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- Animals destined for dinner plates can also be exposed to arsenic,
- mercury or lead as they graze in U.S. pastures fertilized with recycled
- waste.
-
- And while no case of the so-called "mad cow disease" has yet been
- officially documented in the United States, a U.S. consumer advocacy
- group recently worried that certain slaughterhouse methods could
- increase the risk of transmission.
-
- The use of stun guns -- designed to offset an animal's suffering --
- could enable brain particles to find their way into meat sold to the
- public, according to an article published by the Center for Science in
- the Public Interest, a private advocacy gourp,
-
- The United States is also the only nation in the world to treat beef
- with bovine growth hormones, a practice that the European Union deems
- harmful and has led to an European ban on U.S. beef.
-
- U.S. poultry cleaning processes have also riled the European Union. U.S.
- slaughterhouses use chlorine at the end of the production line and
- improperly use cleaning water, which Europeans say increases the risk of
- salmonella contamination.
-
- Some studies have indicated that up to 60 percent of U.S. poultry and
- eggs are infected with salmonella bacteria, which can cause often fatal
- food poisoning.
-
- Fruits and vegetables have also led to their share of trouble: in July,
- 185 people who ate basil fell victim to an outbreak of cyclosporiasis, a
- gastrointestinal ailment that causes nausea, diarrhea and vomiting.
-
- Other cases of the ailment in the United States had previously been
- traced to Mexican strawberries and Guatemalan raspberries.
-
- U.S. regulators on Tuesday announced measures to increase testing for
- disease-causing microbes at all processing plants that do not pasteurize
- fruit and vegetable juices.
-
- Last year, an outbreak of illness from the E. coli 0157 bacteria linked
- to one juice producer affected 66 people in the western United States
- and Canada and resulted in the death of one child.
-
- Some 4.3 million inhabitants of the U.S. midwest cannot even drink their
- tap water, which was judged in 1996 to contain a dangerous concentration
- of pesticides, according to a private environmental advocacy group, the
- Environmental Working Group.
-
- Meanwhile, the United States is fighting another health battle linked to
- food and its citizens' eating habits: one in three adults is obese.
-
- By GUY CLAVEL, Agence France-Presse
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 00:39:52 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: CHATHAM 3 UPDATE
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970830003949.006d69bc@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from private e-mail:
- =====================================================
-
-
- SUPPORT THE CHATHAM 3!!!!
-
-
- The Chatham 3 (formerly 5) are Michigan animal rights Hilma Ruby, Gary
- Yourofsky and Pat Dodson activists who have been charged with freeing
- mink from a Canadian fur farm. Of the 5 initially arrested, 2 (Alan Hoffman
- and Robyn Weiner) have made statements to the authorities and agreed to
- testify against the others in court (thus the Chatham 3).
-
- A warrant has been issued for Hilma's arrest as a result of Alan's and Robyn's
- statements regarding their belief that Hilma was one of the people who was
- involved in an earlier raid at the same farm. Alan said Hilma knows all about
- it and who else was involved. Unless she has to return to Canada sooner,
- it is
- expected that Hilma will be placed under arrest when she appears for their
- next court date on November 6. She may have to stand a separate trial for the
- new charges, cover double the lawyer's costs and possibly come up with
- another $10,000 bail.
-
- The Chatham 3 need YOUR help now more than ever!!!!! A flyer about their
- situation has finally been prepared for use at tables, benefits, etc. Anyone
- who can distribute these, please e-mail Chatham3@envirolink.org. We can
- either send you bulk copies or just send an original if you can make the
- copies yourself. Also, if anyone wants to put something in their
- newsletter or
- zine, we can send you an article ready to go, just let us know.
-
- PLEASE folks, think about organizing a fundraiser of some sort to help them
- out - they so desparately need it!!!!!!!! They are burdened with enormous
- legal fees and don't have enough for separate representation for some of
- the accused, which they desperately seek. Hilma is facing serious charges
- twice over and she should not have to worry about whether or not she can
- afford her lawyer of choice!!!
-
- Send donations (earmarked "for the Chatham 3") and letters of support to:
-
- North American A.L.F. Supporters Group
- Box 69597
- 5845 Yonge St.,
- Willowdale, Ont. M2M 4K3,
- Canada
-
- Letters can also be sent to <Chatham3@envirolink.org>.
-
- Also, please let us know if you're in the London/Toronto, Ontario or Detroit,
- Michigan area and can provide invaluable moral support in the courtroom
- and we'll let you know about upcoming court dates and try to arrange carpools.
-
-
- Thanks in advance for support,
-
- Chatham 3 Support Committee
-
-
- + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
- + For updates on the Chatham 3, +
- + check out the No Compromise Web Page at: +
- + <http://www.envirolink.org/orgs/nocompromise/> +
- + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 29 Aug 1997 21:36:29 -0700
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Chemical in laxative dangerous to rodents
- Message-ID: <3407A34D.1088@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- FDA says laxative ingredient may cause cancer
-
- The Associated Press
-
- WASHINGTON (August 29, 1997 5:52 p.m. EDT) -- The government announced
- Friday that it intends to ban an ingredient used in over-the-counter
- laxatives for more than 90 years because of possible links to cancer to
- laboratory animals.
-
- Within hours, the maker of the popular laxative Ex-Lax -- the
- biggest-selling brand containing the ingredient phenolphthalein --
- announced that it will stop making laxatives containing the compound.
- A reformulated Ex-Lax that contains no phenolphthalein will be on store
- shelves within 60 days, Novartis Consumer Health Inc. announced.
-
- The Food and Drug Administration said it has no reports that
- phenolphthalein has caused cancer in people.
-
- But studies found high doses of phenolphthalein can cause a variety of
- tumors in laboratory rats and mice, and some mouse studies also
- uncovered genetic damage.
-
- The FDA, noting that Americans have access to more than two dozen
- laxative products that do not contain phenolphthalein, concluded that
- the worrisome animal data outweighed consumers' need for the product.
-
- So it proposed banning any over-the-counter sale of phenolphthalein, a
- move that would force a host of store-brand laxatives to be reformulated
- or be taken off the market.
-
- Companies and the public may comment on the proposed ban for 30 days and
- then the FDA will decide whether to make the ban final.
-
- Ex-Lax maker Novartis continued to insist that phenolphthalein is safe
- when used as directed for occasional constipation and not frequent use.
- But hours after making that statement, the New Jersey company announced
- it would withdraw phenolphthalein-containing laxatives from the market
- and reformulate Ex-Lax to work with an all-natural ingredient called
- senna.
-
- The company used the FDA's ban announcement to unveil its own toll-free
- phone number for customers to call about the new, phenolphthalein-free
- Ex-Lax. The calls tell customers how to get
- coupons toward the new product.
-
- Several Ex-Lax competitors, anticipating a ban, already have
- reformulated their laxatives. Bayer Corp. this summer pulled off the
- market its one laxative brand that contained the ingredient.
-
- The FDA advised consumers Friday to read the labels of over-the-counter
- laxatives to see whether they contain phenolphthalein.
-
- A committee of cancer experts consulted by the FDA decided that
- phenolphthalein could potentially cause cancer in humans. The experts
- reviewed data showing rats and mice fed doses of
- phenolphthalein that were approximately 50 to 100 times the recommended
- dose for humans developed a variety of tumors. Another study by the
- National Toxicology Program found doses 30 times higher than humans take
- developed lymphomas.
-
- Novartis' information hot line is 1-800-706-6600.
-
- By LAURAN NEERGAARD, Associated Press Writer.
- Date: Fri, 29 Aug 1997 21:39:24 -0700
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: The squirrel's revenge
- Message-ID: <3407A3FC.5DCF@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Eating squirrel brains may cause disease in humans
-
- The Associated Press
-
- LONDON (August 29, 1997 11:46 a.m. EDT) -- U.S. researchers think they
- may have found a link between the consumption of squirrel brains, a
- practice found in some rural parts of the United States, and a lethal
- brain ailment in humans.
-
- Scientists at the University of Kentucky worry that Creutzfeldt-Jakob
- Disease, which can kill humans within months after symptoms first
- appear, may be contracted by eating the brains and nervous system tissue
- of squirrels.
-
- A tentative warning against eating squirrel brains was published Friday
- in "The Lancet," a British medical journal.
-
- In Britain, mad cow disease, which has led to the deaths of several
- people in Europe and forced the slaughter of vast numbers of cattle,
- also is suspected as a cause of Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease.
-
- Joseph Berger, Erick Weisman and Beverly Weisman of the University of
- Kentucky reported on five patients, aged between 56 and 78, who had been
- diagnosed as having Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease. All of them reported that
- they had eaten squirrel brains.
-
- Among 100 people of similar age who had no neurological disease, 27
- reported eating squirrel brains, the researchers said.
-
- Some residents of rural regions in the United States, including
- Kentucky, scramble the squirrel brains with eggs, or add them to a stew
- known as "burgoo," the researchers said.
-
- A big unanswered question is whether the disease occurs in squirrels,
- the researchers said.
-
- A rare disorder, Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease afflicts only about one
- person in a million, usually striking victims age 50 or older. It
- develops slowly. But once symptoms appear, it destroys the brains of its
- victims, who lose muscle control and mental ability, and die within a
- few months.
- Date: Fri, 29 Aug 1997 21:43:44 -0700
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: No room for other primates
- Message-ID: <3407A500.13A5@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Humans threaten primates, study finds
-
- The Associated Press
-
- WASHINGTON (August 29, 1997 11:16 a.m. EDT) -- Human action threatens to
- make extinct half of the world's 235 primates -- including the
- chimpanzee -- while the human species continues to increase, a report
- says.
-
- Hunting and the steady loss of forests have made primates the most
- imperiled group of mammals on the planet. Half are at risk of
- extinction, while another 20 percent are approaching threatened status,
- Worldwatch Institute said in a report published Thursday.
-
- "In general, the reasons for the declines are no mystery: they all
- relate directly or indirectly to human actions," said the report titled
- "Death in the Family Tree."
-
- It spotlights a number of "hot spots" where forest loss has resulted in
- high concentrations of endangered primates. These include southeast
- Asia, equatorial Africa, Madagascar and southeastern Brazil.
-
- "The fate of these forests will largely determine the fate of most
- primates, and more and more of these forests are losing their ecological
- integrity as they are logged, colonized and cleared for
- agriculture," the article said.
-
- Nine-tenths of the primates of south and east Asia face extinction. In
- Indonesia and Malaysia, orangutans, the great ape most dependent on
- trees, have lost 80 percent of their trees in two decades.
-
- With only 200 individuals left after the loss of much of its rain forest
- environment, Vietnam's Tonkin snub-nose monkey has become the world's
- rarest primate.
-
- The macaques of Japan are steadily losing living space to urbanization.
- Deprived of natural foods, desperate macaques turn to raiding orchards
- and fields, prompting farmers to kill about 10 percent of the 50,000
- surviving macaques each year.
-
- Primates also still face heavy "hunting pressure" in various places.
- Some, especially the big apes orangutans, gibbons, chimps and gorillas,
- are being trapped for the pet trade. "They are so much
- like us that there is a virtually insatiable demand for them," the
- report said.
-
- "There's certainly a problem with certain species, and a lot of this is
- due to the increase of human population," said researcher Harold McClure
- of Emory University's Yerkes Primate Center.
-
- McClure said he has seen no figures that confirm primates are more
- endangered than other mammals, but "I would feel comfortable with that"
- assertion.
-
- Worldwatch, an independent research institute financed by private grants
- and sale of its publications, monitors environmental and social issues.
- A spokeswoman for World Wildlife Fund, which seeks to protect animals
- around the globe, echoed the report.
-
- "There are few species that are as good an indicator of the overall
- health of an ecosystem as primates," said Jinette Hemley, the fund's
- director of wildlife policy. "The new pressures are spelling
- potential disaster for them."
-
- While the world's human population has grown steadily to above 5.7
- billion people, great apes are declining and now number fewer than
- 400,000.
-
- Despite a generally gloomy outlook for most species, the report
- contained snippets of encouraging conservation news.
-
- Biomedical research once consumed up to 90,000 chimpanzees a year but
- now relies on captive-bred animals. In Rwanda, the social pact with the
- famed mountain gorillas weathered even the recent ethnic conflict that
- killed at least 500,000 people. Only two of the 320 remaining gorillas
- died.
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 14:43:22 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (CN) Rare type of horse to roam wild
- Message-ID: <199708300643.OAA09865@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >South China Morning Post
- Internet Edition
- Saturday August 30 1997
-
- Rare type of horse to roam wild
-
- ASSOCIATED PRESS
-
- A rare type of horse that once roamed rugged northwestern China will be
- returned to the wild for the first time in more than 20 years.
-
- The horses, called Equus Przewalski after the Russian adventurer who
- first brought them to the West's attention a century ago, were driven to
- extinction in their native habitat, the rugged hills of Xinjiang, by the
- early 1980s, Xinhua (the New China News Agency) reported.
-
- About 100 of the horses survived in zoos in the United States and
- Europe, some of them related to animals captured by Colonel Nikolai
- Przewalski in 1886.
-
- China bought 16 horses from Britain, Germany and the US in 1986 to set
- up a breeding centre. Last year, the herd numbered 70.
-
- The horses will slowly be returned to the Jungar Basin in northern
- Xinjiang.
-
-
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 14:43:31 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (IN) Plague fears as rat-borne fever kills 18
- Message-ID: <199708300643.OAA08179@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >South China Morning Post
- Internet Edition
- Saturday August 30 1997
-
- Plague fears as rat-borne fever kills 18
-
- JOHN ZUBRZYCKI in New Delhi
-
- A rat-borne disease that is believed to have affected nearly 15,000
- people in Gujarat has revived memories of a plague epidemic that ravaged the
- state three years ago.
-
- Local authorities have launched a massive health drive in the cities of
- Surat and Bulsar to prevent panic-stricken citizens from fleeing the
- area, as happened in 1994.
-
- Health authorities have identified the latest disease as leptospirosis,
- a bacterial infection spread by rodents, but point out that it bears no
- relationship to the plague other than having a common carrier.
-
- The symptoms of leptospirosis begin with fever, which affects the liver
- and leads to jaundice. If no treatment takes place death can occur after
- two weeks in severe cases.
-
- So far 18 people are known to have died of the disease, with a further
- 970 people undergoing hospital treatment in Surat.
-
- Hundreds of thousands of panic-stricken people fled Surat, India's
- diamond-cutting capital, when a plague epidemic broke out in 1994. Since
- then the city of two million has undergone a facelift and is now
- considered one of the cleanest in India.
-
- Gujarat Health Minister Anil Joshiara has ordered the deployment of 450
- medical teams to Surat and Bulsar. A rodent-control programme has also
- been launched.
-
- The World Health Organisation last year warned that India was
- ill-prepared to cope with the spread of viral diseases like yellow
- fever. The last major epidemic in India occurred in New Delhi, where
- more than 400 people died of mosquito-borne dengue fever in 1996.
-
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 14:43:37 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Humans cited as primates' greatest enemy
- Message-ID: <199708300643.OAA06524@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >South China Morning Post
- Internet Edition
- Saturday August 30 1997
-
- Humans cited as primates' greatest enemy
-
- AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE in Washington
-
- Half the world's primate species are threatened with extinction because
- they are over-hunted and their natural habitats are disappearing, the World
- Watch Institute journal says.
-
- An article in the journal's September issue also says monkeys are
- particularly
- vulnerable because poachers have to kill the mother in order to get their
- hands on the highly sought-after babies.
-
- Orang-utans, native to Indonesia, have lost 80 per cent of their jungle
- habitat over the past 20 years, while in Japan, macaques are driven to
- raid orchards and farms for food.
-
- The macaque population is down to 50,000, in part because enraged rural
- dwellers kill the animals to try to prevent the incursions.
-
- In Madagascar, 20 of the 30 species of lemurs, one of the oldest types
- of primates on the planet, face extinction with 80 per cent of the
- forest cover cut down in the 1,000 years since humans came to the Indian
- Ocean island.
-
- In Brazil and sub-Saharan Africa, roads built to transport logs from
- the rainforest make it easier for primate hunters to reach their game,
- the article says.
-
- In the West African country of Gabon, the 1.4 million population
- consumes an estimated 3,600 tonnes of game annually. Butchers habitually
- supplement their stores with game meat.
-
- John Tuxill, who wrote the article, acknowledges strides made in Rwanda
- towards protecting gorillas, as well as the drop in the number of
- monkeys, especially chimpanzees, used in medical research.
-
- Because Rwanda's Government has decided to cash in on eco-tourism, the
- article notes, the gorilla population has risen from 250 to 320 since
- the early 1980s.
- The number of monkeys used in medical research has dropped from some 100,000
- in the 1950s to about 40,000 today, most of which are raised in captivity.
-
-
-
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 14:43:43 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Rubbish-fed gulls turn to attacking whales
- Message-ID: <199708300643.OAA09065@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >South China Morning Post
- Internet Edition
- Saturday August 30 1997
-
- Rubbish-fed gulls turn to attacking whales
-
- REUTER in Buenos Aires
-
- Giant seagulls, swollen beyond their normal size by a diet of rubbish
- in southern Argentina, have taken to swooping down on top of whales and
- pecking pieces of their flesh, a whale-watching group said.
- The whales of the Peninsula Valdes "are being savagely attacked by seagulls,
- which cause wounds in the animals' skin up to seven centimetres deep",
- whale-watcher Carlos Bottazzi said.
-
- "The whales feel such intense pain that they twist around to try to
- escape from the birds and swim underwater," Mr Bottazzi, of the Green
- Fleet of whale-watching boats, said.
-
- The seagulls' behaviour has changed owing to years on a diet of rubbish
- and fish dumped by local fleets, which has allowed them to grow bigger
- than ever before.
-
- "That diet has made the seagulls astonishingly big and heavy.
-
- "And if you add that to the bird's quick wits and strength, you have a
- dangerous customer," Mr Bottazzi said, adding that the seagulls also
- attacked whale calves Peninsula Valdes is a world-famous spot for observing
- right whales, which swim close to shore to give birth to their calves.
-
- Tourists who come from around the world to visit the whales on boat
- trips have included Princess Diana.
-
-
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 14:43:54 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Watch out, here comes Big King
- Message-ID: <199708300643.OAA10137@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >The Straits Times
- 30 Aug 97
-
- Watch out, here comes Big King
-
-
- MIAMI (Florida) -- Fast-food chain Burger King announced on Thursday
- the creation of the "Big King", designed to take down McDonald's
- universally known -- and eaten -- Big Mac.
-
- "With more meat than the other guys' sandwich, the Big King clearly
- outsizes the competition, and that's why we think it's a bigger, better
- Big Mac," said Mr Jim Watkins, Senior Vice-President of North America
- Marketing for Burger King Corporation.
-
- The Big King, Burger King's newest "signature sandwich", contains 75
- per cent more beef than a Big Mac and is garnished with two slices of
- cheese, lettuce, onions, pickles and "King Sauce", he said.
-
- It will make its debut here on the upcoming three-day Labour Day
- weekend in the United States, amid television commercials and college
- football tie-ins featuring head coaches like Bobby Bowden from Florida
- State University and Joe Paterno of Penn State University.
-
- "Our strategy to promote the Big King alongside college football is a
- natural," Mr Watkins said, adding:
-
- "The competition between the two rival sandwiches this season will be
- as fierce as Penn State against Michigan, Notre Dame against USC,
- Nebraska against Colorado or Florida against Florida State."
-
- The Big King will cost 99 US cents (S$1.50) until Sept 14, but the
- price after that has not been announced. A Big Mac costs US$2.99 in
- Manhattan, New York. -- AFP.
-
-
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 14:43:49 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (HK) Samples head for US in flu inquiry
- Message-ID: <199708300643.OAA25534@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >Hong Kong Standard
- 30 Aug 97
- Samples head for US in flu inquiry
-
- By Ceri Williams
-
- ABOUT 500 samples from relatives and farm workers will be flown to a leading
- US research facility for further examination in the inquiry into the
- influenza A (H5N1) strain.
-
- Dr Daniel Lavanchy, head of the World Health Organisation's influenza
- surveillance program, said that scientists at the Centres for Disease
- Control and Prevention in Atlanta would take about a month to examine the
- samples collected in the probe on the virus dubbed ``Hong Kong 1997''.
-
- Dr Lavanchy said that the three-year-old boy who died in Queen Elizabeth
- Hospital after contracting the virus was still being treated as an isolated
- case.
-
- He also denied the investigation had been hampered because health
- authorities had failed to carry out an autopsy on the child who died in May.
-
- ``We had already separated the specimens and isolated the virus so there was
- no need to conduct an autopsy.''
-
- A team of international and local experts are checking to find out exactly
- when the child caught the virus and they have drawn up a strategy plan in
- their investigation.
-
- The Agriculture and Fisheries Department (AFD) said on Friday it was now
- halfway through its investigation into the flu virus.
-
- Officials say they have collected samples from only half of the 25 chicken
- farms in their bid to find out more about the virus.
-
- Dr Thomas Sit Hon-chung, senior veterinary officer with the AFD, said: ``We
- still have to collect samples from half of the 25 chicken farms before the
- inquiry is finished.''
-
-
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 14:44:01 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (Colombia) Horse Bomb
- Message-ID: <199708300644.OAA10126@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >The Straits Times
- 30 Aug 97
-
- HORSE BOMB: A soldier was killed and three others were hurt when guerillas
- blew up a horse laden with dynamite outside a military base in
- north-west Colombia, the authorities said.
-
- The attack occurred on Wednesday evening on the southern outskirts of
- Medellin, capital of Antioquia province. General Carlos Alberto Ospina,
- commander of the 4th Army Brigade, said the assailants stashed about 15
- kg of dynamite inside two milk containers strapped to the horse's back
- before sending it off towards the main entrance of the military base. --
- Reuter.
-
-
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 14:44:07 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (TW-MY) Orangutans sent back to Malaysia
- Message-ID: <199708300644.OAA07380@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >CNA Daily English News Wire
- ORANGUTANS SENT BACK TO MALAYSIA
-
-
- Taipei, Aug. 26 (CNA) Three orangutans were sent from a wildlife reception
- center species at a university in southern Taiwan to their homeland,
- Malaysia, on Tuesday.
-
- The wildlife reception center at National Pingtung University of Science and
- Technology held a farewell party for the three red hair apes, one male and
- two females, Monday night.
-
- According to an agreement reached between the university and two Malaysian
- zoos during an annual meeting of the Southeastern Asia Zoo Association in
- Malaysia last October, the zoos agreed to accept five orangutans from the
- university for their breeding programs.
-
- The three orangutans had similar histories -- all were smuggled into Taiwan
- from Malaysia and then deserted by their owners after growing up. Each was
- found wandering free on streets before being caught and sent to the center
- at Pingtung.
-
- The male orangutan, nicknamed "Monk," weighed only 25 kg when he was sent to
- the center in November 1994. Since then, Monk has gradually put on weight.
- Now he weighs 53.1 kg.
-
- "Paradise" was eight years old when she was transferred to the center in
- March this year. The good care received at the center has brought her weight
- up from 28 kg to 36.5 kg in five months.
-
- When "DuBee" was sent to the university in July 1995, she was six years old,
- very shy and weighed only 13.5 kg. She now weighs 18.7 kg and gets along
- well with her companions.
-
- An official at the wildlife reception center, which presently keeps some 200
- endangered species including Taiwan black bears, said that two more red hair
- orangutans, both female, will be sent to Malaysia by the end of this year.
- (By Lin Wen-fen)
-
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 14:44:14 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (TW) Turtle farmers protest cholera report
- Message-ID: <199708300644.OAA09981@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >CNA Daily English News Wire
-
- TURTLE FARMERS PROTEST CHOLERA REPORT
-
- Taipei, Aug. 29 (CNA) Local fresh-water turtle farmers have been telephoning
- their indignation to the government since a report on Thursday said a turtle
- feast is suspected of causing the first cholera case in Taiwan in 35 years.
-
- Calling the accusation hasty and reckless, the turtle farm owners complained
- that the report, released by the Department of Health (DOH), has caused the
- price of live cultivated fresh-water turtles to plummet from NT$300
- (US$10.40) to NT$150 per 600 grams.
-
- The DOH held a press conference Thursday announcing that an elderly man was
- confirmed as having the acute 0139 cholera virus. The 71-year-old was
- diagnosed with the disease after being admitted to the Kaohsiung Veterans
- General Hospital suffering from serious diarrhea and dehydration.
-
- The patient, surnamed Yang, told doctors that the symptoms appeared one day
- after he participated in a feast of turtle meat and turtle blood organized
- by a tourist agency. An estimated 340 tourists from different parts of the
- island were present at the turtle feast. The meal featured cooked turtle
- meat, turtle eggs and raw turtle blood, the latter considered "good for
- men," according to DOH officials.
-
- The DOH suspects the patient contracted the infectious disease from a
- turtle, although it noted other foods could also be responsible. Yang also
- ate cold bamboo shoots, watermelon and other dishes.
-
- Although turtles are cultivated domestically, some of those he ingested may
- have been imported illegally from Southeast Asia, the officials noted.
-
- Cholera last struck Taiwan in 1962, when it killed 24 of the 383 people here
- who contracted the disease and brought immeasurable losses to the island's
- aquaculture farms.
-
- The DOH officials warned that Taiwan risks being declared a new cholera
- infection area if it fails to prove that no second such case is reported in
- 12 days.
-
- They estimated that the island's aquaculture industry may incur losses as
- high as NT$30 billion (US$1.04 billion) a year if Taiwan is indeed declared
- a cholera infection area. (By Debbie Kuo)
-
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 14:44:22 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (TH) Green and stinking sea is natural, says mayor of Pattaya
- Message-ID: <199708300644.OAA09987@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >Bangkok Post
- 29 Aug 97
-
- Green and
- stinking sea is
- natural, says
- mayor of Pattaya
-
- Pattaya
-
- The sea here has turned a sickly dark green, emits a foul stench,
- has killed large numbers of fish and other aquatic creatures, and
- has caused bathers to suffer rashes and severe itching.
-
- But according to the mayor, "there's nothing to worry about".
-
- Tourists and locals shouldn't panic about this "natural
- phenomenon", said Phairat Sutthithamrongsawat.
-
- Everything will return to normal in a few weeks, said Mr Phairat.
-
- "This happened three or four years ago on Si Racha and Sattahip
- beaches. It disappeared in a few days," he said.
-
- But according to Piamsak Menasveta, head of Chulalongkorn
- University's aquatic resources research institute, the situation
- reflects a failure of pollution control in this country.
-
- Large quantities of waste water remain untreated. In Pattaya
- alone, about 50,000 cubic metres of untreated waste water are
- discharged into the sea daily.
-
- Mr Piamsak said the phenomenon at South Pattaya and Jomtien
- is "plankton bloom." The plankton noc tiluca sp. is causing the
- sea to turn green because of its big green cell.
-
- Plankton consumes oxygen in sea water and depletes oxygen,
- especially at night, killing other aquatic creatures. After a
- week,
- the plankton dies and discharges ammonia, which causes
- allergies.
-
- The bloom in this plankton has been caused by an increase in
- pollutant nutrients flushed from main rivers into the inner Gulf,
- especially during the beginning of the monsoon.
-
- Mr Piamsak said plankton bloom often happens at Bang Saen,
- Pattaya, and Si Racha, since the current at this time of year
- brings nutrients from the Chao Phraya and other rivers.
-
- Officials inspected the beaches yesterday and sent samples of
- water to a lab for testing. The results will be ready in a few
- days.
-
- Preeda Vairojpan, head of the Pattaya environmental health
- office, said the plankton is growing quickly and fish have died
- because of the reduction of oxygen in the sea water.
-
- Mr Preeda claimed the plankton is not dangerous and will cause
- only skin irritations.
-
- "Those who suffer from rashes and itching are allergic to the
- seaweed. But they are not harmful or deadly. They cause only
- skin irritations," he said.
-
-
-
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 09:55:19 +0000
- From: "Miggi" <miggi@vossnet.co.uk>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Barry Horne update.
- Message-ID: <199708300853.JAA14345@serv4.vossnet.co.uk>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT
-
- Several updates have been sent out by Barry Hornes Hunger Strike
- Support Campaign. I am sorry but I haven't got time to forward all to
- the list, but for the latest news (and a letter from Barry) please
- go to:
- http://village.vossnet.co.uk/m/miggi/barry.htm
- -
- Miggi
- Type Bits/KeyID Date User ID
- pub 1024/BBFB4A25 1997/08/01 Mark Ridley <miggi@vossnet.co.uk>
-
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- -----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 07:09:05 -0400
- From: Greg Thomisee <Greg_Thomisee@compuserve.com>
- To: AR News <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: beating duck to death
- Message-ID: <199708300709_MC2-1E9F-7FC3@compuserve.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
-
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
- Content-Disposition: inline
-
- Updated: Thursday, Aug. 28, 1997 at 22:13 CDT
- ⌐ 1997 Fort Worth Star-Telegram -- send us your Feedback.
- Send comments on any of today's Metroplex stories to the Fort Worth
- Star-Telegram News Desk:
- INTERNET:harral@startext.net
-
- or call
- (817) 390-7905 or metro (817) 429-2655, ext.á905.
- ****************************************
-
- 11-year-old didn't violate law requirement in beating duck to death
-
- By Gabrielle Crist
- Star-Telegram Staff Writer
-
- FORT WORTH -- Efforts to have an 11-year-old boy punished for beating a
- duck to death didn't fly in juvenile court yesterday because prosecutors
- could not prove that the fowl was domesticated.
-
- The boy had faced a misdemeanor charge of cruelty to animals in a hearing
- before State District Judge Jean Hudson Boyd. Had the sixth-grader been
- found delinquent -- the equivalent of conviction in adult court -- he could
- have been placed on probation, removed from his home or placed in Texas
- Youth Commission custody.
-
- The boy was so unfamiliar with court proceedings that Boyd had to explain
- what a trial was and what it meant to testify.
-
- The child told Boyd that he was planning to fish at a pond in White
- Settlement's City Park on July 14 when he approached a duck to pet it. When
- the duck bit him and ran away, the boy got mad, he testified.
-
- "I threw a net over it and I hit it with a stick," said the boy, who was 10
- at the time. He said he didn't mean to kill the duck.
-
- "It didn't deserve to lose its life like that," said the boy, whose name is
- not being published because he is a juvenile.
-
- Shawna Provence, 20, of White Settlement, testified that she and a friend
- were driving by the pond when they saw the boy hit the duck at least 10
- times.
-
- "He is just whaling on this duck," Provence testified, adding that the duck
- was motionless. "He was bleeding out of the eye. It was sad. It was
- horrible."
-
- White Settlement animal control officer Fernando Molinar said the duck,
- which was born at the pond, was taken to an animal shelter for medical
- care. When it had not recovered a week later, it was euthanized, he said.
-
- Defense attorney Marilyn Belew told Boyd in her closing argument that no
- law had been violated because the duck was not domesticated, an element
- required by law.
-
- "This was a wild creature owned by no one," Belew said.
-
- But prosecutor Joetta Keene argued that the city and its residents owned
- the duck because city employees fed and cared for it.
-
- After the hearing, Provence and her friend, Laura Littlefield, said the boy
- should have been punished for his actions, perhaps by being ordered to work
- in an animal shelter. Now, they said, the child has been given the message
- that what he did is acceptable.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- ⌐ 1997 Fort Worth Star-Telegram -- send us your Feedback.
- Send comments on any of today's Metroplex stories to the Fort Worth
- Star-Telegram News Desk:
- INTERNET:harral@startext.net
-
- or call
- (817) 390-7905 or metro (817) 429-2655, ext.á905.
- ****************************************
-
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 19:29:36 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (NZ) Super beef
- Message-ID: <199708301129.TAA25537@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >The Straits Times
- AUG 27 1997
-
- Hey, beef-cake!
-
- WELLINGTON -- New Zealand scientists said yesterday they had made a
- breakthrough that could pave the way for the breeding of super stock.
-
- A husband-and-wife team has discovered a gene that causes a mutation in
- cattle, prompting double muscle growth, the scientists said.
-
- The discovery by Madam Mridula Sharma and Mr Ravi Kambadur could have
- far-reaching implications for meat production and wider implications for
- science and medicine, team leader John Bass said.
-
- The discovery relates to the gene myostatin, an inhibiting regulator of
- muscle growth.
-
- The pair, working at the government Ruakura Agriculture Research Centre
- in the heart of New Zealand's dairy country in the central North Island,
- showed that a mutation in myostatin produced a 40-per-cent increase in
- muscle mass in certain breeds of cattle, notably Belgian Blue.
- "The discovery opens the flood gates for further work on the effects of
- myostatin and the factors which control muscle growth," Mr Bass said.
-
- Until now, the only way of increasing meat production in cattle was
- through selective breeding and diet.
-
- The discovery gives the first specific genetic information on the
- inheritance of agriculturally desirable traits in cattle and could lead
- to the development of breeds with improved yield and quality, Mr Bass said.
-
- Mr Kambadur said he was also attempting to repeat the experiment on sheep.
-
- The gene, which is present in humans, may have applications in
- medicine, including the treatment of musculo-degenerative diseases or in
- tissue repair, Mr Bass said.
- Madam Sharma and Mr Kambadur followed up a report in the scientific journal
- Nature in May, which described the double-sized muscles of mice that lacked
- myostatin.
-
- They showed that part of the gene was missing in Belgian Blue cattle,
- allowing muscle mass to continue to develop well beyond normal.
-
- "We have cloned the gene and isolated the mutation that is responsible
- for this condition," said Mr Kambadur.
-
- The advantage of double muscles is that they yield more meat that is
- also more tender than normal breeds. Farmer returns would be higher.
-
- Mr Kambadur said they had taken the first step in cloning the same gene
- from sheep and were attempting to make mutations in the gene to bring
- about the same double-muscling condition. -- Reuter.
-
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 19:31:58 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (IN) Snake control
- Message-ID: <199708301131.TAA25816@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >The Straits Times
- 27 Aug 97
-
- SNAKE TRAIL: The authorities in Madhya Pradesh state plan to raise mongooses
- and peacocks to kill snakes, following 40 deaths due to snake bites in the
- last three months, the United News of India said in New Delhi yesterday.
-
- The incidence of bites was reported to have increased during the
- monsoon, when snakes were washed into villages by flood waters. -- AFP.
-
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 19:34:34 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (CN) Jailed for selling fur
- Message-ID: <199708301134.TAA27101@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >The Straits Times
- 28 Aug 97
-
- FUR TRADE: A Chinese court has jailed five men for up to 14 years each for
- selling the coat of an endangered giant panda, court officials said
- yesterday. An official said that the five were convicted by the Tongxian
- District People's Court outside Beijing on Aug 15 for peddling the fur. --
- Reuter.
-
-
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 19:38:08 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Only bullfighting school in US
- Message-ID: <199708301138.TAA27082@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >The Straits Times
- 29 Aug 97
-
- No bull but fight is passion-charged
-
- SUPPORTERS and detractors of the only bullfighting school in the United
- States are facing off in the public arena to determine the fate of the
- fledgling California Academy of Tauromaquia.
-
- The school was founded recently in the southern California city of San
- Diego, which boasts a rich Latin culture and has always provided
- enthusiastic fans for the bullfights in nearby Tijuana, Mexico.
-
- For US$500 (S$740), Mr Peter Romboldt and Mr Coleman Cooney, the
- academy's founders, teach students the use of the cape, brandishing
- horns on their heads and playing the bulls in the city's public parks.
- The academy aims to convert its students into eager fans, deepening their
- knowledge of bullfighting through physical training, videos and trips to
- Mexico to attend corridas (bullfights).
-
- But bullfighting and promoting the sport are illegal in California,
- where it stirs strong passions.
-
- The academy's founders and students claim the US Constitution protects
- their freedom of expression.
-
- Mr Romboldt, whose torero alias in Tijuana is Pedro Romero, has killed
- 39 bulls over 29 years of bullfighting and does not hide that he would
- enjoy it if one of his students were to follow in his footsteps.
- His most promising student is Tricia Slane, 23, an actress with a part in
- Hollywood's much anticipated film Titanic.
-
- She has already faced a young bull but dreams of someday facing a
- bigger challenge, saying the object of the sport is to honour the life
- of the bull ... and that you can always give the meat to a good cause.
- -- AFP
-
-
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 20:21:05 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: NZ Considering legalising deadly rabbit virus
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970830200319.2b3f729c@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Channel One News 6pm 30/8/97 (New Zealand)
-
- MAF have just suspended and employee
- for aiding South Island farmers in the spread
- of RHD.
- MAF believe the virus is now widespread in
- the South Island. All containment measures have
- now ceased and eradication of the disease may not
- be possible. There have been no confirmed reports
- of rabbits dying of RHD in the North Island but farmers
- are saying it has already made its way up to the North
- Island.
- On Monday cabinet will decide whether or not to legalise
- RHD as a biocontrol.
-
- ===========================================
-
- Rabbit Information Service,
- P.O.Box 30,
- Riverton,
- Western Australia 6148
-
- Email> rabbit@wantree.com.au
-
- http://www.wantree.com.au/~rabbit/rabbit.htm
- (Rabbit Information Service website updated frequently)
-
- /`\ /`\
- (/\ \-/ /\)
- )6 6(
- >{= Y =}<
- /'-^-'\
- (_) (_)
- | . |
- | |}
- jgs \_/^\_/
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 09:23:53 -0700
- From: Sean Thomas <sean.thomas1@sympatico.ca>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Animal Action EMAIL Address Change
- Message-ID: <34084919.6E4F@sympatico.ca>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- The new contact email address for Animal Action (Ottawa, Canada) is
-
- cb968@freenet.carleton.ca
-
- Our snail mail address remains the same
- Box 64284
- Ottawa, Canada
- K1Y 4V2
-
- Sean Thomas
- Co-Director, Animal Action
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 11:08:56 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Six-year-old recovers from E. coli contamination
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970830110853.006e2a00@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- more on the e-coli thing...also, check out the last paragraph (kids learn
- more quickly than adults)
- from Mercury Center web page:
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Posted at 8:30 p.m. PDT Friday, August 29, 1997
-
- Six-year-old recovers from E. coli contamination
-
- LOS ANGELES (AP) -- A 6-year-old San Luis Obispo
- girl was recovering Friday from a nearly fatal bout
- of food poisoning she may have contracted from
- eating a Burger King hamburger during a Utah
- vacation, her father said.
-
- Jessica was in stable condition at Sierra Vista
- Regional Medical Center, sleeping peacefully in a
- room decorated with flowers, balloons, pictures and
- cards from well-wishers.
-
- ``She's being a champ,'' said her father, Robert,
- who asked the family's last name not be used.
-
- Jessica, who was hospitalized Aug. 17, could be
- released in the next few days, her father said in a
- telephone interview from the medical center, where
- family members have remained around the clock.
-
- ``It's basically day to day. But the last few days
- she's shown improvements,'' he said. ``She's very
- alert and in very good spirits.''
-
- Her father said tests showed that Jessica was
- sickened by E. coli, a potentially deadly bacteria
- that can cause diarrhea and dehydration. It can be
- ingested in contaminated, undercooked beef.
-
- A wave of E. coli infections prompted Hudson Foods
- Inc. last week to recall 25 million pounds of
- potentially contaminated beef from a Nebraska
- facility.
-
- Burger King was Hudson's largest customer but
- pulled meat supplied by the company from its
- stores, including those in Utah.
-
- No E. coli illnesses have been tied to Burger King
- hamburgers but Robert said he suspects a link to
- his daughter's illness.
-
- Jessica ate at a Burger King restaurant near a Utah
- interstate during the family's vacation trip
- through Utah, Wyoming and Idaho, her father said.
-
- ``She only ate one hamburger in a two-week
- period,'' he said. ``Twelve days later, she's in
- the hospital fighting for her life.''
-
- The girl had diarrhea, cramping, and became pale.
- Her mother, a nurse, felt the girl had something
- more serious than a ``bug.''
-
- It was.
-
- Jessica was hospitalized in critical condition.
-
- She underwent a blood transfusion and may need
- another to dilute toxins from the bacteria in her
- bloodstream. Further testing will determine whether
- she may have permanent kidney damage, her father
- said.
-
- Health agencies in San Luis Obispo and Utah will
- conduct DNA tests to determine if Jessica's E. coli
- contamination is linked to Hudson beef, he said.
-
- Meanwhile, Jessica's illness has made her a picky
- eater.
-
- ``She definitely doesn't want any meat. She's been
- asking for all veggie trays,'' her father said.
-
- -------------------------------------
- Date: 30 Aug 97 17:26:55 EDT
- From: 0 <74754.654@CompuServe.COM>
- To: Ian Lance Taylor <ar-news@cygnus.com>
- Subject: ISRAELI KIBBUTZ PLANS TO BREED BABOONS FOR CHEMICAL WARFARE
- Message-ID: <970830212654_74754.654_EHL74-1@CompuServe.COM>
-
- ISRAELI KIBBUTZ PLANS TO OPEN BABOON BREEDING FACILITY TO SUPPLY
- SUBJECTS FOR U.S. MILITARY CHEMICAL WEAPONS TESTING. PROTEST FAXES
- REQUESTED.
-
- Animal activists in Israel have notified us that Kibbutz (farm
- settlement) Or Haner plans to open a baboon breeding facility to
- breed and subsequently ship baboons to the U.S. military for
- chemical warfare experiments. Many of you may have seen the story
- on the Associated Press wire.
-
- Sources in Israel believe American animal dealer Matthew Block is
- behind the contract with the Kibbutz that provides baboons for
- breeding purposes will be supplied to the kibbutz, which will breed
- them for 2 years and then sell the offspring to the U.S. armed
- forces for chemical warfare testing.
-
- The International Primate Protection League (IPPL) secured Matthew
- Block's felony conviction, with a sentence of 13 months in jail and
- a fine $30,000, after he plead guilty to conspiring to violate the
- U.S. Endangered Species Act and an international treaty barring the
- trade of protected animals. Six starving baby orangutans were
- found stuffed in a crate marked "live birds" at the Bangkok,
- Thailand airport. They were stuffed so tightly that one was upside
- down. Four of them died in transit. In January, 1994, the U.S.
- Department of Agriculture revoked the import/export license of
- Worldwide Primates, the company owned by Matthew Block, for failing
- to provide food, water, adequate housing and veterinary care.
-
- Animal activists in Israel are conducting an investigation to
- determine whether Matthew Block or his company Worldwide Primates
- or any company owned by Matthew Block or Worldwide Primates are
- involved in the deal with Kibbutz Or Haner. A meeting is scheduled
- with the Director of the kibbutz this coming Wednesday, September
- 3rd. Israeli animal activists are hoping to bring pressure on the
- Kibbutz Director by showing him a large number protest faxes from
- animal groups worldwide.
-
- The final vote as to whether the kibbutz will go ahead with plans
- to undertake the baboon breeding facility or whether they will
- break the contract will be up to all the members of the kibbutz,
- based on the facts presented to them by kibbutz's Director. The
- facts are being provided by U.S. animal groups, including a great
- deal of information from IPPL. Faxes urging the Kibbutz' Director
- to abandon plans to launch the breeding facility have already been
- sent by Concern for Helping Animals in Israel (CHAI), In Defense of
- Animals, ISAR, Jews for Animal Rights (JAR), the Medical Research
- Modernization Committee (MRMC), NEAVS, and PETA.
-
- FAXES PROTESTING THE OPENING OF A BABOON BREEDING FACILITY ARE
- REQUESTED FROM INDIVIDUALS AND GROUPS. Please try to send the
- faxes ASAP. The fax number in Israel is 011 972 7 680-2602. 011
- is the code for an international call. 972 is the country code for
- Israel. 7 is the city code. The rest is the fax number.
-
- If you have trouble sending your fax directly to Israel, fax it to
- CHAI in the U.S. on (703) 941-6132 and we will fax it over.
-
- Dr. Shirley MaGreal, President of IPPL, recommends omitting Matthew
- Block's name from your letter until we have documentation proving
- he and/or a company he owns is, in fact, behind this deal.
-
- Arguments you can make in your fax:
-
- 1. The moral, ethical arguments to be made against experimenting
- on animals in general, and on primates, in particular because they
- are so close to us genetically.
-
- 2. This investment will prove to be economically unsound. The
- number of animals used in laboratories is dwindling as better
- methodologies become available and as people increasingly realize
- the immorality of experimenting on sentient beings. The U.S.
- government already has about 1,000 "surplus" chimpanzees that are
- costing $5 million per year to house and care for.
-
- 3. Housing primates presents a public health threat to the
- community since primates can transmit many deadly viruses to
- humans.
-
- 4. It would be harmful to Israel's image for the country to be
- involved in promoting chemical warfare, which will ultimately
- result in the destruction of human life, or to be involved in
- deliberately inflicting horrific suffering from nerve toxins, for
- example, on innocent animals, which would violate the Jewish
- mandate of "tsaar ba'alei chayyim".
-
- If you have questions or need additional information, please call
- Nina Natelson at CHAI, e-mail:74754,654.compuserve.com or (703)
- 658-9650 tel., (703) 941-6132 fax.
-
- THANK YOU!!!
-
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 12:59:33 -0700
- From: farmusa@erols.com
- To: AR-News <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Letters to Editor About E coli
- Message-ID: <34087BA5.7F7E@erols.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
-
-
- Dear Fellow Activists:
- The bad news is that 50,000 more cattle will have to suffer and die
- to replace the 25 million pounds of tainted hamburger meat that has been
- recalled and destroyed. The good news is that the recall provides us
- another opportunity to drive home our message.
- To that end, we have provided below the drafts of three letters to
- the editor that we ask you to send to your local newspaper(s) at your
- very earliest opportunity, while the recall is still in the news. Note
- that many newspapers now accept letters by e-mail and/or fax. Send one,
- send all three (under different names, of course), change them as you
- see fit, but, for the sake of the 50,000 cattle, do it. Please!
- We would appreciate an e-mail (farmusa@erols.com) with the date and
- the first word of the letter(s) you sent. Also, let us know if you would
- like to join our regular 'Letters From FARM' network. Finally, please
- send the full page containing your published letter to FARM, 10101
- Ashburton Lane, Bethesda, MD 20817.
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Dear Editor
- Last weekÆs headlines have brought alarming news about the sorry
- state of our public and planetary health.
- ╖ The USDA has forced the recall of 25 million pounds of hamburger meat
- that may be contaminated with deadly E. coli bacteria and the closure of
- the offending plant.
- ╖ Excessive use of antibiotics in raising farm animals and in medical
- practice has forged a Staphylococcus bacterium that is immune to all
- these drugs.
- ╖ Effluents from farm animal waste have nurtured toxic algae that have
- killed billions of fish and devastated fisheries throughout the eastern
- seaboard, from Delaware to Louisiana.
- ╖ Cornell University Professor David Pimentel told a national animal
- science meeting that our soil, water, and energy resources can not
- sustain current levels of animal agriculture.
- ╖ The Worldwatch Institute has warned that world grain production is
- falling behind meat consumption, leading to higher grain and meat prices
- and widespread famines in developing countries.
- Surely, the time has come for consumers to see the handwriting on the
- wall and to adopt a plant-based diet advocated by leading health and
- environmental authorities for the past 25 years.
- Sincerely,
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Dear Editor:
- Your report that USDA is recalling 1.2 million pounds of hamburger
- meat tainted with deadly E. coli bacteria was shocking, but not
- surprising. This problem first captured public attention in 1993, when
- four people died from eating E. coli-tainted burgers in Washington
- state.
- The US Public Health Service estimates that each year several million
- Americans have been afflicted and up to 9,000 killed by mostly
- meat-borne infectious diseases. Yet, few of these cases made the news.
- Indeed, the current contamination came to light only because of the
- alertness of Colorado health officials.
- Nowadays, hardly a week goes by without a report of another public
- health or environmental disaster associated with production or
- consumption of meat. Last year, it was the æMad CowÆ disease in beef.
- Last month, it was the fish-eating æcell from hell,Æ nurtured by hog and
- chicken farming waste. Last week, it was the Staphylococcus bacterium
- rendered resistant to all known antibiotics by excessive use of these
- drugs in raising farm animals. Now itÆs the return engagement of E.
- coli-tainted hamburgers.
- What ever happened to the good old days, when meat eating was linked
- only with heart disease, cancer, stroke, and a host of other chronic
- diseases responsible for the deaths of 1.4 million Americans annually?
- ItÆs enough to make one look wistfully to the Garden of Eden and its
- governing injunction: ôBehold, I have given you every herb bearing seed
- . . . and fruit; to you it shall be for meat.ö
- Sincerely,
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Dear Editor:
- Here are the top ten tricks to avoid contaminated hamburgers:
- #10. Get a job at a slaughterhouse, so you know how the stuff gets to
- your plate
- # 9. Cook the hamburgers at 160F, or till they turn black, whichever
- comes first
- # 8. Soak them in laundry bleach overnight and add artificial coloring
- # 7. Call the Meat and Poultry Hot Line and take down more detailed
- instructions
- # 6. Stay away from foods that have to carry warning labels
- # 5. Try a veggie burger or a veggie hot dog from your local supermarket
- # 4. How about a veggie pizza at your favorite hangout?
- # 3. Treat yourself to a meatless dinner at a Chinese or Middle Eastern
- restaurant
- # 2. Crash a dinner party at a vegetarian friendÆs house
- # 1. Kick the meat habit - go vegetarian!
- Sincerely,
- ------------------- end of long, urgent message ----------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 19:40:26 -0400 (EDT)
- From: ARAishere@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Unsuscribe
- Message-ID: <970830193901_332432513@emout12.mail.aol.com>
-
- Unsuscribe ar-news
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 19:43:22 -0700
- From: farmusa@erols.com
- To: Veg-News <veg-news@envirolink.org>, AR-News <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Letters to Fast Food Chains
- Message-ID: <3408DA4A.2216@erols.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
-
-
- Dear Friends.
- Preparations for World Farm Animals Day are accelerating. For latest
- information check out our web site at http://www.farmusa.org/wfad1997.
- To receive a preliminary Action Kit, e-mail us at farmusa@erols.com or
- call 1-888-FARM-USA.
- Reproduced below is a letter that we sent to the world headquarters
- of McDonald's, Burger King, Wendy's, and KFC (formerly Kentucky Fried
- Chicken) to alert them to our World Farm Animals Day actions.
- We would appreciate it if you would send similar letters to the
- chains' consumer relations departments, requesting that they provide
- more meatless options and that they require suppliers to treat animals
- humanely. The addresses are: McDonaldÆs, 1 Kroc Drive, Oak Brook, IL
- 60523, 630-623-3000; Burger King, 17777 Old Cutler Rd, Miami, FL 33157,
- 305-378-3000; WendyÆs, PO Box 256, Dublin, OH 43017, 800-243-1846;
- KFC, 1900 Col Sanders Lane, Louisville, KY 40213, 800-544-5774.
- Sincere regards, Alex H.
- ---------------------------------------
- Dear ...
- On October 2, thousands of caring people will be conducting public
- education events in front of your outlets throughout the world. They
- will be asking that you provide a greater choice of meatless entrees and
- that you require your suppliers to treat their animals humanely.
- The occasion is the 15th annual observance of World Farm Animals Day,
- dedicated to exposing, memorializing, and ending the needless suffering
- and death of billions of cows, pigs, sheep, chickens, and other
- innocent, sentient animals raised for food. The events will include
- information tables, leafleting, picketing, and vigils.
- Your enormous success in the marketplace is due in large measure to
- your responsiveness to public demand. Consequently, you should be aware
- that public demand for meatless meals has grown explosively in the past
- two decades.
- ╖ 33 million American consumers have explored a meatless diet
- ╖ One in five consumers look for a restaurant that offers vegetarian
- items when they dine out, and one in three would order a vegetarian item
- on the menu
- ╖ Over half of American consumers said they would be less likely to eat
- fast food hamburgers following the recent recall of HudsonÆs ground beef
- ╖ One in four teens consider vegetarianism to be æinÆ and one in eight
- shun all meat
- ╖ The American Dietetic Association, American Cancer Society, National
- Cancer Institute, and US Dietary Guidelines, have effectively endorsed
- vegetarianism
- ╖ Major food processors and supermarket chains are marketing meatless
- entrees
- You should also realize that the public demands humane treatment of
- animals.
- ╖ Nine in ten Americans would base their food choices on how animals are
- treated
- ╖ US veal consumption has dropped by 70 percent because of cruel
- practices
- ╖ The British High Court has ruled that McDonald's (and presumably other
- fast food chains) is responsible for cruel practices in raising broiler
- chickens, laying hens, and pigs
- We are pleased that some firms have already taken steps in the right
- direction. Dutch and Indian McDonaldÆs, British Burger King, and US
- Subway franchises offer meatless burgers. WendyÆs franchises feature
- baked potatoes and a special salad bar. McDonald's has directed its
- suppliers to comply with the Humane Slaughter Act.
- We believe that catering to the health-conscious and humane segments
- of the consuming public will only enhance your success and profits. We
- also believe that you need some public prompting to implement the
- necessary changes. This is why we are launching our public education
- campaign on World Farm Animals Day.
- Sincerely,
-
- Date: Sat, 30 Aug 1997 19:59:10 -0400 (EDT)
- From: CFOXAPI@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: USFWS- REPORT ON WILDLIFE-RELATED RECREATION
- Message-ID: <970830195909_1159698166@emout09.mail.aol.com>
-
-
- ---------------------
- Forwarded message:
- From:mitch_snow@mail.fws.gov (Mitch Snow)
- Sender:owner-fws-news@dataadmin.irm.r9.fws.gov
- Reply-to:fws-news@dataadmin.irm.r9.fws.gov
- To:fws-news@dataadmin.irm.r9.fws.gov
- Date: 97-08-29 23:55:00 EDT
-
- This message is from the fws-news listserver. Please DO NOT REPLY (it
- just confuses the computers).
-
- Subscribers can't reply or send their own messages to the fws-news
- listserver. This listserver is designed mainly as a "one way street" for
- the rapid dissemination of information concerning the Service and its
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- ============================================================
-
- August 27, 1997 Hugh Vickery 202-208-5634
-
- SERVICE RELEASES PRELIMINARY STATE-BY-STATE REPORT ON
- WILDLIFE-RELATED RECREATION
-
- Michigan had the largest number of hunters in the country, Florida led
- the country in anglers, and California had the largest number of wildlife
- watchers, according to the preliminary state overview from the 1996
- National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation.
-
- Meanwhile, the survey revealed that residents of the West North Central
- region--which includes Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, and
- the Dakotas-had the highest participation rates of any region for
- hunting, fishing, and wildlife watching.
-
- The survey, which has been conducted every 5 years since 1955, was done
- for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service by the Census Bureau. As part of
- the survey, the Census Bureau initially screened 80,000 households. From
- this, the bureau chose 28,000 sportsmen and -women and 14,400
- wildlife-watching participants 16 years of age and older for detailed
- surveys throughout the year.
-
- The preliminary national results released earlier this summer showed that
- more than 39 million Americans 16 and older either hunted or fished in
- 1996 while 63 million enjoyed watching-2- wildlife. In all, 40 percent
- of the adult population enjoyed some form of wildlife-related recreation.
-
- "America's love affair with wildlife continues to be strong," said
- Service Director Jamie Rappaport Clark. "Whether they're anglers,
- hunters, or wildlife watchers, Americans enjoy wildlife and, equally
- importantly, commit their time and resources to its conservation. Our
- economy also benefits from the $100 billion spent on wildlife-related
- recreation."
-
- In the state-by-state breakout, Michigan had 934,000 hunters 16 years and
- older, edging out Texas and Pennsylvania, which had 913,000 and 879,000
- respectively. Wisconsin was fourth with 665,000 hunters trailed by New
- York with 642,000.
-
- Florida led the way with 2.9 million anglers 16 and older, followed
- closely by California with 2.7 million. Texas had 2.6 million, Michigan
- 1.8 million and New York 1.7 million.
-
- The survey revealed that 5.7 million Californians 16 and older enjoyed
- observing, photographing, or feeding wildlife around their homes while
- 2.4 million took trips away from home to enjoy these activities. Texas,
- Pennsylvania, New York, and Illinois also were home to millions of adults
- who enjoy watching wildlife.
-
- >From a regional standpoint, 25 percent of the adults in the West North
- Central region fished, 14 percent hunted, and 37 percent participated in
- wildlife watching. That represented the highest participation in each
- category for any region in the country.
-
- The final national report will be issued in November. The 50 state
- reports will be issued as they become available starting in November.
- Copies of the preliminary report can be obtained by calling the Service's
- publications unit at 304-876-7660.
-
- The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is the principal Federal agency
- responsible for conserving, protecting, and enhancing fish and wildlife
- and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the American people.
- The Service manages 511 national wildlife refuges covering 92 million
- acres, as well as 68 national fish hatcheries.
-
- The agency enforces Federal wildlife laws, manages migratory bird
- populations, stocks recreational fisheries, conserves and restores
- wildlife habitat such as wetlands, administers the Endangered Species
- Act, and helps foreign governments with their conservation efforts. It
- also oversees the Federal Aid program that funnels Federal excise taxes
- on fishing and hunting equipment to state wildlife agencies. This
- program is a cornerstone of the Nation's wildlife management efforts,
- funding fish and wildlife restoration, boating access, hunter education,
- shooting ranges, and related projects across America.
-
- -FWS-
-
-
-
- ============================================================
- News releases are also available on the World Wide Web at
- http://www.fws.gov/~r9extaff/pubaff.html They can be reviewed in
- chronological order or searched by keyword.
-
- Questions concerning a particular news release or item of information
- should be directed to the person listed as the contact. General comments
- or observations concerning the content of the information should be
- directed to Craig Rieben (craig_rieben@mail.fws.gov) in the Office of
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