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-
-
- Singapore:
- >The Straits Times
- 2 July 97
- Cancer-buster
- By Allison Lim
-
- MEET Dr Kong Hwai Loong, 32, cancer-buster.
-
- By marrying the work of two scientists, Dr Judah Folkman, who is
- renowned for his work with blood vessels, and Dr Ronald Crystal, a Professor
- of Medicine at The New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Centre, Dr Kong has
- come up with a new way of battling cancer tumours.
-
- His method is based on gene therapy, which aims to deal with cancer cells by
- reprogramming them.
-
- A senior registrar with the National University Hospital (NUH), he
- thought of the idea in May last year while he was at The New York
- Hospital-Cornell Medical Centre to further his training in cancer treatments.
-
- Working with a team of doctors there, he designed a gene which would
- slow down the growth of blood vessels in cancer tumours.
-
- Tumours have their own tiny blood vessels which absorb nutrients from
- the body and help the tumour grow.
- Dr Kong felt that the tumours could be starved to death if they did not have
- these blood vessels.
-
- Genes are like blueprints, responsible for determining specific
- characteristics or traits in living things, including cancer cells. The
- information is stored in the DNA, or deoxyribonucleic acid.
-
- Dr Kong "reprogrammed" both the cancer and normal cells by going into
- the blueprints and introducing new DNA.
-
- The cells would then produce a new protein, which would shut off new
- blood vessel formation, and would act only on the blood vessels in the
- tumour.
-
- In an experiment using mice, his team injected the rodents with cancer cells
- to infect their lungs and liver. Half the mice were given the gene
- treatment.
-
- The mice which did not receive gene therapy developed massive cancer
- tumours and died within 30 days.
-
- Those which received the gene treatment were alive and healthy five
- months after the treatment began.
-
- Gene therapy has not proven its effectiveness and safety in humans yet,
- but Dr Kong is hopeful that some day, it will.
-
- Human trials are going on all over the world, with 136 in the United
- States alone.
-
- Professor John Wong, chief of the oncology department at NUH, said that gene
- therapy was not a miracle cure. But he added that it was on the right
- track, and could offer hope to cancer patients in future.
-
- Date: Wed, 2 Jul 1997 12:30:29 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Share a whale and get a tax break?
- Message-ID: <199707020430.MAA15157@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >The Straits Times
- 2 July 97
- Share a whale and get a tax break?
-
-
- The Eskimo tradition of sharing may earn some Alaskan whaling-ship
- captains a sizeable federal tax deduction.
-
- An Eskimo captain "gets the whale, he's expected to give it to all
- members of the village and they eat it ... but they don't pay him",
- explained US senator for Alaska Frank Murkowski on Monday.
-
- The US Senate included the US$7,500 (S$10,500) "charitable
- contribution" -- which would benefit a total of 40 captains -- among a
- series of tax cuts totalling US$85 billion it approved on Friday.
-
- Mr Murkowski's proposal would cost the federal government some US$3 million
- over 10 years.
-
- Both houses of Congress must confer to approve a common Budget text to
- be submitted to President Bill Clinton, who on Monday said he opposed the
- proposal. -- AFP.
-
-
- Date: Wed, 2 Jul 1997 12:38:44 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: New Zealand says No to Rabbit Haemhorragic Disease(RCD)
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970702123625.2ddf057c@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- News Flash from Rabbit Information Service (Australia) (Wednesday 2nd July 1997)
- =====================================================================
-
- News just received from New Zealand indicates that a news release issued
- at 3pm today New Zealand time by New Zealand Ministry of Agriculture
- says that New Zealand will not follow Australia's lead in using
- Rabbit Haemorrhagic Disease as a Biological Control of wild European rabbits.
-
- Over 800 submissions were received by New Zealand MAF from within New
- Zealand and from around the world and over 50% of those submissions were
- against the proposed import and use of deadly rabbit haemorrhagic disease
- as a biological control agent.
-
- RHD was renamed rabbit calicivirus disease (RCD) by Australian authorities
- to make the virus seem more innocuous. Farmers in New Zealand thought that
- RHD would provide a cheap means of rabbit control but scientists argued that
- no one could guarantee that RHD would not infect other species. Also, in
- Australia, some rabbit populations are already immune to the RHD virus
- having been exposed at an early age and having developed antibodies to the
- disease.
-
- Further details will be available tomorrow.
-
-
-
-
- ===========================================
-
- Rabbit Information Service,
- P.O.Box 30,
- Riverton,
- Western Australia 6148
-
- Email> rabbit@wantree.com.au
-
- http://www.wantree.com.au/~rabbit/rabbit.htm
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Tue, 01 Jul 1997 21:50:59 -0700
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Vegetarian, except for the gelatin
- Message-ID: <33B9DE33.1D9A@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Wendy's accused of misrepresenting veggie pitas as vegetarian
-
- The Associated Press
-
- DUBLIN, Ohio (July 1, 1997 8:50 p.m. EDT) -- Wendy's is changing its new
- garden veggie pita sandwiches after a vegetarian group raised a beef
- over its ingredients.
-
- The Vegetarian Awareness Network said Tuesday the fast-food chain
- misrepresented its new product in nutritional guides available at its
- restaurants.
-
- The group said the veggie pita is described as "vegetarian" and "all
- vegetable" even though the dressing contains gelatin, which comes from
- animal tissue.
-
- Wendy's International Inc., which operates 1,500 restaurants worldwide,
- plans to remove all gelatin from the dressing and should have it in
- restaurants within two months, spokeswoman Rebecca Lusk
- said Tuesday. In the meantime, it will continue using the current sauce,
- she said.
-
- Lusk said Wendy's discovered the error last week and recalled thousands
- of guides from stores.
-
- Vegetarian Awareness, based in Washington, said it filed complaints
- about Wendy's claims in the guide with the Federal Trade Commission and
- the Food and Drug Administration last week.
- Date: Tue, 01 Jul 1997 21:53:53 -0700
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: 96 billion pounds of food wasted annually in U.S.
- Message-ID: <33B9DEE1.6FEB@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- 96 billion pounds of food wasted annually in U.S.
-
- The Associated Press
-
- WASHINGTON (July 1, 1997 12:50 p.m. EDT) -- More than one-fourth of the
- food produced in the United States spoils, is tossed out unused or goes
- uneaten on the plate, the government said Tuesday.
-
- "By recovering a fraction of this food, we could get food to those in
- need, instead of tossing it into the Dumpster," said Agriculture
- Secretary Dan Glickman.
-
- The Agriculture Department study estimated that food lost in retail
- stores, restaurants and people's homes in 1995 amounted to more than 96
- billion pounds -- one quarter of the total U.S. food supply of 356
- billion pounds.
-
- If the average person consumes 3 pounds of food per day, Glickman said
- recovery of even 5 percent of the wasted food would provide enough for 4
- million people to eat. And in terms of trash, the study estimated that
- if 5 percent of the annual losses were recovered, taxpayers would save
- $50 million in solid waste disposal costs.
-
- The vast bulk of the food is lost in people's homes, where food spoils
- in the refrigerator or is tossed uneaten into the garbage can, and in
- restaurants and other food service industries. Homes and food service
- sites accounted for 91 billion pounds of lost food.
-
- The remaining 5.4 billion pounds was lost in retail groceries through
- overstocking, discarding of perishable items such as fresh produce and
- dairy products, and food removed for bypassing its "sell-by" date.
-
- Two-thirds of the lost food was fresh fruit, vegetables, milk and grain
- products such as bread and sweeteners, USDA found.
-
- Scraps are inevitable at most restaurants but waste is expensive, said
- Simon Marsh, assistant manager of Listrani's, an Italian cafe in
- Washington. At his restaurant, produce and other perishables are used up
- quickly and any leftover meats are frozen.
-
- "While we do have some waste, it's not enough to warrant giving it away
- to charity," he said.
-
- The USDA study examined only losses in homes, stores and food service
- establishments, leaving out losses on the farm or at the wholesale
- level.
-
- Glickman, who planned to discuss the study at a national food recovery
- conference in California Tuesday, said its findings were important
- because the only previous estimates of food loss were 20 years old.
-
- "Understanding where and how much food is lost is an important step in
- reducing that waste and increasing the efficiency of food recovery
- efforts," Glickman said.
-
- The study recommends continued emphasis on programs, many of them run by
- non-profit charities such as Second Harvest, to collect and distribute
- unused food from farms, restaurants and stores to needy people.
-
- In addition, consumers should learn how to prepare the proper portions
- of meals and pay close attention to expiration dates on products such as
- milk to guard against spoilage.
-
- Glickman plans a national food recovery summit in Washington in
- September to further highlight the problem and possible solutions.
-
- By CURT ANDERSON, AP Farm Writer
- Date: Tue, 01 Jul 1997 22:19:02 -0700
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Gene therapy as genetic weapon
- Message-ID: <33B9E4C6.A6A@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- British doctors warn against genetic weapons
-
- Reuter Information Service
-
- LONDON (July 1, 1997 11:56 a.m. EDT) - Gene therapy could be twisted
- into terrifying genetic weapons that target and destroy ethnic groups,
- doctors in Britain warned Tuesday.
-
- The British Medical Association (BMA) is so worried by the possibility
- that it has commissioned a team of geneticists, biologists, lawyers and
- warfare experts to see if the technology is possible, and if so, to ban
- it.
-
- "It is a particularly horrifying thought," said Dr Vivienne Nathanson,
- head of science and ethics for the BMA, who started the study.
-
- "If you were a dictator somewhere in the world and you wanted to get rid
- of a group of people in your population who were opposing you -- whether
- you are talking about Hutus and Tutsis in Rwanda, Bosnian Serbs or 1930s
- Germany -- you could use this," she added.
-
- Gene therapy homes in on genes that certain people have that are
- different and can cause disease. For example, people with cystic
- fibrosis have easily identified mutations, as do some sufferers of
- breast cancer.
-
- New genes, or therapeutic proteins, can be delivered using engineered
- DNA -- the basic genetic building material.
-
- Nathanson said this could be twisted.
-
- "If we can target people to have a therapeutic effect then maybe you
- could put something in that is dangerous," she said in a telephone
- interview.
-
- Race war would not be possible -- races are too genetically diverse and
- what people recognise as "race" has little genetic basis.
-
- "You are looking for what in Scotland would be a clan or in Africa a
- tribe," Nathanson said. "It's a family grouping where one would expect
- to see a genetic similarity."
-
- Genes targeted by such weapons could control a person's appearance --
- height or hair color -- or how their bodies process certain drugs.
-
- "If that is the case, and it is likely to be the case, then it is
- possible to say we may have a weapon which was a virus or a chemical
- compound which has a genetic targeting component," Nathanson said.
-
- "We have to recognise that there is a potential for weapons with a fair
- degree of selectivity and extraordinary awfulness."
-
- Such compounds could be delivered as a gas or spray, or put into the
- water supply. They could kill, make people infertile or cause the birth
- of deformed children.
-
- "It would probably not be 100 percent effective but I've never really
- come across a dictator who seemed terribly concerned about losing some
- of their own population," she said.
-
- "We are doing the study at the moment using as many lawyers and other
- experts as we can to find out whether we think it is feasible," said
- Nathanson, who presented her fears to the BMA's annual meeting in
- Edinburgh.
-
- "If we do think such weapons are feasible, and so far we haven't heard
- anything that we think means they wouldn't be, a ban that works would be
- needed," Nathanson said.
-
- "It would need international collaboration and cooperation."
-
- But Nathanson said she feared that, if such weapons were ever developed,
- there would be no way to ban them. For example, landmines were proving
- hard to ban because so many companies and governments earned money from
- their sale.
-
- "One of the things we have to learn is not to wait until the technology
- has been learned and dispersed around the world before we ban them."
- Date: Tue, 01 Jul 1997 22:27:30 -0700
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: "Dolphin safe" tuna
- Message-ID: <33B9E6C2.2E0D@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Congress still debating 'dolphin safe' tuna
-
- Congressional Quarterly
-
- WASHINGTON (July 2, 1997 00:14 a.m. EDT) - Although the environmental
- protests of the 1980s that led to protections for dolphins during tuna
- harvesting have faded into memory, debate about fishing practices and
- international tuna trade continues unabated in Congress.
-
- The Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee dived into the
- issue last week, approving a bill by voice vote that supporters say
- would protect dolphins from deadly tuna nets, even as it would lift an
- embargo on tuna imports from countries that use such nets.
-
- The cuddly image of the mammals in popular culture prompted an outcry
- from consumers when reports of dolphin carnage by tuna fisherman
- surfaced in the 1970s and 1980s, and led Congress in 1992 to ban
- imported tuna caught with methods that killed or harmed dolphins.
-
- The new Senate bill, which is similar to legislation passed by the House
- on May 21, would revise the standard for "dolphin safe" tuna to include
- fish caught by encircling nets (a practice that, under
- existing law, would disqualify canned tuna from earning the "dolphin
- safe" label), so long as an observer on the tuna boat certified that no
- dolphins had been killed in the catch.
-
- Under an amendment offered by Sen. Olympia Snowe, R-Maine, and adopted
- by the committee by voice vote, a catch that did not immediately kill
- dolphins but seriously or mortally wounded them also would not be
- considered "dolphin safe."
-
- The legislation has divided environmentalists, and bill supporters are
- not confident that Snowe's expanded definition of "dolphin safe" would
- satisfy its opponents.
-
- Similar legislation passed the House easily in 1996 but was killed by
- the threat of a filibuster by Democratic Sens. Barbara Boxer of
- California and Joseph Biden Jr. of Delaware.
-
- "I don't expect that the changes made will alter Sen. Boxer's position
- on this bill," said a member of her staff. Biden also expressed his
- continuing opposition to the amended bill. And aides to bill sponsors
- were wary of claiming they had yet achieved a compromise that could be
- enacted.
-
- "It's been clear all along it's been boiling toward a floor fight," said
- William Snape, legal director of the environmentalist group Defenders of
- Wildlife, which opposes the bill.
-
- The pending legislation would change U.S. law to implement a 1995
- international agreement, known as the Declaration of Panama, and settle
- a long-standing dispute between the United States and
- Mexico, Venezuela and other Latin American nations over access to the
- U.S. market.
-
- At issue is an effort by Latin American fishermen to gain access to the
- $1.4 billion U.S. consumer market for canned tuna. They are hindered by
- an embargo that was imposed on their tuna under
- U.S. law because of fishing practices that endanger dolphins, which
- often swim above schools of tuna and can be killed in encircling nets.
-
- The Clinton administration supports the legislation, arguing that the
- Panama declaration is a model for reconciling the often-competing
- pressures of global trade and environmental protection.
-
- Not only would the bill settle a closely watched trade dispute, bill
- supporters say, but it would also create a definition of dolphin-safe
- tuna that would better protect fisheries in the eastern tropical
- Pacific Ocean and bind Latin American nations to an international
- agreement to safeguard the marine ecosystem.
-
- Proponents of the bill warn that if legislation is not enacted, the
- Panama agreement will collapse and other nations would feel free to
- return to dolphin-killing practices. Opponents say the agreement is
- poorly conceived and that Congress should not bow to international
- pressure to accept it. By their lights, the Panama agreement is an
- effort to promote trade at the expense of U.S. environmental law.
-
- The new legislation would allow a type of purse seine netting that is
- less dangerous to dolphins than other nets and require the stationing of
- observers on tuna boats to determine whether dolphins had been killed in
- the catch.
-
- The bill would limit the annual tuna-related dolphin death toll to 5,000
- and set a goal of zero dolphin mortality. The bill would limit the
- number of dolphins killed annually to no more than 0.2 percent of the
- species' overall estimated population until the year 2000, with that
- ceiling dropping to 0.1 percent in 2001.
-
- By ALAN GREENBLATT, Congressional Quarterly
- Date: Tue, 01 Jul 1997 22:30:53 -0700
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Death toll from cancer drug reaches 94
- Message-ID: <33B9E78D.61DB@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Japanese death toll from cancer drug reaches 94
-
- The Financial Times
-
- TOKYO (July 2, 1997 00:08 a.m. EDT) -- At least 94 Japanese cancer
- patients have died from the side-effects of a popular cancer drug after
- the Japanese Health Ministry underplayed the drug's risks.
-
- The revelation has sparked fury over unethical practices in Japan's
- drugs industry.
-
- Dr. Masanori Fukushima, head of the Aichi Cancer Center in Nagoya, in
- western Japan, said Tuesday that Health Ministry data indicated at least
- 94 patients had died from the side-effects of irinotecan hydrochloride,
- a treatment for lung and cervical cancer. He said the total was likely
- to grow.
-
- Fukushima's public warnings last week forced an admission from the
- drug's two makers in Japan, Daiichi Pharmaceutical and Yakult Honsha,
- that 39 deaths had resulted from its side-effects. On Tuesday the two
- firms acknowledged that the figure of 94 fatalities was correct.
-
- In late 1995, 18 months after the drug's commercial launch, the ministry
- only admitted that nine people had died from side-effects. At the time,
- however, the ministry knew at least 55 people had died out of 1,000
- given irinotecan in clinical tests, according to Fukushima.
-
- The Health Ministry still faces criticism over the hundreds of deaths
- resulting from HIV-tainted blood products distributed by Green Cross, a
- Japanese pharmaceutical company, in the 1980s. Bereaved relatives and
- people infected with HIV from the products have taken legal action
- against the ministry for its alleged failure to halt distribution of the
- contaminated products.
-
- At least 5,000 cancer patients have been injected with irinotecan,
- marketed in Japan under the name Topotecin by Daiichi, and as Campto by
- Yakult, since it came on to the market.
-
- The drug is marketed in the U.S. by Pharmacia & Upjohn as Camptosar.
-
- In spite of severe side- effects -- which include damage to blood cells
- -- regulators approved it because trials showed potential benefit
- outweighing harm. Western drug companies regard the
- Japanese market as more prone than their own to concerns over
- side-effects.
-
- Irinotecan's use in most overseas markets is strictly limited to the
- treatment of cancer of the colon
- and has not been linked to unusually high death rates.
-
- The Japanese Health Ministry's decision to extend its use to treat
- gastric cancer and cancers of the
- lungs, cervix and ovaries was an "irresponsible move to approve a
- dangerous drug very loosely,
- while many other good foreign drugs that doctors want to use here are
- banned," said Fukushima.
-
- The ministry acknowledged that the high number of deaths from irinotecan
- had not been publicized but said that it had issued warnings about the
- drug's side-effects since its launch and would soon
- warn doctors and hospitals "to be more careful about administering the
- drug."
-
- By GWEN ROBINSON and DANIEL GREEN, The Financial Times
- Date: Wed, 2 Jul 1997 11:23:48 +0200
- From: aal@magnet.at (Bernhard Anderl)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Message-ID: <msg98669.thr-ba948db5.1dcede59@magnet.at>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
-
- Content-ID: <msg98669.thr-ba948db5.1dcede59.part0@magnet.at>
-
-
- unsubscribe aal@magnet.at
- Date: Wed, 02 Jul 1997 07:35:20 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: EU opens mad cow disease conference
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970702073517.006e4c30@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from USA Today web page:
- -----------------------------------------
- EU opens mad cow disease conference
-
- BRUSSELS, Belgium - The decision to ban bone and meat meal from animal feed
- appears to have slowed the
- spread of mad cow disease in the 15-nation European Union, an EU
- commissioner said Tuesday. The
- comments by EU Consumer Affairs Commissioner Emma Bonino opened a two-day
- conference on the
- disease, which is widely-believed to be caused by cattle feed containing
- the ground-up remains of infected
- sheep. The disease, also called bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or BSE,
- created a public panic when the
- British government announced last year that a new version of a fatal human
- brain illness may be caused by
- eating tainted beef.
- Date: Wed, 02 Jul 1997 07:49:27 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (UK) Brit Beef on U.K. Burger King Menu
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970702074925.006a46ac@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- ------------------------------------
- 07/01/1997 12:09 EST
-
- Brit Beef on U.K. Burger King Menu
-
- LONDON (AP) -- With Britain's meat eaters less worried about mad cow
- disease, Burger King said Tuesday it will join rival McDonald's in
- putting British beef back on the menu in local restaurants.
-
- ``People have become more confident about British beef,'' said Burger
- King spokeswoman Emma Sturt.
-
- The fast-food giants both pulled British beef out of their U.K.
- restaurants 15 months ago, after the government said a fatal human brain
- ailment, Creutzfeld-Jakob Disease, was apparently linked to a similar
- cattle disease: bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or BSE.
-
- Both McDonald's and Burger King said from the outset they believed
- British beef was safe, but they had to import substitutes because too
- many customers were scared to eat it.
-
- McDonald's announced last Thursday it would sell British beef again
- because surveys showed the majority of its customers supported the move.
-
- Over the weekend, Burger King noticed a big surge in its customers who
- wanted British beef back on the menu, Ms. Sturt said.
-
- Burger King said it would take special steps to ensure the quality of its
- beef, and this would be explained prominently in leaflets at the
- company's 429 British stores.
-
- British beef exports are now banned by the 15-nation European Union, and
- the loss of business from McDonald's and Burger King, two of the
- industry's biggest customers, had been a huge blow to British cattle
- farmers who now can sell their product only at home.
-
- Date: Wed, 02 Jul 1997 07:52:23 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: EU To Appeal Ruling on U.S. Beef
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970702075221.00687c68@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- --------------------------------
- 07/01/1997 09:32 EST
-
- EU To Appeal Ruling on U.S. Beef
-
- BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -- The European Union said Tuesday it will appeal
- a ruling by the World Trade Organization that its ban on imports of
- hormone-fed American beef is illegal.
-
- The EU's executive Commission said the panel ignored scientific evidence
- that eating hormone-treated beef poses a health risk. The WTO issued its
- ruling Tuesday, confirming an interim finding made in May.
-
- The U.S. beef industry has long argued the European ban, imposed in 1988,
- lacked scientific basis and costs its members $250 million a year in
- European sales.
-
- In a statement, the executive Commission said the WTO's finding ignored
- the right of nations to ``decide what level of (consumer) protection they
- consider appropriate for their citizens.''
-
- Gerard Kiely, spokesman for EU Agriculture Commissioner Franz Fischler,
- said an appeal would likely be filed with the WTO in Geneva in late
- August. A new dispute panel would then have between 60 and 90 days to
- make a final ruling, Kiely said.
-
- If the EU loses an appeal, it would have to lift its ban or compensate
- the United States.
-
- But a U.S. trade official said Tuesday that after pushing so hard to win
- its case, Washington would probably not be satisfied with payment.
-
- ``We want market access for our commodities. Compensation isn't an
- issue,'' said the official, who asked not to be named.
-
- When the EU banned imports of US beef in 1988, Washington retaliated by
- imposing tariffs on imports of European veal and canned tomatoes, valued
- at $100 million. It subsequently sought a formal WTO panel ruling and
- dropped the import penalties.
-
- In anticipation of Tuesday's WTO ruling, the European Parliament last
- week approved a resolution calling on the Commission to continue blocking
- imports of hormone-treated beef -- even if it loses its appeal.
-
- The hormone ban is not the only transatlantic food fight. The EU is also
- questioning the hygiene of poultry slaughterhouses in the United States
- and several EU nations ban the import of genetically-modified American
- corn for health reasons.
-
- Date: Wed, 2 Jul 1997 07:30:13 -0700 (PDT)
- From: "Christine M. Wolf" <chrisw@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: URGENT: CALL YOUR SENATORS NOW TO STOP FUNDING OF TROPHY
- HUNTING PROGRAM
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19970315190946.2f4f0a2a@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- NOW IS THE TIME TO TELL YOUR SENATORS THAT YOU OBJECT TO YOUR TAX
- MONEY
- BEING WASTED ON FOREIGN TROPHY HUNTING PROGRAMS!!
-
- Next week, the senate will consider the Foreign Operations Appropriations
- bill for Fiscal Year 1998, S. 955, which makes monetary allocations for the
- U.S. Agency for International Development. U.S. A.I.D. has committed to
- spending several million of your hard-earned tax dollars on the CAMPFIRE
- program in Zimbabwe.
-
- Please see our ACTION ALERT below for details, AND PLEASE CALL YOUR SENATORS
- NOW, BEFORE THIS BILL IS CONSIDERED.
- ___________________________________________________________________
-
- STOP YOUR TAX DOLLARS FROM FUNDING THE TROPHY HUNTING OF
- ELEPHANTS !
-
- The U.S. Agency for International Development (US AID) is using $28 million
- of your tax money to fund elephant trophy hunting programs in Africa!
- Through the CAMPFIRE program (Communal Areas Management Program for
- Indigenous Resources), wealthy hunters come to Africa to shoot elephants
- under the guise of returning revenues to local communities who are looking
- for a way to benefit from living with wildlife. Besides being a cruel cloak
- for trophy hunting, this program is not meeting its goal of helping local
- villagers. In a recent evaluation of CAMPFIRE, conducted by ULG Consultants,
- many holes were found in the program, including:
-
- No quantitative assessment of the size or health of local wildlife
- populations was conducted prior to initiating the hunting programs.
-
- The methodology used by local officials to monitor wildlife populations
- who are being hunted was "questionable."
-
- The project is "subject to collapse once donor funding is withdrawn."
- This means that US AID would have to fund this hunting program in perpetuity.
-
- Perhaps even more disturbing is the role that CAMPFIRE and its
- subcontractors have played in attempting to re-open the ivory trade.
- Delegates from CAMPFIRE and the Zimbabwean government came to the U.S. last
- year to testify before Congress in favor of weakening the Endangered Species
- Act and downlisting the elephant from Appendix I to Appendix II under the
- Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species. THIS WOULD SPELL
- DISASTER FOR THESE MAJESTIC CREATURES WHO HAVEN'T YET RECOVERED
- FROM DECADES
- OF RAMPANT POACHING! The money trail from this visit leads back to US AID.
-
- Call your two Senators at 202-224-3121 (Capitol Switchboard) to tell them
- that US AID SHOULD STOP WASTING YOUR TAX MONEY ON CRUEL TROPHY
- HUNTING
- PROGRAMS AND FUNDING OF FOREIGN GOVERNMENT'S LOBBYING EXCURSIONS.
-
-
- For more information, or to find out who your senators are, call Christine
- Wolf at The Fund for Animals (301-585-2591). THANK YOU FOR ACTING NOW TO
- SAVE THE ELEPHANTS !
-
- ******************************************************************
- Christine Wolf, Director of Government Affairs
- The Fund for Animalsphone: 301-585-2591
- 850 Sligo Ave., #300fax: 301-585-2595
- Silver Spring, MD 20910e-mail: ChrisW@fund.org / web: www.fund.org
-
- "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change
- the world; indeed, it is the only thing that ever has." (Margaret Mead)
-
- Date: Wed, 2 Jul 1997 11:48:23 -0400 (EDT)
- From: MINKLIB@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: 1996 Fur Sales Results
- Message-ID: <970702114822_102828458@emout11.mail.aol.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=unknown-8bit
-
-
- The following article is from the first issue of Inside the Fur Industry, a
- quarterly newsletter reporting on the fur trade. Inside the Fur Industry
- contains information that is not being published anywhere else. If you
- follow the fur issue, or run the fur committee of your local group, then
- this newsletter is a must. A one year subscription is $18. Subscriptions
- are available from:
-
- CAFT
- PO Box 822411
- Dallas, TX 75382
-
- NUMBER OF FURS SOLD DROPPED IN 1996
-
- The number of fur garments sold in the US dropped in 1996. In public
- relations campaigns the industry is claiming that they experienced a 5% sales
- increase, but this is described as misleading by analysts.
-
- In the 1995-96 auction season, mink prices were pushed sky-high as Russia,
- South Korea, and China bought up everything in sight. This increase in
- prices hurt fur sales in Asia, and in the US as well. Fur coats sold for
- 13.8% more in 1996, which made it possible for the fur trade to claim that
- they grossed 5% more that year, with sales ending at $1.25 billion. What the
- trade is hesitant to admit is that less individual coats sold, and that is
- why with prices up nearly 14% they could only register a 5% gain.
-
- In fact, much of that 5% increase was not from the sale of fur at all, but
- rather from an increase in fur storage. Whereas $228 million worth of furs
- were stored in 1995, $346 million worth were stored in 1996.
-
- The fur industry has used sales increase statistics in public relations
- campaigns for several years now. There logic is that if people see others
- buying fur, they wonÆt feel as hesitant to do the same. Keeping in line with
- this campaign, the trade has at times made public statements contending that
- the annual fur sales figure of $1.2 billion included only the sales of fur
- coats, and not revenues from fur services.
-
- This year it was admitted that the actual sale of fur coats only came to
- about $720 million. The rest of the profits were from the sale of shearling,
- fur trim, storage, cleaning, and other services.
-
- Anti fur activists would be mistaken to use this as an excuse to engage in
- less campaigning this fall. So many fur stores have gone out of business
- that the remaining furriers still have a decent market share. Many more
- people will have to be convinced not to wear fur if this decline is expected
- to continue.
-
- With next years mink prices expected to be lower, it will be easier for
- furriers to sell more individual coats. Furthermore, few animal rights
- groups have worked to get fur out of upscale dept. stores. To make matters
- worse, fur trim is openly sold in many stores such as Sears and T.J. Maxx
- which have large turnover volume. To make a huge impression on the number of
- animals killed for fur each year, it is suggested that groups work to get fur
- out of large chain stores, and push it back into small specialty shops which
- have little exposure to the general public.
-
- This year will be a critical one in determining who will be the eventual
- winner in the battle between pro and anti fur forces.
-
-
-
- Date: Wed, 02 Jul 1997 12:22:53 -0700
- From: Hillary <oceana@ibm.net>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Wendy's In Trouble with Vegetarians
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970702122251.00683b80@pop01.ny.us.ibm.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Subj:FEATURE/Vegetarians Tell Dave To Stuff It Better: FTC/FDA Complaints
- Filed
- Date:97-07-01 13:04:03 EDT
- From:AOL News
- BCC:FreeAnmls
-
- WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE FEATURES)--July 1, 1997--There's talk
- on the Internet about a Wendy's boycott, a class-action lawsuit, and
- federal regulatory agency complaints. This comes hot on the heels
- of the widely-publicized McLibel verdict on June 19. Hey, what's the
- big huff?
- Vegetarians are thanking Dave Thomas for trying to stuff his
- Veggie Pita right for them. However, they are asking if it might
- just be possible to make it "all vegetable" as promoted.
- Many vegetarians ate the pita thinking they were getting
- something "vegetarian" and "all vegetable" as advertised in Wendy's
- Nutrition Guide. The potential for litigation looms. An example of
- a precedent is a Boulder, Co. police officer who successfully sued
- over meat-laden tomato sauce misrepresented as vegetarian.
- "At first, we caught Dave with pants down. Then, six weeks
- later, he was in the buff," exclaims Lige Weill, president of the
- Vegetarian Awareness Network, a national public-interest
- organization.
- On May 9, Weill contacted the Consumer Relations Department of
- Wendy's International, Inc. in Dublin, Ohio after being alerted to
- pita problems by Utica, N.Y. consumer activist Pat Fish. Fish said
- Wendy's Fresh Stuffed Garden Veggie Pita contained gelatin in the
- sauce.
- Gelatin comes from the collagen-bearing tissues of any animal
- slaughtered for food, and it is certainly not vegetarian.
- On June 23, Linda Theado, an employee in Wendy's Research and
- Development Department, told Weill she had been working since
- February to remove the gelatin. The pita was rolled out in April,
- according to Theado.
- "Wendy's knew about the gelatin before the pita was even in its
- restaurants if what Theado said is accurate. It became apparent
- Wendy's was not going to make the public aware of the pita problems
- without pressure," says Weill.
- The Vegetarian Awareness Network had heard enough. On June 26,
- it filed formal complaints with the Federal Trade Commission and the
- Food and Drug Administration, charging that the pita was not
- "vegetarian" or "all vegetable" as advertised in Wendy's Nutrition
- Guide.
- "Wendy's meatless marketing misrepresented the contents of the
- Veggie Pita. Wendy's failed to immediately disclose the
- discrepancies. Instead, Wendy's compounded its original
- transgressions by intentionally misleading consumers with
- misinformation. Wendy's has been trying to minimize the situation
- with spin control," states Weill.
- "Wendy's could make amends for not alerting the public by
- removing the gelatin, egg yolk, and dairy ingredients," says Weill.
- Thus its Veggie Pita would be "all vegetable" as promoted in its
- Nutrition Guide.
- The gelatin may be in the sour cream in the Reduced Fat/Reduced
- Calorie Garden Ranch Sauce and in the Broccoli Slaw, which contains
- the sauce. Egg yolk may be in the sauce and slaw also. Dairy
- ingredients may be in the pita bread, sauce and slaw.
- When dining in restaurants, vegetarians often have it rough.
- Hidden animal ingredients abound. For example, Taco Bell's
- guacamole in its 7-Layer Burrito contains gelatin in the sour cream.
- "I was bamboozled," laments Kevin Muhammad of Virginia Beach,
- Va., a vegetarian for religious reasons. Muhammad consumed Taco
- Bell's Veggie Fajita Wrap, not knowing it contains chicken and clam
- in the sauce.
- Taco Bell supplies nutritional information quickly and
- accurately on its consumer line (1-800-TACO-BELL), whereas Wendy's
- hotline (1-800-82-WENDYS) makes getting it tough. Also chances of
- receiving correct information at the counter are slim, especially
- since Wendy's has recalled the fraudulent Nutrition Guides due to
- negative publicity stemming from false claims.
- "They just don't want their customers to see what's in that
- guide -- it's like a smoking gun. By making the Nutrition Guide
- unavailable, they're making it even more difficult for customers to
- trust what's in Wendy's food," says Fish.
- "Instead, Wendy's should have notified the public and recalled
- the gelatin-laced sauce back in May when vegetarians originally
- lodged complaints. Wendy's has alienated the very market they chose
- to court," says Fish. "Wendy's is showing a real lack of respect
- for the values of customers it is targeting," adds Weill.
- Wendy's is apparently targeting the rapidly growing vegetarian
- market with its advertising. For example, a Veggie Pita commercial
- aired during "Paul McCartney's Town Hall Meeting" May 17 on VH-1.
- McCartney is a long-time vegetarian, and he asked everyone to "go
- veggie" during the program.
- 36 percent of all Americans look for a meatless entree when
- eating out, according to the May issue of Whole Foods. The National
- Restaurant Association is urging its members to add more vegetarian
- items to their menus because of growing demand.
- The number of American adults claiming to be vegetarian showed a
- 100 percent growth rate over a six year period, according to
- a survey by Yankelovich Partners. The number adopting a
- vegetarian diet was one million adults per year -- about 20,000 per
- week.
- "Dave could benefit by joining our ranks. He may be eating too
- much of his own stuff," says Weill. Thomas has heart disease and
- is recovering from a heart attack. A vegetarian diet has been shown to
- prevent -- and even reverse -- heart disease. American
- nonvegetarian men have ten times the heart disease death rate of
- total vegetarian men.
- For more information, please call the Vegetarian Awareness
- Network toll-free at 800/USA-VEGE (800/872-8343).
- -0-
- EDITOR'S NOTE: Any of the above not attributed may be attributed to
- Lige Weill, president of the Vegetarian Awareness Network.
- CONTACT:
- Vegetarian Awareness Network
- Lige Weill
- 202/347-8343, 423/558-8343, 800/234-8343
- or
- Pat Fish
- 315/733-4064
-
- To edit your profile, go to keyword NewsProfiles.
- For all of today's news, go to keyword News.
- Date: Wed, 2 Jul 1997 09:47:44 -0700
- From: LCartLng@gvn.net (Lawrence Carter-Long)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Cc: VEGAN-L@VM.TEMPLE.EDU
- Subject: BizWire: Veg*ns Tell Dave Thomas To 'Stuff' It!
- Message-ID: <199707021643.MAA08318@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- FEATURE/Vegetarians Tell Dave
- To Stuff It Better: FTC/FDA
- Complaints Filed
-
- WASHINGTON--(BUSINESS WIRE FEATURES) -- There's talk
- on the Internet about a Wendy's boycott, a
- class-action lawsuit, and federal regulatory agency complaints.
- This comes hot on the heels of the widely-publicized McLibel
- verdict on June 19. Hey, what's the big huff?
-
- Vegetarians are thanking Dave Thomas for trying to stuff his
- Veggie Pita right for them. However, they are asking if it might just
- be possible to make it "all vegetable" as promoted.
-
- Many vegetarians ate the pita thinking they were getting
- something "vegetarian" and "all vegetable" as advertised in
- Wendy's Nutrition Guide. The potential for litigation looms. An
- example of a precedent is a Boulder, Co. police officer who
- successfully sued over meat-laden tomato sauce misrepresented
- as vegetarian.
-
- "At first, we caught Dave with pants down. Then, six weeks later,
- he was in the buff," exclaims Lige Weill, president of the
- Vegetarian Awareness Network, a national public-interest
- organization.
-
- On May 9, Weill contacted the Consumer Relations Department of
- Wendy's International, Inc. in Dublin, Ohio after being alerted to
- pita problems by Utica, N.Y. consumer activist Pat Fish. Fish said
- Wendy's Fresh Stuffed Garden Veggie Pita contained gelatin in
- the sauce.
-
- Gelatin comes from the collagen-bearing tissues of any animal
- slaughtered for food, and it is certainly not vegetarian.
-
- On June 23, Linda Theado, an employee in Wendy's Research and
- Development Department, told Weill she had been working since
- February to remove the gelatin. The pita was rolled out in April,
- according to Theado.
-
- "Wendy's knew about the gelatin before the pita was even in its
- restaurants if what Theado said is accurate. It became apparent
- Wendy's was not going to make the public aware of the pita
- problems without pressure," says Weill.
-
- The Vegetarian Awareness Network had heard enough. On June
- 26, it filed formal complaints with the Federal Trade Commission
- and the Food and Drug Administration, charging that the pita was
- not "vegetarian" or "all vegetable" as advertised in Wendy's
- Nutrition Guide.
-
- "Wendy's meatless marketing misrepresented the contents of the
- Veggie Pita. Wendy's failed to immediately disclose the
- discrepancies. Instead, Wendy's compounded its original
- transgressions by intentionally misleading consumers with
- misinformation. Wendy's has been trying to minimize the situation
- with spin control," states Weill.
-
- "Wendy's could make amends for not alerting the public by
- removing the gelatin, egg yolk, and dairy ingredients," says Weill.
- Thus its Veggie Pita would be "all vegetable" as promoted in its
- Nutrition Guide.
-
- The gelatin may be in the sour cream in the Reduced Fat/Reduced
- Calorie Garden Ranch Sauce and in the Broccoli Slaw, which
- contains the sauce. Egg yolk may be in the sauce and slaw also.
- Dairy ingredients may be in the pita bread, sauce and slaw.
-
- When dining in restaurants, vegetarians often have it rough.
- Hidden animal ingredients abound. For example, Taco Bell's
- guacamole in its 7-Layer Burrito contains gelatin in the sour
- cream.
-
- "I was bamboozled," laments Kevin Muhammad of Virginia Beach,
- Va., a vegetarian for religious reasons. Muhammad consumed
- Taco Bell's Veggie Fajita Wrap, not knowing it contains chicken
- and clam in the sauce.
-
- Taco Bell supplies nutritional information quickly and accurately
- on its consumer line (1-800-TACO-BELL), whereas Wendy's
- hotline (1-800-82-WENDYS) makes getting it tough. Also chances
- of receiving correct information at the counter are slim, especially
- since Wendy's has recalled the fraudulent Nutrition Guides due to
- negative publicity stemming from false claims.
-
- "They just don't want their customers to see what's in that guide
- -- it's like a smoking gun. By making the Nutrition Guide
- unavailable, they're making it even more difficult for customers to
- trust what's in Wendy's food," says Fish.
-
- "Instead, Wendy's should have notified the public and recalled
- the gelatin-laced sauce back in May when vegetarians originally
- lodged complaints. Wendy's has alienated the very market they
- chose to court," says Fish. "Wendy's is showing a real lack of
- respect for the values of customers it is targeting," adds Weill.
-
- Wendy's is apparently targeting the rapidly growing vegetarian
- market with its advertising. For example, a Veggie Pita commercial
- aired during "Paul McCartney's Town Hall Meeting" May 17 on
- VH-1. McCartney is a long-time vegetarian, and he asked
- everyone to "go veggie" during the program.
-
- 36 percent of all Americans look for a meatless entree when eating
- out, according to the May issue of Whole Foods. The National
- Restaurant Association is urging its members to add more
- vegetarian items to their menus because of growing demand.
-
- The number of American adults claiming to be vegetarian showed
- a 100 percent growth rate over a six year period, according to a
- survey by Yankelovich Partners. The number adopting a
- vegetarian diet was one million adults per year -- about 20,000 per
- week.
-
- "Dave could benefit by joining our ranks. He may be eating too
- much of his own stuff," says Weill. Thomas has heart disease and
- is recovering from a heart attack. A vegetarian diet has been
- shown to prevent -- and even reverse -- heart disease. American
- nonvegetarian men have ten times the heart disease death rate of
- total vegetarian men.
-
- For more information, please call the Vegetarian Awareness
- Network toll-free at 800/USA-VEGE (800/872-8343). EDITOR'S
- NOTE: Any of the above not attributed may be attributed to Lige
- Weill, president of the Vegetarian Awareness Network.
-
- CONTACT: Vegetarian Awareness Network | Lige Weill |
- 202/347-8343, 423/558-8343, 800/234-8343 | or | Pat Fish |
- 315/733-4064
-
- [Copyright 1997, Business Wire]
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Lawrence Carter-Long
- Coordinator, Science and Research Issues
- Animal Protection Institute
- phone: 916-731-5521
- LCartLng@gvn.net
-
- "Faced with the choice between changing one's mind
- and proving that there is no need to do so, almost
- everyone gets busy on the proof." - Galbraith's Law
-
- Date: Wed, 2 Jul 1997 12:36:43 -0700 (PDT)
- From: civillib@cwnet.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: 12 Arrested At Slaughterhouse Protest (US)
- Message-ID: <199707021936.MAA02566@borg.cwnet.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- (Activists may want to call the jail at 860-621-0103 to check on the status
- of those incarcerted - cres)
-
- URGENT NEWS
- ADVISORY
-
- July 2, 1997
-
-
-
-
-
- 12 Activists Jailed
- At Slaughterhouse
- Demonstration
-
- SOUTHINGTON, CT -- Twelve animal rights activists were arrested here
- Wednesday after militants allegedly locked themselves to a truck carrying
- the dead bodies of pigs to the Southington Meat Plant.
-
- About 40 activists from a half dozen states, including Vermont,
- Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Maryland and New Hampshire participated
- in the demonstration, which closed down the slaughterhouse for about 3 hours.
-
- At least one activist was reported injured after police hit him during the
- arrest, and another activist has severe health problems, including diabetes.
-
- All activists -- except one juvenile who has already been released -- are
- on a hunger strike and refusing to pay $1,000 bail. They have been charged
- with breach of peace, interference with an officer, reckless endangerment,
- criminal mischief, unlawful assembly and trespassing.
-
- A vigil and protest is being carried out at the Southington Police Station
- by about 2 dozen activists, who have vowed to not leave until their friends
- are released. One arrest has already occurred at the police station.
-
- Those arrested include Nick Stillman, Kim Berardi, Chris Rogowski, Vern
- Flynn, Heather Neil, Karen Laski, Leis Ellison, Chris Tarbell, Dan Flynn
- (released/juvenile), Dan Beban (juvenile), Jerry Vlasak, Adam Weissman
- (Weissman was the injured activist).
- -30-
-
- Contact: ADL 800-691-9775 / Activist Civil Liberties Committee 916-452-7179
-
-
- Date: Wed, 2 Jul 1997 15:08:43 -0500
- From: "Robert D. Kewan" <rkewan@omnifest.uwm.edu>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: APHIS Press Release Womack's Out of Business for
- Message-ID: <9707022008.AA27714@omnifest.uwm.edu>
-
- FORWARDED FROM: /mail/rk/rkewan(#644) From:rkewan@execpc.com(Alternative Ego)
-
-
- "Fasten your seatbelts, it's going to be a bumpy night!"
- -Margo Channing (Bette Davis)
- "All About Eve"
-
- /\_/\
- ( o.o )
- > <
-
-
- ---------- Forwarded message ----------
- Date: Wed, 02 Jul 1997 09:19:53 -0600
- From: Questa Glenn <qglenn@aphis.usda.gov>
- To: press_releases@info.aphis.usda.gov
- Subject: APHIS Press Release Womack's Out of Business for 10 Years
-
- Jim Rogers (301) 734-8563
- jrogers@aphis.usda.gov
- Jamie Ambrosi (301) 734-5175
- jambrosi@aphis.usda.gov
-
- WOMACK'S OUT OF BUSINESS FOR 10 YEARS
-
- RIVERDALE, Md., July 2, 1997--The U.S. Department of Agriculture
- and Lorin Womack, a licensed animal exhibitor doing business as Land O'
- Lorin Exotics in Batavia, Ill., have agreed to a consent decision and order
- regarding violations of the Animal Welfare Act.
-
- "This decision was the best solution for the animals," said W. Ron
- DeHaven, acting deputy administrator for animal care with the Animal and
- Plant Health Inspection Service, a part of USDA's marketing and
- regulatory programs mission area. "We're requiring that Womack use
- $15,000 to repair and improve this animal facility and pay $15,000 to the
- U.S. Treasurer. We've also suspended his license for a decade."
-
- As part of the consent decision, Womack neither admitted nor denied
- any violations of the AWA.
-
- APHIS inspectors found AWA noncompliance items in the areas of
- housing, waste disposal, storage, sanitation, pest control, and
- recordkeeping.
- The AWA requires that regulated individuals and businesses provide
- animals with care and treatment according to the standards established
- by APHIS. Animals protected by the law must be provided with adequate
- housing, handling, sanitation, food, water, transportation, veterinary
- care, and shelter.
-
- The law covers animals that are sold as pets at the wholesale level,
- transported in commerce, used for biomedical research, or used for
- exhibition purposes.
-
- #
-
- NOTE: USDA news releases, program announcements, and media
- advisories are available on the Internet. Access the APHIS Home Page
- by pointing your Web browser to
- http://www.aphis.usda.gov and clicking on "APHIS Press Releases."
- Also, anyone with an e-mail address can sign up to receive APHIS press
- releases automatically. Send an e-mail message to
- majordomo@info.aphis.usda.gov
- and leave the subject blank. In the message, type
- subscribe press_releases
-
-
- -----FORWARDER'S COMMENTS:
- Can anyone confirm this? I read a recent post that Womack's license was
- reissued under a different name and no penalties were charged. Is the
- road-side zoo really closed down?
-
- Please respond privately.
-
- Thanks!
-
- Bob
- Date: Wed, 2 Jul 1997 13:25:47 -0700 (PDT)
- From: bchorush@paws.org (pawsinfo)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [WA] PAWS Expands Internet Lost and Found Service for July 4th Weekend
- Message-ID: <199707022025.NAA17096@siskiyou.brigadoon.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- MEDIA RELEASE July 2, 1997
-
- Contact: Bob Chorush - (425) 787-2500 ext 862
-
- PAWS Expands Internet Lost and Found Service for July 4th Weekend
- http://www.paws.org/lostpets
-
- In anticipation of an influx of animals becoming lost because of
- firecrackers and fireworks displays, the Progressive Animal Welfare Society
- (PAWS) will offer a stepped-up lost and found pet information service for
- the long Fourth of July weekend. This expansion of normal lost and found
- Internet listings is being set up to help reunite families with pets who
- have become scared or disoriented and have wandered away from home.
-
- "The PAWS Internet lost and found service is an important step a pet owner
- can take in locating a lost dog or cat," said Deanna Davies, PAWS Companion
- Animal Services Director. "However, it is vital that owners search every
- shelter, as well as reports filed by good Samaritans over the Web."
-
- PAWS strongly urges pet owners to keep their companion animals indoors and
- wearing ID tags over the holiday. The PAWS shelter notes a six times
- increase of lost and found activity following fireworks displays.
-
- Last year PAWSÆ expanded July 4th lost and found service registered 60 lost
- animals, with more than 65% of lost dogs being returned to their owners,
- several exclusively through the internet. This year, through the Petnet
- system, set up with a grant by the Bosack-Kruger Foundation, PAWS will be
- able to post information on Lost and Found animals reported to any of 5
- local area shelters. Visitors to any of the area shelters will also be able
- to search the database for any animal reported lost or found in the area.
-
- The special PAWS lost and found Internet listing service will operate from
- Thursday, July 3rd to Monday, July 7th. During this time, listings of lost
- or found animals will be posted to PAWS internet site three to four times
- per day. PAWS staff will also endeavor to match lost and found reports and
- contact owners to speed reuniting families and their pets.
-
- Ways to list a lost or found animal this weekend:
-
- ╖ Call (425) 787-2500 ext 862 and leave a detailed description of the animal
- ╖ Post directly to PAWS through Internet page http://www.paws.org
- ╖ email to: info@paws.org
- ╖ fax to: (425) 742-5711
- ╖ Fill out Lost and Found report at PAWS shelter, 13505 44th Ave W, Lynnwood
- (closed Friday July 4; Open Sat/Sun 11-5pm)
-
- PAWSÆ expanded lost and found service has been funded by a private donor
- after fireworks promoters declined to sponsor the lost and found program.
-
- Lost and found pet descriptions will be displayed on the Internet at
- http://www.paws.org/lostpets
-
-
-
- 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: 02 Jul 1997 15:35:18 EST
- From: fls@wspausa.com (Joanne deMarrais)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Information Request - RE: Circo Suarez (aka Suarez Brothers
- Message-ID: <fls.970702.1535180161@wspausa.com>
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
-
-
- Dear Friends:
-
- WSPA is assisting various authorities on matters relating to source, care, and disposition
- of animals at this circus, which travels throughout Central America, Mexico and parts
- of the United States.
-
- Any accurate information which can be provided to WSPA's Boston office will be greatly
- appreciated. Please respond by private e-mail only to:jdem@wspausa.com
-
- In advance, thank you for your help.
-
- Sincerely,
-
- John Walsh
- International Projects Director
- WSPA - World Society for the Protection of Animals
- PO Box 190
- 29 Perkins Street
- Boston, MA 02130 USA
- Telephone:(617) 522-7000
- Fax:(617) 522-7077
- Home Page:http://way.net/wspa
-
-
- Date: Wed, 2 Jul 1997 17:28:51 -0400
- From: "D'Amico, AnnMarie" <DAMICOA@od1em1.od.nih.gov>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>,
- "rkewan@omnifest.uwm.edu" <rkewan@omnifest.uwm.edu>
- Subject: RE: APHIS Press Release Womack's Out of Business for
- Message-ID: <c=US%a=_%p=NIH%l=NIHHUB/HUB/001F0390@imc.nih.gov>
-
- Please let us know what's going to happen to the animals?
-
- TKS -- AM
-
- ----------
- From: Robert D. Kewan[SMTP:rkewan@omnifest.uwm.edu]
- Sent: Wednesday, July 02, 1997 4:08 PM
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: APHIS Press Release Womack's Out of Business for
-
- FORWARDED FROM: /mail/rk/rkewan(#644) From:rkewan@execpc.com(Alternative Ego)
-
-
- "Fasten your seatbelts, it's going to be a bumpy night!"
- -Margo Channing (Bette Davis)
- "All About Eve"
-
- /\_/\
- ( o.o )
- > <
-
-
- ---------- Forwarded message ----------
- Date: Wed, 02 Jul 1997 09:19:53 -0600
- From: Questa Glenn <qglenn@aphis.usda.gov>
- To: press_releases@info.aphis.usda.gov
- Subject: APHIS Press Release Womack's Out of Business for 10 Years
-
- Jim Rogers (301) 734-8563
- jrogers@aphis.usda.gov
- Jamie Ambrosi (301) 734-5175
- jambrosi@aphis.usda.gov
-
- WOMACK'S OUT OF BUSINESS FOR 10 YEARS
-
- RIVERDALE, Md., July 2, 1997--The U.S. Department of Agriculture
- and Lorin Womack, a licensed animal exhibitor doing business as Land O'
- Lorin Exotics in Batavia, Ill., have agreed to a consent decision and order
- regarding violations of the Animal Welfare Act.
-
- "This decision was the best solution for the animals," said W. Ron
- DeHaven, acting deputy administrator for animal care with the Animal and
- Plant Health Inspection Service, a part of USDA's marketing and
- regulatory programs mission area. "We're requiring that Womack use
- $15,000 to repair and improve this animal facility and pay $15,000 to the
- U.S. Treasurer. We've also suspended his license for a decade."
-
- As part of the consent decision, Womack neither admitted nor denied
- any violations of the AWA.
-
- APHIS inspectors found AWA noncompliance items in the areas of
- housing, waste disposal, storage, sanitation, pest control, and
- recordkeeping.
- The AWA requires that regulated individuals and businesses provide
- animals with care and treatment according to the standards established
- by APHIS. Animals protected by the law must be provided with adequate
- housing, handling, sanitation, food, water, transportation, veterinary
- care, and shelter.
-
- The law covers animals that are sold as pets at the wholesale level,
- transported in commerce, used for biomedical research, or used for
- exhibition purposes.
-
- #
-
- NOTE: USDA news releases, program announcements, and media
- advisories are available on the Internet. Access the APHIS Home Page
- by pointing your Web browser to
- http://www.aphis.usda.gov and clicking on "APHIS Press Releases."
- Also, anyone with an e-mail address can sign up to receive APHIS press
- releases automatically. Send an e-mail message to
- majordomo@info.aphis.usda.gov
- and leave the subject blank. In the message, type
- subscribe press_releases
-
-
- -----FORWARDER'S COMMENTS:
- Can anyone confirm this? I read a recent post that Womack's license was
- reissued under a different name and no penalties were charged. Is the
- road-side zoo really closed down?
-
- Please respond privately.
-
- Thanks!
-
- Bob
-
- Date: Wed, 02 Jul 1997 18:31:13 -0700
- From: FARM <farmusa@erols.com>
- To: Veg News <veg-news@envirolink.org>, A/R Wire <ar-wire@waste.org>,
- A/R News <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Animal Rights Activists Rally in Nation's Capital
- Message-ID: <33BB00E1.3E07@erols.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
-
-
- Nearly 600 US animal rights activists and other caring folks rallied
- in the nationÆs capital on June 26-30th to gain new skills, to network,
- and to ærecharge their batteries.Æ The program of ANIMAL RIGHTS æ97
- featured 75 speakers in 66 seminars and workshops, as well as 40 videos
- and 60 exhibits. Over 50 took part in the Lobby Day that followed.
- Presentations addressed abuse of animals in factory farms,
- slaughterhouses, laboratories, pounds, circuses, and in the wild, as well
- as organizing and outreach skills. Plenary sessions dealt with the state
- of our movement, with movement unity, diversity, and communications, and
- with strategies for the 21st century. æRapÆ sessions explored the more
- controversial issues facing our movement.
- A moving tribute to movement pioneer Henry Spira and a presentation by
- recently released whale defender Paul Watson highlighted the program.
- Other key speakers included noted physician Neal Barnard, animal rights
- movement cofounder Alex Hershaft, Humane Society of the US officers
- Michael Fox, John Kullberg, and Howard Lyman, Ingrid Newkirk of PETA, and
- Philosophy Professor Tom Regan.
- The Hyatt Regency Hotel near National Airport served as convention
- headquarters. Delicious vegan meals were provided by the Hyatt and a
- nearby hotel.
- This yearÆs convention was sponsored by FARM, a national public
- interest organization promoting plant-based eating. Supporting
- organizations included the American Antivivisection Society, AnimalsÆ
- Agenda, Beacon Global Advisors, Coalition for Nonviolent Food, Doris Day
- Animal League, Humane Society of the US, In Defense of Animals, IntÆl
- Society for Animal Rights, New England Antivivisection Society, North
- Shore Animal League, PETA, and PCRM.
- For additional information contact FARM at 301-530-1737 after July
- 13th. Tapes of all sessions are available from Chesapeake Communications
- at 410-379-0812.
-
- Date: Wed, 2 Jul 1997 22:23:19 -0400 (EDT)
- From: NOVENAANN@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (VA) Milk Billboard Vandalism
- Message-ID: <970702222318_290063384@emout15.mail.aol.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=unknown-8bit
-
-
- STYLE WEEKLY JULY 1, 1996
-
- Billboard Defacement Is Udder Vandalism
-
- Got veal?
-
- ItÆs not a slogan thatÆs tearing up the ad world, but itÆs doing a
- number on billboards advertising milk. Two Richmond billboards have been
- defaced recently with animal-rights messages ù the subtler of the two
- mischievously asking ôgot veal?ö That message was scrawled across a
- billboard near Blockbuster Video in Carytown.
-
- But a more macabre tableau appeared on Cary Street near the Wonder Bread
- baking facility. Baseball hero Cal RipkenÆs milk mustache was
- transformed into a blood-dripping mess. Next to the words ô3 glasses a
- dayö is painted ô= death.ö Another message blares: ôMale dairy cows are
- raised as veal.ö That billboard has been replaced.
-
- Tom Pappalardo, vice president and general manager of Lamar Advertising,
- the billboard company that handles the poster, downplays the vandalism.
- ôIt hasnÆt been an ongoing problem with that product or any other
- product,ö he says. ôI donÆt want to create one.ö
-
- Animal-rights groups such as People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals
- would like nothing better than to create a problem.
-
- ôThatÆs very exciting,ö Bruce Friedrich, vegetarian campaign coordinator
- for the Norfolk-based group, says enthusiastically. ôI had heard about
- billboard alterations going on on a huge scale in California and
- Seattle,ö but this, he says, is the first he has heard about any
- Richmond ôalterations.ö
-
- ôPeople drinking milk or eating cheese are supporting the veal industry,
- which is extremely cruel,ö Friedrich adds. He says male calves born on
- dairy farms are used for veal and forced to exist in small crates for
- months.
-
- Roughly 20 milk billboards per month ù featuring New York Knicks star
- Patrick Ewing and NASCAR driver Jeff Gordon among others ù have been up
- for several months, Pappalardo says.
-
- Calls to the Milk Processors Board were not returned by StyleÆs press
- time.
-
- Milk has recently been hailed as nutritious by industry boosters and
- vilified as the most treacherous threat to health since the plague by
- critics including Dr. Benjamin Spock. Meanwhile, ads for the dairy
- beverage ù featuring the famous milk mustache ù have soared in
- popularity.
-
- ù J.A.G.
- Date: Wed, 2 Jul 1997 22:26:33 -0400 (EDT)
- From: NOVENAANN@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Re: (VA) Milk Billboard Vandalism
- Message-ID: <970702222632_-1494752742@emout14.mail.aol.com>
-
- In a message dated 97-07-02 22:24:08 EDT, you write:
-
- > STYLE WEEKLY JULY 1, 1996
-
- I meant 1997.....woops....
-
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