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- from USA Today web page:
- --------------------------------------
-
- This car deal was a real bear!
-
- SIOUX CITY, Iowa - Who made the Boo Boo? It might have been the former
- owner of a black bear by that name.
- It might have been the car dealer who traded a car for Boo Boo. At any
- rate, the car is gone and Boo Boo is in a
- shelter where workers are trying to find the 120-pound, one-year-old
- declawed bruin a new home. Officials
- aren't naming the dealer or what the buyer got in return. "Maybe a Cougar
- or something," guessed Cindy
- Rarrat, who is trying to arrange for a zoo in Newark, N.J., to take the bear.
-
- Trading animals for cars is not without precedent in Sioux City. Brian
- Berkenpas, owner of Big Deal Auto Plaza.
- said he took a boa constrictor for a 1979 Ford Mustang last summer. "I got
- $400 bucks, I think, and a snake,"
- he said.
- Date: Tue, 22 Apr 1997 09:37:03 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: RFI: vegan/vegetarian/animal rights/environmental dates
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970422093700.006c1ea4@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Request for information -- posted for Gail Joslin -- send response to
- <gail@OUP.CO.ZA>:
- ------------------------------------------------------
-
- I'm trying to collate all the dates in the year (anniversaries also) which
- pertain to notable activities, personages, protest actions, etc that have
- a bearing on veganism, vegetarianism, animal rights, environmental issues
- etc.
-
- What I mean here are things like: internationally/nationally recognized
- "days" (e.g World Vegan Day, Gandhi's birthday, World anti McD day,
- founding of Greenpeace, birth & death dates of famous vegans, events in
- the sports world won by vegans, banning of battery cages in Sweden, etc.)
-
- I'd appreciate them being posted to me at:
-
- Gail Joslin
- Vegans In South Africa
- Box 36242
- Glosderry
- 7702 South Africa
-
-
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 22:48:55 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (CN) Cloning a Chinese Dolly
- Message-ID: <199704211448.WAA24042@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >South China Morning Post
- Internet Edition
-
- 21 Apr 97
-
- Sheep-cloning scientists aim for own Dolly
- IVAN TANG
-
- Scientists are expecting to produce China's first version of Dolly the
- sheep within a year.
-
- And a separate project in which researchers used embryonic cells to clone a
- bull a year ago has been revived.
-
- The programme had to be halted when the original one million-yuan
- (HK$930,000) research fund dried up. The cloned bull was sold to a farmer.
-
- Zhang Baowen , President of the Northwestern Agricultural University, says
- the project at the China Academy of Agricultural Sciences' Institute of
- Animal Science in Beijing has been restarted after money became available.
-
- Mr Zhang said the other research programme was aimed at cloning sheep using
- cells from mature animals - similar to the Dolly experiment carried out in
- Scotland.
-
- "The researchers are experimenting in cloning sheep using cells from the
- livers and leg joints of adult sheep," he said.
-
- Mr Zhang expected the country's first cloned sheep to be produced within a
- year.
-
- Although the two research programmes were similar in nature, he said, they
- could not be combined.
-
- The bull-cloning project aimed to improve farm animals' ability to
- reproduce, while the sheep-cloning project aimed to understand the animal's
- development.
-
- Different sources of funding was also a problem.
-
- Mr Zhang said: "The bull-cloning project receives funds from the State
- Science and Technology Commission, while the one cloning sheep gets money
- from both the commission and the Ministry of Agriculture."
-
- Chinese scientists cloned a rabbit in 1993 using embryonic cells. So far,
- they have produced eight cloned animals, including rabbits, pigs, goats and
- bulls.
-
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 22:49:03 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (CN) Cancer mortality rate on the rise
- Message-ID: <199704211449.WAA27902@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >South China Morning Post
- Internet Edition
- April 21 1997
-
- Cancer mortality rate on the rise
- DANIEL KWAN
-
-
- A report released by the National Cancer Prevention and Control Office
- showed more than 1.3 million Chinese die of cancer every year, Xinhua (the
- New China News Agency) said yesterday.
-
- The annual figure will rise to 1.4 million by 2000, it said.
-
- Office director Li Liandi said China needed to promote the concepts of
- early treatment and health education in order to save more people from cancer.
-
- The report said cancer had become the second most fatal disease in China
- after respiratory illness.
-
- According to the report, about 80 per cent of victims die from stomach,
- liver or lung cancer.
-
- It said the cancer mortality rate had risen 30 per cent in the past 20
- years.<P>
- Lung cancer had doubled in the past 20 years and become the biggest killer
- among all diseases in Chinese cities.
-
- The report quoted experts saying pollution, widespread use of chemicals and
- smoking were the main reasons behind the increase.
-
- The report warned that health professionals were facing problems tackling
- cancer, which was spreading more quickly in rural areas than in cities.
-
- It said health conditions in most villages were inadequate and presented
- obstacles to doctors.
-
- Unlike in the 1960s, when most Chinese enjoyed free medical care, people
- now often had to pay their own medical bills.
-
- Cancer patients were particularly hard-pressed as their medical bills were
- likely to be very high.
-
- The Government has yet to establish a national system to provide cancer
- sufferers with sufficient medical support.
-
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 22:49:13 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (MY) 'Fish on wheels' to ensure quality supply
- Message-ID: <199704211449.WAA29201@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >The Star Online
-
- Monday, April 21, 1997
- 'Fish on wheels' to ensure quality supply
-
-
- JOHOR BARU: The Johor Fishermen's Association has
- implemented a "fish on wheels" programme to ensure that
- consumers have a constant supply of good quality fish at
- reasonable prices.
-
- Its chairman Abu Jusoh said the programme was launched
- with two lorries donated by the state government. "The
- lorries will ply housing estates," he said.
-
- Abu Jusoh said the association would expand the direct
- sale concept to all major towns.
-
- "We picked Johor Baru to start the programme because of
- the high cost of living and the demand for good quality
- marine products at moderate prices," he said.
-
- Abu Jusoh said the association would receive its
- supplies from fishermen in Endau, Mersing, Pontian, Batu
- Pahat and Muar and also from neighbouring countries.
-
- He said the Malaysian Fisheries Development Board would
- help the association set up a cold room at the wholesale
- complex in Pandan soon.
-
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 22:49:19 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (MY) Effluents killing fish
- Message-ID: <199704211449.WAA29907@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- > The Star Online
-
-
- Monday, April 21, 1997
-
- Kukup breeders: Effluents killing fish
- By Shahar Yaacob
-
-
- PONTIAN: More than RM100,000 worth of fish being bred in
- cages in the sea off Kukup, 24km south of here, have
- died in the past two weeks believed to be due to
- effluents flowing from a nearby river.
-
- A breeder Ng Swee San alleged that the effluents had
- reached several cages close to the rivermouth. He hoped
- the authorities concerned would react quickly to contain
- the problem.
-
- He said the breeders found the fish behaving strangely
- about two weeks ago and their first thought was that the
- old problem of ships desludging had reappeared.
-
- But there was no sign of the oily substance and so they
- decided to scout around for a clue.
-
- "We discovered some dead fish floating in the water
- around the mouth of Sungai Durian. As we moved further
- inland there were more dead fish.
-
- "When we returned to Kukup we probed the water edgeand
- took several water samples which we sent to the relevant
- authorities for analysis. We also lodged a police report
- at Permas."
-
- Some 70 breeders are operating pen-culture fish breeding
- in Kukup water spanning several kilometres along the
- strait between the Kukup coastline and Kukup island.
-
- Most of the harvest are sold to seafood restaurants
- while some are exported to Singapore.
-
- Most of the fish fry are imported from Taiwan as they
- are more resistant to the water condition in Kukup.
-
- Among the fishes being bred are tiger kerapu and siakap
- which can attain a weight of 10kg in four months
- fetching a price of RM10 per kg.
-
- "Up to today I have lost at least RM40,000 and will lose
- more if the situation is not brought under control,"
- said Ng.
-
- It is believed that the Department of Environment had
- collected water samples and is investigating the source
- of the alleged pollution.
-
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 22:49:25 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (TH) Underwater wedding for 'promotion of coral conservation'
- Message-ID: <199704211449.WAA30562@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- April 21, 1997
-
- [BANGKOK POST]
-
- ENVIRONMENT / SOCIAL EVENT
-
- Underwater wedding in Trang province
- All for 'promotion of coral conservation'
- by Chakrit Ridmontri
- Trang
-
-
- The country's first underwater wedding was held
- yesterday, with the brides and grooms expressing
- the hope that the ceremony would promote coral
- reef conservation and responsible tourism.
-
- The two couples, Pornlada Krobthong and Nophadol
- Surathin, and Susisda Sampao and Veera
- Khorvichienkul, descended 30 feet down to the
- ceremony venue in front of Koh Wan. Marble
- tables were placed on the seabed for the
- ceremony.
-
- The couples' phuyai was the former deputy
- governor of Trang, Chane Wiphatborwornwong. He
- took the plunge to pour holy sand over the hands
- of the brides and grooms.
-
- Sikao district chief Nawin Sinthusa-ard signed
- the wedding registrations, specially printed on
- slate boards.
-
- The event was late in the morning when the sea
- was calm and visibility was good. But the water
- turned murky.
-
- "Doing your signature underwater is difficult as
- the pen and slate boards keep floating up and
- down," said Mr Nawin.
-
- Mr Chane, the former deputy governor who is the
- eldest of the divers, was exhausted after
- spending almost an hour underwater.
-
- Even the brides and grooms, experienced divers,
- faced no fewer difficulties as they had to kneel
- down with their hands extended.
-
- "Sitting on the sea floor isn't easy, but posing
- for the cameramen underwater is even more
- difficult," said Ms Pornlada.
-
- But the wedding went smoothly amid cheers from
- people on ferries surrounding the spot.
-
- The couples said they hoped the event would
- generate public awareness of the need to look
- after the underwater environment, especially
- coral reefs.
-
- "I hope it'll encourage people to save the coral
- reefs in Trang, which are beautiful and also
- sensitive," said Mr Nophadol.
-
- Surin Tothabtieng, president of Trang Chamber of
- Commerce, said he and Trang governor Yongyudh
- Wichaidith decided to sponsor the wedding
- because the pairs met and fell in love in Trang
- while they were collecting garbage in the coral
- reefs.
-
- He said scuba diving should be promoted as it
- was a way of conserving coral reefs, as the
- divers can do useful things such as collecting
- garbage.
-
- Some local conservation groups stayed away from
- the underwater wedding activity.
-
- Pisit Chansnoh, president of Yadfon Association,
- said anchoring in coral reefs was rampant and it
- was impossible to control it because of the
- increasing number of ferries carrying tourists
- to the diving spots.
-
- He added that the fertility of coral reefs
- cannot be evaluated from only the corals, but
- also the diversity of species.
-
- More divers will chase away fish and other
- marine lives from their habitats, he said.
-
- Article copyright Post Publishing Public Co., Ltd 1997
- Reprinted for non-commercial use only.
- Website: http://www.bangkokpost.net
-
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 22:49:30 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (TH) Beef scare prompts beef-eating festival
- Message-ID: <199704211449.WAA30116@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- April 21, 1997
-
- [BANGKOK POST]
-
- HEALTH
-
- Beef scare prompts festival
- Slaughterhouses to be given certification
- Aphaluck Bhatiasevi
-
- Concerned about falling beef sales due to fears
- of anthrax, government organisations have joined
- hands to stage a beef-eating festival this
- Friday at which various film stars will take
- part.
-
- The event is jointly organised by the Interior,
- Agriculture and Public Health ministries and the
- Bangkok Metropolitan Administration. It will
- take place at Siam Jusco department store in
- Nonthaburi.
-
- The government authorities are cooperating to
- help train beef sellers on Thursday, to inform
- them of the possible contraction of diseases
- from cattle.
-
- Certificates will be given to slaughterhouses
- and beef sellers approved by the Public Health
- Ministry to reassure the public that the beef
- purchased is free of anthrax, according to the
- ministry's Information and Public Relations
- Office director, Prapan Teekhavanit.
-
- Anthrax is a bacterial disease caused by
- "bacillus anthracis". It can be transmitted from
- cattle to humans, but is non-communicable
- between humans.
-
- In beef, the disease can be destroyed under 140
- degrees celsius temperature for 1-3 hours or if
- exposed under 100 degrees celsius of moist heat
- for 5-30 minutes.
-
- Dr Prapan said that according to a group of
- Muslim beef sellers who recently urged the
- Public Health Ministry to help provide
- clarifications to the public about anthrax, the
- daily sales of beef dropped to only 10 percent
- of what it was following the news on the
- outbreak of anthrax.
-
- The Livestock Department has imposed strict
- measures in importing cows and buffaloes in
- border provinces by making sure that all cattle
- imported into the country are vaccinated before
- being sold in the country.
-
- Article copyright Post Publishing Public Co., Ltd 1997
- Reprinted for non-commercial use only.
- Website: http://www.bangkokpost.net
-
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 22:49:37 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (MY) Trapped crocodile finds home in Malacca Zoo
- Message-ID: <199704211449.WAA29990@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >The Star Online
-
-
- Monday, April 21, 1997
- Trapped crocodile finds home in Malacca Zoo
-
-
- MALACCA: A female freshwater crocodile found trapped in
- a fishing net in Kuala Sungai Tampok, Rengit, Johor, on
- Saturday has been placed at the Malacca Zoo.
-
- Zoo public relations officer Masri Arop said the 300kg
- female crocodile would be paired with a male crocodile
- caught in Puchong, Selangor, on March 25.
-
- He said the 4.4m reptile, known scientifically as
- Crocodileus Porosus and locally known as buaya tembaga,
- was the biggest female fresh water crocodile obtained by
- the zoo.
-
- Masri said fisherman Atan Sulong, 48, found the catch
- when he was on a regular fishing trip on Saturday.
-
- The crocodile was later transferred to its new home by
- officers and rangers of Kluang National Parks and
- Wildlife Department and Malacca Zoo the same day.
-
- He said the crocodile, believed to be between 20 and 25
- years old, has been named Rengit.
-
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 22:49:42 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (HK) Pig dung 'trick' on right scent
- Message-ID: <199704211449.WAA26582@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >South China Morning Post
- Internet Edition
- April 211997
-
- Pig dung 'trick' on right scent
- ALEX LO
-
-
- Treated pig dung which does not stink has become a popular fertiliser with
- farmers.
-
- Researchers say they cannot keep up with demand for the mixture of sawdust
- and dung which is composted into odourless fertiliser.
-
- "We are not mass-producing because we are only doing experiments, but
- farmers are already demanding more than we can provide," City University
- biologist Professor Nora Tam Fung-yee said.
-
- Farmers can save money on chemical fertilisers, said a spokesman from the
- Tsui Keng Vegetable Marketing Co-operative Society in the New Territories.
-
- "Chemicals are expensive but this stuff is free."
-
- Last year, the Agriculture and Fisheries Department distributed about
- 50,000 kilograms to more than 50 farmers at the government farm in Ta Kwu Leng.
-
- The new method took advantage of the natural process of composting to
- maximise nutrient value. Professor Tam said the trick was to regulate
- moisture and air supply.
-
- Fresh pig dung contained a high level of bacteria which consumed nutrients
- and damaged plants, she said. But as the mixture decomposed, it produced
- excellent fertilisers containing nitrate, phosphorus and potassium.
-
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 10:17:54 -0500 (CDT)
- >From: hsuslab@ix.netcom.com (Tamara Hamilton HSUS Laboratory Animals)
- To: primate-talk@primate.wisc.edu
- Subject: Washington Post Editorial on Bion
- Message-ID: <199704211517.KAA20917@dfw-ix15.ix.netcom.com>
-
- Monkeys in Outer Space?
- By Daniel S. Greenberg
-
- Sunday, April 20 1997; Page C07
- The Washington Post
- In the bitter strife between mainstream science and animal-rights
- advocates, the scientists
- have made a strong case for experimenting on animals to advance human
- welfare. In fact,
- anyone who disputes them is likely to be relegated to the nut fringe.
- But you don't have to be an animal-rights zealot to wonder about NASA's
- sinking 31 million
- scarce government dollars into an international study of how monkeys
- with electrodes in
- their brains and wires on their bodies react to a two-week space
- voyage.
- The question was of scientific interest and practical importance in the
- long-ago beginnings of
- manned space flight, when human experience in the unknowns of
- weightlessness was limited
- to a few days. But in recent years, human space travelers have remained
- in orbit for months
- at time, serving as the subjects of sophisticated and productive
- experiments on the bodily
- and psychological effects of zero gravity.
- Many unknowns remain about the ill effects of space on bone density,
- muscle mass and
- cardiac fitness. But the best experimental subjects for studying the
- effects of space on
- humans are humans in space. And these days, they're plentiful, aboard
- the Russian Mir and
- the American Space Shuttle.
- NASA's animal experimenters, however, won't give up. And their rigidity
- is compounded by
- American commitments to sustain the impoverished Russian space
- enterprise, which has a
- long tradition of shooting monkeys into space.
- Thus, when a Space Shuttle flight for a Franco-American monkey
- experiment was canceled
- in 1994, the project -- called Bion 11 -- was handed over to the
- Russians. People for the
- Ethical Treatment of Animals, French animal-rights organizations and
- individual scientists
- disputed the scientific value of the experiment. Last summer, the House
- voted to cut off its
- funds. NASA bounced back with a favorable evaluation from a panel of
- scientists, and the
- termination effort failed in the Senate.
- On Christmas Eve, in a capsule supplied by the Russians, Bion 11,
- carrying two rhesus
- monkeys, was launched into orbit from a Russian cosmodrome for a
- two-week flight.
- As described in the authoritative weekly Space News, "While in orbit,
- the monkeys were
- dressed in space suits, which were secured to chairs. Their heads were
- shaved and small
- holes were drilled into their skulls to permit sensors to take regular
- readings of body
- temperature. A half-dozen electrodes were put into the monkeys'
- muscles, with the wiring
- connected to recording devices. On the ground in Moscow, two other
- rhesus monkeys were
- in the same basic position to permit comparisons of the reaction to
- weightlessness."
- The experiment was deemed a success. But then one of the monkeys died,
- in circumstances
- unrelated to its space voyage, according to NASA officials and their
- colleagues in the
- Russian Institute of Biomedical Problems, who offered the following
- account.
- Shortly after their return from space, the monkeys were anesthetized at
- the institute for the
- removal of bone and muscle specimens. On the following day, as one of
- them was emerging
- from the anesthetic, it went into cardiac arrest and died, despite
- efforts at resuscitation. The
- cause of death is under study by NASA and the Russian institute.
- Meanwhile, preparations continue for launching Bion 12 in 1998.
- The scientific justification for these antiquated experiments is nil.
- But that doesn't deter the champions of animal experimentation from
- emulating the extravagant rhetoric of their opposites. In the old days,
- space enthu
- siasts invented tales of Tang and Teflon coming out of space research,
- which they most assuredly did not. They have since graduated to grander
- claims, of similarly thin substance.
- In a statement supporting the Bion experiment, Americans for Medical
- Progress declared that the project would not only help humans in space
- but would also "assist in understanding and finding treatments for
- anemia, osteop
- orosis, muscular atrophy and immune system dysfunction for patients on
- earth."
- As a recruiting tool for the animal-rights movement, Bion is a dream
- that can turn into a nightmare for legitimate experimentation on
- animals.
- Daniel S. Greenberg is editor and publisher of Science & Government
- Report, a Washington newsletter.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 12:57:12 -0400
- >From: Shirley McGreal <spm@awod.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Bear killers seek import permits
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.32.19970421165712.008a4bac@awod.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- The seven men listed below have filed applications to import Polar
- bear trophies (no women). According to the 9 April Federal Register:
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The public is invited to comment on the following application(s)
- for permits to conduct certain activities with marine mammals. The
- application(s) was/were submitted to satisfy requirements of the Marine
- Mammal Protection Act of 1972, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.) and
- the regulations governing marine mammals (50 CFR part 18).
- The following applicants have each requested a permit to import a
- sport-hunted polar bear (Ursus maritimus) from the Northwest
- Territories, Canada for personal use.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Applicant/address Population PRT-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Bruno Scherrer, Los Angeles, CA...... Northern Beaufort...... 826942
- David Anaman, Hemlock, MI............ ......do............... 826910
- Derek A. Burdeny, Omaha, NE.......... ......do............... 827122
- Harry Brickley, Indianapolis, IN..... ......do............... 827123
- Bruce Levein, Mercer Is., WA......... Southern Beaufort...... 826941
- William Katen, Patchogue, NY......... ......do............... 826911
- Mark David Samsill, Ft. Worth, TX.... ......do............... 827037
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Written data or comments, requests for copies of the complete
- application, or requests for a public hearing on this application
- should be sent to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Office of
- Management Authority, 4401 N. Fairfax Drive, Room 430, Arlington,
- Virginia 22203, telephone 703/358-2104 or fax 703/358-2281 and must be
- received within 30 days of the date of publication of this notice.
- Anyone requesting a hearing should give specific reasons why a hearing
- would be appropriate. The holding of such hearing is at the discretion
- of the Director.
-
- Dr. Shirley McGreal, Chairwoman
- International Primate Protection League, POB 766 Summerville SC 29484 USA
- Phone: 803-871-2280 Fax: 803-871-7988 E-mail ippl@sc.net and ippl@awod.com
- Web page (revised January 1997): http://www.sims.net/organizations/ippl/
-
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 13:01:37 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: JanaWilson@aol.com
- To: Ar-News@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US)Address to Help Animal Flood Victims in North Dakota
- Message-ID: <970421130115_51881166@emout10.mail.aol.com>
-
-
- >From Sherrill in Tulsa..:
-
- The bank in Grand Forks, ND is under water, so the Humane Society is
- requesting cashier's checks instead of regular checks, please. Here's
- the address: Humane Society of Grand Forks, Rural Route 2, Grand Forks,
- ND 58203 Please put on the cashier's checks: "For Flood Relief -
- Animals" I've been told this humane society is wonderful. Thanks for any
- help you can offer them.
-
- Another address: The Grand Forks Air Force Base Veterinary Clinic,
- Grand Forks AFB, ND 58204 Put this message on checks: "For Flood
- Victims' Pets"
-
- For the Animals,
-
- Jana, OKC
-
- Date: Tue, 22 Apr 1997 13:14:04 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) (Fwd) Police Brutality at UC Davis
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970422131401.006add00@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from private e-mail:
- ------- Forwarded Message Follows -------
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
- April 21, 1997
-
-
-
-
- Beaten Activists Charge
- Police Brutality at UCD
- News Conference Monday
-
- DAVIS, Ca. -- A major news conference has been called for 11 a.m. Monday
- morning at the California Primate Research Center by a civil liberties group
- that monitored what it will claim was the beating and brutalizing of
- activists by University of California riot police during a demonstration
- Sunday.
-
- Among those present at the news conference will be a 19-year-old activist
- who was rushed the hospital with a possible broken arm -- incurred after a
- UCD officer hit him with the full force of a billy club even though the
- youth was already laying face down on the ground.
-
- Thirty-two activists were arrested, and at least half of them have reported
- varying levels of brutal treatment by the UCD police. All were released by 1
- a.m. Monday morning.
-
- A "pattern of conduct" indicating abusive, illegal, unethical behavior will
- be outlined at the news conference, which will also reveal preliminary
- evidence of police brutalities, mostly involving the use of clubs to hit
- nonviolent protestors.
-
- "This was a peaceful demonstration, and when activists attempted to march
- up to the Primate Center, police pushed, hit, bashed and injured them.
- Television footage and our footage consistently and clearly show that," said
- Crescenzo Vellucci, director of the California based Activist Civil
- Liberties Committee and one of those arrested, and injured.
-
- "We will provide the news media with a list of cruel tactics used by the
- police. Their activities have not been seen in many years in California --
- they are, unlike the peaceful activists, inherently brutal," said Vellucci.
-
- Activists from throughout the Western U.S. participated in two-days of
- workshops at the California Regional Primate Center at the University of
- California, Davis Sunday concerning campaigns to stop animal experiments and
- factory farming abuses.
- -30-
- Contact: ACLC (916)452-7179
-
-
- Activist Civil Liberties Committee
- PO Box 19515, Sacramento, CA 95819 (916) 452-7179
-
- ***************************
- * FREE TONY WONG! *
- * FREE STACY SCHIERHOLZ! *
- * FREE JEFF WATKINS! *
- ***************************
-
-
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 10:25:15 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [SA] Dolphins save drowning woman
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970421102547.3cdfb244@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Monday, April 21st, 1997
-
- Dolphins save drowning woman
-
- A GROUP of dolphins saved a woman from drowning in the Indian Ocean near
- Durban, a South African newspaper said yesterday. Doris Svorinic, 28, said
- she was snorkelling when she panicked and swallowed water. The dolphins
- nudged her all the way to safety, she said. A neighbour, Mark Frederic, 27,
- who was diving nearby, failed to surface and was still missing at the weekend.
-
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 15:14:48 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: s010sam@desire.wright.edu
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: undigest
- Message-ID: <Pine.PMDF.3.91.970421151320.556009417A-100000@desire.wright.edu>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT
-
-
- i'm unsure about how to undigest ar-news.
-
- could you please send me info or
- preform the service?
- s010sam@desire.wright.edu
- thanks!
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 15:23:26 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: Pat Fish <pfish@fang.cs.sunyit.edu>
- To: AR-News@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Soy finds yet another use (Breast Implants) (US)
- Message-ID: <Pine.BSF.3.95.970421151910.21357U-100000@fang.cs.sunyit.edu>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
-
- Hard Copy reports that there is currently a study being conducted, in which
- 500 women desiring breast implants will get Soy instead of saline or
- silicone. HC also states there is still space for women to join the study.
-
-
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 13:46:40 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [US] Moms of the '90s Take On Environmental Threats
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970421134712.3caf72c8@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- >From The American News Service
- (Forwarded with permission)
-
- Moms of the '90s Take On Environmental Threats
- By Nancy Weil
-
- (ANS) -- Dierdre Tinker, mother of three, has her own version of a power
- suit. On days she's meeting with Texas legislators, she reaches for her
- foam-rubber cement kiln outfit.
-
- One side is dirty, sooty, gray -- meant to show what happens when a cement
- kiln smokestack burns hazardous waste without pollution control equipment.
- The other side is spotless. Toilet brushes hang from it to suggest
- "scrubbers" that companies use to reduce pollutants emitted into the air.
-
- Her outfit speaks for her when she debates environmental cleanup with the
- lawmakers.
- While national organizations such as the Sierra Club lobby
- Washington on the Clean Air Act, thousands of "enviro-moms" such as Tinker
- are waging their battles closer to home. In her case that means De Soto,
- southwest of Dallas.
-
- They may at times dress funny, but these moms are on a mission. Armed with
- facts and figures, and driven by love and concern for their children,
- they're the "heart and soul" of the environmental movement, said longtime
- environmental educator Petey Giroux of Atlanta.
-
- Without such women, "it would be a much less effective movement," said Ann
- Notthoff, who works with grassroots groups as a senior planner in the San
- Francisco office of the Natural Resources Defense Council. "I think that
- women bring a very important perspective and approach to dealing with
- environmental problems," she said.
-
- Mothers across the country speak with passion about what motivates their
- efforts.
-
- "When I realized this cement plant had been burning hazardous waste for over
- eight years and I did not know it, that made me a victim and I wasn't born
- to be a victim," said Tinker -- like many other enviro-moms, a newcomer to
- the arena of public activism. "I wanted to look into it because in the
- meantime my children don't breathe so well."
-
- Her three sons have asthma, one of them a severe case. Tinker believes
- emissions from the cement kiln, nine miles by air from her home, are
- contributing to the asthma. So she has helped rally her local and then
- statewide PTA behind tougher laws regarding permits.
-
- With the biannual state legislative session under way in Austin, Tinker and
- her friend Becky Bornhorst have been driving three and a half hours to meet
- lawmakers every few weeks. Bornhorst lives near the same cement plant, and
- her 10-year-old daughter has had a cough -- since last September -- that she
- can't shake.
-
- Environmentally aware mothers like Tinker and Bornhorst go head-to-head with
- lawmakers and corporate giants, waiting out the dog-years pace of government
- and then sticking around to be sure that laws are enforced.
-
- One of the original environmental moms is Lois Gibbs, whose neighborhood in
- Niagara Falls, N.Y., was a chemical-waste dump in the 1940s and '50s.
-
- In 1978, she sounded the call to arms at Love Canal, where dioxins and other
- chemicals had seeped into basements in homes in her neighborhood, causing
- cancer and birth defects. The nation's single worst environmental disaster
- led to the creation of the federal Superfund to clean up hazardous waste sites.
-
- In 1994, Occidental Chemical Corporation was ordered to pay New York $98
- million over three years and assume wrongdoing in the catastrophe. Gibbs
- became widely known for her work in the grassroots environmental movement
- and in 1981 founded the Center for Health,
- Environment, and Justice, based in Falls Church, Va. The center said it has
- helped 8,000 community groups fight hazardous wastes.
-
- Other moms were famous before they became environmental leaders. Actress
- Meryl Streep started worrying about the use of pesticides on fruits and
- vegetables that her children ate. It was apples -- sprayed with the chemical
- Alar -- that helped trigger her concern eight years ago. So Streep and her
- friend Wendy Gordon banded together some of their Connecticut neighbors and
- soon persuaded the local supermarket to provide organic food.
-
- >From their kitchen-table meetings arose Mothers & Others for a Livable
- Planet, a national organization dedicated to helping consumers make
- environmentally informed choices about the food they eat and the products
- they use. Streep has said the New York-based group "can claim a good part of
- credit" for the Food Quality Protection Act signed by President Clinton
- last August. The Texas moms do their environmental work through the state
- and local PTA, as well as with a neighborhood group called Downwinders at
- Risk. Like other women engaged in similar fights across the nation, they
- didn't intend to become leaders of a cause.
-
- "We don't want to find out in the future that our kids have something
- terribly wrong with them because of what's going on," said Bornhorst of the
- hazardous waste burning.
-
- ⌐ COPYRIGHT The American News Service
-
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 13:46:43 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [US] Environmental Business Investments May Be Looking Up
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970421134715.3cafa744@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- >From The American News Service
-
- Environmental Business Investments May Be Looking Up
-
- (ANS) -- Over the past five or 10 years, investments in environmental
- businesses have not profited as well as more traditional investments, admits
- Gerard Hallaren, who manages Invesco's $20 million Environmental Services
- Fund in Denver.
-
- The average annual return for his fund over the past five years has been
- only 2.8 percent, versus 22.9 percent for the Standard and Poor's 500, a
- widely quoted index that gives a snapshot of a broad swath of American
- businesses.
-
- However, he said, "I see a much brighter picture going forward." Up until
- about 1990 or so, people were pouring money into what he called "pie in the
- sky investments" that were priced too high. Now, he thinks, environmental
- investments are more realistic.
-
- "We invest in what you might call pretty mundane things," said Hallaren, who
- began managing Invesco's fund late last year. "People are going to have to
- do something about garbage. They need clean water and air. I see this fund
- not as a speculative thing, but as a solid, growth-oriented investment over
- the long term."
-
- Hallaren's fund has already begun to bear out his prediction: Last year, it
- earned 17.8 percent for investors.
-
- ⌐ COPYRIGHT The American News Service
-
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 13:46:45 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [US] In "Eco-Industrial Parks," One Company's Waste Is
- Another's Raw Material
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970421134717.3caf9948@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- >From The American News Service
-
- In "Eco-Industrial Parks," One Company's Waste Is Another's Raw Material
- By Darren Waggoner
-
- {(ANS) -- Imagine an industrial park in which all the products are designed
- and manufactured in environmentally friendly ways. Not only that, but the
- businesses are organized so that the waste produced by one company can be
- used as raw material by another.
-
- That's the dream being pushed toward reality by The Green Institute, a
- public-private venture in Minneapolis that is setting up what it calls an
- "ecological industrial park."
-
- The Minneapolis project is one of about 20 similar projects operating
- independently nationwide. The President's Council on Sustainable
- Development, a project of Vice President Al Gore, acts as a clearinghouse
- for information, sources of funding and ideas.
-
- The idea goes far beyond the kind of recycling that most cities already
- practice. In its ideal form, Green Institute executive director Michael
- Krause and others like him envision an industrial system that would emulate
- nature, where nothing is wasted.
-
- Next to the site, The Green Institute has already created one related
- business: the Re-Use Center, a 26,000-square-foot retail operation that
- sells building materials salvaged from demolished properties. It employs 13
- people and generates $350,000 in annual sales.
-
- But the institute hopes to start construction within the year on a $4.5
- million, 70,000-square-foot building that would house 15 to 20 more
- businesses. Eventually, it hopes to expand to 200,000 square feet of
- industrial space.
-
- Krause has been talking to a variety of possible tenants for the new
- building. One would open a paint remanufacturing plant that would recycle
- old paint, some of it becoming high-quality caulk. Other possibilities
- include a firm that helps companies find ways to cut their energy expenses,
- one that makes canvas bags, and one that makes solar energy devices for home
- and business use.
-
- Krause especially likes the idea of businesses that can use each other's
- waste. "That's almost always cheaper than using a virgin raw material," he said.
-
- But the concept does not always succeed.
-
- One of the nation's biggest monuments to dashed environmental hopes stands
- in Rochester, N.Y. More than a decade ago, the state and county governments
- spent $80 million on what was supposed to be a high-tech, state-of-the-art
- recycling center to turn trash into useful products such as paving materials
- and fuel to sell to the local electric utility.
-
- As it turned out, few markets were found and the electric utility could not
- burn the fuel efficiently. Today the plant is used primarily as a garbage
- transfer station, sending waste to traditional landfills.
-
- Overall, however, the concept of ecologically friendly industry seems to be
- catching on. A handful of the nation's largest investment companies,
- including Fidelity and Invesco, have set up mutual funds that invest
- primarily in recycling and other environmentally oriented
- businesses.
-
- Londonderry, N.H., is another town hoping to attract some of this investment
- by setting up an ecological park. Peter Lowitt, the town's director of
- planning and economic development, said town leaders became interested in
- the eco-park idea in 1995 after taxpayers had spent almost 10 years and more
- than $13 million to clean up three toxic sites.
-
- "We've learned a hard lesson. It helped us want to work harder with our
- industries to create a model showing you can be good to your bottom line
- while being good to the environment," Lowitt said.
-
- "We want to show the industries that their waste stream can be a revenue
- stream, as well as saving mightily on the cost of disposal."
-
- Town leaders are negotiating with three prospective firms interested in
- moving into a 100-acre site the town obtained by foreclosing for unpaid
- taxes. Meanwhile, Yale University forestry students are analyzing the town's
- industrial waste stream, a study that could help
- Londonderry officials identify prospective businesses.
-
- Unique to the Londonderry project is a legally binding covenant the
- companies will be asked to sign, agreeing to account for all their waste and
- try to make sure it is recycled.
-
- "We hope the covenant will protect a company's investment. They'll know that
- another company won't come in next door and put in a junkyard," Lowitt said.
-
- Yet another eco-park is taking root in Brownsville, Texas. The local
- economic development council studied more than 100 businesses, then gathered
- information about the waste produced by 35 companies on both sides of the
- U.S.-Mexico border.
-
- With help from the Bechtel Corp., a high-tech research firm, a computer has
- spit out a list of companies that might be good matches to use each other's
- waste. "The final scenario has uncovered hundreds of potential matches,"
- said Rick Luna, project manager.
-
- There were some early glitches in the computer program. For example, it
- could not distinguish between waste motor oils and waste food oils --
- products that would have very different uses. However, when the report is
- finished he expects to see opportunities for reuse of a variety of
- cardboards, oils, plastics and solvents.
-
- Eventually, Luna said, the Brownsville project will have about a dozen
- businesses working together in the eco-park. But it is also hoping to expand
- the idea of businesses feeding each other's waste to others without
- necessarily having to pick up and relocate into the park.
-
- In early March, Brownsville hosted a conference for eco-park developers
- across the country. The keynote speaker, a vice president at Chaparral Steel
- near Dallas, explained how his company takes junked cars and separates the
- steel from the plastics and glass. Then, the company runs the metal through
- a minimill to produce a top-quality steel. Chaparral is
- also looking for ways to recycle the plastics and foams from those cars.
-
- "The company's goal is to get to zero waste where everything that comes from
- the cars finds a market," said Luna.
-
- ⌐ COPYRIGHT The American News Service
-
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 17:20:41 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: BKMACKAY@aol.com
- To: Ar-news@envirolink.org
- Cc: OnlineAPI@aol.com
- Subject: THS, pound seizure question
- Message-ID: <970421171851_1616926646@emout14.mail.aol.com>
-
- Memorandum
-
- To: City Solicitor
- Medical Officer of Health
- City Auditor
-
- >From: Christine Archibald, Administrator, Neighbourhoods Committee, City
- Clerk's, Corporate Services (2-7039)
-
- Date: April 7, 1997
-
- Subject: Toronto Humane Society
-
- At its meeting on April 3, 1997, the Neighbourhoods Commitee gave
- consideration to a report (March 17, 1997) from the respecting (sic) the
- Toronto Humane Society.
-
- The Committee also had before it a report (April 1, 1997) from Liz White,
- Director, Animal Alliance of Canada and Barry Kent [MacKay], Programme
- Manager, The Animal Protection Insitute (April 1, 1997
-
- The Committee took the following action:
-
- 1: Received the report (March 17, 1997) from the City Solicitor.
-
- 2: Requested that the previously requested report to be prepared by the
- Medical Officer of Health respecting a Complaints Procedure and Reporting
- Requirements, be forwarded to the Committee for consideration at its next
- meeting on April 30, 1997, for consideration as a deputation item, together
- with the following material:
-
- + Audited Financial Statements for the year ended December 31, 1995 and
- December 31, 1996
-
- + The By-laws of the Toronto Humane Society
-
- + The contract with the Toronto Humane Society and the City of Toronto with
- the exception of any information respecting the security of the animals
-
- 3: Requested the City Solicitor to report on the following recommendation
- contained in the submission (April 1, 1997) from Liz White, Director, Animal
- Alliance of Canada for consideration with the foregoing report/submissions at
- the Committee's April 30, 1997 meeting:
-
- "That the Committee and Council re-affirm the City's position that animals
- sheltered by the Society will not sold or gifted for research purposes."
-
- [Signed C. Archibald, Administrator]
-
- ____________________________________
-
- All activists in the GTA should consider attending this meeting.
-
- BKM.
- Date: Tue, 22 Apr 1997 19:14:04 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Web Site Offers Rare Look at Birds
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970422191400.006b5f18@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- ----------------------------
- 04/21/1997 17:46 EST
-
- Web Site Offers Rare Look at Birds
-
- COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -- The state Division of Wildlife has created a site
- on the
- Internet for viewing one of Ohio's four nesting pairs of peregrine falcons.
-
- The falcons are nesting on the 41st floor of the Rhodes State Office Tower in
- Columbus. Four eggs in the nest are expected to hatch about May 9.
-
- The division each year installs a video camera at the nest that feeds a
- signal to a
- television monitor in the lobby of the downtown office building.
-
- The agency has expanded the viewing to the World Wide Web where pictures
- of the
- falcons' activities are updated every 10 seconds.
-
- Wildlife biologist Donna Daniel said the site provides a unique
- opportunity for
- Internet users to watch falcon chicks hatching and feeding.
-
- ``Peregrines are elusive birds of prey. They typically nest in places
- where they can't
- be seen easily such as tall buildings or rock cliffs,'' Daniel said Monday.
-
- The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the state of Ohio have placed the
- birds on the
- endangered species list.
-
- The Web address for viewing the peregrine falcons is:
- www.dnr.state.oh.us/odnr/wildlife/falcon/peregrine.html
- Date: Tue, 22 Apr 1997 19:15:13 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) U.S. Won't Extend EU Meat Deadline
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970422191510.006b5f18@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- ---------------------------
- 04/21/1997 16:38 EST
-
- U.S. Won't Extend EU Meat Deadline
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) -- Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman said Monday the United
- States will not extend an April 30 deadline for reaching agreement with
- the European
- Union on mutually acceptable meat inspection standards.
-
- The United States has warned the EU it will halt imports of as much as
- $300 million
- in European meat products if agreement cannot be reached by the end of the
- month.
-
- The threat was in response to the EU's introduction on April 1 of new
- standards that
- are blocking about $50 million in U.S. poultry exports to the 15-nation
- community.
-
- After European negotiators submitted new proposals, the United States
- extended its
- April 15 deadline last week and scheduled new talks beginning Tuesday.
-
- Glickman told the annual meeting of the National Association of Agricultural
- Journalists the United States ``has given it two more weeks,'' but added
- that after
- that, ``I would say there will be no more extensions.''
- Date: Tue, 22 Apr 1997 19:32:59 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US/CA) Web Notice -- Snow Geese
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970422193256.006b79b8@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Just FYI...
-
- At this URL: http://north.audubon.org/
- you can "track" Snow Geese on their migrations. This may be of interest to
- those who are especially concerned about the Snow Geese.
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 21:45:16 -0400
- >From: "Zoocheck Canada Inc." <zoocheck@idirect.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Canada's Polar Bear Export Program
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970421214514.00698bf0@idirect.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Zoocheck Canada Press Release dated April 17, 1997
-
- +++
-
- For Immediate Release
- April 17, 1997
-
- Canada's Forgotten Polar Bears: Study and Video Reveals Tragedy of Manitoba
- Polar Bear Export Program
-
- Approximately 40 wild-caught polar bears from the Churchill, Manitoba
- region have been captured by Manitoba Natural Resources and shipped to zoos
- around the world.
-
- An investigation by national animal protection organization Zoocheck Canada
- has revealed the tragic consequences of Manitoba's polar bear export program.
-
- Despite assurances by government officials that the program has been
- humane, Zoocheck Canada has uncovered numerous serious problems, including
- the shipment of bears to grossly substandard zoos around the world; the
- movement of polar bears from recipient zoos to other destinations; polar
- bears exhibiting abnormal stereotypic behaviours; bears that have died or
- are seriously ill; and the transfer of Canadian polar bears to a circus.
-
- You are invited to a media conference to find out more about the Manitoba
- Polar Bear Export Program, the kinds of conditions Canadian bears are now
- subjected to in zoos around the world, and the recommendations proposed by
- Zoocheck Canada to deal with the problems.
-
- Copies of the Zoocheck Canada report <Canada's Forgotten Polar Bears: An
- Examination of Manitoba's Polar Bear Export Program>, and videotape of
- Canadian polar bears, will be available.
-
- Date, Time & Location:
-
- Lombard Hotel, Cambridge Room, 2 Lombard Place, Winnipeg
- Friday April 18, 1997, 10:30 am
-
- For more information, contact:
-
- Zoocheck Canada (416) 696-0241
-
- +++
-
- The above-referenced press conference generated provincial and national
- media coverage on the issue. In response, the Manitoba Minister of Natural
- Resources promised to look into the problem, and other politicians
- expressed an interest in taking on the issue.
-
- Zoocheck Canada's report <Canada's Forgotten Polar Bears: An Examination of
- Manitoba's Polar Bear Export Program> is available for $10.00 Canadian.
-
-
-
-
- Zoocheck Canada Inc.
- 3266 Yonge Street, Suite 1729
- Toronto, ON M4N 3P6
- (416) 696-0241 Ph (416) 696-0370 Fax
- E-Mail: zoocheck@idirect.com
- Web Site: http://web.idirect.com/~zoocheck
- Registered Charity No. 0828459-54
- Date: Tue, 22 Apr 1997 21:53:24 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) May 1st DEADline!...take a second please!
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970422215321.0068e0f0@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from private e-mail:
- --------------------------------
- "It is imperative to stop the slaughter" said Interior Secretary Bruce
- Babbitt. But the killing of buffalo goes on.
-
- On May 1, all bison still outside of Yellowstone National Park, including
- those tested, marked and tagged as being brucellosis-free, must either
- return to the park or be shot.
-
- Why? Because soon the cattle will be trucked in to stock Forest Service
- grazing allotments. Bison killing has slowed in recent weeks as the
- winter's snowpack melted to expose forage, and bison have not needed to
- move so far.
- But when the May 1st deadline arrives, we expect a full-on massacre of the
- remaining animals.
-
-
- Join us letting public officials know that the public is outraged!
- Sign on to this simple statement....
-
- I am outraged about the slaughter of the Yellowstone bison.
- On May 1st, I will be wearing a black arm band to show solidarity with the
- last wild buffalo herd in the United States!
- The world will be watching Montana on May 1st to see if the massacre stops!
- Signed,
-
-
- to sign on send your name and state to stop-the slaughter@wildrockies.org
- by April 28th
-
-
- We will compile the letter and names and forward it appropriate officials.
- We will inform the press just how many folks are outraged across the nation!
- We need at least two names for each bison that was murdered!
-
- Montana Department of Livestock refuses Park Service offers to haze buffalo
- back into park boundaries. Bulls that couldn't possibly transmit
- brucellosis
- (through the placenta or milk) are being killed. So the Tokala Society of the
- Oglala Lakota Nation is helping to patrol the border and keep the state of
- Montana from killing any more bison.. They will be working on the
- 1st...keep them in your thoughts.
-
- Please pass this on! It only takes a sec!!!
-
- Thank you,
- For the Earth,
- su
-
-
-
- Quotable QUOTES:
-
- Audubon article: "By late March more than 2,000 bison - nearly two-thirds
- of the park herd - had died, caught in a political crossfire of a dispute
- about a disease called brucellosis and about who should decide the fate of
- America's last wild bison herd."
-
-
- Rosalie Little Thunder, Lakota elder says, "The killing ... and the
- laughing of the killers...its the Phil Sheridan nightmare all over again".
- (Note: Phil Sheridan ordered and participated in the 1800's slaughter of
- millions of buffalo to bring the Indian people to their knees.) "This
- slaughter is the result of that same mentality, combined with political
- paralysis. Common sense and direct action is desperately needed to save
- what's left of the herd."
-
- For more information about the plight of the Yellowstone Bison
- check out this web site
- http://www.wildrockies.org/bison
-
-
-
- Date: Tue, 22 Apr 1997 21:55:25 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Time may be running out
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970422215523.0068a160@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Posted for (and replies to) "Bob Kirk" <oma00284@mail.wvnet.edu>:
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Looking for a good home for the following animals:
- >
- >Kodiak Grizzly - 2 year old female. Raised from a cub, manageable.
- >
- >African Lion - 2 year old male. Raised from a cub, manageable, declawed
- and
- >frisky. Can
- > use lead and collar.
- >
- >Siberian Tiger - 2 year old male. Very passive, manageable, use a lead.
- >
- >All have been bottle feed.
- >
- >All come with their own cages.
- >
- >Must come to Lewisburg, West Virginia to pick up the animals.
- >
- >All are in good health and good hands at this time.
- >
- >I am acting as a go between for the owner. We realize (and have made
- >queries) about the value
- >of each animal. He has kept and feed them for more than a year. He would
- >like to sell them by
- >May 1, 1997.
- >
- >If you or anyone you know would be interested in them you can contact me
- by:
- >Calling (304) 645-4232 (Work) Mon. - Fri. 0830-1700 EST and ask for Bob
- Kirk
- >or (304) 645-4232 (Home) after 1700.
- >E-mail, oma00284@mail.wvnet.edu
- >Write to, PO Box 801, Fairlea, WV 24902.
- >
- >Please contact me for any more information.
- >
- > Thank You, Bob Kirk
- >
- >
-
- Any help with other contacts will help
-
-
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 23:06:10 -0400
- >From: "H. Morris" <oceana@ibm.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: veg-nyc: NYC Lockdown for Chimps
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970421230604.006db288@pop01.ny.us.ibm.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >Hey you crazy animal rights freaks!!!
- >
- >Today at a protest at NYU to demand that 100 chimps which NYU has tortured
- >and maimed, some for nearly 30 years, be transferred to a sanctuary rather
- >than to notorious toxicologist Fred Coulston, killer of the chimp Jello
- >(DEATH 1/97).
- >
- >At first, we were around the corner to the main entrance to the building
- >atop which a "secret:" animal research lab is being built. But the police
- >wouldn't arrest us, presumably becauseNYU did not want the negative
- >publicity. I mean, four people were locked down with pipes, and they did
- >nothing. In fact, there was only 3 or 4 cops total! After some discussion
- >and two hours later, the lockdowners removed themselves and we walked to
- >the main entrance, where two people sat down and the lockdowners blocked
- >the entrance and relinked!! Cops were doing NOTHING! Of course, once we
- >bblocked the entrance, things started getting going! Cops, students,
- >crowds, MEDIA (Ch 2, 5, 9, NY Times, and NY Post along with a number of
- >local papers). Goo dchants, great energy, lots of support from
- >passerbys--handed out about 2000 flyers. The cops, who recognized alot of
- >us from FFF, didnt want to cut through the pipes, and there was a long time
- >when they begged those locked down to release themselves. Of course, they
- >didnt for a while, and those of us who were sitting around them
- >agreed....then the University agreed to let us speak to the VP of the
- >school.Those locked down agreed tounlock themselves, with the condition
- >that if the VP was not open to listening, and if the meeting turned out to
- >be a sham, we would be back in greater force, and soon.
- >
- >I wont go into the details of the meeting, which was to my mind a joke, but
- >suffice to say that WE'LL BE BACK. Perhaps someone else who was there
- >wants to give some sense of the meeting?
- >
- >THe move to the front of the building, as well as the decision by some of
- >those who joined the sitdown, was unplanned. So good things do come about
- >even when they're spur of the moment! We got a meeting with the 2nd in
- >command, and let him know that we are serious and will not go away.
- >Congrats to Wetlands for organizing a great demo--James, Chris, Olga, and
- >others!
- >
- >Hillary
- >
- >
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 23:14:09 -0400
- >From: Wyandotte Animal Group <wag@heritage.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Bear Exhibitor Charged
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970422031409.2497fc34@mail.heritage.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- A man had two bears at the Gibraltar Trade Center, in Mt. Clemens, MI, this
- weekend offering pictures with the bears. The bears had all their teeth and
- claws and weres restrained only by a leash. No muzzles were used. Someone
- called the police and a background check was done on the exhibitor. His
- license for having the bears had expired. He is currently facing charges
- related to "possessing unmuzzled bears." The bears are currently housed at
- the Detroit Zoo. No permanent arrangments have yet been made on where the
- bears will stay.
-
-
-
- Jason Alley
- Wyandotte Animal Group
- wag@heritage.com
-
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 23:18:38 -0400
- >From: Wyandotte Animal Group <wag@heritage.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Bear Exhibator Charged Update
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970422031838.27af3f14@mail.heritage.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Just found out:
-
- The exhibator was none other than Sam Mazollo, the famous wrestling bears
- goon. His charges are "possessing unmuzzled bears" and public endangerment.
-
- Jason Alley
- Wyandotte Animal Group
- wag@heritage.com
-
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 20:19:50 -0700
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Elephants in peril
- Message-ID: <335C2E56.69CD@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Elephants doomed if ivory trade restarts
-
- Reuter Information Service
-
- LONDON (April 21, 1997 8:02 p.m. EDT) - Elephants in southern Africa and
- Asia could be wiped out by poachers if a small group of countries
- succeed in overturning a ban on the international ivory trade, an
- environmental group said Tuesday.
-
- Trading in ivory is banned under the Convention on International Trade
- in Endangered Species (CITES) but Botswana, Namibia, and Zimbabwe,
- backed by South Africa and Mozambique, plan to petition the 134-member
- CITES to lift the 1989 ban.
-
- The Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) said the proposal could
- spell doom for the elephant population.
-
- "The ban on international trade in ivory has been a huge success.
- Elephant herds across Africa and Asia which were on the verge of
- disappearing have started to recover," EIA Director Dave Currey said in
- a statement.
-
- "Even a partial relaxation of the ban would send a message to poachers
- that ivory trade is back. This would mean disaster for elephant
- populations across the two continents."
-
- South Africa, Namibia and Zimbabwe all have large elephant populations
- which they say often devastate their environment. Herds are often culled
- in an attempt to keep numbers down.
-
- The countries hope to convince governments and conservationists that the
- ban merely drives trade underground. They plan to propose that ivory
- collected from periodic culls be auctioned under tight controls instead.
-
- Botswana says its ivory stockpile is the result of natural deaths and
- ivory seized from poachers and illegal traders. Officials say they have
- a Japanese buyer for the ivory.
-
- A similar move by Botswana in 1992, involving another buyer, was voted
- down.
-
- The EIA and other environmental groups point out that the African
- elephant population fell by more than 50 percent in the 10 years before
- the ban -- mostly due to ivory poachers.
-
- The EIA said it had evidence that poachers were waiting for the ban to
- be lifted.
-
- "In February of this year two EIA investigators carried hidden
- microphones and cameras during discussions with Namibian traders which
- indicated that large amounts of black market ivory from neighboring
- Angola are available for sale," it said.
-
- The EIA added that sources in India had reported smugglers stockpiling
- ivory in anticipation of a rise in profits.
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 20:31:47 -0700
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Manslaughter - #2
- Message-ID: <335C3123.8AC@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Parents of girl who suffered brain damage from vaccine get settlement
-
- Kansas City Star
-
- KANSAS CITY, Mo. (April 21, 1997 00:43 a.m. EDT) -- The vaccine was
- supposed to keep Taylor Simmons healthy. Instead it damaged her brain
- and destroyed her chance for a normal life.
-
- The girl, now 4, is so hyperactive and oblivious to danger that she
- cannot be left alone for a second. She will require round-the-clock care
- for the rest of her life.
-
- "She's certainly one of the most extreme behavior cases I've seen," said
- Colorado rehabilitation specialist Mark Litvin, who designs programs to
- care for children like Taylor.
-
- Acknowledging the severity of Taylor's brain damage, attorneys with the
- U.S. Justice Department agreed this week to a settlement that could pay
- almost $50 million to Taylor and her family over her lifetime. A
- department spokesman said he could not discuss details of the
- settlement.
-
- Taylor's parents have received the first check, for $500,000. They asked
- that their city of residence not be named because of concerns about
- publicity about the money.
-
- The money comes from a fund set up by Congress in 1988 to compensate
- people injured after receiving childhood vaccinations. Most claims, like
- Taylor's, involve adverse reactions to vaccinations for pertussis. The
- disease, commonly called whooping cough, can lead to convulsions,
- pneumonia, brain damage or death.
-
- About 5,000 claims have been filed, and the fund has paid out more than
- $750 million, according to the National Vaccine Information Center in
- Virginia.
-
- "As a result of these vaccinations, Taylor's quality of life was totally
- destroyed," said Olathe lawyer Greg Kincaid, who represents the Simmons
- family. "Her parents have not had a reasonable night's sleep since this
- happened."
-
- Taylor is an inquisitive whirlwind of motion. She gets into and out of
- everything and sleeps only three or four hours at a time.
-
- A plate of food set in front of her will be splattered on the floor.
-
- She can remove window screens and will careen wildly around a parking
- lot, oblivious to moving cars.
-
- "Our house has to look like Fort Knox," said Taylor's father, Steve
- Simmons.
-
- She can only be taught one on one.
-
- Steve and Tracy Simmons say they are angry about what happened to their
- daughter. They are angry that the batch of vaccine that damaged their
- daughter was not recalled by the government after several other children
- had fatal reactions.
-
- Since then, the Food and Drug Administration approved a different
- vaccine that it says causes far fewer side effects. But that vaccine,
- which has been used in Japan since 1981, came too late for the
- Simmonses.
-
- "The day she got that shot, our lives died," said Steve Simmons.
-
- Taylor was 4 months old when she was vaccinated. She immediately passed
- out and remained semiconscious for the rest of the day, Steve Simmons
- said. At 3 a.m. the next day her parents found her having seizures and
- called for an ambulance.
-
- Doctors assured them that the seizures were prompted by a high fever, a
- not uncommon problem for children.
-
- Things were fine until Taylor was 7 months old, when she had another
- seizure and quit breathing. Doctors prescribed drugs to control the
- seizures.
-
- The seizures started coming once a month, but Taylor, the Simmonses'
- first child, appeared to be developing normally. She was sitting up and
- crawling at appropriate ages and was starting to talk.
-
- The seizures increased in frequency until she was having up to 15 a day.
- Some lasted for more than an hour. Her development slowed and then
- regressed. She could no longer speak words she had known a few months
- before.
-
- Doctors tried medication after medication to control the seizures. The
- Simmonses lost track of how many emergency room trips they made.
-
- "The paramedics knew us on a first-name basis," Tracy Simmons said.
-
- Taylor has required physical, occupational and speech therapy since she
- was 15 months old.
-
- All along, her parents suspected that the vaccination had something to
- do with Taylor's problems, but doctors told them that wasn't the case.
-
- Then Steve Simmons saw a report on a television news magazine about
- problems associated with diphtheria-pertussis-tetanus vaccinations.
-
- "We always knew that something happened, but we never had the
- information to validate what we believed," Steve Simmons said.
-
- Finally their pediatrician told them that yes, Taylor's problems could
- have been caused by the vaccination.
-
- The television program they saw was due in part to the efforts of the
- National Vaccine Information Center, which was founded in 1982 by
- parents of vaccine-damaged children.
-
- Its executive director, Kathi Williams, said an earlier television
- documentary led her and other parents to form the group.
-
- The group strives to educate the public about possible problems with
- vaccines. It has helped establish the compensation fund, set up a
- central system to report vaccine problems and lobbied for the safer
- vaccine.
-
- Williams said that despite thousands of anecdotal stories and the
- willingness of the government to recognize the problem by paying
- compensation, many doctors do not believe it has been proved that the
- vaccinations are responsible for problems.
-
- Still, others in the medical community believe that a small percentage
- of people receiving vaccinations suffer some type of harmful reaction.
- People who have studied the topic say there are no definitive studies on
- how widespread the problem is.
-
- According to an FDA report several years ago, one out of every 309,000
- pertussis vaccinations resulted in some type of nerve damage.
-
- The only large government-financed study, in 1979, found that one out of
- every 875 shots resulted in a seizure or collapse caused by shock,
- Williams said.
-
- Litvin says he deals with children around the country with serious
- physical and emotional problems related to vaccinations. He has designed
- a plan to care for Taylor for the rest of her life.
-
- Such intensive care is expensive and demanding. Litvin said he has seen
- many families torn apart by the emotional strain of caring for a child
- like Taylor.
-
- "These parents need help," Litvin said. "They are basically worn out all
- the time. Everything they do with her is stressful and demanding."
-
- --By Tony Rizzo, Kansas City Star
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 20:29:59 -0700
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Manslaughter - #1
- Message-ID: <335C30B7.2BD1@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Article
-
- Pennsylvania couple in court for not giving daughter medical treatment
-
- The Associated Press
-
- HOLLIDAYSBURG, Pa. (April 21, 1997 1:07 p.m. EDT) -- A couple who
- believed that prayer can heal should not be prosecuted in the death of
- their teen-age daughter because they did not intend for her to die,
- their attorney said Monday.
-
- Lorie and Dennis Nixon of Altoona went on trial on involuntary
- manslaughter charges in the death of 16-year-old Shannon Nixon last
- year. She died of a heart attack brought on by untreated diabetes. The
- couple, who belong to the Faith Tabernacle Church, also lost a son to
- illness several years earlier.
-
- "This case is not about the prosecution of criminals. This case is about
- the persecution of well-intended, well-meaning parents," defense
- attorney Steven Passarello told jurors in Blair County Court.
-
- District Attorney William Haberstroh said doctors will testify this week
- that "there is absolutely no reason why this child should have died."
-
- State law requires parents to protect children who are younger than 18,
- he said. He pointed out that Shannon had been to a doctor as a
- requirement for her drivers' license and had seen a dentist.
-
- Shannon had complained to her parents for several days that she wasn't
- feeling well, she vomited repeatedly and she was constantly thirsty, the
- parents told police at the time. She asked for a healing ceremony from
- the church rather than a doctor. She was unconscious for several hours
- before she died, with a minister and her parents praying over her.
-
- Five years earlier, the couple's 8-year-old son, Clayton, died of an
- inner-ear infection. That time, they pleaded no contest and were
- sentenced to probation. They also were ordered to perform community
- service in a hospital at the request of Haberstroh, who wanted them to
- see the positive effects of medicine.
-
- But no hospital would accept them as volunteers, so they performed their
- community service elsewhere, he said.
-
- The couple has eight surviving children and Mrs. Nixon, 44, is pregnant
- again. Haberstroh has said he would not seek more than a year in prison
- if they are convicted.
-
- The Nixons are the latest members of the Faith Tabernacle to go up
- against the state in the treatable deaths of their own children. The
- Nixons are fighting powerful foes -- doctors, courts and other religions
- -- by clinging to the belief that prayer rather than medical treatment
- can heal.
-
- Two other members of the Philadelphia-based sect have been convicted, in
- 1983 and 1992, of involuntary manslaughter in central Pennsylvania for
- allowing their toddlers to die.
-
- In 1991 in suburban Philadelphia, five more children died during a
- measles outbreak, and in the 1970s, a Faith Tabernacle couple in
- suburban Philadelphia lost five children before age 2 to untreated
- cystic fibrosis.
-
- Other churches also have had members prosecuted on similar grounds,
- including an Albany, Ore., member of the Church of the First Born was
- convicted of criminally negligent homicide a year ago in the death of
- his 7-year-old son from a treatable form of leukemia.
-
- In church Sunday, pastor Charles Nixon told the biblical tale of David
- and Goliath in his sermon as his daughter-in-law listened. Mrs. Nixon
- sat calmly in a navy blue hat and maternity jumper flanked by female
- relatives as her father-in-law spoke.
-
- The biblical David "left the battle in the hands of the Lord, so he
- didn't need to worry about winning it," the pastor told the 80 or so
- worshipers.
-
- Called "baby killers" by some, the Faith Tabernacle refuses to elaborate
- beyond pamphlets in the church foyer about its beliefs.
-
- "It's just beyond me how somebody can watch a child die and not do
- anything about it," said Rosemary Smith, 61, as she watched her two
- grandchildren play Sunday afternoon from her porch around the corner
- from the church.
-
- Smith, a Roman Catholic, grew teary-eyed as she described watching Faith
- Tabernacle children play every day behind the church, where they also
- attend school, and wondering, "Who's going to be the next one?"
-
- The number of faiths that advocate prayer over medicine is shrinking,
- said J. Gordon Melton, director of the Institute for the Study of
- American Religions in Santa Barbara, Calif. Many popped up around the
- turn of the century as a backlash against modern medicine.
-
- Pamphlets say the Faith Tabernacle Congregation is 100 years old this
- year and has "stations" from New Jersey to Africa. During the Sunday
- service, Nixon read a wish list of anonymous prayers from churchgoers.
-
- "Sister asks to be remembered for healing a condition in her leg," Nixon
- recited. "Brother has a request that God will take care of Dennis and
- Lorie and their family. Brother asks for grace in dealing with a
- headache and sickness."
-
- --By Casey Jones, The Associated Press
- Date: Mon, 21 Apr 1997 20:33:46 -0700
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Manslaughter (or womanslaughter?) #3
- Message-ID: <335C319A.5095@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Hysterectomy should be last resort
-
- Reuter Information Service
-
- LONDON (April 20, 1997 9:02 p.m. EDT) - Most British doctors think
- hysterectomiesshould only be done as a last resort but the operation is
- still one of the most frequent, a survey published on Monday found.
-
- The survey, by Meditex, also found broad disagreement among doctors as
- to which drugs should be used as alternatives to hysterectomy for
- treating menorrhagia -- excessive menstrual bleeding.
-
- "There has been concern for some time, both within the medical
- profession and outside, about rising rates of hysterectomy, which appear
- to be continuing despite the availability of alternative surgical
- treatments," said Angela Coulter of the Kings Fund medical charity.
-
- A statement released by a group of doctors concerned about treatment of
- menorrhagia said hysterectomy was one of the most frequently performed
- operations in the Western world. "On current rates at least one-fifth of
- women living in England and Wales will have a hysterectomy before the
- age of 65," it said.
-
- "In the United States of America and Scotland, this surgical procedure
- is second only to another controversial operation experienced wholly by
- women -- Caesarean section."
-
- Two-thirds of the 73,000 hysterectomies (removal of the uterus and
- sometimes the ovaries) carried out in England in 1992-93 were to treat
- menorrhagia.
-
- The survey found most doctors did not know about the most effective
- drugs available for treating menorrhagia, which include mefenamic acid
- and tranexamic acid.
-
- One of the doctors in the group, Dr. Sally Hope, said less-educated
- women were much more likely to have hysterectomies. "Better eduction for
- women about period problems tends to lead to fewer hysterectomies, as if
- the other options are explained and tried most women prefer not to have
- surgery," she said.
-
- Last month a team at London's Royal Free Hospital reported in the Lancet
- medical journal that women treated with electrosurgery or laser to
- remove some of the surface of the uterus, a procedure known as TCRE,
- were just as happy with the outcome as women who had hysterectomies.
-
- Time spent being operated on, blood loss and time to recovery were all
- lower with TCRE.
-
-
-
- </pre>
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