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-
- >Bangkok Post
- 22 Aug 97
-
- Cheap goods to be
- sold at Dusit Zoo
-
- Anjira Assavanonda
-
- Part of Dusit Zoo is to be turned into a temporary shopping
- plaza tomorrow.
-
- "Visit Khao Din, Eat Thai Food, Use Thai Products, Save
- Money" is the idea.
-
- Until next Sunday, people will be able to buy cheap goods from
- over 100 booths between 9am and 8pm.
-
- From Monday to Friday there will be a special promotion during
- which people can enter the zoo free between 4pm and 8pm.
-
- Popular singers will be on hand to provide entertainment.
-
- The country's only twin elephants, Jum-Jim, will be brought in
- from Khao Khiew Zoological Park.
-
- The Orang-utans Zuzu and her baby, from Sa Kaew Zoological
- Park, will be present.
-
- Usum Nimmanhaemin, director of the Zoological Park
- Organisation, said so far more than 200 shop owners from
- Bangkok and the provinces had offered to take part.
-
- The committee will have to choose about 100, since space is
- limited.
-
- Those who are chosen would be allowed to sell without charge,
- but will be asked to lower their prices as much as possible.
-
- According to Mr Sukhum, the idea will be applied to provincial
- zoos controlled by the organisation.
-
- He said numbers of zoo-goers had been increasing year by year,
- adding that this year the income of Dusit Zoo had increased five
- percent.
-
- But due to the slump and government cuts, admission prices
- might have to be raised to 30 baht per person.
-
-
-
- Date: Thu, 21 Aug 1997 20:21:02 -0700 (PDT)
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] National Trust hunting ban upheld
- Message-ID: <199708221209.IAA28119@envirolink.org>
-
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Friday, August 22nd, 1997
-
- National Trust hunting ban upheld
- By Charles Clover, Environment Editor=20
-
- A HIGH Court judge has refused an appeal by hunters to overturn the National
- Trust's ban on deer hunting with hounds, choosing instead to give the
- go-ahead for a judicial examination next year.
-
- Justice Robert Walker asked the trust the reconsider its ban, calling the
- speed and secrecy with which it made the decision "a serious error of
- judgment", but stopped short of making an order compelling the trust's
- ruling council to reverse its decision of April 10. It was imposed within 36
- hours of the publication of a study purporting to show that hunting caused
- unacceptable stress to deer.
-
- The judge said the report by Prof Patrick Bateson, an expert on animal
- behaviour at King's College, Cambridge, was not in scientific language. It
- had not been subject to "peer review" by other qualified experts and there
- had been some criticism of its contents since publication.=20
-
- The judge also accepted evidence that at least one of the trust's 52-member
- council was having second thoughts about the ban. He refused, however, to
- grant an injunction to the
- Devon and Somerset Staghounds and the Quantock Staghounds allowing them to
- continue hunting with hounds on trust land in the 1997-98 season.
-
- He said that it would amount to deciding on matters of fact which could only
- be established by a full trial. His most serious criticism of the trust
- concerned its handling of Prof Bateson's findings, which the court was told
- were discussed by a small group of senior trust officials, including the
- chairman, Charles Nunneley, and director general, Martin Drury, at a meeting
- in January this year.
-
- Hunts, which had received assurances from Prof Bateson that hunting would be
- unaffected by his research, learned only in early April that the report
- might have serious consequences. The report was published at a press
- conference on April 9 at which Mr Nunneley said he would be recommending a
- ban to the ruling council at a meeting the next day. Council members had the
- 77-page report for a day before voting unanimously for a ban.
-
- Mr Justice Walker said the trust's chairman and his small group of officials
- who knew about the report's findings were "preoccupied and probably
- excessively preoccupied" with the need to make a quick, clean decision to
- deflect media criticism.=20
-
- This led to "secrecy being preferred rather than the opportunity for further
- consultation and discussion".=20
-
- The speedy timetable was "bound to impose pressure" on council members,
- however well-informed and diligent they may have been, at their meeting on
- April 10.=20
-
- The judge said that if calm, quiet reflection was supposed to attend the
- council's consideration of serious questions, it was "an extraordinary
- decision" by Mr Nunneley to present the Bateson report at a press conference
- 36 hours before the council met. This seemed "very questionable".=20
-
- A report in The Telegraph, which summarised Prof Bateson's report and gave
- Mr Nunneley's recommendation for a ban, was published on April 10 and was
- likely to have influenced councillors in their decision.
-
- However, Mr Justice Walker said that he was "very far from convinced" that
- this amounted to a conspiracy by trust staff to get hunting banned.
-
- He refused to allow a judicial review of the trust's decision, saying there
- was equivalent redress to be had using charities law. The judge ruled that
- the huntsmen did have an arguable "but not a strong" case for a further
- trial of the trust's decision.=20
-
- Counsel for the National Trust, Michael Douglas, QC, said it would give
- "great weight" to the judge's suggestion that the decision to ban hunting be
- reconsidered by its council in the light of evidence not available or
- misunderstood at the time.=20
-
- Janet George, a spokesman for the British Field Sports Society, said: "We
- are extremely pleased that the case is now going to trial."
-
- =A9 Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.=20
-
- [UK] National Trust hunting ban upheld
- Date: Thu, 21 Aug 1997 20:21:05 -0700 (PDT)
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Ollie the escaped parrot ends up behind bars
- Message-ID: <199708221209.IAA28121@envirolink.org>
-
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Friday, August 22nd, 1997
-
- Ollie the escaped parrot ends up behind bars
- By Will Bennett=20
-
- OLLIE the parrot's attempt to seek broader horizons will not go down as one
- of the most successful of escape attempts - he achieved the opposite of what
- generations of prisoners
- have tried to do by breaking into Wormwood Scrubs
-
- As his worried owner, Dot Oliver, searched for him, Ollie, an African Grey,
- got through the London prison's ventilation system into E Wing. There he was
- looked after by a man
- serving a life sentence and who keeps budgerigars. He grew so fond of the
- new cell-mate that he fed him his precious supply of chocolate biscuits.
-
- Ollie's stay behind prison bars ended after a metal identity tag enabled
- prison staff to contact Miss Oliver, 44, a legal secretary, who lives in
- Barnes, south-west London.
-
- She said: "I don't know what this man has done to get in prison but I think
- it would be nice to keep in touch with him. I am going to send him some
- photos of Ollie and a letter every three months to let him know how he is
- doing. Ollie actually came back fatter than when he went in. He would not
- eat bird seed so the man gave him a whole packet of chocolate digestives.=20
-
- "The prison staff were fantastic. They said the man who looked after him
- said he did not want me to take him home."
-
- A prison spokesman said: "The parrot had come in through the vents in our E
- Wing. A lot of lifers tend to keep birds so they have a knowledge of them."
-
- =A9 Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.=20
-
- [UK] Ollie the escaped parrot ends up behind bars
- Date: Fri, 22 Aug 1997 10:53:15 -0400 (EDT)
- From: JanaWilson@aol.com
- To: AR-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Oklahoma Dove Hunting Information
- Message-ID: <970822105116_838874998@emout18.mail.aol.com>
-
-
- A/w local Oklahoma City hunting news:
-
- If you are looking for a place to hunt doves, the Oklahoma Wildlife
- Dept. can point you in the right direction with its 1997 Oklahoma
- Dove Hunting Maps available at the dept's headquartes located in
- Oklahoma City. Dove season opens on the first of Sept.
-
- These booklets contain maps showing the location of fields on
- department-owned wildlife management areas that have been
- managed to attract doves. More than 20 areas have received
- special attention in an effort to provide the best possible dove
- hunting opportunities. The booklets also provide maps of more than
- 4,200 acres of private land the dept. has leased especially for
- public dove hunting. The leases are in Logan, Kingfisher and
- Blaine counties.
-
- Mr. Alan Peoples, assistant game chief, says "We've really
- strived to provide high-quality public dove hunting, especially at
- some of our wildlife management areas. Dove hunting can
- be very fast-paced and exciting, so we encourage first-time
- hunters to make use of the public hunting opportunities available
- to them."
-
- Peoples also said that the Tulsa hunters should be able to find
- good hunting close by because portions of Fort Gibson, Keystone
- and Deep Fork Wildlife Area Management Areas have been
- managed for dove hunting. He added that most of the state-
- owned areas, even those not specifically managed for doves, are
- open to public dove hunting.
-
- A/w Peoples "Hunters are advised to scout these areas just
- prior to hunting. Weather conditions and subsequent agricultural
- activity can greatly impact the no. of birds using these dove hunting
- areas. The best bet is to scout a day or two before hunting,
- than concentrate your hunting where you have seen the most
- activity."
-
- For the Animals,
-
- Jana, OKC
- Date: Fri, 22 Aug 1997 09:42:07 -0700
- From: LCartLng@gvn.net (Lawrence Carter-Long)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Taiwan struggles to solve stray dog problem
- Message-ID: <199708221636.MAA20115@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Taiwan struggles to solve stray dog problem
- 01:22 a.m. Aug 21, 1997 Eastern
-
- By Uma Nithipalan
-
- TAIPEI, Aug 21 (Reuter) - Dogs in Taiwan can face a grim future.
-
- Some strays have been rounded up and dumped into pits to wallow
- and starve to death. Others drown after being locked in cages and
- thrown into rivers in an effort to curb their numbers, animial rights
- activists say.
-
- ``Taiwan is one of the worst places in the world to be a dog,''
- according to the World Society for the Protection of Animals, which
- inspected Taiwan in February.
-
- The government estimates that up to 200,000 stray dogs live in the
- Taipei metropolitan area alone, and the number continues to multiply
- because most of the vagabonds have not been neutered.
-
- Residents see the problem as a growing menace. They complain of
- waste and noise from the animals that roam in such numbers and so
- freely as to seem an accepted part of the landscape.
-
- But animal rights activists blame irresponsible human owners and
- argue the strays are innocent victims.
-
- Whether dogs or humans are right, Taiwan's government says the
- uneasy relationship must end soon and plans to launch a major
- campaign to improve treatment for the strays.
-
- The campaign includes a budgeted T$6 million (US$206,897) to build
- shelters for stray dogs in southern Taiwan.
-
- Advocates for the canines praise the move, but say it is misguided.
-
- ``Their efforts are nice, but in the wrong direction,'' said Buddhist
- master Wu Hung, secretary-general of the Life Conservationist
- Association, one of several private organisations that promote animal
- rights.
-
- ``Building shelters for the strays is good, but it cannot quite solve
- the problem,'' Wu said.
-
- The monk said the government not only should try to find ways to
- keep the strays alive, it should find ways to kill them humanely,
- through euthanasia.
-
- ``It is more important to keep a balance on quantity,'' Wu said.
-
- Affluent Taiwan long has been accused by international groups like the
- World Society for the Protection of Animals for killing strays using
- brutal methods.
-
- In past years, captured strays were dumped into shallow pits to
- wallow and starve in a slow death. Others drowned after being locked
- in cages and thrown into rivers.
-
- WSPA crusaders say Taiwan also killed its strays by electrocuting
- and poisoning them.
-
- Taiwan's government admitted that brutal execution methods had been
- widespread on the island, but said it has ordered local administrations
- to be kinder and gentler.
-
- ``The (dog) catching done now is more humane. Last year they
- replaced the metal rods used to catch the dogs with the more
- animal-friendly nets,'' said Yang Su-er, a representative from Taipei's
- Bureau of Environmental Protection.
-
- ``Captured dogs are now executed through lethal injections or gas. I
- think that as long as the dog doesn't suffer, then it's okay for the
- dogs to be executed,'' Yang said.
-
- But some crusaders maintain that the government should punish not
- the strays, but those who caused the dogs to become strays -- their
- flighty masters.
-
- ``The government should institute a law to prevent people from
- abandoning their dogs,'' said Wang Li-ling, president of the private
- Help-Save-A-Pet Fund.
-
- ``People need to be educated to see if they are qualified to buy a dog.
- If they are inhumane and their living standard is not good, they should
- not even consider buying a dog,'' she said.
-
- Wang pointed to the advent of microchips as a promising way to rein
- in the strays' human deserters.
-
- Veterinarians can now place a microchip in a dog's ear as a form of
- identification, allowing authorities to contact owners of abandoned
- dogs.
-
- ``Microchip implanting is a good way to locate the dog deserters,''
- Wu Hung said.
-
- Copyright 1997 Reuters Limited.
- --
- Posted by:
- Lawrence Carter-Long
- Coordinator, Science and Research Issues
- Animal Protection Institute, phone: 916-731-5521
- email: LCartLng@gvn.net
- world wide web: http://www.api4animals.org/
-
- "Do not be too moral. You may cheat yourself out of too
- much life by doing so. Aim above morality. Be not simply
- good; be good for something." -- Henry David Thoreau
-
-
- Date: Fri, 22 Aug 1997 09:43:17 -0700
- From: LCartLng@gvn.net (Lawrence Carter-Long)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Biotech News: Selecting the Gender of Pigs
- Message-ID: <199708221637.MAA20207@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Scientists Develop Method of Selecting the Gender of Pigs
-
- ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH
- Thu, Aug 21 1997
-
- For four weeks beginning in April, scientists from the University of
- Missouri at Columbia met a Southwest Airlines jet each Wednesday
- evening at Lambert Field to pick up a specially packed box and drive it
- to their campus.
-
- Inside each box were small vials filled with a tiny amount of hog semen
- that earlier in the day had undergone a high-tech treatment to sort it
- into male and female components.
-
- Early the next morning, Mizzou researchers used the gender-separated
- semen to fertilize sow eggs in test tubes and later implant them in
- surrogate-mother sows.
-
- The result was a surprising scientific success: litter after litter of
- all-female or all-male piglets, marking the first successful gender
- sorting of swine.
-
- The most recent litter was born Aug. 6, researchers said Wednesday.
-
- The development could lead the way to more efficient hog production. It
- could also help researchers trying to genetically engineer hogs to
- provide hearts, kidneys and other organs that can be transplanted into
- humans.
-
- "We knew it would work," said Bill Day, a professor of animal science at
- the university who led the Missouri end of the cooperative project with
- the U.S. Department of Agriculture. "But we didn't expect much more
- than an 85 percent success in predicting the gender."
-
- Of the 33 piglets born beginning in July at MU's Animal Science
- Research Center, 32 were born with the predicted sex. An all-female
- litter of eight piglets was the largest of the eight litters. The lone
- "miss" was a male in a litter with three females.
-
- Day was cautious when asked whether gender sorting was possible in
- humans.
-
- "We're working with pigs . . . . I honestly don't think of it
- otherwise," he said.
-
- He added that such issues were "up to society to determine, but there's
- obviously no reason the technology can't be transmitted from one
- mammal to another."
-
- The breakthrough was one of many over the past several years in animal
- reproductive technology. Among other techniques, scientists have
- developed ways to control the breeding time of cattle and hogs. MU has
- been a leader in this research, including test-tube fertilization
- technology.
-
- The gender-sorting process was developed by scientists with the
- Department of Agriculture in Beltsville, Md. They were the ones who
- placed the vials on the jet in Baltimore.
-
- The process separates semen into two components - one containing
- sperm carrying the X, or female, chromosome and the other containing
- the Y, or male, chromosome. Scientists can sort the semen because the X
- chromosome has slightly more DNA than the Y chromosome.
-
- These chromosomes in the sperm determine the sex of the offspring.
-
- The gender-sorting technique was demonstrated a few years ago in cows
- by scientists with the Agriculture Department.
-
- The research reported Wednesday combined the Agriculture
- Department's ability to sort semen by gender and the MU technique for
- maturing swine embryos in test tubes.
-
- The problem is that the Agriculture Department's process is slow and
- separates many fewer sperm than needed for insemination. The solution is
- the MU test-tube fertilization technique, which requires only relatively
- small numbers of sperm.
-
- Among other potential benefits, the gender-separation technology could
- eventually help hog farmers, who desire females more than males in
- developing breeding stock. Normally, a litter would have half males and
- half females.
-
- Day cautioned that the finding was only one step among many still
- needed.
-
- "We have shown that this technology can be accomplished, but it will
- need to be improved before used in any commercial or medical
- applications," he said.
-
- Among other problems, the experimental litters aren't big enough to be
- of commercial value. And much more work needs to be done on the
- promising technology for genetically engineering pigs to produce organs
- for humans.
-
- (Copyright 1997)
-
- Copyright 1997, ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH.
- --
- Posted by:
- Lawrence Carter-Long
- Coordinator, Science and Research Issues
- Animal Protection Institute, phone: 916-731-5521
- email: LCartLng@gvn.net
- world wide web: http://www.api4animals.org/
-
- "Do not be too moral. You may cheat yourself out of too
- much life by doing so. Aim above morality. Be not simply
- good; be good for something." -- Henry David Thoreau
-
-
- Date: Fri, 22 Aug 1997 09:46:04 -0700
- From: LCartLng@gvn.net (Lawrence Carter-Long)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Florida Times-Union: BBQ's Without The Beef
- Message-ID: <199708221640.MAA20483@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Florida Times-Union: BBQ's Without The Beef
-
- Meat-free Barbecuing From black bean burgers to
- mushroom patties, vegetarians can make the most out of a
- barbecue, even when there's meat on nearly everyone's
- menu
-
- The Florida Times-Union
- Thu, Aug 21 1997
-
- If having a slab of beef on a bun seems less tantalizing than
- tormenting, chances are the idea of a family barbecue fills you more with
- dread than delight.
-
- Maybe you're just sick of living in a meat-mad nation. Maybe you're
- tired of the same old hamburger and hot dog ritual. Or maybe sinking your
- teeth into anything that bleeds red when you bite into it makes you feel
- like another Draculesque Florida mosquito.
-
- So whether because of ethics or aesthetics, you've made the vegetarian
- choice. But what's a vegetarian to do when the family screams for summer
- barbecue?
-
- "We eat all the salad, and there's no salad for anybody," said Gil
- Weise, vegetarian and owner of Weise Natural Food Product Shoppe. "I just
- say all I want is some salad, and then when I get home I eat whatever I need
- to supplement my normal diet."
-
- "Sometimes people just don't understand," vegetarian Melanie Manuel
- said. "I'll say I don't eat meat, and they'll say, 'Here's a really good
- chicken dish.'... The last time I went to a barbecue, I ate fruit salad,
- baked beans and garlic bread."
-
- Sometimes, though, salad just isn't enough and treating yourself to a
- juicy lettuce-tomato-pickle-no-burger burger is the barbecue equivalent
- of eating the apple out of a roast pig's mouth. Being a die-hard
- greens-gulper doesn't have to mean boring barbecue and a long summer with
- nothing but potato salad, potato salad, and more potato salad in sight.
-
- Evelyn Harden, who attributes her good health and high energy at age 79
- to her 30 years of vegetarianism, has had plenty of time to become
- familiar with many meat-free options.
-
- "You can buy things," Harden said. "You can get {meatless} hot dogs.
- They also have the nicest canned chicken made from grains and soybeans. You
- can make a patty out of vegetables, or take vegetables like onions and
- squash and just put them on the grill."
-
- The types of vegetarians are as varied as their reasons for not eating
- meat. Most people who eschew meat are ovo-lacto vegetarians who will eat
- products from live animals, such as eggs and milk.
-
- Then there are the vegans, who consume no foods produced by animals,
- living or dead -- up to, and often including, honey.
-
- Macrobiotics follow a diet whose roots lie in Zen Buddhism, trying to
- balance the forces of yin and yang (expansion and contraction) in their
- meals. At the center of the diet are whole grains and vegetables, though
- small amounts of fish can sometimes be included.
-
- Rawists think that cooking foods destroys vitamins, minerals and
- essential enzymes and plan diets for themselves of which at least 75
- percent is uncooked.
-
- Fruitarians eat only fruits and those vegetables that are botanically
- classified as fruits (peppers, squash, tomatoes). The idea behind the
- diet is that, to fit into the scheme of things, humans must consume only
- those parts of plants that have evolved to be dispersed by creatures who
- consume them -- in other words, the parts containing seeds.
-
- According to U.S. Department of Agriculture studies, more than 50
- million Americans are cutting back on their meat intake. People have
- started to turn away from animal products, the main source of disease
- promoting/aggravating substances such as saturated fat, cholesterol,
- excess protein and excess sodium, to plant products that contain the
- preventative beta carotene, vitamins E and C, fiber and folic acid.
-
- "My family is not vegetarian," said Mary Harden, who's seen first-hand
- the benefits of a meatless lifestyle from her husband's grandmother,
- Evelyn Harden. "They have cut down on meat, though, because everyone's
- aware of the health problems."
-
- So many, in fact, go veggie that entire product lines have been
- developed to cater to those who want the experience without the beef.
- Nasoya Foods, Inc., offers fat free, soy-based VegiBurgers and VegiDogs
- to replace the traditional type, as does Morning Star Farms.
-
- But what if you don't want to eat out of a box? Portobello mushrooms
- have long been hailed as a beef-burger substitute, but even their
- ever-juicy, smoky flavor can grow old over a Florida grilling season that
- stretches from April to September. Fortunately for vegetarians, there's
- more than one way to grill a veggie.
-
- BLACK BEAN BURGERS
-
- 1 14-ounce can black beans
-
- 1 small onion
-
- 2 cloves garlic, crushed
-
- 2 teaspoons Cajun seasoning
-
- 1/2 cup seasoned bread crumbs
-
- 1/4 cup egg substitute
-
- Place onion and garlic in food processor and process until fine. Add
- well-drained black beans. Process until beans are in mashed consistency.
-
- Place in medium mixing bowl, add Cajun seasoning, bread crumbs and egg
- substitute. Mix thoroughly and shape into 4 patties.
-
- Place in well-greased grill basket or on grill, and cook for 5 to 7
- minutes on both sides.
-
- Yield: 4 servings.
-
- Source: Food TV Network
-
- BULGHUR BURGERS
-
- 3 cups water
-
- 2 garlic cloves, minced or pressed
-
- 1 1/2 cups bulghur
-
- 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
-
- 1/2 cup chopped scallions
-
- 1/2 cup grated carrots
-
- 1/4 cup chopped fresh parsley
-
- 1/4 cup tahini
-
- 1 cup mashed chick peas
-
- 2 tablespoons tomato paste
-
- 2 tablespoons soy sauce
-
- 1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
-
- Dash of ground black pepper
-
- Bring water to boil. While it is heating, use heavy pan or skillet to
- saute garlic and bulghur in oil on medium-high heat for 2 minutes,
- stirring frequently.
-
- Add boiling water. Return to boil, cover and reduce heat to low. Simmer
- for 15 to 20 minutes, until all water is absorbed and bulghur is soft but
- still chewy.
-
- When bulghur is ready, stir in scallions, carrots, parsley, tahini,
- chick peas, tomato paste, soy sauce, mustard and pepper.
-
- With moistened hands, form the bulghur mixture into 6 to 8 burgers.
-
- Grill in grill basket for 5 to 7 minutes on each side. Burgers should be
- firm to touch.
-
- Yield: 6 to 8 servings.
-
- Source: Moosewood Restaurant Cooks at Home.
-
- FALAFEL
-
- 1 medium russet potato, baked, peeled, and mashed
-
- 3 cups (2 16-ounce cans) chick peas, drained and mashed
-
- 2 tablespoons toasted or regular tahini
-
- 1 tablespoon plain yogurt
-
- 1/2 cup soft whole wheat bread crumbs
-
- 2/3 cup finely chopped red onion
-
- 2 cloves garlic, crushed and minced
-
- 1 tablespoon ground cumin
-
- 2 teaspoons sweet paprika
-
- Dash cayenne pepper
-
- Pinch salt
-
- 1/4 cup minced fresh cilantro
-
- 6 pita pockets or whole wheat burger buns
-
- In large mixing bowl, combine potato, chick peas, tahini, yogurt, bread
- crumbs, onion, garlic, cumin, paprika, cayenne pepper, salt and
- cilantro. Mix well, using hands, until thoroughly blended.
-
- Shape mixture into 6 patties and place inside wire-mesh grill screen or
- directly on grill. Cook for about 15 minutes, turning once halfway
- through, until they've browned evenly. Do not overcook.
-
- Serve in pita pockets or burger buns.
-
- Yield: 6 servings.
-
- Source: Grilling from the Garden, by Diana Shaw
-
- VEGETARIAN MUSHROOM PATTIES
-
- 2 1/2 cups chopped mushrooms
-
- 1 cup plus 2 tablespoons seasoned dried bread crumbs
-
- 2/3 cup low-fat or fat-free cottage cheese
-
- 1/2 cup chopped onion
-
- 2 large eggs lightly beaten
-
- 2 1/4 ounces shredded mozzarella cheese
-
- 2 ounces chopped walnuts or almonds
-
- 1 teaspoon reduced-sodium soy sauce
-
- 1/4 teaspoon garlic powder
-
- Dash salt
-
- Dash freshly ground black pepper
-
- In large bowl, combine all ingredients until thoroughly blended. Shape
- mixture into 6 patties.
-
- Place patties in well-greased grill basket and grill for 5 to 7 minutes
- on each side, or until firm.
-
- Yield: 6 servings.
-
- Source: Weight Watchers Favorite Homestyle Recipes.
-
- SMOKED MOZZARELLA, TOMATOES AND HERBS
-
- 1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
-
- 1 clove garlic, finely minced
-
- 1 small shallot, finely minced
-
- 2 tablespoons minced fresh basil
-
- 16 cherry tomatoes
-
- 2 cups cubed smoked mozzarella
-
- Combine olive oil, garlic, shallot and basil.
-
- Alternating tomatoes and cheese, thread onto skewers.
-
- Brush skewers with oil-and-herb mixture.
-
- Grill, turning often, until tomatoes char lightly and cheese gets gooey,
- about 6 to 8 minutes.
-
- Yield: 4 servings.
-
- Source: Grilling from the Garden, by Diana Shaw.
-
- INFOBOX
-
- TIPS FOR MAKING VEGGIE BUGERS
-
- Chop ingredients in food processor to make them smaller. This helps
- patties stick together better.
-
- Chill patties before grilling. Patties can also be frozen ahead of time
- and then transferred straight from freezer to grill, though this
- increases cooking time slightly.
-
- Cook in grill basket which has been thoroughly oiled. Use paper towel to
- wipe oil over all of basket. Spraying with non-stick cooking spray
- doesn't work well.
-
- Use fire that is about four "Mississippis." It should be hot enough so
- that you can hold your hand for a count of "one-Mississippi,
- two-Mississippi, three-Mississippi, four-Mississippi" without pulling
- hand back.
-
- TIPS FOR VEGGIE SKEWERS
-
- Use skewers with either a flat prong or a double prong so that when you
- turn skewer, vegetables actually turn with it.
-
- Leave space between vegetables on skewers to help them cook more
- evenly.
-
- Placing similar items on same skewer cuts down on visual appeal, but
- makes cooking easier. Potatoes cook slower than mushrooms, which cook slower
- than cheese.
-
- Copyright 1997, The Florida Times-Union.
- --
- Posted by:
- Lawrence Carter-Long
- Coordinator, Science and Research Issues
- Animal Protection Institute, phone: 916-731-5521
- email: LCartLng@gvn.net
- world wide web: http://www.api4animals.org/
-
- "Do not be too moral. You may cheat yourself out of too
- much life by doing so. Aim above morality. Be not simply
- good; be good for something." -- Henry David Thoreau
-
-
- Date: Fri, 22 Aug 1997 18:42:28 +0200
- From: "sa338@blues.uab.es" <sa338@blues.uab.es>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Institutions that support bullfighting
- Message-ID: <33FDC174.72A2@blues.uab.es>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- I am Nuria from Barcelona.
- Please read about several Institutions that suport torture
-
- http://www.geocities.com/heartland/ranch/1231/support-toros.htm
-
- Thanks for your concern
-
- Nuria http://www.geocities.com/heartland/hills/3787
- Date: Fri, 22 Aug 1997 18:44:26 +0200
- From: "sa338@blues.uab.es" <sa338@blues.uab.es>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Cc: sa338@blues.uab.es
- Subject: Link-Mistake solved in Institutions that support bullfighting
- Message-ID: <33FDC1EA.768C@blues.uab.es>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- sa338@blues.uab.es wrote:
- >
- > I am Nuria from Barcelona.
- > Please read about several Institutions that suport torture
- >
- > http://www.geocities.com/heartland/ranch/1231/promote-toros.htm
- >
- > Thanks for your concern
- >
- > Nuria http://www.geocities.com/heartland/hills/3787
- Date: Fri, 22 Aug 1997 13:06:58 -0400 (EDT)
- From: PAWS <paws@CapAccess.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: King Royal Update
- Message-ID: <Pine.SUN.3.91-FP.970822123704.3963B-100000@cap1.capaccess.org>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
- City Gets Elephants Until Trial: Circus Case Could Take Up to 2 Years
-
- State District Judge Susan Conway on Thursday compared King Royal Circus
- to an abusive parent and gave the city of Albuquerque temporary custody
- of 10 animals taken from the company's trailer.
-
- The city had seized the two elephants and eight llamas after police
- discovered them in the hot, cramped trailer with one dead elephant.
-
- After 1 1/2 days of testimony and viewing the surviving animals Wednesday
- evening, Conway awarded the city custody until the full case comes to
- trial--which could be as much as two years away.
-
- In her ruling, Conway likened the case to one in which a child dies under
- suspicious circumstances.
-
- It could be that the child was abused and neglected, or it could be "a
- tragedy in which no one is to blame," she said.
-
- "The evidence in this case shows that the respondents (the circus and its
- handler Benjamin Davenport) are to blame," Conway said.
-
- "I am delighted," Mayor Martin Chavez said of Conway's decision, which
- he said "has national implications for the protection of animals."
-
- Chavez said he understands it is the first time a U.S. municipality has
- successfully intervened for custody in a case of animal abuse.
-
- "I'm not one to say that animals should never be used in circuses but
- here there was a case of abuse," said Chavez who said the animals are
- "thriving" in the city's care at San Gabriel Park.
-
- Meanwhile, the USDA slapped the Texas-based circus with a 21-day
- suspension earlier this week.
-
- The suspension, filed under the federal Animal Welfare Act, means that
- King Royal cannot exhibit any animals for 21 days and a USDA
- investigation of the circus is under way.
-
- King Royal also has been cited by the city of Albuquerque on suspicion of
- cruelty to animals, leaving animals unattended in a vehicle, and improper
- care and feeding of an animal.
-
- But final resolution of the city's civil custody battle with the circus
- won't be any time soon, lawyers say.
-
- Assistant City Attorney Greg Wheeler--who argued the case with Assistant
- City Attorney Patricia Williams--said a trial could be anywhere from 6
- months to 2 years away.
-
- "It's up to the judge, " Wheeler said.
-
- Attorney Ron Koch, who represents the circus and teh 23-year-old
- Davenport, called Conway "a good judge and a fair judge (who) did what
- she thought was appropriate."
-
- Though Koch said "it could take quite a while " for the case to come to
- trial, he said, "We'll live with that."
-
- conway said Thursday she found the space in which the animals traveled
- "inhumanely small" and "inadequately ventilated."
-
- Davenport testified Thursday that he had driven the animals from Las
- Vegas on August 3 to Dillon, Colorado, where he first noticed the 8 year
- old elephant named Heather was getting sick.
-
- After consulting by phone with his father, circus owner John Davenport,
- he drove the animals to Albuquerque--and it was at a truck stop just
- west of Albuquerque that he knew Heather had died.
-
- Although Davenport testified he made frequent short stops to feed and
- water the animals and clean out the trailer, conway noted he never took
- the animals out and exercised them during the entire 400-mile
- Nevada-to-colorado trip.
-
- "It would have made the circus late," she said.
-
- Conway waid it was clear to her that "the elephants are bonded to Mr.
- Davenport," but, she added, "that doesn't mean they weren't abused...we
- all know that children bond to abusive parents."
-
- conway also found there was substantial evidence that the stress of
- travel, an "admittedly wrong" diet and an improperly ventilated
- trailer--which officials said could have reached 120 degrees while parked
- in the Albuquerque hote lot--all contributed to heather's death.
-
- Tests showed she died of a septicemic salmonella bacterial infection, zoo
- veterinarian Dr. Brett Snyder testified Wednesday.
-
- Surviving elephant Donna and Irene also were found to be carrying
- salmonella bacteria, but Irene, a larger Asian elephant, didn't hav an
- active case, Snyder said.
-
- Conway said Thursday there would be substantial harm to Donna--who has
- put on 140 pounds in less than two weeks--if she were fiven back to King
- Royal Circus "in her recently improved condition."
-
- conway--who earlier threw out the city's original request to force
- Davenport to remain with the animals--said Thursday she would allow
- circus handlers to attend to the animals "and I encourage them to do so."
-
- conway also had turned down the city's request for a lien on the
- circus--to cover the cost of the animals' upkeep. The city has said
- caring for the 10 animals cost several hundred dollars a day.
-
- But conway also rejected King Royal's request that the city post a bond
- or security against any possible award to the circus in the final
- resolution of the case.
-
- "The city is good for any damages that might accrue," Conway said. "The
- city is not going anywhere."
-
-
- **********************
-
- PAWS will keep you posted as the case continues. PLEASE continue to
- pressure the USDA to confiscate animals and PERMANENTLY revoke King
- Royal's license.
-
- Secretary Daniel Glickman
- USDA
- 14th St. and Independence Ave SW
- Washington, DC 20250
-
- (202) 720-3631
-
- PLEASE don't stop calling and writing now. The USDA is in a
- decision-making process and it is imperative that they continue to hear
- from us. Thank you!
- Date: Fri, 22 Aug 1997 13:52:16 -0400 (EDT)
- From: PAWS <paws@CapAccess.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Rep. Farr Condemns King Royal
- Message-ID: <Pine.SUN.3.91-FP.970822134231.22902B-100000@cap1.capaccess.org>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
- Congressman Sam Farr, Representative from the 17th Congressional District
- in California has issued the following press release about the King Royal
- Circus:
-
- Washington, August 22, 1997:
-
- I am distressed but not surprised to learn of another serious occurrence
- of animal abuse where the King Royal Circus is responsible. On August
- 6th, the Albuquerque, New Mexico police department was called to
- investigate a suspicious looking van parked in the area. Opening the
- van, the officers found a horrible sight...badly dehydrated exotic
- animals tightly packed in the van and tragically, a baby African elephant
- dead on the van floor.
-
- This circus has a well-documented history of animal abuse citations going
- back several years. The USDA's Animal Plant Health Inspection Service
- (APHIS), whose responsibility it is to enforce the law protecting animals
- such as these, must intervene now to stop this horrific pattern of animal
- abuse by this circus. APHIS must take immediate steps to revoke any and
- all licenses that this circus has to show animals. I have contacted the
- Secretary of Agriculture, Dan Glickman, as well as responsible APHIS
- officials in Washington to express in the strongest terms the need for
- maximum sanctions against this repeated offender of the Animal Welfare
- regulations.
-
- Not only is this an issue of animal abuse, it is also about public
- safety. APHIS cannot ignore the very real danger that exists when the
- public is invited to ride on circus elephants. And when there are
- documented instances of abuse of animals by those who would show
- them...the possibilities of accidents rise dramatically. Circuses who
- abuse and mistreat their animals should be out of business. The public
- safety is at stake and the Animal Welfare Act makes it the law. APHIS must
- take action now.
- Date: Fri, 22 Aug 1997 16:55:49 EDT
- From: klaszlo@juno.com (Kathryn A Laszlo)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (MN) Ruling May Halt Goose Roundups
- Message-ID: <19970822.171107.6487.1.KLaszlo@juno.com>
-
- Published Aug 22, 1997
- Federal Judge Revokes Permits That Allow Roundup Of Canada Geese
- Dean Rebuffoni/Star Tribune
-
- Minneapolis -- A federal judge on Thursday revoked permits that allow the
- annual roundup of nuisance Canada geese in the Twin Cities area, ruling
- that two federal agencies violated their own regulations by issuing the
- permits.
-
- U.S. District Judge Richard Kyle's decision, which came on a lawsuit by
- animal-rights advocates, does not affect the latest roundup, which ended
- in July. About 4,300 goslings were captured and relocated out of the
- area; 1,300 adult geese were slaughtered, and their meat was donated to
- area food shelves.
-
- However, the ruling could affect future roundups in the 15-year-old
- effort to control the metro area's burgeoning goose population. Even so,
- the decision is not a clear-cut victory for the animal-rights advocates,
- who sued the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Interior Department.
- That's because the ruling, issued in St. Paul, focuses on the process by
- which the agencies approved special permits for the two most recent
- roundups.
-
- Kyle did not decide whether a major environmental-impact study is needed
- before the control program can be resumed.
-
- Indeed, the judge said he has "grave doubts" that the animal-rights
- advocates will prevail if they again ask the federal courts to order such
- a study. He said they "have presented no evidence to show that the
- metro-area goose population will be destabilized or otherwise placed in
- jeopardy by destroying the limited number of geese specified" in the
- federal permits.
-
- On the contrary, Kyle said, evidence in the case indicates that the metro
- goose population "is not only thriving, but in certain areas has
- increased so much as to become a public nuisance."
-
- The Justice Department attorneys who represented the federal agencies
- could not be reached Thursday for comment. Although the Minnesota
- Department of Natural Resources (DNR) oversees the goose roundups, it is
- not a defendant in the suit, and its officials had not yet reviewed the
- decision.
-
- The suit was filed by three nonprofit groups: the Humane Society, its
- Minnesota affiliate, and Friends of Animals and Their Environment (FATE),
- a Twin Cities-based organization. Their attorney, Richard Duncan of
- Minneapolis, praised Kyle's decision.
-
- "It ends probably the single most wasteful DNR wildlife-management
- program," he said. "It spends $75,000 of taxpayers' money every year, but
- really doesn't control the number of geese, because they come back.
-
- "These poor birds are being treated inhumanely for no sound scientific
- purpose," Duncan said. "The DNR should put this program to bed. It should
- donate that $75,000 to food shelves, where it would do some real good for
- people."
-
- In his decision, Kyle noted that the Fish and Wildlife Service and
- Interior Department are charged with administering the U.S. regulations
- derived from the Migratory Bird Treaty, a pact with Canada and Mexico.
-
- Migratory birds such as Canada geese cannot be captured or killed except
- in compliance with those regulations. Violations are criminal acts, and a
- defendant's allegation that a bird is so abundant that it no longer needs
- protection is not a valid defense, Kyle said.
-
- Originally, he said, the federal permits that allow the DNR to manage the
- goose roundups "focused on activities intended to protect the geese."
-
- Birds of giant Canada goose subspecies, the type commonly found in the
- Twin Cities, were once considered extinct, or nearly so. However, the
- metro area's goose population has grown from about 500 birds in 1968 to
- more than 25,000.
-
- The birds' remarkable recovery has been aided by the area's urbanization,
- which greatly diminished goose predation by other wild animals. Also,
- many local communities prohibit goose hunting for safety reasons, and
- converting the area's timber and brush to lawns and golf courses has
- greatly increased the amount of grass preferred by geese, which are
- grazers.
-
- Geese droppings foul area lawns, walkways, beaches and golf courses, and
- there is concern about the big birds colliding with aircraft near
- airports. As the goose population grew and complaints about the birds
- increased, the DNR started relocating geese to northern Minnesota and to
- other states.
-
- The DNR also allows special goose-hunting seasons in parts of the area
- and in recent years has permitted the killing of geese for distribution
- to local food shelves. Although the DNR says the program has been an
- environmental and societal success, it has prompted lawsuits by
- animal-rights advocates. They contend that there are less lethal
- alternatives for controlling the bird's population.
-
- One such suit was rejected last year by Kyle, who said the advocates had
- failed to show that their ability to enjoy viewing geese would be
- irreparably harmed if several thousand of the birds were moved or killed.
- He also said that while federal officials may not have followed the rules
- granting permits to the DNR, they did provide evidence that limiting the
- goose population is needed to prevent risks to aircraft and possible
- public health problems.
-
- This time, however, Kyle took issue with the process by which the federal
- agencies issued permits for the 1996 and 1997 goose roundups. He noted
- that one Wildlife Service regulation states that it may only issue such
- permits upon "receipt of evidence clearly showing that migratory birds"
- are seriously damaging farm crops or commercially grown fish.
-
- The Wildlife Service failed to meet that requirement, Kyle determined. He
- also said that the service and the Interior Department "failed to comply
- with their own regulations in issuing these permits. By disregarding the
- very regulations which they are charged with enforcing, defendants have
- acted outside of their statutory authority, constituting more than
- harmless error."
-
- Still, Kyle said, his decision "does not constitute a determination" that
- conservation agencies cannot conduct a goose roundup that complies with
- current regulations. He said "the real problem" is that those rules "did
- not contemplate such a burgeoning population of once nearly extinct
- birds."
-
- As a result, the regulations "have failed to consider that there may be a
- need to lower any one bird population because it is a nuisance," he said.
-
-
- Copyright 1997 Star Tribune | Minneapolis-St.Paul
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 22 Aug 1997 20:02:21 -0400 (EDT)
- From: NOVENAANN@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Vegetarian gets "mad cow" disease
- Message-ID: <970822200220_-435835341@emout17.mail.aol.com>
-
- LONDON (AP) - A young woman who has been a vegetarian for 12
- years has contracted a strain of the incurable human brain ailment
- linked to ``mad cow'' disease, her father said Friday.
- Clare Louise Tomkins, 24, has been ill for 10 months and was
- diagnosed with Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease two weeks ago, Roger
- Tomkins said.
- The Times of London, The Guardian of London and other news
- agencies reported that Miss Tomkins' doctor had diagnosed her and
- that she was believed to be the 22nd case of the new variant of
- CJD. The doctor was not immediately available to confirm the
- reports.
- Firm diagnosis of the disease in humans is extremely difficult
- because it involves biopsy of brain tissue.
- Eleven years ago, scientists detected the first cases of mad cow
- disease - bovine spongiform encephalopathy - in Britain's cattle
- herds.
- In 1995, Britain announced that a new variant of CJD was linked
- to eating meat from animals who had mad cow disease. The European
- Community imposed a total ban of the export of British beef.
- Professor John Pattison, dean of London's University College
- Medical School, said Friday it was very likely that Miss Tomkins
- suffered from the new variant.
- ``The fact that this woman was a vegetarian for such a long time
- is an unusual feature and we will think about what the implications
- for that are,'' he said. ``But I don't think it invalidates our
- thinking at the moment, which is that new variant CJD was probably
- caused by infected animal tissue.''
- Pattison said the woman could have caught CJD before the first
- case of mad cow disease was identified in 1986.
- ``The first infections in cows must have been occurring from
- probably 1981 to 1983,'' he said. ``If this young lady stopped
- eating meat in 1985, we are just within the margins when she might
- or might not have been exposed because of her meat eating.''
- Miss Tomkins' father said it never occurred to the family that
- she might have CJD because she was such a strict vegetarian.
- ``She ate cheese and milk but would not touch anything like
- biscuits if they had meat products in them,'' he said.
- Professor Richard Lacey, a microbiologist who was among the
- first scientists to warn of a mad cow disease threat to humans,
- said scientists should not dismiss the possibility that Miss
- Tomkins contracted the illness from drinking milk.
- Date: Fri, 22 Aug 1997 20:10:23 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Burger King Goes Burgerless
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970822201020.006d1fbc@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- If only Burger King had a real veggie burger (like in UK).......
- from AP Wire page:
- -------------------------------------
- 08/22/1997 19:32 EST
-
- Burger King Goes Burgerless
-
- By SCOTT BAUER
- Associated Press Writer
-
- Ham-and-cheese and BLT sandwiches replaced Whoppers at 700
- Burger Kings around the nation Friday as the largest meat
- recall in U.S. history sent the fast-food chain scrambling for ground
- new beef suppliers.
-
- Some diners were keen on the burgerless Burger Kings while
- others walked out the door.
- -----------
- ``You can't have Burger King without burgers,'' said David
- Clouse as he left one of the restaurants in Arapahoe County, Colo. ``It's
- just not the same.''
-
- Tierney Smith of Columbus, Neb., said the ham-and-cheese she selected
- instead of a double cheeseburger had fewer calories, ``and that's good
- for me.''
-
- Burger King, the nation's second-largest fast-food chain behind
- McDonald's, came up beef short after it cleared its stores of patties
- supplied by Hudson Foods Inc., the source of burgers blamed in an E. coli
- outbreak that sickened fewer than two dozen people in Colorado in early
- June.
-
- Miami-based Burger King said 1,650 of its restaurants in 28 states were
- affected by the expanded recall Thursday of 25 million pounds of
- hamburger processed at a Hudson Foods plant in Columbus, Neb., but 950 of
- the restaurants got new beef supplies by Friday. Other Burger Kings in
- the chain didn't use Hudson as a supplier.
-
- ``Absolutely, customers are concerned,'' said Paul Clayton, North
- American president of Burger King Corp. ``Obviously, our sales are
- probably not what we'd want them to be.''
-
- Spokesmen for rival chains McDonald's and Wendy's said it was too soon to
- tell whether their business had increased or whether people were avoiding
- hamburgers altogether because of Thursday's expanded recall.
-
- Hudson also supplied ground beef for some Boston Markets restaurants and
- frozen beef patties sold at Safeway, Wal-Mart and Sam's Club. All have
- removed the meat from their shelves.
-
- At first, 20,000 pounds of beef were recalled Tuesday, but it was
- expanded when the U.S. Department of Agriculture cited problems with
- records for tracing meat production.
-
- Hudson Foods agreed to recall all the beef that had been processed at the
- plant and to shut down the plant until stronger safety recommendations
- were met. There was no indication when the plant might reopen.
-
- ``We are confident that the plant is ready to open as soon as the USDA is
- ready to come in and take a look at it,'' said Hudson spokesman Robert
- Udowitz.
-
- He said it was too early to estimate how much the recall and
- the plant shutdown will cost the company. The USDA said the
- contamination didn't occur at the plant but at one of Hudson's
- suppliers. It wasn't known which one sent Hudson the tainted
- beef.
-
- People with Hudson hamburgers in their freezer were urged to
- return them to the place where they purchased them, said USDA
- spokeswoman Jacque Knight said. All of the meat will then be
- returned to Hudson, which will decide whether to burn it or
- render it into pet food, she said.
- ----------
- Clayton said Burger King pulled the meat as a precaution. It
- maintains a separate production line at the plant and its own testing
- showed no contamination. In addition, the chain's flame-broiled cooking
- system guarantees beef is cooked at least to the 155-degree temperature
- that kills E. coli bacteria, he said.
-
- ``No tainted beef made its way to Burger King,'' Clayton said.
-
- Meanwhile, Burger Kings doing without hamburgers extended
- their breakfast menus into the lunch hour, urging customers
- to check out the pork patties and other beefless offerings.
-
- Bacon, lettuce and tomato and ham-and-cheese sandwiches were
- added to menus.
- -------------
- ``To tell the truth, even though they've had this recall,
- I've still been eating beef,'' said Alan Russell, 27, as he ordered
- chicken for himself and his son at a Burger King drive-through in
- northwest Omaha. ``I guess it just doesn't bother me like it does some
- people.''
-
- Burger Kings that carried Hudson beef are in Alabama, Arkansas, Colorado,
- Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan,
- Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico,
- North Dakota, Oklahoma, Ohio, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah,
- Wisconsin, West Virginia and Wyoming.
-
-