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- Happy chickens lay the best eggs, group says
-
- Agence France-Presse
-
- MUNICH, Germany (October 7, 1997 11:40 a.m. EDT http://www.nando.net) -
- Happy free-range chickens lay the best eggs, which are richer in
- vitamins, a German animal rights group said Tuesday.
-
- The group, basing its findings on a study conducted by nutritionists at
- the University of Vienna, said the way a chicken is raised has a lot of
- influence on the eggs it lays.
-
- It condemned the fact that in Germany, nine out of 10 laying birds are
- raised in chicken coops or batteries, and demanded better labeling of
- the origin of eggs on the market.
-
- "Consumers who buy eggs laid by free-range chickens are not only doing a
- favour for the chickens but also for their health," the group said.
- Date: Wed, 8 Oct 1997 15:16:20 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (MO) Letter on "merits" of bullfighting
- Message-ID: <199710080716.PAA24091@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- You can e-mail letters to <editor@hkstandard.com> They should contain the
- writer's full name, e-mail address and city.
-
- >Hong Kong Standard
- 8 Oct 97
-
- Letters to the Editor
- Bullfighting has its merits
-
- IT is interesting to read the letters of protest about Macau bullfighting in
- the local papers. There are bits and pieces of hearsay merging together with
- passionate declarations on behalf of the bulls. Such letters are a free form
- of expression of those individual's opinions and convictions. They have a right
- to be published and heard.
-
- In Macau, which has had a Portuguese presence for 450 years, there is a
- tangible tolerance between the two cultures, and has the resulting culture
- with its own dialect, cuisine and music.
-
- There are some Asian practices which seem strange to Westerners, such as
- eating dog, cat or monkey meat. And those who find such a custom strange
- surely refrain from joining in. And of course in the West, there exist
- customs very strange to Asians, such as England's long lived enthusiasm for
- fox hunting.
-
- American protesters may find bullfighting ``violent'', while Asians may find
- the liberal gun laws there and high US murder rate epitomise violence.
-
- A campaigner from Britain recently cited some percentages of Spanish
- indifference or disgust to bullfighting _ what is believed to be part of
- Spain's national identity _ but without citing her sources.
- If there is such a dislike for bullfighting there, one naturally wonders why
- bullfighting matches have such high attendance in Spain and why that country
- has numerous schools for matadors.
-
- Many protesters also make comparisons with Spanish and Portuguese
- bullfighting without knowing how the two differ greatly. Portuguese
- bullfights have a tradition of horsemanship during the show,
- and it is unlawful to kill the bull in the arena. The bull will be either
- used as a stud afterwards, or as the Hong Kong Standard reported on 24
- September, slaughtered to end up in Macau restaurants.
-
- A spokeswoman for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals voiced her
- surprise that a woman would be in that line of work, saying that
- bullfighting is more in a man's nature. Manuela's boyfriend, who is
- supportive of her work, happens to be a decorator. Is someone then going to
- comment on a
- man in that line of work? Of course not.
-
- Those who want to experience the ancient Portuguese tradition of
- bullfighting are welcome and those who don't approve of it are of course
- entitled to their opinion. In the meantime, it makes for some lively debate.
-
- Sophia Jade, Macau
-
-
- Date: Wed, 08 Oct 1997 01:28:57
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK/US] Skin is grown from human cells
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971008012857.30978ea0@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Wednesday, October 8th, 1997
-
- Skin is grown from human cells
- By Celia Hall, Medical Editor
-
- THE world's first replacement skin to be grown from human cells was
- launched yesterday, heralding a revolution in replacement surgery with
- cartilage, ligament and human bone being developed.
-
- The fully human dermis, the skin's inner layer, was originally derived from
- discarded tissue from circumcised newborn babies and the new technology
- enables limitless supplies to be created from cell banks. Now human trials
- with engineered human cartilage to treat knees damaged through sports
- injury and in accidents are due to begin in Britain and America.
-
- Dr Gail Naughton is co-inventor of the skin product, Dermagraft, and
- president of Advanced Tissue Sciences which makes it in California. She
- said: "Ultimately we are looking at joint
- replacements. Some day we will be able to replace the plastic and metal
- joints used in hip replacement surgery." She said they incubated the cells
- in a medium similar to the environment in the womb which gave them maximum
- potential for growth.
-
- Dr Naughton said in London yesterday: "The breakthrough has been to
- understand what cells do during the normal growth process. That enabled us
- to simulate the conditions you would see in a normal growing child. Having
- learned how to keep cells happy the trick was to mimic the body's
- environment in the laboratory."
-
- The Dermagraft is the first product in the range of fully human engineered
- tissues. It has been designed to heal foot ulcers in diabetic patients
- which are hard to treat. It was launched by Smith and Nephew and the US firm.
-
- The dermis is made by seeding very thin scaffolds of a polymer with the
- type of cells called fibroblasts. The cells grow across the mesh. The
- polymer scaffolds, made from the material used for suturing, eventually
- break down and disappear.
-
- But as the scaffold can be made in any shape or size, other parts of the
- body can also be made using the appropriate cells. Dr Naughton said: "It is
- the first step in whole joint replacement. We have been successful in
- growing bone and cartilage together." To treat foot ulcers, a single layer
- of the dermis is cut to match the wound and applied to it. This is done
- weekly for eight weeks. Each application costs ú250.
-
- Dermagraft is neither classed as a medicine nor a medical device and does
- not need formal approval to be used in the NHS. A full treatment has been
- costed at nearly ú3,500 a year and there are an estimated 30,000 foot
- ulcers annually.
-
- Dr John Posnett, director of York Health Economics Consortium, York
- University, said that treating the ulcer conventionally cost on average
- ú3,620 so Dermagraft could achieve savings of ú128 per patient per year.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
-
- Date: Wed, 08 Oct 1997 01:34:57
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: US split on tackling global warming
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971008013457.1fbf0b10@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Wednesday, October 8th, 1997
-
- US split on tackling global warming
- By Hugo Gurdon in Washington
-
-
- THE American government has emerged more divided than ever
- from a global warming conference intended to help resolve its
- differences over how to cut greenhouse gas emissions.
-
- Vice-President Gore has caused outrage by pushing
- American-financed abortion and contraception in the Third
- World
- as a key to slowing climate change. President Clinton is
- struggling
- to balance his desire for America to take a lead on the issue
- against the fear that big emission reductions would slow
- economic
- growth.
-
- And the Republican-controlled Congress is increasingly angry
- about the probable inclusion of an energy tax in his
- plans. America
- produces more than a fifth of the world's greenhouse gases
- and
- both the European Union and Third World are demanding that
- the
- biggest polluter reform itself.
-
- But the EU demand for greenhouse gas cuts to 15 per cent
- below
- 1990 levels is seen as a sneak attack on the American
- economy. It
- is far easier for Europe to meet the targets because its
- economies
- have hardly grown in the 1990s, whereas America is in the
- fifth
- year of a massive boom which has sharply increased energy
- use.
-
- Mr Clinton told the conference at Georgetown University,
- attended
- by scientists, environmentalists and business executives,
- that he
- wanted a global treaty to emerge from the Kyoto summit on
- climate
- change in December, but targets had to be realistic. He
- faces a
- huge and controversial lobbying effort at home.
-
- The White House keeps delaying a decision on what policy or
- negotiating position it will take to Kyoto because Mr
- Clinton's aides
- are split.
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
-
- Date: Wed, 08 Oct 1997 01:43:09
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK/US] 'Dogs told me to take money to ThrustSSC'
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971008014309.1fbf4cfa@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
-
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Wednesday, October 8th, 1997
-
- 'Dogs told me to take money to ThrustSSC'
- By Robert Uhlig at Black Rock Desert, Nevada
-
- A MULTI-millionaire Telegraph reader has come to the
- rescue of
- ThrustSSC after his dogs told him to fly out to Nevada
- with a
- suitcase of cash to help fund the record-breaking attempt.
-
- Colin Hill, a retired 57-year-old engineer from
- Derbyshire, read
- that the ThrustSSC team, led by Richard Noble, was
- running out
- of funds to finance its attempt to break the sound
- barrier in a
- car. The eccentric northern philanthropist's former
- company,
- RK Carbon, had previously supplied the fireproof
- carbon-fibres
- that went into the protective suit that Mr Noble wore
- when setting
- his 1983 633mph land-speed record in Thrust 2.
-
- As with any of the business decisions that have helped
- him build
- up one of the world's leading carbon-fibre manufacturing
- companies, he consulted his three labrador dogs before
- making
- a decision.
-
- "I went up to the Point of Ayre on the tip of the Isle
- of Man with
- the dogs, sat down on a rock beside the lighthouse, and
- read
- that Richard Noble had only 10 days cash left for his
- project," Mr
- Hill said. "I spoke to the dogs and said perhaps I ought
- to take
- them some money. They said, 'Get on with it' so I called
- Richard
- Noble."
-
- Mr Hill offered to wire the funds to the ThrustSSC team at
- Gerlach, a seven-bar town without a church or shop, on the
- edge of the Black Rock desert in Nevada, but was told
- that there
- was nowhere to send it. "Richard said we need dollar
- notes, so I
- said I'll bring you a bundle to keep you going a few
- more days,"
- Mr Hill said.
-
- The next morning, on Friday, Mr Hill called two friends,
- Pat
- Wilson and Peter Manchester, and within 10 hours was on a
- flight to Reno, 100 miles from the Black Rock desert,
- with a bag
- full of dollar bills and travellers' cheques.
-
- On Monday, he saw the car run twice over the desert
- playa at
- over 700mph, coming within a fraction of setting a new land
- speed record.
-
- "It was worth every penny. It's a magnificent sight," he
- said. Mr
- Hill would not divulge how much he has donated to
- ThrustSSC's
- bid for the sound barrier, but Richard Noble said it was
- enough
- to keep the team afloat for several more days.
-
- "We had thought we would run out of money within about
- eight
- days," Mr Noble said. "Colin's contribution is a
- significant
- injection which should last some time further."
-
- The cost of keeping the team operational in the Nevada
- desert is
- a tightly-guarded secret, but has been estimated to be
- up to
- ú20,000 a day. Telegraph readers have previously come to
- the
- rescue of the ThrustSSC project. With only a matter of
- days to
- go before the record-breaking car was due to leave for
- Nevada,
- Mr Noble announced he did not have enough money to finance
- the flight or run the car once it had arrived. Donations
- from
- thousands of readers flowed in response, at a rate of
- more than
- ú15,000 a day.
-
- However, if it had not been for the consent of his three
- labradors, Mr Hill would not have made the
- project-saving trip at
- all. Poppy, a 12-year-old Scottish labrador bitch, was his
- company's director of finance. The director of
- engineering is
- Panox, a nine-month old labrador puppy bought for him by
- his
- staff when he sold his company, set up with ú83 in 1968,
- for
- over ú20 million in January to a German company.
-
- Earwig, a six-year-old male Cheshire labrador, was the
- director
- of security until he was neutered recently. "My wife
- decided to
- change his position," Mr Hill said. "She said you can't
- have a
- security chief with no balls. He was going to go into
- IT, but he
- knows nothing about computers, so he's now director of
- sales."
-
- Dogs have always been important to Mr Hill. Lucy, a former
- head of group corporate planning, was even interviewed
- by an
- unsuspecting financial journalist when Mr Hill said his
- directors
- did not like to travel from Stockport to London.
-
- With his fund-contributing mission over, Mr Hill is
- returning to the
- Isle of Man, with a poster of the car signed by all the
- ThrustSSC
- team intended for his primary school, Tibshelf Town End, in
- Derbyshire. Mr Hill has already donated ú50,000 to the
- school
- after he asked each teacher to draw up a personal
- wish-list.
-
- "One thing I've not got a shortage of is money," Mr Hill
- said. "If
- Richard got stuck for the funds for one last day to get
- the record,
- I'd probably stump up some more. I want to see him do it."
-
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
-
- Date: Wed, 08 Oct 1997 10:26:25 -0400
- From: Allen Schubert <ar-admin@envirolink.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Subscription Options--Admin Note
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-
- Date: Wed, 08 Oct 1997 10:36:03 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (KR/US) U.S. Team Shortens Visit to S.Korea on E.coli
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971008103601.006d1498@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from CNN web page:
- ---------------------------------
- U.S. Team Shortens Visit to S.Korea on E.coli
-
- Reuters
- 08-OCT-97
-
- SEOUL, Oct 8 (Reuter) - U.S. scientists and experts, looking into
- contamination of a U.S. beef shipment to South Korea, have cut short their
- visit after being satisfied with early meetings, a U.S. Embassy spokesman
- said on Wednesday.
-
- Jeff Sexton said the team of experts from the U.S. Department of
- Agriculture had dropped a scheduled visit on Thursday to a branch of the
- National Animal Quarantine Service in the southeastern city of Pusan.
-
- ``They're satisfied with what they've learned and didn't see any need to go
- to Pusan,'' Sexton said.
-
- The team, which arrived on Monday, visited the Seoul office of the
- quarantine service on Tuesday and was scheduled to meet with officials from
- Korea's Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday.
-
- Sexton declined to give any details on the meetings. ``We're not going to
- make any comments on the content of the conversations the two sides are
- having with each other,'' he said.
-
- On September 26, South Korea announced its inspectors had found the
- O-157:H7 strain of E.coli bacteria in 18.18 tonnes of beef shipped from an
- IBP Inc plant in Nebraska.
-
- The bacterium is an especially virulent form of E.coli and causes kidney
- failure and death.
-
- He said the team had nothing to say about comments by U.S. Agriculture
- Secretary Dan Glickman in Washington on Tuesday that the U.S. wanted to
- verify South Korea's test results.
-
- ``It is extremely important in the international trade picture that there
- be independent verification of these reports,'' Glickman said, to ensure
- ``these things not be used in a non-scientific strategic plan by some other
- country to accomplish other objectives, other than public health and safety
- objectives, if I make myself clear.''
-
- Seoul has reacted angrily to Washington's announcement last week that the
- United States has begun procedures that could lead to trade sanctions
- against South Korea over automobile trade issues.
-
- South Korean consumer groups have called for a boycott of U.S. imports and
- autoworkers have staged peaceful demonstrations against the threat.
-
- South Korea has said it would refuse any U.S. request for verification
- tests on the contaminated beef.
-
- An official in the Animal Health Division of South Korea's Agriculture
- Ministry said on Wednesday Seoul had received no such request from the
- United States and that South Korea was unaware of Glickman's comments.
-
- South Korea has proposed sending its own team to the United States from
- October 10 to 29 to visit the IBP plant in Nebraska that processed the
- contaminated beef as well as the beef suppliers, the official said.
- Date: Wed, 08 Oct 1997 10:41:59 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Attempt To Ban Pigeon Shoots
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971008104157.006d1cac@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from CNN web page:
- ---------------------------------
- Reuters
- 08-OCT-97
- Attempt To Ban Pigeon Shoots
-
- (HARRISBURG) -- A state lawmaker plans to make another attempt to ban live
- pigeon shoots in the Commonwealth. Indiana County Representative Sara
- Steelman will unveil her legislation today as ``The Fund for Animals''
- stands by. Animal rights groups have been trying for years to ban the
- controversial events and have made the annual Labor Day shoot in Hegins,
- Schuylkill County the target of their protest.
-
- Meanwhile, ``The Fund For Animals'' says a 24-year-old North Carolina
- woman, who was sentenced to 45-days in jail for protesting at the Hegins
- Pigeon Shoot, is in her fifth day of a hunger strike. Dawn Ratcliffe says
- she will NOT eat until lawmakers put the bill to ban pigeon shoots on the
- floor of the House for a ``fair'' vote. Ratcliffe is the co- founder of
- Direct Action for Animals.
- Date: Wed, 08 Oct 1997 10:45:30 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Mink Farm Still Rounding Up Mink
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971008104527.006d1cac@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from CNN web page:
- ---------------------------------
- Reuters
- 08-OCT-97
-
- Mink Farm Still Rounding Up Mink
-
- (PRESTON) -- Franklin County authorities say they don't know who opened the
- cages at a mink farm, sending thousands of animals running. There were
- five-thousand of them at the Palmer Mink Farm near Preston. With help from
- neighbors, the Palmer's have returned 75-percent of them to cages but they
- lost most of the breeding cards. That information helps prevent inbreeding.
- Whoever opened the cages... took the breeding records too.
- Date: Wed, 08 Oct 1997 11:25:07 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Lawmakers Learn About University's Hog Odor Research
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971008112505.006da29c@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- --------------------------------
- 10/08/1997 10:34 EST
-
- Lawmakers Learn About University's Hog Odor Research
-
- By TARA BURGHART
- Associated Press Writer
-
- URBANA, Ill. (AP) -- Lawmakers are closely watching hog odor research
- being done at the University of Illinois as they continue dealing with
- issues surrounding so-called ``mega'' hog farms.
-
- ``Maybe this technology will be the future, the positive solution to
- enable the hog industry to become an economic development to the state
- instead of a controversial issue,'' said Rep. Rick Winkel, R-Champaign,
- after hearing about some of the university's projects designed to reduce
- offensive odors emanating from the farms.
-
- Those projects include spraying vegetable oil in hog buildings to control
- dust, changing the diet of the animals so that they produce less waste
- and cleaning air from hog housing by running it through a tube that acts
- like a cyclone.
-
- The researchers detailed their projects Tuesday for a joint meeting of
- the Illinois House and Senate Agriculture and Conservation committees.
-
- Mega-scale hog farms are a growing force in Illinois, the nation's No. 4
- hog producer. About 41 percent of Illinois hog farms have at least 2,000
- animals -- four times more than the typical large-scale facility 17 years
- ago, according to the Illinois Pork Producers Association.
-
- Environmentalists and others say the large collections of manure
- generated at the farms contaminate the air and threaten groundwater.
-
- The hog farms usually store the abundant waste the animals produce in
- large lagoons, and the resulting unpleasant odor is another of the main
- problems associated with the livestock operations.
-
- But the university researchers are focusing more on controlling odors in
- the buildings that house the hogs, as opposed to the lagoons built to
- hold their manure, said Michael Ellis, an associate professor in the
- department of animal sciences.
-
- Ellis said university researchers believe a well-managed lagoon often
- does not cause major odor problems.
-
- Gerald Riskowski, a professor in the department of agricultural
- engineering, detailed a few ideas in the development or testing stage
- that could cut down on odors coming out of hog confinement buildings:
-
- --A contraption called a noncontact aerodynamic deduster acts much like a
- cyclone, pulling dust particles -- which can carry odors -- out of the
- air before the air leaves the building. Compared to a filter system, the
- deduster doesn't have to be cleaned very often, does not clog up and can
- handle more air.
-
- --A process called thermal chemical conversion is being researched to try
- to convert manure into other products, such as fuel oil and plant
- fertilizer, that would not smell like hog manure.
-
- --A wet scrubber being tested on ventilation fans removes up to 80
- percent of odorous dust from building exhaust air.
-
- --Nutritionists are trying to adjust hog diets so that the animals
- produce less waste and odor.
-
- --Researchers have found that a daily spraying of vegetable oil
- throughout a hog confinement building suppresses dust and can cut odors
- up to 50 percent.
-
- ``This technology is great and may help us respond to the legitimate
- concerns people have about odor and water quality near these hogs
- farms,'' said Sen. Todd Sieben, R-Geneseo.
-
- Date: Wed, 8 Oct 1997 09:00:15 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Heidi Prescott <hprescott@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, jaduncan@unccvx.uncc.edu, Plannet@epix.net
- Subject: Pigeon bill, Dawn Ratcliffe and support demo update
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19971009130937.255f374e@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Dawn Ratcliffe:
-
- I visited Dawn last night and she is in very good spirits. She was
- on day 5 of her hunger strike and her resolve remains very strong. She said
- to tell everybody she is okay and the jail staff is treating her well. She
- was able to take her cruelty free products with her and they let me give her
- Tom's of Maine toothpaste last night. She said the other inmates are very
- nice to her. Dawn is totally dedicated to staying on her strike, and she is
- still demanding that the bill is put on the floor for a vote. I think we
- all owe it to Dawn to work very hard to make sure the bill comes to the
- floor for a vote, so that her hunger strike is not in vain.
-
- Which brings me to:
-
- Pigeon bill update:
-
- Gloria, Ginger, Johnna (from PLAN) and I were at the Capitol working on
- getting co-sponsors for the bill yesterday. Because of Dawn, we are trying
- to fast-track the bill. We got 36 co-sponsors so far. That is a RECORD!.
- The last bill had 31 co-sponsors and we ended up with a vote of 99 of the
- needed 102 to pass it. We are working again today and the bill will be
- introduced by 2:00 pm.
-
- URGENT: We need calls to State Representatives. Anyone with friends or
- relatives in Pennsylvania, please have them contact us and we will look up
- their Reps. Also, calls are still needed to Representative John Perzel
- (Philadelphia) (717) 787-2016 -- District office (215) 331-2600, and Speaker
- of the House Matt Ryan (Media) (717) 787- 4610, District office (610)
- 565-3800. Ask them to bring the pigeon shoot bill to the floor for a vote
- The calls have more impact from Pennsylvanians, but all calls are being
- tallied. If you are from Pennsylvania, ask for a written response
- addressing whether they will put the bill on the floor.
-
- Representative Steelman is encouraged and feels that the momentum is
- building. Dawn's hunger strike is definitely adding to the momentum. As I
- was lobbying yesterday, many aides mentioned Dawn's hunger strike. Media
- attention is also starting to increase and more stories are out today about
- the bill introduction. Representative Steelman has a concern about any
- demos taking place at specific district offices and is asking us to hold off
- on them at this time.
-
- Support Demos:
-
- Support demos will be held for Dawn at the jail. Contact Brett
- Weiker from Vegan Resistance for Liberation for more information at (215)
- 943-2370. Brett is also organizing a support demo in the Philadelphia area
- at noon on Monday, October 13th. For more details call him. As we learn
- about demos, details will be posted. For those people interested in
- organizing demos to support Dawn, remember that pigeon shoots take place
- every weekend, and the clubs would be great sites to bring attention to the
- fact that Hegins is not the only shoot.
-
- Also, another vulnerable target would ge the Powderbourne Gun Club in East
- Greenville, Montgomery County, PA. This is where the birds come from for
- the majority of the pigeon shoots. The barn-like coops are visible from the
- road. A "Free Dawn free the Pigeons" theme could be used.
-
-
- If you need any further information, please feel free to call or
- e-mail us. We will continue to post updates. Thank you.
-
- Heidi
-
- Date: Wed, 08 Oct 1997 13:03:41 -0700
- From: bailey2@ix.netcom.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: GRAY WHALES need your help
- Message-ID: <343BE71D.2866@ix.netcom.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) is lobbying for members of
- the U.S. House of Reprentatives to sign on to a letter being circulated
- by Rep. Jack Metcalf (R-WA) to protect gray whales off the coast of
- Washington state.
-
- PLEASE PHONE YOUR U.S. REPRESENTATIVE to ask that he/she sign on to
- Metcalf's letter. You can reach your U.S. Representative by calling the
- Congressional switchboard at 202-224-3121. (The switchboard receptionist
- is able to tell you your Representative's name by looking up your zip
- code.)
-
- THE SITUATION
- As many of you know, the Makah nation of Washington state is seeking an
- aboriginal subsistence quota to hunt gray whales at the upcoming 49th
- annual International Whaling Commission meeting in Monaco. The Makah
- have not hunted whales for some 70 years, and several tribal members are
- strongly opposed to the resumption of whaling.
-
- WHAT TO SAY WHEN YOU CALL YOUR U.S. REPRESENTATIVE
- 1) The Makah have no nutritional or subsistence needs to kill whales.
- 2) Granting a quota for the Makah could set a dangerous precedent for
- other coastal communities throughout the world -- native or otherwise
- -- that wish to hunt whales for profit.
- 3) Makah elders oppose the hunt, and have lobbied the International
- Whaling Commission against a return to whaling.
-
- The following members of the U.S. House of Representatives have already
- signed on to Jack Metcalf's letter to protect gray whales:
- Neil Abercrombie (D-HI)
- George Browne (D-CA)
- Jennifer Dunn (R-WA)
- Phil English (R-PA)
- Lane Evans (D-IL)
- Sam Farr (D-CA)
- Jon Fox (R-PA)
- Luis Gutierrez (D-IL)
- Doc Hastings (R-WA)
- John Lewis (D-GA)
- George Miller (D-CA)
- John Porter (R-IL)
- Joe Scarborough (R-FL)
- Linda Smith (R-WA)
-
- Thank you for caring for the animals.
- Date: Wed, 08 Oct 1997 13:59:14 -0500
- From: LGrayson <lgrayson@earthlink.net>
- To: ar-news <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Transgenic cows to produce the human protein in its blood or milk.
- Got Milk?
- Message-ID: <343BD802.1C98@earthlink.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
-
-
- Firms team up to make
- cloned cattle with special
- milk
-
- October 7, 1997
- Web posted at: 6:22 p.m. EDT
- (2222 GMT)
-
- BOSTON, (Reuter) -- Two U.S.
- companies said Tuesday they
- had
- teamed up to make cloned
- cattle
- that would produce milk
- containing
- human proteins.
-
- Genzyme Transgenics Corp of Framingham, Massachusetts, and Worcester,
- Massachusetts-based Advanced Cell Technology Inc., said they would
- combine genetic engineering and cloning to create a herd of cattle
- genetically identical to one another, and carrying human genes The idea
- at both laboratories is to first create an animal that is successfully
- transgenic, one that contains the human gene and in which the gene
- causes the animal to produce the human protein in its blood or
- milk.
- In genetic engineering, the gene is put into an egg cell
- or newly fertilized cell, called a blastocyst. Sometimes the inserted
- genes do not "take", so the researchers are keen to develop the few
- successful ones. So they want to clone the successful animal to make
- several others just like it and eventually a herd.
- Advanced Cell Technology's cloning technology involves clones made
- at the embryo stage, not clones made from adult cells -- the procedure
- used to clone a sheep in Scotland last year. Using embryos to make
- clones is easier. The company inserts the genes into the embryo
- cells, the implants the embryos into surrogate mothers. All of the
- embryos transferred into the surrogate mothers are female, and therefore
- are milk producers.
- Genzyme Transgenics said the first protein to be produced
- would be human serum albumin, which is used to maintain fluid balance in
- the blood.
- The protein will then be purified out of the milk for medical
- use. Human serum albumin is currently derived from pooled human plasma.
- About 440 metric tons of plasma-derived albumin are used annually
- worldwide, with annual sales of about $1.5 billion.
- Serum albumin is given to patients who have
- lost a great deal of blood and is used widely in a range of other
- problems from extreme malnutrition to burns.
-
- Copyright 1997 Reuters Limited. All
- rights reserved.
-
-
-
- á
- Date: Wed, 8 Oct 1997 14:49:57 -0400 (EDT)
- From: JanaWilson@aol.com
- To: AR-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Okla. Wildlife Dept. Anti-AR Policy
- Message-ID: <971008134247_898052085@emout14.mail.aol.com>
-
-
- This question and answer appeared in an Okla. Wildlife Dept.
- non-game publication:
-
- Is Teaming with Wildlife an an Anti-Hunting or Animal Rights
- Initiative?
-
- No. Teaming with Wildlife is a conservation initiative that would
- allow state wildlife agencies to expand their constituencies by
- meeting the needs of outdoor users. This would in turn generate
- support for traditional forms of outdoor recreation (hunting and
- fishing) by educating wildlife enthusiasts who do not hunt or fish
- about the many contributions that hunters and anglers have made
- to conservation.
-
- Teaming with Wildlife is a proposed federal initiative that would
- raise funds for state-based nongame wildlife conservation, outdoor
- recreation and environmental education projects. The initiative
- would have to be passed by Congress and signed by the President
- to become law.
- If passed in its entirety, Teaming with Wildlife would raise $350
- million nationwide each year of which $5.5 million would return to Okla.
- for programs in the areas of nongame wildlife conservation, outdoor
- recreation and environmental education.
- Groundwork for Teaming with Wildlife is currently being prepared with
- Congress. Although a bill has not been introduced yet in Congress,
- it is expected to be introduced this fall.
-
- For the
- Animals,
-
- Jana, OKC
- Date: Wed, 08 Oct 1997 17:25:09 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) USDA Wants More Authority on Food
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971008172506.006953c8@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP Wire page:
- -----------------------------------
- 10/08/1997 14:35 EST
-
- USDA Wants More Authority on Food
-
- By CURT ANDERSON
- AP Farm Writer
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Agriculture Department can impose fines
- on circuses that mistreat elephants and dealers who sell
- undersized potatoes, but not on meat companies that produce
- contaminated food, officials complained Wednesday.
-
- ``At a certain point, it becomes fairly evident who's being
- protected here,'' Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman told
- senators. ``I think we can come down a little more strongly on the side
- of the consumer.''
-
- Glickman urged the Senate Agriculture Committee to approve legislation
- that would expand USDA's enforcement authority over cases of contaminated
- meat and poultry.
-
- Among its provisions are powers to issue mandatory product recalls,
- impose fines of up to $100,000 a violation per day and require that USDA
- be notified when any suspected contamination is found in the food
- distribution system from slaughterhouse to dinner table.
-
- [Image] In the aftermath of the recall of 25 million pounds of Hudson
- Workers at Foods Inc. ground beef that was possibly tainted with E. coli
- the Hudson bacteria, Glickman said, new powers are crucial to ensure that
- companies are adopting new anti-contamination systems and that
- industry responds immediately when a product is suspected of
- being unsafe.
-
- as much an insurance policy as anything else,''
- Glickman said. ``Most companies are willing to rise to this
- responsibility. But in talking about enforcement, we're
- talking about dealing with the few who don't.''
-
- Many senators, however, appeared skeptical about granting
- new powers to USDA that could economically ruin food
- companies, particularly since agency officials could only
- point to about a dozen cases when companies delayed issuing voluntary
- meat recalls over the past five years. None refused outright.
-
- ``They don't need the threat of a $100,000 fine hanging out there,'' said
- Sen. Bob Kerrey, a Democrat from Nebraska, home of the Hudson plant and
- another plant involved in a recent contaminated meat recall. ``I'm not
- sure this is going to be able to increase consumer confidence.''
-
- Added Sen. Pat Roberts, R-Kan.: ``We always seem to get into
- sort of a crisis management situation. I think the proposal is
- punitive.''
-
- Other senators said the promise of new technology such as
- irradiation -- which kills bacteria such as E. coli and
- salmonella -- and improved testing of products makes more sense than
- expanded enforcement because it could prevent outbreaks of illness.
-
- ``It's got to be supplemented with something that gets to the heart of
- the problem,'' Sen. Dick Lugar, R-Ind., chairman of the Agriculture
- Committee, said of Glickman's proposal.
-
- Glickman said it appears likely the Food and Drug Administration will
- soon approve a 3-year-old petition to permit irradiation for red meat.
- The process is already approved for poultry, pork, fruits and vegetables
- but has not been widely adopted -- mainly due to consumer wariness.
-
- USDA officials say consumers must be educated about the safety of
- irradiation before companies will widely use it, just as it took time for
- people to accept milk pasteurization and fluoridation of water.
-
- Date: Wed, 08 Oct 1997 23:25:18 -0400
- From: Peter Muller <Peter.Muller@worldnet.att.net>
- To: JanaWilson@aol.com
- Cc: AR-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Re: (US) Okla. Wildlife Dept. Anti-AR Policy
- Message-ID: <343C4E9D.F47A8DE4@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- We've got to be real careful on this one. Even though it sounds
- superficially good, let's remember one thing: "Follow the money."
- Who is slated to get the extra money that is supposed to be generated by
- this proposal? Why -- Surprise! Surprise! It's the same good boys that
- have overseeing the decimation of our wildlife all these years. The
- various state fish & game agencies DEC, DEP, DNR (whatever it's called
- in your stated) the fish and game or, as we like to call them, the
- squish and maim department will have their revenues doubled. So now
- that they have more revenues they'll forget all about hunting an
- "manage" wildlife for its own benefit. Right? We'll if you believe that
- then there is nice bridge about 75 miles south of here that you might be
- interest in....
-
- Peter Muller,
- C.A.S.H.
-
-
- JanaWilson@aol.com wrote:
-
- > This question and answer appeared in an Okla. Wildlife Dept.
- > non-game publication:
- >
- > Is Teaming with Wildlife an an Anti-Hunting or Animal Rights
- > Initiative?
- >
- > No. Teaming with Wildlife is a conservation initiative that would
- > allow state wildlife agencies to expand their constituencies by
- > meeting the needs of outdoor users. This would in turn generate
- > support for traditional forms of outdoor recreation (hunting and
- > fishing) by educating wildlife enthusiasts who do not hunt or fish
- > about the many contributions that hunters and anglers have made
- > to conservation.
- >
- > Teaming with Wildlife is a proposed federal initiative that would
- > raise funds for state-based nongame wildlife conservation, outdoor
- > recreation and environmental education projects. The initiative
- > would have to be passed by Congress and signed by the President
- > to become law.
- > If passed in its entirety, Teaming with Wildlife would raise $350
- > million nationwide each year of which $5.5 million would return to
- > Okla.
- > for programs in the areas of nongame wildlife conservation, outdoor
- > recreation and environmental education.
- > Groundwork for Teaming with Wildlife is currently being prepared with
- > Congress. Although a bill has not been introduced yet in Congress,
- > it is expected to be introduced this fall.
- >
- > For the
- > Animals,
- >
- > Jana,
- > OKC
-
-
-
- Date: Wed, 08 Oct 1997 23:31:30 -0400
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: Peter.Muller@worldnet.att.net, JanaWilson@aol.com
- Cc: AR-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Admin Note--was: Re: (US) Okla. Wildlife Dept. Anti-AR Policy
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971008233126.0069657c@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- AR-News Admin Note (sympathetic though I am to the last post)
-
- Please do not post commentary or personal opinions to AR-News. Such posts
- are not appropriate to AR-News. Appropriate postings to AR-News include:
- posting a news item, requesting information on some event, or responding to
- a request for information. Discussions on AR-News will NOT be allowed and
- we ask that any
- commentary either be taken to AR-Views or to private E-mail.
-
- Continued postings of inappropriate material may result in suspension of
- the poster's subscription to AR-News.
-
- Here is subscription info for AR-Views:
-
- Send e-mail to: listproc@envirolink.org
-
- In text/body of e-mail: subscribe ar-views firstname lastname
-
- Also...here are some websites with info on internet resources for Veg and
- AR interests:
-
- The Global Directory (IVU)
- http://www.ivu.org/global
-
- World Guide to Vegetarianism--Internet
- http://www.veg.org/veg/Guide/Internet/index.html
-
-
-
-
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