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-
- Ukraine quarantines village after suspected anthrax outbreak kills two
-
- The Associated Press
-
- KIEV, Ukraine (May 22, 1997 6:43 p.m. EDT) -- An Ukrainian village was
- under quarantine Thursday after a suspected outbreak of anthrax killed
- two people and led to the hospitalization of 19 others.
-
- Hundreds of police, emergency and health workers were sent to the
- Donetsk region village of Privolnoye, Emergencies Ministry spokesman
- Oleg Bykov said. The village is 350 miles southeast of Kiev, the
- capital.
-
- Eight of those hospitalized with symptoms of cutaneous anthrax, which
- causes swollen boils on the skin, work at a slaughterhouse on the
- Transportnoye state farm in Privolnoye. The workers may have been
- infected by meat they received in lieu of pay.
-
- Anthrax can infect humans through skin contact, ingestion and even
- inhaling contaminated spores. It can be treated with penicillin.
-
- A husband and wife hospitalized Monday with skin infections died
- Wednesday, said Lidia Blakitnaya of the Donetsk regional health agency.
-
- "Clinically, it looks very much like the cutaneous form of anthrax," she
- said, but added that doctors were waiting for test results to confirm an
- anthrax diagnosis.
-
- She said if untreated, cutaneous anthrax can lead to the often deadly
- pulmonary form.
-
- Infectious diseases have become more frequent in recent years in Ukraine
- because of a steep post-Soviet decline in the quality of health care.
- Date: Fri, 23 May 1997 13:11:57 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (TH) No help for sick elephants
- Message-ID: <199705230511.NAA19718@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >Bangkok Post
- 23 May 97
- Appeal for funds to no avail
- Lampang
- The elephant hospital's appeal for funds has fallen on deaf ears
- at the provincial hall and seven sick and injured animals
- remain at
- risk.
-
- With its funds drying up, the hospital is finding it increasingly
- difficult to extend medical assistance to treat the animals.
-
- The hospital, the only one of its kind, was counting on help from
- the state but so far, its efforts have proved futile.
-
- Hang Chat elephant hospital, in the Forestry Industry
- Organisation's Thai Elephant Preservation Centre, has had to
- admit seven patients when it only has facilities for five.
-
- Hospital staff are worried the lack of facilities and money is
- putting the lives of sick elephants in danger. Kha Chan, a female,
- they say, has a broken front leg that might have to be amputated
- unless help arrives.
-
- She had been in the hospital for six days after her leg was
- broken when she was charged by another elephant during a
- show six months ago. Veterinarians say the left leg may have to
- be cut off if it becomes infected.
-
- Lucie Monseu, a volunteer veterinarian from Belgium, ruled out
- an operation on Kha Chan, saying elephant bones are too large
- and the hospital does not have a X-ray machine to locate the
- break.
-
- The best it can do is strap a metal plate to the injured area and
- use a splint to help keep the leg steady and prevent further
- injury
- and infection, Ms Monseu said.
-
- Kha Chan continues to receive anti-tetanus shots, she said, but
- there is little chance the leg would return to its normal
- condition.
-
- The hospital is appealing for donations to help cover the cost of
- treating sick elephants, which amount to almost 200,000 baht a
- month.
-
- Article copyright Post Publishing Public Co., Ltd 1997
- Reprinted for non-commercial use only.
- Website: http://www.bangkokpost.net
-
-
- Date: Fri, 23 May 1997 03:04:35 -0400 (EDT)
- From: HoneyK9@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: shelter stress and dogs
- Message-ID: <970523030433_122316451@emout12.mail.aol.com>
-
- The local shelter in my town does a great job, but they currently have two
- dogs who have been there for four months who are starting to exhibit signs of
- stress. These are both great, well-socialized dogs and, while they get to
- spend time each day out in the yard with other dogs and people, they are
- starting to snarl when in their cages. Unless they are either adopted very
- soon (unlikely) or something is done to reduce the stress, they will be
- euthanized.
-
- I would appreciate learning what other shelters do to keep dogs in shelters
- mentally healthy over time. Would also like to hear whether anyone can
- substantiate that animals experiencing such stress revert back to their
- normal healthy behavior once adopted into a good situation.
-
- Thanks to anyone/everyone who can address these issues. The clock is ticking
- and nobody here is happy about it.
-
- HoneyK9@aol.com
- Date: Fri, 23 May 1997 09:56:03 -0400
- From: allen bleyle <derfty@monad.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Circus Protest SW New Hampshire
- Message-ID: <3385A1F3.DA7@monad.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Piccadilly Circus is putting on a circus at the monadnock regional
- highschool gym, in East Swanzey NH on Thursday, May 29, with a show at
- 5:15 and one at 7:30 pm. Swanzey is right outside of Keene. Anyone
- who has any information on piccadilly circuses, and anyone who wants
- to attend or help in anyway PLEASE email me, derfty@monad.net. thanks
- Allen
- Date: Fri, 23 May 1997 10:24:43 -0400 (EDT)
- From: JanaWilson@aol.com
- To: Ar-news@envirolink.com
- Subject: (US) More on Oklahoma Hog Farm Bill
- Message-ID: <970523102437_1491211623@emout12.mail.aol.com>
-
-
- According to Oklahoma news, the Oklahoma House and Senate
- committee members agreed Thursday to move forward with the
- bill regulating corporate hog farming, although some of the
- industry people are not pleased. A vote is expected today on the
- measure, which has several clauses that those living near the
- hog farms will support.
- Some of the hog industry people reluctantly agreed to the bill
- while some others balked. But a majority of committee members
- in both houses decided there will be a regulation bill. "We can live
- with it," said Clem McSpadden, lobbyist for a good share of the
- hog farm industry, including Seaboard Farms and the Oklahoma
- Pork Council which represents many of the smaller producers.
- Opponents include Tyson Foods, a southeastern Oklahoma firm
- that has objected to any state regulation and Pig Improvement
- Co., which operates in northwest Oklahoma.
- Late Wednesday, the two legislative authors of House Bill 1522 huddled
- with industry representatives in a meeting that resulted in a few
- changes in the measure Thursday.
- Several who attended the meeting confirmed that Pig Improvement
- Co. objects strong to a provision that would require a depth of
- 4 feet between the water table and future lagoons that the company
- might build to hold pig waste. Pig Improvement Co. is operating
- in the Hennessey area where the sandy soil allows the water table
- to rise near the surface during the heavy rains.
- The provision would mean hog corporations would have trouble
- building more farms in sandy areas of the state. The state Wildlife
- Commission already has raised questins about the levels of
- nitrates near a Pig Improvement Co. farm in the Lake Canton area.
- James Barnett, a lobbyist for the company, refused Thursday
- to comment on PIC's concerns.
- One lawmaker said he received 25 calls Thursday from contract
- farmers working with Tyson. Tyson officials did not return phone calls
- from a local reporter seeking comment.
- The latest version for the bill also calls for
- 1. Mandatory permitting for all hog farms with more than 5,000 hogs.
- 2. Authorization for the Oklahoma state Ag Dept to monitor any
- lagoon in the state if complaints are lodged.
- 3. Hog manure and wastewater could not be spread within 500
- feet of a neighbor's house or within 300 feet of a water well.
- 4. Future hog farms would have to locate between a quarter-mile
- and three-quarters mile - depending on the no. of hogs -
- from their neighbor's house.
-
- For the Animals,
-
- Jana, OKC
- Date: Fri, 23 May 1997 10:40:07 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Calf's breakaway saved it from steakhouse
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970523104005.006d705c@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from USA Today web page:
- --------------------------------------
- Calf's breakaway saved it from steakhouse
-
- NEW YORK - Next up in the calf-roping competition - the Bronx police.
- Officers in this borough of high-rises
- were trying to rope a calf this week after the animal broke loose from a
- truck. The calf was being unloaded at
- Ely Live Poultry Market when it escaped and hoofed it across four lanes of
- traffic. The animal was briefly
- corralled in a yard but broke free and continued its flight with police
- yelling "Stop, cow, stop!" Once it was
- recaptured, The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
- stepped in and saved the youngster
- from a date with the steakhouse. Turns out the slaughterhouse where it was
- being unloaded was for chickens
- and was not supposed to process any other kind of animals. So the calf and
- three pals were headed for Green
- Chimneys farm in upstate New York, where they will be used in therapy for
- abused children.
- Date: Fri, 23 May 1997 11:03:36 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) N.C. Hog Population Near 10 Million
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970523110334.006d2168@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- ------------------------------
- 05/23/1997 03:08 EST
-
- N.C. Hog Population Near 10 Million
-
- By EMERY P. DALESIO
- Associated Press Writer
-
- RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) -- North Carolina's pork producers proposed adding
- more than 300,000 hogs to the state's 9.3-million-head herd in the past
- three months.
-
- But whether the hog industry is slowing due to tighter state regulations
- or only stuck in neutral while farms are built to hold more pigs depends
- on who is looking at the numbers.
-
- ``We're on our way to 10 million,'' Bill Holman, an environmental
- lobbyist and an industry critic, said Thursday. ``It does show that
- despite all the whining about stricter environmental regulations ... the
- industry continues to grow.''
-
- Forty-three applications for required operating permits have been filed
- since February, when a new permit process took hold. That compares with
- 82 applications seeking state certification to open or expand
- industrial-style farms during the same February-to-May period last year.
-
- Expansion plans this year have come under the specter of a proposed
- one-year, statewide halt to the industry's growth.
-
- Pressure for a moratorium comes from critics. They charge mammoth
- livestock operations have fouled streams with hog waste and the air with
- the stench created by thousands of hogs. The industry's supporters point
- to the jobs and wealth it has created.
-
- A bid to impose a moratorium on new and expanded hog operations was
- passed by the state House last month and is awaiting action in the
- Senate.
-
- A spokesman for the state's pork producers said tougher regulations that
- took effect in January have added to economic pressures for fewer and
- larger operations.
-
- ``The more we drive regulation, we force the farms to be larger to be
- efficient,'' said Roger Bone, a lobbyist for the North Carolina Pork
- Council. ``The flip side of that is that what we're doing with
- regulations is putting small folks out of business.''
-
- But industry executives last month said growth has slowed because the
- region's slaughterhouses have been full for a year, leaving little room
- for expansion. That means hogs must be shipped out of the state to be
- slaughtered for market.
-
- Tougher standards in place this year force new hog operations to keep a
- minimum distance from neighbors as well as a earn a state permit before
- opening. The first applications were not filed until February after the
- state Division of Water Quality sorted out its application process.
-
- Each owner has worked for months to jump through regulatory hoops before
- applying for the state permit needed to operate. Each location has been
- checked by state regulators to make sure the proposed site meshes with
- state guidelines and that the waste management plan is appropriate.
-
- Applications for new or expanded hog operations so far this year range
- from a Wayne County grower seeking to add at least 1,500 head to a Bladen
- County operation housing at least 69,000 head proposed by Murphy Family
- Farms, the country's largest hog producer.
-
- Including the 69,000-head Murphy operation, new and expanded sites
- proposed so far this month would add about 143,000 head. Expansion plans
- filed since February total more 296,000 head.
-
- The head counts for each farm are estimates that count only the number of
- mature animals and exclude piglets, said Coleen Sullins, head of
- compliance for the Division of Water Quality.
-
- All but three farms are proposed for the state's hog-dense eastern
- counties.
-
- Date: Fri, 23 May 1997 11:16:12 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Rider Thrown Off Club's Bull Dies
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970523111604.0068b3a4@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- -------------------------------
- 05/23/1997 00:43 EST
-
- Rider Thrown Off Club's Bull Dies
-
- FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) -- A professional rider died of injuries suffered
- earlier this month when a bull threw him at Billy Bob's Texas nightclub.
-
- Willy Gene Larson, 20, was pronounced dead Tuesday at a Fort Worth
- hospital. Relatives said he died of head injuries suffered when the
- 1,500-pound bull catapulted him from its back May 9 and then kicked him
- while he was airborne. Larson landed headfirst in the dirt in front of
- 150 spectators.
-
- ``My son said if he was going to die, it would be on the back of a
- bull,'' his mother, Susan Larson of Round Rock, told the Fort Worth
- Star-Telegram. ``But I never expected him to go this soon. At least he
- left this world doing what he loved most.''
-
- Pam Minick, Billy Bob's Texas marketing director, said Larson is the
- first bull rider to die in a riding accident at the 16-year-old club.
-
- ``We've just been in shock here,'' Ms. Minick said. ``We honestly never
- expected this to happen because we take so many safety precautions.''
-
- Billy Bob's requires all riders to wear a protective vest made from the
- same material as police bullet proof vests, Ms. Minick said.
-
- Last year, the National Center for Injury Prevention Control in Atlanta,
- part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, proposed
- protective headgear requirements for all bull riders. But, many
- professional riders said the headgear would interfere with their balance,
- Ms. Minick said.
-
- ``Anyone who loves the sport knows the dangers involved,'' she said,
- adding the club only allows professional riders to mount a bucking bull.
-
- Date: Fri, 23 May 1997 11:18:58 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Lynx Doesn't Make Endangered List
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970523111855.0068b3a4@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- ---------------------------------
- 05/22/1997 19:10 EST
-
- Lynx Doesn't Make Endangered List
-
- By SCOTT SONNER
- Associated Press Writer
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service refused to declare
- the Canada lynx an endangered species Thursday but acknowledged the
- elusive cat has suffered significant population loss and only a few
- hundred survive in the lower 48 states.
-
- The unusual move, confirming the animal's dire situation while refusing
- to protect it under the Endangered Species Act, drew quick criticism from
- environmentalists.
-
- The Canada lynx is the only lynx left in North America and its population
- ``has decreased significantly in the lower 48 states,'' said Ralph
- Morgenweck, director of Fish and Wildlife Service's Denver regional
- office.
-
- ``Unfortunately, our resources are limited and other species are in worse
- condition and require more immediate action on our part,'' he said.
-
- The Canada lynx, about the size of a bobcat, has large, furry paws for
- hunting in deep snow at high elevations. It has long tufts on the ears
- and a flared facial ruff, and a short, black-tipped tail.
-
- A federal judge in Seattle had ordered the agency in March to reconsider
- an earlier decision to keep the cat off the list amid mounting evidence
- it was headed for extinction.
-
- Adding the cat to the endangered species list could mean new restrictions
- on logging and other commercial development in the four states where it
- still lives outside of Alaska and Canada -- Washington, Montana, Wyoming
- and Maine.
-
- ``We're glad the Fish and Wildlife Service is finally acknowledging the
- magnitude of threats to the lynx,'' said Joan Moody, a spokeswoman for
- Defenders of Wildlife in Washington, D.C.
-
- But the failure to put the cat on protected list ``is another indication
- of their lack of nerve in acting on controversial species,'' she said.
-
- Earlier the agency said federal protection was not warranted. Now it
- believes protection is ``warranted but precluded'' because of more
- pressing demands to protect other endangered species.
-
- The agency issued a similar ``warranted but precluded'' decision for the
- bull trout in several Western states two years ago and is currently
- involved in a court battle with environmentalists over that decision.
- Agency officials have indicated they plan to protect the bull trout in
- some areas soon.
-
- The Northwest Ecosystem Alliance in Bellingham, Wash., one of the group's
- that petitioned for listing of the lynx, is considering further court
- challenges.
-
- ``They don't want to confront the timber industry,'' said Mitch Friedman,
- the group's executive director.
-
- The service decided against listing the lynx in 1994 despite warnings
- from its field offices that only a few hundred of the cats remain.
-
- ``The Fish and Wildlife Service has consistently ignored the analysis of
- its expert biologists,'' U.S. District Judge Gladys Kessler of Seattle
- said in ordering the agency to reconsider on March 28.
-
- Morgenweck said agency biologists concluded the cat is being threatened
- by loss of forest habitat, past hunting and trapping and increased human
- access to forests.
-
- The lynx once lived in Alaska, Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, New York,
- Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Washington,
- Oregon, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Utah and Colorado.
-
- Thousands of lynx remain in Alaska and Canada, but biologists estimate
- there are only a few hundred in the lower 48 states -- an estimated 20 to
- 50 in Maine, 150 to 400 in Montana, 50 or fewer in Idaho and 100 to 150
- in Washington state, said Bill Snape, a lawyer for Defenders of Wildlife.
-
- The Fish and Wildlife Service provided no specific numbers. It concluded
- the lynx also is surviving in Wyoming but doesn't have enough numbers in
- Idaho to be considered a surviving population.
-
- The agency is required to reassess the lynx's situation within a year.
-
- Date: Fri, 23 May 1997 09:20:11 -0700 (PDT)
- From: bchorush@paws.org (pawsinfo)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Congressman Opposes Dalls Porpoise Removal Study [WA-USA]
- Message-ID: <199705231620.JAA22686@siskiyou.brigadoon.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- MEDIA RELEASE
- May 22, 1997
-
- Congressman Opposes Dalls Porpoise Removal Study
-
- On May 21, 1997, Congressman Jack Metcalf officially contacted National
- Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) Wildlife Biologist Brad Hanson requesting a
- halt to invasive studies of Dalls Porpoises going on now through May 28 off
- Turn Point in the San Juan Islands.
-
- The studies, conducted by Hanson under a NMFS permit, involve capturing up
- to 25 Dalls Porpoises with a hoop net while they bow ride between two
- Zodiaks, then lifting the animals out of the water enough to surgically bolt
- a telemetry device onto their dorsal fins. The purpose of the study is to
- establish the health and numbers of the local population in order to
- determine how many porpoises can be safely removed.
-
- The establishment of a potential biological removal (PBR) level leads the
- way to setting standards for how many of these porpoises may be killed by
- fishing and other activities without adversely affecting the entire local
- population.
-
- There is considerable concern among scientists, dolphin activists and whale
- watch operators about the negative effects of this study. Dalls Porpoises
- are among the fastest swimming cetaceans, in part because they are naturally
- preyed upon by transient orcas. The telemetry devices, which will be affixed
- to the porpoises' dorsal fin, increase drag by as much as 18%, placing
- tagged animals at a disadvantage. The devices are intended to corrode in
- salt water and drop off "in a few months" according to Hanson.
-
- As well, there is concern by whale watch operators that once harassed, Dalls
- Porpoises will be less inclined to bow ride on their boats. Bow-riding
- porpoises are an exciting adjunct to the whale watching business.
-
- "While this seems to be an important study," Congressman Metcalf writes, "it
- appears that this study could be done with considerably less harassment to
- the dolphins with the aid of photography." Recent improvements in computer
- analysis of digital images now make it possible to study dolphin populations
- in a noninvasive manner similar to orca studies that have been going on in
- the same area for years.
-
- PAWS supports Congressman Metcalf in his request "that the study be halted
- so an evaluation can be performed on the impact to the porpoises."
-
-
-
- Contacts: Bob Chorush, PAWS, (425) 787-2500 ext 862
- Michael Kundu, Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, (425) 513-9021, (206)
- 359-3398 cell
- Chris Stow, Congressman Metcalf's Office, (202) 225-2605
-
-
-
-
- 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, 23 May 1997 13:04:33 -0400 (EDT)
- From: AAVSONLINE@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: aids vaccine hype
- Message-ID: <970523130431_-1196618437@emout17.mail.aol.com>
-
- Hi AR people.
-
- Very recently, various media sources have reported on a "breakthrough" in
- AIDS research in the protection of chimpanzees from HIV with a new vaccine.
- I have prepared the following brief response to this which I hope some may
- find of use:
-
- >>
-
- Aids Vaccine Hype:
-
- A look at the history of AIDS research reveals that animal experiments have
- been little more than a black hole into which our AIDS dollars have been
- poured, while non-animal methods have made enormous strides. Now a vaccine
- utilizing loops of DNA containing HIV genes has apparently provided
- protection from HIV infection in chimpanzees. This has been heralded as the
- breakthrough for which we have all been waiting.
-
- What is not emphasized to the public is that while HIV can infect
- chimpanzees, it does not typically do to them what it does to humans: Invade
- essential cells of their immune systems and destroy those cells, allowing
- opportunistic diseases to flourish and kill the patient. HIV infection
- causes completely different, much less severe symptoms in chimpanzees.
- Humans and chimpanzees clearly have a very different relationship with HIV.
-
-
- The immune system is both the target of HIV's attack, as well as the system
- which is activated by vaccination. If there is one thing we know about the
- immune system, it is that very subtle differences can evoke extremely diverse
- responses. Within the context of the immune system, the differences between
- human and chimpanzee are severe.
-
- In the past, claims that non-human primates had been successfully vaccinated
- against either HIV or SIV (Simian Imunodeficiency Virus) turned out to be
- premature upon further examination. In any event, the success of any vaccine
- against HIV can not be adequately predicted by the use of animals who react
- to the virus in a manner so different from the way in which humans react.
-
- Experiments on animals did not contribute to the understanding of HIV and
- AIDS which led to the development of this methodology in the first place. As
- is extensively documented in our magazine, Deadly Deception, in vitro
- research with human cells in culture, in coordination with careful clinical
- and epidemiological observations deserves the credit.
-
- The use of similar DNA loops failed to protect macaques from SIV, but the
- tests on chimpanzees went ahead anyway. Clearly, AIDS researchers must
- therefore acknowledge that the immune cells and systems of different species
- of primates react in very different ways to viruses and vaccines such as
- this. The use of DNA loops containing genes from HIV may very well provide
- protection in humans, and we certainly hope that it does. However, tests on
- non-human animals will not provide the answer.
-
- >>>
-
- for further information contact:
-
- Andy Breslin
- American Anti-Vivisection Society
- (215) 887-0816
- aavsonline@aol.com
-
-
- Date: Fri, 23 May 1997 16:07:43 -0400 (EDT)
- From: LMANHEIM@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Fwd: Paul Watson Update 5-23-97
- Message-ID: <970523160742_-1800122912@emout17.mail.aol.com>
-
- In a message dated 97-05-23 15:14:44 EDT, nvoth@estreet.com (Nick Voth)
- writes:
-
- << Subj:Paul Watson Update 5-23-97
- Date:97-05-23 15:14:44 EDT
- From:nvoth@estreet.com (Nick Voth)
- Reply-to:seashepherd@lists.estreet.com (Sea Shepherd Mailing List)
- To:seashepherd@lists.estreet.com (Sea Shepherd Mailing List)
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE MAY 23rd, 1997
-
-
- ENVIRONMENTAL HERO'S TRIAL SPURS INTERNATIONAL ACTION AND OUTRAGE
- Mick Jagger, Rutgor Hauer, Jane Seymour, Martin Sheen Condemn Norwegian Foul
- Play
-
- For the past 2 weeks, Holland has been barraged with public and celebrity
- expressions of concern and protest in support for Captain Paul Watson,
- founder
- and president of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society. This weekend, mass
- demonstrations and other protests are planned to focus world attention on
- Watson, whom many countries now consider a political prisoner in the
- high-stakes war on the oceans and marine wildlife species.
-
- Watson was arrested in Amsterdam on April 2 on an Interpol warrant issued by
- Norway. Pending an extradition hearing, Norway wants Watson to serve a jail
- sentence on the charge of sinking a Norwegian whaling vessel in 1992, for
- which he was convicted in absentia. Other charges stem from the incident on
- July 6, 1994, when the Sea Shepherd conservation vessel Whales Forever was
- rammed, depth-charged and fired upon by the Norwegian naval vessel Andenes
- which was protecting the whaling fleet during its illegal whale-killing
- activities. Norway claims that it was Sea Shepherd's vessel Whales Forever
- that did the ramming even though the incident was witnessed by 11
- independent
- journalists on board who obtained footage and photographs proving that the
- action was carried out by the Norwegians.
-
- "Norway made a mistake when they thought they could arrest Paul Watson, who
- has been fighting nonstop for the whales for 26 years now," said Sea
- Shepherd
- International Director Lisa Distefano. "By trying to manipulate the Dutch
- justice system for their own means, they have focused unwanted attention on
- their illegal whaling in defiance of the global moratorium. They want Paul
- badly, but they wanted to get him quietly. It looks like they're not getting
- their wish."
-
- A full-page advertisement in the May 23 edition of the newspaper Volkskrant
- features actors Pierce Brosnan, Cher, Rutgor Hauer, Jane Seymour, and Rob
- Lowe, and musicians Mick Jagger and Chrissie Hynde, among others, who are
- appealing to the Dutch community to free Paul Watson. The ad was sponsored
- by
- avid Sea Shepherd supporter John Paul Dejoria, CEO of Paul Mitchell Systems,
- respected for his activism and support of environmental causes.
-
- "We are grateful for the outpouring of personal time, funding, and
- commitment
- by people worldwide who realize what is at stake here," said Distefano.
- "Sincee Paul's arrest, we have received a flood of hate mail, phone calls,
- e-mail, and faxes from Norway in a hate campaign orchestrated by a Norwegian
- government-controlled radio station. We can't hold out much hope for Paul's
- survival in a Norwegian prison. We all just hope the global outcry will be
- enough to convince the Netherlands that condemning Paul to almost certain
- death in order to support Norway's political agenda on whaling is not a
- course
- of action they want to follow."
-
- Watson's extradition hearing is on May 26, 1997 at 3:30 P.M. and is open to
- the public at the Court of Haarlem, Netherlands, 46 Jansstraat, which will
- also be the site of a massive international demonstration beginning at 2
- p.m.
-
- Contact: Lisa Distefano (310) 301-7325
-
- SEA SHEPHERD CONSERVATION SOCIETY
- PO Box 628
- Venice, CA. 90294
- USA
- Tel: 310-301-7325
- Fax: 310-574-3161
- www.seashepherd.org
-
-
-
-
-
- --
-
- *****************************
- Sent From Nick Voth
- System Administrator
- E Street Communications, Inc.
- <nvoth@estreet.com>
- *****************************
-
-
-
- ----------------------- Headers --------------------------------
- From seashepherd@lists.estreet.com Fri May 23 15:13:56 1997
- Return-Path: <seashepherd@lists.estreet.com>
- Received: from lists.estreet.com (lists.estreet.com [204.30.121.10])
- by emin39.mail.aol.com (8.8.5/8.8.5/AOL-4.0.0)
- with SMTP id PAA16186;
- Fri, 23 May 1997 15:12:59 -0400 (EDT)
- Received: from estreet.com by lists.estreet.com with SMTP; Fri, 23 May 97
- 13:12:40 -0600
- Date: Fri, 23 May 97 13:04:27 -0500
- From: nvoth@estreet.com (Nick Voth (admin))
- Organization: E Street Communications
- Subject: Paul Watson Update 5-23-97
- To: Sea Shepherd Mailing List <seashepherd@lists.estreet.com>
- Message-ID: <9936002.ensmtp@estreet.com>
- Priority: normal
- X-Mailer: ExpressNet/SMTP v1.1.5
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
- Reply-To: Sea Shepherd Mailing List <seashepherd@lists.estreet.com>
- Precedence: Bulk
- X-List-Software: LetterRip 1.1 by Fog City Software, Inc.
- X-List-Unsubscribe:
- <mailto:requests@lists.estreet.com?subject=unsubscribe%20seashepherd>
- X-List-Subscribe:
- <mailto:requests@lists.estreet.com?subject=subscribe%20seashepherd>
- >>
-
-
- ---------------------
- Forwarded message:
- From:nvoth@estreet.com (Nick Voth)
- Reply-to:seashepherd@lists.estreet.com (Sea Shepherd Mailing List)
- To:seashepherd@lists.estreet.com (Sea Shepherd Mailing List)
- Date: 97-05-23 15:14:44 EDT
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE MAY 23rd, 1997
-
-
- ENVIRONMENTAL HERO'S TRIAL SPURS INTERNATIONAL ACTION AND OUTRAGE
- Mick Jagger, Rutgor Hauer, Jane Seymour, Martin Sheen Condemn Norwegian Foul
- Play
-
- For the past 2 weeks, Holland has been barraged with public and celebrity
- expressions of concern and protest in support for Captain Paul Watson,
- founder
- and president of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society. This weekend, mass
- demonstrations and other protests are planned to focus world attention on
- Watson, whom many countries now consider a political prisoner in the
- high-stakes war on the oceans and marine wildlife species.
-
- Watson was arrested in Amsterdam on April 2 on an Interpol warrant issued by
- Norway. Pending an extradition hearing, Norway wants Watson to serve a jail
- sentence on the charge of sinking a Norwegian whaling vessel in 1992, for
- which he was convicted in absentia. Other charges stem from the incident on
- July 6, 1994, when the Sea Shepherd conservation vessel Whales Forever was
- rammed, depth-charged and fired upon by the Norwegian naval vessel Andenes
- which was protecting the whaling fleet during its illegal whale-killing
- activities. Norway claims that it was Sea Shepherd's vessel Whales Forever
- that did the ramming even though the incident was witnessed by 11 independent
- journalists on board who obtained footage and photographs proving that the
- action was carried out by the Norwegians.
-
- "Norway made a mistake when they thought they could arrest Paul Watson, who
- has been fighting nonstop for the whales for 26 years now," said Sea Shepherd
- International Director Lisa Distefano. "By trying to manipulate the Dutch
- justice system for their own means, they have focused unwanted attention on
- their illegal whaling in defiance of the global moratorium. They want Paul
- badly, but they wanted to get him quietly. It looks like they're not getting
- their wish."
-
- A full-page advertisement in the May 23 edition of the newspaper Volkskrant
- features actors Pierce Brosnan, Cher, Rutgor Hauer, Jane Seymour, and Rob
- Lowe, and musicians Mick Jagger and Chrissie Hynde, among others, who are
- appealing to the Dutch community to free Paul Watson. The ad was sponsored by
- avid Sea Shepherd supporter John Paul Dejoria, CEO of Paul Mitchell Systems,
- respected for his activism and support of environmental causes.
-
- "We are grateful for the outpouring of personal time, funding, and commitment
- by people worldwide who realize what is at stake here," said Distefano.
- "Sincee Paul's arrest, we have received a flood of hate mail, phone calls,
- e-mail, and faxes from Norway in a hate campaign orchestrated by a Norwegian
- government-controlled radio station. We can't hold out much hope for Paul's
- survival in a Norwegian prison. We all just hope the global outcry will be
- enough to convince the Netherlands that condemning Paul to almost certain
- death in order to support Norway's political agenda on whaling is not a
- course
- of action they want to follow."
-
- Watson's extradition hearing is on May 26, 1997 at 3:30 P.M. and is open to
- the public at the Court of Haarlem, Netherlands, 46 Jansstraat, which will
- also be the site of a massive international demonstration beginning at 2 p.m.
-
-
- Contact: Lisa Distefano (310) 301-7325
-
- SEA SHEPHERD CONSERVATION SOCIETY
- PO Box 628
- Venice, CA. 90294
- USA
- Tel: 310-301-7325
- Fax: 310-574-3161
- www.seashepherd.org
-
-
-
-
-
- --
-
- *****************************
- Sent From Nick Voth
- System Administrator
- E Street Communications, Inc.
- <nvoth@estreet.com>
- *****************************
-
-
- Date: Fri, 23 May 97 19:27:04 -0000
- From: shadowrunner@voyager.net
- To: <ar-news@envirolink.com>
- Subject: Paul Watson Update 5-23-97
- Message-ID: <199705232326.TAA19592@vixa.voyager.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE MAY 23rd, 1997
-
-
- ENVIRONMENTAL HERO'S TRIAL SPURS INTERNATIONAL ACTION AND OUTRAGE
- Mick Jagger, Rutgor Hauer, Jane Seymour, Martin Sheen Condemn Norwegian
- Foul
- Play
-
- For the past 2 weeks, Holland has been barraged with public and celebrity
- expressions of concern and protest in support for Captain Paul Watson,
- founder
- and president of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society. This weekend, mass
- demonstrations and other protests are planned to focus world attention on
- Watson, whom many countries now consider a political prisoner in the
- high-stakes war on the oceans and marine wildlife species.
-
- Watson was arrested in Amsterdam on April 2 on an Interpol warrant issued
- by
- Norway. Pending an extradition hearing, Norway wants Watson to serve a
- jail
- sentence on the charge of sinking a Norwegian whaling vessel in 1992, for
- which he was convicted in absentia. Other charges stem from the incident
- on
- July 6, 1994, when the Sea Shepherd conservation vessel Whales Forever was
- rammed, depth-charged and fired upon by the Norwegian naval vessel Andenes
- which was protecting the whaling fleet during its illegal whale-killing
- activities. Norway claims that it was Sea Shepherd's vessel Whales Forever
- that did the ramming even though the incident was witnessed by 11
- independent
- journalists on board who obtained footage and photographs proving that the
- action was carried out by the Norwegians.
-
- "Norway made a mistake when they thought they could arrest Paul Watson,
- who
- has been fighting nonstop for the whales for 26 years now," said Sea
- Shepherd
- International Director Lisa Distefano. "By trying to manipulate the Dutch
- justice system for their own means, they have focused unwanted attention
- on
- their illegal whaling in defiance of the global moratorium. They want Paul
- badly, but they wanted to get him quietly. It looks like they're not
- getting
- their wish."
-
- A full-page advertisement in the May 23 edition of the newspaper
- Volkskrant
- features actors Pierce Brosnan, Cher, Rutgor Hauer, Jane Seymour, and Rob
- Lowe, and musicians Mick Jagger and Chrissie Hynde, among others, who are
- appealing to the Dutch community to free Paul Watson. The ad was
- sponsored by
- avid Sea Shepherd supporter John Paul Dejoria, CEO of Paul Mitchell
- Systems,
- respected for his activism and support of environmental causes.
-
- "We are grateful for the outpouring of personal time, funding, and
- commitment
- by people worldwide who realize what is at stake here," said Distefano.
- "Sincee Paul's arrest, we have received a flood of hate mail, phone calls,
- e-mail, and faxes from Norway in a hate campaign orchestrated by a
- Norwegian
- government-controlled radio station. We can't hold out much hope for
- Paul's
- survival in a Norwegian prison. We all just hope the global outcry will be
- enough to convince the Netherlands that condemning Paul to almost certain
- death in order to support Norway's political agenda on whaling is not a
- course
- of action they want to follow."
-
- Watson's extradition hearing is on May 26, 1997 at 3:30 P.M. and is open
- to
- the public at the Court of Haarlem, Netherlands, 46 Jansstraat, which will
- also be the site of a massive international demonstration beginning at 2
- p.m.
-
- Contact: Lisa Distefano (310) 301-7325
-
- SEA SHEPHERD CONSERVATION SOCIETY
- PO Box 628
- Venice, CA. 90294
- USA
- Tel: 310-301-7325
- Fax: 310-574-3161
- www.seashepherd.org
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 23 May 1997 19:54:51 -0400 (EDT)
- From: LMANHEIM@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Fwd: Frog Dissection Class a Mystery
- Message-ID: <970523195450_-1230319894@emout19.mail.aol.com>
-
- Could not ~believe~ what I was reading. This is really one for the books!!!
-
- In a message dated 97-05-23 16:29:49 EDT, AOL News writes:
-
- << Subj:Frog Dissection Class a Mystery
- Date:97-05-23 16:29:49 EDT
- From:AOL News
- BCC:LMANHEIM
-
- .c The Associated Press
-
- By JOHN ANTCZAK
- LOS ANGELES (AP) - The frogs are DOA in Christine Karlberg's
- class. Her students' task is to find out why they croaked.
- Mrs. Karlberg tries to make frog dissection more interesting and
- educational for her students by placing the dead, preserved frogs
- in miniature ``crime scenes'' and assigning the seventh-graders to
- solve the whodunit. The approach has delighted students and
- offended animal-rights activists.
- The frogs are posed in doll furniture and given toe tags. Stray
- hairs, fake blood, footprints, fingerprints are other evidence are
- left at the scene.
- The late D. Frog, for example, was found dead in a bathtub. The
- erstwhile T. Tadpolian bought the farm in bed. A certain K.C.
- Amphibious had a stab wound inflicted by some pond scum.
- At Hewes Middle School in Orange County last week, the student
- forensic sleuths were ribeted by the exercise.
- ``It was laying on its back and there were blood spatters on the
- wall,'' Robert Washington, 13, said of his frog. ``I was the
- criminalist.''
- Robert said the frog had been done in by a teacher. ``She took a
- pencil and she stabbed it in the throat,'' he said. What was the
- first clue? ``We had pencil fibers and pencil erasings.''
- No one at the school actually kills the frogs; the supplier
- delivers them dead, in formaldehyde. But Mrs. Karlberg dreams up
- the crime scenarios, and she and other teachers often take the fall
- for the murders.
- Last year, for example, Lucas Payne's frog supposedly succumbed
- in a bathtub.
- ``It was Mrs. Karlberg who drowned it,'' the 13-year-old said.
- Footprints, fingerprints and a few stray hairs gave Mrs. Karlberg
- away. ``She said she was with her husband,'' but her alibi didn't
- hold up, Lucas said.
- He added: ``We opened the frog up. There was a bunch of ovaries
- in there and a liver and stuff. That was real fun.''
- About 800 students have taken part in the science exercise in
- the past three years, Principal Margaret Sepulveda said. Contrary
- to the student testimony, Mrs. Karlberg does not inflict wounds on
- the creatures, Ms. Sepulveda said.
- Mrs. Karlberg did not return calls.
- Ms. Sepulveda said the students are learning how to go through
- the steps of scientific problem-solving, including collecting data,
- keeping a log, forming a hypothesis, making observations and
- reaching a conclusion.
- ``It's not a joke,'' she said. ``It's a way to help students
- understand the scientific process.''
- The exercise has raised eyebrows at animal rights organizations
- opposed to dissection.
- ``If you sort of make light of it ... it almost ridicules the
- exercise all the more,'' said Jonathan Balcombe, associate director
- for education in animal research issues at the Humane Society of
- the United States in Washington.
- Robert's mother, Erin Washington, said her son has never been so
- interested in science.
- ``He's had a blast,'' said Mrs. Washington, a nurse. ``This has
- been the only time in the whole history of school he's talked about
- science. ... He came home today and said that he was pretty sure he
- had gotten an `A' on the test.'' >>
-
-
- ---------------------
- Forwarded message:
- Subj: Frog Dissection Class a Mystery
- Date: 97-05-23 16:29:49 EDT
- From: AOL News
-
- <HTML><PRE><I>.c The Associated Press</I></PRE></HTML>
-
- By JOHN ANTCZAK
- LOS ANGELES (AP) - The frogs are DOA in Christine Karlberg's
- class. Her students' task is to find out why they croaked.
- Mrs. Karlberg tries to make frog dissection more interesting and
- educational for her students by placing the dead, preserved frogs
- in miniature ``crime scenes'' and assigning the seventh-graders to
- solve the whodunit. The approach has delighted students and
- offended animal-rights activists.
- The frogs are posed in doll furniture and given toe tags. Stray
- hairs, fake blood, footprints, fingerprints are other evidence are
- left at the scene.
- The late D. Frog, for example, was found dead in a bathtub. The
- erstwhile T. Tadpolian bought the farm in bed. A certain K.C.
- Amphibious had a stab wound inflicted by some pond scum.
- At Hewes Middle School in Orange County last week, the student
- forensic sleuths were ribeted by the exercise.
- ``It was laying on its back and there were blood spatters on the
- wall,'' Robert Washington, 13, said of his frog. ``I was the
- criminalist.''
- Robert said the frog had been done in by a teacher. ``She took a
- pencil and she stabbed it in the throat,'' he said. What was the
- first clue? ``We had pencil fibers and pencil erasings.''
- No one at the school actually kills the frogs; the supplier
- delivers them dead, in formaldehyde. But Mrs. Karlberg dreams up
- the crime scenarios, and she and other teachers often take the fall
- for the murders.
- Last year, for example, Lucas Payne's frog supposedly succumbed
- in a bathtub.
- ``It was Mrs. Karlberg who drowned it,'' the 13-year-old said.
- Footprints, fingerprints and a few stray hairs gave Mrs. Karlberg
- away. ``She said she was with her husband,'' but her alibi didn't
- hold up, Lucas said.
- He added: ``We opened the frog up. There was a bunch of ovaries
- in there and a liver and stuff. That was real fun.''
- About 800 students have taken part in the science exercise in
- the past three years, Principal Margaret Sepulveda said. Contrary
- to the student testimony, Mrs. Karlberg does not inflict wounds on
- the creatures, Ms. Sepulveda said.
- Mrs. Karlberg did not return calls.
- Ms. Sepulveda said the students are learning how to go through
- the steps of scientific problem-solving, including collecting data,
- keeping a log, forming a hypothesis, making observations and
- reaching a conclusion.
- ``It's not a joke,'' she said. ``It's a way to help students
- understand the scientific process.''
- The exercise has raised eyebrows at animal rights organizations
- opposed to dissection.
- ``If you sort of make light of it ... it almost ridicules the
- exercise all the more,'' said Jonathan Balcombe, associate director
- for education in animal research issues at the Humane Society of
- the United States in Washington.
- Robert's mother, Erin Washington, said her son has never been so
- interested in science.
- ``He's had a blast,'' said Mrs. Washington, a nurse. ``This has
- been the only time in the whole history of school he's talked about
- science. ... He came home today and said that he was pretty sure he
- had gotten an `A' on the test.''
- AP-NY-05-23-97 1616EDT
- <HTML><PRE><I><FONT COLOR="#000000" SIZE=2> Copyright 1997 The
- Associated Press. The information
- contained in the AP news report may not be published,
- broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without
- prior written authority of The Associated Press.<FONT COLOR="#000000" SIZE=3>
- </I></PRE></HTML>
-
-
- To edit your profile, go to keyword NewsProfiles.
- For all of today's news, go to keyword News.
- Date: Fri, 23 May 1997 20:09:06 -0500 (CDT)
- From: Suzanne Roy <idausa@ix.netcom.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Marine Mammal Freedom Weekend
- Message-ID: <199705240109.UAA27831@dfw-ix15.ix.netcom.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- Date: May 22, 1997Contact: Donna Hertel (916) 455-7325
- Suzanne Roy (415) 388-9641 x. 26
-
- SIXTH ANNUAL MARINE MAMMAL FREEDOM WEEKEND SPOTLIGHTS CRUELTIES
- OF CAPTIVITY
- FOR DOLPHINS, WHALES
-
- Mill Valley, Calif....Environmental and animal protection activists
- throughout the United States and Canada will gather this weekend for Marine
- Mammal Freedom Weekend (MMFW), May 24-26. The sixth annual event will
- feature protests, rallies, information tables and educational events at
- marine and amusement parks and aquariums that display captive dolphins,
- whales and other marine mammals. MMFW, sponsored by Northern
- California-based In Defense of Animals (IDA), is held to increase public
- awareness of the cruelties involved in keeping dolphins and whales confined
- in artificial, captive environments, and to promote respect for marine
- mammals and their habitat.
-
- MMFW events will take place at dozens of locations, including the Shedd
- Aquarium in Chicago; the Dallas World Aquarium in Texas; Marineland Canada
- in Niagara Falls; the Vancouver Aquarium; Knott's Berry Farm in Southern
- California (as well as at the offices of some of the park's corporate
- sponsors), Sea World in San Diego, California; and Marine World/Africa USA
- in Vallejo, California. Information tables and leafleting will also take
- place at Albuquerque's Biological Park and Ripley's Aquarium in South
- Carolina. Neither facility displays marine mammals.
-
- "The public is becoming increasingly aware of harmful effects that a life of
- captivity has on dolphins and whales," stated Donna Hertel, Marine Mammal
- Program Coordinator for In Defense of Animals, sponsor of the event. "There
- is growing public sentiment against marine parks and aquariums that imprison
- marine mammals."
-
- According to IDA, the detrimental effects of captivity include ulcers,
- blindness (from chlorinated tanks), pneumonia, other stress-related
- illnesses, and premature death. Infant mortality rates for captive dolphins
- and whales are also high. It is inhumane, the group says, to confine these
- complex, intelligent and sensitive animals, who swim up to 100 miles a day
- in the open sea, to tiny, concrete tanks that legally can measure just 24
- ft. long.
-
- The success of the Free Willy movies and the transfer, rehabilitation and
- planned release of the film's star, Keiko has sparked growing public
- awareness about the captivity issue. Over the past six years, at least 19
- marine and amusement parks in North America have either closed their captive
- dolphin shows or gone out of business entirely. Well over 75 aquariums,
- either existing or proposed, have declared their commitment to not exhibit
- captive dolphins and/or whales.
-
- "The public is beginning to see through the claims that marine parks are
- educational and environmental," said Mark Berman, Program Coordinator of
- Earth Island Institute, which co-founded MMFW with IDA in 1991. "The true
- purpose of these 'abusement parks' is profit pure and simple, and dolphins
- and whales are dying because of it."
- - end -
-
- ===============================================================
-
- Date: May 23, 1997Contact: Donna Hertel (916) 455-7325
- Suzanne Roy (415) 388-9641 x. 26
-
- PROTEST TARGETS MARINE WORLD'S NEW OWNERS
- EVENT MARKS 6TH ANNUAL MARINE MAMMAL FREEDOM WEEKEND
-
- Vallejo....Bay Area animal advocates will gather at Marine World/Africa USA
- to protest the park's continued exhibition of captive dolphins and whales on
- Memorial Day, Monday, May 27, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the park (off Route
- 37 in Vallejo).
-
- Part of the sixth annual Marine Mammal Freedom Weekend (MMFW), the protest
- will target the park's new owner, the City of Vallejo. The city took over
- ownership of the park late last year, after steadily-declining attendance
- and profits left its previous owners, the Marine World Africa Foundation,
- unable to pay its debts. In an attempt to increase revenues, the City
- recently hired a national theme park operator, Premier Parks, Inc., to take
- over management of the park. Marine mammal advocates are encouraging the
- company to phase out animal acts as a means of increasing attendance and
- profits.
-
- "The public is becoming increasingly aware of harmful effects that a life of
- captivity has on dolphins and whales," stated Donna Hertel, Marine Mammal
- Program Coordinator for In Defense of Animals, sponsor of the event. "There
- is growing public sentiment against marine parks and aquariums that imprison
- marine mammals."
-
- According to IDA, the detrimental effects of captivity include ulcers,
- blindness (from chlorinated tanks), pneumonia, other stress-related
- illnesses, and premature death. Infant mortality rates for captive dolphins
- and whales are also high. It is inhumane, the group says, to confine these
- complex, intelligent and sensitive animals, who swim up to 100 miles a day
- in the open sea, to tiny, concrete tanks that legally can measure just 24
- ft. long.
-
- In the past several years, declining attendance and revenues have forced at
- least 19 marine and amusement parks in North America to either close their
- captive dolphin shows or go out of business entirely. Well over 75 new
- aquariums, either existing or proposed, have committed to facilities that do
- not exhibit captive dolphins and/or whales.
-
- "By making the commitment to no longer display captive marine mammals,
- Marine World can make a real difference on behalf of the animals, city
- taxpayers and its own bottom line," said Mark Berman, program coordinator at
- Earth Island Institute, which in 1991, co-founded MMFW with IDA. "We urge
- the City of Vallejo to transform the park into a world-class rehabilitation
- center for marine mammals and other wildlife."
-
- Held each year over Memorial Day weekend, MMFW features protests, rallies,
- information tables and educational events at marine parks and aquariums
- throughout the United States and Canada. MMFW was created to increase
- public awareness of the cruelties involved in keeping dolphins and whales
- confined in artificial, captive environments and to promote respect for
- marine mammals and their habitat.
- - end -
-
-
-
- Date: Sat, 24 May 1997 09:49:26 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (HK) E coli fears end offal sales in markets
- Message-ID: <199705240149.JAA27227@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
-
- >Hong Kong Standard
- 24 May 97
- E coli fears end offal sales in markets
- By Yau Wai-ping
-
-
- BEEF suppliers have agreed not to sell offal in markets from Sunday in a bid
- to prevent cross-contamination of beef with deadly E coli bacteria.
-
- One supplier, Ng Fung Hong, said that once a cow was slaughtered, its heart
- and liver would be incinerated and the offal sold to offal shops.
- Three cases of beef contaminated with E coli O-157:H7 have been reported in
- Hong Kong in the past two months, all supplied by the same company and
- distributed by the Hop Lee Fresh Provision Shop in Western and Chi Fu Fa Yuen.
-
- Meanwhile, a Tuen Mun seafood restaurant has reopened after being shut down
- on Saturday for poor hygiene. The New Kwong Tong Restaurant reported a
- two-thirds drop in trade after reopening on Friday.
-
- Urban councillor Steve Chan said health officials needed more power to act
- against unhygienic premises, as the current 15-point demerit system was
- ineffective. He said it took up to a year for health officials to close an
- unhygienic shop, restaurant or factory.
-
-
- Date: Sat, 24 May 1997 09:50:34 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Stray dog cull condemned
- Message-ID: <199705240150.JAA21864@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
-
- >Hong Kong Standard
- 24 May 97
- Stray dog cull condemned
-
- TAIPEI: Animal rights campaigners in London and Taiwan on Friday condemned a
- Taiwanese plan to kill 1.3 million stray dogs in a year.
-
- The London-based World Society for the Protection of Animals (WSPA) demanded
- that Taiwan's government abandon the stray dog cull.
-
- ``The knee-jerk reaction to the problem of stray dogs is the ultimate act of
- an irresponsible government that is flouting international opinion and the
- guidelines of the World Health Organisation,'' the society said.
-
- ``It amounts to a deliberate and unnecessary slaughter of dogs in a country
- where they are viewed as rubbish to be cleared away,'' it said.
- It said Taiwan already uses some of the world's cruellest and most inhumane
- methods in handling stray dogs, including gassing, electrocuting and
- poisoning the dogs or leaving them in shallow pits to starve to death.
-
- ``The planned genocide of over a million dogs breaks the promises made to
- WSPA by Taiwanese government officials,'' the statement said.
-
- Taiwan's Council of Agriculture, under fire from international animal rights
- campaigners, agreed earlier this year to take measures to improve the
- treatment of stray dogs.
-
- But on Thursday, it ordered the hunting and killing of stray dogs in Taipei,
- Taichung, and Kaohsiung in the south to avert a possible outbreak of rabies.
- - Reuter
-
- Date: Sat, 24 May 1997 09:58:57 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Cc: pisces@pisces.demon.co.uk
- Subject: (NZ) Fish is an animal, police legal section determines
- Message-ID: <199705240158.JAA29080@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
-
- >South China Morning Post
- Saturday May 24 1997
- Goldfish killer goes to jail
- AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE in Wellington
-
- A man who pleaded guilty to aggravated cruelty towards a goldfish
- called Moby is
- now in jail at his own request.
-
- Darren Hura, 32, was convicted in the Upper Hutt District Court this
- week and
- remanded for sentence on June 5.
-
- The Evening Post reported he walked to the police station and asked to
- be locked up until then.
-
- On the charge of aggravated cruelty, Hura initially pleaded not guilty
- and there was some dispute whether a fish was an animal. The police legal
- section determined it was an animal because it was a vertebrate with a spine
- and was kept in a state of captivity and depended on man.
-
- Prosecutor Sergeant Neil Ford told the court Hura had argued with his
- partner, who then walked out on him, taking their two children with her.
- Hura had picked up his son's goldfish bowl and thrown it from a
- second-storey window. The bowl smashed, and Moby spilled on to the front
- lawn and died.
-
- Hura asked police what else he was supposed to have done when he wanted
- to get rid of it.
-
- Date: Fri, 23 May 1997 22:09:12 -0700
- From: "FARM (Farm Animal Reform Movement)" <farmusa@erols.com>
- To: A R News <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: ANIMAL RIGHTS '97 deadline
- Message-ID: <338677F8.78F4@erols.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Please note that Tuesday, May 27th is the discounted registration fee
- postmark deadline for ANIMAL RIGHTS '97 - our movement's annual
- convention. The event will be held in the nation's capital between
- June 26th and 30th. For additional details, check out
- http://envirolink.org/arrs/farm/ar97.htm or call 1-888-FARM-USA during
- regular business hours.
- Date: Fri, 23 May 1997 20:57:43 -0700
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Making dissection into fun
- Message-ID: <33866737.1537@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- A new whodunit: Biology-class dissection is novel, controversial
-
- The Associated Press
-
- LOS ANGELES (May 23, 1997 4:31 p.m. EDT) -- The frogs are DOA in
- Christine Karlberg's class. Her students' task is to find out why they
- croaked.
-
- Mrs. Karlberg tries to make frog dissection more interesting and
- educational for her students by placing the dead, preserved frogs in
- miniature "crime scenes" and assigning the seventh-graders to
- solve the whodunit. The approach has delighted students and offended
- animal-rights activists.
-
- The frogs are posed in doll furniture and given toe tags. Stray hairs,
- fake blood, footprints, fingerprints and other evidence are left at the
- scene.
-
- The late D. Frog, for example, was found dead in a bathtub. The
- erstwhile T. Tadpolian bought the farm in bed. A certain K.C. Amphibious
- had a stab wound inflicted by some pond scum.
-
- At Hewes Middle School in Orange County last week, the student forensic
- sleuths were ribeted by the exercise.
-
- "It was laying on its back and there were blood spatters on the wall,"
- Robert Washington, 13, said of his frog. "I was the criminalist."
-
- Robert said the frog had been done in by a teacher. "She took a pencil
- and she stabbed it in the throat," he said. What was the first clue? "We
- had pencil fibers and pencil erasings."
-
- No one at the school actually kills the frogs; the supplier delivers
- them dead, in formaldehyde. But Mrs. Karlberg dreams up the crime
- scenarios, and she and other teachers often take the fall for the
- murders.
-
- Last year, for example, Lucas Payne's frog supposedly succumbed in a
- bathtub.
-
- "It was Mrs. Karlberg who drowned it," the 13-year-old said. Footprints,
- fingerprints and a few stray hairs gave Mrs. Karlberg away. "She said
- she was with her husband," but her alibi didn't hold up, Lucas said.
-
- He added: "We opened the frog up. There was a bunch of ovaries in there
- and a liver and stuff. That was real fun."
-
- About 800 students have taken part in the science exercise in the past
- three years, Principal Margaret Sepulveda said. Contrary to the student
- testimony, Mrs. Karlberg does not inflict wounds on the creatures, Ms.
- Sepulveda said.
-
- Mrs. Karlberg did not return calls.
-
- Ms. Sepulveda said the students are learning how to go through the steps
- of scientific problem-solving, including collecting data, keeping a log,
- forming a hypothesis, making observations and reaching a conclusion.
-
- "It's not a joke," she said. "It's a way to help students understand the
- scientific process."
-
- The exercise has raised eyebrows at animal rights organizations opposed
- to dissection.
-
- "If you sort of make light of it ... it almost ridicules the exercise
- all the more," said Jonathan Balcombe, associate director for education
- in animal research issues at the Humane Society of the United States in
- Washington.
-
- Robert's mother, Erin Washington, said her son has never been so
- interested in science.
-
- "He's had a blast," said Mrs. Washington, a nurse. "This has been the
- only time in the whole history of school he's talked about science. ...
- He came home today and said that he was pretty sure he had gotten an 'A'
- on the test."
- Date: Fri, 23 May 1997 20:59:12 -0700
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Tigers and Mice
- Message-ID: <33866790.15CA@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Researchers on trail of zoo breeding success
-
- Times of London
-
- LONDON (May 23, 1997 11:13 a.m. EDT) -- Scientists may have discovered
- why some rare animals, such as tigers, leopards and pandas, will mate in
- captivity, whereas others refuse.
-
- Researchers at the Institute of Zoology in London have found a link
- between the numbers of males and females in a litter and the likelihood
- that the males will become "wimps" or Casanovas.
-
- Most mammals, including the big cats and bears, base their choice of
- sexual partner on smell. Male big cats, for example, spend a great deal
- of time and effort warning rivals to stay away from their patch by
- leaving complex scent marks on the ground. The same scent marks are also
- crucial signals to females, when they are ready to mate, indicating the
- prowess and fitness of individual males. The more scent marks, the
- stronger the signal that the male is a worthy mate who will produce fit
- and healthy offspring.
-
- Professor Morris Gosling of the institute, which is part of London Zoo,
- has been studying mice as a model animal to discover why some males
- produce a lot of scent marks and why others are "wimps." "We have found
- that if the numbers of females exceeds the number of males, then the
- males scent mark at a lower rate," he said Wednesday. The researchers
- believe this is because young males surrounded by sisters think they
- have little need to make attempts to attract the opposite sex and have
- little to fear from male rivals.
-
- The findings may have implications for captive breeding programmes.
- Professor Gosling said they might be able to collect the male's scent
- markings and get the female to accept him "by using the stored material
- to enhance his signal and double the frequency."
-
- The researchers also want to extract the key gland chemicals used by the
- animals in scent marking. It may be possible to synthesise these
- artificially to enhance the allure of a "wimp" male.
-
- By NICK NUTTALL, The Times of London News Service
-
- ======================================================
-
- Mice are used as "models" for people all the time, so why not
- extrapolate findings from mice to tigers and leopards as well? There's
- some kind of logic behind it, I suppose.
-
- Andy
-
- </pre>
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