home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- from CNN custom news http://www.cnn.com/
- --------------------------------------
- Maryland State News
- Reuters
- 10-NOV-97
-
- Researchers Discuss Pfiesteria
-
- (DURHAM, North Carolina) -- Researchers are gathering at Duke University in
- North Carolina today to discuss pfiesteria... the organism that has been
- blamed for killing thousands of fish along the east coast. Scientists want
- to know how pfiesteria affects humans. Edward Levin of Duke's integrated
- toxicology program says his studies have shown pfiesteria can affect the
- long-term memory of lab rats. Levin says it may take years to unravel the
- medical mystery behind the so-called ``cell from hell.'' Pfiesteria has
- been implicated in fish kills in Maryland, North Carolina and Virginia.
- Date: Mon, 10 Nov 1997 09:14:50 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Deer Hunt Slated For Howard County
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971110091448.006988a0@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from CNN custom news http://www.cnn.com/
- --------------------------------------
- Maryland State News
- Reuters
- 10-NOV-97
-
- Deer Hunt Slated For Howard County
-
- (COLUMBIA) -- Deer hunting, on a limited scale, will be scheduled next
- month in the Middle Patuxent Environmental area. County officials say the
- hunt is necessary in order to reduce the deer population in the park. There
- are so many deer in the woods that officials say they're having problems
- finding enough food, and they are leaving the park and creating traffic
- problems. The scheduled deer hunt is expected to be opposed by animal
- rights groups.
- Date: Mon, 10 Nov 1997 09:05:09 -0800
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Mice studies promise eternal fertility
- Message-ID: <34673EC5.6996@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- A way to stop menopause?
-
- The Associated Press
- LONDON (November 10, 1997 07:06 a.m.)
-
- Harvard scientists experimenting with mice have found a way to keep
- ovaries from dying, thus blocking the onset of menopause.
-
- London's Sunday Times reported that scientists at the Harvard Medical
- School discovered an application of two chemical agents called
- fumonisim-B1, a fungal toxin, and sphingosine-1-phosphate, that stops
- cells in the ovaries from dying.
-
- The research will be published next week in the scientific journal
- Nature Medicine, the newspaper said. There was no immediate reaction to
- the report from Harvard.
-
- While the report noted that the research is still at the experimental
- stage, project leader Jonathan Tilly said the results with mice were so
- good the technique could be used on women right away. [Oh, yeah - AG]
-
- "Hormone replacement therapy will become a thing of the past because the
- implant would preserve ovarian function," Tilly said. "The results are
- so striking that in a perfect world we would take it into clinics right
- now."
-
- Under hormone replacement therapy, many women take estrogen, a natural
- reproductive hormone, to help them avoid hot flashes during menopause.
- Women also take estrogen after menopause to prevent heart disease and
- osteoporosis.
-
- The scientists were trying to preserve fertility in cancer patients.
- Cancer treatment often makes young women infertile, stopping the ovaries
- from producing estrogen and bringing on early menopause.
-
- The Sunday Times said the technique also offers women the prospect of
- being permanently fertile.
- Date: Mon, 10 Nov 1997 15:15:29 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: EU Unhappy about Belgian Mad Cow Incident
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971110151527.006fa050@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from CNN http://www.cnn.com/
- --------------------------------------------
- EU Unhappy about Belgian Mad Cow Incident
-
- Reuters
- 10-NOV-97
-
- BRUSSELS, Nov 10 (Reuters) - The European Commission criticized the Belgian
- authorities on Monday for allowing the carcase of a cow with mad cow
- disease to be processed into animal feed and sold in Poland and the
- Netherlands.
-
- ``As far as we're concerned, the legislation is quite clear,'' Gerry Kiely,
- a spokesman for the European Union executive, told reporters. ``If an
- animal is suspected of having BSE (bovine spongiform encephalopathy), its
- carcass must be held until the laboratory analysis comes back.
-
- ``If it is shown to have BSE, it must be destroyed.'' The Belgian
- Agriculture Ministry said last week the carcass of the diseased cow, the
- first case discovered in Belgium, had been turned into animal feed because
- a vet mistakenly believed it had been infected with rabies.
-
- Kiely said the Belgian authorities seemed to be ``splitting hairs'' about
- what ``destroyed'' meant. ``Common sense would tell you that putting it
- into meat and bone meal doesn't mean destroyed,'' he said.
-
- EU Agriculture Commissioner Franz Fischler has written to the Belgian
- ministry about the matter and Belgian authorities have indicated they
- intend to tighten up legislation to ensure there is no repeat, Kiely said.
-
- The EU imposed a worldwide ban on British beef exports after the government
- revealed there could be a link between BSE and Creutzfeld-Jakob Disease, a
- similar brain-wasting disease that afflicts humans.
- Date: Mon, 10 Nov 1997 15:24:51 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Exercise a Heart Plus for Vegetarians
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971110152448.006fc48c@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from Yahoo news http://www.yahoo.com/headlines/
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Monday November 10 1:50 PM EST
-
- Exercise a Heart Plus for Vegetarians
-
- NEW YORK (Reuters) -- Vigorous exercise or moderate alcohol intake helps
- increase blood levels of heart-protective high-density lipoprotein (HDL)
- cholesterol in vegetarians or others who eat a low-fat diet, according to
- new findings from the ongoing National Runners Health Study.
-
- The report of the study in the November issue of the American Journal of
- Clinical Nutrition notes previous research which linked a vegetarian diet
- with lower blood HDL levels. But according to study author Dr. Paul T.
- Williams of the life science division at the Lawrence Berkeley National
- Laboratory in Berkeley, California, little information exists on how diet
- and physical activity interact to affect the risk of coronary artery
- disease.
-
- "Does exercise prevent the decrease in plasma HDL cholesterol caused by
- high-carbohydrate, low-fat diets?" he asks. "Do vegetarians benefit from
- vigorous physical activity? Does exercise mitigate the consequences of poor
- dietary choices?"
-
- To get some answers to these questions, Williams surveyed 351 vegetarian
- and 8,891 nonvegetarian runners. Questionnaires were handed out at running
- events and through a national magazine for runners. Runners provided data
- on their weekly intakes of alcohol, red meat, fish and fruit, and weekly
- distance run. They also supplied information on height, weight, waist and
- chest circumference. The doctors of 26% of runners surveyed provided
- information on HDL levels.
-
- Although, as a group, male and female vegetarians were leaner than
- nonvegetarians (omnivores), their HDL levels tended to be lower. But in
- male vegetarian runners, those who ran the greatest distance per week had
- high HDL concentrations. This was not true for vegetarian women runners,
- however, in whom greater weekly distance run was associated more with
- decreased body fat than with higher HDL.
-
- The results also suggest that a combination of vigorous exercise and
- moderate drinking may boost men's HDL levels. Men who ran more than 72
- kilometers (about 45 miles) each week and who consumed about 6 ounces of
- alcohol per week "were five times more likely to have clinically defined
- high HDL cholesterol (equal to or greater than 60 milligrams per deciliter
- of blood)," than men who ran about 22 miles per week, Williams states.
-
- However, the researcher notes the findings pertain to moderate alcohol
- intake and cautions nondrinkers not to interpret the study results as a
- call to start drinking alcohol.
-
- He points to "a substantial body of research" showing an increase in blood
- pressure from alcohol consumption in nonrunners. "In this study, we
- demonstrated that such increases are not reduced by running."
-
- William says official guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and
- Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, Georgia, assert that the majority of health
- benefits from physical activity can be obtained by walking 16 to 23
- kilometers (10 to 14 miles) per week, the energy equivalent of running 8 to
- 12 km/week (5 to 7 miles).
-
- "Ninety-five percent of the 199 male and 152 female vegetarians exceeded
- these minimum recommendations and appeared to benefit substantially by
- exceeding the recommended levels," he says.
-
- He adds that vegetarians who exceed the CDC recommended activity level "may
- significantly increase their HDL cholesterol concentration and lose
- significant amounts of weight."
-
- "Our analyses suggest that vigorous exercise provides important health
- benefits beyond those obtained by eating vegetarian diets or consuming
- moderate amounts of alcohol alone," Williams concludes. SOURCE: American
- Journal of Clinical Nutrition (1997;66:1197-1206)
-
- Date: Mon, 10 Nov 1997 14:59:57 -0600 (CST)
- From: Suzanne Roy <idausa@ix.netcom.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: FRONTLINE ON DOLPHIN CAPTIVITY INDUSTRY
- Message-ID: <199711102059.OAA12998@dfw-ix15.ix.netcom.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
-
-
- Date: November 10, 1997
- Contact: Suzanne Roy, 415/388-9641 x 26
-
- PBS DOCUMENTARY INCLUDES LOOK AT MARINE WORLD
- "Whale of a Business" Airs Tomorrow, Focusing on Marine Mammal Captivity
-
- Vallejo, Calif. Marine World Africa USA remains in the media spotlight this
- week, as the PBS news program Frontline includes the Bay Area amusement park
- in a documentary entitled "A Whale of a Business," which will air nationally
- at 10:00 p.m. tomorrow (November 11) on PBS stations. The program will take
- a hard and thorough look at the money, power and politics behind the
- increasingly controversial captive marine mammal industry. Immediately
- following the Frontline broadcast, Straight Talk with Derek McGinty will
- present "Animals in Captivity," which will feature a panel discussion on the
- ethics of keeping wild animals in captivity.
-
- On Sunday, September 7, Frontline crews visited Marine World and filmed the
- parkÆs marine mammals, including its "killer whale" and dolphin shows. The
- footage and producersÆ impressions will be included in tomorrowÆs program,
- which will also focus on Keiko, the star of the original Free Willy film,
- who is now residing at the Oregon Coast Aquarium where he is being
- rehabilitated for possible return to the wild.
-
- "We are thrilled that Frontline has taken on this most important issue,"
- said Suzanne Roy, Program Director for In Defense of Animals (IDA). "It is
- time that the public saw the truth about cruelties and exploitation involved
- in the captive marine mammal industry. Marine World and other marine parks
- will tell you how well their animals are treated, and how they provide such
- an educational value for people. This program will expose the truth about
- the industry: that it is cruel and exploitative and is simply about profit
- and greed."
-
- IDA has long battled against the confinement of marine mammals in captivity
- and has campaigned for the rehabilitation and re-release of Marine WorldÆs
- cetaceans.
-
- "Many people donÆt realize how much these animals suffer in captivity," Roy
- stated. " Frontline will explore the parts of the industry that the public
- never sees, including the capture, shipment, and treatment of whales and
- dolphins bound for captivity show."
-
- Marine World has been in the media spotlight frequently over the past few
- weeks, although probably not for reasons the park would prefer. Marine
- World officials announced a few weeks ago that, due to financial
- difficulties, the park was laying off many employees and closing down for
- five months effective November 3 -- the first time ever that the park has
- closed down entirely during the winter months. Shortly
-
- - more -
-
-
- IN DEFENSE OF ANIMALS ╖ 131 CAMINO ALTO, SUITE E ╖ MILL VALLEY, CA 94941 ╖
- 415/388-9641
- thereafter, Marine World was again a media focus when one of its killer
- whales, 32-year-old Yaka, died of pneumonia on October 29 following an
- extended illness.
-
- "YakaÆs death was an enormous loss, and she will be greatly missed" Roy
- stated. "We hope that people will watch this Frontline program and really
- think about YakaÆs life and what it meant to her to be held at Marine World
- for so long. Yes, she entertained many people. But at what cost? She was
- snatched from her family and her home in the ocean, where her mother and
- sisters still survive. She spent 28 years in a tiny tank that was not even
- as deep as she was long. We certainly hope that this program will open
- peopleÆs eyes to the truth behind the performances and that they will no
- longer support any park that displays captive marine mammals."
-
- Roy concluded that IDA will continue its efforts and attempt to work with
- Marine World and the City of Vallejo (which now owns the park) to obtain the
- retirement and rehabilitation of its remaining orca, Vigga, for possible
- re-release to the wild.
-
- "We are determined that Vigga not suffer YakaÆs fate," Roy stated. "She is
- an Icelandic orca, as is Keiko. We would like to see Vigga given the same
- chance at freedom as has been afforded to Keiko."
-
- "A Whale of a Business" is produced by Renata Simone and Neil Docheny.
- Frontline is produced by a consortium of public television stations: WGBH
- Boston, WTVS Detroit, WPBT Miami, WNET New York, and KCTS Seattle. The
- executive producer of Frontline is Michael Sullivan. The senior executive
- producer for Frontline is David Fanning.
-
- In Defense of Animals is a national animal advocacy organization with over
- 70,000 members, based in Mill Valley, California.
-
- - end -
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Tue, 11 Nov 1997 08:45:43 -0800
- From: Coral Hull <animal_watch@envirolink.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (AU) 12 Hens Rescued From A Victorian Battery Hen Farm
- Message-ID: <34688BB7.3FD0@envirolink.org>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- ANIMAL WATCH AUSTRALIA
- RELEASE, NOV 11, 1997
-
- 12 HENS RESCUED FROM A VICTORIAN BATTERY HEN FARM
-
- Late Friday night the AWA Rescue Team successfully rescued 12 battery
- hens during an initial routine inspection of one of VictoriaÆs largest
- battery hen farms. All hens had been debeaked and were in the initial
- stages of feather loss. One of the hens had developed a cough. The 12
- hens were rescued from three tiny wire cages. They were that squashed
- in, that one of the hens was forced to sleep on top of the backs of the
- other three hens.
-
- On a previous inspection at this particular farm, the rescue team viewed
- the sheds being cleared of thousands of hens. They heard hens crying
- like babies as they were ripped from cages and stacked into plastic
- crates on trucks bound for the slaughterhouse. During this operation 90%
- of hens will suffer broken bones, many having their feet chopped off, as
- they fall through holes in the bottom of stacked plastic crates.
-
- Thanks to the AWA rescue team, these 12 hens will never have to live a
- life in a battery cage. Nor will they have to be ripped from the cage
- followed by cruel slaughter. They have been safely deposited at a hen
- sanctuary somewhere in Victoria. Soon they will feel sun and rain for
- the first time. More action at this particular battery hen farm is
- expected.
-
- For Further Information Contact: AWA Battery Hen Campaign Co-ordinator:
- Patty Mark Tel: 61-(0)3-9531-4367 Fax: 61-(0)3-59531-4257.
-
- Coral Hull (Site Director)
- Animal Watch Australia
- http://www.envirolink.org/orgs/animal_watch/au.html
- Date: Tue, 11 Nov 1997 08:53:09 -0800
- From: Coral Hull <animal_watch@envirolink.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (AU) Women Raid Factory Farm
- Message-ID: <34688D75.1B1@envirolink.org>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- ANIMAL WATCH AUSTRALIA
- MEDIA RELEASE, NOV 11, 1997
-
- WOMEN RAID FACTORY FARM
-
- Hens Rescued and Eggs Correctly Labeled at Montalto Poultry Farm 12
- McDonalds Road Epping Victoria Australia 61-(0)3-9404-1524
-
- The past weekend (Saturday night) yet another daring middle of the night
- raid on one of VictoriaÆs notoriously cruel battery hen farms seven
- women from AWA successfully rescued eight seriously ill battery hens. It
- was the sixth rescue at the Montalto Poultry Farm in Epping and the
- women also managed to correctly label over 1,000 battery eggs with an
- ink stamp reading MADE WITH CRUELTY.
-
- Montalto Poultry, known for its rat and lice infestations, was once
- again exposed in dramatic video footage to be a virtual hell for the
- hens imprisoned in dilapidated and run down old cages. The women were
- forced to leave the sick hens behind because they couldnÆt carry any
- more. Three of the hens had to be humanely euthanased by a vet with
- three others seriously ill. Many were infested with lice. One hen was so
- badly trapped under the food trough it took three people to pry her
- free.
-
- Another tiny hen was so weak she couldnÆt stand and her head hung limp.
- On vet examination she weighed a mere 850 grams (normal weight 2.2
- kilos). Two had enormous tumors on their heads preventing them from
- eating. All these hens were being badly trampled and attacked by other
- hens gone mad in the small cages.
-
- While the women rescued, others stamped over 1,000 eggs with the words
- æMADE WITH CRUELTYÆ which is the correct definition of battery eggs.
-
- The rescue team has been involved on over 100 peaceful and non-violent
- undercover rescues and inspections in Australia during the last three
- years. The team feel forced to go and rescue factory farmed animals who
- are so brutally and callously ignored by the authorities. This was the
- second rescue during the weekend, with a further twelve hens rescued
- from another property the night before.
-
- AWA Battery Hen Campaign Coordinator Patty Mark said today:æYet again we
- have faxed an urgent appeal to the Department of Agriculture and RSPCA
- to get their vets and inspectors to Montalto Poultry to do the job
- entrusted to them. Deputy Premier and Minister of Ag Pat McNamara
- couldnÆt care less. Not only does he fail to enforce the Prevention of
- Cruelty to Animals Act he arrogantly ignores numerous appeals to view
- our evidence and meet with us. We prefer the authorities to get their
- act together. But if they refuse yet again, we will not hesitate to do
- another raid and rescue hens in urgent need of veterinary care.ö
-
- GRAPHIC VIDEO FOOTAGE AVAILABLE
-
- Further Information Contact: Patty Mark 61-(0)3-9531-4367
- Debra Tranter 61-019-181-573
-
-
- Coral Hull (Site Director)
- Animal Watch Australia
- http://www.envirolink.org/orgs/animal_watch/au.html
- Date: Mon, 10 Nov 1997 17:54:55 -0500 (EST)
- From: SMatthes@aol.com
- To: <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Cc: alf@dc.seflin.org, OneCheetah@aol.com, nnetwork@cwnet.com,
- dnation@juno.com, BHGazette@aol.com, lcanimal@ix.netcom.com,
- foa@igc.apc.org, DDAL@aol.com, Ashley_Banks@ml.com
- Subject: Rex Parker Sentenced in Manatee County Dog Beating Case
- Message-ID: <971110175449_-822647623@mrin53.mail.aol.com>
-
- Sarasota In Defense of Animals President Elise Matthes has received a
- telephone report from State's Attorney Jeffrey Quisenberry who stated that
- Rex Parker was sentenced today (11/10/97) by Judge Janette Dunnigan in
- Manatee County, Florida for the beating death of a dog, "Bruiser," owned by
- Debbie Burrows, Parker's neighbor.
-
- Despite hundreds of calls and letters from around the world asking for a
- maximum sentence for the crime, Judge Dunnigan handed down the following
- sentence in exchange for a previous guilty plea:
-
- 20 DAYS in the Manatee County jail served on week-ends.
- 18 months probation
- 100 hours community service recommended to be done at an animal shelter
- Anger Control classes
- Psychological evaluation
- Stay away from defendants
-
- Thanks to all of you who wrote, called and faxed on "Bruiser's" behalf. We
- will continue to speak out for the animals despite this injustice....
-
- Elise Matthes, SDA
-
-
-
- Date: Mon, 10 Nov 1997 18:46:22 -0500 (EST)
- From: SMatthes@aol.com
- To: <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Cc: alf@dc.seflin.org, OneCheetah@aol.com, nnetwork@cwnet.com,
- dnation@juno.com, BHGazette@aol.com, lcanimal@ix.netcom.com,
- foa@igc.apc.org, DDAL@aol.com, Ashley_Banks@ml.com
- Subject: Correction Re: Rex Parker Sentenced in Manatee County Dog Beating Case
- Message-ID: <971110184621_901833698@mrin44.mail.aol.com>
-
- Change "Stay away from defendants" to "Stay away from the Burrows family"
- (Bruiser's owners and Parker's neighbors)
- Date: Mon, 10 Nov 1997 21:18:52 +0000 (GMT)
- From: Pat Fish <pfish@fang.cs.sunyit.edu>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Cc: millderd1@sunyit.edu, howej@sunyit.edu
- Subject: TV/VCR ALERT: Wolves, Zoos, Aquariums, Keiko/Willy (PBS- , N.America)
- Message-ID: <Pine.BSF.3.95.971110201936.6552C-100000@fang.cs.sunyit.edu>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
- TV Worth Watching: PBS and Cable listings (please forward)
-
- PBS will be running several shows of interest to AR/Eco types. Your local
- schedule may vary. Some shows, like Nova, may be re-run on Saturday.
-
- Tuesday, Nov. 11 1997___
-
- NOVA 8PM Wolves
- New observations on their culture and the problems they face.
-
- FRONTLINE 9PM "A Whale of a Business"
- FrontLine looks at how cetaceans are caught and kept in captivity and the
- debate over the moral issues.
-
- STRAIGHT TALK WITH DEREK MCGINTY 10PM
- A full-hour long (!) debate over animals in captivity. Check your local
- listings, or call/e-mail your PBS station to verify this slot.
-
-
- GENERAL TV:
-
- TECHNOPOLITICS (PBS- often on Saturday Afternoons at 4PM)
- Lobby your PBS affiliate to drop this program. Last week, in typical form,
- they "debated" the climate change issue, and attacked the animal rights
- movement. Sponsored by South Carolina PBS, Pfizer, Blackwell Corp., Tenneco,
- and others. Basic right-wing corporate propaganda and "wise use" rhetoric
- that often dispenses any attempts to look "balanced".
-
- ROCKO'S LIFE (Nickelodean 12PM EST, other slots may vary)
- As usual, Rocko is a great role model for kids. In a recent episode, he
- goes fishing, only to wind up the hunted himself. He (and hopefully the
- kids) learn something from it. In other episodes Rocko goes to extremes to
- save insects. Nick also runs "Pete and Pete" which once ran a wonderful
- episode about sabotaging a fishing trip.
-
- SEAQUEST DSV (SCI-FI Channel 8PM and Midnight EST)
- A better vision of the future is presented (if still a bit flawed). Don't
- expect ecotopia in every episode but just about every other episode has a
- good morality play about the environment, justice, respect for other species
- (whether they be reptiles, squid or extra-terrestrials), people with
- disabilities, human rights, genetic engineering, war and peace. "Darwin", a
- dolphin, is a member of the crew. PETA credited SEAQUEST for breaking new
- ground by reducing the usage of live dolphins, by moving the film industry
- towards animatronics and computer graphics (Amiga VideoToaster). Red meat
- is outlawed and people rely more heavily on the sea. Set approximately in
- the year 2022.
- (This series grows on you. Personally, I find I get the most out of an
- episode after about 3 viewings)
-
-
- THANKSGIVING DAY TREATS
- STAR TREK IV: The Voyage Home (AKA the "Save the whales" movie)
- SCI FI Channel-- time to be announced.
- After the Enterprise is destroyed, the crew limps home only to discover
- that the Earth's atmosphere is being ravaged by powerful emissions coming
- from an ancient alien probe (which is trying to communicate with intelligent
- life on Earth). Spock realizes the probe is trying to contact the extinct
- Humpback whale, and makes brilliant commentary on man's arrogant view of his
- position above other creatures. The crew atempts dangerous time-travel to
- bring back a pair of Humpbacks. Wonderful comedy (the Trek-impaired
- may need a Trekker to explain a few jokes) and a great scene where
- the crew messes with whalers. You'll have to see the rest. Turn down the
- lights and bring your Tofu-Turkey into the TV room. This is a good first
- movie for those who "don't get Trek". Trekkers might use this to show their
- S.O. why they love Trek.
- (A recent N. American poll showed that 50% of the public consider themselves
- Star Trek fans-- a powerful movie like this can be a valuable tool. I
- suggest the tape since the TV version is heavily censored for language)
-
-
-
-
- Date: Mon, 10 Nov 1997 20:46:19 -0500 (EST)
- From: Akipplen2@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: TV Advertisement Showing Chickens Going to Slaughter
- Message-ID: <971110204619_2059626676@mrin44.mail.aol.com>
-
- While I was watching Court TV tonight, I saw a Government Employees Insurance
- Company (GEICO) ad which I thought had been pulled several months ago. The
- ad shows a man hanging onto the back of a truck filled with caged chickens on
- their way, I would presume, to the slaughterhouse. I called the toll free
- GEICO number
- 1- 800-515-8250 to protest and hope that you will too. The person who
- answered my call, said that he would report my concerns to his supervisor and
- took my name, address and telephone number. Let's get this ad off television
- for good. Ann
- Date: Mon, 10 Nov 1997 22:53:42 -0500 (EST)
- From: Kristin832@aol.com
- To: ar-admin@envirolink.org, ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Request from subscriber: Feed the Children Fund?
- Message-ID: <971110225341_2004124062@mrin40.mail.aol.com>
-
- I hope this is appropriate to ask on here. I read the guidelines, and I it
- said you could write to request information.
-
- A few days ago, there was a posting concerning the Feed the Children Fund. I
- believe that's what it was called, but I'm not sure. It detailed how they
- sponser deer hunts (indirectly in a way) though Wal Mart? I'm so hazy on
- this. I wanted to save the post and alert the members of another newsgroup
- I'm on, and of course I didn't finish reading it, and OF COURSE AOL seemed to
- have dumped it off my system. Does anyone still have a copy of this?? I'm so
- desperate for it. :-( Could you please please forward it to my email
- address? (email: Kristin832@aol.com)
-
- Many thanks in advance to anyone who can help.
- Christine Kochmann (Kristin832@aol.com)
- Date: Mon, 10 Nov 1997 23:09:35 -0800
- From: Hillary <oceana@ibm.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: NYU STUDENTS TAKE OVER PRESIDENT'S OFFICE
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971110230929.0076bfa0@pop01.ny.us.ibm.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >
- >16 nyu students are currently staging a sit-down in l. jay oliva's
- >office, demanding that the chimps currently on the campus be retired
- >instead of tested on at nyu or given to fred coulston, famous for his
- >toxicology experiments in nm. nyu has recently given 100 chimps and $2
- >cash to coulston, and the students will not let that happen to the
- >remaining chimps on the nyu campus.
- >
- >their demands are:
- >1) retirement of nyu medical center's remaining chimpanzees, many of whom
- >are infected with HIV
- >2) selection by SEAL [nyu's animal righst group -- students for education
- >and animal liberation] of a student to be appointed to the university's
- >institutional animal care and use committee (IACUC).
- >
- >so far, things have gone very smoothly... the students moved in at about
- >9a this morning... there have been dozens of protestors outside, doing
- >support, and more are expected from nj and ct tomorrow to continue the
- >support... several local news stations have picked up on the story, plus
- >cnn and hard copy are also interested.
- >
- >the students are doing fine, they are relaxed and determined to stand
- >their ground. security has already asked them to move, the
- >administration has already offered them a few deals, but the students
- >will not leave until they are sure that the chimps will be safe and out
- >of danger.
- >
- >please call 212.998.2345 and demand that oliva meet the students'
- >demands.
- >
- >for more info, you can call 800.459.3109 or 800.604.5427 for updates. if
- >you leave your nunmber, they may be able to call you back, because they
- >are fixed up in his office and have phone access. please call and leave
- >messages of support for these 16 students.
- >
- >in struggle,
- >kim
- >
- >animal defense league -- new york city/long island
- >po box 33, huntington, ny 11743
- >800.459.3109
- >ADL-NYC-LI@juno.com
- >
- >
- Date: Mon, 10 Nov 1997 23:43:34 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (UK) Probe Finds Flourishing Tiger Trade
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971110234331.006f8114@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from Associated Press http://wire.ap.org/
- ----------------------------------------
- 11/10/1997 19:02 EST
-
- Probe Finds Flourishing Tiger Trade
-
- LONDON (AP) -- Undercover wildlife investigators have found a flourishing
- illegal trade in products from endangered tigers, an environmental group
- said Tuesday.
-
- The London-based Environmental Investigation Agency said tiger products
- were found openly on sale in New York, Amsterdam, Tokyo and Yokohama,
- Japan.
-
- In May, the Worldwide Fund for Nature said the world's estimated 5,000
- tigers, an endangered species, are dying off at the rate of one a day.
- India is home to about 3,000 of the wild cats.
-
- Despite commitments made two years ago, the fund said many countries have
- failed to take action to curb the illegal trade in tiger bones, skin and
- other parts used in traditional Chinese medicines.
-
- ``The trade in tiger products must be stamped out if tigers are to
- survive into the next century,'' said Dave Currey, director and chief
- investigator of the Environmental Investigation Agency. ``Consuming
- countries have a direct responsibility for tiger poaching.''
-
- In Amsterdam, the Environmental Investigation Agency said it found tiger
- bone products on sale in five out of six Chinese pharmacies, in pill,
- liquid and plaster form. Pharmacists identified mainland China as the
- source of the medicines.
-
- In Tokyo and Yokohama, two-thirds of Chinese pharmacies in a telephone
- survey carried tiger products, up from 48 percent in a similar survey two
- years ago, the agency said.
-
- The figure was even higher in New York, where in February an
- investigation revealed 80 percent of Chinese pharmacies sold tiger
- products, it said.
-
- Date: Mon, 10 Nov 1997 23:47:51 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: US Bars Uninspected Australian Meat
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971110234749.0070006c@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from Associated Press http://wire.ap.org/
- ----------------------------------------
- 11/10/1997 17:01 EST
-
- US Bars Uninspected Australian Meat
-
- By CURT ANDERSON
- AP Farm Writer
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) -- Citing safety concerns, the United States has refused
- to allow Australia to sell beef in this country unless each carcass is
- checked by government-paid inspectors.
-
- Earlier this year, Australia petitioned the U.S. government to allow
- imported beef that is examined by inspectors who are paid by the
- meatpacking industry, with periodic oversight by government officials.
-
- During the months since, meat safety became a high-profile issue in the
- United States, including the recall of 25 million pounds of E.
- coli-tainted ground beef. Now, the Agriculture Department has told
- Australia it cannot sell meat here unless the Canberra government does
- all the inspecting.
-
- ``The extreme reduction of federal oversight proposed by Australia ...
- does not, in our view, provide adequate assurance of industry performance
- over time in producing safe and wholesome meat,'' Thomas J. Billy,
- administrator of the USDA's Food Safety and Inspection Service, said in a
- letter to Australian officials that was made public Monday.
-
- There was no immediate comment from Australia, which sells roughly
- 200,000 tons of beef worth more than $1 billion in the United States each
- year. Billy's letter leaves open the possibility of future negotiations.
-
- In the past, Australian officials have insisted that shifting more
- responsibility to industry workers will increase food safety. Meat sold
- in Australia is already inspected this way.
-
- Like the United States, Australia's meatpacking industry is implementing
- new scientific quality control procedures aimed at reducing harmful
- microbes such as E. coli and salmonella.
-
- But in the United States, USDA inspectors will continue to physically
- check each meat and poultry carcass as it moves down the production line.
- Billy said the United States will not accept meat imports unless they
- undergo an identical level of scrutiny.
-
- Caroline Smith DeWaal, director of food safety at the Center for Science
- in the Public Interest, said Australia's main reason for seeking the
- change is to save money on inspectors.
-
- ``This is no time to let foreign governments use American consumers as
- guinea pigs for their own experiments with meat safety,'' DeWaal said.
-
- Date: Mon, 10 Nov 1997 23:54:24 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Early Blizzard Devastates Cattle
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971110235421.006da838@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- (the last paragraph gives an interesting "insight")
- from Associated Press http://wire.ap.org/
- ----------------------------------------
- 11/10/1997 22:21 EST
-
- Early Blizzard Devastates Cattle
-
- By AARON J. LOPEZ
- Associated Press Writer
-
- DENVER (AP) -- In the two weeks following one of the worst blizzards in
- Colorado history, Don Bain and his family worked from dawn to dusk
- guiding hundreds of hungry and confused cattle back to the herd.
-
- With drifts as high as 15 feet, the Bains scoured a 65-mile stretch of
- snow-covered farmland, delivering hay bales to the scattered cattle and
- rounding up disoriented strays.
-
- In all, the Bains lost 80 cattle to the Oct. 24-26 storm that dropped
- more than 3 feet of snow on Colorado's eastern plains, killing at least
- 24,000 steer, cows and calves.
-
- ``When you find the cattle, they're just sitting there, and they actually
- look peaceful,'' Bain said from his ranch in Hugo. ``But they can't move
- because they're in snow up to their head.''
-
- Todd Inglee of the Colorado Cattlemen's Association said the death toll
- likely will top 30,000 by the time all the carcasses are counted.
-
- Cattle and calf sales account for about $2.6 billion in annual sales for
- Colorado ranchers. The blizzard wiped out less than 1 percent of the
- state's cattle population, but the individual losses were devastating.
-
- ``We hear there's people up northeast that lost every one they had,''
- said Curtis Tempel, a Wiley rancher who lost 30 of his 140 cattle.
-
- Bain said he lost about $50,000 worth of cattle, many of which drowned by
- breathing the rapidly falling snow into their lungs. Others suffocated
- after walking into snow banks.
-
- ``They suck so much snow into their lungs, it's just like going
- underwater,'' Bain said.
-
- Thousands of cattle carcasses remain uncollected, and the Colorado
- Department of Transportation is offering equipment and workers to help
- bury the animals once counties dig enough pits.
-
- The process is cumbersome because health officials have to make sure the
- carcasses do not taint surrounding water supplies. Cleanup costs are
- estimated from $600,000 to $1 million.
-
- The effect on beef prices is not expected to be severe.
-
- ``For the individual producer who has the death loss, it can really
- impact him, but beef prices are running off of national supply and
- demand, so you're really not going to have any effect,'' said Colorado
- Beef Council spokeswoman Heather Buckmaster.
-
-
-
- </pre>
-
- <!-- END OF PAGE CONTENT -->
-
-
-
- <!-- END OF PAGE CONTENT -->
-
- </TD>
-
-
- <TD width=50 align=center>
-
- </TD>
- </TR>
-
- <!-- THE BOTTOM TOOLBAR -->
-
- <TR>
-
- <TD colspan=3 align=center fontsize=2>
- <a href="../SUB~1.HTM" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/sub.html">ARRS Tools</a> |
- <a href="../NEWSPA~1.HTM" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/newspage.html">News</a> |
- <a href="../ORGS~1.HTM" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/Orgs.html">Orgs</a> |
- <a href="../SEARCH~1.HTM" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/search.html">Search</a> |
- <a href="../SUPPOR~1.HTM" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/Support.html">Support</a> |
- <a href="../ABOUT/INDEX.HTM" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/about">About the ARRS</a> |
- <a href="mailto:arrs@envirolink.org">Contact ARRS</a>
- </TD>
- </TR>
-
-
- <!-- END OF MAIN -->
-
- </TABLE></center>
-
-
-
-
- <!-- THE UNDERWRITERS -->
-
- <table border=0 width=100%>
- <tr><td>
-
- <center> <hr width=285>
- <Font Size=1>THIS SITE UNDERWRITTEN IN PART BY:</FONT>
- <BR>
-
-
- <a href="../../../tppmsgs/msgs9.htm#981" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/cgi-bin/show_support.pl?id=t889237342&sec=sbn_bottom&url=http%3a//www.go-organic.com/" target=_top><img src="../../SUPPORT/BANNERS/CROSS-~1/GO-ORG~1.GIF" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/support/banners/cross-promotion/go-organic.gif" border=0 alt="Go Organic"></a>
-
-
- <hr width=285>
-
- <br><font size=2>
- <b>The views and opinions expressed within this page are not
- necessarily those of the <br>EnviroLink Network nor the Underwriters. The views
- are those of the authors of the work.</b></font>
- </center>
- </td></tr>
-
- </table>
-
- </BODY>
-
- </HTML>
-
-
-
-
- </BODY>
-
-
-
- </HTML>
-
-