home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1998-04-03 | 73.0 KB | 1,696 lines |
- VANCOUVER, B.C. - About 60 environmental activists took part in a week-long
- training camp in Belcarra Regional Park, near Vancouver. The course, which
- covered how to safely climb trees, ships and buildings, abseiling
- techniques, how to blockade roads and how to chain yourself to a tree,
- finished today. It also dealt with how to deal with mainstream media -
- especially how to condense their cause into a 10-second sound bite.
-
- Sheri Grayden, of Media Watch, stated in an commentary for CBC TV's
- 'Broadcast One' that she felt that anyone wishing to participate in a
- campaign - from getting elected to saving the planet - needs all the help
- they can get. After all, she noted, " although the groups send out the press
- releases, TV stations still get to decide which press releases they take
- notice of, which sound bites they use, and what images they run with those
- sound bites."
-
- The course, which involved members of Greenpeace - including at least one
- from Belgium, Bear Watch, People's Action for Threatened Habitat (PATH),
- Forest ACtion Network, and Friends of Clayquot Sound, was taught by a
- Montana-based group called the Rukus Society. Rukus director Mike Roselle
- told the Vancouver Sun that no fee was charged for the course, and Rukus
- only used volunteer instructors. Roselle was one of the founders of Earth
- First. He told CBC that if the rest of the world was cutting timber at the
- rate B.C. was, there would be no trees left in 11 years.
-
- It was hoped that there would be no further anti-logging activity in B.C.'s
- forests this summer after an agreement, known as the Protected Areas
- Stratergy was concluded by members of the forest industry and some
- enviromental groups. (These groups included the Sierra Club, B.C. Wildlife
- Federation (a pro-hunting group), and the Canadian Parks and Wildlife
- Federation.) The agreement promised that 14% of old-growth forest within the
- Lower Mainland would be preserved. It was implemented last year, and a
- further 136,000 hectares of parkland was created. However, a decision to log
- in the upper Elaho Valley, including the Stoltmann Wilderness area, angered
- most enviromental groups, including those taking part in the course and the
- Western Canada Wilderness Committee.
-
- Protests are planned against logging companies in forests near Whistler and
- Bella Coola, on the north coast of the mainland of B.C., as well as the
- Stoltmann Wilderness.
-
- Roselle told the Sun that he had been arrested 40 times, had not been asked
- about his record when he passed through the Canadian border, adding that as
- he had a trunk full of climbing gear, he told customs officials that he was
- going climbing.
-
- Advice was given to attendees by one of the early pioneers of B.C.
- environmentalism, Jean McLaren, who lives on Gabriola Island, near Nanaimo
- on Vancouver Island. McLaren remembered she once kicked a security guard,
- but said that she felt really bad about it. "Civil disobedience is very
- valid and more people realize it. Violence doesn't work," she said.
-
- Many of those on the course said they were there to learn more about civil
- disobedience as they had become frustrated with other methods of action.
-
- The forest industry says, of course, that it deplores the use
- civildisobedience against logging, that the Protected Areas Sratergy was an
- ideal agreement, and that members of Rukus should go back down to the U.S.
- and ask for "more redwoods to be planted."
-
- Provincial Attorney-General, Ujjal Dosanjh, said he would ask police what
- they are doing to ensure illegal actions were being taught at the course,
- and that he was "very concerned: that people may be counselling breaking
- B.C. and Canadian laws.
-
- Interesting, the anti-logging campaign will pit Greenpeace (and others)
- against Patrick Moore, one of the original founders of Greenpeace in
- Vancouver 26-years ago, who now works for the forest industry.
-
- No matter the weather, it looks like a hot summer in B.C. this year..
-
-
- Date: Wed, 9 Apr 1997 01:21:47 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] 'The Field' hunts out its MP opponents (long)
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970409012215.2257ce02@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Wednesday, April 9th, 1997
-
- The Field hunts out its MP opponents
- By Charles Clover, Environment Editor
-
- A "HIT list" of 72 MPs from all parties who are opposed to hunting and have
- small majorities is published today in The Field, which exhorts its readers
- to get rid of them at the general election.
-
- The magazine's editor, Jonathan Young, says that many on the list think they
- are safe from attempts by field sports enthusiasts to unseat them because
- they represent urban constituencies. The Field thinks they are wrong. In a
- full-page editorial, it says: "It would not take much organised effort to
- remove vehemently anti-field sports MP's such as Sir Andrew Bowden
- (Brighton, Kemptown, majority 3,056) and Sir Graham Bright (Luton South,
- 799), both of whom would impose their private beliefs on us."
-
- It continues: "It is up to ourselves, our families and friends to ensure
- that parliamentary candidates from all parties realise that if it is their
- wish to destroy country people's lives, it will cost them dear."
-
- Pointing out that the animal rights movement had recently given the Labour
- Party ú1 million, it said "we would be fools to believe" that activists
- would not transfer their attentions to shooting and fishing if hunting was
- banned. Of the 72 targets, 56 are Labour MPs, 12 Tory,
- two Lib-Dem, and two SNP. Those with the most precarious majorities include
- Phillip Oppenheim (712), Alice Mahon (478), Nick Ainger (755), Janet
- Anderson (120), and Mike Hall (191).
-
- The magazine targets some Opposition figures who also have precarious
- majorities, including Jack Cunningham, Labour heritage spokesman, Ann
- Taylor, shadow leader of the house and Glenda Jackson.
-
- Some of the choicer comments relayed by anti-hunting MPs to field sports
- supporters in their constituencies are also reproduced. For example, from
- Jim Marshall (Lab, Leicester South): "Labour policy is quite clear - we are
- opposed to foxhunting and some other field sports." Mr Marshall may have
- said that before the publication of Labour's manifesto last week promising a
- free vote on hunting, no policy on shooting and active support for angling.
- John Garrett (Lab, Norwich South), also appeared not to have read the
- manifesto when he said: "The Labour Party in government will end all hunting
- with hounds and coursing."
-
- The Field's analysis does not take into account boundary changes that have
- made some constituencies safer and some less so. The changes mean Sir Andrew
- Bowden's notional majority has risen to 10,257. Nor does the magazine
- explain who to vote for if the sitting
- member is against hunting - Sir Andrew's Labour opponent, Desmond Turner, is
- also opposed to hunting. Voters wishing to vote against a particular
- candidate need to check the credentials of rivals.
-
- The anti-hunting MPs by constituency, according to The Field, are:
-
- Amber Valley, Phillip Oppenheim, C, 712; Angus East [Angus), Andrew Welsh,
- SNP, 954; Barrow & Furness, John Hutton, L, 3,578; Basildon [South End W],
- David Amess, C, 1,480; Birmingham Erdington, Robin Corbett, L, 4,735; B'ham
- Northfield, Richard Burden, L, 630; B'ham Selly Oak, Lynne Jones, L, 2,060;
- B'ham Yardley, Estelle Morris, L, 162; Brentford & Isleworth, Nirj Deva, C,
- 2,086; Brighton Kemptown, Andrew Bowden, C, 3,056; Bristol E, Jean Corston,
- L, 2,692; Bury S, David Sumberg, C, 788; Cambridge, Anne Campbell, L, 580;
- Cannock & Burntwood [Cannock Chase], Tony Wright, L, 1,506; Cardiff Central,
- Jon Owen Jones, L, 3,565; Cardiff N, Gwilym Jones, C, 2,969; Carlisle, Eric
- Martlew, L, 3,108; Carmarthen [Carmarthen East & Dinefwr], Alan Williams, L,
- 2,922; Clwyd South West [Clwyd South], Martyn Jones, L, 4,941; Copeland,
- Jack Cunningham, L, 2,439; Coventry South East [Coventry S], Jim Cunningham,
- L, 1,311; Croydon N-W [Croydon N], Malcolm Wicks, L, 1,526; Cunninghame N,
- Brian Wilson, L, 2,939;
-
- Delyn, David Hanson, L, 2,039; Derby N, Greg Knight, C, 4,453; Dewsbury, Ann
- Taylor, L, 634; Dulwich [Dulwich & W Norwood], Tessa Jowell, L, 2,056;
- Dundee E, John Mcallion, L, 4,564; Edinburgh Central, Alistair Darling, L,
- 2,126; Edinburgh Leith [Edinburgh N & Leith], Malcolm Chisholm, L, 4,985;
- Edinburgh South, Nigel Griffiths, L, 4,176; Ellesmore Port & Neston, Andrew
- Miller, L, 1,989; Erith & Crayford [Bexleyheath & Crayford], David Evennett,
- C, 2,339; Glasgow Hillhead [Glasgow Kelvin], George Galloway, L, 4,826;
- Gordon, Malcolm Bruce, LD, 274; Halifax, Alice Mahon, L, 478; Hammersmith;
- Ealing, Acton & Shepherd's Bush], Clive Soley, L, 4,754; Hampstead &
- Highgate, Glenda Jackson, L, 1,440; Harlow, Jerry Hayes, C, 2,920; Hyndburn,
- Greg Pope, L, 1,960; Ilford South, Mike Gapes, L, 402; Ipswich, Jamie Cann,
- L, 265; Kingswood, Roger Berry, L, 2,370; Lewisham E, Bridget Prentice, L,
- 1,095;
- Lewisham W, Jim Dowd, L, 1,809; Luton S, Graham Bright, C, 799; Monklands E
- [Airdrie & Shotts], Helen Liddell, L, 1,640; Moray, Margaret Ewing, SNP,
- 2,844; Nuneaton, Bill Olner, L, 1,631;
-
- Pembroke [Carmarthen W & Pembrokeshire S], Nicholas Ainger, L, 755; Pendle,
- Gordon Prentice, L, 2,113; Renfrew W & Inverclyde [Renfrew W], Tommy Graham,
- L, 1,744; Rochdale, Elizabeth Lynne, LD, 1,839; Rossendale & Darwin, Janet
- Anderson, L, 120; Sherwood, Paddy Tipping, L, 2,910; Southampton Itchen,
- John Denham, L, 551; Southampton Test,
- James Hill, C, 585; Stockport, Ann Coffey, L, 1,422; Stockton S, Tim Devlin,
- C, 3,369; Strathkelvin & Bearsden, Sam Galbraith, L, 3,162; Streatham, Keith
- Hill, L, 2,317; Thurrock, Andrew Mackinlay, L, 1,172; Tooting, Tom Cox, L,
- 4,107; Wallasey, Angela Eagle, L, 3,819; Walsall S, Bruce George, L, 3,178;
- Walthamstow, Neil Gerrard, L, 3,022; Warrington S [Weaver Vale], Mike Hall,
- L, 191; Warwickshire N, Michael O'Brien, L, 1,454; West Brom E, Peter Snape,
- L, 2,813; Western Isles, Calum Macdonald, L, 1,703; Wolverhampton N-E, Ken
- Purchase, L, 3,939; Woolwich [Erith & Thamesmead], John Austin-Walker, L, 2,225.
-
- C = Cons; L = Lab; LD = Lib Dem; SNP = Scottish National
- Party.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
-
- Date: Wed, 9 Apr 1997 01:21:51 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Anti-hunting site
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970409012218.21b7037c@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- I came across the following site, which may be of interest for those wanting
- more info on the anti-hunting campaign. There is not too much information
- there as present, but the debate is sure to heat up during - and after - the
- election. The URL is:
-
- http://www.jenkins.co.uk/fox/releases.htm
-
- Date: Wed, 9 Apr 1997 01:21:53 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Butchers face stricter curbs
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970409012220.2257b08a@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Wednesday, April 9th, 1997
-
- Butchers face stricter curbs
- By Auslan Cramb, Scotland Correspondent
-
- TOUGH food safety proposals, which will lead to more than 10,000 butchers'
- shops being licensed, were accepted by the Government yesterday.
-
- Ministers hope that they will prevent a repeat of the food poisoning
- epidemic that claimed the lives of 20 people. Prof Hugh Pennington made 32
- recommendations in his report into the E coli outbreaks in Lanarkshire and
- the Forth Valley.
-
- Key recommendations include:
-
- - Animals to be presented at slaughterhouses in an appropriate, clean condition.
- - New licensing arrangements for butchers' premises.
- - A requirement for all food handlers to have undertaken at least basic food
- training, and intermediate level training for supervisory staff.
- - Separation in storage, production, sale and display, between raw meat and
- unwrapped cooked meat/ meat products and other ready-to-eat foods.
- - The introduction of food hygiene training in primary and secondary schools.
- - An education programme for farm workers.
-
- Shops that are unable to separate raw and unwrapped cooked meats will not be
- allowed to sell them, and it is envisaged that some will have to close. The
- changes could take five years to implement fully and will set new standards
- of hygiene in shops, abattoirs and farms. The cost will vary from ú5,000 to
- ú20,000 in each butcher's shop, with an estimated total bill of about ú180
- million.
-
- The report stopped short of apportioning blame for the E coli outbreaks, the
- most serious of which was linked to a single shop in Wishaw, Lanarkshire,
- and did not call for the creation of an independent food safety
- organisation. The proposals were accepted immediately by Michael Forsyth,
- Scottish Secretary, on behalf of the Government.
-
- They were widely welcomed by the meat trade and consumer associations,
- although Labour and the Liberal Democrats said the findings highlighted the
- Government's "cavalier" attitude to food safety. Gavin Strang, the Labour
- agriculture spokesman, called it an indictment of the Government's record,
- and Paul Tyler, for the Liberal Democrats, said the issue of food safety was
- "festering" under the surface of the election. Both parties have promised to
- set up an
- independent food safety commission "free from ministerial influence".
-
- Prof Pennington, an epidemiology expert, said it was time for the Government
- to end the "light touch" that had characterised its approach on hygiene
- legislation over the last 12 to 18 months.
-
- However, he refused openly to criticise Douglas Hogg, the Agriculture
- Minister, or the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food. He said
- changes in food policy since 1990 and de-regulation in the industry had
- created uncertainty among environmental health officers
- about the overall policy approach. But the light touch was understandable,
- he added, because the new meat hygiene regulations introduced in 1994 took
- time to understand and develop.
-
- The premises affected by "selective licensing" will be the smaller shops
- that do not produce cooked meats for sale to other businesses. About 700
- larger shops are already covered by the Meat Products (Hygiene) Regulations
- 1994.
-
- Prof Pennington said the proposals would not eradicate E coli, which he
- called a "particularly nasty organism", from animals or guarantee food
- safety. "It will prevent another epidemic of the sort we have been seeing
- recently, but E coli 0157 is a very versatile bug, and I wouldn't want
- anyone to go away with the impression that if everything is implemented in
- my report that that will be the end of E coli as a hazard.
-
- "We are aiming to very significantly reduce the threat from this organism
- but . . . the organism will still be present in wildlife and cattle. We
- haven't solved the E coli problem, we are aiming to reduce the risk people
- face by eating food, and getting E coli infection that way, very, very
- substantially."
-
- The professor said that the central Scotland outbreak had been handled
- "reasonably well" and did not criticise the action taken by local
- authorities to deal with the outbreak, which affected more than 400 people.
-
- He added that the question of who was at fault would be dealt with by a
- forthcoming fatal accident inquiry, and by any criminal proceedings. The
- circumstances of the epidemic will be dealt with in a separate report.
-
- John Barr, the Wishaw butcher whose shop was linked to the outbreak, said
- that he had already implemented in full the recommendations contained in
- Prof Pennington's interim report, which formed the basis of the measures
- announced yesterday.
-
- There were no major departures from the provisional recommendations,
- although Prof Pennington did soften his original demand that separate staff
- should deal with fresh and cooked meat on all occasions. He said he was
- persuaded this could lead to the closure of small businesses, and, where the
- measure was impractical, an extra sink would allow staff to wash their hands
- between sales.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
-
- Date: Wed, 9 Apr 1997 01:21:58 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Training video breaks rules on abattoir safety
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970409012225.2257af58@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Wednesday, April 9th, 1997
-
- Training video breaks rules on abattoir safety
- By David Brown, Agriculture Editor
-
- THE agency responsible for ensuring proper standards in abattoirs admitted
- yesterday that its latest training video for inspectors breached health and
- safety guidelines aimed at protecting slaughterhouse staff.
-
- The Pennington report urged yesterday that the Meat Hygiene Service, set up
- by the Government two years ago, should "rigorously enforce" health and
- hygiene controls in abattoirs.
-
- The videos, which included a foreword from Angela Browning, Food Minister,
- were issued in February. They show abattoir staff handling the spinal cords,
- heads and other specified offals of cattle deemed most likely to carry the
- deadly BSE agent, with their bare hands and
- not wearing protective masks.
-
- The scenes breach guidelines drawn up by the Health and Safety Executive,
- another Government agency, designed to protect abattoir workers from any
- risk of contracting Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, the human equivalent of BSE.
- The guidelines recommend that workers should wear protective gloves and
- masks where there is a risk of being splashed by the high risk materials.
- The mistakes were spotted by Colin Atkins, head of public health of the
- Amber Valley Borough Council in Derbyshire and Maurice White, his senior
- technician. They had already warned the MHS a year ago of similar errors in
- a training booklet.
-
- Mr Atkins wrote to Johnston McNeill, chief executive of the MHS, on March
- 14, warning him that similar mistakes had been made in the video but has had
- no reply. He also alerted the Pennington Committee.
-
- Mr White said yesterday: "As a training exercise I think this falls far
- short of what is required. The Health and Safety Executive guidelines quite
- clearly call for protective gloves and masks to be worn where there is a
- risk of splashing."
-
- About 1,500 copies of the video, entitled The Control of Specified Bovine
- Materials, have been circulated by the MHS.
-
- Gavin Strang, shadow minister of agriculture, said last night: "If the Meat
- Hygiene Service video is as badly wrong as it is reported to be somebody
- must be called to account."
-
- The Ministry of Agriculture said that the video had breached guidelines "but
- not the law." The MHS had no plans to withdraw it.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
-
- Date: Wed, 09 Apr 1997 07:35:10 -0400
- >From: marcia <marcia@eci.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Procter & Gamble
- Message-ID: <334B7EEE.64E2@eci.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Procter & Gamble has issued a press release today
- that it is acquiring Tambrands, manufacturer of Tampax.
-
- Marcia
- Date: Wed, 9 Apr 1997 07:48:49 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: Weissman <jun1022@gate.cybernex.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Super Urgent Announcement--Read ASAP!!!!!!!!! (fwd)
- Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.3.93.970409074811.3382A-100000@gate.cybernex.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
-
-
- ---------- Forwarded message ----------
- Date: Wed, 9 Apr 1997 07:42:17 -0400
- >From: Weissman <Jun1022@pop.cybernex.net>
- To: seac+animalrights@ecosys.drdr.virginia.edu,
- seac+region15@ecosys.drdr.virginia.edu, veg-nyc@waste.org,
- seac+announce@ecosys.drdr.virginia.edu
- Subject: Super Urgent Announcement--Read ASAP!!!!!!!!!
-
- Two activists were arrested Monday night for alleged ALF actions. They
- will be arraigned this morning. They have joined the Tony Wong
- hungerstrike and are protesting the Clinton policy on the EU fur
- importation ban (Clinton is tryingto block the ban).Hillary Clinton is
- going to be in NYC today at NY University. We will be meeting at Noon at
- the Arch at Washington Square Part to plan a protest. We will be meeting
- again atthe Arch at 2:45PM for the protest. Please attend both!!!
- Coalition to Abolish the Fur Trade-NYC
-
-
- Date: Wed, 9 Apr 1997 09:47:46 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: Franklin Wade <franklin@smart.net>
- To: Ar-News <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: COK Protest at White House 4/12 1pm
- Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.3.95.970409094716.17618A-100000@smarty.smart.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
- What:Compassion Over Killing will protest the Clinton Administration's
- opposition to the EU Wild Fur Ban. COK supports the demands made
- by Tony Wong and other jailed activists.
-
- Date:Saturday, April 12th 1997
-
- Time1-2:30pm
-
- Place:The White House sidewalk, Pennsylvania Ave.
-
- Metro:Farragut West (Orange & Blue Lines)
-
- _____________________________________________________________________
- franklin@smart.net Franklin D. Wade
- United Poultry Concerns - www.envirolink.org/arrs/upc
- Compassion Over Killing - www.envirolink.org/arrs/cok
-
-
- Date: Wed, 09 Apr 1997 10:49:47 -0400
- >From: "H. Morris" <oceana@ibm.net>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>,
- "veg-nyc@waste.org" <veg-nyc@waste.org>
- Subject: NYC Activists Arrested
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970409104942.0071a674@pop01.ny.us.ibm.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- This is a forwarded message I received from ADAM WEISSMAN.
-
- NYC ACTIVISTS ARRESTED:
-
- >Dari Fullmer of New York University and Carol Mehaffey of the School of
- >Visual Arts were arrested 251/2 hours ago as of this writing at 4PM
- >Sunday night /Monday morning outside Kenny Roger's Roasters, a chicken
- >fast-food restaurant. As of this writing they have not yet been arrainged.
- >
- >According to Dari they are being charged with:
- >
- >Reckless Endangerment
- >Criminal Mischief
- >Criminal Possession of a Weapon
- >
- >
- >They are being held at the court building where they willl be tried.We
- >have no information what thee weapon is. While the presupmtion atthis
- point
- >is that their arest is ALF related, we have no evidence to prove that this
- >is the case. Dari and Carol are innocent until proven guilty of any
- >crime, and we must maintain this attitute at all times.
- >
- >Dari has signed onto the three demand hungerstrike in solidarity with
- >Tony. In light of this, I think we should continue pushing these
- >demands, the impetus for which seems to have ended with Nicole's release
- >and Jeff's strike-breaking (not saying this is right or wrong just statig
- >an undisputed fact). Dari aparently wants to refuse to be bailed out,
- >which, if he is indeed in jail for an alleged clandestine direct action,
- >is probably unwise. We do not know if Carol is joining him in either of
- >these two stances. Dari's parents have been apprised of the situation.
- >We do not know if Carol's parents have been contacted.
-
- >Carol is the organizer of Animal RIghts Today! at the School of Visual
- Arts. Dari is
- >the Co-President of Students for Education and Animal Liberation at NYU
- >and a member of the New Jersey Animal RIghts Alliance. Both have been
- >involved in Student Abolitionsit League and Coalition to Abolish the Fur
- >Trade-NYC as well. Carol runs Student Abolitionist League's literature
- >distribution center. Needless to say, none of the above listed
- organizations, involve >themselves in clandestine direct actions, but all
- >are supportive of them.
- >
- >More info as it becomes avaialable....
- >adam
- >
- >
- >
- Date: Thu, 10 Apr 1997 12:01:47 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Protesters Roar at Lion Dinner
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970410120145.006cd420@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- -----------------------------
- 04/09/1997 08:40 EST
-
- Protesters Roar at Lion Dinner
-
- SAN DIEGO (AP) -- A restaurant that held a South African-themed dinner
- featuring the
- king of the jungle as the main course drew protesters who waved placards
- that read,
- ``Lions belong in the wild, not on your plate.''
-
- Sixty guests wearing tuxedos and formal dresses braved the wrath of about 150
- protesters Tuesday to enter the Top O' the Cove restaurant in upscale La
- Jolla for its
- $100-a-plate dinner.
-
- ``We think it's really sad that something as magnificent as a lion should
- be reduced
- to just another dinner entree to a bunch of jaded elitists who have
- nothing better to
- spend 100 bucks on,'' San Diego Animal Advocates spokeswoman Linda Kelson
- said.
-
- The lion, which was raised in the Midwest for human consumption, was served
- during ``Le Big Smoke Dinner IX,'' one of the restaurant's special
- quarterly dinners.
- Lion meat reportedly tastes like sweet pork.
-
- The meal also featured six wines and courses of Kenyan haricots verts (green
- beans), wild baby greens with sunflower oil dressing, and alligator cake
- with violet
- mustard sauce. Guests were also offered three types of cigars.
-
- Restaurant owner Ron Zappardino said he doesn't understand why serving
- American-farm raised African lion meat has people upset. In the past, his
- restaurant
- has offered such exotic meats as ostrich, elk and venison.
-
- At least one protester was dressed in a lion costume and another raised a toy
- stuffed lion on a platter over his head like a waiter.
-
- As the protest grew, it drew honks of support from passing cars.
- Date: Wed, 9 Apr 1997 13:15:43 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: OnlineAPI@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Fistulated Cows Exhibited at Public Event
- Message-ID: <970409131519_-1100926123@emout07.mail.aol.com>
-
- Holey Cow: Education or Circus Freak Show
-
- At universities throughout the U.S., the fistulated or "holey cow" is a
- popular teaching tool for students studying bovine rumen. The fistula is a
- man-made surgical opening in the side of a cow that is covered with a round
- piece of clear plastic. The fistula allows students to insert their hands
- and other foreign materials into the cow's rumen to study the
- digestive/ruminating process.
-
- Fistulated animals have been used in research for more than 150 years. While
- the ethics of using animals for research is always questionable, the
- repetition of this type of activity is inexcusable. And the exploitation of
- these animals at exhibitions and other public events is stressful for the
- animals and completely unnecessary.
-
- At the University of California at Davis (UCD), the fistulated cows are put
- on display every spring at an event called "Picnic Day." At last year's
- event, Tina Perry of the Animal Protection Institute (API) observed a crowd
- of hundreds of people anxious for a chance to stick their hands into a cow's
- fistula. The cow moved uneasily from side to side as she tried to avoid
- human contact, and bellowed in distress. The UCD staff restrained the cow
- while as many as 1,200 non-students shoved their gloved hands into her rumen.
- Instead of "acting as a valuable teaching tool" as the UCD administrators
- claim, the exhibition had turned into a circus-style freak show.
-
- This year "Picnic Day" will be held at UCD on April 19th. API is asking
- animal advocates to write and request that the university put an end to the
- use of fistulated cows, and especially their exhibition at public events:
-
- Edward O. Price, Chairperson
- Animal Science Department
- University of California at Davis
- Davis, CA 95616
-
- If you are aware of the use of fistulated animals at a local university, call
- Tina Perry, API's Program Coordinator for Domestic Animals, at 800-348-7387,
- or send an e-mail message to <bessie@gvn.net>.
-
-
- Date: Wed, 09 Apr 1997 12:21:07 -0700
- >From: Farm Animal Reform Movement <farmusa@erols.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Animal Rights '97
- Message-ID: <334BEC23.14B@erols.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- The Animal Rights '97 site has been updated with full hotel and
- registration details, along with a list of speakers and schedule
- information.
-
- There is also a 'print and mail' registration form, allowing you to send
- in your registration without further delay.
-
- Since the web site contains all information that a mailing would contain,
- we will not post you a brochure unless you write back and specifically
- request that we do so.
-
- If you would like to apply for a work scholarship, send a resume and
- letter of interest and we will contact you. If you don't currently have
- a resume, please be sure your cover letter lists your involvement in
- animal rights and any applicable skills.
-
- http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/farm/ar97.htm
- Date: Thu, 10 Apr 1997 02:00:15 +0800
- >From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [Australia] Dangerous strains in super bugs
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970410015705.304f0d36@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- In an article titled "Dangerous strains in super bugs" in "The Australian"
- newspaper (April 8th 1997),Graeme Leech, science correspondent wrote
-
- "Micro-organisms that cause food poisoning are proving to be so adaptable
- that new and more dangerous strains are emerging, a CSIRO food scientist warned.
-
- Mr Barry Shay, of CSIRO's division of food science and technology, has been
- engaged as a consultant to the Meat Research Corporation to help tackle the
- growing public health problem posed by these new micro-organisms.
-
- My Shay said the organism responsible for the 1995 entero-hemorrhagic e-coli
- outbreak in South Australia that killed a four year old girl was one of
- those new micro-organisms.
-
- Whereas salmonella might make people suffer stomach cramps and cause
- vomiting, the new micro-organisms were virulent and had a traumatic impact
- on the victims - massive internal bleeding, kidney damage and in some cases,
- death.
-
- The worrying aspect for both scientists and consumers was that these
- pathogens were changing their characteristics.
-
- The director of Melbourne University's centre for food science, Dr Barrie
- Davidson, said most research in Australia was directed at detecting unwanted
- organisms in processed food.
-
- "It is not possible to satisfactorily detect any organism or pathogen in
- food in less than 24 hours. So we are looking at an eight hour detection so
- that it would be possible to check before the food left the factory," Dr
- Davidson said.
-
- One scientist who has made a study of EHEC, Dr Karl Bettelheim of the
- Victorian Infectious Diseases Reference Laboratory, has found that the
- intestines of animals were reservoirs for human infection.
-
- The spread of EHEC could be explained by increasing urbanisation and the
- increasing movement of people around the world, Dr Bettelheim wrote in a
- recent paper.
-
- "A simple path for the spread of a pathogen like e-coli to a new environment
- could be that an individual carrying it jets to a new area, his/her faeces
- enter the sewerage which is inadequately treated before being discharged
- into the sea," Dr Bettelheim said.
-
- "The e-coli infect the sea birds. When the weather at sea is rough, they
- feed and defacate in pastures where cattle and sheep graze.The route is then
- short from the pasture animals to human infection."
-
- Mr Shay said the safest way to avoid infection was to cook meat thoroughly.
-
- "With steak, it is easy to kill the bacteria on the outside of the meat, so
- its safe to eat rare steak," Mr Shay said.
-
- "But once you grind it up or mince it, the bacteria gets into the meat all
- the way through. You should not eat a hambeurger where the meat is still
- pink on the inside."
-
- End
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Kia hora te marino, kia whakapapa pounamu te moana, kia tere ai te karohirohi
- i mua tonu i o koutou huarahi.
- -Maori Prayer
-
- (May the calm be widespread, may the sea be as the smooth surface of the
- greenstone and may the rays of sunshine forever dance along your pathway)
-
- Date: Thu, 10 Apr 1997 02:04:15 +0800
- >From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [Australia]More food recalled as crisis grows
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970410020106.304f2e76@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Victoria,Australia which lies on the Eastern seaboard, while being a small
- state has the second highest population in Australia with about 3 million
- people in its capital city of Melbourne (a densly populated multicultural
- capital city).
-
- A major headline in Tuesday April 8th's "Australian" newspaper read "More
- food recalled as crisis grows". This article reported that the number of
- food inspectors in Victoria has been slashed by almost 40% while
- prosecutions of unscrupulous handlers have fallen by more than 70% since the
- [current] Victorian government came to power according to a survey of local
- councils [our Australian local government authorities].
-
- The survey, conducted by the State Opposition, was released as the Victorian
- Health Department confirmed the sixth food contamination scare in less than
- a month with the recall of a soft cheese by its manufacturer and a well
- known supermarket chain also issued a recall on a type of thin sausage made
- in Victoria.
-
- The Australian also reported that "The spate of food contaminations in
- Victoria prompted public health officials from Australia and New Zealand
- yesterday to renew their support for national uniform standards on food
- hygeine, with a draft code expected this month and final standards by the
- end of the year."
-
- Also reported was that "A spokeswoman for the Victorian Department of Health
- said yesterday the manufacturers of a soft cheese had recalled the cheese as
- a precautionary measure after listeria monocytogenes bacteria was detected
- during routine quality control checks at the factory.The spokeswoman said no
- illness had been reported.
-
- In a seperate incident, a well known supermarket chain recalled all barbeque
- thin and thin sausages made by one Victorian manufacturer after traces of
- crayon were detected in the products. A spokeswoman for the supermarket said
- the sausages turned blue when cooked, but did not pose any threat to public
- health
- as the crayon was non toxic. "
-
- A recent survey of 78 councils showed the number of food inspectors had been
- cut from 317 to 199, since councils were amalgamated and compulsory
- competitive tendering introduced. Some councils had experienced a 60 per
- cent drop in environmental health officers.According to the leader of the
- Opposition "Areas of public health should be exempted from compulsory
- competitive tendering...where councils reduce the number of inspectors they
- have in order to win the bid." He said food prosecutions had fallen more
- than 70% from 1877 in 1993 to 543 last year, while penalties imposed in
- courts had dropped 68% from 318 in 1993 to 103 last year.
-
- A spokeswoman for the Department of Human Services said the decline in food
- prosecutions could be a result of improved food handling procedures within
- the industry.
-
- She denied that a reduction in the number of food inspectors was linked to
- recent food poisonings.
-
- Footnote:In recent outbreaks of food poisoning three people died.
- Two were elderly citizens and one was a young man of 27.
-
- Kind Regards,
-
- Marguerite Wegner
- Western Australia
-
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Kia hora te marino, kia whakapapa pounamu te moana, kia tere ai te karohirohi
- i mua tonu i o koutou huarahi.
- -Maori Prayer
-
- (May the calm be widespread, may the sea be as the smooth surface of the
- greenstone and may the rays of sunshine forever dance along your pathway)
-
- Date: Thu, 10 Apr 1997 16:47:28 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (CH) Health Group Warns on Disease
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970410164726.00688d48@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- (see the paragraph beginning: Mass food production...)
- from AP Wire page:
- ---------------------------
- 04/07/1997 08:58 EST
-
- Health Group Warns on Disease
-
- GENEVA (AP) -- New infectious diseases are emerging at an unprecedented rate
- and long-feared killers are staging an alarming comeback, the World Health
- Organization warned today.
-
- In the past 20 years, authorities have identified more than 30 new contagious
- diseases, including AIDS and Ebola hemorrhagic fever, the U.N. agency said.
-
- At the same time, it said, such diseases as malaria and tuberculosis are
- increasingly drug-resistant and are rebounding in many parts of the world.
- After
- many years in decline, diphtheria, yellow fever and cholera are also on
- the increase
- because of crumbling health and sanitation systems, especially in the
- former Soviet
- bloc, WHO said.
-
- Seeking to highlight the problem, the U.N. health agency picked infectious
- diseases
- as the theme of its annual World Health Day today.
-
- WHO wants to use the occasion to prod the public and private sectors to
- channel
- more resources into disease control and surveillance.
-
- Earlier medical success in wiping out diseases like smallpox in the 1970s and
- confidence in antibiotics are partly to blame for the upswing in
- infectious diseases,
- WHO said. Medical funds and expertise were switched elsewhere and public
- health
- authorities were taken by surprise by the subsequent increase in infectious
- diseases.
-
- Many antibiotics are not strong enough to treat common infections like
- pneumonia,
- gonorrhea and tuberculosis. And fewer new antibiotics are being developed,
- WHO
- said.
-
- ``With optimism came a false sense of security, which has helped many
- diseases
- spread with alarming rapidity,'' WHO said.
-
- Mass food production means that contaminated food is no longer confined to
- one
- small batch. And free trade helps food-borne diseases spread -- as with
- the current
- U.S. outbreak of Hepatitis A, an epidemic blamed on contaminated
- Mexican-grown
- strawberries.
-
- Distance is no longer a barrier to infection.
-
- ``Whereas cases of cholera, plague and smallpox were slowly transported
- from one
- continent to another by ship and could be recognized during the voyage, it
- is now
- possible and quite likely that an infected traveler will only develop
- signs of the
- disease several days after travel,'' WHO said.
- Date: Thu, 10 Apr 1997 17:05:51 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (PH) Bat Species Found in Subic Forest
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970410170547.006d6530@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- ---------------------------
- 04/09/1997 02:33 EST
-
- Bat Species Found in Subic Forest
-
- MANILA, Philippines (AP) -- Scientists have discovered a tiny bat and two
- new rodent
- species in the 27,000-acre rain forest inside the Subic Bay Freeport,
- officials said
- today.
-
- The species were first discovered in the course of a state-sponsored
- biodiversity
- project at Subic, formerly the largest U.S. overseas naval base, now
- converted into
- an industrial estate and tourism center.
-
- Researchers from the Department of Science and Technology claim that the
- finger-sized bats, about 2.4 inches tall, belong to the family of the
- Tylonycteris
- pachypus or Lesser Flat-headed bats, said Subic Bay Metropolitan Authority
- Chairman Richard Gordon.
-
- They were found in an area of dense vegetation consisting mainly of small
- bamboo
- plants, he said.
-
- Of the two rodents, one belongs to Chrotomys family and the other to the
- Phloemys
- pallidus family, scientists said.
-
- A full report on the discoveries will be presented April 22-25 during a
- wildlife
- convention, Gordon said.
- Date: Wed, 09 Apr 1997 18:29:40 -0400
- >From: Animal Alliance of Canada <aac@inforamp.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Bizarro cartoonist headlines Toronto benefit April 20
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970409170541.006c7ecc@inforamp.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- ***FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE***
-
- DAN PIRARO, BIZARRO CARTOONIST, TO APPEAR AT
- LITERARY LIONS 97!
- April 9, 1997
-
- Animal Alliance of Canada's fourth annual benefit reading, Literary Lions
- 97, takes place on the afternoon of Sunday, April 20 at Tallulah's Cabaret
- inside Buddies in Bad Times Theatre, from 1:30 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.
- Established in 1994, the series celebrates love and respect for animals in
- culture (including pop culture!). Proceeds benefit long term animal
- protection through legislative advocacy, public education, research,
- investigation and rescuing cats and dogs in pounds from being sold to
- research through our Project Jessie. (Visit our website at
- www.inforamp.net/~aac)
-
- We call Literary Lions a reading series, but it is evolving into more of a
- cabaret-style entertainment. (Perhaps our three-year association with
- Tallulah's has something to do with this!) Boring and stuffy it ain't!
- Just look at who is at the top of the bill this year - Dan Piraro, the man
- behind Bizarro, the quirky, one-panel syndicated cartoon. Bizarro often
- features animals in a very affectionate way; the joke is never at the
- animal's expense. This is just the sort of spirit we love at Literary Lions!
-
- Joining Dan on the program will be actor and novelist Barbara Kyle
- (A Dangerous Devotion), reading from her latest novel and passages about
- animals by international authors, past and present. AAC wildlife
- director/Toronto Star "Nature Trail" columnist Barry Kent ("Shecky") MacKay
- will keep us in stitches with his birding stories. Journalist/novelist/cat
- rescuer/bent willow furniture maker Robert Olver will tell cat stories.
- Poets Owen R. Neill ("Canada's Poet of the Wolf") and Winnipeg's Patrick
- Carroll will wax lyrical.
-
- Beyond the artists who use words as their pallette, this year Literary
- Lions welcomes visual artists Michael Alstad and Veronica Verkley, who will
- have some of their work on display. This talented duo were part of the
- riveting UNhuman Kind animal rights art show at A Space last summer.
- Michael Williams Stark, of the comedy improv troupe The Parts, has a
- special song to share with us. And so does Dr. Ronald Orenstein. Find out
- just what a singing zoologist sounds like! More animal-friendly fun is in
- the works, so stay tuned!
-
- But wait, there's more! The auction with Jack Layton has exciting goodies
- for everyone's taste and budget, from a framed Robert Bateman print or a
- bottle of 1969 Echezeaux burgundy valued at over $400 from Clayton Ruby's
- cellar to books, CDs, cruelty-free products, vegetarian dinners for two,
- kids' stuff and nights on the town. There will be a raffle with mystery
- gifts inside "doggie" and "kitty" bags and door prizes, too. Remember,
- your shopping spree benefits animals, so come bearing cash or plastic!
-
- Tickets for Literary Lions are $20, or two for $35, available through
- Animal Alliance of Canada, (416) 462-9541, Buddies box office, (416)
- 975-8555 and Broadcast, 808 Queen Street East, (416) 463-6677. Space is
- limited, so don't wait too long to avoid disappointment.
-
- For more information, please call Anne Livingston, Director,
- Animal Alliance of Canada, (416) 462-9541, email aac@inforamp.net
- Date: Wed, 09 Apr 1997 19:13:58 -0400
- >From: Animal Alliance of Canada <aac@inforamp.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: AAC joins JAVA against cruel horse "tradition"
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970409191301.00730254@inforamp.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- ANIMAL ALLIANCE OF CANADA JOINS THE JAPANESE ANTI-VIVISECTION
- ASSOCIATION
- TO CALL FOR AN END TO "TRADITIONAL" ANIMAL ABUSE
-
- April 9, 1997
-
- For the past 700 years in May, Ageuma Shinji, or the Shinto Horse-Lifting
- Festival, has taken place at the Tado grand Shrine in Mie Prefecture in
- Japan. In this ritual, riders race horses up a steep hill to climb a
- precipice atop a 3-meter wall. Traditionally, the number of horses who
- successfully climbed the wall foretold the outcome of the year's harvest.
- Today, the festival is a tourist attraction, attracting tens of thousands
- spectators.
-
- The Japan Anti-Vivisection Association (JAVA) is a non-profit organization
- concerned with animal protection. They have asked for Animal Alliance's
- help to alert Canada to the suffering of horses at the Horse-Lifting
- Festival, hoping that the actions taken in Canada will help end a
- centuries-old tradition of pain, fear, injury and death.
-
- Last April, a veterinarian complained that the thoroughbred horses ridden
- in Ageuma Shinji were doped. JAVA's subsequent investigation discovered
- that Annaka (a powerful stimulant affecting the central nervous system) had
- been used on the Festival horses for the past ten years. The vet explained
- "This ritual in itself is very merciless for horses. Thoroughbreds are
- nervous and their legs are weak. They won't run toward a precipice without
- a stimulant." He also said that doping is stressful to the heart and
- constitutes abuse. Compounded with the doping and the forcing of unnatural
- and dangerous behaviour, as they race by the Festival horses must endure
- beatings with bamboo sticks from onlookers.
-
- JAVA requested of the Tado Grand Shrine that the doping of the horses be
- stopped and the entire ritual be reconsidered in light of the animal
- suffering engendered. They asked the Governor of Mie Prefecture to cancel
- the designation of "intangible racial and cultural assest" for the Tado
- Festival. This created great interest among the Japanese media, who
- covered the story for several days. Before the Horse-Lifting Festival
- took place in May, the Tado Grand Shrine acceded to JAVA's requests. They
- agreed to stop doping; reduce the steepness of the man-made hill;
- alleviate the horses' pain; and prohibit actual and apparent cruel
- treatment of the horses.
-
- JAVA representatives attended last year's Ageuma Shinji on May 4 to monitor
- it in light of the Tado Grand Shrine's commitments. Here is what they found:
-
- ╖ The doping had apparently been stopped, however:
-
- ╖ The height of the hill was virtually identical to the hill the year before;
-
- ╖ There was no protection at the precipice for the horses, such as mats
- covering the steep wall;
-
- ╖ Many young men who play a key role in the Festival were beating and
- kicking the horses as the horses ran by; these young men were also
- consuming alcohol under the legal age limit in full public view;
-
- ╖ Many horses stumbled and fell during the Festival ritual. One tumbled
- over the precipice and emerged bleeding from a fetlock, leg and back;
-
- ╖ The horses were frightened, with bloodshot eyes caused by extreme
- excitement and stress; some shook off their riders;
-
- ╖ Many horses stumbled and fell during the Festival ritual; one tumbled
- over the precipice and emerged bleeding from a fetlock, leg and back;
-
- ╖ According to the vet on duty at Ageuma Shinji last May 4, the horses are
- often slaughtered after the ritual, especially the most severely injured;
- therefore, treatment or pain relief is not sought for them.
-
- JAVA sent Animal Alliance a package containing a written summary of events,
- photos and a video (VHS format, Japanese dialogue) which corroborates their
- story. Copies of these materials are available to the media through Animal
- Alliance.
-
- In light of the suffering of horses caused by the very nature of the Shinto
- Horse-Lifting Festival, Animal Alliance of Canada (AAC) joins JAVA in their
- mission to end it and investigate past rituals. Like them, we do not
- recognize "tradition" as an acceptable reason to propogate animal
- suffering, whether that tradition is Ageuma Shinji, bullfighting, blood
- festivals or rodeos. We ask Canadians who care about animals to send
- postcards urging the ending of Ageuma Shinji and the investigation into
- past rituals to:
-
- ╖ Mikio Okuda, Minister of Education, 3-2-2 Kasumigaseki, Chiyoda-ku,
- Tokyo, Japan; phone 011-81-3-3581-4211; fax 011-81-3-3591-8072
-
- ╖ Masayasu Kitagawa, Governor of Mie, 13 Komei-cho, Tshu, Mie 514, Japan;
- phone 011-81-0592-24-3070; fax 011-81-0592-24-3130
-
- ╖ Hiroshi Kasei, chief priest of Tado Taisha, 1681 Tado, Tado, Kuwana, Mie
- 511-01, Japan; phone 011-81-0594-48-2037; fax 011-81-0594-48-5381
-
- ╖ The Japanese Ambassador to Canada, Mr. Takashi Tajima, 255 Essex Drive,
- Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, K1N 9E6; phone (613) 241-8541; fax (613) 241-2232
-
- For more information, please contact Anne Livingston, Director, Animal
- Alliance of Canada, phone (416) 462-9541, fax (416) 462-9647, email
- aac@inforamp.net or
- Yumi Tomono, Vice President, Japanese Anti-Vivisection Association, phone
- 011-81-3-3464-0439, fax 011-81-3-3464-6409, email QZY10546@niftyserve.or.jp
-
- Animal Alliance of Canada is a federally registered not-for-profit
- incorporation. We work toward long term animal protection through
- legislative advocacy, public education and rescuing cats and dogs from
- being sold for experimentation through Project Jessie. Website:
- www.inforamp.net/~aac
-
- -30-
-
- Date: Wed, 09 Apr 1997 16:15:47 -0700
- >From: angst@cdsnet.net
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: OREGON LEGISLATIVE ALERT
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970409161539.007a6100@mail.cdsnet.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Hello Fellow Activists:
- ANTI-COUGAR BILLS are now up to a total of 5 and still counting...will it
- ever end??
-
- ask for legislators to oppose all of these Cougar bills!!
- SB402
- SB403
- HB 3344
- HB 3302
- HB2499
- (see summaries below)
-
- ask for legislators to oppose:
- SR4
- SB991
- (see summaries below)
-
- ASK YOUR LEGISLATORS TO SUPPORT THESE BILLS:
- HB2463
- HB3483
- HB2873
- (see summaries below)
- **********************************
- SUMMARIES:
- Cougars bills to ask Legislators to oppose:
- hb2499 reduces cougar tag fee from $50 to $10
- Before house nat. resources and ag. committee, has had a hearing,
- but still in committee
-
- hb3302 Reduces cougar tag fee to $10 and offers sportsman bargain, for
- $100 they get fishing and hunting licenses, plus tags for several
- species, including bear and cougar
- --before house ag comm, no hearing date yet assigned
-
- hb3344 also reduces cougar tag to $10, plus establishes open season on
- cougars until the year 2004!!
- hearing is scheduled for today, 4/8 before house
- agriculture and nat. resources
-
- PLEASE CONTACT REP. JUDY UHERBELAU, SHE IS ON THE HOUSE N.R. AND AG
- COMMITTEE, HER DISTRICT VOTED STRONGLY for M.34 AND FOR M.18. SHE
- NEEDS TO
- HEAR FROM YOU NOW.
- All legislators can be called at 800 332 2313 and written to at: state
- capitol, salem 97310. to learn who your legislators are, call the above
- 800 no.
-
- House
- Agriculture & Natural Resources email addresses:
-
- Charles Starr, Chair repstarr@teleport.com
- Terry Thompson, Vice-Chair NO E-mail address
- Dennis Luke lukebuil@transport.com
- Ken Messerle messerle.rep@state.or.us
- Kurt Schrader schrader.rep@state.or.us
- Larry Wells repwells30@aol.com
- Judy Uherbelau repjudyu@aol.co
-
-
- SB 402 allows counties to establish cougar "safety zones" where cougars
- can be killed by any method, including hounding.
- Sen. Nat. Resources and ag committee hearing held, still in committee
-
- SB 403 REduces tag fee from $50 to $10
- had hearing in sen. n.r. and ag committee, still in committee
-
- PLEASE CONTACT YOUR SENATOR, ESPECIALLY LENN HANNON WHO IS
- SPONSORING BOTH
- BILLS INSPITE OF THE FACT THAT HIS DISTRICT VOTED STRONGLY for M.34.
- ALSO CC YOUR LETTERS TO SENATOR BRADY ADAMS, OR CONTACT HIM
- DIRECTLY at
- Brady.Adams@state.or.us
- ********************************************************
- ASK YOUR LEGISLATORS TO OPPOSE THESE BILLS, BOTH FROM
- THE OREGON PET industry ASSOCIATION:
-
- SR4 This is a resolution, not a bill, but nevertheless can/will influence
- decisions and sets a dangerous precedent. It opposes anti-cruelty
- legislation, opposes sterilization of pets, promotes the use and
- exploitation of animals, opposes anything that doesn't involve
- use/abuse
- including funding for humane education
- hearing scheduled 4/9 before senate nat. resources and ag. committee
-
- sb991 another bill from the Oregon Pet Industry Assoc. Fines any person
- who makes a complaint to an agency re. animal welfare
- which doesn't result in citation or prosecution,
- $500! This is obviously an attempt to stop people
- from complaining about pet stores, and to keep exploiters
- free from bothersome interference from law enforcement and public
- scrutiny.
- Hearing scheduled 4/9 before senate nat. resources and ag committee.
-
- Please cc your letters to Senator Brady Adams and House Speaker
- Lundquist
- *********************************
-
- ASK YOUR LEGISLATORS TO SUPPORT THESE BILLS: (HB means bill is in the
- house, sb means bill is in the senate, so contact the appropriate
- legislator)
- HB2788 Prohibits canned hunts, where captive wildlife, often tame from
- years of
- zoo life or former pets, are confined in an area for trophy hunters.
-
- HB2463 Prohibits carrying animals in open bed of truck, existing law is
- ambiguous and not enforceable. unfortunately, it exempts farm
- dogs and livestock.
-
- HB3483 Requires animals adopted from shelters to be sterilized, owner
-
- can be penalized for noncompliance.
- This is the 3rd year this type of bill has
- been put forth,
- always defeated. let's see
- it finally passed now.
-
- HB2873 Creates crime of animal neglect in second degree for person
- failing to provide adequate space for livestock to turn around
- and stretch their limbs except when livestock is
- receiving
- medical treatment.
- this has been sitting in the Judiciary
- committee since 2/28.
-
- Thanks in advance for taking the time to see that these bills get the
- attention they need.
-
- Sarah Wilson
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Thu, 10 Apr 1997 07:55:02 +0800
- >From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Xenotransplantation, pig virus
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970410075153.23972438@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- April 9, 1997 - From CDC's AIDS Clearinghouse (April 8)
-
- "A Transplant Breakthrough...With One Big Catch" Business Week (04/07/97) P.
- 137; Baker, Stephen: Genetically engineered pigs, designed with human genes
- to make their organs more acceptable to the human immune system, are being
- hailed by some as a solution to the critical shortage of transplant organs.
- Pig organs could help save 200,000 Americans a year, says transplant expert
- John J. Fung, of the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.
-
- A potential obstacle to the use of pig organs was recently discovered,
- however, when researchers at London's Institute of Cancer Research found
- that a pig virus could infect human cells, suggesting that the use of pig
- organs in humans could result in a new human viral epidemic. "From an
- infectious disease standpoint, transplanting animal organs is a really bad
- idea," claims Jonathan S. Allan of the Southwest Foundation for
- BiomedicalResearch. While the British government placed a moratorium on
- animal-to-human transplants in January, the U.S. Food and Drug
- Administration has approved the practice, under strict regulations to
- guarantee safety. Transplant recipients are especially vulnerable to
- cross-infection, because they are given immune-suppressing drugs to prevent
- organ rejection.
-
- Researchers, meanwhile, are also investigating ways to transplant live
- animal tissues and cells to treat diseases like Parkinson's disease, AIDS,
- and diabetes.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Kia hora te marino, kia whakapapa pounamu te moana, kia tere ai te karohirohi
- i mua tonu i o koutou huarahi.
- -Maori Prayer
-
- (May the calm be widespread, may the sea be as the smooth surface of the
- greenstone and may the rays of sunshine forever dance along your pathway)
-
- Date: Thu, 10 Apr 1997 07:58:42 +0800
- >From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: BSE MOUSE TESTS
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970410075533.23974f3c@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- In Science News, February 1, 1997 Vol 151, No. 5., page 72, titled: "The
- latest salvo in the prion debate" Reports a study in Science, January 17th:
- "A research group headed by Dominique Dormont of the Atomic Energy
- Commission in Fontenay-aux-Roses, France, ground up brains of cows with
- bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), the fatal neurological disorder also
- known as mad cow disease. The scientists then injected samples of the
- bovine brains into the brains of 30 mice.
-
- After peiods ranging from 368 to 719 days, all of the mice began
- experiencing symptoms of a BSE-like neurological disorder. Yet when the
- scientists searched the brains of those mice for prions, they found none in
- 55 percent of them. That was surprising, since prions are now thought by
- many scientists to be the infectious agent for BSE. According to this
- hypothesis, prions are malformed versions of a cellular protein called PrP.
- Prions cause BSE by converting normal PrP proteins into thier own mishapen
- form."
-
- ...Because they did not detect these abnormal proteins in the brains of all
- the diseased mice, however, Dormont and his group speculate that prions are
- not the agent for BSE. Still the prions probably play a crucial role in how
- the disease develops, they note.
-
- While the few reseachers who argue that an undetected virus or bacterium
- causes BSE have taken heart from the results of the French group, other
- scientists are skeptical. "Our experience is quite different than the
- French goup's," observes Moira E. Bruce of the Institute for Animal Health
- in Edinburgh, whose research group has also injected BSE brain tissue into
- mice. The most important distinction, Bruce notes, is that in every mouse
- tested so far, her group has found accumulations of prions.
-
- Bruce argues that the work of Dormont's group does not shatter the prion
- hypothesis, but she also remains undecided as to whether the prions or some
- infectious microbe causes BSE. Like many other scientists, "I'm still on
- the fence," she says."
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Kia hora te marino, kia whakapapa pounamu te moana, kia tere ai te karohirohi
- i mua tonu i o koutou huarahi.
- -Maori Prayer
-
- (May the calm be widespread, may the sea be as the smooth surface of the
- greenstone and may the rays of sunshine forever dance along your pathway)
-
- Date: Thu, 10 Apr 1997 20:10:12 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (CH) Report: Wild Apes Could Go Extinct
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970410201010.006b6e4c@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- -----------------------------
- 04/09/1997 20:02 EST
-
- Report: Wild Apes Could Go Extinct
-
- By ERICA BULMAN
- Associated Press Writer
-
- GENEVA (AP) -- Man's closest genetic relative, the ape, is facing
- pressures that
- could drive it into extinction in the wild, the World Wildlife Fund warned
- Thursday.
-
- Driven from their natural habitats, hunted for their meat, poached as
- trophies and
- listed as the `plat du jour' in fancy Paris restaurants, the world's great
- apes have
- been fighting a losing battle in recent years.
-
- While there are still tens of thousands of great apes left -- from
- chimpanzees to
- orangutans to gorillas -- their numbers have dropped precipitously.
-
- The wildlife group warned that the ape could end up extinct, but did not
- estimate
- when that could happen.
-
- The latest threat comes in the form of war.
-
- ``The most endangered of all these apes is the mountain gorilla, whose last
- stronghold is the troubled -- sometimes war-torn -- zone along the
- frontiers of
- Rwanda, Zaire and Uganda,'' Elizabeth Kemp, Species Policy Information
- Officer for
- WWF International said.
-
- ``Civil unrest has put the gorilla and chimpanzee in great peril,'' she
- noted.
-
- In 1994, hundreds of thousands of refugees fled ethnic violence in Rwanda,
- streaming into Zaire and settling near the Virunga National Park, a haven for
- mountain gorillas.
-
- The WWF said that landmines, firewood collection, random shootings and the
- threat
- of disease are killing chimpanzees and putting the gorillas at risk.
-
- Kemp noted, though, that Zairian rebels were cooperating with
- conservationists to
- help protect animals.
-
- One of the largest threats to the great ape is loss of habitat, the report
- said.
-
- ``Unsustainable logging, agricultural expansion, oil exploration, mining
- and human
- migration into ape habitat are all causing the animals' forest home to
- shrink as
- never before,'' the report said.
-
- The report warned that in 50 to 70 years the forests in Zaire, Equatorial
- Guinea and
- Cameroon could disappear completely.
-
- In Malaysia and Indonesia, it said, less than two percent of the
- orangutan's forest
- habitat remains. Suitable habitat for the animal has declined by 80
- percent in the
- past 20 years.
-
- Wildlife is also being increasingly hunted for food, it added.
-
- ``Bush meat,'' long hunted by the denizens of the forests, has become
- fashionably
- exotic, with restaurants as far as Paris and Brussels offering monkey on
- the menu.
-
- The great apes are also hunted for souvenirs. In the late 1980's many
- orangutan
- skulls were sold to tourists as trophies in Indonesia, a practice that has
- been
- stopped by the government.
-
- Chimpanzees, which roamed Africa by the millions at the turn of the
- century, are
- down to 100,000 to 200,000 today. In Asia the number of orangutans has
- decreased
- from 100,000 to 30,000. The number of bonobo chimps has been halved in the
- last
- 20 years, dwindling to below 25,000. The western lowland gorilla is now
- extinct in
- Zaire.
- Date: Thu, 10 Apr 1997 09:26:21 +0800
- >From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [Australia] Bid for mouse bait.
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970410092313.24b7ea24@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- BID FOR MOUSE BAIT
-
- Victorian "Weekly Times" (9.4.97)
-
- Victorian grain growers may soon be armed with zinc phosphide to fight the
- mouse plague many believe will hit broadacre farms this year.
-
- If approved by the National Registration Authority, Victorian farmers will
- be the first in the country to use the bait, and the first in the world to
- use it for broadacre application.
-
- On Monday, Agriculture Minister Pat McNamara urged the NRA to approve the
- use of the chemical for ground and arial baiting by Victorian farmers this
- autumn.
-
- The Government support followed two successful trials of zinc phosphide in
- the past six months.
-
- He said there was concern about continual build-up of mice numbers,
- especially in the Mallee and Wimmera.
-
- "They are in the stubble and we want to knock down the numbers before they
- cause any damage," M<r McNamara said.
-
- If approved by the NRA, zinc phosphide will be used instead of strychnine,
- which proved unpopular in the market and was rejected by the Australian
- wheat and barley boards when used in the 1993 plague.
-
- Victorian Farmers Federation Grains president David Thomas welcomed the
- government support.
-
- "Zinc phosphide is the most widely used rodenticide overseas and has no
- known side effects. It does the job and then breaks down," he said.
-
- Farmers would need an Agricultural Chemical Users Permit to place the baits.
-
- End
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Kia hora te marino, kia whakapapa pounamu te moana, kia tere ai te karohirohi
- i mua tonu i o koutou huarahi.
- -Maori Prayer
-
- (May the calm be widespread, may the sea be as the smooth surface of the
- greenstone and may the rays of sunshine forever dance along your pathway)
-
- Date: Wed, 09 Apr 1997 21:31:36 -0400
- >From: Wyandotte Animal Group <wag@heritage.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: CHATHAM 5 RELEASED ON BAIL
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970410013136.0957ba74@mail.heritage.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- The judge announced today, instead of Friday like planned, that bail would
- be granted to them. The jail opens at 9:30 AM tomorrow and hopefully, all
- will get released as soon as possible after that. They send their love and
- thanks to everyone who has supported them!
-
-
-
- Jason Alley
- Wyandotte Animal Group
- wag@heritage.com
-
- Date: Thu, 10 Apr 1997 09:46:28 +0800
- >From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: RFI: Zinc Phosphide as broadacre baiting
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970410094319.23170484@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Has anyone access to information on Zinc Phosphide and its use as a potential
- broad acre treatment of "coming mouse plagues" ?
- I would be most grateful of a copy of or reference to such information.
-
- Do any long term studies exist with regards to this product in relation
- to human health (of both users of the product and with regards to the
- product entering the food chain of humans)?. Also I would be most grateful
- on the potential effect of zinc phosphide on native animals and birds(if
- ingested) and
- information with regards to possible residual levels in soils or grains.
- Also of interest is whether this product is capable of causing sickness/death
- in aquatic life if it enters waterways.
-
- The product is being allowed restricted testing in our Eastern states
- following rumours of "coming mouse plagues". The NRA disallowed a request by
- Victorian farmers for strychnine baits but is allowing field trials of zinc
- phosphide in Victoria.
-
- In my state of Western Australia, so far, broadacre baiting of mice is termed
- "unacceptable" according to literature I have received from WA agricultural
- authorities.
-
- I have searched widely but can find little information on zinc phosphide.
-
- Please email me privately with any references on the subject if possible.
-
- Kind Regards,
-
- Marguerite Wegner
- Western Australia
- rabbit@wantree.com.au
- Ph/Fax +61 9 354.2985
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Kia hora te marino, kia whakapapa pounamu te moana, kia tere ai te karohirohi
- i mua tonu i o koutou huarahi.
- -Maori Prayer
-
- (May the calm be widespread, may the sea be as the smooth surface of the
- greenstone and may the rays of sunshine forever dance along your pathway)
-
- Date: Thu, 10 Apr 1997 10:16:02 +0800
- >From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Two articles re Salmonella outbreaks [Australia]
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970410101253.2317309e@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Food poison blamed on retail end.
- The Weekly Times, 7th April 1997, Victoria, Australia
-
- Pacific Meat Packers general manager Leo Susko believes the Victorian
- salmonella ourbreak has not been caused due to processing.
-
- "With inspection levels these days, the latest outbreak can only be to do
- with food handling or lack of training of staff at that end," he said.
-
- "It is beyond meatworks and even after processing of smallgoods, I believe
- it may have occurred at the retail outlets.
-
- "It is happening outside the rigid standards now in force in the processing
- industry,"
-
- Pacific Meat in Thomastown is the first independent, off-site boning room in
- Australia and New Zealand to achieve ISO 9002 accreditation for production
- quality.
-
- Mr Susko said salmonella was inherent in the gut of every animal, but was
- not normally a health threat.
-
- "If I were to test every animal I would find a percentage had salmonella in
- their gut.
-
- "In the chicken industry you won't find one bird without salmonella."
-
- End.
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Meatworks "clean"
-
- By Duncan Brown
- Livestock Editor. Weekly Times (Victoria , Australia 9th April 1997)
-
- Victoria's meatworks watchdog has ruled out a return to government
- inspection in domestic amattoirs following the recent food poisoning outbreaks.
-
- Victorian meat authority chairman John Watson said the state's company-based
- inspection system, introduced in 1994, has become the quality benchmark for
- abattoirs.
-
- His comments follow five seperate outbreaks of salmonella in Melbourne in
- recent weeks which have affected more than 600 people and are predicted to
- cost the smallgoods industry more than $1 million.
-
- Mr Watson said none of the outbreaks had been traced to domestic abattoirs
- (which are underpinned by a compulsory quality assurance scheme) but had
- occured during curing, cooking or handling.
-
- The authority has called for the rapid introduction of uniform, national
- food hygiene standards for wholesalers and retailers based on the latest
- quality assurance guidelines.
-
- But in a blow to the domestic processing sector, retail giant Coles told the
- Weekly Times it was sourcing all its national meat requirements from two
- export accredited abattoirs.
-
- Coles retail spokesman Greg Every said the export accreditation was an
- assurance to customers that a system met a certain standard.
-
- "It is nothing against domestic abattoirs" he said.
-
- Mr Watson said the domestic abattoirs had become a convenient scapegoat for
- unions with a vested interest in seeing a return to regulatory inspection.
-
- "It wouldn't matter if you had 1,000 or 10,000 inspectors out there, they
- can't be out there every minute if the day and they can't see these
- dangerous pathogens" he said.
-
- "Company inspection operates in many industries around the world, including
- the manufacturing of aircraft, motor cars and pharmaceutical supplies."
-
- Mr Watson dismissed claims by the Community and Public Sector Union last
- week that domestic inspection systems weren't up to export standard.
-
- The union's food inspection branch secretary, Felicity Rafferty, said a
- CSIRO trial had exposed domestic abattoirs as having much higher incidences
- of salmonella bacteria than export abattoirs.
-
- But the CSIRO this week responded to the claims, saying most of the sampling
- for the trial had taken place prior to in-house inspection in 1994.
-
- Meanwhile, senior government veterinarians have rejected claims the source
- of recent salmonella outbreaks could have been infected cattle.
-
- End.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Kia hora te marino, kia whakapapa pounamu te moana, kia tere ai te karohirohi
- i mua tonu i o koutou huarahi.
- -Maori Prayer
-
- (May the calm be widespread, may the sea be as the smooth surface of the
- greenstone and may the rays of sunshine forever dance along your pathway)
-
-
-
-
- </pre>
- <!-- END OF PAGE CONTENT -->
-
- </TD>
-
-
- <TD width=50 align=center>
-
- </TD>
- </TR>
-
- <!-- THE BOTTOM TOOLBAR -->
-
- <TR>
-
- <TD colspan=3 align=center fontsize=2>
- <a href="../SUB~1.HTM" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/sub.html">ARRS Tools</a> |
- <a href="../NEWSPA~1.HTM" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/newspage.html">News</a> |
- <a href="../ORGS~1.HTM" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/Orgs.html">Orgs</a> |
- <a href="../SEARCH~1.HTM" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/search.html">Search</a> |
- <a href="../SUPPOR~1.HTM" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/Support.html">Support</a> |
- <a href="../ABOUT/INDEX.HTM" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/about">About the ARRS</a> |
- <a href="mailto:arrs@envirolink.org">Contact ARRS</a>
- </TD>
- </TR>
-
-
- <!-- END OF MAIN -->
-
- </TABLE></center>
-
-
-
-
- <!-- THE UNDERWRITERS -->
-
- <table border=0 width=100%>
- <tr><td>
-
- <center> <hr width=285>
- <Font Size=1>THIS SITE UNDERWRITTEN IN PART BY:</FONT>
- <BR>
-
-
- <a href="../../../tppmsgs/msgs22.htm#2209" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/cgi-bin/show_support.pl?id=t891020770&sec=sbn_bottom&url=http%3a//www.outpost.com" target=_top><img src="../../SUPPORT/BANNERS/OTHERS/CYBERIAN/PLAYMORE.GIF" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/support/banners/others/cyberian/Playmore.gif" border=1 alt="Cyberian Outpost"></a>
-
-
- <hr width=285>
-
- <br><font size=2>
- <b>The views and opinions expressed within this page are not
- necessarily those of the <br>EnviroLink Network nor the Underwriters. The views
- are those of the authors of the work.</b></font>
- </center>
- </td></tr>
-
- </table>
-
- </BODY>
-
- </HTML>
-