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- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: "Homosexual" seagulls?
- Message-ID: <337BDF17.528F@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
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-
- Gulls sometimes unite to save species
-
- Scripps-McClatchy Western
-
- LOGAN, Utah (May 15, 1997 11:19 a.m. EDT) -- Life is impossible if
- you're a single seagull trying to raise chicks in a world full of
- predators and aggressive neighbors.
-
- "These gulls have to go out daily to feed, and if you leave your eggs or
- chicks undefended for even a few minutes, when you come back they won't
- be there," says Michael Conover, a professor of wildlife science at Utah
- State University. "If you are a gull, there is no such
- thing as a single-parent family."
-
- And that, says Conover, is why some females form homosexual pairs with
- other females in several species of terns and gulls. Female-female pairs
- are found in up to 2 percent of California gulls -- Utah's state bird --
- and up to 5 percent of ring-billed gulls, which also are
- common in Utah.
-
- During two decades of research, Conover found female gulls form same-sex
- pairs when too few males are present, possibly due to pollution.
-
- "There is some female-female pairing in almost every gull colony in
- Utah," Conover says. "It's a natural phenomenon in gulls. Female-female
- pairing seems to occur because of a shortage of males. It is an adaptive
- strategy gulls adopt when they can't find a male mate."
-
- Gulls in female-female pairs sometimes mount each other, but their
- alliance "is not a sexual behavior," Conover says. Each female in the
- pair will copulate with a male who already has a female mate. Then the
- homosexual females share a nest and lay their eggs in it.
-
- "The two females will share incubation and chick-rearing
- responsibilities," says Conover. "One will babysit while the other is
- out feeding."
-
- Conover's research was highlighted recently in a Science News magazine
- article about animal homosexuality. "Some of these homosexual activities
- appear to boost reproduction," the magazine said, citing gulls as an
- example.
-
- Discovery of the first known homosexual birds -- female-female pairs of
- western gulls on California's Channel Islands -- was reported in 1977 by
- George Hunt Jr., a professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at the
- University of California, Irvine.
-
- Conover followed with studies in Washington state and Oregon,
- discovering female-female pairing among California and ring-billed gulls
- in 1979 and among Caspian terns in 1983.
-
- "Faced with the option of no mate and no offspring, these females pair
- up and take the future into their own hands," Hunt says. "There is more
- flexibility in the mating systems they employ than any of us reckoned."
-
- Conover grew up in Homestead, Fla. His parents were scientists. His love
- of fishing, bird-watching and hiking prompted him to major in biology at
- Eckerd College in St. Petersburg. But he abandoned plans to enter
- fisheries science because "I get deathly seasick."
-
- So he switched to wildlife ecology, earning master's degrees in zoology
- and psychology and a doctorate in zoology from Washington State
- University, where he started studying seagulls. He continued the
- research during a fellowship in Irvine while on leave from his job
- at a Connecticut research facility.
-
- Hundreds of thousands of California, ring-billed and Franklin's gulls
- nest in Utah; millions of gulls from more than a dozen other species
- winter here or migrate through Utah.
-
- "Gulls are sort of the white rats of ornithology" because they nest in
- colonies and are highly social, making it easy for scientists to study
- behavior among hundreds of birds, he adds.
-
- Seagulls nest within a couple feet of each other, so if a fox or other
- predator attacks, "you'll have 20 or 30 gulls all diving at him. But on
- an individual basis, these gulls can't stand each
- other. So you have a lot of territorial fights among these birds. If a
- chick wanders into their territory or is left undefended, they will kill
- it, pecking it to death."
-
- In an experiment published in 1984, Conover and Hunt concluded: "The
- formation of female-female pairings enhances the ability of females to
- raise young when they are unable to find male mates."
-
- Conover and Hunt used small rockets to hurl large nets over one colony
- of ring-billed gulls and four California gull colonies in Oregon and
- Washington. They captured up to a third of the males, "put them in jail
- for three weeks and let them go," Conover recalls.
-
- Because male and female seagulls look similar, researchers count the
- number of female-female pairs by looking for nests with four to six
- eggs. Nests of female-female pairs contain twice as many eggs as the two
- to three eggs found in nests of heterosexual pairs.
-
- Compared with neighboring colonies, Conover and Hunt found more four- to
- six-egg nests -- and thus female-female pairs -- in colonies from which
- males had been removed.
-
- Conover got more evidence by examining collections of stuffed gulls and
- gull eggs in museums across the country. He found male shortages and
- female-female pairings in several gulls species.
-
- Male shortages and female-female pairs are found in several gull species
- but not others, and often in areas where the insecticide DDT polluted
- the environment before it was banned in the United States in 1972.
-
- The theory is that the pesticide -- first used in 1939 -- feminized
- young male gulls, leaving them unable to reproduce or perhaps unable to
- return to their colonies.
-
- By studying museum collections, Conover learned female-female pairings
- and shortages of males happened only since the 1940s and 1950s in
- western gulls, herring gulls and Caspian terns. Yet he found evidence of
- same-sex pairs and male shortages in other species a century ago, before
- DDT existed. So Conover doubts pollution is the cause of male
- shortages and, ultimately, of female-female pairings.
-
- Hunt, however, insists "pollution is still a possibility." He notes
- female-female pairing in gulls off California's coast became less
- frequent starting a decade after DDT was banned.
-
- Another theory explaining female-female pairing is that males simply die
- younger than females because they spend so much time fighting for
- territory they have less time to forage and fatten up to survive winter.
-
- "By being aggressive, you may increase the probability of starving,"
- Conover says.
-
- Since arriving in Utah in 1990, Conover has spent some of his time
- studying same-sex pairings among ring-billed gulls near Bear Lake on the
- Utah-Idaho border.
-
- Conover placed bands on chicks of female-female and male-female seagull
- pairs, then waited for them to grow up. Gulls that migrate often return
- to nest near where they were raised.
-
- To date, he has found five offspring of heterosexual pairs, "and all
- five have mated with members of the opposite sex. So far we have found
- four chicks that were raised by a female-female pair and have come back
- and nested as an adult. Two mated with males and two have formed
- female-female pairs."
-
- Conover expects to continue the study for years as he tries to determine
- if same-sex pairing in seagulls is an inherited trait or learned
- behavior.
-
- All gull species look similar, except each has a unique color for its
- eyes and for a ring-shaped mark around each eye.
-
- "Research has shown females are not born with an innate knowledge of
- what species they are," Conover explains. "Instead, females look at
- their father and his eye and eye ring, and when they grow up they will
- try to mate with a bird that looks like their father.
-
- "The question with female-female pairs is if females are looking at
- their father to decide who to mate with, what happens if there is no
- father there? One possibility is that female-female pairing is a learned
- trait. . . . When chicks raised by two females grow up, maybe they
- search for a female to mate with rather than a male" because they're
- looking for a gull that resembles mom instead of their absentee dad.
-
- Conover says female-female pairs occur in gull species where males and
- females look so similar that scientists can tell them apart only by
- making a small incision, then inserting a scope to examine the gull's
- reproductive organs.
-
- So he says it is possible even gulls can't distinguish guys from gals,
- and females simply may pair with the biggest unmated gull they can find,
- which sometimes is a female because the biggest females are larger than
- the smallest males.
-
- By LEE SIEGEL, Salt Lake Tribune
-
- ==================================================================
-
- The term "homosexual" is misleading and unsupported in this context.
- The fact that two females share a nest to assure the survival of their
- chicks, when there's no eligible male, has nothing to do with sexual
- preferences.
-
- Incidentally, wolves worked out this problem a long time ago. The cubs
- are raised up by the entire pack and when the mother goes out to hunt,
- another female (a "nanny") stays with the litter to protect them.
-
- Andy
- Date: Thu, 15 May 1997 21:17:02 -0700
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Taste and Diet
- Message-ID: <337BDFBE.38A@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- JANET ASIMOV: Accounting for tastes for food
-
- Los Angeles Times Syndicate
-
- (May 15, 1997 11:49 a.m. EDT) -- Although the proverb says there's no
- accounting for tastes, taste for food has been under investigation.
- Research shows that while many people now try to develop a taste for
- healthy foods, in the future we may have to change much more.
-
- All animals, including bacteria, possess receptors that sense edible and
- inedible chemicals in their environments. Since life on Earth began in
- the ocean, these receptors received chemical stimuli through a liquid --
- and they've been doing it ever since. Even land animals taste through
- moisture -- can you taste much when your nose and/or
- tongue are dry?
-
- When you "taste" something you are usually smelling it too. If a bad
- cold knocks out your sensitivity to odors, what's left is the ability to
- taste bitter, sweet, sour and salt.
-
- The taste buds of a fish are on its body surface, but land-dwelling
- vertebrates have them on the tongue (and a few in the throat and
- palate). The raised areas on tongues are called papillae, each of which
- contain many taste buds.
-
- Humans have 50 to 150 taste receptor cells in each taste bud. The total
- number of taste buds on the tongue seems to be inherited, with the
- average number being about 5,000.
-
- The location of taste buds on the tongue determines what they sense:
- Front for salty and sweet, sides for sour, and back for bitter.
- Sensations from each taste bud go to the brain via two nerves -- the
- trigeminal nerve for touch, temperature, and pain; the facial nerve for
- taste.
-
- We are all born liking what tastes sweet, according to studies by
- Israeli researcher Joseph Steiner. Babies also have an inborn dislike
- for what tastes bitter.
-
- According to Linda Bartoshuk of Yale University, the degree of your
- ability to taste is correlated with the number of taste buds per square
- centimeter of your tongue. Half the human population are medium tasters;
- one-quarter each are nontasters and supertasters.
-
- After applying a blue dye to tongues, researchers found that nontasters
- have about 11 taste buds per square centimeter but supertasters have up
- to 1100!
-
- Supertasters usually dislike very bitter foods, as babies do, but they
- also dislike very sweet foods -- and food that is too hot in
- temperature, or too slick with fat. Although being finicky can make life
- complicated for supertasters, they also tend to be thinner than
- nontasters.
-
- As someone who thinks fat tastes and feels icky, it doesn't bother me to
- report on the amazing results of research by Richard D. Mattes, of
- Indiana's Purdue University.
-
- Mattes has shown that merely tasting fat will increase the concentration
- of blood triglycerides (triglycerides are implicated in coronary artery
- blockage). Tasting, not swallowing.
-
- This effect occurs whether or not you consciously taste the fat. But be
- of good cheer, for triglycerides are not raised if the tongue gets
- low-fat foods that taste fatty but are not.
-
- In general, however, humans are not very picky about food. It's no
- accident that there always seem to be plenty of cockroaches, rats, and
- humans because all three are omnivores -- animals that will eat a wide
- variety of animal and plant foods.
-
- Omnivores can make do in hard times when more specialized feeders
- starve. Omnivores do take some risks in trying new foods, but the risks
- are decreased if new foods are first eaten in small samples, part of a
- varied diet.
-
- According to psychologist Paul Rozin of the University of Pennsylvania,
- omnivores learn about negative consequences of food in spite of the fact
- that "some digestion usually must occur before the effects of the food
- manifests itself. Nature seems to have given us a special learning
- ability to bridge this gap."
-
- Rozin points out that the most powerful determinant of distaste is
- nausea, in contrast to other negative consequences (like allergies) that
- "may cause you to stay away from that food but not to dislike it."
-
- You usually think food tastes terrible if it once made you nauseated, or
- if your culture labels it as poisonous, disgusting, or prohibited.
- According to Rozin, disgust about animal food may come from the
- superstitious notion that "you are what you eat," but I think the
- increase in vegetarianism stems from health concerns or the wish to
- reduce the killing of animals.
-
- It's good to taste veggies with pleasure, but we should remember that
- they are not grown in tanks of sterilized water with artificial
- fertilizers. Like Mother Nature, farmers recycle animal feces into
- manure. The remains of butchered animals are used not only for
- fertilizer like bone meal but also for animal feed (turning animals into
- cannibals).
-
- These practices may now be very dangerous, according to "Deadly Feasts,"
- the eye-opening book by Richard Rhodes. TSE (transmissable spongiform
- encephalopathy) is an incurable disease that devastates the human
- nervous system up to 20 years after exposure, and always kills. It can
- be acquired from similarly infected animals.
-
- We are all vulnerable to TSE, thanks to inefficient animal-testing, the
- common use of animal fertilizer and the practice of putting animal
- products into animal feed.
-
- We must find safer ways to dispose of millions of tons of animal waste.
- We could also reduce the amount of animal waste by ignoring our taste
- preferences for meat and eating fewer animals. We must also improve
- tests for TSE and find safer fertilizers for the vegetables we will have
- to eat.
-
- Tofu, anyone?
- Date: Thu, 15 May 1997 21:29:17 -0700
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Insects used in fruit juice production
- Message-ID: <337BE29D.6E07@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Why Do They Call Fruit Punch Bug Juice? Here's a Possibility
-
- By ELIZABETH SEAY
- Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
-
- As a vegetarian, Lucy Peluso says she's "neurotic about
- reading labels." So when the 28-year-old law clerk was
- working late at her judge's chambers in Hauppauge,
- N.Y., one night last week, she checked the ingredients
- of her Ocean Spray Ruby Red Grapefruit Juice Drink.
-
- Unfamiliar with the word "cochineal," she grabbed a
- dictionary and was horrified at the definition: "a red dye
- made from the dried bodies of female cochineal insects."
-
- Her call to Ocean Spray Cranberries Inc. in
- Middleboro, Mass., quickly rousted a
- customer-relations manager, who confirmed that the
- color does come from an insect -- albeit one approved
- by the Food and Drug Administration. Ms. Peluso says
- she still sees red when she thinks about it. She feels that
- vegetarians and meat-eaters alike should know about
- the bug. "I'm sure they don't want to eat insects," she
- says. "It's just not normal."
-
- Ocean Spray counters that it is quite normal. "We use
- cochineal because it's natural and completely safe," says
- John Lawlor, a spokesman. Ocean Spray puts cochineal
- -- or its close cousin carmine -- in its Ruby Red, Ruby
- Red & Tangerine, Kiwi Strawberry and Island Guava
- juices.
-
- Indeed, colors extracted from cochineal give a magenta
- hue to dozens of products, from aperitifs to lipsticks to
- pill coatings and fruit yogurt. The insect, found on
- cactuses in Central and South America, has a brilliant
- history; it has made bright stripes on Mayan cloaks,
- Mexican serapes and early U.S. flags. The very words
- "crimson" and "carmine" stem from a Sanskrit term for a
- dye-yielding bug.
-
- Dye makers stress that the red is extracted from the bug.
- "Some people have the misconception that it's a
- ground-up insect," says Harry Meggos, vice president of
- technical service at Universal Foods Corp.'s
- Warner-Jenkinson. "You consume a molecule that gives
- a color."
-
- Even so, the North American Vegetarian Society of
- Dolgeville., N.Y., plans to alert readers about cochineal
- in its next Vegetarian Voice. While it's not strictly an
- animal product, says co-director Brian Graff, "it's not the
- kind of thing you'd expect to see in your drink."
-
- Others are concerned for religious reasons. Susan
- Krasner, president of Cinema Beaute cosmetics, has put
- out a line of lipsticks that don't contain cochineal or
- other animal products forbidden by Jewish law. "Insects
- are not kosher," she says.
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 00:53:21 -0400
- >From: "radioactive" <radioactive@bellsouth.net>
- To: "Animal Rights" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: US TO ACQUIRE LAND IN ALASKA FROM EXXON FUNDS
- Message-ID: <199705160454.AAA02884@mail.mia.bellsouth.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain;
- charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- U.S. to acquire land in Alaska from Exxon funds
-
- WASHINGTON (Reuter) - Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt will
- sign an agreement Monday to use $15.2 million from the Exxon
- Valdez oil spill settlement fund to buy coastal lands and fjords
- in Alaska, the department said Thursday.
- About 32,000 acres will be bought for Kenai Fjords National
- Park and the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge to protect
- fish and wildlife species harmed by the 1989 oil spill in
- Alaska's Prince William Sound.
- The land is to be bought with English Bay Corporation, a
- Native Alaskan corporation.
- ``This is an extraordinary agreement that protects valuable
- habitat for Kenai Fjords National Park as well as archaeological
- and cultural sites important to Alaska Natives who were directly
- affected by the oil spill,'' Babbitt said in a statement.
-
- ^REUTER@
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 00:55:19 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: CFOXAPI@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: WI TRAPPING BILL- LETTERS NEEDED
- Message-ID: <970516005518_114575249@emout13.mail.aol.com>
-
- Please note: Though the Fund for Animals has already posted a notification
- regarding this bill, we thought a reminder would not be out of line.
-
- ___________________________________________________________________
-
- ACTION ALERT
-
- HELP RESTRICT TRAPPING IN WISCONSIN!
- ****LETTERS NEEDED IN SUPPORT OF AB 282****
-
- The furbearing animals of Wisconsin need your help NOW! Representative
- Rebecca Young (D- Madison) introduced Assembly Bill 282 in April and the bill
- currently has eight co-sponsors. If passed, this bill will limit the sale of
- traps, prohibit trapping in cities, villages and in the right-of-way of any
- public thoroughfare and would require trappers to post warning signs at trap
- sites.
-
- Please write to the Chairman of the Assembly Natural Resources Committee,
- Representative DuWayne Johnsrud, and ask him to support AB 282. In addition,
- contact your legislators TODAY and urge them to co-sponsor AB 282.
-
- Points you may want to include in your letter:
-
- * Leghold traps have been banned in over 80 countries and restricted or
- banned in Arizona, Colorado, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Rhode Island and
- Florida.
-
- * Leghold traps and snares are indiscriminate. For every target animal
- trapped, at least two other non-target animals, including dogs and cats, are
- trapped.
-
- * Leghold traps and snares cause extreme suffering and pain to their
- victims. Animals caught in leghold traps can endure fractures, ripped
- tendons, edema, blood loss, amputations, and starvation.
-
- * In a national poll conducted in November 1996, it was shown that 74% of
- Americans believe leghold traps should be outlawed.
-
- To obtain the name of your district representative or senator please call
- 1-800-362-9472.
-
- Senator________Representative DuWayne Johnsrud
- P.O. Box 7882Assembly Natural Resources Committee
- Madison, WI 53707State Capitol
- Madison, WI 53702
-
- Rep. (Last name A-L)Rep. (Last name M-Z)
- P.O. Box 8952P.O. Box 8953
- Madison, WI 53708Madison, WI 53708
-
- For more information about upcoming committee hearings and status reports on
- the bill, please contact the Alliance for Animals at (608) 257-6333. For
- more information about trapping issues, contact Camilla Fox at API at (916)
- 731-5521. Tips for contacting public officials are available on the
- Legislation page of the Animal Protection Institute's Web site
- <http://www.g-net.com/api/ContactingOfficials.htm>.
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 14:04:24 +0800
- >From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [Aust]Red fox pelt order received from Eastern Europe
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970516135650.254f504e@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Red fox pelt order received from Eastern Europe
-
- 15th May 1997 (The Countryman [WA])
-
- An Adelaide company has won a contract to export 10,000 fox pelts to
- Eastern Europe this winter, reviving a fur trade which was almost destroyed
- by financial problems in the break-up of the Soviet Union in th Early 1990's
-
- The export contract has again put a value on Australia's foxes because
- professional shooters get up to $20 for each top quality dried pelt and
- lesser amounts for lower quality skins.
-
- The Adelaide Wool Company at Gilman will supply red fox furs to Poland and
- the Czech Republic. The first shipment is due to leave Adelaide at the end
- of May.
-
- Mr Bob Amos, managing director of Adelaide Wool Company, said the shipment
- was the first significant order since the Eastern European fur trade
- collapsed in
- the early 1990's.
-
- "Five to 10 years ago we were exporting up to 100,000 fox furs a year, but
- financial problems in Eastern Europe after the break-up of the Soviet Union
- meant the industry collapsed almost overnight," Mr Amos said.
-
- "In recent years conditions in the Eastern Europe have improved and furriers
- are again looking overseas to help keep up with demand."
-
- "People in Australia don't realise that fur coats are essential to survive
- winters in Eastern Europe and many Europeans replace their fur coats on an
- anual basis."
-
- He said the return of the Eastern Europe market could not have come at a
- better time for Australian farmers, who were facing mounting problems after
- an explosion in fox numbers in recent years.
-
- "Foxes in Australia are vermin and are presently in plague proportions,
- causing havoc among native marsupials and considerable damage to the sheep
- industry at lambing time," he said.
-
- "The release last year of the calicivirus and drop in rabbit numbers in
- Australia has increased this pressure, so the return of the fur trade comes
- at a very opportune time."
-
- Mr Amos said that in the 1970's, Australia had been a significant exporter
- of fox pelts which helped keep animal numbers in the wild in check. But the
- collapse of the Eastern European market and a fashion swing against fur meant
- the price for skins collapsed and fox shooting stopped.
-
- Australian red fox produces a commercial quality fur generally used for
- trimmings.
-
- Mr Amos said the latest order came from the sale of 500 fox pelts last year
- and could be the start of a significant upswing in exports.
-
- It is still early days and any significant swing in currency exchange rates
- could quickly snuff out the present revival," he said.
-
- "But we are hopeful it will again be a significant industry."
-
- Mr Amos said shooting would resume in earnest once the colder weather had set in
- and the foxes had grown their winter coats.
-
- 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)
-
-
-
- ("\''/").___..--''"`-._
- `9_ 9 ) `-. ( ).`-.__.`)
- (_Y_.)' ._ ) `._ `. ``-..-'
- _..`--'_..-_/ /--'_.' .'
- (il).-'' ((i).' ((!.-'
-
-
-
- Date: Thu, 15 May 1997 22:45:36 -0700
- >From: igor@earthlink.net (Elephant Advocates)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Los Angeles Activists Protest Elephant Ride (US)
- Message-ID: <v01530506afa1a3abbf1e@[207.217.4.46]>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- ELEPHANT ADVOCATES
- NEWS RELEASE
-
- DATE: May 15, 1997
- CONTACT: Debbie Famiglietti, (213) 939-0656
-
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
-
- Activists to distribute protective face gear to circus-goers
-
- Los Angeles, CA - Activists from Elephant Advocates, a local animal rights
- group dedicated to the removal of elephants in traveling shows, will
- leaflet and protest an elephant circus act and ride sponsored by the
- Farmer's Market, 6333 West 3rd Street @ Fairfax Ave., Friday the 16th, at
- 3:00 p.m. & Saturday the 17th, at 12:00 p.m. A press conference will be
- held at 3:30 p.m. on Friday the 17th, in front of the L.A. Circus tent in
- the parking lot of the Farmers Market.
-
- Elephant Advocates has called for cancellation of the elephant act as it
- poses a tuberculosis (TB) threat to people, but USDA officials said they
- have no authority to stop the exhibit. Thai, the elephant being trucked in
- for the circus has been exposed to TB. She was used in the movies, "Dumbo
- Drop" and "Larger than Life." For five months, Thai was housed with Calle
- who has tested positive for TB. They lived together at the facility that
- is hiring out the elephant, "Have Trunk Will Travel", owned by Gary
- Johnson. Calle is a Los Angeles Zoo elephant currently being treated for
- TB at the San Francisco Zoo.
-
- Annie (who just died with active TB at the LA Zoo on 3/22) and Calle were
- Johnson's circus elephants. Johnson swapped Annie and Calle for three
- juvenile elephants at the LA Zoo.
-
- Putting a child on the back of an elephant is dangerous because of the TB
- risk and the threat of elephant rampages. We've all seen Hard Copy
- videotape of the elephants who just couldn't take it anymore and ran out of
- the circus ring. The circus elephant, Tyke, killed her trainer, then
- rampaged. The ride elephant, Janet Kelly, stampeded into a parking lot and
- stomped her trainers' car. Both elephants were slowly shot to death in the
- streets.
-
- Elephant Advocates founder, Debbie Famiglietti states, "after years of
- being pulled around with a bull hook, chained by the legs and prodded to
- perform degrading tricks, is it any wonder they turn on their captors? The
- elephants are protesting their slavery and so are we."
-
- According to Dr. Patrick Ryan, Chief Veterinarian, LA County Health Department ,
- "[TB] infected...circus and zoo animals...can present a risk to people and
- other animals."
-
- Even these disposable face masks we are wearing and distributing will not
- fully protect people from active TB in elephants, and it certainly won't
- protect them during a rampage, but we are trying to make a visual point.
- Famiglietti states, "the best thing people can do for elephants and
- themselves is to boycott all circuses with elephant acts."
-
- -30-
-
- Deborah Famiglietti
-
-
- Date: Thu, 15 May 1997 22:50:54 -0700
- >From: igor@earthlink.net (Elephant Advocates)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Protest Elephant Ride in Los Angeles
- Message-ID: <v01530507afa1a52f1a44@[207.217.4.46]>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Activists unable to attend the demonstration can protest the elephant
- act/ride taking place this weekend at the Farmer's Market in Los Angeles by
- calling:
-
- L.A. Circus
- (213) 931-1975
- a temporary number set up for this temporary circus
-
-
- Jennifer Marsan, Marketing Director
- Farmers Market
- 6333 West 3rd Street
- Los Angeles, CA 90036
- Wk: (213) 954-4230
- Fx: (213) 954-4229
- sponsored the elephant ride
-
- ###
-
- Deborah Famiglietti
-
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 03:22:33 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: Pat Fish <pfish@fang.cs.sunyit.edu>
- To: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- Cc: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Digital Dolphins- Computer Animal Actors
- Message-ID: <Pine.BSF.3.95.970516022233.10967H-100000@fang.cs.sunyit.edu>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
- Animal Acts: Giving Innovators Overdue Credit
-
- Related to the reported death of a dog for a motion picture, Vadivu Govind
- wrote:
-
- >Computer generated images are becoming an important aspect of film-making
- >and in preventing the use of animals for entertainment purposes. This means
- >advancement not just in technology but in compassion.
-
-
- Years before it was popular, or even considered technically feasible,
- NBC's "SeaQuest DSV" took just such an approach to creating a dolphin
- character. The program is set in the early part part of the 21st century,
- when beef eating and vivisection are outlawed, and the human race depends on
- oceanic resources to survive.
-
- Like "Star Trek" before it, the program places high value on moral themes,
- including, albeit inconsistanly, animal rights and vegetarianism. PETA's
- first issue of "GRRR!" gave the program mostly favorable reviews, for the
- producer's use of animatronic dolphins in most of the portrayals of Darwin,
- SeaQuest's leading cetacean.
-
- What PETA didn't know, was that many of the underwater dolphin sequences
- were rendered on computers. Beyond the Emmys that were given to the Video
- Toaster (an Amiga with special FX video card), no recognition has ever been
- given to the groundbreaking Amiga computer nor NewTek's LightWave 3D
- software for their contribution to the animals. NewTek worked closely with
- SeaQuest FX artists to create software that would create realistic
- biological and underwater effects. The under-$800 Amiga computer with
- LightWave software provided proof-of-concept that set the entire industry on
- a new course, making digital animals in films like Jurassic Park and Jumanji
- possible.
-
- "SeaQuest DSV" was canceled several years ago, but reruns are aired on the
- SCI-FI channel Monday-Friday at 8PM and Midnight EST-US.
-
-
- The Amiga with the Video Toaster card, LightWave 3D and Video Flyer
- software makes a complete video FX and non-linear video editing system.
- Sadly, since 1994, the Amiga computer has gone through several protracted
- acquisitions, with Gateway2000 expected to announce ownership on May 17th in
- London. CPEA expresses grave concern over the Amiga's status as an
- "ethical" platform due to Gateway's questionable history. On a positive
- note, Gatewaye has said that Amiga Technologies will continue as an
- independent company.
-
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 16:00:57 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Update: Poutry in Pakistan
- Message-ID: <199705160800.QAA32396@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- Thanks to Dr Wedderburn for writing!
- Dr Wedderburn is from this list and can be reached at <jwed@hkstar.com> and
- you can check out probably the world's first bilingual (in Chinese and
- English) animal rights site at <http://www.earth.org.hk/>.
- Thanks to others who wrote in as well. We CAN make a difference in places
- far away!
-
- Vadivu
- _________________________________________________________
-
- > Pakistan Link
- 16 May 97
- Letters to the Editor
-
- Facts about chicken meat
- Dr John Wedderburn Hong Kong
-
- I enjoy reading your newspaper on the net! Your website is simple
- and elegant and user-friendly.
- In your May 12 issue, I read "Pakistan's poultry industry
- faces crisis after wedding ban". Poultry farmer, Khalid Hasan
- Ansari, was quoted as saying "there is need to create awareness
- that white meat is healthier and people should start eating it as
- in other western countries." As a physician of 32 years standing
- and as a professional with a special interest in disease related
- nutrition, I hope I can humbly offer some comments on this.
- Many people know that beef and other red meats are full of
- saturated fat, cholesterol, antibiotics and growth hormones. They
- think chicken is the better meat. But they do not know that
- chicken contains the same amount of cholesterol as beef (25 mg
- per ounce)(1). About 90% of factory farmed chickens are also
- likely to be contaminated with leukosis (chicken cancer) (2), or
- the dangerous salmonellosis, which has also been found in as much
- as 90 percent of federally inspected poultry in America (3).
- According to the Food and Drug Administration, poultry is the
- number one source of food-borne illness, causing an estimated
- 1,680 deaths in America each year (4) and millions of cases of
- "stomach upset" or "food poisoning."
- Several studies show that the risk for several cancers such
- as breast, prostate and ovary, and for heart diseases and other
- chronic diseases increases with higher consumption of animal
- products.
- The Cornell-China-Oxford Project on Nutrition, Health and
- Environment is the most comprehensive project on diet and disease
- ever done. The diets of rural Chinese were found to be more
- plant-based and much lower in fat and animal protein and much
- higher in fibre than American diets. The former were found to
- suffer from much less chronic degenerative disease like
- atherosclerosis, cancer and osteoporosis. Chinese who consumed
- more animal-based foods than others had a significantly higher
- occurrence of these diseases.
- US$61.4 billion has been estimated as the annual medical
- outlay attributable to meat consumption in USA. (6) This is
- considered a serious underestimate by some experts (e.g. Dr
- William Harris "The Scientific Basis of Vegetarianism" - ISBN 0-
- 9646538-0-X). Can Pakistan afford this? Should it?
- The West is learning the health hazards of meat the hard way
- and is looking to the East to learn lessons from traditional
- plant based Eastern diets. The way to avoid slipping down the
- slope the West fell down in terms of chronic disease and health
- costs lies in traditional diets. Affluence should not be allowed
- to draw people magnetically to the follies of the West.
- Cancer and other chronic diseases are about to take the
- human population by storm as a recent World Health Organisation
- Geneva report states (The Straits Times, May 6 1997, "Cancer
- cases to double in 25 years: WHO".) We can stand and watch this
- happen to ourselves and our loved ones and be comforted by
- listening to traditional advocacy of meat and dairy products. Or
- we can try to digest the fact that a healthy vegetarian diet is
- really the way to go for good health. The price to pay for
- medical orthodoxy and "moderation" is too much in this case - are
- we ready to pay with human lives?
-
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 16:01:17 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (HK) Danger beef 'may have been sold'
- Message-ID: <199705160801.QAA09059@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >South China Morning Post
- Internet Edition
- 16 May 97
- Danger beef 'may have been sold'
- RHONDA LAM WAN and NAOMI LEE
-
-
- More than 300 kilograms of beef possibly infected with a deadly strain of
- E-coli bacteria could have been sold to the public, the Department of Health
- warned yesterday.
-
- Samples taken on May 10 from the Sun Luen On shop in Western and the Hop
- Lee shop in Aberdeen tested positive for the bacteria on Wednesday.
-
- This came after the fatal E-coli 0157:H7 bacteria was also found at a
- wholesaler and the Sun Luen On shop in samples taken on May 6.
-
- The beef came from a cow slaughtered at the Kennedy Town Abattoir and
- distributed between the Hop Lee and Sun Luen On shops which have the same
- operator, the Urban Services Department said.
-
- Dr Monica Wong Man-ha, the Department of Health's acting assistant director
- (hygiene), said the Hop Lee shop was closed on Tuesday, but only after more
- than 300 kg of the infected beef could have been sold.
-
- "It takes three to four days to sell a cow . . . so we believe some may
- have been sold," she said, urging people to cook any suspect meat thoroughly.
-
- Dr Wong said that cross-contamination was the most likely cause of
- infection, with workers transferring the bacteria from meat to meat by using
- the same knives.
-
- Director of Urban Services Elaine Chung Lai-kwok said that her officers had
- stepped up inspections at abattoirs since March when the first E-coli was found.
-
- But she agreed with Legislative Councillors that insufficient samples were
- being taken.
-
- "The current practice of taking two meat samples in a monthly inspection is
- not adequate," she added.
-
- The Urban Services Department was considering tougher penalties for licence
- holders of restaurants and fresh provision shops.
-
- The operator of Hop Lee and Sun Luen On shops, who identified himself as Mr
- Lo, said they washed the meat with tap water and cut it up for sale.
-
- Urban Councillors yesterday recommended that the Urban Services Department
- be given the power to close factories failing to maintain hygiene, and to
- introduce tougher penalties, a new complaints hotline and regulations
- obliging food operators to use their own name when applying for a licence to
- increase their responsibility.
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 16:01:11 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (HK) Whale meat probe
- Message-ID: <199705160801.QAA08790@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >Hong Kong Standard
- 16 May 97
- New probe call on whale meat
- By Yonden Lhatoo
-
- THE World Wildlife Fund for Nature Hong Kong is calling for further
- investigations into the illegal sale of whale meat in the territory's
- Japanese restaurants.
-
- It wants to determine whether whale is being smuggled in from Japan.
-
- A new report on illegal whale meat trade by TRAFFIC, the WWF's wildlife
- trade monitoring program, says its investigators were promised whale in
- seven of 27 Japanese restaurants surveyed.
-
- However, investigations by the government found only one of seven
- restaurants touting whale was serving the real thing.
-
- ``Trade in Hong Kong is probably not large enough to pose a threat to
- whales, but it is a problem,'' said WWF Hong Kong executive director David
- Melville.
-
- ``We would like restaurateurs and the public to remember that selling or
- buying whale meat in Hong Kong is against the law.''
-
- The report said that because Japan was cited as the main source of whale
- promised by local restaurants, further investigations were needed to
- determine if it was being smuggled from Japan.
-
- The report pointed out that ``seriously flawed'' legislation was making the
- illegal trade ``too easy'' in Asian countries such as Japan and South
- Korea.
-
- It said Japan was the world's largest market for whale.
-
- While Japan's legal domestic market was supplied by scientific whaling and
- bycatch _ whales caught inadverdently _ as well as from old stocks of
- frozen meat, the lack of an inventory and a voluntary system of registering
- bycatch created a loophole that made detecting illegal meat virtually
- impossible.
-
- The report called on Japan and South Korea to clarify and strengthen laws
- governing bycatch and to implement a system so that illegal meat could be
- identified by DNA testing.
-
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 16:01:23 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (HK) Councils urged to close low-grade factories
- Message-ID: <199705160801.QAA07074@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >Hong Kong Standard
- 16 May 97
- Councils urged to close low-grade factories
- By Ella Lee
-
- THE graded food operators' licensing system came under fire on Thursday as
- legislators and councillors called for the abolition of premises with the
- lowest grade.
-
- Food from the low-grade premises was usually not fit for human consumption,
- the critics said.
-
- The call came after the C-graded Dai Yick food factory in Hung Shui Kiu was
- found to be the source of several cholera cases in the territory.
-
- Under the licensing system of the Urban and Regional Councils, premises are
- classified into three categories, A to C, based on hygiene conditions.
-
- Grade A factories are considered the best and are only subjected to
- inspection every six to eight weeks.
-
- Those with Grade B licences are inspected every three to four weeks.
-
- Grade C premises, described as those being maintained to a standard of
- hygiene ``below acceptable levels'', are the worst and are inspected every
- two weeks.
-
- Health inspectors who raided the Dai Yick factory earlier this week were
- shocked to find flies and grease everywhere and poultry feet scattered
- around.
-
- The factory used water from a well believed to have been contaminated by
- excrement seeping from two dry toilets nearby for washing and food
- preparation.
-
- Legislator Dr Leong Che-hung, who represents the medical profession, on
- Thursday called on the councils to abolish Grade C licences.
-
- ``If that factory (Dai Yick) is our standard for a Grade C licence, I don't
- think we should have allowed them to exist at all.''
-
- Dr Leong said the two municipal councils should require all Grade C
- premises or factories to upgrade their standards.
-
- More than a quarter _ or 189 food factories out of 732 in the New
- Territories licensed by the Regional Services Department (RSD) _ are
- C-graded.
-
- In urban areas, there are 1,196 Grade C food premises and factories _ 13.1
- per cent of the 9,179 establishments.
-
- Chairman of the Regional Council's environmental hygiene select committee,
- Ting Yin-wah, said he had been pushing for abolition of Grade C food
- premises and factories for the past year.
-
- Mr Ting said the RSD should not renew the licences of these factories and
- premises once their old licences expired.
-
- But he said political factors had made long-term action difficult.
-
- ``In the long term, all those places with a Grade C licence should be
- closed down. But it will take a year for the law to be amended and public
- consultations held, as well as for the premises and factories to upgrade
- their standards.''
-
- Mr Ting said the committee had pressed the RSD to disclose the list of all
- Grade C food premises and factories so councillors could conduct spot
- checks.
-
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 16:01:28 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (HK) Factory `conformed' to top-level standards
- Message-ID: <199705160801.QAA29061@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >Hong Kong Standard
- 16 May 97
- Factory `conformed' to top-level standards
- By Jimmy Cheung
-
- PRELIMINARY inspections by Regional Services Department officials on the
- second food factory tipped as a possible cholera source found no evidence
- of sub-standard hygiene, although workers admitted well and tap water in
- the premises had been mixed at one time.
-
- RSD superintendent (environmental health) Law Kai-chung on Thursday said
- hygiene at the Dor Bo Food Factory in Tuen Mun was good.
-
- ``The freezer and hygiene are in good order. Preliminary evidence suggests
- that the factory has kept a certain level of maintenance,'' he said after
- visiting the factory with regional councillors Chan Shu-ying and Cheung
- Yuet-lan.
-
- The inspection followed an announcement by Director of Health Margaret Chan
- Fung Fu-chun that information given by cholera victims had suggested the
- factory could be the second source of the disease after the Dai Yick food
- factory in Yuen Long.
-
- The Dor Bo factory suspended operations and destroyed more than two tonnes
- of fried chicken and duck feet _ favourite snacks in the territory _ after
- a raid by the Health and Regional Services departments on Wednesday.
-
- Dr Chan said tap and well water had been mixed, which could cause
- contamination.
-
- But Mr Law said he found no evidence that tap water had been mixed with
- well water.
-
- He said the factory's hygiene had been ranked Category A, the highest, and
- it had a good record.
-
- A worker at the factory, who gave his name only as Mr Chan, said well and
- tap water had gone into the same water supply in the past. But, he said,
- the two water sources had been separated and well water was being used only
- for cleaning the floor.
-
- ``I firmly believe that our food is cholera-free and everything here
- absolutely conforms to government hygiene standards,'' Mr Chan said.
-
- But he barred reporters from entering the factory. A television news crew
- complained that its video tape had been damaged by workers as they followed
- officials inside the factory.
-
- Health officials said a warning requiring immediate disinfection of the
- well had been issued and no operations would be allowed pending tests.
-
- Officials laid charges against the factory on Wednesday after discovering
- its walls were dirty.
-
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 16:01:33 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (HK) Inspection team probe call
- Message-ID: <199705160801.QAA05488@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >Hong Kong Standard
- 16 May 97
- Inspection team probe call
- By Cynthia Wan
-
-
- AN Urban Councillor is urging an investigation into health inspectors
- responsible for Category C food outlets, as the Regional Services
- Department launched an internal investigation into the effectiveness of
- periodic inspections of food outlets.
-
- The department would look into the effectiveness of inspections and the
- performance of health inspectors, Assistant Director of Regional Services
- Lai Kwok-tung said on Thursday at a special meeting of the council's
- environmental health select committee on the cholera scare.
-
- Councillor Wong Kwok-hing said the RSD should also look into possible
- corruption.
-
- He urged the department to probe inspectors responsible for visiting
- Category C food factories.
-
- Referring to the Dai Yick outlet he said: ``I can't imagine a food factory
- can produce food in such a terrible condition where all the tools and
- equipment are stained and filthy. Why, according to their (health
- inspectors) professional knowledge, these obvious violations are
- acceptable?''
-
- Members of the two municipal councils assailed health inspectors for
- turning a blind eye to filthy conditions in some food-processing centres.
-
- Regional Councillor Thomas Pang Cheung-wai said individual inspectors might
- not be serious enough in carrying out their tasks.
-
- ``After so many inspections on the (Dai Yick) food factory there have been
- few prosecutions and no improvement,'' he said.
-
- There are about 200 health inspectors carrying out regular and spot checks
- on food premises across the territory.
-
- There are now 20 Category C food production plants under the USD and 189
- under the RSD.
-
- Food premises are inspected every two to eight weeks according to their
- different classifications.
-
- The two councils also urged the prosecution of sub-standard food production
- plants and the imposition of heavier penalties.
-
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 16:01:43 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Whaling station profitable
- Message-ID: <199705160801.QAA07261@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >South China Morning Post
- Internet Edition
- 16 May 97
- Having a whale of a time
- EDWARD PETERS
-
- Fifteen years ago shrimp fisherman Jamie Bray sat on the dock at Tofino, on
- the west coast of Vancouver Island, and contemplated a bleak future.
-
- Debarred from the profession he had followed since leaving school by
- stringent new government quotas, he had only a boat and the sea as his
- assets and scant idea of what to do with them.
-
- "There are some hot springs nearby and I thought I might be able to take
- people out there, but then I met another fishing guy, and he said that's
- what he was doing," said Mr Bray.
-
- "Then he said 'I saw a coupla whales when I was out there today, why don't
- you try that?'."
-
- Back in 1982 tourists were few and far between in Tofino, still very much a
- one-shrimp town.
-
- But with no alternative Mr Bray set up his fledgling whaling station, and
- scouted for business round the local motels, whose managers could barely
- hide their amazement that anybody would pay to go look at a fish.
-
- "But when I got back from my first trip there was a line of guys on the
- dock all wanting to come out with me," reported Mr Bray.
-
- Nowadays Jamie's Whaling Station has expanded to include a fleet of three
- regular vessels and three inflatables - Ocean Thunder, Pacific Lightning and
- Devilfish - and there's also Jamie's Whaling Station Gift Shop.
-
- He runs harbour jaunts ("an adventure unto themselves") fishing trips and
- tours to the hot springs, as an influx of visitors to the nearby Pacific Rim
- National Park has ensured there is a good supply of tourist dollars to go
- round all Tofino's former fishermen.
-
- But of all his excursions, it is Jamie's Whale Watching that pulls in
- sightseers from all over.
-
- From March onwards, 20,000 or more Grey whales cruise past Tofino on their
- annual northern migration, completing an 8,000-kilometre route that starts
- in Baja, Mexico, where they mate and subsequently calve after 13 months'
- gestation, and up to the Bering and Chukchi Seas off Siberia.
-
- By the beginning of May the cavalcade of leviathans has passed, but up to a
- dozen stick around in the Clayquot Sound off Tofino, moving from bay to bay,
- browsing on the two tonnes of small crustaceans and tubeworms they consume
- each day.
-
- "There was one baby whale that got so used to us coming by it used to
- wriggle along under the boat, so everybody used to rush up to the bow to see
- him come up," said Mr Bray.
-
- "Then he'd exhale and it would go all over everybody. It used to stink like
- hell but they all loved it like it was a baptism or something."
-
- Getting decidedly close to nature is the major attraction of whale
- watching, and there is little to compare with the earthy pleasure of
- chugging along on the open sea amid a school of 15-metre long, 40-tonne
- whales as they dive 50 metres to feed off the bottom, then rise and break
- the surface like prehistoric submarines.
-
- Gargantuan yet somehow gentle, performing like hired hands for Jamie's
- Whaling Station yet utterly elemental and wild.
-
- Not everybody who antes up the C$70 fee (about HK$400) is entirely wild
- about the idea though. "There was this guy who used to bring me groups from
- mainland China," said Mr Bray.
-
- "He used to ship them in on a bus and put 'em on the boat, and they'd be
- huddled up down below being seasick while he was on deck yelling and all
- gung ho.
-
- "I think the only bit they enjoyed was getting a certificate to say they'd
- done it when they got back on dry land.
-
- "After a few times I called up to say I liked the revenue but I just didn't
- want to run those sorts of tours anymore. They weren't enjoying it and I
- wasn't enjoying it either."
-
- But the vast majority of whale watchers, from Asia, Europe and the United
- States, come away thrilled and so just about everyone is a winner.
-
- Mr Bray guarantees sightings and anybody who is out of luck is given a
- voucher - valid for 100 years - for another trip.
-
- All fares are subject to a $2 surcharge that is donated to research on
- whales and wildlife rehabilitation. And Mr Bray himself is not too unhappy.
-
- "My pleasure comes from taking people out and showing them the whales. I
- hurt my back fishing so I'm able to take it easier now.
-
- "In fact, I guess the government did me a favour when they put me out of
- business."
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 16:02:01 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (LK) Society to rescue cattle from slaughter
- Message-ID: <199705160802.QAA08776@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >Daily News
- Friday 16, May 1997
- Society to rescue cattle from slaughter
-
- THE Kandy Humanitarian Society has launched a program to mark the
- ``wesak week'' by rescuing as many head of cattle as possible from
- slaughter houses in and around Kandy.
-
- The Society says, that it has already rescued 220 heads of cattle and
- have handed them over to caretakers who are expected to liaise with
- the society.
-
- The Society has also drawn up a program to encourage unemployed youth
- to take to dairy farming. They are given the cattle free. They are
- provided with facilities and the knowhow in dairy farming and are
- encouraged in home gardening where the inputs would be compost manure
- from the cattle shed
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 16:02:11 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (MY) Apes Spared
- Message-ID: <199705160802.QAA06945@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >The Straits Times
- MAY 16 1997
- MALAYSIA FILE
-
-
- APES SPARED: Hundreds of monkeys at the Terendak Camp in Sungai
- Udang, Malacca, would be spared the firing squad, The Star
- reported yesterday. The army has decided not to shoot them as
- they have become an attraction for visitors and patients at the
- army hospital. A senior officer was quoted as saying that the
- animals had also speeded up the recovery rate of patients,
- especially children.
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 16:02:06 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (LK) Tanneries' environmental cost
- Message-ID: <199705160802.QAA08377@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >Daily News
- Friday 16, May 1997
- Re-locating tanneries in Bata-Ata by compromising bio-diversity
- By Tharika Goonathilake
-
-
- The first rays of the rising sun quietly appeared in the distant horizon as
- the last stars of dawn slipped gracefully away. And, in the rising light
- the Kalametiya lagoon shone in all its glory. Bathing the sea and
- mangrove-skirted lagoon in the morning light.
-
- Situated on the south-eastern coast, between the town of Tangalle and Yala
- National Park the Kalametiyava lagoon is rather isolated and this accounts
- for its rare beauty and rich bio-diversity.
-
- The area is also a haven for wildlife, particulary for a number of rare
- birds which has led to the site gaining fame as a wetland of a very special
- ecological interest to Sri Lanka. Infact, it is currently a bird sanctuary.
-
- But, many people fear that the move to relocate the main tanneries from
- Colombo to Bata-Ata in close proximity to the Kalametiya lagoon will
- threaten the very ecosystem which sustains the livelihood of these fishing
- communities and pose a serious threat to the environment.
-
- In Sri Lanka, over 13 tanneries manufacture leather from raw hide. All of
- them are located in the Colombo and the Gampaha districts but due to the
- severe environmental problems and numerous protests by people living in the
- vicinity of these tanneries, plans are under way to relocate all these
- industries in Bata-Ata.
-
- The move aimed at tackling the problems of pollution through the
- establishment of a main treatment plant while ensuring the productivity of
- these industries by bringing them to one location under the guidance of the
- Ministry of Industrial Development is no doubt commendable.
-
- But, what most environmentalists fear is that the consequences of bringing
- these industries to a rich ecological site like Bata-Ata may be
- counter-productive since tanneries produce large amounts of highly toxic
- and polluting waste products.
-
- Villagers say that the environmental impacts notably pollution could
- destroy the lagoon and the sea around it taking away the main resource on
- which their livelihood depend.
-
- Though on the positive side it must be said that relocation of such a large
- industry in Bata-Ata could boost local employment and give a strong input
- to infrastructual investments.
-
- The Mihikatha Institute, one of the main environmental lobby groups
- protesting against the move, is of the view that certain conditions that
- should be adhered to before the establishment of such a high polluting
- industry has not been taken into consideration by the Central Environment
- Authority (CEA) when granting approval.
-
- ``The CEA has issued the necessary licence known as EPL (Environmental
- Protection Licence) to these tannery industrialists without proper
- investigations, violating conditions laid down in the licence itself,''.
-
- According to an official of the Mihikatha Institute, the shortcomings in
- the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) report conducted by these
- industrialists has not been taken note of.
-
- The CEA instead had issued the licence (EIA) putting down the
- `shortcomings' as certain `conditions' that have to be adhered to before
- they commence their industrial activities in Bata- Ata.
-
- ``They have issued the licence in spite of the EPL not being completed.
- This is a violation of the Environmental Act itself'' an official of the
- Mihikatha Institute said.
-
- The Institute also points out that measures introduced in the EIA to tackle
- pollution are not sufficient. Especially since chromium used in the tannery
- process is highly dangerous and is known to increase the risk of lung
- cancer and other harmful skin diseases.
-
- Though measures such as planting a large number of trees around the
- industrial site (to minimise the release of putrid emissions) and the
- establishment of a large scale central treatment plant to purify the
- tannery water before being released to the sea are cited as methods that
- will be adopted by these industrialists to address problems of pollution,
- officials of the Mihikatha Institute and the majority of the villagers
- believe otherwise.
-
- People in the area also argue that the emissions from raw hide storage and
- the production processes, may release unbearable odours.
-
- According to villagers numerous requests and representations had been made
- to certain authorities to consider the establishment of a salt factory in
- Bata-Ata since there are many salterns in the area but unfortunately no one
- has been interested in exploring this possibility.
-
- Meanwhile an official representing these industrialists when contacted by
- the `Daily News' said that most of these allegations were unfounded.
-
- ``We have taken note of all these problems and every effort will be taken
- to minimise the risk to the environment. These industries undoubtedly
- generate a lot of pollution but we have mentioned the measures that will be
- taken to redress these problems.
-
- These are high income generating industries and they bring in a lot of
- foreign exchange as well as provide employment to a large number of people.
- These environmentalists are blowing things out of proportion,''he said.
-
- What ever the arguments one thing is clear. Development is necessary and so
- is the environment. If a conflict arises between these `champions of
- nature' and the `champions of development', those who are affected are
- undoubtedly the people. So the solution lies in compromising and not losing
- one at the expense of the other.
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 04:05:26 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: Pat Fish <pfish@fang.cs.sunyit.edu>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Farmers Charged for Starvation (US NY)
- Message-ID: <Pine.BSF.3.95.970516040448.10967M-100000@fang.cs.sunyit.edu>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
-
- Farmers Leave Cows and Pig to Starve, Wander
- by Patrick Fish
-
- WEST TURIN, NY-- May 10 1997 State Police in Lowville discovered
- approximately 30 cows wandering along Highmarket Road. A check of the
- barn revealed 8 dead and decaying cows and one dead pig.
-
- Police discovered that the owner of the farm, Gilbert Young, 55, of
- Ringwood NJ had hired Patrick Schoff, 48, of West Road in Constableville,
- NY, to act as caretaker for the farm. Young had previously lived on
- Highmarket Rd.
-
- A day later, each man was charged with allowing bulls to run at large,
- and nine counts of failing to provide proper sustenance, all of which
- are only misdemeanors under the NYS Agriculture and Markets Law.
- No other charges of cruelty were filed against the men.
-
- The case will be handled by the Lewis County DA's office. Calls for a
- tough prosecution of this case should be directed to DA James P. O'Rourke
- (315-376-5390, Fax=315-376-5390).
-
- Chances for justice are low, as a year earlier, the same rural area hosted
- a school meeting featuring "Putting People First" anti-animal activist
- Kathleen Marquardt. Her campaigning helped elect LeRoy Platt, a former
- Posse Comitatus and Oneida County Patriot Society member, to the local
- school board on a pro-gun, anti-animal, anti-ecology, anti-UN platform.
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 09:35:18 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: RFI: (US) Our recent encounter with an animal rights violation
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970516093515.006db60c@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- posted for--and send replies to--dave & marie magyar <dmagyar@nni.com> :
- ------------------------------------------------
-
- My husband and I were recently involved in a criminal court proceeding
- regarding a grotesque animal rights violation that we unfortunately
- witnessed on Trick or Treat Day 1996. The witness testimony and evidence
- collected were enough to have the man brought to trial but unfortunately
- his defense lawyer demanded an exhumation of the cat that the defendants'
- friends refused (he mutilated his friend's cat). Thus, the charges were
- plea bargained down to criminal mischief and the charge of animal cruelty
- was dropped although it was clear from the evidence that this man committed
- a most heinous crime and his only saving grace was a very wise defense
- attorney. During this entire period, my family has been subjected to
- humiliating stares, nightmares, and break-ins on our automobiles.
-
- It has been very clear to both of us that this man is a butcher with
- absolutely no remorse and obviously his friends agree with this lecherous
- behavior because he continues to visit them regularly. We truly believe in
- "what comes around goes around," but it is very difficult for us to accept
- that we were dragged into this, having no choice, and we were then cheated
- out of justice.
-
- Is there a possibility for civil litigation in this case? Can we have this
- man held responsible for his heinous actions? Can you help us? Is there
- someone that you know of that can help us receive some type of justice from
- this mess?
-
- Thank you so much for taking the time out to read this. We very much
- appreciate all of your consideration and time.
-
- Thank you,
-
- David & Marie Magyar
- 1138 Furnace Street
- Hellertown, PA 18055
- phone#: 610.838.7057
- e-mail: dmagyar@nni.com
-
- (please note that you can obtain the full story of this incident at
- <http://www.magyars.com/pages/dave/story.html>)
-
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 08:22:25 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: bchorush@paws.org (pawsinfo)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Marineland Co-Owner Goes to Trial June 11 [CA]
- Message-ID: <199705161522.IAA04326@siskiyou.brigadoon.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- 5/15/97
-
- JOHN HOLER, CO-OWNER OF MARINELAND, NIAGARA FALLS (CANADA) ON TRIAL
- JUNE
- 11, 1997 ON CARELESS DRIVING CHARGE
-
- John Holer, one of the owners of Marineland, Niagara Falls, goes to trial
- June 11, 1997 on a careless driving charge. Mr. Holer struck Holly Penfound
- on Sept. 1, 1996 with his four-wheel drive truck while she was peacefully
- leafleting at the exit of Marineland. Ms. Penfound was participating in an
- international protest held in association with Gadfly '96 to highlight the
- suffering of whales, dolphins, bears and deer at the marine park.
-
- In a meeting held several weeks ahead of the protest, animal activists
- indicated their concern for the safety of protesters in view of John
- Holer's past threatening behaviour. In apparent recognition of this
- concern, the police indicated that they had already discussed this with
- John Holer and obtained his agreement to stay right away from protesters.
- In a discussion at that meeting regarding leafleting the area, the police
- and the Mayor of Niagara Falls suggested that demonstrators do so at the
- exit of the park, the very location where Ms. Penfound was standing when
- she was struck.
-
- Several Cetacean Freedom Network members witnessed the incident in which it
- was alleged that
- John Holer drove directly toward Ms. Penfound, entering the exit area
- driving the wrong direction. Although Ms. Penfound was able to jump to one
- side, she was still struck in the shoulder by the mirror of Mr. Holer's
- vehicle. Ms. Penfound was taken to the hospital by ambulance, and later
- released -- shaken up, but fortunately, without suffering serous bodily harm.
-
- A criminal investigation was launched by Niagara Regional Police a week
- after the incident with much urging from Holly Penfound, two lawyers who
- are assisting her (Lesli Bisgould and Jeff House) and dozens of Cetacean
- Freedom Network
- members. Numerous letters of complaint were sent to the Niagara police,
- Canadian politicians, and Canadian embassies and tourism agencies in other
- countries regarding the sharp treatment of protesters by police on Sept. 1,
- including the arrests of Ben White, Steve Hindi, Janet Allan, Mark McAlpine
- and Wayne Mercier. This contrasted with the way the police dealt with John
- Holer and his security staff, including the failure of the police to
- protect protesters from Mr. Holer, and to hold him immediately accountable
- for his actions.
-
- To illustrate, Steve Hindi was arrested within a short time following an
- incident the day of the Marineland protest in which a security guard
- alleged that Mr. Hindi spat on him (a charge of which he was recently
- acquitted). Yet the police took several weeks to lay a charge against John
- Holer. At that, the accused was charged for the less severe offence of
- careless driving, rather than the criminal charge of dangerous driving. The
- latter would have incorporated the element of deliberate intent on the part
- of Mr. Holer.
-
- Holly Penfound and the two organizations which she represents -- Zoocheck
- Canada and the Canadian Federation of Humane Societies -- would like to
- express their sincere appreciation for the concern shown by Cetacean Freedom
- Network members
- regarding the John Holer incident, as well as ongoing support for the local
- campaign to end the suffering of the whales, dolphins, bears, deer and
- other animals kept at Marineland, Niagara Falls. Thank you.
-
-
- 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
-
-
-
-
-
- Bob Chorush Web Administrator, Progressive Animal Welfare Society (PAWS)
- 15305 44th Ave West (P.O. Box 1037)Lynnwood, WA 98046 (425) 787-2500 ext
- 862, (425) 742-5711 fax
- email bchorush@paws.org http://www.paws.org
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 11:32:00 -0400
- >From: "radioactive" <radioactive@bellsouth.net>
- To: "Animal Rights" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: AIRCRAFT SPREAD DEADLY VIRUSES
- Message-ID: <199705161533.LAA15287@mail.mia.bellsouth.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain;
- charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Aircraft spread deadly viruses, report says
-
-
- LONDON (Reuter) - Aircraft could be spreading dangerous
- viruses around the world in the sewage from on-board toilets,
- U.S. researchers reported.
- Researchers who took samples of the waste pumped from
- commercial aircraft were horrified to discover that nearly half
- contained infectious viruses that survived the chemicals in the
- sewage tanks, New Scientist magazine said Thursday.
- ``It was a bit of a jolt for us,'' the magazine quoted Mark
- Sobsey, an environmental scientist at the University of North
- Carolina, as telling a meeting of the American Society for
- Microbiology in Miami Beach.
- Sobsey's group had been asked by the World Health
- Organization and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control to look
- for viruses in aircraft heads. They did not find polio, to their
- relief.
- But they did find enteroviruses that cause stomach upset and
- fever.
- ``The range of illnesses that can be transmitted by the
- world's airlines is quite worrisome,'' Sobsey said. He was
- concerned hepatitis viruses could be spread in this way, as well
- as bacteria and parasites.
- Sobsey said airline waste in the United States was treated
- in commercial sewage plants, which do not always kill all types
- of virus.
- ``That means one to 10 percent of the viruses survive and
- are discharged into the environment,'' he said. ``We think
- there's a risk.''
- He suggested adding stronger chemicals to all aircraft
- toilets.
- ^REUTER@
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 11:33:51 -0400
- >From: "radioactive" <radioactive@bellsouth.net>
- To: "Animal Rights" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: CHOLERA, DEADLY BACTERIA MAKE HK WATCH WHAT IT EATS
- Message-ID: <199705161536.LAA15802@mail.mia.bellsouth.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain;
- charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Cholera, deadly bacteria make HK watch what it eats
-
-
- (Recasts, adds details of other disease outbreaks)
- By John O'Callaghan
- HONG KONG, May 15 (Reuter) - With a restaurant, noodle shop
- or market on every corner, Hong Kong clearly loves its food.
- But an outbreak of cholera in chicken feet and deadly E.coli
- bacteria in beef has caused a scare and is making people more
- careful about what they eat, doctors and health officials said.
- Cholera has sent eight people to hospital in the past week.
- A government spokesman said on Thursday that health
- authorities would launch a sweep on hundreds of food factories
- following the cholera outbreak.
- Health officials traced the disease to batches of chicken
- and duck feet -- favourite snacks in the territory -- produced
- by a factory where sewage from the staff toilets had leaked into
- well water used to process the food.
- Health inspectors seized 4,500 kg (9,900 lb) of poultry feet
- from the fly-infested factory on Wednesday and ordered it to
- disinfect the well.
- The penalties don't seem to deter offenders in Hong Kong.
- The factory had been prosecuted four times for violating hygiene
- standards and faced fines of HK$350 to HK$1,000 (US$45 to $130).
- Another processed food factory suspected of supplying
- cholera-laced chicken and duck feet was ordered to suspend
- production on Thursday.
- Health officials have warned Hong Kong's 6.4 million
- residents to either dump poultry feet they bought or cook them
- thoroughly.
- But a local newspaper said checking the factories was not
- enough.
- ``The real problem is the disclosure of the unwholesome
- procedures followed by at least some local suppliers, and by the
- way they have been able to go on operating,'' the South China
- Morning Post newspaper said in an editorial on Thursday.
- ``It is, for example, deeply worrying to learn that a shop
- where the deadly E.coli bacteria has been found twice in two
- months can go on trading, even though it has been prosecuted
- nine times in the past.''
- The shop in question, a wholesale butcher's, was also the
- source of meat contaminated with the deadly O-157 strain of
- E.coli that was sold at an upmarket Yoahan department store in
- March.
- The strain was blamed for the deaths of at least 11 people
- in Japan and 20 in Scotland earlier this year.
- Another butcher shop in the same area was also found to be
- selling contaminated meat. Both shops have had their stock
- confiscated but no other action has been taken.
- The health department warned on Thursday that about 300 kg
- (660 lb) of beef tainted with E.coli has been on sale for
- several days.
- Hong Kong has rules on food preparation but health officials
- must ensure offending factories and butcher shops follow the
- regulations, Dr Lee Kin-hung, president of the Hong Kong Medical
- Association told Reuters.
- ``I'm sure the Urban Services department have their eyes
- wide open now and it depends on what follow-up actions they are
- going to take,'' Lee said.
- ``The rules are there but it's how frequently you inspect
- the place and how diligently you proceed with prosecution.''
- ^REUTER@
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 08:51:31 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: Mike Markarian <MikeM@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Singapore cats
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19970516114959.2b8ff8e6@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- I thought the list may be interested in these web sites. -- Mike
-
- >Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 13:20:51 +0800
- >From: Janalee <janalee@pacific.net.sg>
- >Organization: Expats For Cats
- >To: fund4animals@fund.org
- >
- >Hello, what a wonderful organization! I am sure there are more urgent
- >animal causes than mine, but I'm hoping to do something about this
- >situation before it becomes an emergency. If you wouldn't mind taking a
- >look at my site and seeing if it could fit into your page somewhere, I'd
- >really appreciate it. I am trying to do something about the stray cat
- >situation in Singapore. I have two web sites, one for letters to the PM
- >and one to help the cats. They are listed below. Thank you very much
- >for your time.
- >
- >Janalee
- >--
- >http://www.best.com/~mtyler/expats.htm Expats For Cats
- >http://www.wnm.net/~jana/cats.html -- Singapore Cats Need Help
- >"How we behave toward cats here below determines our status in heaven."
- > -Robert A. Heinlein
- >
- >
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 12:12:19 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: PrairieD@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Fwd: FOUR MORE CALIFORNIA CONDORS RELEASED
- Message-ID: <970516121206_1089632148@emout15.mail.aol.com>
-
- >From U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service:
-
- ---------------------
- Forwarded message:
- >From:mitch_snow@mail.fws.gov (Mitch Snow)
- Sender:owner-fws-news@dataadmin.irm.r9.fws.gov
- Reply-to:fws-news@dataadmin.irm.r9.fws.gov
- To:fws-news@dataadmin.irm.r9.fws.gov
- Date: 97-05-15 14:26:06 EDT
-
- This message is from the fws-news listserver. Please DO NOT
- REPLY (it just confuses the computers).
-
- Subscribers can't reply or send their own messages to the
- fws-news listserver. This listserver is designed mainly as a
- "one way street" for the rapid dissemination of information
- concerning the Service and its activities, rather than for
- gathering feedback. To contact us, see the explanatory note
- at bottom of the message.
- ============================================================
- Jeff Cilek or Bill Heinrich, The Peregrine Fund 208/362-3716
- Jeff Humphrey, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 602/640-2720
- Tom Bauer, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 505/248-6911
- Rory Aikens, Arizona Game and Fish Department 602/789-3214
- Mike Small, Bureau of Land Management 801/628-4491
-
- May 14, 1997
-
- FOUR MORE CALIFORNIA CONDORS RELEASED
- -JOIN SPECIES' RECOVERY EFFORT OVER SOUTHWEST CANYONS-
-
- Four of the nine California condors being held atop the 1000-foot
- Vermilion
- Cliffs north of the Grand Canyon were released this morning. At 7:00 a.m.,
- Peregrine Fund biologists lifted the door of the condor pen and the birds
- cautiously hopped from their shelter and onto the lip of the cliff. As the
- last
- bird emerged, all four unfolded their 9-foot wings to initiate their maiden
- flights. Peregrine Fund biologists, Mark Vekasy and Shawn Farry, reported
- that
- the "the four made a number of short flights and are now perched on the talus
-
- slope near the base of the cliff."
-
- The nine condors have been held in a netted adjustment pen since shortly
-
- after they were transported from the Los Angeles Zoo to the Bureau of Land
- Management administered cliff site on April 29, 1997. The four most
- subordinate
- condors were selected for release today with the hope that they will
- socialize
- more easily with the existing birds. The remaining captive birds will be
- released after biologists evaluate their behavior, weather conditions and the
-
- results of today's release.
-
- The two-year old condors are the oldest to be released in the wild.
- Since
- older, more mature birds could immediately soar greater distances than their
- younger counterparts did when released last December, biologists chose to
- release them in small batches. "By releasing these birds a few at a time, it
-
- will give them the opportunity to gradually assimilate with the existing
- population. The younger condors have performed well since their release last
-
- December; these older birds could learn much from the existing birds as the
- two
- groups begin to socialize" said Bill Heinrich, Species Restoration Manager of
-
- The Peregrine Fund. The Peregrine Fund is a non-profit conservation
- organization conducting the release in northern Arizona.
-
- Since December, the five original condors have greatly extended their
- range. They have soared below the north rim of the Grand Canyon and been
- spotted over Lake Powell and Page, Arizona. Each of the five condors
- regularly
- returns to the Vermilion Cliffs and has inspected the new arrivals.
- Researchers
- will continue to monitor the condors' movements and study how the groups
- interact and assimilate.
-
- ###
-
-
- (EDITORS: An uncertain release schedule prevents program biologists from
- offering media coverage of this release. File photographs are available from
-
- the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service or by accessing The Peregrine Fund's
- website
- at www.peregrinefund.org.)
-
-
- Condors Released May 14, 1997 at Vermilion Cliffs
-
- Tag NumberSexHatch DateHatch Location
- #16Male4/13/95San Diego Wild Animal Park
- #19Female4/17/95San Diego Wild Animal Park
- #27Female2/2/95San Diego Wild Animal Park
- #28Female2/21/95The Los Angeles Zoo*
-
- *All birds were held at the Los Angeles Zoo facility prior to being
- transported
- to the Vermilion Cliffs
-
-
- ===========================================================
- News releases are also available on the World Wide Web at
- http://www.fws.gov/~r9extaff/pubaff.html They can be reviewed in
- chronological order or searched by keyword.
-
- Questions concerning a particular news release or item of
- information should be directed to the person listed as the
- contact. General comments or observations concerning the
- content of the information should be directed to Craig
- Rieben (craig_rieben@mail.fws.gov) in the Office of Public
- Affairs.
-
- ============================================================
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-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 12:47:05 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: JanaWilson@aol.com
- To: Ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Okla.City Shelter Emergency Adoption Event
- Message-ID: <970516124337_335658921@emout06.mail.aol.com>
-
-
- There's no room to grow at the Oklahoma City Animal Shelter,
- so an emergency "Save A Pet" adoption is planned this saturday.
- Dogs of all ages, breeds and sizes will be available from noon to
- 4 pm in the parking lot of Jumbo Sports South, 7202 S. Interstate 35.
- Cats will not be taken to the site, but many can be seen at the
- shelter, 2811 SE 29th. Shelter hours are noon to 5:45 pm tuesday
- thru saturday.
- A/w a spokesperson, "There are just swamped with all kinds of
- puppies and kittens."
- Shelter veterinarian Sally Ryan said about 90 animals are ready for
- adoption. The crowded conditions only allow space for about half
- the number of newly acquired dogs and cats. "What that means
- is we're having to euthanize more animals that might be good
- adoption candidates."
- Ryan said adoptions have been down, as the shelter's population
- has increased. In April, 187 animals found new homes, yet
- 1,214, including 227 sick or injured, came into the shelter. In
- comparison, 870 animals were brought in during April 1996.
- One reason the total number increased this year may be
- tranquilizers are being used to capture some evasive strays.
- She also said that officials are working to bring in more potential
- adopters. A $1 million three-phase renovation project is under way.
- The fee for adopting a dog is $57 and for a cat, $50. All available
- animals have received a health check, including a spay or
- neuter operation. Anyone 60 or older pays $27 to take home
- any animal.
-
- For the Animals,
-
- Jana, OKC
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 14:07:49 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Admin Note--Subscription Options
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970516140747.006d8924@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- routine posting............
-
- Here are some items of general information (found in the "welcome letter"
- sent when people subscribe--but often lose!)...included: how to post and
- how to change your subscription status (useful if you are going on
- vacation--either by "unsubscribe" or "postpone").
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
- To post messages to the list, send mail to ar-news@envirolink.org
- POSTING
-
- To post a *news-related item* (no discussions), send your message to:
-
- ar-news@envirolink.org
-
- Appropriate postings to AR-News include: posting a news item, requesting
- information on some event, or responding to a request for information.
- Discussions on AR-News will NOT be allowed and we ask that any
- commentary either be taken to AR-Views or to private E-mail.
- ------------------------------------------
-
- ***General Subscription Information***
- ALL THE FOLLOWING SHOULD NOT be sent to ar-news !!!
- (send them to listproc@envirolink.org)
- For all commands, use a blank Subject line.
- ---------------------------------------------------
-
- To request a digest version, send mail to listproc@envirolink.org
- with the following single line:
-
- set ar-news mail digest
-
- To switch back to immediate mail, and to get copies of *your* postings
- also, send the following command:
-
- set ar-news mail ack
-
- or the following to not get your own postings:
-
- set ar-news mail noack
-
- To see how you are set up ***(and to see if you are still subscribed!)***, use
-
- set ar-news
-
- To temporarily stop mailings, use:
-
- set ar-news mail postpone
-
- To re-enable it, use ack, noack, or digest as above.
-
- To unsubscribe, use:
-
- unsubscribe ar-news
-
- or:
-
- signoff ar-news
-
- If you have to subscribe again, use:
-
- subscribe ar-news first_name last_name (use false name if you want!)
-
- If you have problems, please contact:
-
- Allen Schubert
- alathome@clark.net
-
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 10:44:51 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: Mike Markarian <MikeM@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Dick Randall
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19970516134323.49675060@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- I read today with sadness that Dick Randall has passed away at the age of
- 72. Dick was an Animal Damage Control trapper and aerial gunner until he
- quit in 1971, and devoted the rest of his life to exposing the cruelty of
- the agency. His grisly photographs of trapped coyotes and skinned foxes have
- been used by nearly every animal group that fights trapping. Dick testified
- before Congress numerous times about the cruelty and nonselectivity of the
- steel-jaw leghold trap. His efforts will be sorely missed.
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 11:50:32 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: bchorush@paws.org (pawsinfo)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Miami Seaquarium Dolphin Birth/Death - Info Requested
- Message-ID: <199705161850.LAA29992@siskiyou.brigadoon.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Miami Seaquarium Dolphin Birth/Death - Info Requested
-
- The following appeared in the Miami Seaquarium newsletter Winter 1996/1997
- Edition:
-
- ***********
-
- In the pre-dawn hours of Friday October 25th, Miami Seaquarium welcomed the
- birth of a male Atlantic bottlenose dolphin (scientific name: Tursiops
- truncatus) at the Top Deck Dolphin Stadium. BeBe, one of the original stars
- of the Flipper television series filmed at the Miami Seaquarium is the mother.
-
- "Both the calf and mother appear to be doing great," said Michael Renner,
- chief veterinarian at Miami Seaquarium. "BeBe is an experienced mother and
- she is taking excellent care of her baby."
-
- When dolphin calves are born they weigh about 25 to 40 pounds and are about
- four feet in length. They are born underwater and are immediately assisted
- to the surface for their first breath of air. The mother will nurse her calf
- for 12 to 18 months.
-
- Nursing is done underwater. It only takes place for a few seconds at a time
- but is repeated often. Within three moths, the mother will begin sharing
- solid foods with her calf. At Miami Seaquarium calves will usually begin
- taking food from trainers within six months.
-
- This is BeBe's eight calf. BeBe, who is 40 year sold, was the second dolphin
- born at Miami Seaquarium. Twelve of the 19 dolphins at Miami Seaquarium were
- born at the park.
-
- BeBe and her calf can be seen at the Top Deck Stadium from 9:30 a.m. to 6
- p.m. daily.
-
- ********
-
- BeBe died about two weeks ago. Radio news reports originating from the Miami
- Seaquarium stated the cause of death to be "old age"; not very likely for a
- nursing mother mammal.
-
- What has happened to her 7 month old calf, which MSQ says should be nursing
- for an additional 5-11 months?
-
- Does anyone have detailed information re. BeBe? Necropsy reports? Veterinary
- inspections?
-
- This death certainly seems to belie MSQ vet's opinion that "Both the calf
- and mother appear to be doing great."
-
- If you have information or details re BeBe or her newborn male calf, please
- contact the sender at bchorush@paws.org
-
-
- Bob Chorush Web Administrator, Progressive Animal Welfare Society (PAWS)
- 15305 44th Ave West (P.O. Box 1037)Lynnwood, WA 98046 (425) 787-2500 ext
- 862, (425) 742-5711 fax
- email bchorush@paws.org http://www.paws.org
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 15:13:11 GMT
- >From: NAVS <navs@miint.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Intel Endorses Animal Cruelty at Science Fair
- Message-ID: <199705161513.PAA25438@spear.miint.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- National Anti-Vivisection Society
- Contact: Marcia Kramer
- 1-800-888-NAVS
- e-mail: navs@navs.org
-
-
- News Release: May 15, 1997
-
- Hi-Tech Giant Endorses Animal Cruelty
-
- Intel Corporation, the Santa Clara, California-based producer of high-tech
- computer chips, has become the sponsoring organization of the largest
- science fair
- competition that continues to award prizes to high school students who
- perform painful
- and cruel experiments on live animals. The International Science and
- Engineering Fair
- (ISEF), which is being held this year in Louisville, Kentucky, is now called
- the "Intel
- ISEF," with Intel awarding three scholarship prizes of $40,000 each to top
- student
- projects.
- Despite the widespread acceptance of humane standards for science fair
- projects,
- developed and endorsed by Westinghouse, Kodak and other science fair
- sponsors, ISEF
- has refused to consider adopting standards that would stop mice, rats and
- gerbils from
- being injected with cocaine and other drugs, irradiated, subjected to
- intensified magnetic fields and being surgically mutilated. Many such
- experiments end, intentionally or unintentionally, with the death of the
- animals.
- In the past year, ISEF prizes were awarded to one student who injected rats
- with
- morphine sulphate and another who injected rats with bovine serum albumin
- solution
- (causing severe hives) and then placed them in a chamber with light and
- vibrations to test the psychological impact. With three million students
- competing in local science fairs to qualify for just over 1000 places in the
- international competition, the number of animals sacrificed in the name of
- education and science multiplies enormously. This year one project that made
- it to the final competition was studying cannibalism in starving planaria
- (earthworms), which involved both starving, then irradiating animals while
- still alive.
- With their new name sponsorship status, Intel is in a position to change the
- standards that encourage students to inflict pain and suffering on animals.
- Just as
- Westinghouse instituted guidelines 30 years ago to prevent harm to animals
- in science fair experiments, so should Intel begin taking responsibility for
- teaching school children that all life has value, and that the death of
- other creatures is not justified as a means to winning a prize.
- Let's congratulate instead the hundreds of compassionate students who choose to
- make their mark on the scientific world by exploring alternatives to animal
- experimentation.
-
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 15:22:04 -0700
- >From: Martin Acuna <hspca@neosoft.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: AA (Houston, TX) Harris Co. Animal Control sells pets for medical research
- Message-ID: <337CDE0C.19E7@neosoft.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- The Houston SPCA desperately needs you to call the Harris County
- Commissioners at 713-755-5000 and tell them you oppose the sale of pets
- from Harris County Animal Control to medical research laboratories.
- Tell the Commissioners that animal shelters should be the last humane
- refuge for stray, abandoned, or unwanted pets. Pets should be given a
- chance at life in new adoptive homes.
- Tell the commissioners that they are betraying the public's trust by
- selling pets for research, and you oppose this barbaric, primitive
- practice.
- Please attend the Harris County Commissioners court meeting on Tuesday,
- May 20, 1:45 pm at 1001 Preston. All you need to do is stand up, state
- your name and address, and tell the commissioners you oppose the sale of
- pets to medical research labs.
- Further details can be found at http://www.neosoft.com/~hspca/news.htm
- Thank you for caring
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 17:39:54 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Fwd: request for info (urgent!!)'
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970516173952.006d9938@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From private e-mail...send responses to: quazit13@webtv.net (melissa)
- -------------------------------------------------
-
- hello,
- My name is Melissa Burdick and I'm writing in request for some
- information I need. We have a project at school, a speech, and I chose
- animal rights as my topic. I was wondering if you could give me some
- information about anything that's going on somewhere in Cleveland,
- Ohio?? Also, any other information you think would be useful in a speech
- about animal rights-please e-mail to me. Thank you for your time!
-
- sincerely,
- missie
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 20:14:05 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: Debbie Leahy <DLEAHY@delphi.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Mazolla's Bear Act Returns
- Message-ID: <01IIY7IPEOG29ELQHP@delphi.com>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII
-
- MAZOLLA'S BEAR ACT RESURFACES IN MICHIGAN
-
- Last April, Mazolla and his World Animal Studios appeared at the
- Gibraltar Trade Center (GTC) in Mt. Clemens, MI with his bear
- display for photo shots with the public. The police were notified
- and confiscated the bears (one adult and one 2-1/2-month-old cub)
- because it violated local ordinances. The bears were temporarily
- housed at the Detroit Zoo.
-
- IAA just received a complaint that this pathetic bear display is
- now appearing at the GTC in Taylor, MI and Lakota the bear was
- surrounded by crowds of people for 32 hours within a three
- day period.
-
- According to GTC general manager, Jim Harget, Mazolla claimed the
- Mt. Clemens incident was completely cleared up, the Mt. Clemens
- police department offered him an apology, and accused the Detroit
- Zoo of injuring the adult bear. Mazolla also claimed to have filed
- lawsuits against the Detroit Zoo and the three officers involved in
- the arrest.
-
- Phone calls to the Detroit Zoo director, Ron Kagan, and arresting
- officer Sgt. Dan Fields, revealed Mazolla's story to be a lavish
- fairy tale.
-
- When the bears were brought to the zoo, Mazolla was disorderly and
- threatened police using the adult bear as a weapon. When police
- drew their guns in self-defense, Mazolla keeled over faking a heart
- attack and was brought to the hospital. Zoo officials found the
- 550-pound adult bear to be overweight (Mazolla feeds him forty
- loaves of bread per day). Neither bear was injured while in
- custody of the Detroit Zoo.
-
- The Mt. Clemens police department DID NOT offer an apology to
- Mazolla. Sgt. Dan Fields stated Mazolla was the "most foul-
- mouthed, abusive, arrogant, disruptive" individual he's dealt with
- in 23 years of police work. Mazolla currently has three criminal
- charges pending against him from the Mt. Clemens incident,
- including violating city ordinances and creating a disturbance.
- Witnesses also report Mazolla smacked his bear in the head. No
- lawsuits have been filed against the zoo or police.
-
- GTC's Jim Harget was not concerned that he was misinformed by
- Mazolla and intends to allow the bear exhibit to continue.
-
- IAA posted an alert in February regarding World Animal Studios
- traveling with Super Sales. Thanks to the efforts of many other
- groups, within a week Super Sales terminated its contract with
- World Animal Studios and provided IAA with written assurances that
- neither Mazolla nor World Animal Studios would have animal displays
- at any future shows it sponsored.
-
- This is a miserable life for the bears and puts the public's safety
- in jeopardy. The bears, tethered on a leash, are unmuzzled and
- have their teeth and claws. Let GTC know how you feel about their
- lack of concern for the truth, animal welfare, and public safety.
-
- Complain to:
-
- Jim Harget, general manager and Susan Lenz, owner
- Gibraltar Trade Center
- 15525 Racho
- Taylor, MI 48180
- Phone) 313/287-2000
- Fax) 313/287-8330
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- --------------
-
- Debbie Leahy
- Illinois Animal Action
- P.O. Box 507
- Warrenville, IL 60555
- 630/393-2935
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 21:01:04 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) PETA: BLOODY FUR-WEARERS "TRAPPED BY GREED" AT MACY'S
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970516210102.00695928@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from PETA web page:
- ---------------------------------
- BLOODY FUR-WEARERS "TRAPPED BY GREED" AT MACY'S
-
- Screaming "Fashion Victims" Risk Arrest to Protest Fur
-
- For Immediate Release:
- May 13, 1997
-
- Contact:
- Jason Baker 757-622-7382, ext. 490
-
- Albany, N.Y. -- Carrying a giant banner reading, "Trapped by Greed,"
- PETA members--armed
- with steel-jaw leghold traps--will protest fur at Macy's:
-
-
- Wednesday, May 14
- 12 noon
- Macy's at Crossgate Mall, south entrance
-
-
- The fur foes--some "caught" in steel traps--will dare shoppers to
- "put themselves in animals'
- shoes" before purchasing pelts.
-
- Furriers are feeling the chill of PETA's anti-fur efforts, with sales
- down by more than 50 percent
- since 1991. PETA has shown helped consumers that animals are trapped,
- drowned, or beaten to
- death in the wild, and gassed, strangled, or electrocuted on fur
- farms to make the garments.
-
- "Fur was a status symbol now it's a social liability," says PETA's
- Lisa Lange. "No matter how
- they try to spin it, furriers' profits are still half of what they
- were in the late eighties." According to a
- 1995 Associated Press poll, most Americans surveyed say killing
- animals for fur is always wrong.
-
- Broadcast-quality video footage of animals on fur farms and in traps
- is available.
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 21:04:22 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) PETA: CAVEPEOPLE WIELD CLUBS OUTSIDE MACY'S
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970516210412.00695928@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from PETA web page:
- -----------------------------------
- CAVEPEOPLE WIELD CLUBS OUTSIDE MACY'S
-
- "Neanderthals" Lead Anti-Fur Protest
-
- For Immediate Release:
- May 13, 1997
-
- Contact:
- Jason Baker 757-622-7382, ext. 490
-
-
- Boston -- Boston -- Behind a giant banner reading, "Only Cavepeople
- Wear Fur," members of
- People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA)-- wielding clubs
- and draped in animal
- skins--will exhibit their primitive apparel outside Macy's department
- store:
-
-
- Wednesday, May 14
- 12 noon to 1 p.m.
- 350 Washington St. (at Summer Street)
-
- Fur used to be the only thing to keep primitive people from freezing.
- Today's lightweight
- synthetics--like Gortex--are much more efficient at keeping people warm.
-
- PETA's Anti-Fur Campaign has kept fur sales cold by keeping consumers
- focused on the fact that
- fur-bearing animals are trapped, drowned, or beaten to death in the
- wild and gassed, strangled,
- or electrocuted on fur farms. According to a 1995 Associated Press
- poll, the majority of Americans
- surveyed believe killing animals for fur is always wrong.
-
- Fur sales have plummeted more than 50 percent over the past 10 years.
- According to Fur World,
- sales topped $2.1 billion in the late 1980s, but dropped to a flat $1
- billion last year.
-
- "Neanderthals weren't known for their fashion sense," says PETA's
- Lisa Lange. "Fur-wearers
- look just plain silly walking around in coats that belong in a
- natural history museum."
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 21:06:27 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) PETA: RUSH-HOUR COMMUTERS GET ANTI-FUR MESSAGE
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970516210625.00695928@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from PETA web page:
- ---------------------------------
- RUSH-HOUR COMMUTERS GET ANTI-FUR MESSAGE
-
- PETA's Rocky Raccoon Says: "Fur Is Dead"
-
- For Immediate Release:
- May 14, 1997
-
-
- Contact:
- Jason Baker 757-622-7382, ext. 490
-
- Salt Lake City -- Looming over morning rush-hour traffic, "Rocky
- Raccoon," PETA's 7-foot-tall
- anti-fur mascot, will unfurl a giant banner reading, "Fur Is Dead,"
- which will hang:
-
-
- Thursday, May 15
- 8 a.m. sharp
- Off of the 6400 South 20 overpass (facing east) above I-215
-
-
- Rocky's eye-opening message is to remind consumers that animals are
- trapped, drowned, or
- beaten to death in the wild, and gassed, strangled, or electrocuted
- on fur farms to make the
- garments. Furriers are feeling the chill of PETA's anti-fur efforts,
- with sales down by more than 50
- percent since 1991.
-
- "Fur was a status symbol now it's a social liability," says PETA's
- Lisa Lange. "No matter how
- they try to spin it, furriers' profits are still half of what they
- were in the late eighties." According to a
- 1995 Associated Press poll, most Americans surveyed say killing
- animals for fur is always wrong.
-
- Broadcast-quality video footage of animals on fur farms and in traps
- is available.
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 21:10:44 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) PETA: "GOLDEN GIRL" RUE McCLANAHAN:'FUR TARNISHES
- OKLAHOMA MUSEUM'
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970516211042.00695928@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from PETA web page:
- --------------------------------
- "GOLDEN GIRL" RUE McCLANAHAN:'FUR TARNISHES OKLAHOMA MUSEUM'
-
- Actress Pens Letter to Historical Society
-
-
- For Immediate Release:
- May 14, 1997
-
- Contact:
- Joey Penello 757-622-7382, ext. 372
-
- Salina, Okla. -- Oklahoma native Rue McClanahan, known as the sexy,
- stylish "Blanche" on TV's
- The Golden Girls, is speaking out against her least favorite
- accessory--fur.
-
- On behalf of PETA, the Emmy Award-winning actress has written a
- letter to the Oklahoma
- Historical Society, asking them not to proceed with plans for a "fur
- museum." She suggests "a
- less violent part of our past" be memorialized.
-
- If work on the museum continues, McClanahan would like Blake Wade,
- the society's director, to
- work "with PETA to create an exhibit that shows the animals' side of
- the story."
-
- According to McClanahan, the fur industry's use of cruel and barbaric
- leghold traps has made
- animals "the ultimate fashion victims."
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 21:13:43 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) PETA: "GILL" THE FISH URGES KIDS TO BOYCOTT FISHING
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970516211341.00695928@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from PETA web page:
- ---------------------------------
- "GILL" THE FISH URGES KIDS TO BOYCOTT FISHING
-
- PETA's "Save Our Schools" Campaign Hits Biloxi
-
-
- For Immediate Release:
- May 15, 1997
-
- Contact:
- Michael McGraw 757-622-7382, ext. 310
-
- Norfolk, Va. -- Biloxi, Miss. -- In a campaign aimed at getting kids
- to leave rods and reels behind
- as they leave for summer vacation, "Gill" the fish--PETA's
- 6-foot-tall "Save Our Schools"
- mascot--will greet students outside two Biloxi elementary schools on
- Friday, May 16:
-
- 7:30 a.m. to 8 a.m.
- Our Lady of Fatima
- Elementary, 320 Jim Money Road
- 2:40 p.m. to 3:10 p.m.
- Nativity of the Blessed Virgin
- Mary Elementary, 1046 Beach Blvd.
-
- Why the flap over fishing? Fish feel pain--they have neurochemical
- systems like humans and
- sensitive nerve endings in their lips and mouths. They begin to die
- slowly of suffocation the
- moment they are pulled out of the water. And fishing hurts other
- animals, too, like birds and otters
- who swallow hooks and plastic bait or get tangled in lost fishing line.
-
- Another reason to forgo fish? Fish are caught and killed by the
- billions for their flesh, but many of
- them exact a little revenge: According to the Centers for Disease
- Control, 80,000 people get sick
- and many die each year from eating contaminated fish. Fish flesh
- often contains toxic levels of
- mercury and PCBs--carcinogens that have been linked to many kinds of
- cancer.
-
- "Kids should be encouraged to enjoy nature without tormenting or
- killing animals," says PETA's
- Dawn Carr.
-
- Gill is encouraging kids to get hooked on harmless outdoor pastimes
- like hiking, canoeing,
- mountain-biking, snorkeling, or camping. His stop in Biloxi concludes
- a week-long tour that
- included schools in Miami; St. Petersburg, Fla.; Tallahassee, Fla.;
- and Mobile, Ala.
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 21:16:15 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) PETA: "COLUMBO" ASKS POLICE NOT TO ENLIST ELEPHANTS
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970516211613.00695928@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from PETA web page:
- -----------------------------------------
- "COLUMBO" ASKS POLICE NOT TO ENLIST ELEPHANTS
-
- For Immediate Release:
- May 15, 1997
-
- Contact:
- Joey Penello 757-622-7382, ext. 327
-
- Albuquerque, N.M. -- Peter Falk is working on a new case, and this
- one involves an unlikely
- cast of characters--the Fraternal Order of Police and circus
- elephants. On behalf of PETA, TV's
- lovable "Lieutenant Columbo" has asked his real-life counterparts to
- reject the use of elephants in
- police fundraising activities.
-
- In a letter to the national president of the Fraternal Order of
- Police, Falk notes the increasing
- number of incidents in which elephants try to escape the life of
- chains and beatings they endure in
- the circus. "You do not have to be a detective," the Emmy-winner
- writes, "to know that after years of
- confinement, chains, and beatings with bullhooks, these animals are
- naturally going to rebel."
-
- Since these incidents routinely result in death or injury to
- elephants and humans, Falk would like
- to spare the animals, the officers, and their communities the ensuing
- trauma.
-
- Falk, who reprises the role of "Columbo" in an ABC-TV movie this
- week, is a long-time animal
- rights activist. His letter to the Fraternal Order of Police follows.
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 21:18:26 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) PETA: SCHOOL PRINCIPAL THREATENS PETA MASCOT
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970516211824.00695928@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from PETA web page:
- --------------------------------
- SCHOOL PRINCIPAL THREATENS PETA MASCOT
-
- "Gill" to Get "All the Hostility" Principal Can Direct
-
- For Immediate Release:
- MAY 15, 1997
-
- Contact:
- Michael McGraw 757-622-7382, ext. 310,
- or pager 888-202-2835
-
- Mobile, Ala. -- Gill the fish--PETA's 6-foot-tall dancing mascot--and
- his human sidekick are
- making waves in Mobile today, as they visit schools asking kids not
- to fish.
-
- "They will be met with some violent parents, police, and all the
- hostility I can direct to them. ... I
- do not want them here, and you better not let them come," said
- Maryvale Elementary principal
- Joyce Hunter--in a phone message left this morning at PETA's
- headquarters in Norfolk,
- Va.--regarding Gill's visit.
-
- Gill is wrapping up a week-long tour of schools in Florida, Alabama,
- and Mississippi and has
- been warmly received by many teachers and students along the way.
-
- Why the flap over fishing? Gill wants students to know that fish feel
- pain--they have
- neurochemical systems like humans and sensitive nerve endings in
- their lips and mouths. They
- begin to die slowly of suffocation the moment they are pulled out of
- the water.
-
- "Kids should be encouraged to enjoy nature without tormenting or
- killing animals," says PETA's
- Dawn Carr.
-
- Undeterred by Principal Hunter, Gill will greet students at the
- school at 1901 N. Maryvale St., at
- 2:25 p.m. today to encourage them to get hooked on harmless outdoor
- pastimes like hiking,
- canoeing, mountain-biking, snorkeling, or camping.
- Date: Sat, 17 May 1997 10:51:51 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (HK) Shop and abattoir face E-coli charges
- Message-ID: <199705170251.KAA08925@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >South China Morning Post
- Internet Edition
- 17 May 97
- Shop and abattoir face E-coli charges
- NAOMI LEE
-
-
- An abattoir and two shops could face prosecution after an investigation
- into how beef infected with the fatal E-coli 0157:H7 bacteria came to be put
- on sale.
-
- Inspectors were collecting evidence to find out whether the two parties
- should be held responsible for the infected meat, said the Department of Health.
-
- Acting assistant director (hygiene) Dr Monica Wong Man-ha said all samples
- from the Sun Luen On shop in Western and the Hop Lee shop in Aberdeen had
- been inspected.
-
- Both shops had been found selling the infected meat this week.
-
- Samples taken from the Kennedy Town Abattoir which supplied the meat were
- also being checked.
-
- Health Department staff were now compiling a report before seeking advice
- on what legal action could be taken.
-
- Date: Sat, 17 May 1997 10:52:01 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (HK) Taskforce to overhaul surveillance of hygiene
- Message-ID: <199705170252.KAA19751@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >South China Morning Post
- Internet Edition
- 17 May 97
- Taskforce to overhaul surveillance of hygiene
- JANE MOIR and NIALL FRASER
-
-
- A taskforce has been set up to overhaul the territory's hygiene
- surveillance system - including inspections, enforcement and penalties - in
- the wake of the cholera outbreak, Governor Chris Patten announced last night.
-
- Director of Health Dr Margaret Chan Fung Fu-chun will head the taskforce,
- comprising representatives from the Urban and Regional Services, Government
- Information Services and Housing Department, which will monitor procedures
- "as a matter of urgency".
-
- "We need to look at education, we need to look at standards of inspection
- and surveillance, we need to look at enforcement and penalties, we need . .
- . to look at training," Mr Patten said.
-
- "These are not things that should happen in a city like Hong Kong and we
- must do everything we can to make certain that Hong Kong has the standards
- of food hygiene which it deserves."
-
- Yesterday, three more cholera cases were detected at hospitals and health
- authorities confirmed another suspected case. So far, nine cholera cases
- have been confirmed, including a 76-year-old man in critical condition.
- Three other people are suspected of having the disease.
-
- A spokesman from the Health and Welfare Branch said last night branch
- Secretary Katherine Fok Lo Shiu-ching would report regularly to the Governor
- on the taskforce's work.
-
- The body, which has already met to discuss handling of the cholera
- outbreak, will investigate hygiene laws and standards, methods of
- surveillance and inspections, and the penalty system.
-
- Legislators, regional councillors and health officials have condemned the
- current monitoring system as out of date and unacceptable.
-
- This follows revelations Regional Services Department hygiene inspectors
- failed to spot two food factories, including one in Yuen Long linked to the
- cholera outbreak, using well water contaminated with human excrement for
- food preparation.<P>
- Regional Services Department Assistant Director Lai Kwok-tung admitted
- yesterday substandard licensing requirements were drawn up about 20 years
- ago. The New Territories were relatively undeveloped and many premises
- licensed then were still operating, he said.
-
- Hygiene inspectors continued to sweep the territory's 499 food factories
- yesterday. Three such factories in rural areas are licensed to use well
- water for food preparation. Others must use the water only for cleaning.
-
- By yesterday afternoon, Department of Health officials had contacted the
- 200 retailers, food outlets and shops known to have received chicken and
- ducks' feet from the Dai Yick factory in Yuen Long.
-
- Another 260 outlets selling produce from the Jackpot factory in Tuen Mun
- were also contacted and instructed to dump the produce.
-
- Authorities still fear some shops may have sold contaminated produce after
- health inspectors blitzed both factories on Wednesday.
-
- Cholera symptoms - vomiting and diarrhoea - show about 12 hours after
- contaminated food is eaten. Microbiologist Dr Yuen Kwok-yung said more
- people might become infected.
-
- Date: Sat, 17 May 1997 10:52:06 +0800 (SST)
- >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (LK) Protection of the law for animals
- Message-ID: <199705170252.KAA12075@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >Daily News
- Saturday 17, May 1997
- Letters to the Editor
- Protection of the law for animals
-
-
- If animals are to be protected from cruelty, they must be brought under the
- shelter of the law and be effectively protected by it.
-
- In fact animals in Sri Lanka are protected by law under the legislative
- enactment called the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Ordinance. Yet, the
- reality is that this law is rarely implemented and even when it is, it is
- ineffective, not being updated for nearly a century.
-
- With regard to food animals in particular, since independence, successive
- governments, instead of updating the law and carrying out the protection of
- animals without any religious or communal bias, have been manipulating the
- issue of the handling and slaughter of animals and playing up to the
- religious susceptibilities of different communities.
-
- Therefore, today we see how the fate of food animals tragically veers from
- being snatched from slaughter on Poya days, (only to be slaughtered the
- following day) while on other days, particularly those of religious
- festivals, to being slaughtered by the hundreds in the most cruel manner.
-
- It must be stated that cases of cruelty inflicted on animals even openly on
- the streets, abound during the season of Hadj. The reason for this is the
- practice of leading animals by foot to homes for sacrificial slaughter.
- Even the Police tend to turn a blind eye to instances of cruelty committed
- openly on the road by people leading animals to slaughter because they seem
- to think that the law is to be ignored during religious festivals.
-
- We understand Hadj is a festival of the people of the Islamic faith when
- they slaughter cattle, sheep and goats as a sacrificial offering to Allah.
- In Sri Lanka people of the Islamic faith purchase animals and the suppliers
- send these animals led by hired men to the homes of the buyers. The animals
- delivered to homes in Colombo are usually sent from distances of about
- eight to ten miles away. The men hired to lead these animals are evidently
- chosen for their brutality. Instead of leading the animals gently, and
- allowing them to rest a while on the way, these brutish men drive the
- frightened animals to walk fast beating them with big sticks until their
- bodies are bruised and swollen and they twist their tails, until the bones
- are broken in several places.
-
- On the day before Hadj last month, while driving on Duplication Road I
- encountered two animals being led by two young men. Having seen the way the
- men were twisting their tails and beating them to walk faster, and
- observing the state of extreme exhaustion the animals were in, I asked the
- men to stop and give the animals a rest. They refused, upon which driving
- my car slowly I went along with them. After walking about less than quarter
- mile one of the animals collapsed on the road through exhaustion. To my
- horror one of the men started beating the fallen animal trying to make it
- get up. I immediately intervened, with the help of several sympathetic
- passers by and also by a member of Gal Gava Mithuro who had her salon
- nearby.
-
- We hailed a passing police vehicle and the officer passed the message to
- the Kollupitiya police.
-
- Seeing for themselves the state of the animals and with members of two
- animal welfare organizations willing to lodge complaints, the police
- ordered the men to lead the animals to the Kollupitiya police station, this
- time slowly and without beating.
-
- The two men were produced in courts the next day on the charge of cruelty
- to animals and ordered to pay the maximum fine which was just Rs. 250 each.
- The Magistrate ordered the police to investigate the papers carried by the
- men claiming ownership of the animals. At the next hearing, the magistrate
- not being satisfied with the papers produced by the men, ordered the police
- to amend the charges adding a new charge of theft. The two animals were
- handed to the custody of Sathva Mithra.
-
- What we have tried to show here is that cruelty to animals can be stopped
- only by law and the police enforcing the law. The protection of animals
- cannot be left in the hands of different communities. Whenever we speak to
- a person of the Islamic faith about cruelty to food animals they will not
- only condemn it, they will tell us how kindness to animals is taught in the
- Quoran. But they refuse to accept the reality as it happens in society
- today, especially the cruelties perpetrated on animals by meat traders
- belonging largely to their faith. In the case of Buddhists, they will blame
- it all on the Muslim community. They do not seriously question the
- contribution by Buddhists in sustaining a huge trade in meat by selling of
- animals for slaughter, and the consumption of meat by them.
-
- The important thing is to acknowledge that animals are sensitive beings
- that feel pain and suffer when tortured. As a civilized society let us
- afford them protection through strong, effective laws, honestly enforced. I
- am sure there will be many people from every community, reasonable and
- compassionate enough to support this view.
-
- SAGARIKA RAJAKARUNANAYAKE,
- Sathva Mithra.
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 20:03:22 -0700
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Alice in Wonderland
- Message-ID: <337D1FF9.7E1A@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Mouse Helps Explain What Makes Humans Tick
-
- By NICHOLAS WADE
-
- New York Times, May 16, 1997
-
- Oh dear, oh dear, I shall be too late," the White
- Rabbit exclaimed as he examined his fob watch.
-
- The rabbit overheard by Lewis Carroll's Alice during her
- adventures in wonderland now has a real-life counterpart: a
- mouse whose biological clock has been genetically reset to
- run at a 28-hour cycle instead of 24 hours.
-
- Deranging the daily rhythm of a mouse is not some perverse
- goal of modern science but rather a means to a larger end, the
- understanding of the biological clocks that govern the daily
- lives of everything from microbes to man.
-
- The biological clock in humans governs rhythms like the
- sleep-wake cycle, the daily ebb and flow of many hormones,
- and the variations in mental alertness. It resets itself daily
- according to the amount of light perceived. Without a
- well-adjusted clock, the human condition can get very jagged,
- as is evident when changing a work shift or flying through too
- many time zones for the clock to keep pace.
-
- The biological clock has long defied analysis, in part because
- the basic rhythmicity is generated at the deepest levels of the
- cell. In mammals, the master clock is in the suprachiasmatic
- each eye cross over. The nucleus, about the size of a pinhead,
- consists of some 10,000 nerve cells, each containing a tiny
- clock at the level of its genes and proteins.
-
- Biologists have identified a few individual components of the
- clocks used by fruit flies and by a microbe called Neurospora,
- which makes bread mold. But possession of the genes for
- these components did not, as is often the case, help fish out
- the counterpart genes in mice or humans.
-
- In frustration, a bold new approach was conceived seven
- years ago by Dr. Joseph Takahashi of Northwestern
- University in Evanston, Ill. In fact it was a bold old approach,
- that of trying to find timekeeping genes in mice with the same
- mass screening method that was used to find the gene in fruit
- flies in 1971. But mice are far harder to work with than fruit
- flies.
-
- The method is to serve meals laced with a heavily mutagenic
- chemical that randomly changes DNA all along the genome.
- By screening enough fruit flies or mice for defects in their
- biological clock, the researcher can hope to find one with an
- aberrant clock, and then rummage around in its genome to see
- which gene was disrupted.
-
- A large facility was built to watch -- for a month -- hundreds
- of mice running on wheels. Wheel-running affords an accurate
- signal of the animals' internal clock since laboratory mice like
- to take exercise regularly and will start punctually to the
- minute at the same time each night.
-
- Takahashi and his team expected to have to screen several
- thousand mice before hitting on one with a broken clock. But
- fortune smiled upon their mouse-deranging endeavors, and it
- was mouse No. 25 turned up incurably tardy. No other
- seriously clock-deranged mouse has yet shown up. "We were
- incredibly lucky," Takahashi said.
-
- The mutant mouse had a basic daily rhythm about an hour
- longer than normal mice, caused by a single defective gene,
- which Takahashi named the Clock gene. Descendants bred to
- have two defective copies of the Clock gene, one from each
- parent, had a daily rhythm four hours longer than normal.
-
- Takahashi and his team discovered the clock-deranged
- mouse three years ago and then set about trying to identify the
- damaged gene, a snippet of genetic material hiding
- somewhere within the three billion units of DNA that make up
- the mouse's genome. The project took a 10-member team
- three years.
-
- In Friday's issue of the journal Cell, the researchers report
- having laid hands on the gene and describe the molecular
- features of the protein it specifies. Dr. David King led efforts
- to pinpoint the location of the gene. Dr. Marina Antoch
- directed a clever method of proving the gene's function: she
- fixed the clock in mutant mice by substituting a correct piece
- of DNA.
-
- Of great interest to specialists is the finding that one stretch of
- the protein, known as a domain, resembles a domain seen in
- the clock proteins of the fruit fly and the bread mold, even
- though the overall protein structures have little similarity. This
- bolsters the expectation, hitherto unsupported, that since
- circadian rhythms are an ancient behavior in all living creatures
- they should have a common basic mechanism.
-
- The common domain is one that enables the protein to
- activate certain genes strung along the cell's DNA, though the
- target genes have not yet been identified. Just how this
- constitutes the mechanism of a clock remains to be
- determined. From what is known of the fruit fly and bread
- mold clocks, ingenious schemes have been suggested in which
- a Clock gene makes a protein, which links up with another
- protein and then turns off the gene in a daily feedback loop.
-
- Dr. Steven Reppert, who studies circadian rhythms at the
- Massachusetts General Hospital, said the Takahashi team's
- work is "really a tour de force," adding, "This is the first
- molecular entry into the mammalian clock."
-
- Dr. Charles Czeisler, a neuroendocrinologist at the Brigham
- and Women's Hospital in Boston, described the finding as "a
- landmark discovery which holds great promise for
- understanding the underpinnings" of the human biological
- clock.
-
- Some people are night owls, others are alert in the mornings,
- a difference that may have a genetic basis. "Given that a
- Clock gene has now been identified in mice, one can begin to
- tease apart whether these differences in human behavior may
- have a genetic basis," Czeisler said.
-
- Takahashi's team found that the normal version of the Clock
- gene in mice is made up of 24 sections, known as exons. In
- the mutant mouse they created, a single unit of DNA was
- changed, causing one of the exons to be lost from the
- processed version of the gene. Loss of the exon resulted in a
- protein with one part missing, which slowed the clock.
-
- Progress in Clock gene research has been gathering pace
- after a slow start. The two clock genes so far known in the
- fruit fly are called Period, found in 1971, and Timeless, found
- in 1994. The bread mold gene Frequency was discovered in
- 1978. Two more bread mold genes, dubbed White collar-1
- and White collar-2, were reported earlier this month by a
- team led by Jay Dunlap and Jennifer Loros at the Dartmouth
- Medical School in Hanover, N.H.
-
- =============================================================
-
- "Bold new research" or "bold old research?" I don't know how bold it is
- to use mice as praxis for people but "new" is the last word I would
- use.
-
- To give credit where credit is due, the terms "deranged" and "Alice in
- Wonderland" are very well chosen, -- though they should be applied to
- the researchers, not their animal victims.
-
- It must be a tough job to be a newspaper science writer. You don't only
- have to sell every piece of crap that comes out of the laboratory as
- earth-shaking discovery; you also have to be cute and entertaining in
- order to sell the paper.
-
- Andy
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 20:09:29 -0700
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: How about a drug that promotes common sense?
- Message-ID: <337D2169.470B@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- New drug not meant for touch-up weight loss, researchers say
-
- Reuter Information Service
-
- LONDON (May 16, 1997 1:19 p.m. EDT) - A new obesity drug that crossed
- the first hurdle of approval this week is not for summertime slimmers,
- the developers warned Friday.
-
- But even with a limited market, Hoffman-La Roche Inc hopes its Xenical
- (orlistat) will bring $1 billion in annual sales in the United States
- alone.
-
- Xenical takes a whole new approach to weight reduction. Instead of
- reducing appetite or trying to speed up metabolism, it stops the body
- from absorbing fat.
-
- It got initial approval from a Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
- advisory panel on Thursday.
-
- Jayson Dallas, medical director at Roche for Xenical in Europe, said the
- company was also waiting for approval from the European Medicines
- Evaluation Agency (EMEA).
-
- In the meantime, the company was being deluged with requests for
- information from dieters and their doctors.
-
- "One thing that we are at pains to point out is that the drug is
- targeted at people whose weight is a risk to their health," he said. In
- other words, only the severely obese should be prescribed the drug if
- and when it becomes available.
-
- "It's a long-term thing. It's not what you take before you go to the
- beach for a couple of weeks. It's not a crash diet," Dallas added.
-
- For an obesity drug, a class of medicines that does not have a good
- track record, Xenical has marked effects.
-
- It works by reducing absorption of fat by about 30 percent --
- technically it inhibits pancreatic lipase. It must be taken with meals
- to work.
-
- Tests on 5,000 volunteers in Europe and the United States showed those
- put on a "modest" diet and Xenical lost up to 10 percent of their body
- weight -- that was more than 20 pounds (10 kg) for patients weighing 220
- pounds (100 kg).
-
- Their diet was moderate in fat by Western standards. Britons and
- Americans get up to 40 and sometimes even 50 percent of their calories
- from fat. The volunteers ate a diet with 30 percent of calories from
- fat.
-
- At first everyone lost weight -- even those given sugar pills or
- placebos. But the placebo group later started putting the weight back
- on.
-
- "People on Xenical kept that weight off for up to two years," Dallas
- said.
-
- The drug also helped control what Stuart Dollow of Roche called "dietary
- indiscretions." "If a patient takes a high-fat meal, relatively quickly
- afterwards they get a diarrhoeal effect," he
- told a recent obesity conference. "It does modify behaviour."
-
- Xenical also slightly lowered blood cholesterol and blood sugar --
- something the Roche scientists cannot yet explain. But they are
- delighted -- high cholesterol and high blood sugar can lead to the
- dangerous health effects of being overweight such as heart disease and
- diabetes.
-
- "Even a five percent reduction in your weight can have marked effects on
- things like your blood pressure and your blood cholesterol," Dallas
- said.
-
- "The main problem that we are going to face is making sure that peoples'
- expectations are real. This is not something that you can eat what you
- want and carry on and lose weight," he added.
-
- "I think it's very important that we discourage people who want to lose
- 10 pounds (five kg) very quickly from using this."
-
- By MAGGIE FOX, Reuter
-
- ================================================================
-
- Millions of people will dole out hundreds of bucks and put up with the
- unpleasant side effects, taking a drug that cuts fat absorption by 30
- percent.
-
- How about cutting fat *intake* by 30 percent instead? Oh yeah, that
- would be bad for business! Not only would Hoffman-La Roche be out of
- the anticipated billion dollar revenue, but hamburger joints and meat
- producers would also lose sales.
-
- Andy
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 20:33:50 -0700
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: The FDA's double standard
- Message-ID: <337D271E.2C0D@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- FDA warns laxative life-threatening
-
- The Associated Press
-
- WASHINGTON (May 16, 1997 4:55 p.m. EDT) -- Americans should not use an
- herbal laxative sold as part of the "Arise & Shine" dietary supplement
- line because it may cause life-threatening heart problems, the Food and
- Drug Administration warned Friday.
-
- The herbal laxative, called "Chomper," is believed responsible for
- hospitalizing a young Massachusetts woman about a week ago, the FDA said
- in a strongly worded national consumer warning.
-
- Laboratory analysis uncovered "powerful substances which are found in a
- number of poisonous plants" and "may result in severe, potentially fatal
- heart block even in otherwise healthy individuals," the FDA said.
-
- The FDA discovered ingredients that are similar to the potent cardiology
- drug digitalis and that can disrupt normal heart rhythms, eventually
- blocking the normal electrical stimulation that keeps the heart pumping,
- said Elizabeth Yetley, FDA dietary supplement chief.
-
- Chomper is part of a five-product kit called the "Arise & Shine Cleanse
- Thyself Program," Yetley said. It is sold by mail, through health-food
- stores and on the Internet.
-
- Taking the tablet "will elevate you toward greater good health, vitality
- and energy," said one advertisement Yetley discovered.
-
- The otherwise healthy Massachusetts woman had taken the tablet for
- several days before developing nausea and then serious heart-rhythm
- abnormalities. She has been discharged but is being monitored for
- further effects, the FDA said.
-
- Consumers should not buy or consume the product, and should immediately
- seek medical help if they have ingested Chomper and experience nausea,
- vomiting, dizziness, headache, confusion, low blood pressure, vision
- disturbances or abnormal heart rate or rhythms, the FDA said.
-
- The FDA said it is investigating whether other consumers have suffered
- injuries after using Chomper, and whether to take further action.
-
- The FDA said Chomper is sold by Arise & Shine in Mount Shasta, Calif. A
- message left with the firm's sales center was not immediately returned.
-
- ====================================================================
-
- The FDA wasted no time issuing a warning about the side effects of a
- herb supplement. That's its job, right? Yet when there are indications
- that a prescription drug developed by one of the giant pharmaceuticals
- may be injuring or killing hundreds of people, the FDA cautions the
- public "not to panic," but continue taking their medications.
-
- Andy
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 20:54:13 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Sheep farmers warned of looming epidemic
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970516205448.33a7263c@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From The Electronuc Telegraph - Saturday, May 17th, 1997
-
- Sheep farmers warned of looming epidemic
- By David Brown, Agriculture Editor
-
-
- A LIVESTOCK disease brought to Britain in a cargo of goats from Germany
- seven years ago is spreading rapidly through flocks of sheep, veterinary
- scientists warned yesterday.
-
- They said that Britain is on the verge of an "epidemic" of Caseous
- lymphadenitis (CLA), a bacterial infection that can be fatal and causes
- abscesses on the skin and damage to the lungs, lymph nodes and other organs.
- Vets urge that all affected sheep are destroyed.
-
- People can also contract CLA, though such cases are rare. Four outbreaks
- have been confirmed recently among pedigree sheep on farms in Northumberland
- and the Scottish Borders.
-
- As the sheep-shearing season gets under way, farmers have been urged to look
- for signs of the disease.
-
- Graham Baird, of the Scottish Agricultural College, St Boswells,
- Roxburghshire, said: "We are getting close to an epidemic. This disease is a
- test of what happens when you have totally open borders in Europe."
-
- Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 20:54:16 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Student find swells bat population in Britain
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970516205451.2707d164@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- >From The Electronuc Telegraph - Saturday, May 17th, 1997
-
- Student find swells bat population in Britain
- By Aisling Irwin, Science Correspondent
-
- TWO students believe they have stumbled across a new mammal in the British
- Isles - a tiny, three-ounce bat living in an old stables in County Antrim.
-
- The discovery will disconcert experts still recovering from news of another
- new bat announced fortnight ago. Before that no new mammals had been found
- in the British Isles for more than 50 years.
-
- Experts disagreed yesterday about whether the new bat, a Nathusius'
- pipistrelle, is living here permanently or has hidden itself in a temporary
- nest on its way from the Baltic states.
-
- "They might have discovered a mating roost before going back to have their
- young in Europe," said Prof Paul Racey, Regius Professor of Natural History
- at Aberdeen University. But if they remain there over the summer the experts
- will have to concede that the bat is now
- living in Britain.
-
- The bats, so small they will fit into a matchbox, were found by Jon Russ and
- James O'Neill, from the Queen's University of Belfast.
-
- Mr Russ said: "We were checking along woodland edges and found a roost of
- common pipistrelle bats. But then I heard a trilling noise on the detector
- which was very distinctive from the others. We held the net up and caught
- one and were amazed to find it was a Nathusius' pipistrelle.
-
- "It is a very cute, furry creature. It is strange to think that they may
- have been here all he time and nobody knew, but then bats constitute a
- quarter of all mammals and we know virtually nothing about them."
-
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 20:54:18 -0700 (PDT)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Nuisance the seal might force nuclear plant to shut down
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970516205453.2707dcfe@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Saturday, May 17th, 1997
-
- Nuisance the seal might force nuclear plant to shut down
- By Roger Highfield, Science Editor
-
- NUCLEAR Electric may have to shut down its Dungeness B nuclear power station
- in Kent to evict a seal which has taken up residence in one of the plant's
- reservoirs.
-
- The company said yesterday that the shutdown could cost ú250,000. The 800lb
- adult female grey seal, nicknamed Nuisance, was chasing a shoal of fish when
- she was sucked into a reservoir that holds sea water drawn in from the
- Channel. The water is used to condense
- steam from the turbines in the 1,200 megawatt twin-reactor nuclear station.
-
- A spokesman said a filter over the cooling water intake was thought to have
- been damaged by a trawler, allowing Nuisance to be sucked down a
- 200-yard-long, 6ft-wide pipe into the forebay, a triangular holding tank.
-
- The forebay, which is 60 ft deep, 30 yards long and has vertical sides, has
- become a lunchtime attraction as the station's employees go to watch
- Nuisance's antics.
-
- The good news for Nuisance is that, with 130 million gallons of water being
- drawn in every hour, there are plenty of fish to eat. The bad news is that
- there are strong currents deep in the tank and she has nowhere to rest.
-
- The tank is too dangerous for divers. Nuclear Electric is planning to lure
- the seal on to a suspended wooden platform. A net will be dropped over
- Nuisance and the platform removed by crane.
-
- First, they have to wait for her to become tired. This could take some time.
- "I am told by marine experts that seals can swim for four weeks non-stop,"
- said the spokesman.
-
- If all else fails and she refuses to rest on the platform, Nuclear Electric
- said it was prepared to shut down the plant for a day to capture her. The
- plan is to send Nuisance to Norfolk. The station also intends to put a
- special grill on the end of the intake pipe to ensure the seal cannot return.
-
- This is not the first time that sea life has caused problems for nuclear
- power stations. Sprats have put Dungeness A out of action on several
- occasions. The tiny fish clog the filters used to clean the reactor's
- cooling water.
-
- Asiatic clams knocked out Arkansas Nuclear One power plant in Russelville,
- Arkansas. And the St Lucie plant in Florida had to be shut down when it was
- hit by a 14-square-mile slick of Cloverleaf and Cannonball jellyfish. The
- plant had to be closed for 11 days at a cost of about ú7 million.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- Date: Fri, 16 May 1997 20:56:14 -0700
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: A late apology
- Message-ID: <337D2C5E.4EF7@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Clinton to apologize to victims of syphilis experiments
-
- The Associated Press
-
- TUSKEGEE, Ala. (May 16, 1997 10:19 a.m. EDT) -- For decades, Fred
- Simmons suffered from syphilis without knowing it because the government
- had decided not to tell him. Now, at 100, he is in a forgiving mood.
-
- "I'm going to go up there, shake the president's hand and tell him I'm
- doing all right," Simmons said as he left for the White House on
- Thursday.
-
- On Friday, President Clinton will offer an apology to Simmons and three
- other men -- ages 91 to 100 -- for one of the most shameful episodes in
- American history: the 40-year Tuskegee Syphilis Study, in which poor
- black men were unwittingly denied treatment for the disease they knew as
- "bad blood." The experiment was aimed at learning exactly what syphilis
- does to the body.
-
- For a long time, Simmons was not all right. He suffered years of
- discomfort. One month nearly 50 years ago, he could not eat or walk,
- bled from sores and nearly starved to death.
-
- Some feel that the apology to the four survivors and other victims comes
- 25 years late and hundreds of miles from where it should be issued.
-
- "They thought he was going to die, but then one day he started getting
- better," said Simmons' grandson, Michael Simmons. "There was never any
- cure. We just prayed a lot. That worked better than anything."
-
- Simmons was among the 399 black men from rural southern Alabama who
- signed up for medical care in the 1930s, unaware they had syphilis. All
- of them were denied penicillin, the standard treatment for the disease
- since 1947. An additional 200 or so who did not have syphilis were used
- in a control group.
-
- Those who were infected left thousands of descendants, many of whom had
- to deal with the stigma of coming from a family with a known history of
- syphilis.
-
- "The way they treated him and the way they treated us, it was horrible,"
- said Dora Banks, 90, the daughter of a syphilis victim. "I don't even
- like to think about it anymore."
-
- Herman Shaw, another survivor headed for the White House, said he felt
- like a guinea pig as government doctors subjected him to spinal taps and
- blood tests he thought would cure him of his illness.
-
- A 1972 article by The Associated Press exposed the study. The AP
- reported that 28 of the men who signed up for the supposed treatment had
- died of syphilis and 100 others had died of syphilis-related
- complications.
-
- At least 40 wives had been infected and 19 children contracted the
- disease at birth. Hundreds of others watched as the disease ravaged
- their loved ones.
-
- In the final stages, syphilis produces rubbery tumors that form large,
- crusty ulcers on the skin. The disease also eats away at bones, the
- liver, the heart and the brain and can cause paralysis, blindness
- and deafness.
-
- David Allen recalled hearing stories about the slow death of his
- grandfather, Benjamin Rockamore.
-
- "He lost teeth, broke out in rashes, all kinds of stuff," Allen said.
- "At the end he couldn't eat. My mother said it was terrible to watch.
- And to know he was used like that ... it was very inhumane."
-
- The experiments contributed to a mistrust of government among blacks and
- added to suspicions that diseases such as AIDS are part of a genocidal
- conspiracy.
-
- A study by a University of Alabama professor found that black people who
- are aware of the Tuskegee experiment are more reluctant to take part in
- government-run medical experiments.
-
- The government has never actually admitted wrongdoing, though it has
- distributed about $10 million to more than 6,000 survivors and their
- family members after settling a 1973 class-action lawsuit.
-
- Shaw, 94, said: "For so long, we began to think nothing was going to
- happen -- that we had reached the end of the ballgame. This is late, but
- it will help quite a bit."
-
- By EDDIE PELLS, Associated Press Writer
-
-
-
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