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- In Ottawa, Canada today Oscar Meyer launched a nation-wide talent search
- for the new Oscar Meyer weiner kid. Parents from the region brought
- their children to audition in front of cameras for a part in a new
- commercial. Animal Action activists were there to urge kids to think
- about what it mean to be an Oscar Meyer weiner, for livestock it means
- certain death. One activist dressed in a pig costume placed himself at
- center stage and refused to move. A melee ensued and the activist's
- sign (please don't eat me) was ripped apart, his pig head torn off and
- epithets hurled in his face by angry parents. The activist left after
- the situation appeared to be escalating to a more violent level.
- The Ottawa Citizen newspaper was on hand to capture the event.
-
- Sean Thomas, Co-Director
- Animal Action
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 02:33:10 -0700 (PDT)
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Huge rally for right to hunt foxes
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970711023407.97077ebe@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Friday, July 11th, 1997
-
- Labour peer warns Blair of tragedy in the country
- By Charles Clover, Environment Editor
-
-
- SPEAKERS at the Countryside Rally from six political parties and every
- corner of Britain insisted that plans to ban hunting would curtail freedoms,
- reduce animal welfare and destroy rural jobs.
-
- The crowd of more than 100,000 heard speeches from Lady Mallalieu, the
- Labour peer, and Michael Heseltine, the former deputy prime minister. There
- were threats of civil disobedience from a Welsh huntsman, David Jones, and
- the columnist Auberon Waugh.
-
- Lady Mallalieu, a keen huntswoman, said it was a tragedy that the private
- member's Bill to ban hunting put forward by the "very new MP" Michael Foster
- would criminalise many of those present at the rally.
-
- "We cannot and will not stand by in silence and watch our countryside, our
- communities and way of life destroyed forever by misguided urban political
- correctness," she warned.
-
- Dressed in a red frock coat, which she earlier described as socialist pink
- not hunting pink, she rebuked Tony Blair for his reaffirmation, the day
- before, that he would vote to ban hunting.
-
- She said: "Tony Blair has said he will govern on behalf of the whole
- nation.That is what we want. He is entitled to his private view but the
- Government has not given support to this pernicious Bill and we hope it will
- never do so."
-
- She said that the rally was about "the freedom of people to choose how they
- live their own lives. It is about tolerance of minorities and, sadly those
- who live in the countryside, are now a minority. It is about listening to
- and respecting the views of other people of which you may personally
- disapprove".
-
- She said: "The irresponsible seem to feel free and qualified to tell the
- responsible that they are, and I quote, 'barbaric sadists and perverts'."
-
- Lady Mallalieu said that a ban on hunting would result in more snaring, more
- wounding and more prolonged deaths which followed injury. Some 16,500 jobs
- depended on hunting and 63,000 relied partly on it. Fifty thousand horses
- and 20,000 hunts would become redundant overnight and ú100 million worth of
- business would be lost to the rural economy.
-
- "All these things are important to us but so is this. Hunting is often
- described as a sport. But to those of us who have heard the music of the
- hounds and love it, it is far more than that," she said.
-
- "Hunting is our music, it is our poetry, it is our art, it is our pleasure.
- It is where many of our best friendships are made, it is our community. It
- is our whole way of life. We will fight for these things with all the
- strength and dedication we possess because we love them. Do not forget us,
- or what we have done today. We have made history. The countryside has come to
- London to speak out for freedom."
-
- Lady Mallalieu ended her highly-charged speech with the words Shakespeare
- gave to Henry V, addressing another minority "We few, we happy few, we band
- of brothers" on the eve of another battle, Agincourt.
-
- Michael Heseltine congratulated the organisers as he looked out from the
- stage and said: "No one interested in the tolerance and freedom of our
- people can ignore what I see now."
-
- He said he would join those who would use every parliamentary device to
- prevent the Foster Bill becoming law for three reasons. "First, it would not
- save the life of a single fox. It would simply force farmers to use other
- ways to contain them. Second, the people behind this Bill will not be
- satisfied with its enactment. The next targets would be shooting, fishing
- and other country sports. Third, and above all, this law would undermine
- rural communities, damage already fragile economies, destroy people's jobs,
- force the unnecessary death of countless horses and hounds and cause
- incalculable and unpredictable damage to the quality of the rural
- environment. This law adds up to a vicious onslaught on a treasured
- tradition of rural life for no reason beyond the satisfaction of the bigotry
- and prejudice of people whose
- concept of rural life owes more to Walt Disney than any appreciation of the
- real world."
-
- William Hague, the leader of the Opposition, attended the rally but did not
- make a speech. However, in a statement he denounced the Foster Bill as an
- "divisive measure creating two nations in our country by setting the town
- against the countryside".
-
- He added: "Labour MPs appear to believe that they are re-fighting the old
- class war but this country has a long and proud history of freedom and
- tolerance, and freedom is important even when it is unpopular. The strength
- of democracy is judged by the way it treats its minorities."
-
- The mass protest was the culmination of a nationwide trek by marchers from
- Scotland, Wales and the West Country. The marchers arrived at Hyde Park Gate
- at noon and were welcomed with tumultuous applause. Wearing yellow T-shirts
- emblazoned with the words "Listen To Us", marchers were greeted by the
- environmentalist David Bellamy and champion jockey Willie Carson before
- taking a petition to 10 Downing Street. But two of the marchers sounded a
- darker note, with the threat of civil disobedience on a wide scale, if an
- anti-hunting Bill was passed.
-
- David Jones, the huntsman of the David Davies Hunt, who had marched to Hyde
- Park from Machynlleth, Powys, said: "I have one thing to say. This is the
- last peaceful march. This is the last peaceful rally."
-
- Sam Butler, an estate agent and one of the organisers of the marches, said:
- "Tony Blair has reiterated that he will vote for a ban on hunting and he had
- said there will be no disruption in the countryside. We are here to fight
- and if politicians ignore what has been happening here they do so at their
- peril."
-
- Among the speakers who queued to take the stage included the actor Jeremy
- Irons, the author Frederick Forsyth and the model Paula Hamilton. The former
- Liberal leader Lord Steel, Sir Thomas Pilkington, senior steward of the
- Jockey Club, and Lord Wakeham, chairman of the British Horseracing Board,
- were also among them. Simon Bates, the former Radio One disc jockey, was one
- of the masters of ceremonies.
-
- Frederick Forsyth directed his brief speech to Tony Blair. He said: "You
- have inherited a country with such a large majority that you can pass any
- legislation you want. That's power Prime Minister, but it's rotten
- government. You can run this country the way you promised or you can run it
- as an elective dictatorship. We are waiting for your answer."
-
- Neil Greatrex, president of the Union of Democratic Mineworkers, a shooting
- and ferreting man, told the crowd: "I wish I'd got you lot behind me when
- they shut our pits down in 1992. We'd have got our pits reprieved and likely
- as not 20 new pits sunk. It was economic madness and you can envisage the
- whole episode being repeated once again. No matter what politicians say -
- and most of them lie more than a busload of poachers - shooting, angling and
- other sporting activities will eventually be included in the list of bans."
-
- Auberon Waugh, The Daily Telegraph columnist, said that the anti-hunting
- Bill was a "declaration of war on rural England." He said the options open
- to country people if hunting was banned included blocking the traffic,
- making life difficult for the National Trust and poisoning the water supply.
-
- Whether he was serious about the last point was unclear as he then invited
- the crowd to sing Jerusalem.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- [ In another report in the Telegraph, it was reported that model Paula
- Hamilton's day had got off to a bad start after a ferret which she tried to
- cuddle bit her. CTV National News covered the rally with a feed from one of
- the US networks. The report included video footage of a fox being ripped
- alive by a pack of hounds. The footage was provided by the League Against
- Cruel Sports.]
-
-
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 02:33:14 -0700 (PDT)
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Ban would create carcass problem
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970711023411.9707bf52@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Friday, July 11th, 1997
-
- Ban would create carcass problem
- By David Brown, Agriculture Editor
-
- A HUNTING ban would create a huge problem for farmers who rely on hounds to
- eat thousands of fallen livestock each year, the Government was warned
- yesterday.
-
- About 13,000 hounds, which are often fed with meat from casualty farm
- animals, are expected to be shot if hunting is banned. Brian Rogers,
- chairman of the United Kingdom Renderers Association, which represents
- companies that process animal carcasses, said that farmers would probably
- bury their casualty livestock to avoid paying charges to knackers and renderers.
-
- The association called on the Government to require fallen livestock to be
- collected from farms by specialist vehicles and incinerated in rendering
- plants. It claimed that until Britain adopted the practice, common in
- Europe, the EU was unlikely to lift the export ban on British beef.
-
- Mr Rogers said burying carcasses was adding to a growing environmental
- problem of disposing of cattle carcasses following the beef crisis. While
- British renderers disposed of 80,000 tons worth of fallen livestock a year,
- at least double that was disposed of by burying or feeding to hounds.
-
- Cuts in Government cash aid of ú100 million a year to the rendering
- industry, which started to take effect this month, meant that butchers with
- waste trimmings from cattle cleared for sale, could find it cheaper to send
- it to landfill sites instead of having it destroyed in specialised plants.
- Restrictions on the use of bovine materials in animal food and other
- products meant that this material now had no commercial value in Britain.
-
- Mr Rogers said: "We are producing more than a million tons a year of this
- waste. It raises the question of whether it is acceptable on environmental
- or public health grounds to have this raw waste disposed of in landfill sites."
-
- The Government subsidy, introduced to keep the rendering system functioning
- after the beef crisis broke last year, would be phased out by next March.
- This meant that renderers would be unable to pay the meat trade an
- acceptable price for its animal waste. This made landfill an attractive
- alternative.
-
- Paul Foxcroft, chairman of the association's product committee, said that
- while the Ministry of Agriculture felt it was perfectly legal to dump this
- raw waste in landfill sites, the Environment Agency was opposed to the practice.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 02:33:31 -0700 (PDT)
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Another chance to vote on hunting
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970711023428.970760a2@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Came across this site in a link from The Electronic Telegraph.
-
- Kevin "Fox" Wright's home page deals with providing information etc about
- blood sports, but this particular page is a vote on whether you think
- hunting with hounds is okay or is barbaric.
-
- So far, the vote is running 57% anti-hunting, 43% pro-hunting, so it would
- be nice to have a bigger anti-hunting majority.
-
- The URL to point your browsers at is: www.westwind.demon.co.uk/bsp/vote.htm
-
- Thanks for taking a few moments to vote.
-
- David
-
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 18:33:05 +0800
- From: jwed <jwed@hkstar.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (CN) Protecting its home can save the giant panda
- Message-ID: <3.0.1.32.19970711183305.006a9ea8@pop.hkstar.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- China Daily. Date: 11th July, 1997.
-
- THE most effective protection that can be afforded China's endangered giant
- panda begins at home -- the panda's home, said an official at the Giant
- Panda Protection Office of the Forestry Ministry.
-
- By protecting the giant panda's natural habitat, we protect the panda, he
- told the Xinhua News Agency during a Tuesday interview in Beijing.
-
- The official noted that a series of Forestry Ministry and government
- departmental efforts had reduced the threat from humans to the giant
- panda's habitat -- but a lack of funds prevents the government from doing
- as much as could be done.
-
- The official said he had made a tour of Sichuan and Shaanxi provinces,
- where most of the giant pandas live. "About 1,000 giant pandas in the world
- are now being separated into small groups by human activities and highways,
- and there are only three to five giant pandas in some of the smallest
- groups," he said, cautioning that this will lead to serious problems with
- inbreeding and species degeneration.
-
- He explained that an unstable food supply is another serious ecological
- problem for the giant pandas, and "what is worse, bamboo, the staple food
- of the giant panda, has been dying in large tracts for a period of time."
-
- >From 1983 to 1996, as many as 183 giant pandas were found suffering from
- disease or malnutrition. Many were brought back to health and released back
- into their natural habitats.
-
- According to the official, since 1992, when the "China Giant Panda and
- Habitat Protection Project" was started by the Ministry of Forestry, 11
- natural reserves have been established, bringing the number of natural
- reserves for the giant panda to 25.
-
- The official said the ministry has allocated 64 million yuan ($8 million)
- for the protection project, and that "our goal is to continue to establish
- natural reserves for the giant panda so that their natural habitats can be
- put under State protection."
-
- Over the next several years, there will be three new natural reserves and
- 17 "green passageways" linking several natural reserves to better protect
- the giant panda.
-
- Ministry sources also say that, since 1992, when China intensified
- protection of the giant panda, a number of timber mills have been shut down
- and people have been relocated to reduce the harmful effects of human
- activities on this endangered animal.
-
- The giant panda protection staff turned to science to look for solutions to
- the panda's breeding and food supply problems.
-
- Since 1984, special funds have been allocated for research into how to
- retard the flowering of bamboo, after which some varieties die, and to
- protect the plant. (Xinhua)
-
-
- Every child has the right to a healthy diet - that means no meat.
-
- http://www.earth.org.hk/
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 20:08:38 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (AU) Four-metre crocodile biggest and ugliest caught in 13
- years
- Message-ID: <199707111208.UAA29781@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >Hong Kong Standard
- 11 July 97
-
- Four-metre crocodile biggest and ugliest caught in 13
- years
-
- DARWIN: A four-meter crocodile captured on a ranch in northern Australia is
- not just the biggest caught in 13 years, it is also the ugliest, its new
- custodians say.
-
- ``There are not too many pretty crocs but this poor old fellow really has
- been hit with the ugly stick,'' crocodile farmer Janelle Pugh said.
- Mrs Pugh is now holding the crocodile, dubbed ``Scar'' by her nine-year-old
- daughter, after it was trapped in the Roper River at the Lonesome Dove
- cattle station, about 450 kilometres southeast of
- Darwin.
-
- Government wildlife officers snared the beast in a trap baited with a
- donkey's leg, after a months-long spree of killing and terrorising cattle in
- the region.
-
- ``Pastoralists called us in because for the last few months they had found
- their cattle either going missing or being found mauled,'' wildlife officer
- Patrick Carmody said.
-
- The croc weighed almost a ton and was about 80 years old, wildlife officers
- said. With a deformed face and about a metre missing from its tail, the
- crocodile was the largest caught since a
- five-and-a-half metre monster in 1984, and third behind a notorious
- crocodile nicknamed ``Sweetheart'' caught in 1979 and measuring more than
- six metres.
-
- Sweetheart's stuffed carcass is on display in the Northern Territory Museum.
-
- Mrs Pugh said the crocodile would now be used for breeding.
-
- Crocodiles have been a increasing menace in the tropical north of Australia
- in recent years. Their numbers have grown dramatically following an end to
- hunting more than 20 years ago.
-
- Many beaches and rivers are designated as dangerous to humans. - AP
-
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 20:11:02 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (CN) Pandas to get paths for love
- Message-ID: <199707111211.UAA28652@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >Hong Kong Standard
- 11 July 97
-
- Pandas to get paths for love
-
- BEIJING: China plans to build new nature reserves and ``green passageways''
- to protect panda habitats and ensure lonely groups of the endangered animal
- can travel in search of mates.
-
- Saving the habitat of the giant panda was the most effective way to preserve
- the species, Xinhua News Agency quoted an official of the Forestry
- Ministry's Giant Panda Protection Office as saying on Thursday.
-
- Over the next few years, authorities would build three new nature reserves
- and 17 ``green passageways'' linking areas set aside for the panda, the
- official said.
-
- The passageways would help prevent inbreeding and genetic deterioration
- among pandas by allowing the notoriously frigid animals to move around, he
- said.
- ``About 1,000 giant pandas in the world are now being separated into small
- groups by human activities and highways, and there are only three to five
- giant pandas in some of the smallest groups.''
-
- China has made some progress in reducing human threats to the areas and
- already has 25 nature reserves for pandas, but a lack of funds is hampering
- efforts to ensure the species' survival. - Reuter
-
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 20:16:26 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Gaultier skins
- Message-ID: <199707111216.UAA28400@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >The Straits Times
- 11 July 97
- Gaultier changes his spots
-
-
- PARIS -- The man who once swore he used only recycled or fake fur
- closed ranks with the rest of the Paris couture club on Wednesday, and sent
- out hides belonging to creatures ranging from monkeys to minks.
-
- Jean-Paul Gaultier, in his second stab at haute couture, unleashed
- fox-head stoles over pinstripe trouser suits, Mongolian lamb hats, and a
- kimono and bridal gown of breitschwarntz, the velvety fur of baby
- astrakhans supposedly born dead -- a hit on several catwalks this season.
-
- The secret to this season's fur craze is that the fur industry, devastated
- by political correctness, has given the couture houses animal skins for
- free, hoping the thousands of pages of magazine photographs will revive the
- market.
-
- Fur, genuine fox, sable and mink, seemed to be everywhere, for indoors
- and out, on hats, shawls, the cuffs of gloves, and as trim on gowns or
- suits. -- Reuter.
-
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 10:22:26 -0400 (EDT)
- From: Snugglezzz@aol.com
- To: Ar-News@envirolink.org
- Subject: Horse Owner Charged in Cruelty Complaint
- Message-ID: <970711102131_1994454183@emout19.mail.aol.com>
-
- McAlester, OK (USA): The owner of a thoroughbred has been charged with
- cruelty to his underweight horse that allegedly was stuck in a Kiowa pasture
- with moldy hay and slimy water.
-
- Dustin Pollock is scheduled for arraignment July 23.
-
- During a preliminary hearing this week, Patrolman Tommy Lyons said he had
- noticed the horse in a pasture with little feed or water May 7.
-
- "Every rib on the animal was showing," Lyons said.
-
- Dr. Eric Wynn, a veterinarian, testified that the horse was emaciated and 300
- pounds underweight. Wynn said food and water sources were inadequate.
-
- Wynn testified that the horse has gained about 150 pounds in 62 days.
-
-
- -- Sherrill
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 10:30:02 -0400 (EDT)
- From: Snugglezzz@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: State Hog Firm Moving into Kentucky
- Message-ID: <970711102959_204273323@emout08.mail.aol.com>
-
- Madisonville, KY (USA): A hog farm company that has operations in Oklahoma
- and Texas expects to move into western Kentucky, hiring 120 people locally
- and eventually producing 500,000 animals annually for market.
-
- The Vall Co. has purchased options on 3,200 acres in Hopkins County to build
- a $7 million complex, the company said Wednesday.
-
- Vall East Inc. in Kentucky will initially include a 24,000-sow operation with
- feed mills and offices built and operated by the company. It will contract
- the growth of nursery and finishing operations to local growers.
-
- Vall is expected to join other large-scale hog farms moving into the region,
- attracted to the area's low labor costs and availability of feed grain.
-
- Vall is a family-owned agricultural company headquartered in Lerida, Spain.
-
- In 1993 the company formed Vall Inc. in Texhoma, Oklahoma. It has operations
- in the panhandles of both Oklahoma and Texas.
-
-
- -- Sherrill
-
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 10:34:56 -0400 (EDT)
- From: Snugglezzz@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Bird Rescues Another Bird
- Message-ID: <970711103450_-1259702099@emout12.mail.aol.com>
-
- A lady in a local Oklahoma (USA) town sent a photo into the newsroom at our
- CBS affiliate with a very sweet story behind it.
-
- Apparently, a woodpecker had flown into her house window and knocked himself
- out cold. As she was watching, another bird flew to his rescue! The bird
- picked up the unconscious bird and flew with it to a nearby tree branch. This
- bird stayed with the unconscious bird for approximately TWO HOURS, watching
- over it. The woodpecker finally woke up and appeared to be okay, then both
- birds flew off into the sky.
-
- --Sherrill
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 10:14:11 -0500 (CDT)
- From: hsusga@ix.netcom.com (HSUS Government Affairs)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.com
- Subject: Desperate, Part II
- Message-ID: <199707111514.KAA07644@dfw-ix9.ix.netcom.com>
-
- Thank you, to everyone who called/wrote/faxed/e-mailed their senators
- on the CAMPFIRE issue!
-
- We've just learned that the CAMPFIRE issue will be voted on in the
- House on Wednesday, July 16. CAMPFIRE is the US program that sends
- millions of US tax dollars to Africa to promote trophy hunting,
- including hunting of endangered and threatened species like elephants,
- leopards, and baboons.
-
- *Please* call or fax your representative by Tuesday, July 15. (Unless
- you live very close to DC, a letter will not make it in time.) If you
- don't know your representative's name/number, you can call the House
- switchboard at (202)225-3121. You should ask him/her to "cut CAMPFIRE
- funding by supporting the amendment to the Foreign Operations
- Appropriations Bill." Be sure to tell your representative that you are
- a constituent.
-
- Thank you!
-
- Sincerely,
- Doris Lin
- HSUS Grassroots Assistant
-
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 11:57:32 -0400 (EDT)
- From: JanaWilson@aol.com
- To: AR-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Another Oklahoma Anti-PETA Editorial
- Message-ID: <970711115715_-158054059@emout20.mail.aol.com>
-
-
- This appeared in a local Okla. City newspaper on June 10th:
-
- Front For Terrorism?
-
- Imagine an anti-abortion leader making the following statement:
- "Arson, property destruction, burglary and theft are 'acceptable
- crimes' when used for the unborn's causes."
- Substitute the words "animals' causes" and you have the sentiments
- of Alex Pacheco, cofounder and director of People for the Ethical
- Treatment of Animals (PETA). That's right. Pachecho has endorsed
- terrorism.
- There's growing concern worldwide over environmental and animal
- rights terrorism. It ranges from protesters throwing red paint on fur
- coats to fire-bombing research labs. Will it soon spread to murder?
- Contrary to the propaganda of liberal groups such as the Southern
- Law Poverty Center, terrorist acts against people are actually
- declining in the US. They peaked back in 1982, long before the
- "militia" movement was singled out as a threat.
- But environmental terrorism is on the rise. FBI Director Louis Freeh
- last spring noted in the 1992 Rod Colorado, convicted of firebombing
- a Michigan research facility, as an example of such terrorism.
- Yet Colorado benefited from a hefty donation from PETA, a group
- supposedly concerned with compassion towards animals. Colorado
- was a member of the Animal Liberation Front, which claims
- responsibility for most animal rights terrorism.
- While sending $42,500 to Coronado in 1995, PETA spent less than
- $5000 for animal shelters nationwide. Americans for Medical Progress
- which supports the use of animals in medical research, cites US
- Dept. of Justice estimates showing an increase by as much as 20%
- in the cost of medical research as a result of violence. Yet there's
- no nation outcry to crack down on leftist animal rights groups.
- Nor is there federal protection for research labs as there is for
- abortion clinics. PETA is outspoken against cruelty toward animals,
- a postion ...this paper.... supports (animals should not be used for
- testing unless the research involves conditions that are life-threatening
- to people.) But it is silent on the most hideous form of human abortion.
- To be fair, some PETA members are pro-life and many pro-lifers are
- silent on animal cruelty. But terrorism, whether directed against
- animal researchers or abortion doctor, is always the wrong way to
- redress grievances.
- PETA's endorsement of terrorism leads us again to appeal to our
- readers not to support this group.
-
- For the Animals,
-
- Jana, OKC
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 12:25:39 -0400
- From: Patrick Nolan <pnolan@animalwelfare.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: alert on trapping
- Message-ID: <33C65E83.5979DBE3@animalwelfare.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
-
-
- SOCIETY FOR ANIMAL PROTECTIVE LEGISLATION
- P. 0. Box 3719
- Georgetown Station
- Washington, D.C. 20007
-
- ONE MORE BIG EFFORT NEEDED
-
- July 8, 1997
-
- Dear Humanitarian:
-
- (202) 337-2334
-
- Extremely Urgent
-
- On July 22, just two weeks from now, the European Union's (EU) Foreign
- Ministers will vote to reject or accept the cruel trapping agreement
- proposed by the EU Commission, Canada, and Russia. This agreement would
- actually entrench the use of the world's most painful and widely used
- trap: the leghold trap.
-
- YOU CAN HELP by appealing to the Foreign Ministers whose names appear on
- the enclosed list. PLEASE URGE THEM TO REJECT THE AGREEMENT, which makes
- a mockery of the good EU Regulation 3259/91 against the leghold trap.
- Ask them to implement the Regulation's import ban of furs from 13
- species that come from countries which haven't prohibited use of the
- leghold trap.
-
- Last month the Council of Ministers of the Environment refused to accept
- the shockingly inhumane agreement proposed by the EU Commission, Canada,
- and Russia. This was an important milestone in our long fight to protect
- animals from the ravages of the leghold trap, but we need to make sure
- that the Foreign Ministers do not succumb to the threat of a World Trade
- Organization challenge by the United States.
-
- British, French, Austrian, and Belgian Environment Ministers were the
- chief opponents of the Commission's disastrous agreement. Their
- countries deserve your praise. If you can fax the Foreign Ministers or
- call the embassies or immediatelv write air mail letters, your voice
- will be heard. (Air Letters are available at the Post Office for 50ó.)
-
- These letters, faxes, and phone calls may be the most important you ever
- make on behalf of animals. THANKS for all you can do!
-
- Sincerely,
-
- Madeleine Bemelmans, President
- Christine Stevens, Secretary
-
- FOREIGN MINISTERS' NAMES, ADDRESSES AND FAX NUMBERS
-
- Hon. Wolfgang Schussel
- Vice-Chancellor and Federal
- Minister for Foreign Affairs
- Ballhausplatz #2
- 1014 Vienna
- AUSTRIA
- Fax: 011-93-1 535 4530
-
- Hon. Erik Derycke
- Minister for Foreign Affairs
- #2 Rue Quatre Bras
- 1000 Brussels
- BELGIUM
- Fax: 011-322 511-6305
-
- Hon. Niels Helveg Petersen
- Minister for Foreign Affairs
- Asiatisk
- Platz #2
- 1448 Kobenhavn K.
- DENMARK
- Faxi 011-453 159-0533
-
- Hon. Tacja Halonen
- Minister for Foreign Affairs
- P.O. Box 176
- 00161 Helsinki
- FINLAND
- Fax: 011-350 962 9840
-
- Hon. Hubert Vedrine
- Minister for Foreign Affairs
- 37 Quai D'Orsay
- 75700 Paris
- FRANCE
- Fax; 011-33-1-4551-6012
-
- Hon. Hans Van Mierlo
- Deputy Prime Minister, Minister for Foreign Affairs
- PO. Box 20061 2500 EB
- The Hague
- THE NETHERLANDS
- Fax: 011 31 70 348-4848
-
- Hon. Jaima Garia
- Minister for Foreign Affairs
- Largo do Rilvas
- 1200 Lisboa
- PORTUGAL
- Fax: 011-351 1 609708
-
- Hon. Javier Solana Madariaga
- Minister for Foreign Affairs
- Palacio de la Provincia, 1
- Madrid 28071
- SPAIN
- Fax: 011-341 365-5101
-
- Hon. Dr. Klaus Kinkel
- Federal Minister for Foreign
- Affairs
- Adenauer Allee 99-103
- 53113 Bonn
- GERMANY
- Fax: 011-49-220-17340
-
- Hon. Theodoros Pangalos
- Minister for Foreign Affairs
- 1 Akadimias
- Athens 10671
- GREECE
- Fax: 011-30-1-361-28B5
-
- Hon. Dick Spring
- Tanaiste and Minister for
- Foreign Affairs
- 80 St. Stephens Green
- Dublin 2
-
- Fan; 011-353 1478 1484
-
- Hon. Lamberto Dini
- Ministero degli Affairesteri
- P.E. Farnese #1
- 00194 Roma
- ITALY
- Fax: 011-39-6-322-2350
-
- Hon. Jacques Poos
- Deputy Prime Minister, Minister for Foreign Affairs
- Foreign Trade and Cooperation
- 5 Rue Notre Dame L2910 Luxembourg
- LUXEMBOURG Fax: 011-352 2231 44
-
- Hon. Lena Hjelm-Wallen
- Minister for Foreign Affairs
- 10323 Stockholm
- SWEDEN
- Fax: 011-468 723-1176
-
- Hon. Robin Cook Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs
- House of Commons London SW1A 0AA UNITED KINGDOM Fax: 011-44-171-839-2417
-
- * To reach a Foreign Minister: Air letters need to be sent on or before
- July 12th. before July 20th.
-
- * If you miss these deadlines:
-
- FAXes can be sent any day
-
- the last chance to
- register your plea for the animals is through phone calls to
- the embassies:
-
- Austria: 202-895-6700
- Belgium: 202-333-6900
- Denmark: 202-234-4300
- Finland: 202-298-5800
- France: 202-944-6000
- Germany: 202-939-5800
- Greece: 202-462-3939
- Italy: 202-328-5500
- Luxembourg: 202-265-4171
- Netherlands: 202-244-5300
- Portugal: 202-328-8610
- Spain: 202-728-2340
- Sweden: 202-467-2600
- United Kingdom: 202-462-1340
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 16:51:07 +0000 (GMT)
- From: Daniel Paulo Martins Ferreira <dmartins@student.dei.uc.pt>
- To: Patrick Nolan <pnolan@animalwelfare.com>
- Cc: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Re: alert on trapping
- Message-ID: <Pine.OSF.3.95.970711164549.1356B-100000@student.dei.uc.pt>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
-
-
- On Fri, 11 Jul 1997, Patrick Nolan wrote this adress in a posting to
- ar-news:
-
- > Hon. Jaima Garia
- > Minister for Foreign Affairs
- > Largo do Rilvas
- > 1200 Lisboa
- > PORTUGAL
- > Fax: 011-351 1 609708
-
- This lines should be corrected as follows:
-
- Hon. Jaime Gama
- Minister for Foreign Affairs
- Largo do Relvas
- 1200 Lisboa
- PORTUGAL
- Fax: 011-351 1 609708
-
-
- Regards.
-
- Daniel
-
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 17:15:41 +0000 (GMT)
- From: Daniel Paulo Martins Ferreira <dmartins@student.dei.uc.pt>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Public Petition Against Animal Experiments Secrecy
- Message-ID: <Pine.OSF.3.95.970711170141.30792A-100000@student.dei.uc.pt>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
-
- Greetings.
-
- At the UK National Anti-Vivisection Society web site
- (www.cygnet.co.uk/navs) you can find an online public petition against
- animal experiments secrecy.
-
- I think ar-news community should take a look. I'm sure most of you will
- want to sign it.
-
- Regards.
-
- Daniel
-
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 10:41:01 -0700 (PDT)
- From: "Christine M. Wolf" <chrisw@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.com
- Subject: Re: Desperate, Part II
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19970317075415.193f6062@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- At 10:14 AM 7/11/97 -0500, HSUS Government Affairs wrote:
- >Thank you, to everyone who called/wrote/faxed/e-mailed their senators
- >on the CAMPFIRE issue!
- >
- >We've just learned that the CAMPFIRE issue will be voted on in the
- >House on Wednesday, July 16. CAMPFIRE is the US program that sends
- >millions of US tax dollars to Africa to promote trophy hunting,
- >including hunting of endangered and threatened species like elephants,
- >leopards, and baboons.
- >
- >*Please* call or fax your representative by Tuesday, July 15. (Unless
- >you live very close to DC, a letter will not make it in time.) If you
- >don't know your representative's name/number, you can call the House
- >switchboard at (202)225-3121. You should ask him/her to "cut CAMPFIRE
- >funding by supporting the amendment to the Foreign Operations
- >Appropriations Bill." Be sure to tell your representative that you are
- >a constituent.
- >
- >Thank you!
- >
- >Sincerely,
- >Doris Lin
- >HSUS Grassroots Assistant
- >
- >
-
- ALSO, FEEL FREE TO CALL ME AT THE FUND FOR ANIMALS FOR THE NAMES OF
- YOUR
- SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVES!
-
- ******************************************************************
- 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: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 14:01:39 -0400
- From: Shirley McGreal <spm@awod.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: More on the Madison monkeys
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.32.19970711180139.0070c0d0@awod.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- The Wisconsin State Journal has confirmed that negotiations have been under
- way for possible acquisition of monkeys at the Vilas Park Zoo, Madison, by
- the Procter and Gamble company.
-
- A 10 July story in the Journal ran two photos, one of a monkey captioned
- "Monkeys' Future in Doubt" with the caption, "Is a move in the future for
- this macaque and 147 of his monkey friends at the Vilas Park Zoo? That
- question surfaced this week after UW-Madison's Wisconsin Regional Primate
- Center said it no longer needed the animals kept at the zoo for behavioral
- studies."
-
- Another photo showed the monkey housing with the caption, "The stump-tailed
- macaque and rhesus monkeys attract a crowd Wednesday afternoon at Madison's
- Vilas Park Zoo. "The zoo is not a zoo without a monkey island" said Nancy
- Kinson, as she visited the zoo with family.
-
- The heading stated "Despite scientists' snub, monkeys still a Vilas hit."
-
- The story by John Walsh ran as follows:
-
- Our of favor with the scientists, the monkeys at Madison's Vilas
- Park Zoo remain a crowd-pleaser.
- "Everyone loves the monkeys," Bruce Kinson, 11, of Oregon said
- during a zoo visit Wednesday. "They're fun to wtach, and they're the smartest."
- But the future of the zoo's 148 monkeys is in jeopardy, leading a
- local animal rights group to question whether the playful animals will be
- subjected to painful experimentation.
- The rhesus and stump-tailed macaques that live in the flying saucer
- shaped building are the zoo's only residents that don't belong in the zoo.
- Instead, they belong to UW-Madison's Wisconsin Regional Primate Research
- Center which is now looking into new funding for the animals, possibly
- selling them to a private company, or giving them to the zoo.
- Zoo Director Dave Hall said he was informed several weeks ago of the
- research center's plans not to seek an extension when its lease renewal was
- due in 2002. But with a major cat exhibit due to open in two weeks and a
- bird project already started, the zoo would have difficulty commiting to
- taking over care of the monkeys.
- "I don't know how it would fit in," Hall said, "It's all
- hypothetical right now."
- The center's interim director Joe Kemnitz, said he is talking with
- Procter and Gamble Co., which has expressed interest in using the monkeys
- for breeding stock. He said his first choice would be for the animals to
- stay and have their care taken over by zoo staffers. He estimated yearly
- food bills for all of the monkeys at between $25,000 and $50,000.
- "I think if people knew what was going on they would put pressure on
- the primate center to do what is right," said Tima Kaske, executive director
- of the Madison-based Alliance for Animals. "They were trying to get this
- done benind closed doors."
- She said there is little guarantee that if the monkeys are sold to a
- pharmaceutical company they would not be subjected to invasive procedures.
- The research center was one of seven created by the federal
- government in the early 1960s. In the early years, behavioral studies
- received the bulk of its funding and researchers flocked to the zoo to see
- the animals interact.
- But in later years, funding shifted toward biomedical research, and
- more work was done at the center's laboratories, 22 Charter Street. The
- center's last study of the zoo animals ended this year and no more are
- planned, Kemnitz said.
- But as waves of children and parents gravitated to the monkeys
- Wednesday, there was little doubt they remain one of the zoo's stars.
- "A zoo without monkeys wouldn't be the same," said Roy Hence of
- Madison, who visited the zoo Wednesday with his wife and two kids. "Save the
- monkeys."
-
-
- Dr. Shirley McGreal, Chairwoman
- International Primate Protection League, POB 766 Summerville SC 29484 USA
- Phone: 803-871-2280 Fax: 803-871-7988 E-mail: ippl@awod.com
- Web page (revised January 1997): http://www.sims.net/organizations/ippl/
-
- NOTE; THE OLD E-MAIL ADDRESS AT SC.NET IS NOT BE IN USE, PLEASE DIRECT
- ALL
- E-MAIL TO IPPL@AWOD.COM
-
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 11:39:53 -0700 (PDT)
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [CA] Helping gorillas and humans
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970711114051.98df8404@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From MacLean's Magazine - July 15th edition
-
- At work, Kerry Bowman, a social worker at the Toronto Hospital, is
- interested in how culture influences people's illnesses. In his spare time,
- he studies apes. So when Bowman, 40, visited Africa recently to research the
- plight of the western lowland gorilla, it was only natural that he also
- study the local human inhabitants.
-
- During the month he spent in Cameroon and the Congo, Bowman confirmed
- troubling reports from central and west Africa: that new roads cut through
- the jungle by logging compamies have made it easier for poachers to hunt the
- already-endangered gorillas, as well as chimpanzees.
-
- The apes are butchered, smoked and shipped to the cities, where they are eaten.
-
- "This has gone from occasional domestic use in forest areas to a commercial
- enterprise," says Bowman.
-
- But his time there also gave him reason to hope the practice cam be halted.
-
- Among the 100-plus groups in the Camerron region, he could find none whose
- religion or culture requires thay eat the meat. In addition, he adds, there
- are plenty of other, non-endangered animals, so no one will starve if apes
- are removed from the diet.
-
- Bowman is now co-developing a series of 20-minute radio plays to inform
- African listeners, for instance, that it is, in fact, illegal to hunt the
- apes, and that they are very human-like.
-
- "It is not a very media-saturated area," says Bowman. "There are no
- chimpanzees on TV selling them Visa cards, In fact, most of them have never
- seen the animals alive."
-
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 14:48:32 -0400
- From: "D'Amico, AnnMarie" <DAMICOA@od1em1.od.nih.gov>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>,
- "dmartins@student.dei.uc.pt" <dmartins@student.dei.uc.pt>
- Subject: RE: Public Petition Against Animal Experiments Secrecy
- Message-ID: <c=US%a=_%p=NIH%l=NIHHUB/HUB/0021649E@imc.nih.gov>
-
- Hello...
-
- The Nature of Wellness will celebrate the release of "LETHAL MEDICINE" a
- brand-new documentary that demolishes the claims of the Vivisectionist
- industry.
-
- This fundraising premiere will be held in Los Angeles - Aug. 16th and New
- York City - Sept. 13/14.
-
- The funds are going to be used to buy television airtime for this most
- critical documentary.
-
- If anyone is interested in additional information, please call 818/790-6383
- or email me with your fax # and I'll get the info to you.
-
- TKS -- AM
-
- ----------
- From: Daniel Paulo Martins Ferreira[SMTP:dmartins@student.dei.uc.pt]
- Sent: Friday, July 11, 1997 1:15 PM
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Public Petition Against Animal Experiments Secrecy
-
-
- Greetings.
-
- At the UK National Anti-Vivisection Society web site
- (www.cygnet.co.uk/navs) you can find an online public petition against
- animal experiments secrecy.
-
- I think ar-news community should take a look. I'm sure most of you will
- want to sign it.
-
- Regards.
-
- Daniel
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 16:01:38 -0400 (EDT)
- From: "A. Hogan" <ahogan@CapAccess.org>
- To: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- Cc: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Re: (UK) British Hunters March for Rights
- Message-ID: <Pine.SUN.3.91-FP.970711160133.1437B-100000@cap1.capaccess.org>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
-
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 14:44:49 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Friends of Animals <foa@igc.apc.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Canada Geese and Environmental Rascism
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19970711173059.36c79afc@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Contact info for calls follows the
- news release.
-
- -Bill Dollinger, FoA
-
- July 11, 1997 For Immediate Release:
- Contact: Carroll Cox (202) 296-2172
-
- USDA Animal Damage Control agency sent uninspected,
- potentially contaminated geese to soup kitchens
-
- WASHINGTON D.C.--The carcasses of more than
- 1,700 Canada geese sent to Virginia soup kitchens in recent weeks
- by the USDA Animal Damage Controldivision may have been full of
- lead, herbicides and pesticides used in lawn care, and potentially
- lethal bacteria, including e-coli and salmonella, warn experts--but
- we'll never know for sure, Friends of Animals has discovered, because
- contrary to published reports, the USDA never inspected the remains.
-
- "The USDA does not regulate or inspect wild meat," USDA
- deputy chief inspector for the Virginia region Dr. Maher Haque told
- Friends of Animals special investigator Carroll Cox on Thursday, July 10.
- Haque affirmed that no one from his staff ever saw the dead geese.
-
- Dr. Robert D. Ragland, standards bureau chief within the USDA
- Slaughter Inspection Standards and Procedures Division, explained to Cox
- also on Thursday that waterfowl such as Canada geese are outside the
- coverage of the Meat Inspection Act and the Poultry Inspection Act, and
- are therefore outside the USDA regulatory umbrella.
-
- But that doesn't mean city-dwelling Canada geese are safe to
- eat,
- Ragland continued. "Dr. Ragland further stated that several zoonotic
- diseases could be potential problems with the meat," Cox noted, "for instance
- botulism type E, psitticocus, avian influenza, and salmonella."
-
- Looking for a way to make mass killings of urban Canada
- geese palatable to the public, while continuing to promote the propagation
- of the species in hunting areas, state wildlife agencies in Minnesota and
- Michigan hit upon donating the dead birds to feed the poor in 1995.
- New York, Virginia, and several other states picked up the scheme last
- year. The actual goose roundups and killing are most often their trapping
- credentials, rarely if ever familiar with meat safety inspection.
-
- State agencies take no more responsibility for the safety of
- dead
- geese given to soup kitchens, Friends of Animals special investigator
- Cox found. Virginia Fisheries and Conservation Department spokesperson
- Major Herb Foster told Cox that his agency requires no inspection of wild
- game meat distributed to the public, adding that no other agency did, either,
- to his knowledge. A Virginia State Health Department representative
- confirmed the lack of inspection by state personnel.
-
- The reality of the potential hazard was demonstrated on
- August 27, 1996, when the New York State Department of
- Environmental Conservation acknowledged the unfitness for human
- consumption of 251 Canada geese killed at Clarkstown, New York,
- and donated to the People to People food pantry. The meat was
- found to be irrecoverably contaminated with mud, oil, and lead
- from old shotgun pellets, excavated from the muck at the bottoms
- of ponds and ditches and accidentally ingested.
-
- The Clarkstown geese were among just a handful of urban-dwelling
- Canada geese ever inspected by any agency. But experts had predicted
- the findings, including Clarkstown research chemist Dr. Gregg B. Feigelson
- and Cornell University poultry toxicologist Rodney Dietart.
-
- "There's a legitimate question about suburban geese being
- exposed to pesticides, herbicides, and even PCBs," Dietart told
- eremy Pearce of The Detroit News when the Michigan
- Department of Natural Resources moved to donate dead Canada
- geese to Detroit-area food banks last year. "The situation is
- analagous to looking for mercury in fish. It warrants some testing,"
- Dietart said.
-
- Public officials blamed the Clarkstown contamination on allegedly
- faulty meat processing, but as Peter Muller of Wildwatch pointed
- out, "The finding of lead cannot be blamed on the slaughterhouse,"
- since ingested lead would be absorbed into a goose's bloodstream, and
- would contaminate the goose's entire body. "Lead poisoning affects
- every organ," Muller continued, "can cause nerve disorders, and
- causes mental retardation in children."
-
- "This is classic environmental racism," said Cox. "I come from rural
- Mississippi, I've lived in the ghetto, I've been in the Third World,
- and I know it when I see it. Trying to justify the unjustifiable by
- feeding dead birds that may be unfit for human consumption to
- disadvantaged children in inner city neighborhoods is no different
- from siting a toxic waste dump in a poor part of the countryside
- because the people are so desperate for jobs and houses that they'll
- do anything and put up with anything next door.
-
- "The Animal Damage Control division is part of the USDA,"
- Cox continued, "and the USDA is supposed to be responsible for
- meat and poultry safety, but where was their sense of
- responsibility in this? The ADC was responsible for killing geese,
- but nobody took responsibility for insuring public safety, even while
- the ADC and the state agencies pretended they had to kill
- geese to protect the public from all sorts of diseases that these
- geese are supposed to be at least potentially able to carry.
-
- "But if the geese were that deadly," Cox continued, "why did the
- ADC turn around and give their uninspected remains to soup kitchens
- to feed little kids?
-
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Let the VA Department of Agriculture know how
- you feel about the slaughter of Canada Geese:
-
- Commissioner J. Carlton Courter
- Virginia Department of Agriculture
- 1100 Bank ST., RM 210
- Post Office Box 1163
- Richmond, Virginia 23218
-
- 804-786-3501 Telephone
- 804 371-2945 Fax
-
- The uninspectected meat went to:
-
- Reggie Tupponce
- Director of Operations
- Central Virginia Food Bank, Inc
- 404-226-1899 telephone
-
- Also contact:
-
- Tara Hamilton
- Metropolitan Washington Airport Authority
- 703-417-8371 telephone
-
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 14:27:21 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Mike Markarian <MikeM@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, seac+announce@ecosys.drdr.virginia.edu,
- en.alerts@conf.igc.apc.org
- Subject: Update: Florida Hunting in Bird Sanctuaries
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19970711175451.0ab71bbc@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- The Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission voted unanimously today to
- allow hunting in parts of the South Dade Bird Sanctuary. This was a revised
- proposal -- the original proposal would have affected all 118 bird
- sanctuaries in Florida. This is a loss for the mourning doves in South Dade,
- but a victory for the animals in the other 117 sanctuaries. Thanks to
- everyone who wrote and called on this issue.
-
- Date: Fri, 11 Jul 1997 20:51:22 -0700
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Human genes on the stem
- Message-ID: <33C6FF3A.2420@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Scientists explore growing drugs instead of making them in labs
-
- Reuter Information Service
-
- LOS ANGELES (July 10, 1997 9:15 p.m. EDT) - Many human proteins used to
- make a variety of drugs can be grown in fields, instead of just made in
- laboratories, a California scientist said Thursday.
-
- The vision of vast fields of grain being transformed into a kind of drug
- factory came from Raymond Rodriguez, a genetics professor at the
- University of California at Davis and founder of the genetic engineering
- company Applied Phytologics.
-
- Rodriguez said he had found a way to engineer rice genetically so it
- produces human proteins. In similar research, the Scottish company PPL
- Therapeutics Plc. recently announced it had developed a strain of rice
- that produces the human protein alpha-1-antitrypsin, used to treat
- cystic fibrosis.
-
- If scientists can do the same with other proteins, Rodriguez said, the
- proteins could be mass-produced in the same sort of fields that are
- currently used to produce cereals. He said wheat and corn were also
- ideal plants for growing the proteins.
-
- Such a system would transform drug production from a high-cost,
- low-yield process confined to scientific laboratories to one in which
- large volumes are produced at dramatically reduced prices, he said.
-
- "I don't have any doubts this can work," said Rodriguez, who estimated
- the process would take another three or four years to perfect and would
- then have to be approved by regulators. "Biotechnology is currently a
- high-tech field, but there is a driving force to make it low-tech."
-
- "If we can take these human genes and move them to agricultural systems,
- we can produce them on a scale of metric tons at greatly reduced
- prices," he said.
-
- The process of growing these compounds involves isolating the human gene
- that produces a targeted protein and inserting it into a seed of grain.
- All the grain that grows from that seed should contain the
- protein, which would be harvested when the grain is germinating.
-
- Since the late 1970s, a major area of drug development research has
- focused on recombinant proteins, or human proteins that are reproduced
- outside the body.
-
- Currently, however, the only way these proteins can be reproduced is in
- a broth of bacteria in a laboratory setting. This system is reliable but
- yields only small amounts at an often exorbitant cost.
-
- As a result, some commonly used drugs can cost more than $1,000 per
- dose. Drugs that are based on recombinant proteins include the heart
- attack and stroke drug TPA, made by Genentech Inc., and Epogen, a drug
- for kidney failure made by Amgen Inc.
-
- But if recombinant proteins could be grown in fields, Rodriguez said,
- the industry would probably be spurred to develop new applications that
- are not now cost-effective. The grain itself, for instance, could be
- used to make a protein-enriched cereal.
-
- "One of the most exciting projects we're talking about is taking the
- genes that produce mother's milk and putting them into a barley or
- rice," Rodriguez said. The altered grain would then have new
- disease-fighting properties.
-
- Other biotechnology companies are exploring different agricultural
- avenues for producing recombinant proteins. One of the major competing
- technologies involves genetically engineering herd animals like sheep
- and cattle and then harvesting the proteins from their milk.
-
- By ANDREA ORR, Reuter
-
- ================================================================
-
- A modern version of the Magician's Apprentice story?
-
- Andy
-
- </pre>
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