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- from AP Wire page:
- -------------------------------
- 09/24/1997 17:13 EST
-
- Meat Recalls Usually Not Made Public
-
- By CURT ANDERSON
- AP Farm Writer
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) -- The public was never notified in federal recalls of
- more than 20.2 million pounds of meat and poultry since 1990, Agriculture
- Department records show.
-
- The department's reason: Most of the 142 recalls -- more than half the
- 262 federal meat recalls during that period -- involved products that
- were distributed to restaurants or school cafeterias or were sitting in
- warehouses or on trucks and had not been sold at retail to consumers.
-
- ``It would not be identifiable by the consumer because they don't have it
- in a package that they can identify it,'' Jill Hollingsworth, a USDA
- deputy administrator involved in recalls, said Wednesday.
-
- But consumer advocates say it is time for the Agriculture Department to
- rethink its policy, pointing out that someone could become ill from
- eating a bacteria-laced burger at a restaurant or a school cafeteria and
- never know the product had been recalled.
-
- ``It is not enough to just tell the restaurant there's a problem. It does
- make sense for the public to be notified,'' said Caroline Smith DeWaal,
- food safety director at the Center for Science in the Public Interest.
- ``Consumers need to know.''
-
- The Agriculture Department held a public meeting Wednesday to discuss its
- current recall policies and hear from advocates such as DeWaal, along
- with meat industry groups. Catherine Woteki, USDA's undersecretary for
- food safety, said the session will help the agency determine if changes
- such as wider public notification are necessary.
-
- ``Our primary motivation for those policies is protecting the public
- health,'' she said in an interview. ``If there are things that we could
- do that would better protect the public health, we would certainly change
- our policy.''
-
- Meat and poultry products involved in the unpublicized recalls had many
- problems, according to USDA records.
-
- Some were recalled because of possible bacterial contamination, others
- because there were small pieces of bone, metal or plastic in them. And
- others were improperly labeled or had defective containers, the USDA
- records show.
-
- For example, in one nonpublic 1993 case, Quaker Oats Co. recalled more
- than 1.8 million pounds of chili because of contamination with sand. More
- than 400,000 pounds was not recovered, according to the records.
-
- In another large case, Bil Mar Foods of Zeeland, Mich., recalled over 1.2
- million pounds of cooked beef because of bacteria problems in 1994.
- Almost 302,000 pounds of that beef was recovered.
-
- It is USDA policy not to issue a public recall notice unless consumers
- have likely purchased a meat product and might still have some on hand.
- That was the case last month when Hudson Foods Inc. recalled 25 million
- pounds of ground beef because of possible E. coli contamination. Some of
- that beef was sold at retail.
-
- Instead, officials work within the food service industry to determine who
- has control of the bad product and work with them privately to get it out
- of the system, said the USDA's Hollingsworth.
-
- Industry officials said meat processors are the ones that would lose if
- all recalls were publicized, even those in which public health is not
- endangered. They said companies have every reason to work with government
- to remove the bad meat.
-
- ``There's a tremendous economic and business incentive to take
- adulterated product off the shelf as soon as possible,'' said Jim Hodges
- of the American Meat Institute.
-
- Some industry officials expressed dismay that USDA has recently posted
- details of every meat and poultry recall since 1990 on an Internet site
- -- whether they were made public at the time or not.
-
- ``It has a potentially damaging effect on the companies involved,'' said
- Bob Hibbert, an attorney for the Eastern Beef Processors Association.
-
- Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman has already asked Congress for
- authority to issue mandatory meat and poultry recalls and for tougher
- civil penalties. A bill doing that, however, has not yet been introduced.
-
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 1997 13:11:10 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (Aust)Insects carry Rabbit Hemorrhagic Disease
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970925130033.2c37f982@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Rabbit blow
-
- Weekly Times (Victoria) 24/9/97
- >From News In Brief Column
-
- Australia's rabbits face a major blow with confirmation from CSIRO
- scientists that at least 10 species of insects are capable of spreading the
- rabbit calicivirus (rabbit hemorrhagic disease). CSIRO wildlife and ecology
- division's Brian Cooke said the virus was found on seven kinds of fly, two
- kinds of mosquitoes and European rabbit fleas.
-
- End
-
- ===========================================
-
- 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: Thu, 25 Sep 1997 02:36:49 -0400 (EDT)
- From: NOVENAANN@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Fwd: Hunters and fisherman endorse GOP's Gilmore (VA)
- Message-ID: <970925023648_1923502307@emout10.mail.aol.com>
-
-
- ---------------------
- Forwarded message:
- Subj: Hunters and fisherman endorse GOP's Gilmore (VA)
- Date: 97-09-25 01:21:36 EDT
- From: RARN KV
- To: NOVENA ANN
-
- Hunters and fisherman
- endorse GOP's Gilmore
-
- By Steve Vaughan
- The News & Advance
-
- Although he doesn't have incumbent Gov. George Allen's flair for
- decorating with stuffed and mounted wildlife, Republican gubernatorial
- candidate Jim Gilmore said Wednesday in Madison Heights that he stands
- with the state's hunters and fishermen.
-
- At Izaak Walton League park, Gilmore announced the creation of
- "Sportsmen for Gilmore" a campaign committee headed by former Secretary
- of Public Safety Jerry Kilgore.
-
- Gilmore said that if he is elected governor he will veto any bills that
- "senselessly meddle" with the rights of hunters and fishermen.
-
- Asked if he himself was hunter, Gilmore said he wasn't but was involved
- in sports shooting.
-
- "I've been more involved with shooting sporting clays. I own a shotgun,"
- he said.
-
- Asked if that meant he'd get rid of the various stuffed animals that
- Allen has used to decorate the executive mansion and his capitol office,
- Gilmore laughed.
-
- "I've got some ideas of my own on how to decorate," he said.
-
- A sparse crowd of about 10 supporters braved a threatening rain, to hear
- Gilmore, Kilgore and Del. Preston Bryant, R-Lynchburg, speak in support
- of "Virginia's heritage of hunting and fishing" and against laws
- restricting the right to hunt or to bear arms.
-
- Bryant introduced Gilmore and said that Virginia's sportsmen are also
- conservationists.
-
- Gilmore said that a balance has to be struck between environmentalists
- and sportsmen and business people.
-
- "You look at (Vice President) Al Gore's book for example and there's no
- balance. He's an environmental extremist. That's why I was somewhat
- surprised that Don Beyer had him in the state to campaign for him."
-
- Gilmore said that the state's heritage of hunting, fishing, and shooting
- sports is under attack from people who don't understand them and he
- vowed to stand with the state's sportsmen.
-
- He also promised not to raid the state's Games Protection fund.
-
- "I won't raid that fund to balance the budget or any other fund that is
- collected from sportsmen," Gilmore said.
-
- He also promised not to put anti-hunting advocates on the state game
- commission and to resist merging the commission with another state
- department.
-
- Gilmore also said he supports the liberalization of the state's
- concealed weapon permit law, which has made it easier for applicants to
- get concealed weapons permits and would resist restrictions on firearms
- ownership.
-
- "I support measures that keep gun out of the hands of criminals, but not
- measures that infringe on the rights of law-abiding citizens. I will
- oppose arbitrary waiting periods for firearm ownership and I support out
- instant records check, with is the best in the nation," he said.
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 1997 09:35:04 -0400
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: EARTHSAVE@MAELSTROM.STJOHNS.EDU
- Subject: Hot debate on vegetarianism on "Enviroethics"
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.32.19970925093504.019fa574@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- The "Enviroethics" list is undergoing a hot debate
- on the environmental requirement for vegetarianism.
-
- Is it mandated, giving what we know about the
- ecosystem and the impact of animal agriculture?
-
- Other perspectives balancing this would also
- be welcomed.
-
- Hurry up! Join the jousting.
- (You could unsubscribe later.)
-
- To join, send your polite request to:
-
- Ian Tilsed <I.J.Tilsed@exeter.ac.uk>
-
-
- Subscribe enviroethics
- e-mail@address.xx (your name)
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 1997 10:46:57 -0400 (EDT)
- From: AAVSONLINE@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: AAVS continues Legal Action to End Cruel Procedure
- Message-ID: <970925104447_2098270692@emout08.mail.aol.com>
-
- NEWS RELEASE
-
- For Immediate Release: Contact: Tina Nelson, Ex. Director
- September 23, 1997 (215)-887-0816
- (410)-547-1200 9/24-25/97
-
- AMERICAN ANTI-VIVISECTION SOCIETY CONTINUES ITS STRONG LEGAL EFFORT
- TO
- PROHIBIT THE USE OF ANIMALS IN MONOCLONAL ANTIBODY PRODUCTION.
-
- THE NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH AND THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT
- OF
- AGRICULTURE'S RESPONSES TO LEGAL ACTIONS DEEMED INADEQUATE.
-
-
- JENKINTOWN, PA-- The American Anti-Vivisection Society (AAVS) announced today
- that the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has officially responded to
- their petition filed on April 23, 1997 which would require U.S. laboratories
- to stop using animals for monoclonal antibody (MAb) production. This is just
- one of the actions taken by AAVS as part of their Antibodies without Animals
- campaign.
-
- Monoclonal antibody production is an extremely important and valuable tool as
- every day it effects the lives of humans and animals throughout the world.
- MAbs are used in essentially every field of human and veterinary biomedical
- research and in diagnosing and treating cancers, bacterial and viral
- infections, and other diseases. MAbs have been produced using the ascites
- method, which involves a painful procedure wherein a mouse is implanted with
- a tumor cell which grows and swells in the mouse's abdomen, and the
- antibody-containing fluid is then drained from the mouse's body.
-
- The NIH response, which comes just days before a scheduled workshop,
- "Alternatives in Monoclonal Antibody Production," where top scientists will
- demonstrate and discuss the complete availability of alternatives, falls
- short in the scientific argument as to why a ban will not be implemented.
- The workshop which will be held in Baltimore, MD at the Renaissance
- Harborplace Hotel on September 24-25, 1997, was organized by NIH after the
- AAVS petition was filed and is in direct response to the actions requested in
- the petition.
-
- The NIH response concludes that "several validated alternative methods of MAb
- production are available and are being used successfully by scientists in
- many laboratories," yet the NIH response defends and promotes an outdated,
- inhumane technology that is either banned or severely restricted throughout
- most of Western Europe. Scientists in Germany, the Netherlands, and
- Switzerland conduct world-class research, without the use of such cruel
- methods.
-
- "Science derives its strength from careful, considered examination of the
- available information and conclusions drawn from that process. The NIH
- response is long on words and short on substance," says John McArdle, Ph.D.,
- the AAVS science advisor and director of AAVS' scientific affiliate, The
- Alternative Research & Development Foundation (ARDF).
-
- One of the most recent, simplest, and least expensive alternatives available
- is the development of a method using gas-permeable tissue culture bags. This
- ground-breaking alternative was funded by ARDF and is now being produced in
- kit form by John Reddington, D.V.M., Ph.D., president and CEO of DiagXostics,
- Inc. This alternative will be discussed at the workshop.
-
- The USDA response also rejects the prohibition of MAb production using
- animals and states, "it is not prudent for USDA to extend Animal Welfare Act
- coverage to rats, mice, and birds at this time," and continues to say the
- USDA does not have the legal authority to ban the ascites method of MAb
- production. They do, however, state that they will enforce existing
- regulations through the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committees to
- ensure that alternatives to MAb production are being used.
-
- "There is no reason to believe that the lives of millions of animals used in
- ascites will fundamentally change or improve based upon the current responses
- from NIH and USDA and their actions in the past." says McArdle who will
- present the AAVS' recommendations at the conclusion of the MAb alternative
- workshop.
-
- AAVS Executive Director, Tina Nelson agrees with McArdle and says, "NIH and
- USDA have left us few options other than asking Congress and the courts to
- intervene in creating a more humane biomedical research environment in the
- United States. The AAVS has been extremely reasonable in its request for the
- prohibition of MAB production using mice. There are many scientifically
- sound alternatives which are more cost-effective, more humane and more
- reliable. It is now time for NIH to be reasonable and responsible, not only
- to the animals, but to the taxpayers as well."
-
- The American Anti-Vivisection Society is an international non-profit
- organization dedicated to promoting the well-being of all animals. Founded
- in 1883, its primary mission is to ensure humane research and instruction by
- working to end animal experimentation in testing, biomedical research, and
- education. The AAVS pursues its objectives through legal and legislative
- actions, advocacy, education and development of alternative methods.
-
- ####
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 1997 11:09:55 -0400
- From: Shirley McGreal <spm@awod.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Indonesia burning - animals suffering
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.32.19970925150955.0072316c@awod.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- IPPL has been collecting information on the disastrous that are
- causing harm to humans and wildlife in Indonesia, especially the islands of
- Sumatra and Borneo.
- Some towns on Sumatra over 60 miles from the fires report visibility
- of 15-300 meters due to dense smoky fog. In some places schools and
- kindergartens are being closed. People in some communities are wearing smoke
- masks. Orangutans, gibbons and siamangs, monkeys and other wild
- creatures don't have masks. One wonders what is happening to them.
- Medical facilities are reportedly treating cases of respiratory
- complaints and eye irritation.
- The fires are reportedly being set by influential plantation
- companies and are spreading.
- The Indonesian Ministry of the Environment says it has identified
- over 160 plantation companies allegedly responsible, but few have been
- identified in the highly controlled press. Newspapers and magazines which
- embarrass highly placed politicians or their relatives have been closed by
- the government (I understand "Tempo" was one such publication).
- IPPL has learned that 50,000 hectares of the Batang Hari Hutan
- Lindung forest area in east Sumatra (Jambi and Riau province) is to be
- clear-felled to make way for palm oil plantations. The Batang Hari forests
- protect the water shed of the Batang Hari river, one of the two largest in
- Sumatra, and are the last extensive non-swamp forests in central eastern
- Sumatra. Accessible forest is badly disturbed by illegal logging. Proximity
- to Singapore markets may have caused some reported heavy poaching of
- endangered species such as the Sumatran tiger.
- These forests are home to at least seven species of primate as well
- as other endangered and rare species. What is going on has been described as
- an "environmental holocaust."
- The use of palm oil in US products has been dropping. It is a
- saturated fat. But if you read the labels on many imported food products
- (including from Europe) you will find listings of coconut and/or palm oils.
- Please do not buy any such products for your own health - and that of the
- world's forests and their wild beings.
- A recent visitor to Sumatra reports that the usually noisy siamangs,
- gibbons and hornbills seldom call now.
- Unfortunately there is little news of this catastrophe in the
- Western press because most news coverage requires photos or film footage. No
- pictures, no story.
- Anyone wishing to film in Indonesia has to sign the following
- declaration as part of the application. This may explain the rather small
- amount of publicity when one considers the enormity of the problem.
-
- --------------------------------
-
- S T A T E M E N T
-
- To complete our application for film / video shooting permit in Indonesia,
- we hereby declare that we shall :
-
- 1.Obey all regulations of the Government of the Republic of Indonesia (the
- central as well as the provincial Government).
-
- 2.Report on our arrival to the Department of Information c/o Directorate of
- Film and Video Recording Development in Jakarta to get some information of
- central and local regulations before shooting is conducted.
-
- 3.Agree to be accompanied by the liaison Officer who will be appointed by
- the Department of Information during filming of all shooting in Indonesia
- without exception, and bear all his/her expenses namely board, lodging,
- transportation, and daily allowance from the beginning until the end of our
- activities.
-
- 4.Make shooting only in accordance with the script / synopsis and object /
- location approved and written in shooting permit issued by the Department
- of Information.
-
- 5.No shooting or filming of any forbidden objects or locations or creating
- situations which may have the impression to harm the image of the Republic
- of Indonesia.
-
- 6.Bear all expenses occured during filming objects / locations which have
- specific rules, including any expenses of hiring a special Officer required
- by that rules.
-
- 7.Re-export all our shooting equipment on our own expenses upon completion
- of our activities.
-
- 8.Submit one copy of the released film/video to the Department of
- Information through the Embassy of the Republic of Indonesia and agree that
- the Government of the Republic of Indonesia has the right to use it for
- non- commercial purposes based on its national interest at any time within
- its territory or abroad.
-
-
-
- |---------------------------------|----------------------------------------|
- | Dr. Shirley McGreal | PHONE: 803-871-2280 |
- | Int. Primate Protection League | FAX: 803-871-7988 |
- | POB 766 | E-MAIL: ippl@awod.com |
- | Summerville SC 29484 | Web: http://www.ippl.org |
- |---------------------------------|----------------------------------------|
-
-
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 1997 23:25:22 +0000
- From: jwed <jwed@hkstar.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Bull Fighting in Macau
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.32.19970925232522.006aa560@pop.hkstar.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- If you are in the South China area this weekend, please come to Macau to
- join our bull fight protest this Saturday 27th September 1997.
-
- This is a joint protest by SPCA (HK), IFAW and EarthCare.
-
- We shall meet at 3.0pm outside the stadium (behind the Lisboa Hotel).
-
- We shall be joined by Ms Vicki Moore who was severely gored in Spain by a
- bull two years ago and continues to campaign gallantly despite her injuries.
-
- All are welcome!
-
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 1997 09:02:48
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [CA] If you're chicken, skip this
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19970925090248.481fd85c@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From The Province [Vancouver] - Wednesday, September 24th, 1997
-
- Candian Press
-
- OTTAWA - Wanted: Two people to sit around for seven days and be fed daily.
- Pay is $2,500 each. Accommodation is free, but a camera will record your
- experience.
-
- Location: A chicken coop in an Ottawa art gallery.
-
- Video artist Rob Thompson is betting there are twi first-class layabouts
- who will take on his challenge.
-
- To generate material for a one-hour documentary about :the conflict between
- human and animal rights," Thompson, 40, will pay $5,000 of his own savings
- to two people willing to spend a week together in a wooden cage slightly
- larger than a refrigerator.
-
- The pair will get drinking water from a dripping hose and all the
- vegetarian mash they can eat. A portable potty will also be available, but
- anyone who leaves the cage during the week forfeits the money. The
- "chickens" will be on display at the SAW Gallery.
-
- Caution: When four blokes tried the same stunt in England in 1993, they
- lasted 18 hours. the benefactor, vegetarian author Rebecca Hall wanted to
- expose "animal concentration camps" producing cheap chickens.
-
- After reading about that contest, Thompson was inspired. He cites the
- "Shocking living conditions of animals produced for food," against humane
- treatment for pets, plus mistreatment of elderly and poor.
-
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 1997 09:14:19
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [CA] Animal advocate slams lax law
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19970925091419.266fd540@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From The [Province - Wednesday, September 24th, 1997
-
- Candian Press
-
- EDMONTON - More animals will be treated cruelly because of Alberta's
- decision to drop control on exotic creatures, says an official with a
- national animal welfare group.
-
- Frances Rodenburg, executive director of the Canadian Federation of Humane
- Societies, said she's worried the relaxed law will just encourage more
- people to get exotic pets - such as lions, tigers or jungle snakes - that
- they don't know how to look after.
-
- "The vast majority of people who would like to own these animals do it
- because it's a novelty," Rodenburg said yesterday.
-
- But the Alberta government says it's not in the business of looking after
- the welfare of animalsnot native to the province. It's handing over
- responsibility to cities and towns.
-
- As of Sep. 1 Alberta is only regulating animals deemed to threat to native
- species.
-
- The province will keep regulating animals that could hurt humans until
- March 31.
-
- But after that it's open season. Anyone thinking cobras are cool or brave
- enough to keep a bear won't be stopped by the Alberta government.
-
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 1997 13:35:36 -0400 (EDT)
- From: BreachEnv@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Requiem Service for the Great Whales
- Message-ID: <970925133336_896526086@emout15.mail.aol.com>
-
- Requiem Service for the Great Whales
-
- An inter-denominational Requiem Service For The Great Whales is to be held at
- Ripon Cathedral, North Yorkshire at 5:30 p.m. on Sunday 5th October 1997.
-
- This service is the first of it's kind and coincides with World Prayer Day
- for Animals. It is being held to commemorate the Great Whales which have been
- cruelly slaughtered for commercial reasons so far this year (including those
- killed
- under the guise of so-called "scientific" whaling) and to pray for those
- whose survival is still in danger through constant pressure from human acts.
-
- The Order Of Service is in two parts. Part One: In Remembrance of those Great
- Whales slaughtered in 1997. Part Two: In Celebration of our Cetacean Cousins.
- This part of the Service is for the enlightenment of human kind to the plight
- of the
- Great Whales and dolphins and in hope for the survival of all cetaceans from
- captivity or cruel death at the hands of man. Those who wish to light a
- candle for
- the slaughtered Great Whales will be invited to do so.
-
- All with an interest in Cetaceans are invited to attend. Please RSVP to
- BreachEnv@aol.com. Your presence will be seen as support for the end of the
- inhumane killing of these magnificent mammals, an end to all commercial
- whaling and an end whale and dolphin captivity. Your attendance would be
- instrumental in showing those who carry out or condone these acts that this
- barbaric cruelty should no longer be tolerated and must stop immediately.
-
- Notes. Intro: recorded by Richard Wally, Australian Aboriginal didgeridoo
- music,
- entitled 'The Ocean.. Whales Call'.
-
- The recorded sounds of humpback whales will be played during the service.
-
- Messages to the congregation have been applied for from all the major
- religious
- leaders including the Dalai Lama.
-
- The Breach Marine Protection 'In Celebration of Cetaceans Exhibition' will be
- open within Ripon Cathedral from Saturday 27th September to Thursday 16th
- October. The exhibition includes the 'Popular Resolution for Abolition of
- Inhumane Slaughter of Whales' and its accompanying World-Wide Sign-On
- Petition which will be available for your signature between those dates.
-
- We would like to thank the Dean of Ripon for allowing the magnificent Ripon
- Cathedral to hold this Service and for his enlightened attitude toward the
- desperate plight of the world's remaining cetaceans.
-
- For further information, email or contact:
-
- Toni Ford
- Breach Marine Protection UK
- email: BreachEnv@aol.com
- Tel/Fax: +44 1405 769375 (9:30am - 5pm UK time)
- http://members.aol.com/breachenv/home.htm
-
- Popular Resolution on Abolition of Inhumane
- Commercial Slaughter of Whales - Sign-On Petition:
- http://members.aol.com/breachenv/popreslt.htm
-
- Rapid Env. Disaster - Response. & Rescue
- (R.E.'D.R.Res) Hotline: 0973 898282 (mobile/ answerphone)
- http://members.aol.com/breachenv/redrres.htm
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 1997 14:33:47 -0400
- From: Jun1022@cybernex.net (CAFT-NYC)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: New York City Area Animal Rights Calendar of Events September 26, 1997 Edition
- Message-ID: <v01540b01b05015321787@[204.141.118.242]>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Dari Fullmer: Please forward to NJADL list
- Joe Mielle: Please forward to NJARA list
- Kim Berardi: Please forward to LI/NYC ADL List
-
-
-
- New
- York City/Long Island
- Animal Rights
- Calendar of Events
-
-
- September 26, 1997 Edition
-
-
-
- This calendar is updated every week. To add your events call Adam at:
-
-
- Wetlands: (212) 966-52444
- Home: (212) 860-8832
- Pager: (888) 625-1991
-
-
- Every Monday: 2-4 PM, 66th and York, Protest Rockefeller U Cat Torture
- Experiments
-
- Every Tuesday: 3-5PM Bobst Library Washington Square Park. Demo for NYU Chimps
-
- Every Tuesday: 7 PM Activst Meeting at the Wetlands Preserve, 161 Hudson
- Street, 3 blocks south of Canal
- 1st Tuesday: Rainforest Action Group
- 2nd Tuesday: Human Rights Defense Meeting
- 3rd Tuesday: Federal Lands Action Group
- 4th Tuesday: Animal Rights Action Team
- *************
- FRIDAY, SEPT 26 - SATURDAY, SEPT 27: NYC/LI ADL day of action/sympathy
- fast in solidarity with animal liberation prisoner barry horne and in
- protest of NYU vivisection and
- the LEMSIP chimp transfer we will be protesting/sleeping at the main
- building, where
- the newest lab is located... we will also not be eating ... please bring
- sleeping
- bags and candles if you have any (parrafin, of course, and not
- beeswax)... we will also have time to write letters to barry (prisoner
- support = VERY IMPORTANT)..
- friday 1:45p: meet at washington square arch
- 2-6:30p: protest at nyu main building, nyc (washington square east)
- 6:30-7p: press conference for LEMSIP and barry
- 7p-saturday afternoon: candlelight vigil/protest for barry (saturday is
- also a street fair right in the area, so it will be a good time to
- distribute literature) For more info cal the Animal Dfense League
- Hotline: 800.459.3109
-
- Saturday, Sept 27
- Animals and the Law
- Third Annual Conference
- A day-long confernece on legal issues pertaining to animals including
- * Reintroduction of the Wolf in NY *Legislative update on Wildife Isuues
- *Wildlife Rescue and Rehabilitation * Wildlife in Urbanized Areas-including
- geese and deer * Defense of the Wetlands *International Control Over
- Wildlife
-
- Speakers will include animal advocates, lawyers, environmentalists, wildife
- managment scum (editorial comment by Adam), professors, and others. $10 for
- members and students, $15 for nonmembers. Registration Deadline Sept. 24.
-
- Saturday, Sept 27 MILITANT ANTI-FUR MARCH
- Join the Coalition to Abolish the Fur Trade, the Wetlands Animal Rights
- Action Team , high school studnets from Cardozo HS, Murow HS, and Brooklyn
- Tech, and lots of others for a march from 27th and 7th up 7th Ave., the
- heart of the fur district. We'll visit the corporate office of Federated
- Department Stores, America's largest fur seller (also the office of
- Aeropostale and Charter Club, two Federated stores), and move on to demo at
- Stern's inthe Manhattan Mall and Macy's Herald Square, two of the largest
- Federated Stores in the nation. For more info call Adam at Wetlands at
- (212) 966-5244
-
-
- > SUNDAY, SEPT 28
- > 2-4p protest at ecofest 97 (pony rides and petting zoo), riverside park,
- >nyc... exact meeting place TBA (call theAnimal Defense League hotline)
- >
- > THURSDAY, OCT 2 -- WORLD FARM DAY
- > 5-8p: demo and mass flyer distribution in meat district, nyc... more
- >details TBA
- >
- > SATURDAY, OCT 4
- > 1-3p: protest at john pappas furs in sayville, long island... get in
- >touch for directions/carpool information
- >
- SATURDAY, OCT 4
- STUDENT ACTIVIST ROUNDTABLE
- A networking meeting for student Animal Rights, environmental, and social
- justice activists. Share
- and learn activst strategies. Teach others about your issue and learn
- oabout their issues, Take a look at the connections between the issues.
- Meet students at other schools working on the same issues you are, compare
- notes, and start joint campaigns. 12-3PM
-
- > SUNDAY, OCT 5
- > time TBA: tabling at huntington street fair, long island (near village
- >furs)... for more info, contact dave at XFLTX@aol.com
- >
- > TUESDAY, OCT 7
- > court for ADL protestors (alleged lockdown at fur market building) in
- >nyc... if you would lke to show your support and attend, please leave a
- >message on the ADL hotline
-
- Tuesday, October 7
- Dave Morris of the McLibel two, Britain's longest trial will speak on how
- he and Helen stee founght back when McDonald's sued them for passing out
- anti-McD leaflets. 7 PM. Wetlands Preserve, as part of the Wetlands
- Rainforest Action Group meeting.
-
- Wednesday, 0ctober 8
- Meet FORMER NYU FACULTY MEMBER (!) Peter Singer, author of Animal
- Liberation, the book that launched the modern animal rights movment, which
- he wrote while at NYU, a leader o fthe Australian animal liberation
- movement. Also meet Henry Spira, human and animal rights activst and
- founder of the Coalition for Nonviolent Ford, and Animal RIghts
- International. Henry is a figure of international animal rights movement,
- and in NYC in particular, where he pretty much started the grassroots
- movement.
- Wednesday, October 8th, 6:30 PM , Fourth Universalist Society (Landmark on
- the Park) 160 Central Park West at 76th Street.
-
- PLUS: a screening of Peter Singer's new documentary film, Henry: One Man's
- Way", described by the Sydney Star Observer as " required viewing for all
- activsts."
- Admission is free.
-
- Thursday, October 9
- Join McLibel Defendant Dave Morris for a sneak preview of the new film,
- McLibel: Two Worlds Collide
- 10 AM
- Afterwards we'll demo at McDeath on Broadway, 2 blocks south of Wall Street
- 1 PM
-
- > SATURDAY, OCT 11
- > 1-3p: protest at macy's in manhassett, long island... get in touch for
- >directions/carpool information
- >
- > SUNDAY, OCT 12
- > 1-3p: protest at zamir furs, nyc (90 w. houston street between laguardia
- > and thompson streets, 4 blocks west of broadway)
- >
- > THURSDAY, OCT 16 -- DAY OF WORLDWIDE MCDEATH ACTIONS
- > plans TBA
- >
- > SATURDAY, OCT 18
- > - members of the NYC/LI ADL will be travelling down to edison, nj for the
- >NJARA animal rights conference... for carpool information, please get in
- >touch... to contact NJARA directly, please call 732.446.6808 - following
- >the conference, we will be attending a protest at a mcdeath protest with
- >the members of NJARA and NJ ADL
- >
- > SUNDAY, OCT 19
- > 1-3p: protest at mcdeath, nyc (700 block on broadway, near waverly
- >place/4th street/nyu area)
-
- SATURDAY, OCT 19
- Another STUDENT ACTIVIST ROUNDTABLE
- A networking meeting for student Animal Rights, environmental, and social
- justice activists. Share
- and learn activst strategies. Teach others about your issue and learn
- oabout their issues, Take a look at the connections between the issues.
- Meet students at other schools working on the same issues you are, compare
- notes, and start joint campaigns. 12-3PM
-
- Tuesday, October 21
- Magical Mystery Demo for World Forests
- Time and location to be announced later.
- This is a major event sponsored by Wetlands Rainforest Action Group/NYC
- Earth First! and it is critical that animal rights activists show
- solidarity and attend. Animals are the first top suffer when their
- habitats are destroyed. Habitat destruction is the biggest animal killer,
- dwarfing vivisection, circuses, hunting, fur, and even the meat industry.
- For more info call the Wetlands Rainfest Action Group at (212) 966-5244
-
- Tuesday, October 28
- 7 PM
- Wetlands Animal RIghts Action Team Meeting 7 PM. Featuring Special Guest
- Speaker Jan Moor-Jankowski, the NYU chimpanizee vivisector who was fired
- for speaking out against Ron Wood's illegal procedures (Wood, the notorious
- Junkie Monkey experimenter, addicted monkeys to crack cocaine, solvents and
- heroine. All this was legal, but in addition, he separately, and illegally
- abused these animals.) Learn about how Moor-Jankowski's views on vivsection
- have changed, and about the details ofthe NYU cover-up.
-
- "Man is able to abuse and slaughter and experiment on animals simply
- because he is stronger than they are. There's no MORAL ground on which to
- justify any animal exploitation, A child with leukemia has no more
- intrinsic right to life than does a white rat. Anyone who believes that
- man's intellegence make him special should only look at the way we continue
- to destroy our environment. Man is NOT an intelligent species." -- Grant
- Morrison, Animal Man #26, a comic book available from Student Abolitionist
- League's lending library
-
- "I wish every person would get up and break into a lab," Ingrid Newkirk,
- PETA
-
-
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 97 13:46:24 UTC
- From: SDURBIN@VM.TULSA.CC.OK.US
- To: ar-news@Envirolink.org
- Subject: "Worth Remembering"
- Message-ID: <199709251843.OAA28696@envirolink.org>
-
- Only one-third of the colonists supported the American Revolution.
- The abolitionist movement never numbered more than about 100,000 -
- a tiny fraction. As one historian points out, "Five percent keep saving
- the world." That's worth remembering. - Christian Science Monitor
- (quoted in "Pax Facts")
-
- -- Sherrill
-
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 1997 14:54:33 -0400
- From: Jun1022@cybernex.net (CAFT-NYC)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: IMPORTANT ANTI FUR DEMO TIS WEEKEND!! (NYC-USA)
- Message-ID: <v01540b05b0502ca098b4@[204.141.118.238]>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- Saturday, Sept 27 ANTI-FUR MARCH AND DEMONSTRATION
- Join the Coalition to Abolish the Fur Trade, the Wetlands Animal Rights
- Action Team , high school students from Cardozo HS, Murrow HS, and Brooklyn
- Tech, and lots of others for a march from 27th and 7th up 7th Ave., the
- heart of the fur district. We'll visit the corporate office of Federated
- Department Stores, America's largest fur seller (also the office of
- Aeropostale and Charter Club, two Federated stores), and move on to demo at
- Stern's in the Manhattan Mall and Macy's Herald Square, two of the largest
- Federated Stores in the nation. For more info call Adam at Wetlands at
- (212) 966-5244
-
-
- We've been planning this one for six weeks, so it should be big!
-
- In the past Wetlands/CAFT Macy's Herald Sq demos have brought lotsa media
- (including the NY Times, NYC TV networks, etc, so a good turnout is
- necessary to keep the meida interested. If they do run it, we'll be
- gettingthe word out to tens of millions!!!
-
- "Man is able to abuse and slaughter and experiment on animals simply
- because he is stronger than they are. There's no MORAL ground on which to
- justify any animal exploitation, A child with leukemia has no more
- intrinsic right to life than does a white rat. Anyone who believes that
- man's intellegence make him special should only look at the way we continue
- to destroy our environment. Man is NOT an intelligent species." -- Grant
- Morrison, Animal Man #26, a comic book available from Student Abolitionist
- League's lending library
-
- "I wish every person would get up and break into a lab," Ingrid Newkirk,
- PETA
-
-
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 97 13:58:03 UTC
- From: SDURBIN@VM.TULSA.CC.OK.US
- To: ar-news@Envirolink.org
- Subject: sorry
- Message-ID: <199709251853.OAA00299@envirolink.org>
-
- I accidentally sent the last quote to ar-news instead of ar-views.
- -- Sherrill
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 1997 12:06:12 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Friends of Animals <foa@igc.apc.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Grace Slick Speaks Out Against Avitrol
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19970925150750.20ef4018@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Contact: Bill Dollinger (202) 296-2172
- September 25, 1997
-
- Singer Grace Slick Speaks Out Against Hallucinogen Used On Birds
-
- New York City, NY - In a letter released today by Friends
- of Animals, singer Grace Slick asked Mayor Rudolph Guiliani
- to support a ban on a controversial drug used to poison pigeons,
- sparrows and starlings. The drug, Avitrol, is promoted as an
- hallucinogen by the company which uses it laced in corn to
- poison pigeons at the Channel Club Condominium on the Upper
- East Side of Manhattan.
-
- As Slick explains in her letter, "I have considerable experience
- on the subject of mind-altering drugs, and I can tell you that
- Avitrol is not your run-of-the-mill hallucinogen. It causes violent
- shaking, trembling, thirst, nausea, convulsions, disorientation
- and a slow death. Wow, talk about a bad trip!"
-
- New York Councilman Gifford Miller (D-Manhattan) is currently
- investigating options on the enactment of a city wide ban on
- the use of Avitrol. As Slick states in her letter to the mayor,
- "Friends of Animals is calling for a ban in New York City on
- Avitrol and the killing of pigeons, house sparrows and starlings.
- I hope that you will use your influence to assist this effort.
- The time has come to kick the Avitrol habit."
-
- Friends of Animals (FoA) has been holding protests outside the
- Channel Club Condominium. According to FoA Representative Matt Dunn,
- "We will continue to protest and show videotape in front of the Channel
- Club until the management puts a stop to this horrific program.
- The footage we are showing has had a strong effect on the public
- --even residents of the building have registered their opposition
- to the use of Avitrol."
-
-
-
- Friends of Animals is an international animal protection organization
- with more than 200,000 members and supporters, based in Darien, Connecticut.
-
- -30-
-
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 1997 15:49:53 -0400 (EDT)
- From: EmbyrDragn@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Kids for Animal Rights Everywhere
- Message-ID: <970925154710_1823174727@emout16.mail.aol.com>
-
- If anyone on this list is under 18, or know someone who is and supports
- animal rights, this is for you! Kids for Animal Rights Everywhere (KARE) is a
- new group exclusively for kids, by kids. Of course, if you are an adult and
- want to help out, we'd be glad to have you! KARE supplies information on
- animal rights in general, as well as specific aspects of animal rights, to
- individual kids and groups for kids, online or off. KARE may also hold
- protests in the Northern CA area, where the founders and most of the members
- live, but that depends on how many people are interested. KARE will also
- supply online members with action alerts for their area or nation wide-
- letter writing campaigns, boycotting, and protests in the members area, among
- other things. KARE will also answer any questions pertaining to animal
- rights,or our group.
-
- Membership to KARE is free, although we ask that members pay postage for any
- literature they request through "snail mail".
-
- If you are interested in joining, you can e-mail me at EmbyrDragn@aol.com, or
- write to KARE at:
-
- Kids for Animal Rights Everywhere
- P.O. Box 805
- Santa Clara, CA 95140
-
- ~Embyr~
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 97 14:29:37 UTC
- From: SDURBIN@VM.TULSA.CC.OK.US
- To: ar-news@Envirolink.org
- Subject: 4-H Club and Lester the Pig
- Message-ID: <199709251945.PAA06685@envirolink.org>
-
- Collinsville, OK - Kendal Wolfe, 11, loves pigs. One in particular.
-
- Plump and pink, Lester is Wolfe's prize possession. Wolfe hopes Lester
- becomes a prize winner when he shows the portly fellow at this year's
- Tulsa State Fair.
-
- Wolfe grew up with interest in farm animals with the support of his
- family. The Junior Market Competition, scheduled Oct. 1-2 at the fair,
- will allow Wolfe to demonstrate the dedication and hard work he has put
- into Lester during the last six months.
-
- Wolfe, who is an active member of the Collinsville 4-H Club, said he got
- Lester in April when he was 3-months-old. He chose the name Lester because
- of his breed, he said. He is a Chester White barrow.
-
- Wolfe uses a whip to guide Lester in the desired direction for walking in
- the show ring.
-
- At the contest judges not only look at how the pig walks in the show ring
- but also at its overall appearance. Kendal uses a brush and baby oil to help
- Lester's skin look tanned.
-
- Kendal is aware that Lester will not return home. This will be his
- "terminal show" after which he will be sold for his meat at a market price.
-
- Kendal said that he enjoyed raising Lester so much that he might soon
- find another pig and start training it for next year's competition.
- __________________________________________________________________________
- (He loves the pig, but it's sent to market for meat??)
- -- Sherrill
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 1997 23:39:47 +0000
- From: "Miggi" <miggi@vossnet.co.uk>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Barry Horne Update.
- Message-ID: <199709252238.XAA25040@serv4.vossnet.co.uk>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT
-
- Hi again,
- I have added several reports in to the Barry Horne web pages.
- http://village.vossnet.co.uk/m/miggi/barry.htm
- I have received the latest mail out in the post, but have not got the
- e-mail of the text yet, so it will take longer than usual to update
- everything.
- I have been told there will be an annoucement tommorrow, with regard
- to the Labour Party and its views. I shall post a message as soon as
- I hear anything for definate (not just rumour!)
- Hopefully the rest of the mail-out will be added soon.
- Time to get some sleep.........
- Love n Liberation
- Mark
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 1997 20:42:57 -0700
- From: farmusa@erols.com
- To: Veg-News <veg-news@envirolink.org>, IVU-Talk <ivu-talk@envirolink.org>,
- AR-News <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: REDUCED MEAT CONSUMPTION RECOMMENDED
- Message-ID: <342B2F41.ED1@erols.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
-
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE FROM WORLD FARM ANIMALS DAY HEADQUARTERS
-
- CONTACTS: British Dept of Health: 44-171-210-5221; World Cancer Fund:
- 44-171-439-7177; Vegetarian Society: 44-161-445-8920, 44-161-928-0793;
- World Farm Animals Day: 301-530-1737.
-
- BRITISH GOVERNMENT AND WORLD CANCER BODY RECOMMEND REDUCED
- MEAT
- CONSUMPTION
- On Thursday, 9/25/97, British Secretary of State for Health Frank
- Dobson and Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Food Jack Cunningham
- issued the following statement:
- ôThe Committee on the Medical Aspects of Food and Nutrition Policy has
- issued its report Nutritional Aspects of the Development of Cancer The
- recommendations include:
- o Maintain a healthy body weight and not increase it during adult life
- o Increase intakes of a wide variety of fruits and vegetables
- o Increase intakes of dietary fiber from a variety of food sources
- o Reduce consumption of meat to 90 gms (3 oz) per day or below
- These recommendations should be followed in the context of the
- CommitteeÆs wider recommendations for a balanced diet rich in cereals,
- fruits and vegetables.ö
- --------------------------------------------
- On Thursday, 9/25/97, the World Cancer Research Fund, in association
- with the American Institute for Cancer Research, issued a report
- entitled "Food, Nutrition and the Prevention of Cancer: a Global
- Perspective." The 650-page report was based on examination of 4,000
- studies of diet & cancer by an international panel of 15 scientists
- supported by 100 reviewers.
- The Report draws the following conclusions:
- o Diets based on foods of plant origin are a key factor in cancer
- prevention
- o 3-4 million cases of cancer world-wide could be prevented by a healthy
- diet
- o 66-75% of colon cancers, 33-50% of breast cancers, and 20-33% of lung
- cancers are preventable by a healthy diet
- The Report contains a number of policy recommendations, including
- encouragement of vegetable and fruit markets and healthy school meals
- for children.
-
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 1997 20:54:08 -0700
- From: Hillary <oceana@ibm.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: No you're not invited
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970925205405.00683bd8@pop01.ny.us.ibm.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- SORRY!
-
- I cc:ed the ENTIRE list when I invited Joe to my b-day party--sorry, i
- really was just inviting him!
-
- Please accept my apologies!
-
- Hillary
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 1997 21:44:20 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Fish-Killer Microbe Research Backed
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970925214418.006f1414@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- -------------------------------------
- 09/25/1997 14:36 EST
-
- Fish-Killer Microbe Research Backed
-
- By CURT ANDERSON
- AP Farm Writer
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) -- Officials from mid-Atlantic states urged the federal
- government Thursday to mount a major research effort into a microbe
- blamed for recent fish kills and possible human health problems in
- Chesapeake Bay tributaries.
-
- Maryland Gov. Parris N. Glendening, a Democrat, told a House Government
- Reform and Oversight Committee panel that recent appearance of the toxic
- form of Pfiesteria piscicida should serve as a national warning that not
- all is right in America's waterways.
-
- ``The battle against Pfiesteria is bigger than any one state. We need
- your help,'' Glendening told the panel. ``We need to better understand
- what Pfiesteria is.''
-
- His comments were echoed by Virginia Health Commissioner Randolph Gordon,
- whose state has also found fish with Pfiesteria-like lesions but, unlike
- Maryland, has not closed rivers or assumed there is any link between the
- microbe and human ailments.
-
- ``We are working in a near void of science when it comes to Pfiesteria
- and human health,'' Gordon said. ``The best way to protect everyone from
- this potential threat is by, first and foremost, commitment to the best
- science.''
-
- Glendening closed three Eastern Shore rivers after the toxic form of
- Pfiesteria appeared last month, sickening or killing fish and possibly
- causing illness in 27 people who came in contact with the water. Millions
- of fish were killed two years ago in eastern North Carolina rivers by
- Pfiesteria.
-
- The Maryland governor repeated Thursday that nutrient-rich runoff from
- the numerous chicken farms near the rivers is likely to blame for the
- microbe's rise. In North Carolina, scientists believe big hog operations
- played a role.
-
- ``The problem in the water clearly started on the land,'' Glendening
- said.
-
- Congress has already approved $7 million for the Centers for Disease
- Control and Prevention for research and to develop a health response to
- Pfiesteria.
-
- Several House members said they expected another $3 million to be
- appropriated this year for additional federal research, and a bipartisan
- group of senators introduced a measure Thursday aimed at coordinating the
- research and providing grants for similar work at universities.
-
- Citing the likelihood that agriculture played a big part in Pfiesteria,
- some lawmakers are calling for tougher Clean Water Act standards on farm
- runoff. Most programs aimed at controlling use of manure and other
- fertilizers are now voluntary; these substances introduce high levels of
- nitrogen and phosphorous into waterways that can make unwanted organisms
- grow out of control.
-
- ``We've got to reduce the nutrient levels in the water,'' Glendening
- said.
-
- Although this would likely mean higher costs to farmers, one leading
- farm-state senator introduced legislation Thursday to set new national
- standards for managing manure from large-scale livestock and poultry
- operations.
-
- Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, said the larger operations would have to submit
- a plan for approval by the Agriculture Department detailing how it will
- collect, store and use animal wastes. There would be certain thresholds
- for use of manure that could not be exceeded, and polluters could be
- fined $50,000 per violation per day.
-
- ``We are still learning about the far-reaching effects of animal waste
- that gets into our waters,'' Harkin said. ``National standards for animal
- waste are necessary because this is a national issue.''
-
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 1997 21:44:38 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Clinton Worried About Bad Food
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970925214435.006f30f4@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- ---------------------------------
- 09/25/1997 19:39 EST
-
- Clinton Worried About Bad Food
-
- By LAURAN NEERGAARD
- Associated Press Writer
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) -- Alarmed by reports of tainted fruits and vegetables
- shipped from abroad, the Clinton administration will seek greater
- authority to stop shipments at the border, the White House said Thursday.
-
- Presidential spokesman Mike McCurry said the administration's food safety
- proposal would ``improve the FDA's authority to regulate imported fruits
- and vegetables coming from other countries in a way similar to what the
- USDA already does with respect to meat and poultry products.''
-
- He said formal announcement of the food safety initiative would probably
- not occur until next week.
-
- The Food and Drug Administration now can stop a single product from being
- imported if it has reason to suspect contamination.
-
- But President Clinton will propose legislation that would give the FDA
- authority to refuse all imported fruits and vegetables from a country
- that does not have food-safety standards similar to those imposed by the
- United States, said an administration official said, speaking on
- condition of anonymity.
-
- Outbreaks of illnesses from tainted fruits and vegetables have made
- repeated headlines in the last year, including raspberries from Guatemala
- that were blamed for sickening 1,400 people with the parasite cyclospora.
-
- But many of the outbreaks were from contaminated foods grown in this
- country, including E. coli in unpasteurized apple juice.
-
- The official acknowledged that there is no data indicating more of a
- problem with imported fruits and vegetables.
-
- U.S. consumption of imported foods is rising: Last year, 38 percent of
- fruits and 12 percent of vegetables consumed were imported, a twofold
- increase within the last 10 years.
-
- And the consumer advocacy group Public Citizen said Wednesday that U.S.
- inspections of imported foods have dropped significantly.
-
- Opponents of the administration's trade policies have seized on public
- concerns about unsafe food in their efforts to defeat free trade
- legislation Clinton has pending before Congress.
-
- Critics have charged that the North American Free Trade Agreement with
- Mexico, by increasing imports of fruit and vegetables from Mexico, has
- increased risks of tainted food being sold to American consumers.
-
- The food issue gained prominence earlier this year after imported Mexican
- strawberries were blamed for a hepatitis outbreak among schoolchildren in
- Michigan.
-
- Clinton last week formally asked Congress for the authority he needs to
- expand NAFTA beyond Canada and Mexico to other countries in Latin
- America.
-
- Opponents hope that new public worries about food safety along with
- lingering concerns about the loss of jobs to low-wage countries will be
- enough to defeat Clinton's trade negotiating request.
-
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 1997 22:35:37 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (UK) Row over cancer and meat link
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970925223534.0068e34c@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from Electronic Telegraph:
- ---------------------------------------------
-
- Friday 26 September 1997
- Row over cancer and meat link
- By David Fletcher, Health Correspondent
-
-
- A REPORT by Government-appointed nutrition experts
- that recommends a reduction in the consumption of red
- meat to cut cancer has been withheld by the Department
- Institute of Health after a row with the Ministry of
- of Cancer Agriculture.
- Research
- The report, by the Committee on the Medical Aspects of
- Food and Nutrition Policy, recommends that people
- eating red and processed meat twice a day - equal to
- informationabout 140 grams - should eat less. Even
- those eating
- an average amount should consider cutting back.
-
- The Department of Health published a summary yesterday
- of the report's recommendations - which also include a
- call to eat more fruit and vegetables - but Frank
- Dobson, the Health Secretary, has ordered that the
- Department full report should be withheld. His decision
- follows
- of Health an extraordinary series of interventions by
- Jack
- Cunningham, the Agriculture Minister, although there
- is an official denial of any row.
-
- Nevertheless, the recommendations to eat less red meat
- as a means of cutting cancer are a further setback for
- beef farmers, already hit by the BSE crisis. As
- originally drafted, the report concluded that a
- reduction in meat eating, and an increase in
- consumption of fruit and vegetables, would cut levels
- of cancer, particularly those of the colon and breast.
- It is now being re-written to include precise figures
- on portions to enable consumers to implement its
- recommendations in what appears to be a "victory" for
- the Health Department.
-
- Mr Dobson said that he and Mr Cunningham had
- discovered last Friday that the proposed
- recommendation on red meat consumption had not been
- fully discussed.
-
- The committee met again on Wednesday and agreed on
- precise recommendations. The row overshadowed
- publication of a report yesterday by the World Cancer
- Research Fund, which also recommended a reduction in
- consumption of red meat and concluded that up to 40
- per cent of cancers could be avoided by a change in
- diet.
-
- The report said dietary changes alone would cut lung
- cancer by 20 per cent, breast cancer by 33 per cent
- and colon cancer by as much as 66 per cent. "Together
- with no smoking, this means that up to 70 per cent of
- cancers are preventable," it said.
-
- The conclusions say that diets "rich in vegetables,
- fruits, bread, grains, pasta, potatoes and pulses" are
- the key factor in cancer prevention. One of the
- authors, Professor Philip James, of the Rowett
- Research Institute, Aberdeen, said: "Reliable evidence
- accumulated over the last 15 years shows that what we
- eat and drink is crucial in determining our risk of
- cancer."
-
- Date: Thu, 25 Sep 1997 22:52:19 -0400
- From: "allen schubert, arrs admin" <arrs@envirolink.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: RFI:"Damn right we're mad!!"
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970925225214.006fc398@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Request For Information...send responses to tnd124@mail.usask.ca
- -----------------------------------
- I am looking for a poster of a Holstein cow looking directly into the
- camera with the caption "Damn Right We're Mad!!" below it.
-
- If you know where I can get a copy of this poster please let me know.
-
- Tracey Davis
- tnd124@mail.usask.ca
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 26 Sep 1997 11:05:41 +0000
- From: jwed <jwed@hkstar.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (CN) Meat congress claimed most effective in history
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.32.19970926110541.00691ccc@pop.hkstar.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
-
- China Daily 26th September 1997.
-
- THE 11th World Meat Congress concluded yesterday in Beijing, with H
- Christian Oberst, president of the International Meat Secretariat, claiming
- it the most successful meeting it has ever had.
-
- The concluding session yesterday highlighted such vital issues as
- sustainable meat production and ensuring meat safety while seeking better
- consumer satisfaction.
-
- The delegates agreed these are vital questions for the next century, both
- for people's quality of life and for saving the environment.
-
- "It is time for the whole world to get realistic about meat," Dennis T
- Avery, a delegate from the United States, said yesterday.
-
- "The trend toward increased meat consumption is now too well established to
- treat casually and it is too big a threat to the world's wildlands --
- unless we start moving now to satisfy the rising global meat demand in a
- responsible and global way."
-
- Fundamentally, the delegates said, the world must do more high-yield
- agricultural research, increase per-hectare output instead of plowing down
- wildlands for low-yield crops and livestock, and must remove the farm trade
- barriers.
-
- The pattern of meat consumption is changing dramatically worldwide and as
- many countries around the world experience growth in their disposable
- incomes, their demand for meat grows, and so does their concern about food
- safety, the delegates said.
-
- They called for greater attention to be paid to food safety regulations and
- standards worldwide as a front-line defence against unsafe foodstuff.
-
- "For consumers, safety is before the price, taste and the appearances of
- products," said Marion Guillou, director general of food with the French
- Ministry of Agriculture, Forests and Fishing. "It is a legitimate demand,
- and it is up to the public powers to make necessary arrangements in the
- matter."
-
- She said new elements used in livestock breeding and meat processing have
- engendered the appearance of new food risks such as microbiological
- contamination and chemical pollution.
-
- "The challenge for national and international policy makers is therefore
- two-fold," said Lord Plumb of Coleshill, member of the European Parliament.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Date: 09/26/97
- Author: Ma Zhiping
- Copyright⌐ by China Daily
-
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 26 Sep 1997 11:11:38 +0000
- From: jwed <jwed@hkstar.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (CN) Scientists try to save rare Yangtze dolphins
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.32.19970926111138.00693684@pop.hkstar.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- China Daily 26th September 1997.
-
- QIQI, a male dolphin, has lived for 16 years in the Yangtze Dolphin
- Aquarium that was specially built for him. As the country's first and the
- only Yangtze dolphin raised by man, Qiqi has received the best of care from
- the staff and scientists from the Institute of Aquatic Animals affiliated
- with the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Wuhan, capital of Central China's
- Hubei Province.
-
- Qiqi was born in the Yangtze River 19 years ago. When he was three years
- old, a group of fishermen caught him in shallows near Wuhan. Qiqi, with an
- injured back, almost died. After four months' treatment of combined Western
- and traditional Chinese medicine, Qiqi recovered.
-
- The dolphin has since lived in the aquarium.
-
- Like the giant panda, Yangtze dolphins, an endangered species, are Class I
- animals under State protection. The institute has to breed Yangtze dolphins
- because they total fewer than 100.
-
- Scientific analysis has shown that pollution, shipping, excessive fishing
- and water conservation facilities have seriously reduced Yangtze dolphin
- populations in recent years. Scientists believe in captivity breeding can
- help save the mammal. However, it's difficult to find a spouse for Qiqi.
- Ten years ago, local fishermen caught a young female dolphin Zhenzhen. Qiqi
- lived with Zhenzhen for two years. The life expectancy of a Yangtze dolphin
- is about 30, but unfortunately, Zhenzhen died of pneumonia before she
- became pregnant.
-
- For the last 13 years, middle-aged Qiqi has been accompanied by Wang
- Kexiong, an experienced Yangtze dolphin keeper with the Institute of
- Aquatic Animals, and they've become best friends.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Date: 09/26/97
- Author: Hua Kan
- Copyright⌐ by China Daily
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 26 Sep 1997 00:15:46 -0300
- From: Ty Savoy <ty@north.nsis.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Right Whale Plight
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.32.19970926031546.006f98b8@north.nsis.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Thursday, September 25,
- 1997
-
- Taken From: The Halifax Herald Limited
-
-
- Net loss: experts call for plan to save right
- whales
-
- By ROB GORHAM / Yarmouth Bureau
-
- Freeport - The plight of five right whales this summer has
- sparked calls
- for a Canadian recovery plan to help the endangered mammal.
-
- In the past four months, four right whales have been found
- entangled in
- fishing gear while another was killed by a ship.
-
- Experts say there are only 310 North Atlantic right whales
- left and
- international co-operation is needed to ensure they survive.
-
- "What is clear is that these whales are in trouble and a
- proactive
- conservation approach is needed," said Deborah Tobin, education
- co-ordinator for East Coast Ecosystems, a whale research
- group based in
- Digby Neck.
-
- "What we really need is a recovery plan in Canada to protect
- these very
- rare whales. There is already a recovery plan in the United
- States and
- these whales are transboundary. ... Their migration takes
- them back and
- forth."
-
- Ms. Tobin said she's been "'really impressed by the Canadian
- public's
- response recently."
-
- "With the media coverage, we had phone calls and donations
- from all
- over. The story of the right whale is very tragic. ... These
- whales just can't
- seem to catch a break."
-
- The latest entangled whale, sighted last Friday off Grand
- Manan, N.B., is
- still being tracked closely by scientists with the New
- England Aquarium in
- Lubec, Me.
-
- "The animal looked emaciated and not in good health, so
- that's the one
- we're most concerned about," said Amy Knowlton, associate
- scientist with
- the aquarium. "It had (fishing) line wrapped around the
- flippers and across
- the back," she said.
-
- "We've implanted a radio tag in the blubber and once the
- weather calms
- down our plan is to put a plane in the air with radio
- tracking gear.
-
- "We'll relocate the animal and then have an entanglement
- team go out and
- help the animal."
-
- Satellite tags give a general idea of the animal's location
- from a long
- distance. Radio tags give a more precise position once
- rescuers are within
- the approximate area. Either tag can be shot with a crossbow
- into the
- whale's blubber or attached to any gear it might be
- carrying. The tag is in a
- capsule with a transmitter and battery. The battery
- deactivates under water
- to conserve itself for up to two months, so the animal can
- only be tracked
- on the surface.
-
- Other right whales the aquarium has been monitoring include
- one named
- Orphan Andy spotted in early September south of Yarmouth and
- whale
- No. 2212, a five-year-old male spotted several times in
- August carrying
- gear in the Bay of Fundy. Orphan Andy's entanglement was
- considered the
- most serious of the two but rescue efforts removed most of
- the gear and
- now both mammals are considered out of danger.
-
- Also in August, a dead 12.5-metre female was found floating
- in a shipping
- lane in the Bay of Fundy. The dead whale, No. 2450, was kept
- in a freezer
- and shipped this week to Boston for scientific examination.
-
- In June, a right whale found entangled off Cape Cod was
- rescued by
- scientists with the Centre for Coastal Studies in
- Provincetown, Mass.
-
- "I would say it's a fairly high rate (incidents) compared to
- other years,
- plus there are animals that have new entanglement scars. We
- don't know
- where they are picking up the gear," Ms. Knowlton said.
-
- Efforts are under way to set up a meeting in late October
- among fishermen,
- environmentalists, government officials and others to
- discuss the problem.
-
- Ms. Tobin encourages the input of fishermen.
-
- Donnie Cunningham, spokesman for the West Nova Fishermen's
- Coalition,
- said fishermen are becoming more aware of and sensitive to
- the plight of
- whales and porpoises.
-
- "We can at least report anything we see," he said. However,
- for the most
- part, Mr. Cunningham said fishermen don't have a problem
- with whales.
-
- "When the herring fishermen are out there setting the gear
- the whales are
- all around them and it doesn't seem to be a problem. If it
- were they'd be
- complaining about their gear being destroyed."
-
- Ronnie Wolkins, president of the South West Fishermen's Rights
- Association, said fishermen, too, want the whales preserved.
-
- "We know these whales, everything, serves a purpose."
-
- Mr. Wolkins said it must be determined what type of fishing
- gear the
- whales are getting caught in.
-
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 26 Sep 1997 00:32:17 -0300
- From: Ty Savoy <ty@north.nsis.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: 40,000 Ducks Die
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.32.19970926033217.006d6254@north.nsis.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Thursday, September 25,
- 1997
-
- The Halifax Herald
- Limited
-
-
- Botulism kills 40,000 ducks
-
- By THE CANADIAN PRESS
-
- Pakowki Lake, Alta. - The number of ducks poisoned this
- summer at a
- southeastern Alberta lake is more than three times higher
- than last year,
- says wildlife officials.
-
- More than 40,000 ducks were poisoned this year at Pakowki
- Lake, a huge
- slough located 80 kilometres southeast of Medicine Hat.
-
- However it's a far cry from two years ago when more than
- 100,000 ducks
- died from avian botulism, said Dale Eslinger of Alberta Fish and
- Wildlife.
-
- Botulism poisoning paralyzes the bird. Its neck wobbles
- weakly, its head
- drops helplessly into shallow water and the creature soon
- drowns.
-
- Brian Peers, cleanup co-ordinator, said Tuesday the death
- toll dropped
- off over the last week, but warm weather this week could see
- more
- canard carnage, he added.
-
- Despite the higher numbers this year, it represents less
- than one per cent
- of Alberta's duck population, Eslinger said.
-
- The botulism bacteria are believed to be dormant in the soil
- or water and
- activated by oxygen depletion.
-
- A shallow lake and large amount of vegetation provide prime
- circumstances for an outbreak.
-
- Wildlife authorities try to control the mortality rate by
- picking up the
- dead and dying birds before maggots develop and are eaten by
- healthy
- ducks.
-
- Botulism outbreaks among ducks are common in two other
- Prairie lakes -
- Old Wives Lake in southern Saskatchewan and Whitewater Lake in
- southern Manitoba.
-
- Most of the poisoned birds are ducks but 15 to 20 geese were
- also killed
- this year.
-
- Blood samples are being taken from some birds for analysis at a
- veterinarian lab in Saskatoon.
-
- Eslinger said costs are expected to total $88,000, about the
- same as last
- year.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- </pre>
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