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- >From: Suzanne Roy <idausa@ix.netcom.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Protest Ron Wood!
- Message-ID: <199704152207.RAA02552@dfw-ix4.ix.netcom.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- PROTEST NIH COVER-UP OF RON WOOD'S ANIMAL ABUSE AND FRAUD
- WORLD WEEK FOR ANIMALS IN LABORATORIES
-
- Thursday, April 24, 1997 Washington, DC
- U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services
- 200 Independence Ave. SW
- 11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.
-
- Join us as we converge on the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
- to protest the NIH's outrageous whitewash of animal abuse and scientific
- fraud committed by infamous vivisector Ron Wood. Help us focus attention
- on NIH's scandalous decision to re-fund Wood's crack smoking experiments on
- monkeys after they were shut down amidst federal charges for hundreds of
- violations of the Animal Welfare Act. A strong show of force is necessary to
- convince HHS Secretary Donna Shalala to stop this tragic waste of tax
- dollars and animal lives.
-
- Speakers at the protest will include Ray Greek, M.D. of the Medical Research
- Modernization Committee; Kenneth Shapiro, Ph.D., Executive Director of
- Psychologists for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, Anjay Elzanowski,
- Ph.D., Assistant Director for Research at Humane Society of the United
- States; Rhoda Ruttenberg, M.D., a psychiatrist specializing in the treatment
- of drug addiction; Tracy Reiman of People for the Ethical Treatment of
- Animals; and Paul Shapiro of Compassion Over Killing.
-
- For more information, contact In Defense of Animals at 415/388-9641.
-
- Date: Tue, 15 Apr 1997 15:18:32 -0700
- >From: pmligotti@earthlink.net (Peter M. Ligotti)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Austrians Overwhelmingly Reject GE Food In National Referendum
- Message-ID: <v01540b19af79ac14643e@[206.250.112.52]>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- GREENPEACE: AUSTRIAN REFERENDUM SENDS
- STRONG MESSAGE ON GENETIC ENGINEERING
-
- Greenpeace: The world must listen! - Stop genetically engineered food!
-
- Vienna, April 14, 1997 -- "The European Commission should listen
- to the 1,226,551 Austrian citizens who signed a referendum
- calling on their government to stop the release of genetically
- engineered organisms into food and the environment,"
- Greenpeace Austria Executive Director Ulrike Schelander said today.
- The referendum on genetic engineering came in second in the
- list of referenda in Austria. It was the most successful vote
- on enviromental issues.
-
- "With this sensational result, the Austrian people have given a
- very strong signal to the other EU countries and the whole world:
- A vast part of our population does not want to eat genetically
- altered food. Now the politicians have to act accordingly",
- Schelander said. "It is not only Austrians who do not want
- genetic engineering in their food or environment. Greenpeace is
- getting a similar message from consumers and Governments all
- around Europe and beyond."
-
- France and Italy have banned the growing of genetically
- engineered maize; Austria and Luxembourg have also banned its import.
- The EU Parliament last week strongly criticised the EU Commission
- for its outrageous behaviour in authorising genetically engineered
- maize. European Commission President Jacques Santers' reaction to the
- Parliamentary resolution last week was not one of concern, but rather
- the opposite: he is trying to try to find ways to stifle
- such strong criticism from the Parliament in future.
-
- This week the Commission has been summoned yet again to a meeting
- at the United States Department of Agriculture which has reacted
- to the European opposition to genetic engineering by saying
- `this shouldn't be allowed to happen.'
-
- "For whom is Mr. Santer working - the United States Department
- of Agriculture or Europe? Are we to have no democracy or rights
- in Europe?" asked Greenpeace Director Schelander.
-
- Following the successful referendum, Greenpeace and the other
- initiators demanded a package of immediate measures from the
- Austrian government:
-
- 1. An immediate moratorium on all releases of GMOs;
- 2. A ban on the production of genetically manipulated organisms;
- 3. An import ban on GE maize has to be complied with and defended,
- if necessary up to the European Court;
- 4. Austria should ban the import of GE soya;
- 5. An Austrian veto against the EU patents directive;
- 6. Strict liability-regulations for GE production and transport;
- 7. Strict and comprehensive labelling of all GE food in Austria;
- 8. Austria should be take a proposal to the EU for a
- moratorium on releases of all GMOs in Europe.
-
- "In 1978, the Austrian population voted against the nuclear plant
- Zwentendorf and thus, as the first country in the world, said no
- to nuclear power. Now Austria once again has become a worldwide pioneer,
- by pushing back genetically manipulated food and agricultural products",
- said Schelander.
-
- for further information:
- Matthias Schickhofer, Greenpeace Austria
- Tel: ++43-1-7130061-44 or ++43-664-3386503 (mobile phone)
- Attila Cerman, Greenpeace Austria
- Tel: ++43-1-7130061-58 or ++43-663-9208162 (mobile phone)
- Cindy Baxter, Greenpeace International, Tel: ++31-20-5236279
-
- notes to the editors:
-
- 1) The referendum against genetical engineering was organised
- and supported by a broad coalition of environmental and animal
- protection organisations, Austrian farmers and parts of the
- catholic church of Austria. It was up for signing between
- April 7 - April 14:
-
- NO GENETICALLY MANIPULATED FOOD
- Ban of the production, import and sale of genetically manipulated food
- and agricultural products in Austria.
-
- NO GMO RELEASES IN AUSTRIA
- Ban of the release of genetically manipulated plants, animals and
- microorganisms.
-
- NO PATENTING OF LIFE
- Ban of the patenting of living beings.
-
- 2) According to Austrian law, every referendum that receives
- more than 100,000 signatures has to be dealt with by the parliament
- within one year. The most successful referendum in the
- past was against the construction of the
- Vienna Conference Centre in 1982
- (1,361,562 signatures).
-
- 3) There are 5.76 million voters in Austria.
-
- <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
-
-
- Date: Tue, 15 Apr 1997 21:39:50 -0700
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Animal communication
- Message-ID: <33545816.52E5@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Researcher believes animals have a lot to say
-
- San Francisco Examiner
-
- SAN FRANCISCO (April 15, 1997 01:02 a.m. EDT) -- Unlike humans, animals
- lack sophisticated languages -- but that doesn't mean they aren't saying
- anything.
-
- According to legend, Eskimos have hundreds of different words for
- "snow." Likewise, animals have multiple ways of crying "Help!" that vary
- according to the type of threat, a top scientist says. Certain monkeys
- even know how to lie, and for the same reason that many humans lie --
- for sex, says researcher Peter Marler.
-
- In Africa, vervet monkeys utter one type of cry when threatened by a
- snake; another when attacked by a leopard; and yet another when
- assaulted by an eagle, said Marler, who works at the University of
- California-Davis.
-
- That way, Marler explained at a language conference Saturday at the
- California Academy of Sciences, their fellow vervets will know where to
- hide: say, in a tree, far above the snake; or in a bush, where the eagle
- can't reach them.
-
- Also, field researchers in Africa have observed male vervet monkeys
- attracting females by uttering the vervet word for "food," Marler said.
-
- Just as some human females discover that their blind date's "BMW" is a
- rusting Chevy and his "high-powered job" is the night shift at Arby's,
- the female vervet rushes up to the male and discovers the "food" is a
- twig or leaf.
-
- Marler is "the doyen of animal communication research," said the
- scientist who introduced him, Nina G. Jablonski, chair of anthropology
- at the academy.
-
- For centuries, scientists have wondered whether the animal world's
- cacophony of clucks, tweets, woofs, meows and cock-a-doodle-doos are
- primitive forms of language.
-
- Or are they just meaningless grunts, peeps and squeals that creatures
- utter as automatically and helplessly as a wind-up doll's plea to
- "Change me"? Many animal lovers prefer to believe the former; animal
- "behaviorists," the latter.
-
- The contentious science of "animal communication" peaked in the 1970s.
- Back then, scientists claimed they had trained primates how to
- communicate with sign language.
-
- But critics analyzed videotapes of the training sessions and claimed the
- primates didn't really "understand" what they were "saying." Afterward,
- the field withered and federal research funds largely dried up.
-
- Nowadays, most animal communication experts' goals are far more modest.
- Instead of trying to "talk" via sign language with animals, they
- passively observe animals in the laboratory or the field and tape-record
- their utterances.
-
- What if the animals are, so to speak, tongue-tied? Well, like movie
- Nazis, the scientists have "vays of making zem talk." Nice, harmless
- ways, that is.
-
- For example, scientists have startled a chicken into squawking the
- chickenish cry of "Hawk!" by placing a TV set over its head, then
- showing a videotape of a hawk attack.
-
- In the field, researchers play tape recordings of vervet monkey cries to
- see how these affect real monkeys. For example, they'll play a vervet
- monkey cry that, translated into human English, means "Look out! Snake!"
- Startled, the real-life monkeys stand on their hind feet and look around
- for snakes.
-
- And when the scientists play a cry that is monkey-speak for "Look out!
- Eagle!", the real-life monkeys hide in a bush where the eagle can't
- reach them.
-
- Such experiments offer "great, compelling hints" that the monkeys' cries
- aren't simply dumb reflexes, Marler said. Rather, they're the equivalent
- of human words that refer to specific objects in the environment, Marler
- says.
-
- It raises the $64,000 question: If certain animals utter "words," can
- they assemble those words into "sentences"?
-
- This is "the most difficult (issue in animal communication research),
- the one I feel most timid in approaching," Marler acknowledged. On the
- one hand, he is "virtually certain" there is no evidence that animals
- can assemble words into sentences.
-
- On the other hand, tape recordings of certain bird calls show they
- contain an intricate internal structure. That structure includes "a
- simple library of six (musical) note types" that the bird rearranges
- into a complex variety of songs, he said.
-
- In other words, he joked, animal "talk" isn't totally explained by what
- a colleague scorns as "the GOP theory" -- a theory that animal
- utterances are just "grunts of pain."
- Date: Tue, 15 Apr 1997 21:43:07 -0700
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Science and the bottom line
- Message-ID: <335458DB.5CC6@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Researchers say drug company blocked publication of unfavorable study
-
- The Associated Press
-
- CHICAGO (April 15, 1997 5:25 p.m. EDT) -- For more than six years, a
- drug manufacturer suppressed research that could have helped an
- estimated 8 million Americans save $356 million a year by using cheaper
- alternatives to the company's synthetic thyroid hormone.
-
- Knoll Pharmaceutical Co. finally threatened to sue to halt publication
- of a study that could topple its near-monopoly on the $600 million
- retail market for the drug, the study's lead author told The Journal of
- the American Medical Association. The journal published the research on
- Wednesday for the first time.
-
- Knoll said it had scientific objections to the study.
-
- With the drug industry spending millions each year on medical studies,
- the episode raises troubling questions about the companies' influence
- over research findings on which their profits may depend.
-
- "We don't know whether things have been locked up in laboratories that
- could save lives," said Dr. David Blumenthal of Massachusetts General
- Hospital. "That is probably overdramatic, but I do think there is
- probably some delaying ... slowing the progress of science."
-
- Knoll's product, Synthroid, controls 85 percent of the market for
- synthetic thyroid hormone, used by people whose thyroid glands have been
- damaged by disease or have been surgically removed.
-
- Thyroid hormones regulate metabolism, the chemical activity in cells
- that releases energy from nutrients or fuels the manufacture of other
- substances, such as proteins.
-
- Synthroid dominates the market in part because it was the first
- synthetic thyroid hormone. Natural thyroid extracts had been marketed
- for years before federal rules required a scientific benchmark for the
- drugs' effectiveness.
-
- In 1987, Synthroid's manufacturer -- at the time, Flint Laboratories --
- commissioned a study of the drug. Betty J. Dong, a pharmacist at the
- University of California at San Francisco who had published findings
- suggesting Synthroid might be superior, was hired to compare Synthroid
- to three other,
- similar drugs.
-
- Her study showed clearly that the cheaper competitors -- one brand-name
- drug and two generics -- worked just as well as Synthroid for thyroid
- deficiency.
-
- Over the next four years, the company tried to discredit the study and
- prevent its publication, the journal said in an editorial.
-
- After demands for revisions and a university investigation that found no
- problems with the work, the study was sent to the journal and slated for
- publication in January 1995.
-
- Twelve days before it was to appear, Dong suddenly withdrew the
- manuscript, saying Knoll had threatened to sue because her contract
- prohibited publication without the manufacturer's OK.
-
- The company has admantly denied making such threats but said it withheld
- its permission because of scientific objections to the study.
-
- "It did not meet the requirements of a valid study, which include the
- proper selection of patients, appropriate testing methods and control of
- drug dosage," Knoll said in a statement this week.
-
- The manufacturer still faults the study but agreed to publication,
- partly at the urging of the Food and Drug Administration and of former
- U.S. Health Secretary Dr. Louis Sullivan, who is on Knoll's board, the
- editorial said. JAMA had five outside experts review the work and judged
- it sound.
-
- Synthroid costs two to three times as much as its competitors. At a
- Walgreen's drug store in Chicago this week, 100 tablets of a typical
- daily dose of Synthroid cost $22.99. The same amount
- of Levoxyl, a brand-name alternative, cost $6.99. At those prices, a
- year's supply of Synthroid would be $83.91 and of Levoxyl would be
- $25.51.
-
- Dong and university officials declined to be interviewed, but she and
- her colleagues said in a letter to the journal, "The difficult, sobering
- and painful lessons learned should be remembered by all when
- collaborations between industry and academia occur."
-
- The incident is hardly unique, according to another study in Wednesday's
- journal. About one in 20 faculty members at universities that do
- life-science research said publication of their research has been
- delayed for months when it yielded "undesired results."
-
- Consumer medical advocate Dr. Sidney M. Wolfe said those results are
- terrifying.
-
- "Much of this is derivative of this huge profit motive that these
- companies have," said Wolfe, director of Public Citizen's Health
- Research Group in Washington. "Everyone thinks that because they're in
- the health-care area ... they really operate by different standards, and
- they don't."
- Date: Tue, 15 Apr 1997 21:48:53 -0700
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Animal systems
- Message-ID: <33545A35.3B55@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Chemicals in coffee aroma may prevent disease, researcher says
-
- The Associated Press
-
- SAN FRANCISCO (April 15, 1997 00:55 a.m. EDT) -- What makes that morning
- whiff of coffee so alluring? It could be your nose telling you, "Drink
- up, it's good for."
-
- A University of California-Davis chemist found that beguiling smell of
- freshly brewed coffee is caused in part by chemicals that form potent
- cancer-fighting antioxidants.
-
- Individually, the chemicals are not potent. But when combined, as in
- brewed coffee, the activity increases and is comparable to antioxidants
- found in fruits and vegetables.
-
- Takayuki Shibamoto said his preliminary study shows that chemicals in
- fresh-brewed coffee might be equal to the amount found in three oranges.
-
- "That's not a very scientific comparison, but it makes it easier to
- understand," said Shibamoto, who presented his findings Monday at the
- national meeting of the American Chemical Society.
-
- Shibamoto cautioned that the chemicals detectable in coffee's aroma
- escape rapidly into the air. "You have to drink it in about 20 minutes
- after it is brewed," he said.
-
- Shibamoto warned that the research is preliminary, restricted to
- test-tube analysis. If he gets funding, he hopes to take a look at how
- animals might be affected by coffee.
-
- Sara Risch, a Chicago-based consultant who has studied antioxidants and
- holds a doctorate in food science, called Shibamoto's work "an exciting
- start."
-
- "It's fascinating that he's found a new category of compounds that can
- serve as antioxidants," she said. "If there's a caution, it's that this
- is a laboratory study. The next step is to find out if there is truly
- any biological activity -- if you take it into an animal system, do we
- still see the antioxidant activity?"
-
- A UC-Davis chemist for 18 years, Shibamoto began studying antioxidants
- more than a decade ago. He decided to examine possible health benefits
- of coffee after being intrigued by the fact that many of the world's
- cultures have been drinking it for ages.
-
- "That got me started," said Shibamoto, whose research was done with
- university funding. "So many other researchers have studied the toxicity
- of coffee -- they gave the negative and undesirable effect. I began
- thinking there must be some beneficial effect we are getting from
- coffee."
-
- ==================================================
- Unscientific minds like yours and mine will think that the best way to
- find out whether coffee aroma confers health benefits is by doing an
- epidemiological study of people who drink fresh brewed coffee and people
- who don't.
-
- Not so with the vivisectors. For them, the next step is always to
- take it "into an animal system" - ignoring the fact that success
- or failure in rodent studies will prove nothing about the effects in
- humans.
-
- Andy
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 01:32:57 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK/HK] Marine 'fired at rat' during secret mission
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970416013348.4917b6f2@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Wednesday, April 16th, 1997
-
- Marine 'fired at rat' during secret mission
- By Tim Butcher, Defence Correspondent
-
-
- A ROYAL Marine serving in Hong Kong shot at a rat while on an undercover
- mission, a court martial hearing was told yesterday.
-
- Cpl Steven Leech faces two charges of negligence after firing his Browning
- 9mm pistol during the secret operation. "Leech said words to the effect that
- he was fed up with the rat and was going to take it out," Lt Cdr Mark
- Emerton, prosecuting, told the hearing at HMS
- Nelson in Portsmouth. "At this point there was a loud bang and Leech said
- something like 'I have either blown it away or missed it by miles'."
-
- The hearing was told that Cpl Leech, 27, who served with 45 Commando Royal
- Marines, based at Arbroath in Scotland, was taking part in an operation to
- monitor smuggling between Hong Kong and China. Traffic in cars stolen in the
- colony and shipped illegally into the People's Republic was the target of an
- anti-smuggling unit made up of members of the Armed Forces.
-
- Lt Cdr Emerton said Cpl Leech was with another Royal Marine and two Gurkhas
- in an observation post deep in the New Territories when the incident
- happened last August. "The post was on a ledge on the side of a hill that
- overlooked a location they were watching," he said.
-
- "The other Marine, Philip Harris, said in his statement that in the
- afternoon of the next day he heard the noise of the grab bag where the guns
- were kept being opened and he saw Leech with a 9mm pistol in his hand. It
- was the noise of Leech cocking the pistol that drew his attention."
-
- He then read from the statement from one of the Gurkhas, which said: "Leech
- was holding the pistol with both hands, taking aim at a bush in front of
- them. He heard Leech repeating the word 'rat' and then 'rat' again." The
- hearing was told that Cpl Leech did not report the shot and it was
- discovered only later when the weapons were inspected.
-
- Cpl Leech told Royal Navy investigators that he shot at the rat because he
- thought that it posed a health risk. He said that the incident was reported
- immediately but he suggested that it might not have been logged because of a
- language difficulty with the Gurkha radio operators.
-
- Cpl Leech, who has been in the Royal Marines for 11 years and served in
- Ulster and Hong Kong, denies the charges.
-
- The hearing is expected to end today.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 01:32:59 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [US] Hockey fans asked not to throw octupus
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970416013350.09cf0e6e@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- [Always thought some hockey fans were strange]
-
- According to a report on tonight's BCTV's News Hour Final, fans of the
- Detroit Redwings National Hockey League team have been asked by team
- officials not to throw octupuses (or should that be octupi) onto the ice
- during the Stanley Cup play-offs.
-
- The throwing of a dead octpus has been done fans by of the Redwings since
- 1952, but new regulations brought in by the NHL only permit the throwing of
- hats after a hat-trick. Any other odjects will result in a two minute
- penalty for the whole of the home team.
-
- Redwing officials have brought in sniffer dogs in order to prevent the
- octopses being brought in to the arena.
-
-
-
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 01:32:55 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] MoD joins alliance to save the black grouse
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970416013345.4917ce86@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Wednesday, April 16th, 1997
-
- MoD joins alliance to save the black grouse
- By Charles Clover, Environment Editor
-
- A PLAN to halt the decline of the black grouse was launched by conservation
- groups and the Ministry of Defence yesterday.
-
- Numbers have decreased from 25,000 cocks in the 1980s to 6,500, according to
- the Game Conservancy Trust and the Royal Society for the Protection of
- Birds. This amounts to a fall of 10 per cent a year.
-
- The females, known as greyhens, are harder to count than the noisier cocks
- at their display sites, or leks but the number of cocks roughly equates with
- breeding pairs.
-
- Dr David Baines, the Game Conservancy Trust's head of woodland and grouse
- research, said the decrease represented only part of a "monstrous" decline
- from when the black grouse, one of the most spectacular moorland birds, was
- an abundant species in the last
- century.
-
- It was found in heathland all over southern England. In the 1860s, 4,500
- birds were shot in one year on one of the Duke of Buccleuch's Scottish estates.
-
- The reason for the black grouse's accelerated decline in recent years, said
- Dr Baines, was overgrazing on the moors as a result of EU policies which pay
- farmers by the head of sheep. "This has been accruing for two decades. Now
- the sheep have had the plants the grouse like to eat, the trees they use as
- shelter from the snow and the habitat for the insects they eat and use to
- feed their young."
-
- The new project, which has the backing of 10 landowners, including the
- Ministry of Defence, English Nature and Forestry Enterprise, will employ a
- full-time project officer in the black grouse's last English stronghold, the
- North Pennine moors of Co Durham, Northumberland,
- Yorkshire and Cumbria.
-
- John Barrett, of English Nature, said: "We hope the project will identify
- positive measures which will enhance the status of black grouse."
-
- The landowners involved are willing to use the sums available under
- Government heather improvement schemes - ú25 for each sheep removed. This
- compares with payments of ú35 per sheep kept on the hill.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 01:33:00 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [CA] 'Wild kingdom' day has premier, MLA dodging animals
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970416013351.4917ae14@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From The Vancouver Sun - Tuesday, April 15th, 1997
-
- By Jim Beatty
- Sun Legislature Bureau
-
- VICTORIA - From stampeding horses to suicidal birds, the animal world had it
- in for New Democrats [the governing party in B.C.] on Monday.
-
- In the morning, a horse pulling a carriage in quaint Victoria charged over
- the legislature lawn and rammed a van owned by MLA [Member of te Legislative
- Assembly, or provincial MP]. Then, only hours later, a seagull on a death
- mission threatened to down the helicopter taking premier Glen Clark to the
- capital from Vancouver's harbor.
-
- The latter might have been disastrous. The helicopter, owned by Helijet
- Airways, did some sky-high manoeuvring - including an uncomfortably quick
- turn over English Bay - to aviod the seagull, but to no avail.
-
- The bird hit the front fuselage and, well, exploded.
-
- "It sounded like a gunshot," said Clark, who was reading the paper when the
- bird was struck. "I was shocked."
-
- Covered in feathers and seagull parts, the helicopter landed at Vancouver's
- International Airport to be cleaned and to ensure no debris was caught in
- the engine.
-
- "It looks worse than it is," said Helijet operations manager Gordon Jones,
- adding aircraft often strike birds, although helicopter strikes are more rare.
-
- Most birds are drawn away by the downdraft, Jones said.
-
- Earlier in the day, Randell (MLA for Burnaby-Edmonds) was clearing branches
- and debris from his Dodge Caravan after the horse's rampage.
-
- "The horse just ran amok...It ran across the lawn and knocked all the
- branches over and just pushed in the hood," said Randell, recounting what
- police had told him.
-
- "I couldn't believe the horse had hit the car right there in the parking lot."
-
- Owner Bruce Wright, of Princess Black Beauty Carriage Tours, said the horse
- was spooked when a passerby extended an automatic umbrella.
-
- "We were training the horse and it just bolted," he said. He said the animal
- only stopped after it hit some small trees in front of Randell's vehicle.
-
- No passengers were in the carriage.
-
- With the horse uninjured and back at a nearby farm, the seagull was the
- day's only casualty.
-
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 01:33:03 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [CA] 'Ifs' drive new animal-abuse punishment
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970416013353.09cf0d3e@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- [This just about sums up the attitude of the Canadian government - at all
- levels - towards even animal welfare.]
-
- >From The Vancouver Sun - Tuesday, April 15th, 1997
-
- By Nicholas Read - posted with permission of author
-
- IF the federal Liberals win the next election, IF they have sufficient
- political will and IF various interested parties can agree to a change in
- the wording, it's possible that the Canadian Criminal Code may be ammended
- to make it easier to punish abusers of animals.
-
- That's a lot of ifs and, even if they were eliminated as pre-conditions,
- there would be no guarentee that anything would change.
-
- This is not Europe.
-
- Canadian politicians are notoriously backward where animal issues are
- concerned; so much so that even when there is massive public support for an
- intiative, Candian officials usually can be counted on to find a way to keep
- things rooted in the past. For example, while 80 per cent of Canadians want
- the leghold trap banned, the government continues to fight for its use in
- discussions with the European Union. A long-promised Endangered Species Act,
- supported by 90 per cent of Canadians, is still waiting to be debated in the
- House and may well die before the next election.
-
- Nevertheless there is hope. Documents I obtained under access-to-infromation
- legislation show that the feds are at least considering updating the
- Criminal Code to reflect a changing public attitude to animal protection.
-
- Among the points addressed are:
-
- -An increase in the maximum jail sentence for offenders to five years from
- six-months.
- -The inclusion of stray animals in the law. Currently, it applies only to
- animals with owners.
- -The combination of existing "archaic and redundant" regulations into a
- single, comprehensive section.
-
- But for change to be really effective, more has to be done. Currently, it's
- almost impossible to prosecute anyone accused of being cruel to animals
- under section 442 of the Criminal Code because of three obstructive words:
- "wilful", "unreasonable" and "unnecessary".
-
- They appear in the following clause: "Cruelty, in relation to any animal,
- means the wilful infliction upon the animal of pain or suffering that in its
- kind or degree, or in its object, or in the circumstancesin which it is
- inflicted, is unreasonable or unnecessary."
-
- "But how can anyone prove an act of cruelty is wilful?" humane society
- workers ask again and again. And who's to say what's unreasonable or
- unnecessary ? Setting an animal on fire in a laboratory can be deemed
- necessary if the experimenter says it is.
-
- So, for any real progress to be made, those words have to go.
-
- Will they? Jennifer Lang, communications assistant to Justice Minister Alan
- Rock, says it's too soon to say. This project is only at its most
- preliminary stage, she says, so in fact., it's too soon to say much of
- anything.
-
- What's more, concerned parties have to be consulted before any any firm
- change in wording can be approved.
-
- For example, the Fur Institute of Canada has already expressed concern that
- changes to the code could threaten standard fur industry practices. These
- include a trapper allowing an animal to remain in a steel-jawed trap for
- five continuous days and nights, or a fur farmer keeping a bobcat or lynx
- locked in a cage scarcely bigger than it is until it is gassed or
- electrocuted for its pelt.
-
- Last July, the institute sent a letter to the government wanting assurances
- that any plans to ammend the code would not affect trapping or hunting. It
- said the inclusion of the words "wild animals" in the code and changing the
- definition of animal "to mean any living non-human vertebrate" would be "of
- very real concern to us."
-
- It needn't have worried. Justice department lawyer Mark Berlin made that
- clear in an interview in which he said that any changes wouldn't affect
- "legitimate, legal animal-use industries."
-
- Unfortunately, it's precicisely in these industries - intensive farming,
- trapping and vivisection, among them - that the abuse of animals is most
- prevalent.
-
- Stll, a properly amended law would help. Recently, an Ottawa couple were
- convicted of abandoning their dogs for two weeks after they moved out of
- their house. One dog had to be euthanized when it was discovered starving in
- the basement; the other was found frozen to death chained to its doghouse.
-
- Their punishment? A slap on the wrist: Three years probation and a
- prohibition against owning animals for two years.
-
- Frances Rosenburg, exective director of the 200,000-member Canadian
- Federation of Humane Societies, says her society has spent more than 10
- years trying to persuade the government to amend the code. Thousands of
- letters and signatures on petitions have been sent in support of such a
- change. All that's happened is an expression from the government of a
- willingness to talk.
-
- But it's a start. A tentative beginning. And given the sorry state of animal
- welfare in ths country, that, sadly, is all she can hold on to for now.
-
-
-
-
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 01:33:06 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Fwd: [CA] Vancouver beluga transfer
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970416013356.09cf0280@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- The following is posted on behalf of Annelise Sorg (Whalesave/Coalition For
- No Whales in Captivity. Please reply direct to her. Thanks]
-
- >Date: Tue, 15 Apr 1997 23:57:50 -0800
- >To: adncstr@muskoka.com, cbp@island.net, johnsonm@istar.ca,
- > sheehan@mars.ark.com, per.andre@sas.se, craigm@eriv.com,
- > isisani@aol.com, dknowles@dowco.com, jmcousteau@aol.com,
- > kevin@eagletree.com, ldill@sfu.ca, markc@eriv.com,
- > reelife@sunshine.net, fsharpe@sfu.ca, aschwarz@langara.bc.ca,
- > Dennis_Dorgan@nykatt01.attmail.com
- >From: WhaleSave <annelise@direct.ca>
- >Subject: Vancouver beluga transfer
- >
- >Following is our response to today's Vancouver Aquarium press release.
- >Needless to say, we welcome any ideas and information you can provide.
- >Thanks. // Annelise
- >
- >FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEApril 15, 1997
- >
- >AQUARIUM'S PROPOSAL VIOLATES
- >CANADA'S BELUGA EXPORT BAN
- >
- >The Vancouver Aquarium announced today in a press release that it has
- >applied for export permits to transfer a male beluga called Nanuq, to Sea
- >World in San Diego on a two-year breeding loan. The Coalition For No
- >Whales in Captivity believes this is illegal.
- >
- >The Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) banned the export of
- >wild-caught belugas in 1992. The ban came shortly after the Shed Aquarium
- >in Chicago captured and killed two of four Canadian whales by injecting
- >them with a roundworm vaccine made for cattle.
- >
- >The DFO must reject the aquarium's export permit application and disallow
- >the proposed inhumane back-and-forth transfer of Nanuq to the United
- >States. The ban on exportation of wild-caught Canadian beluga whales
- >should apply to *all* wild-caught belugas, whether they were caught ten
- >days or ten years ago.
- >
- >Canadian whales should stay in Canada. Instead of sending beluga whales to
- >profit the US Anhauser Busch/Sea World Corporation, the whales should be
- >scientifically introduced into a natural sea pen in Nova Scotia. The
- >belugas could then retire in a natural environment and the hard-pressed
- >local economy could benefit from increased tourism.
- >
- >The Toronto-based group Return To The Wild is co-ordinating efforts with
- >biologists and conservation agencies to develop a beluga retirement site in
- >the pristine ocean waters of the Bras D'Or Lakes in Cape Breton, Nova
- >Scotia. In a September 1996 report to the Vancouver Park Board proposing
- >the phase-out of the aquarium's whale exhibits, Vancouver marine mammal
- >biologist Dr. Peter Watts wrote "Certain inlets in Bras D'Or, which could
- >be netted off, experience ice cover during the winter, which would
- >especially suit them for use by belugas. Further, the absence of native
- >marine mammals in Bras D'Or effectively eliminates any fear of transmitting
- >disease to wild populations.". According to Canada's world renowned beluga
- >expert Dr. Pierre Beland, the Bras D'Or project has merit.
- >
- >The Vancouver Aquarium's claim that Nanuq's transfer to a show tank will
- >aid conservation research is ludicrous. In 20 years of keeping beluga
- >whales in captivity, the Vancouver Aquarium has not published a single
- >scientific paper on the species. The aquarium should aid Canadian
- >conservation efforts by participating in the Bras D'Or project, instead of
- >being supportive of California's Sea World.
- >
- >For more information, please contact:
- >Annelise Sorg
- >Director
- >Coalition For No Whales In Captivity
- >102-1365 West Fourth Avenue
- >Vancouver, B.C. V6H 3Y8
- >Canada
- >Tel. (604) 736-9514
- >E-mail <annelise@direct.ca>
- >
- >
- >
- >
-
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 19:53:50 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (CN) Restaurants serving snake multiplying in Shanghai
- Message-ID: <199704161153.TAA21915@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
-
-
- > The Star Online
-
- Wednesday, April 16, 1997
-
- Restaurants serving snake multiplying in Shanghai
- Focus
-
- By Leu Siew Ying
-
- SHANGHAI: Pit vipers, protected cobras, freshwater
- snakes, sea snakes ù you name it and 6,000 specialised
- restaurants here will bring it to your table.
-
- Snake restaurants have multiplied here, serving up 4,000
- tonnes of the exotic fare that connoisseurs say tastes
- like chicken meat and has aphrodisiac and medicinal
- values.
-
- But almost all the restaurants, from small family
- operations to large enterprises, were operating
- illegally, said the latest issue of Life Weekly.
-
- The report said a snake market in Tongchuan Road here
- was the biggest supplier of the reptiles, with one
- seller delivering at least two tonnes of snakes to
- restaurants daily.
-
- In this market, 10 species including sea snakes,
- freshwater snakes, cobras and long-noded pit vipers were
- kept in iron baskets. Only boas, not native to China,
- are missing.
-
- Cobra costs 114 yuan (RM34.86) per kg and one kg of pit
- vipers costs 360 yuan (RM110).
-
- If customers do not find exactly what they want, they
- can always try the seven other snake markets around the
- city, including in the Pudong New Area development zone.
-
- Snake eating first became popular in southern Guangdong
- province but has caught on among Shanghainese.
-
- Restaurants are springing up everywhere but competition
- is so keen they fight it out through advertisements.
-
- Huimin Lao Mi Snake Island, which opened in February,
- bought a front page advertisement in the Liberation
- Daily saying the quality of its snake meat was assured
- and the restaurant was supervised by the Xuhui district
- consumers association.
-
- The restaurant charges 316 yuan (RM96.63) for one kg of
- cobra, 576 yuan (RM176.13) for one kg of pit viper and
- 76 yuan (RM23.24) for one kg of water snake.
-
- Customers pack its lobby every night waiting for seats,
- while snakes writhe nearby in glass tanks.
-
- More than 90 per cent of the snakes that end up on
- dinner tables here have slithered their way from the
- mountains of Zhejiang, Jiangxi, Sichuan and Hunan
- provinces.
-
- Officials from the Shanghai Wildlife Protection
- Administration Bureau said snake restaurants should have
- two licences, but 99.9 per cent of the restaurants had
- no licences at all.
-
- Provincial snake businessmen, who had obtained the
- licences issued by their own provincial departments,
- were not licensed by local authorities here to do
- business here, the officials said.
-
- May to October is the peak period for eating snakes
- because they are more abundant in the wild and the meat,
- blood, gall bladder and skin are believed to have a
- cooling effect and are good for the complexion and the
- sex drive. ù AFP
-
-
-
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 19:54:06 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (IN) Indian animal rightists demonstrate for cows
- Message-ID: <199704161154.TAA21792@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- [THE HINDU]
-
- Wednesday, April 16, 1997
- SECTION: Regional
-
- Police lathicharge animal rights activists
- Date: 16-04-1997 :: Pg: 06 :: Col: d
- By Our Staff Reporter
- BANGALORE, April 15.
-
-
-
- Police resorted to lathicharge and burst teargas shells
- to disperse a mob at the Yelahanka Police Station here
- today. The demonstrators were demanding to know the
- whereabouts of about 60 cows, allegedly being taken to
- slaughter houses.
-
- The activists of Akhil Karnataka Pranidaya Sangha (AKPS)
- had intercepted three lorries packed with cattle, some
- of which bore injuries, near the police station in the
- early hours of today. They were allegedly being
- transported to slaughter houses on the eve of Bakrid.
-
- However, high drama prevailed when some ``miscreants''
- allegedly assaulted the activists while the animals were
- being taken to an ashram and hijacked the animal-laden
- vehicles.
-
- Following this, the AKPS activists organised a dharna in
- front of the police station, demanding that the animals
- be brought back and handed over to them.
-
- The AKPS activists, ``acting on a clue,'' had kept a
- watch on the incoming vehicles at Yelahanka since
- midnight. During morning the activists intercepted three
- lorries, in which the animals were ``packed like cotton
- bales.'' At least one of the cattle had died due to
- suffocation and a few others bore deep cut wounds on
- different parts of their bodies, it is stated. One of
- the lorries was said to be stinking because of the
- oozing blood from the injured cows, infested with flies.
-
- Mr. Sunil of the AKPS said the activists were not
- allowed to feed the animals nor was any treatment given
- to them.
-
- Later, it was decided to take the cattle to Vijayapura
- Ahsram under police protection, which were accompanied
- by some of the activists. But a group of men suddenly
- stopped the cavalcade, it is said, and assaulted the
- activists and drove the vehicles away.
-
- The angry activists of the AKPS and their supporters,
- numbering around 350, resorted to ``rasta roko'' in
- front of the police station. The crowd indulged in
- stone-throwing and burnt a maruti van. Mr. Ananthkumar,
- BJP MP, sought action against the policemen alleging
- ``dereliction of duty'' in saving the cows.
-
- Tension subsided when Mr. Revanasiddhaiah, Commissioner
- of Police, and Mr. Kasturirangan, Additional
- Commissioner of Police (Law and Order), assured the
- agitators to trace the lorries and animals and initiate
- action against the police, if found guilty.
-
-
-
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 19:54:12 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (IN) Experts flay claims over tiger population
- Message-ID: <199704161154.TAA22056@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- [THE HINDU]
-
- Wednesday, April 16, 1997
- SECTION: National
-
- Experts flay claims over tiger population
- Date: 16-04-1997 :: Pg: 16 :: Col: a
- By Our Staff Correspondent
- BHOPAL, April 15.
-
- Wildlife experts have lashed out at the Madhya Pradesh
- Forest department authorities for attempting to project
- through TV and newspaper reports that the tiger
- population has increased in the State even before the
- tiger census began earlier this month.
-
- Mr. Valmik Thapar, who is a member of the Project Tiger
- Steering Committee, MP Tiger State Committee and also
- IUCN-Cat Specialist Group, has written to the Union
- Minister for Environment and Forests expressing dismay
- over attempts by the State Forest Department authorities
- to speculate on the tiger population at a premature
- stage. Tigers are being counted across the country and
- it is only by the end of this year that some indicators
- about the health of the tiger population would be
- available, he has emphasised through his letter to the
- Union Environment Minister.
-
- He has demanded that all State Wildlife Wardens be
- instructed to not come out with any indicators or
- figures till the All-India Tiger Estimation is over.
-
- When approached for comments, publisher and editor of
- ``Sanctuary,'' Mr. Bittu Sahgal - who is also a member
- of the Project Tiger Steering Committee and Madhya
- Pradesh Tiger State Committee - termed it as an
- ``unhealthy development''.
-
- This goes against the directives of Project Tiger, he
- said and added that instead of the week-long census
- operation, an exercise should be conducted round the
- year keep tabs on the tiger population and this should
- be done in close coordination with scientific groups
- that can simultaneously help assess whether or not
- adequate prey-base is available to support the tiger
- population.
-
- He even went to the extent of saying that it had been
- ''painfully`` noticed that the State forest department
- authorities were using Tiger Census to cover up their
- failure when it came to protecting tiger population.
-
- The week-long census operation began in Madhya Pradesh
- on April 4 amid fears that certain attempts might be
- made by the concerned authorities to cook up statistics
- and fudge tiger figures by manipulating the tracing of
- pug marks and collecting other related evidence by the
- forest employees. Meanwhile, an experts group has
- already recommended, at the Government of India level,
- an alternative approach to the estimation of tiger and
- prey population.
-
- It has been pointed out that research on population
- estimation techniques applicable to large mammals has
- now conclusively established the fact that approaches
- based on the concept of ''sampling`` are more rigorous,
- reliable, replicable and cost efficient as compared to
- earlier approaches based on total counts.
-
- It has been suggested that there should be a mapping of
- tiger distribution once a year by the forest department
- staff and the park authorities should not be asked to
- come up with exact numbers of either tigers or prey.
-
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 19:54:21 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (SG) 35 mosques forced to cancel ritual
- Message-ID: <199704161154.TAA22096@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- > The Straits times
- APR 16 1997
-
- 35 mosques forced to cancel ritual
-
- By Indrani Nadarajah and Ting Siew Lee
-
- MADAM Maryulis Marlian had been looking forward to the ritual
- sheep sacrifice, or korban, that was due to take place at the
- Sultan Mosque on Friday, Hari Raya Haji.
-
- This was the first time that the mosque was to have this ritual
- and she and 10 other women were to cook for about 30 needy
- families
-
- So, she was shocked yesterday, when Muis, the Islamic Religious
- Council of Singapore, said that korban would be cancelled at the
- Sultan Mosque and 34 other mosques this year.
-
- Muis said the animals could not be shipped in on time. About
- 3,500 Muslims will be affected.
-
- "We were so looking forward to preparing mutton curry and meat
- stew for needy families as well as for visitors. We had bought
- all the ingredients like onions, ginger and garlic," explained
- Madam Maryulis, 42, a canteen operator who also heads the
- mosque's women's committee.
-
- The animals were to have been slaughtered to provide the meat.
-
- This is the first time this has occurred since 1992, when Muis
- took over bringing in animals for Hari Raya Haji. It last
- happened in 1991, said Muis secretary Syed Haroon Aljunied. But
- one of the 35 mosques, the Hasanah Mosque will be getting 200
- sheep from an importer though they had ordered only 50.
-
- For 37 other mosques which had arranged on their own to have the
- animals shipped in, the ritual will go on as scheduled this
- Friday.
-
- Muis president Maarof Salleh said at a press conference yesterday
- that Shafiq Halal Food Pte Ltd won the tender to provide 3,424
- sheep and 20 cows.
-
- On Monday, it told Muis it had problems shipping the animals from
- Australia and could deliver on Friday at the earliest.
-
- "But this would be too late, because the animals wouldn't be able
- to meet the one-day quarantine requirements," said Mr Syed
- Haroon.
-
- Korban can only take place on the four days of Hari Raya Haji.
-
- "Basically, it reminds us that the prophet Abraham was prepared
- to sacrifice his own son for God, but because he was spared at
- the last minute, he offered up a sheep instead," he said.
-
- Yesterday, the Muslim religious head of Singapore, Mufti Syed Isa
- Mohamed, said that as korban was not obligatory, Muslims who had
- made the vow this year, could defer it till the following year.
-
- However, canteen operator Zubaidah Marlian, 38, had made plans to
- do it in Batam.
-
- "I have contacted some relatives there who will make the
- arrangements for me. It would be too disappointing not to do it,
- because of its religious significance." she said.
-
- All attempts by The Straits Times to contact Shafiq Halal Food
- yesterday for comment failed.
-
- The Australian company that is believed to be supplying the
- animals, Austral Asia Trading House, also could not be contacted
- yesterday.
-
- Muis will form a committee to look into this problem, and ensure
- it does not happen again.
-
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 19:54:27 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Some rams stray into gay baas: Scientists
- Message-ID: <199704161154.TAA22030@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- > The Straits Times, APR 16 1997
-
- Some rams stray into gay baas: Scientists
-
-
- LONDON -- Sheep farmers counting their lambs this spring may not
- have realised what a gamble they took last autumn, when they
- relied on their rams' naturally lustful instincts.
-
- A US study suggests that 10 per cent of rams are attracted only
- to other males and another 10 per cent have no interest in sex at
- all, said the Internet edition of the Times on Monday.
-
- Animal behaviour specialist Anne Perkins of Montana's Carroll
- College said: "If a ram does not pay attention to a female on
- heat within 30 minutes, then the chances are that it has very low
- libido, is asexual or male-orientated." She said that because
- rams were usually reared in all-male groups, even heterosexual
- ones often showed some homosexual behaviour. But as researchers
- have suspected that even this did not explain poor breeding
- performance, they ran an experiment in which two rams and two
- ewes on heat were tethered in a rectangular field, into which
- other rams were released. The scientists noted that the
- homosexual rams sniffed at but did not mount the females, but
- they responded to the urine of the males. If a tethered male
- urinated, they would smell that and proceed to mount them.
-
- The scientists found that about one in 10 rams was turned off by
- sex with animals of either gender, while others appeared to have
- a low sex drive or shyness and would perform only at night or if
- exposed to a female repeatedly.
-
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 19:54:40 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: More on THAT Fish Study
- Message-ID: <199704161154.TAA22385@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- Please note that I am posting news whether I find the contents agreeable or
- not.
- Those who are/know researchers/other scientists may want to find out more
- about the study and perhaps write a rebuttal to the Journal and post it to
- the list.
-
- Vadivu
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- ----------
-
- > The Straits Times,
- APR 16 1997
- Eating fish may curb heart attacks -- study
-
-
- Conducted among 1,822 workers in Chicago, it found an overall
- reduction of 42 per cent in deaths from heart attack among the
- fish-eaters over 30 years.
-
- ---------------------------------
-
- A LARGE long-term study has found that men who eat 200 g or more
- of fish a week -- about the size of two beef patties -- are less
- likely than those who rarely eat fish to die of heart attacks.
-
- The finding, published in The New England Journal of Medicine,
- joins eight other studies that have linked a heart-protective
- effect with regular fish consumption.
-
- The study, conducted among 1,822 employees of Western Electric,
- in Chicago, found an overall reduction of 42 per cent in deaths
- from heart attack among the fish-eaters over a period of 30
- years.
-
- Most of that reduction was accounted for by a low rate of cardiac
- deaths that were not sudden, or those occurring more than three
- hours after the onset of a heart attack.
-
- The researchers, headed by Dr Martha Daviglus, a
- preventive-medicine specialist at Northwestern University Medical
- School, in Chicago, took into account dozens of other factors
- that could influence cardiac risk in the study participants,
- including the possibility that protection came not from eating
- the fish but also from the replacement of meat in the men's diet.
-
- No matter how the data were analysed, fish-eating was associated
- with a reduced risk of cardiac deaths.
-
- "The good news is that eating small amounts of fish -- amounts
- that can fit easily into all people's diets -- make a
- difference," Dr Daviglus said in an interview.
-
- Although the study did not record the kinds of fish consumed, she
- speculated that much of it was probably canned tuna and lean fish
- like flounder or cod.
-
- "From this study," she said, "we can say that eating small
- amounts of fish, even lean fish, is associated with protection
- against heart attacks."
-
- Dr Charles Hennekens of Brigham and Women's Hospital, in Boston,
- whose Physicians Health Study has also suggested that eating fish
- reduces cardiac risks, said: "The public should be reassured that
- there is likely to be a small to moderate benefit to eating fish
- twice a week."
-
- Still, he emphasised that the evidence to date is "suggestive but
- not conclusive and more research ought to be done on this".
-
- Dr Jeremiah Stamler, emeritus professor of preventive medicine at
- Northwestern and a co-author of the new report, pointed out that
- "we don't yet know the mechanism by which fish-eating protects
- against cardiac deaths".
-
- "It would be nice to know how it may be working," he said.
-
- Dr Stamler emphasised, however, that the findings "have nothing
- to do with popping capsules of fish oils, the long-term effects
- of which we know nothing".
-
- One shortcoming of the study and others like it is that
- information about the participants' diets was gathered at the
- beginning of the project and nothing is known about subsequent
- changes that might have occurred in the men's eating habits.
-
- But Dr Stamler said: "Despite changes in dietary patterns that
- have occurred in our country, the limited data we have indicates
- that people tend to continue to eat more or less the way they ate
- before." -- NYT
-
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 22:12:32 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (IN) New Indian Animal Rights Website
- Message-ID: <199704161412.WAA26473@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- The URL of the Beauty Without Cruelty, India website that Manoj referred to is
-
- http://giaspn01.vsnl.net.in/~bwcindia/
-
-
- Vadivu
-
- Date: Thu, 17 Apr 1997 10:19:05 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Connect with Action
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970417101902.006be4c4@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- EnviroLink Network, host of the Animal Rights Resource Site, as well as
- this e-mail list, has a new feature designed for activists:
-
- Connect with Action
- http://www.envirolink.org/connect/
-
- Right now, only one portion has content: Tools for Activists
-
- allen
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 11:45:00 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: Ming-Lee Yeh <myeh@osf1.gmu.edu>
- To: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- Cc: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Re: (TW)PETA--PIGS BEATEN, ELECTROCUTED, AND BURIED ALIVE IN
- TAIWAN
- Message-ID: <Pine.OSF.3.95q.970416113018.25008E-100000@osf1.gmu.edu>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
- Dear PETA and all friends,
-
- Thank you for your support to the animals in Taiwan. The Life
- Conservationists Association (LCA) in Taiwan very much appreciates what
- you have done.
-
- Acctually, President Lee is an expert in agriculture economy. As we
- understand from all media, what he and his government is more considering
- about how to rescue the pork markets rather than other issues related to
- this disease. However, the experiences tells is that his government does
- care about the international images of Taiwan. So we always believe that
- international voice will help any animal rights activities within that
- island.
-
- All supports and voices are most appreciated. And we do wish the
- international continues to support. In addition, we also want to know how
- President Lee and his government respond your appeals. By this way, the
- LCA is able to judge which strategy is more effective in the future.
-
- Please let us know any response that you receive from Taiwanese
- government. Thank you for your help!
-
- Minglee Yeh
- Representative in the US
- Life Conservationists Association of Taiwan
- myeh@osf1.gmu.edu
- tel/fax/: 703-2041858
-
-
-
- On Wed, 16 Apr 1997, allen schubert wrote:
-
- > from PETA news release page:
- > ---------------------------------------------
- > PIGS BEATEN, ELECTROCUTED, AND BURIED ALIVE IN TAIWAN
- > PETA Appeals to President Lee to End Cruelty
- >
- > For Immediate Release:
- > April 14, 1997
- > Contact:
- > Michael McGraw 757-622-7382, ext. 310
- >
- >
- > Taiwan -- The recent outbreak of hoof-and-mouth disease among pigs in
- > Taiwan has sent the Taiwanese
- > government on a violent killing spree, with hundreds of thousands of pigs
- > being cruelly beaten and
- > slaughtered in extremely painful ways in attempts to curb the epidemic.
- >
- > Reports from Taiwan show soldiers bludgeoning pigs, crudely electrocuting
- > them, or burying them alive in a
- > mass extermination campaign that may eventually include more than 2
- > million pigs.
- >
- > PETA has faxed an urgent request to Taiwan's President Lee, urging him to
- > take immediate action to end
- > the torture and violent slaughter of the pigs and to guarantee the pigs
- > are given a humane death at the very
- > least.
- >
- > An estimated 900 million pigs are confined to intensive factory
- > farms--where disease spreads rapidly
- > because of extreme overcrowding--in Taiwan.
- >
-
- Date: Thu, 17 Apr 1997 00:41:04 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (TH) Wildlife Sanctuaries
- Message-ID: <199704161641.AAA09785@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- April 16, 1997
-
- [BANGKOK POST]
-
- WILDLIFE SANCTUARIES
-
- Bid to stall management transfer scheme
-
- Environmentalists, academics resist Forestry
- plan
-
- Chakrit Ridmontri
-
- Academics and environmentalists want to delay a
- Forestry Department plan to hand over management
- of national parks and wildlife sanctuaries to
- regional forestry offices.
-
- "We should do something to delay the process, as
- the department has not carefully considered both
- the positive and negative points of the
- handover," said Surachet Chetthamas, a lecturer
- at the Faculty of Forestry, Kasetsart
- University.
-
- Sathit Sawinthorn, Forestry Department chief,
- has ordered the Natural Resource Conservation
- Office to submit to him on Friday the list of
- parks and sanctuaries to be handed over.
-
- The first batch will be made up of about 50
- forests being prepared to be set up as parks and
- sanctuaries.
-
- The go-ahead prompted a group of academics,
- environmentalists and some park officials
- dissenting from the plan to take action for fear
- that fertile forests in the country mostly
- remaining in the parks and sanctuaries would be
- adversely affected, because regional forestry
- offices lack skills in conservation work.
-
- "We have to inform Prime Minister Chavalit
- Yongchaiyudh and Agriculture Minister Chucheep
- Harnsawat about the negative effects of the
- plan, asking them to order the departmental
- chief to exchange views with us," said Mr
- Surachet, who was speaking at a meeting of
- opponents held recently at the faculty.
-
- Uthis Kutintara, another forestry lecturer, told
- participants to put pressure on the department
- chief to consider the plan at the national park
- and wildlife sanctuary committees chaired by the
- permanent secretary of the Agriculture Ministry
- and the minister.
-
- He said the committees, which comprise a number
- of forestry experts including NGOs, would enable
- the department to obtain a wide range of views
- regarding the positive and negative aspects of
- the plan so that it could make the right
- decision.
-
- Mr Sathit, meanwhile, said he had carefully
- considered the plan, saying he has assigned a
- working committee chaired by one of his deputies
- to gather information on both aspects from
- various concerned parties.
-
- "Any park official who wants to offer his
- opinion on the plan can inform the committee
- directly," he said, adding that the process was
- transparent.
-
- According to Mr Sathit, the plan is aimed at
- tightening the management of the parks and
- sanctuaries so as to get rid of corruption and
- to increase the ability to protect the forests.
-
- But opponents said regional forestry offices are
- too weak to prevent local influential people
- from encroaching on and poaching in preserved
- forests.
-
- They accused Mr Sathit of trying to keep away
- conservation officials to do conservation work
- in order to pave the way for tourism in the park
- and sanctuaries.
-
-
- Article copyright Post Publishing Public Co., Ltd 1997
- Reprinted for non-commercial use only.
- Website: http://www.bangkokpost.net
-
-
-
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 09:57:43 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: Friends of Animals <foa@igc.apc.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Connecticut AlertConnecticut Action Alert- Help Defeat Bill
- 857 Connecticut Activists: Friends of Animals needs your help to
- defeat Bill No. 857, which has already been approved by the
- Environment Committee and is likely to reach the General Assembly
- floor for a vote. Please contact your legislators today. The bill
- would give the Commissioner of the Department of Environmental
- Protection carte blanche with regards to wildlife management. It
- states that the Commissioner "...may destroy and dispose of any
- species which he determines to be undesirable..." If the bill is
- passed it would do the following: -Place absolute power in the hands
- of the DEP without the benefit of broad public input. It would allow
- the DEP to cater to hunters without the input of most citizens who
- insist on being represented when wildlife policies are being debated
- and analyzed. -Mute swans and other nongame species would lose
- protection. Since 1981, Friends of Animals has fought the DEP to keep
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19970416124540.5a3fc92e@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 12:13:01 -0700
- >From: pmligotti@earthlink.net (Peter M. Ligotti)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: More Resources: Genetic Engineering of Food and Animals
- Message-ID: <v01540b02af7ad4e66e67@[206.250.112.97]>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- BOOKMARKS ON GENETIC ENGINEERING FOR THE WWW
- (Compiled by Jim McNulty)
-
- SOME GOOD STOP OFF POINTS WHEN BROWSING
-
- http://web.its.smu.edu/~dmcnickl/miscell/pfcamp.html
- Anti-food defamation laws in the USA
-
- http://www.fairfield.com/wuebben/TM/genetic.html
- Help to avert the dangers of GE food
-
- http://www.netlink.de/gen/info.html
- Combined Web Pages (SWEDISH)
- Greenpeeace.NLP Pure Food Campaign .
- THIS IS AN EXCELLENT SOURCE OF INFORMATION
-
- http://www.t0.or.at/~global2000/gentech.html
- GLOBAL 2000 in the German language,
- but definitely worth getting a translator for.
-
- http://www.newspage.com/NEWSPAGE
- You can set Newspage to search the whole of the internet for you,
- so you have a newspaper e-mail delivered everyday without having
- to search; the only catch is $5 dollars a month. Mine is set with
- six choices 1 Biotech Agriculture.2 Bio-tech Companies. 3.
- Enviromental Regulations 4.Animal testing 5 Bio-Tech Medicine etc.
- EXCELLENT SOURCE OF INFORMATION
-
- http://www.greenpeace.org/
- Greenpeace Homepage. Excellent, as you would expect.
-
- http://www.greenpeace.org/~comms/cbio/geneng.html
- Greenpeace Bio-tech
- Information and Campaign Highlights
-
- http://lcweb.loc.gov/ Library of Congress. Very useful tool when
- needed. American Law and Constitution Reform is available here.
-
- http://www.yahoo.com/
- Yahoo; one of the best Internet Search Engines
-
- http://www.reutershealth.com/ Reuters Health Information.
- It has a good Search Engine that specializes in
- Health issues worldwide.
-
- http://www.netlink.de/gen/biopiracy.html
- Swedish anti-biotech info service this article
- covering Bio-Diversity
-
- http://lcs.usatoday.com/news/court/nscot000.htm
- Supreme Court Index.
- Another excellent tool for information when needed
-
- http://www.greenpeace.org/~comms/cbio/newsindx.html#geneng9
- Another good source of info from Greenpeace on gentic engineering news.
-
- http://www.cnn.com/WORLD/9604/13/agent_orange/index.html
- CNN article about the 300,000 Vietnamese children Chemical War
- Victims from the Vietnam War. Monsanto as one of the makers of
- Agent Orange(Dioxin). They have not paid out compensation
- owing to the Constitutional Protection they received
- from the US Government. I myself accessed this article
- when the picture of the vietnamese child Thoa was included
- (I HAVE COPIES) IT HAS BEEN REMOVED. WHY?
-
- http://www.rz.uni-frankfurt.de/~ecstein/gen/biofacts.html
- Good article about Intellectual Property Rights.
-
- http://www.reutershealth.com/news/search.html
- Reuters News Service
- has good Search engine to browse for up to date news.
-
- http://www.monsanto.com/
- >From those Loveable Folks At Monsanto.
- Gives a bit of an insite into their sordid world.
-
- http://ci.mond.org/9619/961910.html
- Interesting Triple selection of
- Web pages from Greenpeace and on the opposing sides
- Monsanto and Soya Growers.
-
- http://www.ag.uiuc.edu/~farnswor/
- Sustainable Agriculture.
-
- http://www.ag.uiuc.edu/~stratsoy/expert/resource.html
- Converse with an expert on soya politics
- http://www.agri-net.com/centralsoya/
- Combined pages for growers
- and exporters of Soya .(US)
-
- http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/veg/Orgs/VegSocUK/Campaign/genetics.html
- Vegetarian Society on Genetic Engineering
-
- http://www.hrc.wmin.ac.uk/campaigns/ef/toxmut/bio.html
- Earth First
- (Devon)
- Good articles on Genetic Engineering
-
- http://www.hrc.wmin.ac.uk/campaigns/ef/toxmut/flavr.html#cflower
- Earth First again with an excellent article about the
- cauliflower mosaic virus.
-
- http://www.cnn.com/SEARCH/index.html
- CNN Searcher.
- Good source of material available on health,
- enviroment politics etc worldwide.
-
- http://www.ornl.gov/TechResources/Trans/hmepg.html#info
- Transgenic animals available for research
-
- http://www.jax.org/resources/documents/pricelist/index.html
- To order your transgenic animals for research
- purposes, etc. here's the place.
-
- http://www.hrc.wmin.ac.uk/campaigns/ef/toxmut/dsart.html
- Earth First Toxic Mutants etc.
-
- http://www.geocities.com/Athens/1527/
- Pure Food Campaign Homepage
- Excellent campaign from Jeremy Rifkin and compadre's,
- old adversaries of Genetic Engineering.
-
- http://www.chicago.tribune.com/
- Another US News Service but priceless to gauge things US.
-
- http://www.natural-law-party.org.uk/ge_index.html
- Natural Law Party.
- Well presented auguments on all issues pertaining to the struggle.
- John Fagan: one of the leading speakers on GE.
-
- http://www.shef.ac.uk/uni/projects/doe/doe5.html
- ACRE Information releases.
-
- http://biosafety.ihe.be/GB/Leg_EurGB.html
- Euro/British Legislation
-
- http://www.fao.org/waicent/faoinfo/economic/esn/codex/codex.htm
- Codex.
- Very important issues decided by this commitee
- appointed by GATT AND WTO (World Trade Organization)
- to oversee the introduction of G/E foods
-
- http://www.shef.ac.uk/~doe/
- Department of the Enviroment
- The UK Ecological Warrior Force.
-
- http://www.lisco.com/mothersfornaturallaw/
- Mothers for Natural Law
- Succesful group of concerned mothers instrumental
- in many campaign endeavors.
-
- http://www.epa.gov/
- Enviromental Protection Agency
- The place to check on Legislation and
- press releases in US of EPA
-
- http://binas.unido.org/binas/
- Part of Unido
-
- http://www.hrc.wmin.ac.uk/campaigns/RTS.html
- Last but by no means least RTS!
-
-
-
- <<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
-
-
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 15:54:36 -0400
- >From: "H. Morris" <oceana@ibm.net>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Bardo Speaks Out???
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970416155413.00706c28@pop01.ny.us.ibm.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- I don't know about those comments of hers on Muslims.....as a Sufi myself,
- I might take offense....
-
- .c The Associated Press
-
- By CHRISTOPHER BURNS
- PARIS (AP) - A defiant Brigitte Bardot has again blasted the
- Muslim practice of slaughtering sheep, despite facing court charges
- of racism in earlier comments on the subject.
- ``One more time, one too many times,'' the animal rights
- campaigner and former screen siren said. The four-day ritual of Eid
- Al-Adha, which begins Thursday, ``will bathe France's earth in
- blood,'' she added.
- Bardot linked Algerian Muslim fundamentalists to the slaughter,
- which she contends is cruel to sheep.
- ``They've slit the throats of women and children, of our monks,
- our officials, our tourists and our sheep. They'll slit our throats
- one day and we'll deserve it,'' she said in a statement released
- Tuesday.
- Muslim militants in Algeria have recently slashed or beheaded
- scores of villagers and they have killed a number of French
- nationals in their 5-year-old insurgency.
- A human rights group threatened to press charges, the daily
- France Soir reported today.
- ``Freedom of expression, yes, but racism is a crime,'' said
- Mouloud Aounit, president of the Movement Against Racism and
- Anti-Semitism and for Friendship Among Peoples.
- Bardot is to appear Sept. 11 before the Paris Court of Appeals
- for allegedly ``provoking hatred and racial discrimination'' last
- year. A lower court acquitted her of the charge in January.
- A conviction could bring one year in prison and a fine of
- $55,000.
- The 62-year-old former actress last year described the ceremony
- as ``torture, signs of the most atrocious pagan sacrifices.'' She
- also condemned ``the invasion of France by an overpopulation of
- foreigners, notably Muslim.''
- During the springtime celebration following the Islamic fast of
- Ramadan, many of France's 3 million Muslims sacrifice a lamb in a
- rite of peace, as Islamic and biblical teachings say God allowed
- Abraham to do instead of killing his son.
- Bardot's foundation has called for the ritual slaughter to take
- place in state-supervised slaughterhouses and for the animals to be
- stunned before being killed.
- AP-NY-04-16-97 0445EDT
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 15:55:40 -0400
- >From: "H. Morris" <oceana@ibm.net>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Mcd's new Promo
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970416155532.00684ebc@pop01.ny.us.ibm.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- .c The Associated Press
-
- By CLIFF EDWARDS
- CHICAGO (AP) - Teenie Beanies are proving just as popular as
- their bigger siblings.
- McDonald's restaurants have been swamped with parents and kids
- looking for the colorful beanbag animals, which, starting last
- Friday, were offered with each Happy Meal.
- The chain said it is selling out in Chicago, Minneapolis, St.
- Louis, Kansas City and other Midwestern cities, selected areas of
- New York City, parts of Connecticut and the South.
- ``People are buying them like there is no tomorrow,'' said
- spokeswoman Lisa Howard.
- Nationwide, supplies probably will be exhausted by April 25, Ms.
- Howard said.
- McDonald's grabbed hold of one of the hottest kid crazes to lure
- tiny spenders and their parents into its restaurants.
- The Oak Brook, Ill.-based chain produced nearly 100 million of
- the toys - its largest order ever for a promotion - in anticipation
- of heavy demand.
- But word that the company was going to offer smaller versions of
- the beanbag animals with each Happy Meal set off a feeding frenzy.
- The company on Friday recommended that its owner-operators limit
- the sale of Happy Meals to 10 after some customers bought them by
- the caseload to get the Teenie Beanies.
- McDonald's - which produced the toys itself under a license
- agreement with toy maker Ty Inc., also of Oak Brook - made 10
- different animals.
- Two animals were to go on sale each week until supplies ran out.
- But different restaurants sold different versions, and some parents
- reported spending much of last weekend driving around to get all 10
- versions.
- Ty spokeswoman Anne Nickels said the popularity of the miniature
- Beanie Babies is no surprise. ``They have an appeal to everyone,
- not just girls, but boys, adults, senior citizens, kids, college
- students,'' she said.
- Beanie Babies, the original versions with names like Squealer
- the Pig and Kip the Cat, made their debut in 1994, but sales have
- soared this year.
- Ty, whose Teenie Beanie Babies are made in China, has limited
- distribution of the full-size toys so severely that stores have run
- out nationwide. Demand is so strong that Ty doesn't list its
- telephone number.
- In all, there are 103 different Beanie Babies on the market.
- Their suggested price is $5, but they often sell for much more.
- The tiny toys at McDonald's sell for $1.50 without a food
- purchase, while a Happy Meal with a cheeseburger, small fries, soda
- and Teenie Beanie Baby cost $2.50.
- Every six months or so, a few new Beanie Babies are ``born.''
- But for every new one, an old one is retired. The company has
- stopped production on 26 species - Beanie fans call them
- ``extinct'' - and those can draw big bucks.
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 14:59:17 -0600
- >From: "Alliance for Animals" <alliance@allanimals.org>
- To: ar-news@cygnus.com
- Subject: (Fwd) abuse update
- Message-ID: <199704162005.PAA14894@mendota.terracom.net>
-
- Hello,
- Please write letters to local newspaper editors discussing how repeat
- offenders get off easy..especially ANIMAL ABUSERS and ANIMAL KILLERS.
- It would be wise to discuss how the hideous crimes were committed
- in front of his child. What kinds of effects will this have on her?
- Sure he had a bad childhood..OK, so he needs psychiatric help! He
- needs to be off the streets, because as long as he walks, no animal
- within his grasp is safe. This man has a lot of problems and should
- not have custody of a nine year old daughter...(in my opinion).
- Scott Dirks, the assistant DA on the case told me yesterday to ask
- people concerned about the case to report any clues or evidence to
- the JANESVILLE, WI POLICE DEPT AT: (608) 757-2244, and to write the
- papers, etc..Scott also asked to have people write their concerns,
- feelings on the case to him for the case file..at:
-
- Scott DIrks
- Office of the Rock County District Attorney
- 51 South Main St.
- Janesville, WI 53545
- His phone is: (608) 757-5615 bear in mind that he is swamped with
- calls...
- FAX is: (608) 757-5725
-
-
- ------- Forwarded Message Follows -------
- >From: kaaronbe@facstaff.wisc.edu
- Date: Mon, 14 Apr 1997 11:32:41 +0000
- To: alliance@allanimals.org
- Subject: abuse update
-
- ABUSE UPDATE -- 4.14.97
-
- The assistant district attorney prosecuting the case is Scott Dirks.
- Write to him at the Office of the Rock County District Attorney, 51 S.
- Main St., Janesville, WI 53545. or call 608.757.5615 or fax him at
- 608.757.5725.
-
- As of Monday, April 14, Herbeck had been released on his own
- recognizance. He is due in court this afternoon at 3 p.m. (central
- standard time) and a date will be set for his preliminary hearing.
-
- ************
-
- To recap: The following article ran in the April 11, 1997 issue of The
- Wisconsin State Journal, Madison, Wisconsin.
- Headline: Animal mistreatment called "gut-wrenching"
- By Kathleen Ostrander
- Rock County Correspondant
- JANESVILLE (Wisconsin) Police arrested a man on felony animal
- mistreatment charges after finding the corpses of a puppy and five cats
- at his home.
- One Rock County Humane Society official who was at the man's home
- earlier this week described the case Thursday as "gut-wrenching."
- Police were first called Sunday to Barry Herbeck's Janesville home
- after his girlfriend found cat entrails down the garbage disposal while
- she was cleaning the house.
- She told police she then recalled that she came home about a month
- ago when she was still living with Herbeck, 35, and found a dead cat in
- the hallway. She said she also recalled the man's nine-year--old
- daughter saying he had killed the family puppy.
- Police found the rotting corpse of an eight-month-old female
- German shepherd stuffed in a container on Herbeck's porch.
- When police opened the container they saw that the puppy's nose
- and mouth had been taped shut with duct tape and one side of the dog was
- covered in blood.
- Police searched for the man whom relatives said was at a
- carpet-laying job, for several days, finally catching up with him
- Wednesday.
- The nine-year-old girl told police her father became angry when
- the puppy urinated on the floor, so he taped its mouth and stuffed it in
- the container. She said he told her not to let it out or feed it, even
- thought it was whining.
- She said he threw at least one cat against the wall so hard that
- it died, and she saw another dead cat in the bathtub after it had bitten
- her father. She said there had been a large, heavy box in the freezer
- which she suspected was another dead cat.
- In a statement to police, Herbeck said that he had been beaten as
- a child and had a lot of pent-up anger. He said that he felt better
- after he killed the animals and that it helped him release his anger. He
- also said he felt guilty.
- According to the report, Herbeck said that after he killed the
- cats he had in the house he would answer ads in the papers for free
- cats. He would dispose of dead cats in the dumpster where he worked or
- put them out with the trash.
- Herbeck, who has a felony conviction for robbery, was also
- arrested on a charge of being a felon in possession of a weapon, because
- police found two shotguns in the home. When Herbeck said Wednesday that
- he was suicidal, he was committed to the Rock County Health Care Center.
- Police said Thursday that they expected he would appear in court
- when he was released, but they didn't know when that would be.
-
- -- end story --
-
- THIS IS HOW YOU CAN HELP:
- If you know of any relevant websites or digests for this story, please
- post it there -- local media coverage has been very sparse.
- Also, please write your feelings on this case to the authorities
- involved as soon as their addresses are available. I will try to get the
- information out by Monday when city offices have reopened, but you may
- wish to contact
-
- This man's little victims must not be forgotten! And his daughter is
- not only a victim of this monstrosity, but may be in physical danger
- herself when and if he is released. Please, write or call and ask or
- demand (whatever your personal style is) that Barry Herbeck be held
- fully accountable for his actions and punished to the full extent of the
- law!
-
- Thank you so very much --
-
- Rainey Clandennon (Kris Aaron)
- kaaron@bminet.com
-
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 16:30:37 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: LCartrLong@aol.com
- To: farmusa@erols.com
- Cc: ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Indiana Farmer Dies from Mad Cow Related Illness??? (US)
- Message-ID: <970416162947_-734896296@emout13.mail.aol.com>
-
-
-
- Corn, Soybeans Fall on Mad Cow Fear
-
- Wednesday, April 16, 1997 4:11 pm EDT
-
- CHICAGO (AP) -- Corn and soybean futures fell Wednesday on Chicago's Board
- of
- Trade as reports that an Indiana farmer died of an ailment similar to mad
- cow disease
- prompted worries that people will eat less meat, leaving less need for
- animal feed.
-
- The U.S. Centers for Disease control says there is no direct evidence that
- mad cow
- disease -- bovine spongiform encephalopathy -- can spread to humans. But
- news
- that 62-year-old Joseph Gabor died of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, which has
- been
- linked by British researchers to mad cow disease, prompted a selloff in
- animal feed
- grains and beef futures.
-
-
- Creutzfeldt-Jakob reports also sent beef futures plunging on the Chicago
- Mercantile Exchange. Pork prices, which have been independently strong,
- gained on speculation that people may switch from beef to pork, analysts
- said.
-
- c Copyright 1997 The Associated Press
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Thu, 17 Apr 1997 17:31:13 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: SUMMER-Africa/Brazil> ProjDIRs/Interns ('97 & '98)
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970417173110.006b58d8@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From: USII@hotmail.com
- >Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 14:02:46 EDT
- >Reply-To: USII@hotmail.com
- >Sender: USII@hotmail.com
- >To: alathome@clark.net
- from private e-mail...send any response to: USII@hotmail.com
- -------------------------------------------------------------
- >FWD'd / GREENer WORLD Internships
- >
- >[PLEASE SHARE/FORWARD]
- >
- >JOB ANNOUNCEMENT : 25 Project Director Positions
- >
- >
- >
- >Crossroads is now winding down recruitment for the Summer 1997 Prog in
- >
- >Africa and Brazil, and is now accepting applications for the Summer 1998
- >
- >Program.
- >
- >This may be of interest to those with interest in rainforest/ecology
- >
- >issues, international development and humanitarian work.
- >
- >CREDIT
- >
- >Interns/Volntrs usually arrange to receive academic credit - 7 to 15 units.
- >
- >C O U N T R I E S: Botswana, The Gambia, Ghana, Eritrea, Ivory Coast
- >
- > Kenya, Senegal, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Zimbabwe
- >
- > Malawi, Ethiopia, Namibia, Guinea Bissau,
- >
- > and Brazil (in South America)
- >
- >_____________________________________________________________________
- >
- >
- >
- > S U M M E R J O B A N N O U N C E M E N T
- >
- >
- >
- > A F R I C A & B R A Z I L
- >
- >Position: P r o j e c t D i r e c t o r / G r o u p L e a d e r
- >
- >
- >
- > [Also, accepting Intern/Volntr Applications-college-age & up/all welcome]
- >
- >
- >
- >Director 26 years old & up; with experience or advance studies related
- >
- >Requisites to a Crossroads project or to development issues/concerns
- >
- > Professionals, faculty, staff, students, persons with
- >
- > skills - all interested are encouraged
- >
- > Canadians, Americans, others, WELCOME
- >
- >
- >
- >Location: 18 Countries in Africa, plus Brazil
- >
- >Duration: June 16 - August 12 (tentative dates)
- >
- >Director All travel and living expenses will be covered,
- >
- >Pay: plus you will receive an honorarium/stipend
- >
- >
- >
- >DEADLINE: Recruitment for the Summer 1997 Program is now winding down
- >
- > Applications for Summer 1998 are now being accepted
- >
- >
- >
- >Organization: Operation Crossroads-Africa & Brazil
- >
- > 475 Riverside Dr., Suite 1366
- >
- > NY, NY 10027
- >
- > A Non-Profit 501(C)(3) Organization
- >
- >
- >
- >Co-Sponsors: Various UN Programs, NGO's, Ministries [Health, Education,
- >
- > etc.], WHO, Int'l Econ Dev Orgs, Medical Schools, Local
- >
- > Hospitals, Clinics & Grassroots Organizations
- >
- >
- >
- >Contact: International Projects/Overseas Programs
- >
- > Tel: 212-870-2106
- >
- >
- >
- >E-mail: <RainForestS@juno.com>
- >
- >
- >
- >OnLine Info: E-Mail to <RainForestS@juno.com>
- >
- > & in the Subject Field, type either:
- >
- >
- >
- > 1- "SEND DIRECTOR/LEADER PACKET" [26 yrs & up w/ leadership skills]
- >
- > or
- >
- > 2- "SEND PACKET FOR VOLs/INTERNS" [all welcome; college-age & up]
- >
- > Crossroads helps Volunteers/Interns raise needed funds;
- >
- > Early application is essential
- >
- >
- >
- >Website: http://www.igc.org/oca/
- >
- > (here, find brochure, application, information, etc.,
- >
- > OBTAINABLE ALSO BY E-MAIL-see above)
- >
- >
- >
- >====================================================================
- ====
- >
- > P R O J E C T D I R E C T O R S / L E A D E R S
- >
- >====================================================================
- ====
- >
- >
- >
- >If you have experience in a field related to a Crossroads project, and
- >
- >a strong interest in Africa and in team work, pls contact the organization.
- >
- >
- >
- >As a Project Director/Group Leader, you will be in charge of
- >
- >10 to 14 Volunteers/Interns (who will be professionals, students,
- >
- >researchers, non-students and others, all ages), usually in a rural
- >
- >community or village setting. This is an intense living, learning
- >
- >and work experience.
- >
- >
- >
- >________________________________________________________________________
- >
- >
- >
- >Multi-disciplinary Projects
- >
- >
- >
- > Nursing * Medicine * Clinical * Primary Care * Rainforest * Ecology
- >
- > Health * Social Sciences * Nutrition * Education * Econ & Comm Dev
- >
- > Gender Issues * Wildlife * Anthropology * Water & Sanitation * Folklore
- >
- > Agriculture * Dist Lrng * Ethnomusicology * Dance * Computer Literacy
- >
- > Construction of Clinics, Libraries, Homes * Traditional Medicine
- >
- > Human Rights * Land tenure issues * Work camps * Living in villages
- >
- >
- >
- > 200 - 250 Volunteers & 20 - 25 Projects
- >
- > __________________________________________________________________________
- >
- >
- >
- >BRAZIL: Land Tenure Reform/Settlement Communities/Rainforest-Ecology
- >
- >
- >
- > << B A H I A >>
- >
- >
- >
- >
- >
- >This project with multiple objectives is in the Mata Atlantica (Coastal
- >
- >Forest) area in the Southern Cone of the State of Bahia. This is where
- >
- >local poor communities are struggling to gain access to land via
- >
- >articulated political effort.
- >
- >
- >
- >There are over a dozen officially recognized Land Reform Settlemnts in this
- >
- >region, where former landless peasants are striving to promote efforts
- >
- >to save the remnants of this unique patch of rich, bio-diverse forest, as
- >
- >well as to secure their access to land by changing the parameters of Land
- >
- >Tenure in that area.
- >
- >
- >
- >We have been contacted by leaders of these communities seeking help with
- >
- >the various projects they deem vital. These projects will deal with
- >
- >Reforestation, Human Rights, Youth Development, Education & Training,
- >
- >Primary Care and Health, as well as Ecological issues.
- >
- >_________________________________________________________________________
- >
- >
- >
- > Crossroads, cited by JF Kennedy as the model used for the Peace Corps
- >
- > Celebrating 40 yrs of service by 10,000 Volunteers
- >
- > A Non-Profit/Private 501(C)(3) Organization - Since 1957
- >
- >
- >
- > Website: http://www.igc.org/oca/
- >
- > E-Mail: <RainForestS@juno.com>
- >
- >
- >
- >
- >
- >_____________________
- >
- >
- >
- >University Services
- >
- >International Internships
- >
- >
- >
- >
- Date: Thu, 17 Apr 1997 18:28:22 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Bill Would Weaken Tuna Rule
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970417182819.006be470@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- ---------------------------
- 04/16/1997 18:11 EST
-
- Bill Would Weaken Tuna Rule
-
- By H. JOSEF HEBERT
- Associated Press Writer
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) -- Legislation that would weaken the ``dolphin-safe''
- label on
- cans of tuna was endorsed Wednesday by a House committee and could be
- considered by the full House within weeks.
-
- In the Senate several members already have promised to use parliamentary
- tactics,
- including a filibuster, to slow the legislation down should it reach the
- floor.
-
- The proposal to lift the tuna import restrictions has divided
- environmental groups,
- with some arguing it will lead to the killing of thousands of dolphins in
- the eastern
- Pacific by fishermen who use nets to catch tuna. Others say it will allow
- for broader
- protection of the marine ecosystem and reduce the killing of other fish
- and turtles
- caught in the nets.
-
- The bill, which cleared the House Resources Committee by voice vote
- Wednesday,
- would end the import ban on yellowfin tuna caught by using nets. Many
- environmentalists have criticized the use of nets because fishermen often
- deliberately catch dolphins along with the tuna.
-
- But supporters said the bill would ensure that Mexico and other countries
- with large
- tuna fleets in the eastern Pacific take steps to protect not only the
- dolphin but other
- marine life -- sea turtles, small fish and other species -- now often
- killed during tuna
- fishing. Dolphin often swim with tuna in the eastern Pacific.
-
- The legislation would allow tuna caught with nets to continue to be sold
- with the
- ``dolphin-free'' label as long as it is certified that no dolphins
- actually were found
- dead in the nets.
-
- Wayne Pacelle of the Humane Society of America said the issue has been pushed
- by free-trade advocates and pressure from Mexico, whose fishermen cannot send
- their fish into the U.S. market because of the dolphin-safe import rule.
-
- Rep. George Miller, D-Calif., called the bill ``a major setback for American
- consumers that demand dolphin-safe tuna.'' Miller offered an amendment
- that would
- have limited the number of dolphins killed to 2,500, but the measure was
- defeated
- 12-28.
-
- Another proposal, offered by Rep. Frank Pallone, D-N.J., that would have
- allowed
- net-caught tuna to be imported, but without the dolphin-safe label, was
- turned back
- by a 12-28 vote.
-
- The White House has endorsed the legislation, as have some leading
- environmental groups, including Greenpeace, the Center for Marine
- Conservation,
- the World Wildlife Fund and the Environmental Defense Fund. They maintain
- that
- dolphin protection should be pursued internationally.
-
- Rep. Wayne Gilchrest, R-Md., sponsor of the bill, maintains dolphin are
- killed by nets
- in the eastern Pacific despite the U.S. import ban, and the legislation
- would ensure
- fishermen comply with a regional agreement that would afford greater
- protection to
- all marine life.
-
- A similar bill was approved by the House last year, 316-118, but died in
- the Senate,
- where opposition still is strong.
-
- The U.S. import ban has been credited for the dramatic decline in dolphin
- deaths in
- recent years.
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 15:28:51 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Police set up genetic database for birds
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970416152944.1ab7e322@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- BBC World Service Television News reported that West Yorkshire Police are
- compiling a database of DNA from rare and endangered birds, such as the
- periguin falcon, to help track down the trade in the animals.
-
- Both the birds themselves, and their eggs, fetch large sums of money on the
- blackmarket.
-
- Police Constable Steve Dunn, a wildlife specialist with West Yorkshire
- Police said that the database would assist him and his colleagues trace
- whether birds found in human possession were taken from the wild.
-
- Previously, DNA sampling was only possible using blood samples, which made
- it expensive, difficult and stressful to the birds. A new technique allows
- DNA to be obtained from the bird's feathers, which enables the samples to be
- more easily obtained.
-
- West Yorkshire Police are adding the bird DNA to their computerized database
- of human criminals. If the scheme proves succesful, it will be extended
- throughout the country.
-
- Date: Thu, 17 Apr 1997 18:35:35 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Tiny Waterborne Organism Kills Fish
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970417183532.006bfc44@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- A tie-in with the North Carolina hog farming....
- from AP Wire page:
- -------------------------------
- 04/16/1997 16:12 EST
-
- Tiny Waterborne Organism Kills Fish
-
- By SCOTT MOONEYHAM
- Associated Press Writer
-
- RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -- Millions of fish in North Carolina's marshlands have
- turned up
- dead with ugly, open sores caused by a microorganism that feeds on their
- blood.
- Now some scientists suspect the organism preys on humans, too.
-
- More than a dozen fishermen, divers and others have found open sores on their
- bodies, reported feeling faint or complained of memory loss after coming into
- contact with brown water fouled with dead fish.
-
- The organism killing the fish is known as pfiesteria, and biologists call
- it ``the cell
- from hell.''
-
- Pfiesteria has been likened to the piranha of the microbial world. Yet a
- piranha
- wouldn't stand a chance against this bloodthirsty menace.
-
- Scientists say the tiny organisms secrete a toxin that eats holes in fish,
- then slowly
- paralyzes their muscles and suffocates them.
-
- North Carolina State University researcher JoAnn Burkholder, who helped
- discover
- the one-celled organism in 1990, is convinced that pfiesteria's toxins
- sickened her
- and as many as nine other researchers. She and a fellow researcher said they
- suffered severe neurological symptoms, including memory loss, after
- handling the
- organism in a lab in 1993.
-
- But she said state health officials seem more concerned with avoiding bad
- publicity
- that could harm tourism than investigating the possible danger to humans.
- Although
- the state committed $585,000 to study pfiesteria in 1995, the money is
- just now
- making its way to researchers.
-
- ``We still need to know an awful lot,'' Burkholder said. ``It's an
- unfortunate tragedy
- that we don't know more by now.''
-
- State officials defended their efforts, saying that they are collecting
- evidence and
- studying the problem and that there is no proof the organism attacks
- humans. ``We
- continue to try to gather information within the limits of our
- resources,'' said Mike
- Moser, director of epidemiology.
-
- Pfiesteria, a one-celled organism called a dinoflagellate, has existed for
- thousands
- and perhaps millions of years. It has been found as far north as Delaware
- and as far
- south as the Gulf of Mexico. It can live in either fresh or salt water.
-
- Nowhere has the tiny killer been more prevalent than in North Carolina's huge
- estuaries, where slow-moving saltwater is captured behind the islands of
- the Outer
- Banks. It has left millions of menhaden, shad and flounder dead and
- rotting on the
- shores of the Neuse and New rivers.
-
- Burkholder's research indicates that the tiny creatures proliferate and
- take on a
- deadly form when exposed to high levels of nitrogen and phosphorous --
- byproducts
- of human and animal waste.
-
- She and others believe the organism became a problem in North Carolina waters
- as the state's hog farming industry and population rose dramatically over
- the past
- decade.
-
- David Jones, a New Bern fishermen who once ran a wholesale fish market on the
- river shores, is convinced pfiesteria is responsible for the severe memory
- lapses
- and other neurological problems he says he suffers.
-
- Jones said his problems began in 1988, when he experienced what he thought
- was
- heat stroke while working his crab pots during a fish kill.
-
- ``This stuff is real, and it's bad, and I certainly wouldn't want you or
- anyone else to
- have it,'' he said. ``What's inside of me eating me alive?''
-
- Questions about pfiesteria's effects on people have grown since a book
- tracing its
- discovery, ``And the Waters Turned to Blood'' by Rodney Barker, was
- released earlier
- this month. State officials have criticized the book and complained that
- it created
- hysteria.
-
- Burkholder said proving that people's health problems are caused by
- pfiesteria is
- difficult because researchers have yet to isolate and identify its toxins.
-
- Until then, doctors won't be able to test people's blood or tissues for
- evidence that
- the sores or other symptoms have been caused by pfiesteria.
-
- Dr. Chris Delaney, a New Bern physician who has treated two people with skin
- sores, criticized the state's handling of the issue.
-
- ``I don't see this as high science, but the political lay of the land is
- such that there is
- a lot of resistance to change,'' he said.
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 15:48:45 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Urgent RFI
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970416154938.232f3754@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Hi everyone,
-
- Does anyone have any recent information regarding "Oncomouse" regarding the
- patent application to the European Patents Office or elsewhere?
-
- I have also heard that the unfortunate animal was not as sucessful as Havard
- University had hoped in regard to its ability to develop cancers. Does
- anyone have any details on this as well?
-
- TIA,
-
- David
-
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 1997 15:52:12 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: bchorush@paws.org (pawsinfo)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Shrine Circus Seattle - Sponsors
- Message-ID: <199704162252.PAA25205@olympic.brigadoon.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- April 16, 1997
-
- Dear Activist,
-
- Listed below are the businesses that sponsored the Shrine Circus which
- appeared at the Seattle Center
- Key Arena last weekend. As you can see, it's an extensive list and a sad
- reflection of the fact that so many
- people are still unaware of the misery experienced by animals in circuses.
-
- These businesses need to hear from all of us. Please write to as many of
- them as possible. Your letter
- does not need to be long or filled with details. Simply point out that
- circuses are no fun for the animals
- involved, object to their sponsorship of this year's circus and ask that
- they refrain from sponsoring
- circuses in the future. Please send a copy of any replies that you may
- receive to Lisa at PAWS (address below). Thank you!
-
- Sponsors of the 1997 Shrine Circus (Seattle)
-
- Chris Maly, Marketing Director
- Blockbuster Video
- 2025 1st, Suite 250
- Seattle, WA 98121
-
- Jim Anderson
- Wight's Home and Garden
- 5026 196th SW
- Lynnwood, WA 98036
-
- Frank Fadden, President
- Clark Office Products, Inc.
- PO Box 27185
- Seattle, WA 98125-1585
-
- Rick Duell, Operations
- Frank Lumber
- 17727 15th Ave. NE
- Seattle, WA 98155
-
- Kent Stanley
- Stanley Roofing
- 19710 144th Ave NE
- Woodinville, WA 98072
-
- Jim McKenzie
- Quality Inn
- 4303 Kitsap Way
- Bremerton, WA 98312
-
- Carla Stanford
- Seattle Skating Club Bingo
- 22111 Hwy. 99
- Edmonds, WA 98020
-
- Jerry Dahl, President
- Western Fleet Supply
- 620 S. Dakota
- Seattle, WA 98108
-
- Don Pells
- Bayshore Electric
- PO Box 691
- Lynnwood, WA 98036
-
- Ernest Jonson & Company, P.S.
- Certified Public Accountants
- PO Box 9129
- Seattle, WA 98109
-
- Dan Krpan
- Day & Night Plumbing & Heating
- PO Box 1021
- Lynnwood, WA 98046
-
- Office Administrator
- Agra Earth & Environmental
- 11335 NE 122nd Way, Suite 100
- Kirkland, WA 98034
-
- Smokey Basler
- Spartan Electric Service, Inc.
- 6263 Ellis Ave. S.
- Seattle, WA 98108
-
- Tad Kasuya, General Mgr.
- Hotel International
- 5621 196th SW
- Lynnwood, WA 98036
-
- Steven Jordan
- Covenant Shores
- 9150 North Mercer Way
- Mercer Island, WA 98040
-
- Jimbo's Family Restaurant
- 19626 & Hwy. 99
- Lynnwood, WA 98036
-
- Gery and Dick Smith
- C & S Auto Rebuild, Inc.
- 6805 Greenwood Ave. N.
- Seattle, WA 98103
-
- Bardahl Additives & Lubricants
- Bardahl Manufacturing Corporation
- PO Box 70607
- Seattle, WA 98107-0607
-
-
-
-
- Bob Chorush Web Administrator, Progressive Animal Welfare Society (PAWS)
- 15305 44th Ave West (P.O. Box 1037)Lynnwood, WA 98046 (206) 787-2500 ext
- 862, (206) 742-5711 fax
- email bchorush@paws.org http://www.paws.org
-
- Date: Thu, 17 Apr 1997 19:38:00 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) POTOMAC ENDANGERED
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970417193758.006e4424@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- The effects of factory farming on the environment....
- from WJLA Washington web page:
- ----------------------------------------------------
- POTOMAC ENDANGERED
-
- The Potomac is the 7th most-endangered river in the country. The group
- American Rivers put the Potomac on the list announced Wednesday. The
- principal reason--a huge increase in commercial poultry production upstream
- from Washington in the last decade. The group says the number of chickens
- raised has skyrocketed from 7,000,000 to 95,000,000. The increase in
- poultry waste going into the Potomac has led to dramatic increases in
- bacteria in the water.
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 97 16:12:38 -0000
- >From: <lcanimal@ix.netcom.com>
- To: "ar-news" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Linda Blair New Jersey Calendar Signing
- Message-ID: <199704170004.TAA08738@dfw-ix10.ix.netcom.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"
-
- Actress and animal animal supporter Linda Blair will be signing her
- celebrity calendar which benefits Last Chance for Animals in New Jersey.
-
-
- May 3, 1997
- 2:00 P.M.
- Garden State Exhibition Hall
- 50 Atrium Dr.
- Somerset NJ 08873
-
-
-
-