map.
- The tagged houbaras wear tiny backpacks holding satellite
- transmitters. Each weighs 1.2 ounces and costs $3,000, plus $2,000
- to run for a year.
- The transmitters beam signals 620 miles to three orbiting
- satellites, which calculate the birds' position from space and send
- the data to a computer in France.
- The houbaras inhabit an area stretching from the Canary Islands
- in the west to China in the east. They migrate to the Gulf between
- November and February, the hunting season.
- Conservationists say without such a sophisticated project the
- houbara bustard is certain to disappear because the Gulf sheiks -
- who have hunted the birds with falcons for 2,000 years - are
- unlikely to stop.
- Olivier Combreau, an ecologist at the center, says the houbara
- population in the Emirates could be fewer than 1,000 in winter. By
- contrast, David Remple, founder of the Dubai Falcon Hospital,
- estimates there are 10,000 falconers in the region.
- It's difficult to get a firm picture of the houbaras' decline
- since no studies were done on past migrations. But, according to
- poachers, the birds are in noticeable decline.
- Farming and use of pesticides in the birds' breeding grounds
- have contributed to the drop in numbers, but by far the major
- reason is overhunting - mainly because the sheiks have switched
- from camels to four-wheel-drive vehicles in giving chase.
- In the past, a party of hunters would pursue bustards for weeks
- or months across the desert, tracking their footprints in the sand.
- Today, as before, the falcon perches on the falconer's wrist, which
- is protected by a glove-like mangela.
- Once a hood covering the falcon's head is removed, the falcon is
- trained to attack with its claws and beak to break the prey's neck,
- then drop the kill on the ground before the hunter. As a quarry,
- the houbara bustard is prized by Gulf Arabs for its rich, dark
- meat.
- The falcon is such a part of Gulf heritage that it's the
- Emirates' official symbol. Arab poets use the falcon as an image
- for strength and speed; it can fly at more than 100 mph.
- British traveler and author Wilfred Thesiger gives a picture of
- the traditional hunt in his writing about desert trips in the 1940s
- and '50s with Sheik Zayed, the Emirates' ruler.
- ``For months or more we rode for long hours on superb camels,
- slept on the ground in the open, fed on the hares and the bustards
- we had taken - half a dozen in one day if we were lucky - an
- exacting and rewarding experience in confronting an immemorial
- past.''
- At the research center, spokeswoman Theri Bailey said the
- breeding of houbaras to be killed as prey does not contradict
- conservationist values.
- ``We see the potential for conservation ... if the hunting was
- managed properly. We try to put out a positive message,'' said
- Bailey, who comes from England.
- ``Arab people need to move toward the right direction. If you
- are their friends, advisers, it's better to work with them than
- throwing mud at them from the outside.''
- One environmentalist at the center, who spoke on condition of
- anonymity, said he would prefer to free the houbaras to enjoy a
- long life but added: ``We must please the sheiks.''
- ``It's a sensitive subject. We cannot tell the sheiks they
- cannot hunt. They will if they want to. But we can utilize their
- money to understand the ecology in order to protect the houbara,''
- he said.
- Sheik Zayed, the center's benefactor, has described the hunt for
- the bustard as a meditating experience.
- ``Our hunting trips accustom us to patience and endurance,'' he
- wrote recently. ``We regard them as a means of achieving a degree
- of psychological equilibrium between sedentary urban life and that
- of the desert. The simple happiness this sport brings us fortifies
- us against the stresses and strains of our official duties.''
- AP-NY-03-30-97 1201EST
- <HTML><PRE><I><FONT COLOR="#000000 SIZE=2>Copyright 1997 The Associated
- Press. The information
- contained in the AP news report may not be published,
- broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without
- prior written authority of The Associated Press.<FONT COLOR="#000000
- SIZE=3></I></PRE></HTML>
-
-
- To edit your profile, go to keyword NewsProfiles.
- For all of today's news, go to keyword News.
-
- Date: Mon, 31 Mar 1997 20:21:20 -0800
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Your tax dollars at work
- Message-ID: <33408D40.29F8@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Genes used to restore salivary glands in rats
-
- The Associated Press
-
- WASHINGTON (Mar 31, 1997 7:55 p.m. EST) -- When patients with head and
- neck cancer are treated with radiation, a serious side effect is damage
- to glands that produce saliva. Now researchers say a new gene therapy
- may eventually solve this problem.
-
- Scientists at the National Institute of Dental Research have
- demonstrated in laboratory rats that near normal saliva secretion can be
- restored for a time by transferring a saliva-making gene into certain
- cells in the mouth.
-
- The study is to be published Tuesday in the Proceedings of the National
- Academy of Sciences.
-
- Dr. Bruce Baum, chief scientist in the study, said the work is "an
- important first step to managing a condition for which no suitable and
- effective therapy is currently available."
-
- Head and neck cancers often are treated with radiation, but the therapy
- may kill acinar, or fluid-producing, cells in the salivary glands. This
- causes unrelenting "dry mouth," leading to a chronic inflammation of
- mucous membranes and frequent infections. Patients also can have
- difficulty swallowing, speaking and eating.
-
- Radiation often does not affect the salivary ducts, however, and now
- researchers may have found a way to make those ducts produce fluid.
-
- The scientists modified an adenovirus, which is similar to a cold virus,
- so that it could not reproduce. They then put into the virus a gene
- called aquaporin. This gene, recently discovered, causes the formation
- pores for the passage of fluid.
-
- In an experiment, laboratory rats were irradiated so that their salivary
- glands were damaged and saliva secretion was reduced by 64 percent.
-
- When the rats salivary ducts were infected with the modified virus, the
- saliva secretion increased to near normal. The effect was transitory,
- however, the researchers said, because the infection from the modified
- virus lasted only a short time.
-
- Baum said in a statement that the research is at an early stage and it
- may be several years before the gene transfer technique will be ready
- for testing in humans.
- Date: Mon, 31 Mar 1997 20:23:53 -0800
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Falcons return to Seattle skyscraper
- Message-ID: <33408DD9.4A79@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Endangered falcons return to Seattle skyscraper
-
- Reuter Information Service
-
- SEATTLE (Mar 31, 1997 5:19 p.m. EST) - Capistrano may have its famous
- swallows, but Seattle has a mated pair of endangered peregrine falcons
- who have returned to nest on a downtown office building for the fourth
- year in a row.
-
- The female, Belle, laid her third egg at 1:56 a.m. Monday on a ledge on
- the 56-story building and is expected to lay one more, according to
- Terry Onustack, a spokesman for Washington Mutual Bank, the tower's
- principal tenant.
-
- Last year, the falcon laid four eggs. Two of the babies survived to
- leave the nest.
-
- It will take four weeks for the latest eggs to hatch, and then another
- six weeks before the young falcons make their first flight.
-
- Bank patrons and other nature lovers can follow the progress of the eggs
- and any chicks on two video monitors set up in the building, the
- Washington Mutual Tower, including one visible from the street that is
- switched on after hours.
-
- Daily updates on the progress of the falcons can also be heard on a
- telephone hotline.
- Date: Mon, 31 Mar 1997 20:35:51 -0800
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: FWD: Forest Focus
- Message-ID: <334090A7.732C@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- >From: Western Ancient Forest Campaign <wafcdc@igc.apc.org>
- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Subject: WAFC Forest Focus - March 27, 1997
- Date: 31 Mar 1997 00:10:45 GMT
-
- FOREST FOCUS, the Bulletin of the Western Ancient Forest
- Campaign, Mar. 27, 1997 Reach us at (202)879-3188, fax (202)879-
- 3189, or email WAFCDC@igc.apc.org
-
- NEW LAWS?: Sen. Frank Murkowski, chair of the Senate Energy and
- Natural Resources Committee, says he is "skeptical" about the claims
- of the Clinton Administration that they don't need new laws to
- effectively manage the national forests, AP reports. "Administrative
- changes are taking, if not forever, longer than most people can afford
- to wait," Murkowski said in requesting the Government Accounting
- Office to provide his committee with information on the agencies' rule
- making process and the average time frames involved. "We believe
- wholesale revisions of land management statutes are neither necessary
- nor desirable," Secretaries Bruce Babbitt and Dan Glickman wrote to
- Sen. Larry Craig earlier this month in commenting on Craig's proposed
- timber industry legislation. "The laws under which the Forest Service
- and BLM now operate are fundamentally sound."
-
- MINE APPEAL: The Kettle Range Conservation Group has appalled
- the Crown Jewel Mine, a proposed open-pit mine located on Buckhorn
- Mt. on Forest Service land, a release from the group says. The mine
- "has it all," KRCG says: "mine tailings over a creek, blasting the top
- off a mountain, use of cyanide to process microscopic gold, and
- disregard for the folks living in the area." The group claims that the
- creation of a "special management area" by the Forest Service for the
- mine "is unprecedented and illegal." KRCG is appealling the project to
- Regional Forester Bob Williams in Portland OR and asks "all
- concerned citizens to write a letter to the Regional Forester, as an
- 'interested party,' opposing the mine and asking him to prevent this
- land grab."
-
- NO GOSHAWKS: Logging on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon
- has eliminated goshawk habitat, a new wildlife study says according to
- the Arizona Republic. "Goshawks aren't there," researcher Richard
- Reynolds told the Republic about "seed-tree" logging areas on the
- North Kaibab Plateau. Conservationists say that if goshawks are in
- decline in the North Kaibab, their numbers "must be drastically off in
- other, more heavily logged Southwestern forests." Robin Silver of the
- Southwest Center for Biological Diversity said that the area is "what
- historically was the best habitat for goshawks in North America."
-
- DAVIS SUPPORT: The Mayor of Davis CA has written to Rep. Vic
- Fazio (D-CA) asking that Fazio support measures in Congress "that
- bring more accountability and oversight" to the Forest Service. The
- letter specifically asks Fazio, who is a member of the House
- Appropriations Committee, to support the Kennedy amendment to
- eliminate Forest Service road building in roadless areas. "We object to
- spending millions of dollars to promote the obliteration of our old
- growth forests, watersheds, and wildlands," says the letter to Fazio
- from Mayor Lois Wolk for the Davis City Council. "We would like to
- see an end to certain funds, such as the Salvage Fund, which promote
- increased logging at taxpayer expense."
-
- AFRICAN ALARM: "An alarm bell must be sounded" at the
- devastation taking place in central African forests, Rep. Clay Shaw (R-
- FL) told a House subcommittee considering development assistance last
- week, the Environment News Service reports. Shaw and Rep. Bill
- Archer travelled to central Africa in January and Shaw said he
- observed that "the new type of logging that is being done by the Asians
- [in Africa] is clear-cutting pure and simple."
-
- --=====================_859607111==_
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Steve Holmer
- Campaign Coordinator
- Western Ancient Forest Campaign
- 1025 Vermont Ave, NW, 3rd Floor
- Washington, D.C. 20005
- 202/879-3188
- 202/879-3189 fax
- wafcdc@igc.apc.org
- Date: Mon, 31 Mar 1997 20:54:48 -0800
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: The newest drug racket
- Message-ID: <33409518.51DF@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Critics Claim Drugs Intended For Obesity Are Often Misused
-
- By ROBERT LANGRETH
- Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
-
- On a pale Saturday morning in Santa Monica, Calif.,
- while much of the town is still waking up, the waiting
- room of the Manhattan Weight Control Medical Center
- is already packed with patients.
-
- Most are young women, and they wait for up to an hour
- to be seen for a few minutes by a doctor or an assistant
- in one of the nine patient rooms. They want pills to make
- them thin -- or thinner. By closing time at 1 p.m., more
- than 70 customers have been treated in just 4 1/2 hours,
- each spending $30 or more for a seven-day supply.
-
- The pills are American Home Products Corp.'s
- hot-selling Redux, an obesity drug based on
- dexfenfluramine, and "phen-fen," a combination of two
- other obesity drugs, phentermine and fenfluramine. The
- drugs, available only by prescription, are intended only
- for patients who are clinically obese -- that is, 20% or
- 30% heavier than ideal weight -- and can have rare but
- devastating effects. But some customers at Manhattan
- Weight Control simply want to shed a few pounds to
- improve their appearance.
-
- Hundreds of new diet-pill clinics have sprouted
- nationwide in the past year or two to cash in on the new
- drugs and the desire of women -- the clinics' chief
- customers -- to be fashion-model thin without working
- at it. These "pill mills," as critics call them, maximize
- patient turnover while providing little direct contact with
- doctors. Many play down the risks and deceptively
- promise permanent weight loss; sometimes a doctor isn't
- present at all.
-
- "There are plenty of pill mills out there, handing out
- medications like cheap Halloween candy," says Michael
- Myers, an obesity specialist and doctor in Los Alamitos,
- Calif. "Lots of physicians have suddenly become experts
- in obesity."
-
- Those who promise permanent weight loss come in for
- particularly sharp criticism from Richard Joseph, a
- weight-loss specialist in Naperville, Ill. Dr. Joseph,
- chairman of the ethics panel of the American Society of
- Bariatric Physicians, a group of weight-loss specialists,
- says: "It's totally unethical to promise permanent weight
- loss ... since weight loss is rarely, if ever, permanent."
-
- Experts say it is the biggest gold rush in the diet-pill
- business in 30 years. Diet clinics offer an alluring cash
- business to doctors stung by managed care. In Southern
- California alone, at least half a dozen doctor-owned
- chains now offer multiple locations. Get-rich-quick
- entrepreneurs are jumping in, too, including a Houston
- used-car lender and the Florida operator of a
- money-losing chain of Domino's pizza palaces in Poland.
-
- "I've never seen a vehicle like this for seeing large
- number of patients. You may be talking to the next
- billionaire!" says Fred Garcia, owner of Slim & Slimmer
- Medical Associates of Newport Beach, Calif. Dr.
- Garcia operates 24 sites, most of them opened since
- May 1995.
-
- "It's a wide-open market. The profit margins are much
- larger than in restaurants," says Mitchell Rubinson, chief
- executive of QPQ Corp. of Miami Beach, the Polish
- pizza business. QPQ opened four weight-loss centers
- staffed by doctors last year and hopes to expand to 36
- in three years.
-
- The last time a diet-pill craze sparked big business was
- in the 1960s, when hundreds of weight-loss centers
- prescribed amphetamines that proved to be highly
- addictive. Diet pills fell out of favor and were frowned
- upon for three decades, until phen-fen caught on in
- 1994, followed by Redux last year. Though not as
- addictive as amphetamines, the new drugs have possible
- side effects that include temporary memory loss,
- depression, dependency and pulmonary hypertension, a
- lung disease that kills half of the people who get it. That
- is why the pills usually are intended only for those who
- are 20% to 30% overweight or more; the health risks of
- obesity outweigh the risk of side effects.
-
- "It is terrible medicine, malpractice per se, to give the
- medications out to people who want to lose five or 10
- pounds and risk the chance of side effects. All it does is
- enrich the doctor," says Morton Maxwell, an obesity
- expert at the University of California, Los Angeles. Gary
- Huber of the Texas Nutrition Institute in Tyler, Texas,
- warns: "A lot of people are going to get killed."
-
- Last year, doctors wrote a total of 18 million monthly
- prescriptions for one or the other of the two drugs in the
- phen-fen combo, a daytime/nighttime mix. Redux racked
- up an additional 2.4 million prescriptions in just its first
- six months, according to IMS America Ltd., a
- pharmaceutical-research firm.
-
- Sales of the three drugs cleared $400 million last year,
- and about three-quarters of that went to American
- Home, which makes Redux and Pondimin, the main
- brand of fenfluramine. Sales of Pondimin quadrupled to
- about $190 million last year. An American Home
- spokeswoman says the vast majority of doctors
- prescribe its diet drugs only to patients who are obese.
-
- However, visits to several clinics in California and
- Texas, both states with high numbers of diet-pill centers,
- show just how liberal the prescription practices are --
- and how vastly profitable the clinics can be.
-
- At Manhattan Weight Control in Santa Monica, lawyer
- Emily Maxwell has trimmed 15 pounds off her
- 5-foot-7-inch frame and has reached the 125-pound
- mark with phen-fen. "The time to exercise isn't there,"
- she says, but she doesn't worry about the diet drugs'
- side effects. "I feel good about this place."
-
- Jan Wineman of Irvine, Calif., was treated for several
- months at a Manhattan Weight Control clinic last year,
- dropping almost 30 pounds to just 112; she is 5 feet 6
- inches tall. Acquaintances wondered whether she had
- AIDS. She had bothersome side effects -- memory loss,
- stomach cramps, irregular menstruation and jarring heart
- palpitations -- which she says she reported to the clinic.
- "It was like having 15 cups of coffee," she says. She
- ultimately quit the drugs on her own and has since gained
- back about 10 pounds. The pills, she says, were "so
- easy to get."
-
- Manhattan Weight Control maintains it weans patients
- off the drugs after they have lost enough weight.
-
- Most of the chain's 18 clinics have opened only in the
- past year. The owner, Don S. Jensen, a former family
- practitioner who lives in Los Angeles' exclusive Bel-Air
- section, says the chain reaped $15 million in revenue last
- year. He says most customers are more than 60 pounds
- overweight and that the chain rejects many who don't
- qualify. He acknowledges treating people who aren't
- really fat; but he maintains, contrary to generally
- accepted medical opinion, that doing so doesn't pose a
- risk.
-
- Dr. Jensen also says his company hasn't had a single
- serious side effect among 45,000 people it has treated
- and that the threat of pulmonary hypertension is "a red
- herring ... pretty much a media creation."
-
- But at least two malpractice lawsuits have been filed
- against Dr. Jensen by patients who say the chain was
- wrong to prescribe drugs for them. One suit filed by
- Serzine Oghli in Los Angeles Superior Court against Dr.
- Jensen and his company alleges that the plaintiff, on
- medication for high blood pressure when treated at the
- center, had to be hospitalized for heart palpitations
- because of the diet drugs. In the second case, Don
- Ventura is suing the center, Dr. Jensen and another
- doctor no longer at the center; the suit, filed in Orange
- County Superior Court in Santa Ana, Calif., alleges that
- diet pills caused Mr. Ventura, who had uncontrolled
- hypertension, to suffer a stroke that left him partially
- paralyzed.
-
- Dr. Jensen denies the allegations and calls both lawsuits "totally
- ridiculous."
-
- At local rival Slim & Slimmer Associates, business is
- booming. Dr. Garcia, the would-be billionaire, went into
- the diet business after watching his anesthesiology
- practice fall off 40% because of managed care. His
- chain treats 1,400 patients every month at $90 each,
- pocketing a 30% profit, he says. And Slim & Slimmer is
- in talks to open clinics at a chain of 34 health clubs.
-
- Dr. Garcia says he mainly treats patients who are 20%
- overweight or more. But Julie Taylor, an accountant,
- had no trouble getting phen-fen at one of his San
- Fernando Valley offices. She is 5 feet 6 inches tall and
- dropped about 20 pounds to 110 before recently
- stopping the drugs.
-
- In suburban Atlanta, several doctors say they were
- pressured to churn out rapid-fire prescriptions and that
- the patients often were too thin at Ashford Medical
- Weight Loss. "They talked about spending three to five
- minutes, maximum, per patient," says James Heusner, a
- physician who worked for a single day at an Ashford
- clinic. "At least three times in four or five hours, they
- complained I wasn't moving fast enough."
-
- John Powers, operator and part owner of the Ashford
- chain, denies pressuring doctors. He also says: "If
- somebody isn't 20% overweight, our doctors aren't
- going to treat them. Period."
-
- In Houston, Jay Mont treats several dozen patients a
- day at his clinic inside a small office building. Dr. Mont
- buys magazine ads emblazoned with before-and-after
- photos of a bikini-clad woman who purportedly lost 140
- pounds on his program. "Permanent weight loss ... even
- if you only want to lose five pounds!" the ads blare.
-
- Some patients say Dr. Mont tells them exercise is
- optional and lets his staff treat patients when he isn't
- present. Dr. Mont declines to comment.
-
- In Tyler, Texas, Anton Lester III treats up to 20 diet-pill
- patients a day at $50 a head; several patients say he
- often gives them only a cursory exam. Dr. Lester says
- the diet pills are only a fraction of his business. He
- admits that he sometimes prescribes the drugs to people
- who need to lose only a few pounds. "If they pay you,
- you have to give them something," he says.
-
-
-
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