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- OMAHA, Neb., April 22 /PRNewswire/ -- The following was released today by
- Boys Town USA:
-
- Boys Town's child-care programs in Los Angeles and Orange Counties in
- California were alerted Sunday night (April 20) after an animal-rights
- activist, mentioning the group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals
- (PETA), which is a radical animal-rights group, threatened a Boys Town
- telephone operator by saying: "What if I told you I was going to blow the
- place up."
-
- Boys Town has an emergency crisis shelter in Long Beach, and long-term
- residential homes in Orange County. Both are residences for troubled boys
- and girls. Long Beach police increased their patrols around the shelter.
-
- The Boys Town National Hotline identified the source by Caller ID. When
- police from Orange County went to the male caller's home to investigate the
- matter, his sister told them that he had made the call and then abruptly left
- for San Diego.
-
- Boys Town Vice President Tom Gregory said the Boys Town National Research
- Hospital had been accused by PETA of cruelty and "torture" of research
- animals, and that these allegations were found to be without merit by the
- National Institutes of Health and the U.S. Department of Agriculture. He
- also said that in the wake of PETA's repudiated allegations, animal-rights
- supporters have staged screaming protests at Boys Town facilities, phoned
- employees at work and home -- some very late at night -- and passed out
- purposefully wrong and misleading pamphlets and information. He said there
- have been letters and calls threatening death to researchers and employees.
-
- "To quote a recent statement from the Catholic League for Religious Civil
- Rights: `Just what the bigots at PETA will do for an encore is anyone's
- guess'," Gregory said.
-
- SOURCE Boys Town USA
-
- CO: Boys Town USA; People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals
-
- ST: Nebraska, California
-
- IN:
-
- SU:
-
- 04/22/97 17:33 EDT http://www.prnewswire.com
-
-
-
- Date: Thu, 01 May 1997 23:24:13 -0400
- >From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: Veg-News@envirolink.org, AR-News@envirolink.org
- Subject: Mad Cows, Angry Farmers haunt Britain's Conservatives
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970501221829.00df4b48@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- By Andrew Marshall
-
- WOODBURY SALTERTON, England (Reuter) - A warehouse in this rural backwater is
- filled with mountains of thick, brown powder -- all that remains of thousands
- of boiled and pulverized British cattle.
-
- Britain's beef industry remains in crisis and the ``mad cow'' affair could
- see the election hopes of the ruling Conservative Party crumble into dust in
- southwest England.
-
- The small town of Newton Abbot, not far from the mad cow mountains of
- Woodbury Salterton, has held a weekly livestock market for more than 700
- years. The farmers who sell cattle there say there can have been few more
- difficult years in the market's history than the one they have just suffered.
-
-
- ``It has been the worst year of my life. It has just been impossible to make
- ends meet,'' said beef farmer John Reddaway. ``The farmers here have never
- been so angry.''
-
- The rural counties of Devon and Cornwall in southwest England are among
- Britain's main dairy and beef farming areas. There are two targets for the
- farmers' anger -- the European Union and Prime Minister John Major's
- Conservatives.
-
- ``We've been let down by Major, but it's Europe that banned our beef. The
- Conservatives just haven't fought for us like they should have,'' Reddaway
- said. ``We've been sold down the river and they let it happen.''
-
- The question of whether farmers decide to lay most of the blame with Europe
- or the Conservatives could hold the key to Major's fortunes in rural areas in
- Britain's May 1 election.
-
- A YEAR OF DISASTER
-
- Britain's beef crisis began in March 1996 with the announcement of a possible
- link between bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), a disease which had
- reached epidemic proportions among British cattle, and Creutzfeld-Jakob
- disease (CJD), a brain-wasting disease in humans.
-
- Panic ensued. Beef sales slumped and the European Union slapped a worldwide
- ban on British beef. Efforts by Agriculture Minister Douglas Hogg to have the
- ban lifted have met little success, to the fury of Britain's farmers.
-
- ``Sales here collapsed overnight,'' said Paul Griffin, a cattle auctioneer at
- Newton Abbot market. ``We were auctioning a couple of hundred prime steer a
- week, then after BSE it fell back to single figures for a while. Prices just
- dived.''
-
- Many farmers have been forced to cull their herds in an attempt to eradicate
- BSE. Their remains lie in warehouses throughout the country awaiting
- incineration. Not surprisingly, Hogg has become a hate figure.
-
- ``Hogg has been a diabolical disaster,'' said Ian Pettyfer, a beef farmer and
- chairman of the Devon branch of the National Farmers Union (NFU). ``Most
- farmers want him gone, there's no doubt about that, and they may well vote
- accordingly.''
-
- Major, who has stuck by Hogg, has consistently blamed the EU for the crisis.
-
- Officials and ministers denied for years that there was any link between BSE
- and CJD.
-
- Many farmers argue that their beef is safe. Trucks at the Newton Abbot market
- are plastered with stickers proclaiming ``We eat British beef with
- confidence'' and ``British beef is best.''
-
- ``I'm waiting with bated breath, I've got my fingers crossed and I'm
- practically praying every night that we don't get an epidemic,'' Pettyfer
- said. ``The last thing you want is to produce beef knowing you're poisoning
- people.''
-
- With their livelihoods threatened, Britain's traditionally Conservative
- farmers are demanding action, and some say they will punish Major for his
- failure to solve their problems.
-
- The south-west is dominated by the Conservatives but the Liberal Democrats,
- Britain's third-largest party, came a close second in several seats in the
- 1992 election.
-
- If even a small number of voters defect, the Liberal Democrats could capture
- a number of seats from the Conservatives this time. The farming vote could be
- crucial.
-
- Europe, the issue which has recently dominated the election campaign and been
- a thorn in Major's side, is at the center of the farmers' concerns. Their
- main priority is to get the European beef ban lifted.
-
- ``I've been involved in every election in Devon and Cornwall since 1964,''
- said Paul Tyler, regional spokesman for the Liberal Democrats and member of
- parliament for Cornwall North. ``I have never known so many farmers not only
- saying they are going to vote for us, but also demonstrating their support
- for us.''
-
- The Conservatives' handling of the beef crisis had alienated thousands of
- farmers, Tyler said. ``The last 12 months have been so horrendous for the
- livestock areas of the country that there is a recognition that the
- Conservatives are the party of the suburbs and we have become the country
- party,'' he said.
-
- But the Liberal Democrats are seen as the most pro-European of Britain's
- three main parties. The Conservatives hope this will undermine Liberal
- Democrat support among farmers angry at perceived unjust treatment from the
- EU.
-
- In a campaigning visit to a cattle market in Tavistock, Devon, Major demanded
- an end to the EU's beef ban and defended his government's record in handling
- the crisis.
-
- He said the crisis was not the fault of farmers but ``the result of market
- panic and in some cases political panic in countries right the way across
- Europe.''
-
- To loud applause from farmers in the market, he told other EU countries to
- improve their own meat hygiene. ``Firstly, begin to lift the ban on British
- beef and secondly, since you have felt to strongly about us putting our house
- in order, isn't it about time that you put your own house in order?''
-
- Tyler, however, believes his party's pro-Europe stance will win votes among
- farmers. ``Farmers think above all that the Conservative civil war over
- Europe will damage their industry,'' he said. ``And they recognize that
- theirs in an industry which will benefit from a stable currency
- arrangement.''
-
- While politicians argue, the farmers are just struggling to survive. ``If
- they were to take away my beef subsidies tomorrow, it wouldn't be a case of
- tightening my belt. I wouldn't have a belt,'' Pettyfer said. ``I'd have to
- give up farming.''
-
- 09:19 04-22-97
-
-
-
- Date: Thu, 01 May 1997 23:24:16 -0400
- >From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: Veg-Biz@envirolink.org, Veg-News@envirolink.org, AR-News@envirolink.org
- Subject: soybean prices related to BSE concerns / interests
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970501221848.00df4b48@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Soybeans also drew support from floor sentiment that Wednesday's losses were
- unfounded. Soybeans fell on Wednesday after rumors surfaced that an Indiana
- man had died of Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease.
-
- The Indiana Health Department said it could not confirm the man died of CJD
- but said the state has several cases of CJD annually. None have been linked
- to any particular source.
-
- Scientists in Britain last year said they may have found a link between some
- strains of CJD and Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE), the "madcow"
- cattle disease.
-
- That news caused a consumer panic in Europe but U.S.
-
- sources have said no such link has been identified in this country. Still,
- traders said a scare in the beef industry could limit consumer beef purchases
- and lessen demand for livestock feed.
-
- Traders continued to watch developments in Brazil's stevedores strike. Any
- disruptions in exports from Paranagua port could attract buyers to the United
- States, traders said.
-
- The July/November spread gained 7-1/2 cents to close at $1.54, premium July.
-
- Traders said FCC spread 1.2 million bushels July/November at $1.47 to $1.51,
- premium July and Term Commodities spread 800,000 July/November at $1.48 to
- $1.50.
-
- On the day, Goldenberg-Hehmeyer bought five million bushels May and one
- million July, ADM bought 3.5 million July and Rand Financial and Tenco Inc
- each bought three million July, pit sources said.
-
- ABN-AMRO Chicago Corp sold 12 million bushels July and Cargill Inc sold one
- million each May and August.
-
- In options trade, Lind-Waldock bought 900 November $7.00 puts and sold 900
- November $6.50 puts at 26-1/2 cents.
-
- Soybean volume was estimated by CBOT at 68,000 contracts, compared with
- Wednesday's actual volume of 81,900.
-
- ((Emily Kaiser 312-408-8749))
-
- 16:35 04-17-97
-
-
-
- Date: Thu, 01 May 1997 23:24:17 -0400
- >From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: Veg-News@envirolink.org, AR-News@envirolink.org
- Subject: Deaths in Japan linked to Mad Cow
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970501221956.00df4b48@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- By Maggie Fox
-
- LONDON (Reuter) - The HIV virus that causes AIDS could be getting more
- aggressive, Italian researchers reported Friday.
-
- A study of nearly 300 people infected with HIV showed those infected after
- 1989 got sicker faster than those infected before, Dr. Allessandro Sinicco
- and colleagues at the University of Turin said.
-
- The virus could be mutating into stronger forms -- and early screening was
- thus more important than ever, they said in a report in the British Medical
- Journal.
-
- ``Our findings suggest possible changes in the course of HIV epidemic in the
- 1990s and raise intriguing issues on the course of HIV infection,'' they
- wrote.
-
- ``The emergence of more virulent strains due to multiple biological
- mechanisms may be responsible for a more aggressive course of HIV disease in
- patients who have recently seroconverted,'' they added.
-
- Seroconversion is when the body develops antibodies to HIV -- usually within
- two weeks of initial infection.
-
- If this was true, AIDS experts would have to think about different treatment
- strategies, they said.
-
- ``In particular, if HIV disease has become more aggressive, more frequent
- screening would be essential to identify patients who have just seroconverted
- and could benefit from early antretroviral treatment.''
-
- Experts now recommend treating HIV with a cocktail of anti-viral drugs as
- soon as the immune system shows damage -- usually measured by counting immune
- system cells known as CD4 cells.
-
- Studies show this combination therapy can knock the virus back to
- undetectable levels.
-
- Sinicco's study included 285 patients infected with HIV recruited between
- September 1985 to January 1995. They included women, drug users, homosexuals,
- and a small group with other risk factors.
-
- As the 10-year study progressed, more and more women showed up with HIV, as
- did the number of men infected heterosexually.
-
- Patients infected after December 1989 showed faster declines in immune system
- function and a quicker build-up of the virus than those infected earlier,
- they found.
-
- ``Consistent with previous reports, our data show that the first 12 months
- after seroconversion are extremely critical for the future course of HIV
- disease,'' they wrote.
-
- People who seroconverted after December 1989 lost more CD4 cells every day,
- they added.
-
- Those infected later also developed AIDS sooner, Sinicco said.
-
- It could take up to 10 years for those infected in 1985 to develop the
- illnesses like pneumonia or Kaposi's sarcoma that define AIDS, while on
- average it only took two and a half years for those infected between 1992 and
- 1995.
-
- 10:29 04-24-97
-
-
-
- Date: Thu, 01 May 1997 23:24:23 -0400
- >From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@envirolink.org
- Subject: GREENLines Issue#370
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970501222855.00df4b48@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Subject: GREENLines Issue#370
-
- GREENLines, Thurs. May 1, 1997 from GREEN,
- the Grassroots Environmental Effectiveness Network,
- A project of Defenders of Wildlife.
- (202)789-2844x290 or email rfeather@clark.net
-
- SENATE RIDER: The Senate Approps. Committee yesterday attached a
- broad waiver of the ESA for flood control or maintenance activities
- onto the Emergency Supplemental Appropriations bill, according to a
- Defenders of Wildlife press release. Sen. Craig's (R-ID) rider is
- similar to Rep. Pombo and Herger's (R-CA) H.R. 478. "Here we go
- again. The Congress claims it is greener, but attaches a backdoor
- rider to an appropriations bill that would devastate the Endangered
- Species Act," said DOW President Rodger Schlickeisen.
-
- GRAZING DESTRUCTION: An archaeological treasure is being threatened
- by the Bureau of Land Management's failure to enforce a ban on grazing
- in the San Pedro Riparian National Conservation Area, reports the
- Arizona Daily Star. Area resident Al Anderson has seen the cattle
- stray into the area that is protected by an almost nonexistent fence
- and destroy valuable artifacts. "I've been going out there since
- 1984, and each time the pottery pieces are smaller," said Anderson. A
- U.S. attorney is currently reviewing whether BLM officials are
- violating the Archaeological Resources Protection Act and Antiquities
- Act
-
- RED ROCK WILDERNESS: Rep. Maurice Hinchey (D-NY) and 103 cosponsors
- yesterday reintroduced America's Red Rock Wilderness Act, HR 1500,
- according to a Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance press release. The
- bill would designate 5.7 million acres of Utah public land that is
- currently being managed by the Bureau of Land Management as
- wilderness. "This is an overwhelming endorsement for the citizen's
- proposal for BLM wilderness, from every corner of the country.
- Americans want wilderness lands in Utah protected and are sending that
- message to congress," said SUWA Executive Director Mike Matz.
-
- KANSAS ESA: An unusual coalition of Kansas environmentalists,
- government officials and agribusiness reps. drafted a state ESA that
- was passed into law by the governor last week, reports the Topeka
- Capital-Journal. "The biggest winners in this are all the species out
- there that need our help to continue to exist," said Duane Hund, a
- task-force member representing landowners.
-
- DUPONT PROTEST: The 147 member Utah Wilderness Coalition denounced
- DuPont's plans for oil drilling within the new Grand Staircase-
- Escalante National Monument at the annual DuPont shareholders meeting.
- "We don't believe that DuPont shareholders want a few extra pennies
- of profit per share, at the price of destroying America's newest
- national monument," said Tom Price of the Southern Utah Wilderness
- Alliance in a press release.
-
-
- ==========================================================
- Roger Featherstone -- Director
- GrassRoots Environmental Effectiveness Network
- A project of Defenders of Wildlife
- 1101 14th St. NW, Suite 1400, Washington, DC 20005
- (202) 682-9400 x290 fax:(202) 682-1331 e-mail: rfeather@clark.net
- check out our web page at: http://www.defenders.org/grnhome.html
- ==========================================
- For correspondence regarding our listserve and GREENLines
- contact: rfeather@clark.net (NOT listproc@envirolink.org)
- ================================
-
-
- Date: Thu, 01 May 1997 23:24:45 -0400
- >From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@envirolink.org, AR-OLDS@envirolink.org
- Subject: rescue in Cairo
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970501230653.00df4b48@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- [AP, Cairo, Egypt, 31 Aug 1995 CAIRO, Egypt (AP)]
- Six people drowned Monday while trying to rescue a chicken
- who had fallen into a well in southern Egypt.
- An 18-year-old farmer was the first to descend into the 60-foot well.
- He drowned, apparently after an undercurrent in the water pulled
- him down, police said. His sister and two brothers, none of whom
- could swim well, went in one by one to help him, but also drowned.
- Two elderly farmers then came to help, but they apparently were
- pulled by the same undercurrent. The bodies of the six were later
- pulled out of the well in the village of Nazlat Imara, 240 miles south
- of Cairo. The chicken was also pulled out.
-
- The chicken survived. ** yeah for the chicken!! **
-
- Date: Thu, 01 May 1997 23:29:09 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Book: "McLibel: Burger Culture on Trial"
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970501232904.006c4dec@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-