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- An inexpensive treatment for arthritis
-
- The Associated Press
-
- (May 2, 1997 1:26 p.m. EDT) -- If your knees ache with arthritis,
- walking for an hour a day is probably the last thing you want to do.
-
- But now, doctors say exercise such as walking is one of the best things
- you can do to relieve the pain of osteoarthritis.
-
- Scientists studied 365 older adults with osteoarthritis of the knee,
- stiffness and pain believed to be caused by normal "wear and tear" on
- the joint.
-
- They divided the adults, who were all ages 60 or older, into three
- groups. One group walked for an hour three times a week. The second
- group lifted weights for an hour three times a week, and the third
- attended health education classes.
-
- After 18 months of exercise, the walkers filled out out questionnaires,
- and reported a 10 percent drop in physical disability and a 12 percent
- drop in knee pain. They were also able to walk farther in a six-minute
- test, and performed more quickly tasks like climbing up and down stairs,
- lifting and carrying 10 pounds, and getting in and out of a car,
- compared to the health education group. The weightlifters also improved,
- but not quite as much as the walkers. The results of the study were
- recently reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
-
- In our society, only young people are encouraged to walk, run, swim,
- play ball and lift weights. This study refutes conventional wisdom,
- showing that exercise can be just as good for adults over 60 as
- it is for kids.
-
- This study did not examine why the exercisers felt better. Most people
- know that exercise strengthens muscles, makes bones more dense and burns
- excess fat, all of which make people less likely to fall and break
- bones. Other experiments have shown that exercise boosts the immune
- system, soothes insomnia, releases endorphins, the body's own natural
- painkillers, and contributes to a general sense of well-being.
-
- You don't need to know exactly how exercise eases pain to take advantage
- of it. First, see your doctor, especially if you have osteoarthritis or
- other health problems. Your doctor can give you valuable advice about
- starting an exercise program.
-
- Next, choose an activity. Many beginners find that joining a health
- club, pool or taking a class provides instruction and encouragement.
- Some walk with neighbors or take part in shopping mall walking programs
- before business hours. Others enjoy socializing and exercising at senior
- citizens centers. Still others prefer to buy exercise equipment and work
- out at home.
-
- Whether you choose an aerobic exercise like walking or a resistance
- exercise like lifting weights, it is sure to help you. You don't have to
- become an Olympic athlete. Any activity is better than sitting still.
-
- By DR. EDWIN F. RICHTER III AP Special Features
- Date: Sat, 3 May 1997 13:44:48 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (CN) Chinese circus animals dumped
- Message-ID: <199705030544.NAA07799@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- there's no point donating. is there a chance for anyone to rescue the
- animals and bring them to a sanctuary or rehab centre anywhere?? can jill
- help?? can anybody help?? this may be a chance to end their misery.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- ---------
-
- >South China Morning Post, Internet Edition
- May 3 1997
-
- Plea to help feed circus animals stranded by crash
- NG KANG-CHUNG
-
- Animal lovers are being urged to give money to help 20 circus animals
- facing starvation in Guangzhou after their troupe leader was killed in a car
- crash.
-
- The animals - including lions, tigers, horses, and monkeys - have been
- dumped in cages for a week while some of the circus members recover from the
- accident in hospital, holding up the trip.
-
- Guangzhou Zoo has promised help, but says it cannot afford to feed all the
- animals.
-
- Some Guangzhou newspapers are launching a campaign to raise money for the
- circus and a municipal government spokesman said donations from Hong Kong
- would be welcome.
-
- The 30-member Oriental Great Circus, of Anhui province, was on its way to
- Hunan province after performances at the Shenzhen Safari Park last Saturday.
-
- Their trucks were outside the Tianhe Sports Centre in Guangzhou at about 4
- am when one driver lost control and hit a road barrier, killing the circus
- leader and two other members.
-
- Seven others were injured and were still in hospital last night.
-
- The animals were not injured but experts from the Guangzhou Zoo had to be
- called in to sedate them before they were removed from the scene.
-
- A zoo spokesman said: "The animals are not being kept in our place. But we
- shall send vets to take care of the animals to ensure they are all right."
-
- She said they could not afford to feed the animals forever. They ate nearly
- 20 kilograms of food a day. The circus said they would soon run out of money.
-
- Guangzhou Dongshan District Transport Police are keeping the animals and
- troupe members for the meantime, pending investigation.
-
- Those who wish to offer help may contact the Guangzhou Zoo on
- 001-86-20-87618077.
-
- Date: Sat, 3 May 1997 13:44:56 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (SG) Labelling law needed
- Message-ID: <199705030544.NAA16348@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- The Straits Times
- MAY 3 1997
-
- That Haagen-Dazs ice-cream looks great, but . . .
- By Yasmeen Hameed
-
-
- IN AMERICA, you are told that a serving of Haagen-Dazs ice-cream
- contains a lot of saturated fat.
-
- Here in Singapore, you can polish off two helpings of the
- ice-cream, blissfully unaware that you could well have exceeded
- the day's recommended allowance of saturated fat.
-
- This just goes to show that local labels on nutrition value are
- inadequate or misleading, said the Consumers Association of
- Singapore (Case) at a press conference yesterday. Products sold
- in America have different labels when they are sold here, Case
- pointed out.
-
- To demonstrate, Dr Toh See Kiat, the president of Case, and Mr
- Bruce Silverglade, director of legal affairs, Centre for Science
- in the Public Interest (CSPI), brought out American and Singapore
- versions of M & Ms, Almond Rocas and Skippy peanut butter.
-
- Said Dr Toh: "In fact, manufacturers go so far as to remove the
- nutrition labels in Singapore. That is unethical."
-
- And why is it that manufacturers can get away with this?
-
- Because local consumers do not question the labelling practices,
- he said.
-
- Case is telling consumers in Singapore that they will benefit if
- they speak up and ask for better labelling of food products.
-
- It is also urging the Government to speed up implementation of a
- law requiring food manufacturers to label their products
- properly, by giving detailed nutritional information.
-
- Mr Silverglade highlighted another example of inadequate
- labelling: "One 335-ml can of Sprite contains roughly 10
- teaspoons of sugar."
-
- But consumers are not told this on the can.
-
- He said: "So manufacturers can hide negative aspects of their
- products because laws are not tough enough here."
-
- The CSPI is a non-profit, non-government consumer advocacy
- organisation based in Washington DC.
-
- It campaigned in America for the Nutrition Labelling and
- Education Act 1990 to become law.
-
- Since the Act took effect in 1994, US surveys have shown that a
- third of all Americans have stopped buying at least one food
- product.
-
- And about 2,000 new food products containing low or reduced fat
- have been introduced in America since then.
-
- The Sale of Food Act here does cover some aspects of food
- labelling. It stipulates that the volume or net weight of a
- product must be stated on the wrapper or container.
-
- But Case recommends that for canned food and vegetables,
- manufacturers should also give the weight without the liquid.
-
- For instance, said Dr Toh, selling a 500-g can of canned longan
- where the fruit weighs only 50 g is misleading, since it is the
- longan and not the syrup that the consumer wants to buy.
-
- "That is why the label should read 'Drained weight -- 50 grams',"
- he said.
-
- This will ensure that consumers can choose the product that
- offers better value.
-
- With improved and standardised labelling, consumers can compare
- brands easily, choose one with the highest nutrition value, count
- calories and pick the best sources of vitamins and minerals.
-
- Case also pointed out that even though a nutrition labelling
- scheme was proposed in 1995 by the Health Ministry, the
- Environment Ministry, the Singapore National Heart Association
- and Case, there has been little improvement in labelling.
-
- "Campaigns are not enough -- a law is needed," said Dr Toh.
-
- Date: Sat, 3 May 1997 13:45:04 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (CA) The bear facts about a killer
- Message-ID: <199705030545.NAA16711@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >South China Morning Post, Internet Edition
- May 3 1997
- The bear facts about a killer
- ELDRID RETIEF
-
-
- The inmates of Cell Block D were restless. A few were hammering on the metal
- doors. Officially it is known as the Polar Bear Compound. To the locals in
- Churchill, Manitoba, where the bears convene every year in readiness for a
- winter feeding frenzy on frozen Hudson Bay, it's the Polar Bear Jail,
- housing the most feared and fearless killers in the North.
-
- Fourteen bears were in the jail when we were there. Former mayor and tour
- company owner Mark Ingebrigtson told us most bears were not aggressive. They
- only capture the bears when they get too close to town.
-
- Those are tranquilised humanely and jailed in an old Quonset hut, a relic
- of the time there was a military base in these parts.
-
- Some of the concrete-block cells with their metal doors are for single
- male bears, others for mothers and their cubs.
-
- Many pregnant females converge in October to a den site about 60
- kilometres south of Churchill where in mid-winter they give birth.
-
- In jail, the Polar Bears are not fed, just given water.
-
- Bob, a driver/guide, said of the jail: "The old hands who've been here
- before take it placidly. They settle down quietly to await release."
-
- When the Hudson Bay begins to freeze over, the Polar Bears are airlifted
- out one by one on a first in, first out system.
-
- Sedated, they are transported back into the wilderness in nets dangling
- from a helicopter.
-
- You might say Churchill is the staging point for the polar bears' winter
- feed.
-
- From October to November they arrive from their summer ranges south of
- Churchill and ice floes will carry them out on to the bay to spend their
- winter hunting seals. The seal pups, which they cherish, are rich in fat and
- protein. Often the seals are too quick for them. They probably miss nine out
- of 10 and they need to kill two seals a week to keep their cubs alive.
-
- By spring, when the ice melts, the polar bears are prepared for their
- long fast, having stored enough fat reserves to see them through the summer.
-
- The Inuit call them pihoqia, the ever-wandering one. At the last
- estimate, there were only 12,000 polar bears left in the world, most of them
- in Canada.
-
- At Churchill one of the last great wilderness adventures awaits tourists.
-
- Slap in the middle of one of the world's most demanding environments,
- Churchill is a one-horse town of a thousand inhabitants, hundreds of polar
- bears and Beluga whales.
-
- In the winter it is transformed into an icy desert.
-
- The Northern Lights flash and ripple overhead, sketching surreal
- technicolour patterns in the night sky.
-
- You will stay at hotels with names like Bear Country Inn, Tundra Inn and
- Aurora Inn.
-
- Probably the most important building for the people of Churchill is the
- Town Complex.
-
- Here, under one roof, you will find the school, civic offices, ice-hockey
- arena, curling rink, swimming pool, gymnasium, library, indoor playground,
- theatre, cafeteria and bowling alley and health/hospital complex.
-
- Occasionally you will run into a sign: Polar Bear Alert. Stop - Don't
- walk in this area.
-
- There is even a bear hotline. On the outskirts of Churchill at Cape Merry
- the sign says: If you are not accompanied by a park guide while visiting
- Cape Merry and a polar bear is sighted, leave the area immediately. Never
- approach a bear. Bear Alert phone 675-BEAR.
-
- Halloween night comes at the peak of bear movement near the town.
-
- That is when dozens of townsfolk in radio-equipped cars patrol the
- outskirts, watching for bears to protect the children.
-
- This is frontier country, but it is like an urban area with a high
- mugging rate, so you stay away or you are wary, one eye over your shoulder
- looking out for polar bears as you walk home at night.
-
- We were at the Parks Canada museum one evening when an Australian tourist
- asked about the timing of the cinema show and the danger of walking home
- later in the dark.
-
- The Parks Canada attendant said: "I've lived here 40 years and you won't
- catch me walking home at night at this time of the year."
-
- The only way to be sure to see the polar bears is to travel out on the
- tundra in heated, specially designed vehicles adapted to go out on the snow
- and the ice.
-
- Then there is the Tundra Buggy, designed and built by a Churchill man,
- Len Smith.
-
- These all-terrain monsters sit about 4.5 metres above the ground on huge
- balloon tyres that exert minimum pressure on the fragile tundra.
-
- They go through steep ditches without jolting passengers, cross mushy
- tundra with comparative ease and drive across rivers and on to lakes even
- into the Hudson Bay up to a depth of nearly two metres.
-
- Sitting in the tundra buggy is about as close as you will want to get to
- a Polar Bear.
-
- We are picked up early in the morning by coach. The drive is about an hour.
-
- On the way we see polar bears ambling across the snowy wasteland.
-
- Most of the tour operators head for Gordon's Point where there is a
- stationary camp of buggies docked together.
-
- Here tourists spend a day or more and the cooking smells attract the
- polar bears.
-
- Their sense of smell is so acute that they can detect a scent 32
- kilometres away and pick up the scent of a seal under a metre of snow and ice.
-
- Feeding is strictly forbidden, carrying a C$1,000 (HK$5,540) fine.
-
- Yet tourists will still go into the local stores to ask for sardines so
- that they can feed the bears.
-
- When we arrive at Gordon's Point there are five polar bears snoozing
- lethargically in the cold sun in a state of semi-hibernation.
-
- Two others spar playfully for 20 minutes to let off a bit of steam and
- then waddle into the freezing sea to cool down.
-
- Another is nibbling sea-weed and then rolls around in the snow. They love
- the ice.
-
- "I've seen one break off a piece of ice and use it like a piece of soap
- to cleanse himself with both paws," said Bob.
-
- This is a total role-reversal. Here the polar bear is in its own
- environment, in its kingdom, watching the humans confined to their caged
- buggies, being fed their hot soup, egg salad sandwiches and coffee.
-
- One lumbers over, pigeon-toed, to check us out, disturbing the tiny snow
- buntings. He stands on his hind legs and peers in the windows, sniffing.
-
- No matter how often you have seen one in a zoo, nothing can quite prepare
- you for the real thing.
-
- It is magnificent. Massive head held high, coal-black nose and eyes set
- in an ivory coat. Only when it approaches this close do you begin to get an
- idea of the massiveness and the power.
-
- Most of the males weigh in at about 450 kilograms, but the biggest polar
- bear ever measured was nearly four metres high and weighed 900kg.
-
- Yet the bear can walk on thinner ice than a human can because of its
- weight distribution and the size of its paws.
-
- "He doesn't fear anything. Around these parts he's top of the food chain.
- He has only man to fear. It may look cuddly, but it can kill a 200 kilogram
- seal with one swipe of its paw," said Bob.
-
- Soon the other tundra wagons form a semi-laager around our bears. Two of
- them had started playing again, standing on their hind legs and pawing at
- each other.
-
- The one tires of this frivolity, sits down and simply rolls on his back
- like a giant teddy bear. The other takes a mouthful of ear and tugs at it,
- but when he detects there is no interest, he stalks off, bored.
-
- Instead, he comes inspecting the humans in the tundra buggy, poking his
- nose against the windows, no doubt thinking of all the fat inside.
-
- An arctic fox comes snooping around. One gets close to the polar bear and
- then lopes off hurriedly when the bear shows an interest at this possible
- tidbit. That day we saw 12 polar bears.
-
- Len Smith told us: "Most I ever saw on one day was 62. That was a freak
- year. The bears were just everywhere."
-
- Back in Churchill we find a cute poster in one of the few shops. The
- photo is by famed wildlife photographer and writer Robert Taylor.
-
- Looking much like an overweight Mae West, the Polar Bear has her eyes
- closed, her legs daintily crossed. Come up and see me some time, she says.
-
- Thousands of tourists are doing exactly that every October and November.
-
- For information contact Churchill Chamber of Commerce, Box 176, Churchill,
- MB R0B 0E0 Canada. Phone (204) 675-2811.
-
- Travel is edited by Mike Currie - Fax: (852) 2980 3140; e-mail:
- <mikec@scmp.com">
-
- Date: Sat, 3 May 1997 13:57:31 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Re: (CN) Chinese circus animals dumped
- Message-ID: <199705030557.NAA18939@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Sorry. There were some comments on this post meant for private e-mail.
- But of course, if anyone has any leads/contacts/ideas on how we can help,
- let me know. I feel desperately helpless about the state of animals in Asia.
-
- Vadivu
-
- Date: Sat, 3 May 1997 17:06:03 +0800
- >From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: US Farmers death sparks BSE fear
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970503170051.2d97d124@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- US farmer's death sparks BSE fear.
-
- >From "The Countryman" (Western Australia) 24/4/97
-
- Tim Evans reported that:
-
- "The US cattle and beef industry went into major crisis control mode last
- week after an Indiana farmer died of Crutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD).
-
- The news hit the industry like a bomb.
- News service reports speculated on the possible cause and top
- of the list was Bovine Spongiform Encephalitis (BSE) - mad cow
- disease.
-
- The man was a rose farmer and reports had him being infected by blood
- and bone meal.
-
- Although that is almost impossible to prove the cattle futures market went
- into a nose dive on the back of the speculation.
-
- Brokers warned the mere mention of BSE in the US was enough to make the
- market and industry very nervous, especially when other factors like a 7-8
- per cent increase in cattle on feed were taken into account.
-
- The US Department of Agriculture and the FDA acted very quickly to deny any link
- between the man's death and cattle.
-
- They said about 250 Americans died of CJD every year, and that this one was
- a farmer was of little concern.
-
- But the seed had been sown.
-
- There were reported fears that the disease which had devastated the British
- industry could spread to the US, especially if it could be proved
- contaminated meat had been fed to cattle.
-
- In order to control any possible outbreak, the US is considering measures
- against BSE.
-
- The FDA will soon implement a final rule that will ban use of mammalian tissue
- in ruminant rations which comes a year after the US began a moratorium on
- the use of ruminant protein in livestock feeds."
-
- 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: Sat, 3 May 1997 08:18:21 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: KnoxHumane@aol.com
- To: SDURBIN@vm.tulsa.cc.ok.us, ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Re: Lori Gauthier, Animal Rescuer in Kentucky
- Message-ID: <970503081821_-565930424@emout02.mail.aol.com>
-
- I've spoken to Lori several times and we've sent some supplies. The problem
- she is having in aquiring food is that she is not yet non-profit so the major
- food companies will not work with her. She needs an attorney to walk her
- through the incorporation/application for non-profit status process. She
- also needs a KY licensed veterinarian to help her. Our vet was going to go
- up to assist but he can't practice in KY.
-
- Lori is very dedicated, very legit, and has a lot of common sense. She's one
- woman working in a fairly poverty stricken area trying to help flood victims'
- animals. I'd suggest sending her money to buy pet food. The last time I
- talked to her, she was down to about $250 with about 1000 animals she was
- trying to assist in feeding. These animals belong to folks who were
- displaced by the March floods and who are trying to keep their animals with
- them while they try to rebuild their lives and homes. Vicky Crosetti,
- Executive Director, Humane Society of the Tennessee Valley, Knoxville, TN.
-
-
-
- Date: Sat, 3 May 1997 07:06:38 -0800
- >From: ighahorseaid@earthlink.net (IGHA/HorseAid Volunteer)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: National Horse Day
- Message-ID: <v02140b01af90f9a30e50@[206.250.103.130]>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- We would like to remind everybody on the "list" that May 4th (the first
- Sunday in May) is the day to celebrate both "National Horse Day" (U.S.),
- and "The International Day of the Horse" (global), simply -- a day to be
- held "...in celebration of the horse".
-
- More info: http://www.igha.org/news.html (our new URL)
- (or)
- http://home.earthlink.net/~ighahorseaid/news.html (old)
-
-
-
- Date: Sat, 3 May 1997 07:06:43 -0800
- >From: ighahorseaid@earthlink.net (IGHA/HorseAid Volunteer)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: PMU Farms on Fox Network's MILLENNIUM TV show.
- Message-ID: <v02140b02af90f9c81722@[206.250.103.130]>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- The May 2nd episode of MILLENNIUM (Fox Network) centered around the PMU
- farms controversy and the treatment of PMU horses.
-
- We wish to thank Chris Carter, the show's creator/producer for publicizing
- the cruelty involved with PMU farming and the "normal" disposition of the
- PMU disposable end product (the foals that go to slaughter), in an
- intelligent and factual way, and one that was so well woven into the story
- line that no "message agenda" was evident in focusing on the negative
- aspects of PMU farm production.
-
- More info: http://www.igha.org/pmu_link.html (our new URL)
- (or)
- http://home.earthlink.net/~ighahorseaid/pmu_link.html (old)
-
-
- Date: Sat, 03 May 1997 11:20:26 -0400
- >From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: Veg-Org@envirolink.org
- Subject: positive health publicity for National Salad Month
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970503112006.019a2f18@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- We recently posted two things:
-
- May is "National Salad Month"
- the dairy industry is really getting "hot"
- to push their products, and
- is citing lots of gerrymandered
- research to substantiate their
- claims
- (for instance, one control group was given
- a diet strictly limited in vegetables and fruits,
- and dairy, and observed, then a control group
- was given 10 vegetables and fruits a day,
- and dairy products, and their blood values
- improved - citing, presumably, the importance
- of dairy products in the diet.)
-
- Looks like there are some new pushes by the
- milk promoters.
-
- How are we going to respond to that "research"?
- More important, does this have an impact on the
- general public, and does the public see that kind
- of promotion, and what do they think, if they see it?
-
- Is there anything truly effective that we can do?
-
- The corporate promoters are doing lots of
- things to sell their products, and isn't it about
- time that we establish effective PR offices
- for vegetarianism - perhaps groups like
- PCRM and VRG and NAVS?
-
- Salad Month is a great promotional opportunity,
- I would think, now that March, Spring, and
- the GAMO are over, and
- April, Earth Day/Earth Month, and
- World Week for Lab Animals are over.
-
- Isn't this something that vegetarian organizers
- should consider in their planning calendars,
- if we could get corporate backing for this
- type of educational work, lots of the
- health vegetarians (65% in USA, by most studies)
- could "come back home" to "us."
-
- - Maynard
-
- Date: Sat, 3 May 1997 12:57:16 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970503125741.283fb47e@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- [The following is a review of book about the McLibel trial - it's not
- totally anti-McD, but might might be of interest]
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Saturday, May 3rd, 1997
-
- A quarter pounder of flesh
-
- McDonald's serves writs as well as burgers and fries, finds Ross Clark
-
- "McLibel: Burger Culture on Trial" by John Vidal (MacMillan, ú15.99)
-
-
- WHEN Ronald McDonald, the clown who is the mascot of the McDonald's
- hamburger empire, goes visiting local fΩtes he turns up in a white Cadillac,
- addresses schoolchildren as "my little fries", and gently suggests they all
- pop down to their local hamburger bar for a
- bite to eat. The paternalism of such selling techniques was evidently too
- much to bear for the anarchists and environmental protesters who make up an
- organisation called London Greenpeace (which has nothing to do with the
- international movement of the same name).
-
- In 1985 they began distributing leaflets entitled "What's Wrong with
- McDonald's", which bore a number of reasonable complaints about the
- organisation, such as the litter found outside its restaurants, together
- with several debatable accusations, such as "McDonald's food is so lacking
- in bulk it is hardly possible to chew it", and a number of more fantastic
- allegations, such as that McDonald's was in the habit of torturing animals.
-
- McDonald's claimed the leaflets contained 35 libels. It identified five
- members of the group who had helped to distribute the leaflets and served
- them with writs for libel. Three apologised, but the other two, a barlady by
- the name of Helen Steel and an unemployed postman called Dave Morris, chose
- instead to defend themselves against the charges.
-
- If McDonald's was expecting a pushover, it was mistaken. Despite their lack
- of legal training, Steel and Morris managed to keep the American
- corporation's lawyers on the hoof for a record 313 days at the High Court;
- judgment is finally expected in June.
-
- Whichever way the judgment goes, it is difficult to see what McDonald's has
- gained by taking on the two anarchists: as well as spending an estimated ú10
- million on the case without any hope of obtaining much in the way of damages
- from its virtually penniless adversaries, the hamburger chain seems merely
- to have ensured that the contents of a little pamphlet which otherwise would
- have been read by a few hundred people have now been repeated around
- the world.
-
- One yearns for a dispassionate guide to lead the way through the legal
- quagmire. But, in spite of his assurances to the contrary, John Vidal has a
- natural affinity with the politics of Steel and Morris, the book being
- liberally spattered with appeals to the reader to see in
- McDonald's the evils of capitalism as a whole. In his central argument -
- that McDonald's has been over-zealous in protecting its image through the
- law courts - Vidal has a point: the corporation is also on record for
- threatening a Scottish sandwich-bar owner who has dared to use the prefix
- "Mc" in her trading name. But it is unfair of Vidal not to mention that
- McDonald's has itself been a victim of opportunistic legal action taken by
- its customers; it was ordered to pay hefty, punitive damages to an American
- woman who scalded herself while trying to drive away from one of its
- branches with a cup of steaming hot coffee sandwiched between her thighs.
-
- McDonald's emerges from this book as an unlovable organisation so dedicated
- to standardisation that its workers are instructed to measure onion portions
- to the nearest quarter-ounce, while its marketing executives have such a
- cynical view of food that they are
- capable of sending each other memorandums saying "we don't sell nutrition
- and people don't come to McDonald's for nutrition".
-
- But there is something missing from this portrayal of McDonald's as an evil
- empire intent on ruining our diets and subverting local cultures: if
- McDonald's really is as bad as Vidal makes it out to be, can't even just a
- little bit of the blame for its international success - $30 billion in sales
- in 1992, for example - be placed on the shoulders of the multitudes foolish
- enough to be seduced by Ronald McDonald?
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- Date: Sat, 3 May 1997 12:57:19 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [CA] Manitoban's consider themselves lucky dogs
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970503125744.283ff67e@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From The Vancouver Sun - Saturday, May 3rd, 1997
-
- The following comes from a column written by Trevor Lautens
-
- At this writing, Jessie, 2, Joshia, 7, Foxy, 12, and Micah, 13, were facing
- possible removal as the crest of the Red River floodwaters in Manitoba
- neared their homes. They are dogs.
-
- They are the last of a purebred golden retriever kennel operated for 20
- years by George Gertrell, principle of St George School in St Vital, a
- southeast suburb of Winnipeg.
-
- Possibly you are not thinking too much about the effect of the flood on
- animals. But human beings - ceratinly the ones on the Prairies, where all
- the best people come from - do some quite marvelous things in the face of
- common danger, such as showing tender concern for other creatures.
-
- For example, six large dogs in the care of the Winnipeg Humane Society were
- scheduled to be flown Friday to Victoria's SPCA - rides courtesy of Canadian
- Airlines International.
-
- On Wednesday, 12 others were flown to Guelph, Ontario, on Air Canada. Don't
- these airlines ever stop viciously competing with each other?
-
- Vicki Burns, Winnipeg's humane society executive director, explained:
- "People are too preoccupied right now to adopt animals." She arranged with
- Victoria SPCA director Lynn West to have the six sent out for adoption on
- the West Coast. A new life in balmy Victoria, tulips to pee on instead of
- sullen mounds of dirty snow. Talk about lucky dogs.
-
- Such is Winnipeg's community spirit that hundreds of people have registered
- to take in pets during the emergency. And Burns met Thursday with a
- neighborly team from the U.S. SPCA and the International Fund for Animal
- Welfare, who have brought in a huge 75-foot disaster response vehicle from
- North Dakota where they rescued 300 dogs and cats from the flood.
-
- Gertrell, the school principal, has already moved from his bungalow on rural
- property in the suburb of St Germain because of the threat of flooding.
- Fortunately, he had somewhere to go , a house in Charleswood that he'd sold
- recently; the new owner doesn't take possession until mid-June.
-
- He left the dogs in their kennels, returning to feed and exercise them twice
- a day. He was reluctant to move them unless the extensive dike and ditch
- network protecting the city couldn't hold back the waters. They are just
- four kilometres from the gates of the Floodway, or Duff's Ditch, that
- amazing trough dug around the city named for former premier Duff Roblin.
-
- "They're large dogs," Gertrell explained. "Moving them to a 70-foot lot (in
- Charleswood) would be stressful. Micah is deaf as a doornail. Changing dogs'
- patterns can be pretty traumatic." Gertrell himself took in a litter of
- eight six-day-old Labrador pups and their mother belonging to fellow
- principal Bob Milman, who then had to move them a second time because of the
- rising threat to Gertrell's property. Dog owners are something else, aren't
- they?
-
- [The rest of the article dealt with the human aspects of the flooding]
-
- Date: Sat, 3 May 1997 16:24:00 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: Marisul@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: LA Times: Transgenic Livestock
- Message-ID: <970503162359_-366349307@emout11.mail.aol.com>
-
- Copyright 1997 Times Mirror Company
- Los Angeles Times; May 1, 1997, Thursday, Home Edition ; SECTION: Part A;
- Page 1; Metro Desk
-
- TRANSGENIC LIVESTOCK MAY BECOME BIOTECH'S CASH COW; NEW DRUGS AND
- ORGANS FOR
- TRANSPLANT ARE AMONG GOALS. BUT OBSTACLES--INCLUDING POTENTIAL
- BACKLASH--ARE
- PLENTIFUL.
-
- BYLINE: MARTHA GROVES, TIMES STAFF WRITER
-
- The world shook when Dolly the sheep was cloned. But nary a ripple greeted
- the news of Rosie the calf.
- That was so even though the sweet-faced Holstein made its own impressive
- history earlier in February, becoming the first cow to produce milk with
- significant levels of a human protein--promising enrichment for infants and
- elderly alike.
- Both beasts are products of laboratory tinkering in a field of
- agricultural biotechnology known as transgenics--in which the DNA of other
- species, often from human beings, is introduced into the genes of animals.
- Transgenic livestock breeding promises to be the bread and butter of a
- burgeoning 21st century biotechnology industry--Rosie, after all, is a
- potential cash cow if ever there was one. Cloning, with its allure of quickly
- replicating animals with desirable traits, is more likely to be the icing on
- the biotech cake.
- A handful of companies have been engaged in transgenics for the last
- decade with varying success, among them Scotland's PPL Therapeutics, which
- runs the labs that produced Dolly and Rosie.
- Some of these companies--often with funding from medical supply and
- pharmaceutical giants--inject human genes into the embryos of mice, pigs,
- goats and cows in the hope of sharply lowering the cost of producing
- nourishing proteins and healing drugs. Others, such as Nextran and Alexion
- Pharmaceuticals, nurture pigs with altered hearts and kidneys that could one
- day be transplanted into human beings--a market projected to be worth
- billions of dollars.
- Meanwhile, university and government research labs plug away with farmers
- in mind, seeking to create livestock containing human genes that help resist
- disease or produce more milk or leaner meat.
- But the twisting path to this brave new biotech world will be littered
- with obstacles, and scientists recognize that they are bound to stumble along
- the way. The research is painstaking and tedious, and societal backlash can
- threaten at any turn.
- Even the staunchest proponents of ag biotech acknowledge that it will be
- at least five or 10 years before practical, profitable applications are
- commonly available. And all this expensive poking and prodding of animals
- raises moral and ethical questions about whether society has the right to
- pursue the science, and the stomach to deal with the consequences.
- Israeli researchers have reported work on featherless chickens; the birds
- don't use up precious energy producing their plumage, but they look grotesque
- and don't function normally. In Australia, sheep were injected with a
- genetically engineered hormone that produces breaks in wool fibers as they
- grow, enabling simple removal of the wool. Among the unforeseen side effects
- for these self-shearing sheep: severe sunburn and heat stress.
- Problems have been apparent since U.S. Department of Agriculture
- researchers reported the world's first transgenic livestock in 1985. Growth
- hormone was inserted into genetically engineered pigs, which indeed grew
- faster and contained less fat than their plain Jane counterparts. But the
- pigs could not cope with the accelerated growth and suffered from crippling
- arthritis, infertility and more than their usual share of gastric ulcers. The
- research was halted amid a public outcry.
- "There's only a certain distance you can go in the name of science," said
- Caird E. Rexroad Jr., a member of that team and research leader at the
- federal Agricultural Research Service's Gene Evaluation and Mapping
- Laboratory in Beltsville, Md. "You have to make a judgment."
-
- Benefits, Risks of Barnyard Biotech
-
- At PPL Therapeutics, the judgment has been that the potential benefits of
- barnyard biotech--for both society and the company's bottom line--far
- outweigh any risks. The company's lead product is a protein for the treatment
- of cystic fibrosis and emphysema.
- PPL's U.S. branch is ensconced on several hundred acres amid the rolling
- hills of Blacksburg, Va., near Virginia Tech. Working with pigs, cows and
- rabbits, researchers at the 4-year-old operation view their mission as
- generating transgenic livestock that can become individual factories,
- churning out therapeutic proteins in greater quantity and for less money than
- would be feasible by any other method. Once produced in milk, the proteins
- can be isolated for inclusion in pharmaceuticals--or, eventually, sold as is,
- as a beverage with enhanced properties.
- Scientists in February held a coming-out party for Rosie, the firstborn of
- more than a dozen transgenic calves, after her initial milking revealed
- strong levels of alpha-lactalbumin. The human protein provides an excellent
- balance of amino acids, making it highly nutritious and especially suitable
- for premature infants who cannot nurse.
- Although all potential applications haven't been worked out, "infant
- formula is certainly a possibility," said Will Eyestone, PPL's head of bovine
- technology in Blacksburg. Clinical trials are expected to begin within two
- years.
- The aim of Alexion Pharmaceuticals in New Haven, Conn., is quite
- different: to develop a herd of organ donors for the thousands of
- individuals--many of them at death's door--awaiting transplants. The
- 5-year-old company is working with about 50 pigs containing two human genes.
- These high-tech hogs are housed in horse stalls at Tufts University's
- School of Veterinary Medicine, an hour's drive west of Boston. The pigs'
- appearance betrays no hint of their special properties. But, thanks to one of
- the human genes, the animals' hearts, kidneys and lungs bear a human-like
- sugarcoating that the company theorizes would make them compatible with the
- human body. The other gene, researchers believe, would mop up any
- inflammation resulting from a transplant.
- Alexion is testing this double-barreled approach by transplanting pig
- organs into baboons. Organs from the transgenic pigs survive for days, versus
- the hour or so a normal pig organ would last, said Stephen Squinto, Alexion's
- co-founder and vice president of research. That survival time does not yet
- justify a clinical test on human beings, the prospects for which, Squinto
- said, "will be absolutely dependent on data from the primate model, and we'll
- have a good feel for that within the next 12 months."
- The company has received $ 10 million in funding from U.S. Surgical Corp.,
- a Norwalk, Conn., surgical supply company. Shares of Alexion, which went
- public a year ago at $ 8.25 each, traded recently on the Nasdaq exchange at
- about $ 11 before falling to $ 8.75. The cloning news from Scotland did not
- sway interest one way or the other.
- "The people who are investors understand our technology," Squinto said.
- Cloning is not part of Alexion's research, but if it could be made
- commercially feasible--a big if--it could provide a more effective, efficient
- way of making colonies of animals. For now, the technique used in Scotland is
- far too inefficient. It took scientist Ian Wilmut 25 often-frustrating years
- and 277 tries to produce Dolly.
-
- Demand for Organs Is Enormous
-
- The market for "xenotransplantation"--the use of animal organs for
- transplantation into human beings--could be enormous. According to the United
- Network for Organ Sharing, 3,000 patients in the United States die each year
- waiting for a transplant; 100,000 die annually without having qualified for a
- spot on the waiting list. Salomon Bros., a Wall Street investment firm,
- projected last year that demand for organs could be worth $ 6 billion by
- 2010, with patients worldwide seeking 450,000 organs a year.
- That number seems high--but only by $ 1 billion or so--to executives at
- Nextran, a division of Baxter International, a medical products and services
- company. Based in Princeton, N.J., Nextran is a leader in the field, having
- launched a Phase I clinical trial to test the safety and effectiveness of
- using transgenic pig livers outside the human body to treat patients with
- acute liver failure.
- In this procedure, doctors pump blood from a vein in a patient's leg
- through the pig liver, which is stored in a sterile container at the
- patient's side. The blood is then pumped back into the body through the
- jugular vein. The idea is to maintain liver functions until a human organ
- becomes available.
- The company expects to report results within the next year. Nextran is the
- only company so far to have won approval from the U.S. Food and Drug
- Administration to use a transgenic pig organ in human testing.
- "Of all the ag products I can think of . . . this will have the greatest
- impact clinically," said John S. Logan, vice president of research and
- development. "If someone's dying of heart or kidney failure, it could save a
- life."
- Marvin L. Miller, Nextran's president and chief executive, foresees that,
- if approved eventually for transplantation, such organs would fetch $ 10,000
- to $ 18,000 each. That, he said, raises questions: Can society afford to have
- that many transplants done? Is it willing to shoulder the financial burden?
- Cost aside, society probably will have no qualms about using genetically
- engineered pig organs, said Bernard E. Rollin, author of "The Frankenstein
- Syndrome: Ethical and Social Issues in the Genetic Engineering of Animals"
- and a professor of philosophy and biophysics at Colorado State University.
- "In a society that eats pigs, there won't be a big uproar," he said. After
- all, surgeons have successfully used pig heart valves in patients for years.
- (And June will mark the 20th anniversary
- of the first transplant of a baboon heart into a human being.)
-
- Consumer Reaction Hard to Predict
-
- But Rollin sees many potential dangers in high-tech breeding techniques.
- "You can't predict what the insertion of a gene will or will not do," he
- said. "A lot will depend on unintended consequences."
- Animal rights activists have long protested such research. Six years ago,
- well before the world knew of Wilmut's breakthrough cloning work at the
- Roslin Institute, activists torched two laboratories there. (The institute is
- run by PPL Therapeutics.)
- Consumers' resistance to some bioengineered food products--and the
- difficulties researchers have encountered in identifying favorable genes for
- use in transgenics--make the payoff seem distant for private industry. As a
- result, companies have slashed funding for researchers involved in genetic
- engineering of livestock strictly for the sake of farming, rather than for
- producing drugs. Most researchers attempting to aid farmers must rely on
- funds from the USDA and other government entities.
- "It really is a hard slog," said James D. Murray, a professor of animal
- sciences and veterinary medicine at UC Davis. "It's very expensive and very
- long term and very hard to get it funded. That's why most work is done by
- pharmaceutical companies, which see a big pot of gold."
- Murray succeeded recently in changing the fundamental properties of mouse
- milk by injecting a gene that produced a human enzyme. The enzyme, found in
- tears and saliva, can dissolve certain bacteria. Introducing the enzyme in
- cow's milk, he figures, might cut down on gastrointestinal infections in
- children who drink the milk. The presence of the enzyme could also aid the
- dairy cows, decreasing the amount or severity of udder inflammations and
- therefore reducing the need for antibiotics.
- But to prove his speculation, Murray needs a transgenic cow. In 20
- pregnancies so far, the calves have all proved negative for the enzyme. The
- process "is very inefficient," Murray said, adding ironically: "Our success
- rate is in keeping with the worldwide average."
-
- The Possibilities Are Intriguing
-
- Consider Dolly, the longshot cloning success from Scotland. Until
- researchers can dramatically boost the efficiency of Wilmut's technique, most
- scientists agree, it will be merely a momentous novelty.
- Nevertheless, the research world is attracted by the possibilities. After
- the announcement, scientists at the University of Wisconsin immediately set
- about reproducing Wilmut's feat in cattle, using fetal skin cells rather than
- the adult mammary cells used in Scotland. (Up till now, genetic engineering
- efforts focused on dividing animal embryos to produce twins or triplets, or
- on injecting genes into a fertilized egg in the hope that the offspring would
- have specific traits.)
- Although the interest now is purely scientific, Wisconsin researcher Neal
- First, a noted expert in the field, said the hope eventually is to develop a
- reliable cloning method that could help farmers copy animals that produce
- desirable cuts of meat, copious amounts of gene-enhanced milk--or even
- pharmaceuticals.
- Striving to keep pace with consumers' wishes, farmers for decades have
- been fooling with livestock genetics using artificial insemination, in vitro
- fertilization and plain old crossbreeding. Just as cloning would, those
- technologies tend to reduce genetic diversity.
- Take the dairy industry, said George Seidel, a cattle rancher and a
- professor of physiology at Colorado State University. At the end of World War
- II, there were 25 million dairy cows in the United States. Today, about
- one-third that many cows produce 10% more milk than did the postwar herds.
- The total feed consumed and manure produced are about half the earlier
- levels.
- Helping to account for the improved milk yield is a decline in genetic
- diversity: 90% of the dairy cows are Holsteins, versus 40% four decades ago.
- Holsteins produce more milk with less fat than other breeds.
- "That reduces genetic variation," Seidel said. "But it's what consumers
- wanted. If we had cloned cows from the 1950s, they would be much inferior to
- today's cows.
-
- "Cloning," he added, "is not in any sense an ultimate technology for
- improving animals. It's another tool."
-
- ********************
- Question: What do you see ahead for private-sector agricultural
- biotechnology in light of the cloning of Dolly, the Scottish sheep?
- Answers:
- Jim McCamant, editor of the AgBiotech Stock Letter, Berkeley, Calif.:
- "I don't think it has had any significant impact at all on the stock
- prices of biotech companies . It's not a big deal, investment-wise."
- ****
- Robert D. Bremel, managing director of Gala Design, a "designer milk"
- biotech company, Sauk City, Wis.:
- "For many purposes, cloning is not needed. The reason the Dolly process
- was done is that PPL Therapeutics is looking to remove a gene and replace it.
- They need the cloning to make that work. So cloning is a necessary means to
- an end. With current technologies, you can add genes but if you need to take
- one out and put a new one in, it's much more complicated. The Dolly
- procedure makes it conceivable to do that. Whether they can get their
- efficiencies up to make it commercially viable is another question."
- ****
- Vernon Pursel, research physiologist, Agricultural Research Service's Gene
- Evaluation and Mapping Laboratory, Beltsville, Md.:
- "Pharmaceuticala and xenotransplantation the transplantation into human
- beings of organs from genetically engineered animals are the hot areas, with
- great financial potential. It's financially driven. Several of us in the U.S.
- Department of Agriculture are still working toward production
- purposes--growth of animals , disease resistance--that might have
- considerable use in the future. But we don't know how far off that is."
- ****
- Bernard E. Rollin, professor of philosophy and physiology and biophysics
- at Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colo.:
- "With cloning, one can multiply a putatively desirable animal, but one can
- make mistakes. A researcher could screw up things that would show up in a
- year or two."
- ****
- Caird E. Rexroad Jr., research leader, Gene Evaluation and Mapping
- Laboratory, Beltsville, Md.:
- "Should we make a super-pig and tie up all our genetics in that? I think
- the answer is clearly no. My vision is that designer genes are for specific
- purposes. This is a tool--it's not a panacea, nor is it a Pandora's box."
- ****
- George Seidel, professor of physiology, Colorado State University:
- "There will be casualties with any kind of new experimentation. More
- people were saved by penicillin than by any other drug. But more healthy
- people were killed by it. There is a cost to every technological benefit."
- ****
- Vernon Pursel:
- "Population growth is a huge problem. There's a net increase in population
- of 2.8 persons per second. It is frightening. That means that either we have
- to somehow reduce population growth or be lots more efficient in how we
- produce our food. The increases we had in farm production in the 1950s and
- '60s resulted from fertilizers and insecticides. We pumped a lot of bad stuff
- onto the soil. We have to find alternative ways to do that. Biotech is one of
- the ways. But look at the Flavr-Savr a genetically engineered tomato that
- failed to hold up to the rigors of transportation and handling . Getting any
- of these things from the lab into the grocery store--that's a huge
- undertaking."
- ****
- Keith Haglund, executive editor, The Journal of NIH Research, April 1997:
- "Goodbye, Dolly....It's time for you to leave center stage. Time for the
- scientists and ethicists and policy-makers to play their parts."
-
- Compiled by MARTHA GROVES / Los Angeles Times
-
-
- Date: Sat, 3 May 1997 22:44:04 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: PonyJumpin@aol.com
- To: kuma@cyberway.com.sg, ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Re: (MY) Mangrove forest threatened--UNSUBSCRIBE
- Message-ID: <970503224403_402877858@emout08.mail.aol.com>
-
- I'd like to unsubscribe from AR news
- Date: Sat, 03 May 1997 20:16:03 -0700
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Canned lion hunts in South Africa
- Message-ID: <336BFF73.C68@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Mandela under fire over lion-hunt scandal
-
- Times of London
-
- JOHANNESBURG (May 3, 1997 01:14 a.m. EDT) -- The horrors of South
- Africa's lion-hunting industry, in which lions in captivity are drugged,
- shot and skinned for "tourist trophies," are due to be shown on British
- television next week in a documentary whose producers have accused
- President Mandela's Government of failing to act to protect the animals.
-
- Among allegations in the documentary is that hunting operators have
- lured lions out of the Kruger National Park to be shot by tourists
- paying thousands of dollars for the pleasure. The Cook Report will show
- footage of a lioness being shot several times against an
- electrified fence by a tourist, who then poses with the animal before
- its coat is skinned to become a "trophy."
-
- Gareth Patterson, a South African environmentalist who was involved in
- the investigations, says that the hunted lions are being bred in
- captivity for the hunter's gun. More than 300 animals are said to be
- involved. Mr. Patterson tells of one case in which a boy takes 16
- shots to kill a badly wounded lion.
-
- In another incident, a German hunter, unable to stalk on foot, is driven
- into an enclosure and shoots his "trophy" from the vehicle.
-
- The findings of the investigation were presented this week to South
- African government representatives in London for comment. A video of the
- hunt was reportedly shown to the tourism minister Pallo Jordan months
- ago but so far he has not responded. "Apartheid is dead but now South
- Africa urgently needs to evolve its inhumane outlook and policies
- towards wild animals," Mr Patterson said. "International criticism could
- soon mount against a country which has freed its people but whose
- wildlife is still left at the mercy of a utilitarian philosophy of "if
- it pays, it stays."
-
- According to Mr. Patterson hunters are paying upwards of $20,000 for a
- full hunt. He believes that if the lion breeding and hunting business is
- not outlawed white lion hunts could soon be on offer with price tag of
- around $45,000. Already exotic, non-indigenous species, such as black
- panthers, are being offered at extortionate prices.
-
- The documentary makers suspect that game lodges used by thousands of
- British and other game viewing tourists each year may also be breeding
- lions to be shot by high-paying clients. Some of the hunts are legal but
- no less cruel than the illegal operations. In legal hunts the lion is
- held captive in a fenced area waiting to be shot with no chance of
- escape.
-
- Mr. Patterson believes the television documentary could lead to calls
- for a tourism boycott of South Africa and he has called on the
- Government to take immediate action to end the trade.
-
-
-
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