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-
-
- >The Straits Times
- 25 Nov 97
-
- Egypt's religious leaders lock horns over
- bullfights
-
-
- CAIRO -- The first bullfights due to be held in Egypt in almost 50
- years have provoked a new round of bitter debate between Egypt's top
- Muslim religious leaders, according to the pro-government press.
-
- The debate is over whether the bullfights, due to start on Thursday,
- should take place.
-
- It pits the most senior authority of Sunni Islam, Sheikh Mohammad
- Sayyed Tantawi of Al-Azhar, against Egypt's most senior religious
- official, Mufti Sheikh Nasr Farid Wassel.
- Sheikh Wassel has issued a fatwa (decree) that bullfights are haram
- (forbidden) and that "Islam prohibits anyone from attending such events".
-
- "Encouraging them is even haram ," he added.
-
- Sheikh Tantawi is the head of Al-Azhar, a religious institution where
- almost all of the world's muftis are trained.
-
- He is not opposed to corridas and his word carries more weight that any
- fatwa issued by the mufti .
-
- A bullfight is known in Spanish as corrida de toros .
-
- "There are no objections" to organising bullfights, Sheikh Tantawi told the
- Cairo
- weeklies Rose al-Yussef and Al Arabi.
-
- He also suggested that the meat of the dead bulls be distributed to
- patients in
- government hospitals and those run by Al Azhar "as long as the animal
- is killed in line with Syariah" (Islamic law).
-
- The evening daily Al Messa quoted him as saying on Sunday: "If the bull
- survives the death blow and is then slaughtered according to Islamic
- ritual, its meat can be eaten."
-
- The mufti has charged that "eating the meat from bulls killed during
- corridas is contrary to Islam" because the blood of the animals
- coagulates during the fight and cannot be drained properly in line with
- Islam.
- Eight Spanish and Portuguese matadors, horsemen and banderilleros are
- scheduled to participate in 12 corridas at the Shams country club in the
- residential Heliopolis suburb of northern Cairo.
-
- But during the week-long event -- the first since 1954 -- bulls are not
- to be killed, the organisers have said. -- AFP.
-
-
- Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 16:09:32 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (CL) 60-cm-long "mutant" rats
- Message-ID: <199711250809.QAA25533@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >The Straits Times
- 25 Nov 97
-
- MUTANT RATS: A Chilean ecological group has sounded an alarm about
- 60-cm-long "mutant" rats which have attacked barnyard animals in a suburb of
- Santiago.
-
- Mr Mauricio Barraza, president of the Ecological Council of Maipu, said
- he believed the rodents had grown so large because they fed on the
- droppings of hormone-fattened poultry. -- Reuters.
-
- Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 03:55:04 -0500 (EST)
- From: NOVENAANN@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: EU fur ban seen worsening row with U.S. over Cuba
- Message-ID: <971125035501_477123904@mrin83.mail.aol.com>
-
- EU fur ban seen worsening row with U.S. over Cuba
- 06:25 p.m Nov 24, 1997 Eastern
- By Gillian Handyside
-
- BRUSSELS, Nov 24 (Reuters) - An impending European Union ban on American
- fur imports could spark off a trade war and deepen a row over U.S. laws
- hitting foreign companies investing in Cuba, Iran or Libya, an EU
- official said on Monday.
-
- European trade commissioner Sir Leon Brittan told EU foreign ministers
- on Monday that EU-U.S. talks had failed to produce agreement on
- acceptable ways of trapping fur-bearing animals. In the absence of a
- deal, the ban will automatically come into force on December 1.
-
- Foreign Minister Jacques Poos of current EU president Luxembourg said
- the ministers had agreed that the latest U.S. offer was not sufficient,
- but he added that Brittan would seek to convince Washington to improve
- it.
-
- ``If he were unable to do so...the ban would enter into force as of
- December 1,'' Poos told reporters after the meeting.
-
- Brittan's spokesman Nigel Gardner earlier said there was ``no evidence
- of the faintest chance of a new offer from the United States.''
-
- Gardner said Washington was not prepared to accept the EU's demand for
- an end to the use of steel-jawed leghold traps to ensnare species like
- mink, otters and wolves.
-
- The Americans wanted first to conduct tests to see whether the traps
- were as cruel as the EU said they were, he said.
-
- Critics of the traps say they do not kill the animals outright but often
- break their legs and imprison them until they drown, starve or bleed to
- death.
-
- In a separate trans-Atlantic trade dispute, talks between Brittan and
- U.S. State Department officials last Friday produced progress but no
- breakthrough over the U.S. anti-Castro Helms-Burton law and its D'Amato
- law on Iran and Libya.
-
- The 15-member EU bloc is expected to use a transatlantic summit in
- Washington on December 5 to renew its threat to challenge the United
- States at the World Trade Organisation (WTO) if it tries to punish EU
- firms investing in the three countries, who Washington accuses of
- sponsoring terrorism.
-
- But U.S. ire at the impending fur import ban could make it even harder
- to resolve the complex Helms-Burton/D'Amato wrangle, the EU official
- said.
-
- The EU is fiercely opposed to the sanctions laws, saying Washington has
- no right to penalise firms outside its borders.
-
- But America might use the example of the fur ban to accuse the Europeans
- of also resorting to extra-territorial legislation when it suited them,
- the EU official explained.
-
- Gardner denied the fur ban was extra-territorial though he conceded it
- could complicate the Cuba row.
-
- ``We're not using an automatic ban on these leghold traps as a weapon
- for (implementing) foreign policy. We're using it because we feel these
- things are cruel and their use should be phased out,'' he said.
-
- Poos took a similar line, saying: ``I don't think you can make any
- comparisons here with Helms-Burton or D'Amato legislation whereby
- foreign companies are threatened with sanctions if they violate an
- embargo which was declared unilaterally by the United States.''
-
- The potential setback comes at a time when Washington and Brussels are
- seeing signs of progress, albeit small, in their efforts to avert a WTO
- battle over Cuba, Iran and Libya.
- Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 13:00:18 GMT
- From: Chris Wright <chrisw@wmalvern.demon.co.uk>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (UK) Bloody revenge for stag hunt ban
- Message-ID: <3496cb79.16884146@post.demon.co.uk>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- Bloody revenge for stag hunt ban
- [From The Independent, Nov 25th]
-
- At least half the red deer stags in
- the Quantock Hills have been
- slaughtered in a savage reaction to
- the ban on hunting introduced by the
- National Trust and the Forestry
- Commission. Nicholas Schoon,
- Environment Correspondent, reveals a
- bloody propaganda exercise.
-
- The Quantock Staghounds said that if
- they were banned from carrying out
- their sport, the wild red deer on the
- Somerset hills would be wiped out by
- poachers and farmers fed up with
- their crops being eaten.
-
- Opponents of hunting dismissed this
- as scaremongering - but it seems the
- hunt was right. At least 36 stags
- have been shot and sold to game
- dealers in the past few weeks, out of
- the 76 counted last month. Their
- heads have been piled together and
- photographed. They have been killed
- by farmers who no longer see any
- reason not to shoot them now that
- hunting is banned on trust land. One,
- an occasional hunt follower, told the
- Independent: "I thought sod the
- National Trust, I'm going to shoot
- anything that comes into my fields.
- They didn't consult us about their
- ban." He said more than 36 had been
- killed, and he had made 10,000 by
- selling their venison.
-
- Since the trust intended shooting
- deer on its land to control numbers,
- it would make money from selling
- their carcasses. "Why shouldn't we?
- It's our fields that feed them when
- they come off the hills."
-
- Nigel Hester, the trust's local deer
- expert and custodian, said: "It's
- very sad, but its certainly not going
- to change public opinion or make the
- trust's council reconsider its
- decision on hunting. We can't be held
- responsible for people slaughtering
- the deer."
-
- The herd eats cereals and young grass
- but farmers had been willing to
- tolerate losses. Many are hunt
- followers, and also felt the hunt
- limited crop damage by killing deer
- and keeping them on the move.
-
- Last April the trust's council
- decided to ban staghunting on its
- 1,300 acres in the Quantocks after a
- report showed deer suffered extreme
- exhaustion, pain and damage in the
- chase. It reaffirmed its decision
- last month after a legal challenge
- was defeated.
-
- The Forestry Commission has issued no
- new licences for hunting on its land
- in the Quantocks. The hunt now has
- far less freedom to roam; it goes out
- less often and kills fewer deer.
- There is no law stopping farmers
- shooting deer on their land.
- Carcasses are usually sold to a
- licensed dealer for venison, for up
- to 300.
-
- The slaughter, motivated by a
- combination of anger, greed and the
- desire to make a point, has taken
- place over the past six weeks.
-
- It came to light four days before the
- crucial second reading of MP Michael
- Foster's Bill to ban hunting with
- dogs. If it carries on at this rate,
- the herd could be in danger of
- extinction within a few months.
- -----
-
- Chris Wright
- Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 10:14:46 -0500
- From: Animal Rights Resource Site <arrs@envirolink.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: FFF97 Updated
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971125101443.007161e8@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- The Fur Free Friday 97 Events Calendar on ARRS has been updated. Events
- are in the US and Canada (so far). 41 events are listed (some are actually
- multiple events).
-
- Go to:
- http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/calendar/fff97.html
-
- allen
-
- Animal Rights Resource Site (ARRS) http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/index.html
- Fur Free Friday 97: http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/calendar/fff97.html
- What's New: http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/whatsNew/recent.html
- Calendar: http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/calendar/index.html
- AR-Jobline: http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/ar-jobline/
- Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 08:31:23 -0800
- From: "Bob Schlesinger" <bob@arkonline.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Info Request: Re: EU fur import ban
- Message-ID: <199711250831230240.001A5C8A@pcez.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- Does anyone have information about specifically which officials of the US government are
- opposing the EU attempts to ban fur imports because leghold traps are legal here? Please either
- post additional information about this story, or reply via private email and I will write up a piece
- about it to urge individuals to contact these officials.
- Thank you.
- -Bob Schlesinger
-
- Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 10:34:47 -0600
- From: paulbog@jefnet.com (Rick Bogle)
- To: <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Fw: Primate Freedom
- Message-ID: <19971125105041240.AAA180@paulbog.jefnet.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
-
-
- ----------
- > From: Craig Rosebraugh <libcoll@aracnet.com>
- > To: paulbog@jefnet.com
- > Subject:
- > Date: Monday, November 24, 1997 12:04 PM
- >
- > To: paul@jef.net.com
- > From: libcoll@aracnet.com (Craig Rosebraugh)
- > Subject: PRIMATE CENTER TOUR CONTINUES!!!!!!
- >
- > Rick,
- >
- > Please forward this message to everyone and all lists you are on
- > and can think of. Thanks and I will talk with you soon.
- >
- > Craig
- >
- >
- >
- > >To: rlee@lists.desktop.org
- > >From: libcoll@aracnet.com (Craig Rosebraugh)
- > >Subject: PRIMATE CENTER TOUR CONTINUES!!!!!!
- > >Cc:
- > >Bcc:
- > >X-Attachments:
- > >
- > >The National Protest Tour of the seven regional primate centers is
- heading
- > >to Atlanta on December 6th to begin vigils/protests/and other events
- > >againt the Yerkes Regional Primate Research Center. This is the seventh
- > >stop on the seven month tour designed to increase public awareness about
- > >the attrocities committed against non-human primates in biomedical and
- > >scientific research.
- > >
- > >NOW MORE THAN EVER WE NEED YOUR INVOLVEMENT!!!!
- > >
- > >If there is anyway possible for you to make it to Atlanta on December 6
- > >please attend the events. If not, please take part in a demonstration
- at
- > >one of the other six regional primate research centers.
- > >
- > >DEMONSTRATIONS WILL OCCUR AT ALL SEVEN REGIONAL PRIMATE
- RESEARCH CENTERS
- > >ON DECEMBER 6TH. YOUR ENERGY, DEDICATION AND PARTICIPATION IS
- NEEDED!!!
- > >
- > >
- > >To become involved, to help organize events in your local area, or for
- > >more information, please contact:
- > >
- > >Liberation Collective
- > >P.O. Box 9055
- > >Portland, OR 97207
- > >Tel:(503)230-9990
- > >Fax:(503)460-9017
- > >libcoll@aracnet.com
- > >
- >
- Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 09:31:27 -0800 (PST)
- From: Michael Markarian <mmarkarian@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: "Wanderings" Column on Pigeon Shoots
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19971125151934.2cc787e4@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- [This is a syndicated column published in several Pennsylvania newspapers.]
-
- >WANDERINGS/ walt brasch
- >
- >weeks of November 23-29, November 30-December 6, 1997
- >
- > Legislative Manipulation Blocks Needed Legislation
- >
- > by Walt Brasch
- > Five weeks after an animal rights activist entered jail and
- >began a fast to continue her protest against the Hegins pigeon
- >shoot, the leadership of the Pennsylvania House of
- >Representatives claimed they still didn't know about the current
- >bill to ban pigeon shoots as acts of cruelty.
- > Dawn M. Ratcliffe, 24, convicted of disorderly conduct for
- >her protest on Labor Day 1996, began a 45-day prison term in
- >Schuylkill County prison, Oct. 3. At the time, she declared she
- >wouldn't end the fast until a bill to ban the shoot submitted by
- >Rep. Sara Steelman (D-Indiana) was brought out of committee and
- >onto the House floor for a vote. Her protest brought hundreds of
- >phone calls and letters of support to the leaders of the House.
- >The Fund for Animals gave Gov. Tom Ridge a petition with
- >signatures of more than 10,000 Pennsylvanians opposed to pigeon
- >shoots.
- > "We were flooded [by calls and letters]," says a staff
- >member of the office of House Speaker Matt Ryan (R-Delaware
- >County). "I'm not aware of it," said Ryan. "I'll wait until I see
- >it [the bill] before I make a decision." However, he may already
- >have made a decision. Attorney I. B. Sinclair, a former resident
- >of Ryan's district, says Ryan "flaps his arms like a pigeon
- >whenever he sees me." Heidi Prescott, national director for the
- >Fund for Animals, says several House members "flap their arms,"
- >make "cooing sounds," and pretend to be shooting guns when they
- >see her in the capitol.
- > Rep. John Perzel (R-Philadelphia), House majority leader,
- >also says he wasn't aware of the current bill. "There's [about]
- >3,000 bills [a session] that are proposed," said Perzel. "I can't
- >know every one of them." However, Steelman's bill carried 46 co-
- >sponsors. "It's a large number," admitted Perzel who says he
- >would vote against the bill--if it were to get to the House floor
- >Rep. Lita I. Cohen (R-Montgomery Co.), a member of the Judiciary
- >Committee, and former sponsor of similar legislation, says the
- >bill is dead in committee, and won't be brought up for even a
- >committee vote. Matt Ryan claims he has "no power" to urge the
- >committee to bring the bill to the full House. This, of course,
- >if true, would make Ryan the most ineffective speaker not only in
- >Pennsylvania history, but the least effective in all the states.
- > In 1994, the House, under Democratic leadership, voted 99-93
- >to ban the pigeon shoot, but fell three votes short of the
- >majority. Since then, opposition to pigeon shoots has increased,
- >but the Republican leadership, supported by several like-minded
- >Democrats, have refused to allow bills onto the floor for a fair
- >vote. One of Perzel's senior staff told the Associated Press that
- >Perzel would not allow a vote by the full House. It is this
- >refusal that caused Dawn Ratcliffe to begin her hunger strike.
- >Several state representatives acknowledge they have been subject
- >to "arm twisting" to vote against such legislation should it ever
- >be presented for a fair vote.
- > Perzel, who has supported bills opposing animal cruelty,
- >says he fishes "once in awhile," but doesn't hunt or own guns.
- >But, he points out, "the guy that represents the area [Rep. Bob
- >Allen] is a personal friend of mine, and the people of
- >Philadelphia are not fond of pigeons." Ironically, Perzel had
- >written a constituent in 1993 that the Hegins pigeon shoot "sends
- >the wrong message to the nonhunting public . . . and I do feel
- >that it is sometimes hard to justify this practice."
- > Although only 102 votes are necessary for passage, the
- >members could vote the bill onto the House floor for full debate
- >by a 112-vote "super majority." It is unlikely even that vote
- >will occur.
- > In the Senate's Fish and Game Committee, Ed Helfrick (R-Mt.
- >Carmel) whose district is adjacent to that which includes Hegins,
- >has choked a similar bill submitted by Sen. Roy Afflerbach (R-
- >Allentown) that calls for a summary fine for transporting pigeons
- >to shoots. Todd Roup, Helfrick's executive director, says
- >Helfrick will not allow even a discussion of the bill because an
- >"informal poll" indicates "it doesn't enjoy the support of a
- >majority of the [committee] members."
- > Even if the House and Senate pass the bill this session,
- >Gov. Tom Ridge will probably veto it. Tim Reese, the Governor's
- >press secretary, claims the Governor has "not said what his views
- >would be if the General Assembly sends him a bill." However, the
- >Republican Governor, up for re-election, will probably veto a
- >bill that is opposed by his leadership. Like other Republican
- >leaders, Ridge sidesteps the issue of cruelty to animals by
- >believing the bill is "a local issue," and should be decided by
- >the residents of Hegins. How does the Governor know it's a local
- >issue? "Just because it is," says Reese.
- > "Nonsense," says Heidi Prescott who points out that all
- >animal issues are addressed by statewide laws, with the animal
- >cruelty statute part of the Crimes Code. "Dogfighting and
- >cockfighting are illegal statewide," says Prescott, "Why should
- >pigeon shoots be any different?" State Police and humane
- >societies, says Prescott, "should not have to enforce a confusing
- >patchwork of local ordinances. What would happen if cockfighting
- >was illegal in some townships, but legal in others?"
- > At Hegins, as at other shoots, persons with shotguns stand
- >on a line, waiting for pigeons that have been poorly fed and
- >cooped up for several weeks, to fly from traps about 20 yards
- >away from the shooting line. At Hegins, only 15 percent of the
- >birds are killed immediately by shotgun blasts; most of the rest
- >are wounded, then killed by pre-teen and teenage "trappers" who
- >stomp on the birds, wring their necks, or throw them into large
- >barrels to suffocate. Dozens of birds are left on the ground to
- >die.
- > There are at least eight shoots in the Commonwealth, with
- >Hegins being the largest. The Federated Humane Societies of
- >Pennsylvania oppose pigeon shoots. Forty-six states already
- >declare pigeon shoots to be cruelty to animals. The International
- >Olympic Committee has declared pigeon shooting is not a sport
- >because of its cruelty. It's time for Pennsylvanians to tell our
- >legislators that they do not have the right to forbid discussion
- >or fair votes in order to protect their own "pet projects."
- >
- >
- > {Italic} Walt Brasch, an award-winning former newspaper
- >reporter and editor, is author of 10 books, the latest of which
- >is "Sex and the Single Beer Can," a compilation of many of his
- >media-related columns. {end italic}
- > -30-
-
- Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 13:08:31 -0500 (EST)
- From: MINKLIB@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: EU Letter Writing Info
- Message-ID: <971125130831_163659169@mrin58.mail.aol.com>
-
- << Hi:
- > Do you have any information about who in the US government is opposing the
- ban >on leg hold traps that the EU is supporting?
- >If so, please respond (and also post at AR-NEWS) >>
-
- We received the following email. Assuming there are others on ar-news with
- the same question I am answering this here.
-
- Right now, the US Trade Representative is the main player that is opposing
- the EU ban on US wild caught furs. You can contact her at:
-
- Ambassador Charlene Barshefsky
- US Trade Representative
- 600 17th St. NW
- Washington, DC 20506
-
- Also, please contact your own representative at
- The Honorable ____________
- US House of Representatives
- Washington, DC 20515
-
- It is likely that the EU will implement the ban on Monday. Our message to
- the trade office is that they should not oppose the ban before the World
- Trade Organization.
-
- We need our congressional reps to apply pressure to the trade office, urging
- them to leave the EU alone. Please keep track of how your rep feels. We
- need to remind them how they reacted towards the fur issue come election
- time.
-
- Coalition to Abolish the Fur Trade
- PO Box 822411
- Dallas, TX 75382
- MINKLIB@aol.com
- Date: Tue, 25 Nov 97 11:38:02 -0800
- From: In Defense of Animals <ida@idausa.org>
- To: <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: FFF- San Francisco press release
- Message-ID: <199711251936.LAA16991@proxy4.ba.best.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
-
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEContact:
- San Francisco, Union Square
- Dr. Elliot Katz (415) 388-9641 ext.25
- San Jose, Valley Fair Shopping Center
- Joy Menninger (408) 927-9281
-
- Fur Protesters to Take Over Union Square
-
- San Francisco...Sounds of a fox in distress will fill Union Square from 11:30 a.m. - 2:30 p.m. on
- Friday, November 28, also known as Fur-Free Friday. Members of In Defense of Animals (IDA)
- and other groups in the San Francisco area will converge on the shoppers in Union Square to
- educate them on the horrors of the fur industry. Protesters will march around union square
- pushing a 5╣ x 5╣ cage holding an activist dressed in a fox costume while playing a tape of a fox in
- distress. Huge posters of animals caught in traps and skinned for their fur will be on exhibit.
- Neiman Marcus, Saks Fifth Avenue and Macy╣s are the major department stores in Union Square
- that sell fur garments.
-
- │Each year, millions of fur-bearing animals are trapped, poisoned, beaten, drowned, gassed,
- strangled and electrocuted to produce pelts for fur products, said Dr. Elliot Katz, DVM, IDA
- president. │Consumers have a right to know how these animals are being killed just to make a
- coat or trim on a hat or glove.▓
-
- Activists holding signs and distributing anti-fur literature will also be at Valley Fair Shopping
- Center on Stevens Creek Blvd. between Highway 880/17 and Winchester Blvd. from 11a.m. -
- 1p.m in San Jose.
-
- The Friday following Thanksgiving, the busiest shopping day of the year, is used by the animal
- protection movement to educate the public about the suffering of fur-bearing animals.
-
- Nationwide Fur-Free Friday activities will include demonstrations, street theater, non-violent civil
- disobedience, distribution of literature and a call to boycott those department stores that still sell
- fur garments.
-
- Activists will also be on hand to collect signatures for the ballot initiative to ban cruel and
- indiscriminate traps and poisons in California. This measure would eliminate the steel-jawed
- leghold trap from California.
-
- IDA is a national, non-profit organization, with more than 70,000 members, dedicated to ending
- the abuse and exploitation of animals by defending their rights, welfare and habitat.
-
- Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 11:56:44 -0800 (PST)
- From: Michael Markarian <mmarkarian@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, en.alerts@conf.igc.apc.org
- Subject: Conrail Spills Oil, Shoots Beavers
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19971125174508.4d3f1b7c@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- ACTION ALERT
-
- CONRAIL SPILLS OIL, SHOOTS BEAVERS
-
- A Conrail train derailed on November 3 near West Danby, NY, spilling 5,000
- gallons of oil into the Cayuga Lake inlet. The resulting massive fish kill
- also threatens great blue herons and otters. Shortly after the spill, a
- neighbor saw a Conrail employee shooting two beavers -- one was reportedly
- shot five times and took more than fifteen minutes to die.
-
- A Conrail spokesperson denied the shooting until Syracuse TV Channel 9 aired
- the neighbor's video. Conrail blames beaverwork for causing the accident,
- but since a wetland runs alongside the tracks, beaver activity should have
- been expected. Please ask Conrail to do the right thing and install beaver
- bafflers at all such track sites next to streams to prevent future
- environmental devastation.
-
- Write to:
-
- James Newton, President
- Conrail Direct
- 1 Plymouth Meeting
- Plymouth Meeting, PA 19462
-
- Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 17:01:41 -0500 (EST)
- From: Turtleresq@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: We need footage and leads
- Message-ID: <971125170140_30684692@mrin46.mail.aol.com>
-
- Hi everyone: we are working in pre-production on a show called "Humane
- Patrol" which seeks to expose the good and the bad done to animals of all
- kinds. We need footage, tips and articles about events to investigate.
- Examples would be undercover footage of cock fights, footage witnessing an
- animal rescue, artciles from your local newspapers about an exciting animal
- event or rescue or a bad thing that was fixed by the police or animal reg.
- basically a lot fo tips just like the things we read here on AR.
- Fortunately in addition to our turtle rescue, we have access to a production
- company and we are very excited at the ability to make this kind of a show
- happen for the good of all animals. If you'd like to mail things send me an
- e-mail and I'll give you an address. Thanks - this will be great for the
- animals. Susan Tellem
- Date: Wed, 26 Nov 1997 07:47:18 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) First university-associated Veg nutrition newsletter
- Message-ID: <199711252347.HAA04050@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- Re-posted from Sci-Veg with permission from Virginia Messina.
- The invitation applies to AR-News subscribers as well.
- - Vadivu
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- I wanted to invite sci-veg subscribers to write for a free sample issue of a
- brand new newsletter devoted to vegetarian nutrition issues. This is
- *Vegetarian Nutrition and Health Letter* from Loma Linda University. It is
- the first university-associated newsletter devoted to vegetarian nutrition.
-
- For those who are not familiar with Loma Linda University, it is a
- Seventh-day Adventist school in southern CA. This year, LLU is celebrating
- the 75th anniversary of their dietetics program. The program is unique
- because it promotes knowledge about vegetarianism and so has been producing
- information about vegetarian diets for 75 years.
-
- The newsletter is produced by the LLU School of Public Health and it was
- developed to be similar to the many popular newsletters on the market--Tufts
- Nutrition Letter, Berkeley Wellness Letter, Harvard Health Letter,
- etc--except that it is devoted exclusively to vegetarianism. Every issue
- will include a feature article written by a leading nutrition expert
- (usually a researcher), short updates on the medical literature, questions
- and answers from readers, practical information on menu planning, food prep,
- resources and news.
-
- The contents of the first issue include:
-
- Feature article: "Diet and Cancer" written by Dr. John Weisberger of the
- American Health Foundation
- Feature sidebar: How vegetarian diets protect against cancer
- Research news on tomatoes and lycopene; soy and cholesterol, fat and breast
- cancer and more.
- The Practical Vegetarian: Cooking with TVP
- Ask the Experts: How to cook beans to reduce flatulence. How to increase
- calcium intake in vegan children.
- New vegetarian products: new non-dairy milks, soybutter
- Announcements of upcoming vegetarian conferences
- Internet resources for vegetarians
-
- Editor in chief is Dr. Patricia Johnston of LLU; I'm a senior editor and so
- is my husband Mark Messina. The newsletter will come out 10 times per year,
- is 8 pages and costs $24.00 in the US, $34.00 USD in Canada and $44.00 USD
- elsewhere.
-
- Sci-veg subscribers can get a free sample issue by writing, emailing or
- calling the subscription offices at:
-
- Vegetarian Nutrition and Health Letter
- Subscriber Services
- 1707 Nichol Hall
- School of Public Health
- Loma Linda University
- Loma Linda, CA 92350
-
- 888-558-8703
- email: vegletter@sph.llu.edu
-
- Please be certain to mention that you are a sci-veg subscriber.
-
- Ginny
-
-
- Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 22:32:06 -0500
- From: allen schubert <ar-admin@envirolink.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: FUR FREE FRIDAY - Jacksonville, FL
- Message-ID: <3.0.1.32.19971125223206.006b17cc@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- posted for Dawn <dawnmarie@rocketmail.com>
- -----------------------------------------------
- Who: YOU!
-
- What: FUR FREE FRIDAY
-
- Where: Jacksonville, Florida at the Avenues Mall in front of Gayfers
- on the Public easement by the intersection of Phillips Hwy and
- Southside Blvd.
-
- When: Friday, Nov. 29th, Noon - 2:00pm (please arrive early!)
-
- Why: Fur coats are worn by beautiful animals and ugly people.
-
- For more information, please call (904) 967-8571 or you can email Dawn
- at: DawnMarie@rocketmail.com
-
- ===
- Wearing fur is UnFURgivable!
- ~Dawn Flowers
- DawnMarie@rocketmail.com
-
-
-
-
-
-
- __________________________________________________________________
- Sent by Yahoo! Mail. Get your free e-mail at http://mail.yahoo.com
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 20:18:33
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Bill aims to outlaw pig tail-docking
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971125201833.36271f18@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Wednesday, 26th, November,1997
-
- Bill aims to outlaw pig tail-docking
- By David Brown, Agriculture Editor
-
- A BILL to stop "the medieval torture" of docking piglets' tails will be
- introduced in the Commons today.
-
- Although routine tail-docking was banned in 1994, it is still permitted to
- stop pigs biting each others' tails and is carried out on most of Britain's
- 13 million pigs. Animal welfare campaigners have accused farmers of
- flouting the law and claim that the practice - in which about half of the
- piglet's tail is lopped off with pliers or a hot docking iron - is "cruel and
- painful". They blame tail-biting on overcrowded "factory farm" conditions.
-
- The 10-minute rule Bill is being introduced by the Labour MP, Chris Mullin.
- He said last night: "Of all the medieval tortures which factory farmers
- inflict on their animals, tail-docking is one of the cruellest."
-
- But Grenville Welsh, chief executive of the British Pig Association, said
- that piglets operated on while suckling did not even stop feeding. "So at
- worst, the pain must be fleeting," he said. "The agony suffered from
- tail-biting is far worse and this affects free-range pigs as well."
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- SAY NO TO APEC
- Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 20:15:36
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Shooting of stags 'could wipe out Quantock herd'
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971125201536.362722a8@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Wednesday, 26th, November,1997
-
- Shooting of stags 'could wipe out Quantock herd'
- By Sean O'Neill
-
- AN unofficial cull of stags in the wake of a ban on hunting could threaten
- the future of the Quantock Hills deer herd, it was claimed yesterday.
-
- Up to 80 stags have been shot in so-called "spite killings", organised by
- supporters of hunting.
-
- One group photographed a pile of 50 stags' heads as a protest in the week
- when Parliament will debate a private member's Bill to ban hunting.
-
- Official hunt organisations have distanced themselves from the cull, which
- may have accounted for half the stags in the herd, but said they feared it
- was an inevitable consequence of banning hunting.
-
- Farmers who have been shooting the animals said that they would no longer
- feed deer nor would they tolerate crop damage caused by the herd. Feelings
- have been running high in the Quantocks since the National Trust banned
- deer hunting on 1,300 acres in April. Effective
- hunting ceased during the summer when licences to hunt on 2,300 acres of
- Forestry Commission land were suspended.
-
- The Quantock Stag Hounds still meet but if the commission decides to impose
- a complete ban the hunt will have to disband. The recent killings have been
- fuelled by farmers' anger at the hunting ban, a need to prevent crop damage
- and the opportunity to make money by selling carcasses and antlers.
-
- Some supporters of hunting are concerned that the photograph of the stags'
- heads will damage rather than promote their cause. Opponents of the hunt
- described it as crude propaganda and questioned its authenticity. One
- Quantocks landowner who does not allow hunting on his land said: "It is a
- disgraceful picture, rigged for propaganda purposes. The deer are not being
- decimated like that."
-
- But one informed source said there was growing evidence that heavy culling
- had been taking place and that the stag population had been suddenly and
- significantly reduced.
-
- "The farmers have fed the deer in the past, and the pro-hunting farmers fed
- them because they could then be hunted," he said. "But if the hunt is gone
- the farmers will feed fewer deer and they will not tolerate deer wandering
- on to their land. They can turn a cost into an asset by shooting the deer
- and selling the carcass for meat.
-
- "There are powerful emotions at work. People have been talking of spite
- killings and revenge killings, of punishing the victors.
-
- "It is unpleasant but it is not illegal. Using the right weapon at the
- right time of year the landowner has a right to kill every single deer on
- their land."
-
- Robert Rowe, who farms 900 acres in the Quantocks, said he had employed a
- marksman to kill deer on his land but would not disclose how many had been
- shot. He said the photograph had been taken locally and estimated that 80
- stags had been killed on the hills since September.
-
- "Common sense tells you that this was going to happen, it is a direct
- result of the ban on hunting," said Mr Rowe.
-
- "The Trust imposed a ban but had given no thought to what would happen
- next. They were not thinking of the welfare of the deer but about their
- members and their annual subscriptions. There was no consultation with the
- farmers and that has angered us more than anything. They thought that
- banning hunting would mean less cruelty, but I fear there will
- be far, far more."
-
- Paddy Groves, joint master of the Quantock Stag Hounds, said he was
- appalled by the scale of the shootings.
-
- "It is terrible to say, 'I told you so', but this is what I most feared and
- dreaded happening," he said.
-
- Peter Martin, of the Somerset Wildlife Trust, appealed for the cull to be
- controlled.
-
- "In strict conservation terms our concern is that culling should not reach
- the point of threatened extinction of the herd," he said. "I deplore any
- dramatic cull of this kind."
-
- A spokesman for the League Against Cruel Sports said the reports of a
- widespread cull were misleading. He added: "It is rubbish to say that since
- the National Trust banned hunting more stags are being shot. It is just not
- the case."
-
- A live debate, featuring a telephone poll of up to three million people,
- will be televised on ITV ahead of Friday's House of Commons debate on the
- Bill to ban hunting.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- SAY NO TO APEC
- Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 20:09:18
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Ten Cabinet members will miss hunt vote
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971125200918.0c1f37a8@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Wednesday, 26th, November,1997
-
- Ten Cabinet members will miss hunt vote
- By Joy Copley, Political Staff
-
- TONY Blair and most senior members of the Cabinet will be absent from the
- Commons during the controversial vote on fox-hunting on Friday.
-
- The Prime Minister will be on a long-standing foreign engagement as will
- John Prescott, the Deputy Prime Minister, who will be in Australia, and
- Robin Cook, the Foreign Secretary, who will be visiting Poland.
-
- The most senior member of the Cabinet planning to vote for the Wild Mammals
- (Hunting with Dogs) Bill to ban hunting of foxes, deer, hare and mink, will
- be Gordon Brown, the Chancellor. A Daily Telegraph investigation shows that
- 10 members of the Cabinet will be out of town on what advisers were at
- pains to stress were "pre-arranged" appointments. But a further nine have
- pledged to turn up and vote in favour of the Second Reading of the Bill
- being piloted by Michael Foster, the Labour MP for Worcester.
-
- All members of the whips' office are said to be voting for the Bill,
- including Nick Brown, the Chief Whip. But the business managers are still
- adamant that the Bill must not be allowed to proceed to the Lords because
- opposition from Tory peers would cause serious delays to key parts of
- flagship legislation on crime, education and devolution.
-
- Jack Straw, the Home Secretary, whose department would be in charge of any
- ban on fox-hunting, will not vote and will instead visit the Home Office
- immigration office in Croydon. Frank Dobson, the Health Secretary, will be
- addressing a conference in Plymouth.
-
- Donald Dewar, the Scottish Secretary, has long-standing engagements in
- Dundee and an evening awards ceremony in Glasgow and Jack Cunningham, the
- Agriculture Minister, will be opening the new Food and Science building at
- the University of Nottingham.
-
- Mr Cunningham has often been named as one of the three members of the
- Cabinet who are against legislation to ban foxhunting in principle, along
- with Mr Cook and Mr Straw. But, in a surprise move, the Agriculture
- Minister's adviser said Mr Cunningham wanted to stress that had he been in
- London he would have voted for the Bill. Clare Short, the International
- Development Secretary, will be in Brussels representing Britain at the EU
- Development Council, but says she would have backed the Bill. David
- Blunkett, the Education Secretary, will be attending official and
- constituency engagements in Sheffield and Mo Mowlam, Northern Ireland
- Secretary, is not expected to vote as she will be in Northern Ireland.
-
- Those who pledged to be in London to vote for the Bill are Gordon Brown;
- Alistair Darling, Chief Secretary to the Treasury; David Clark, Chancellor
- of the Duchy of Lancaster; Chris Smith, Heritage Secretary; George
- Robertson, Defence Secretary; Margaret Beckett, Trade and Industry
- President; Ron Davies, Welsh Secretary; Ann Taylor, Leader of the House,
- and Gavin Strang, Transport Secretary.
-
- A Labour opponent of fox-hunting will ride with hounds today to gain
- first-hand experience of the sport he wants to ban, writes Sean O'Neill.
-
- Dan Norris, MP for Wansdyke, Somerset, who will vote in favour of the Bill
- on Friday, will join the Mendip Farmers' Hunt this morning. Mr Norris said
- although he was against hunting he felt obliged to hear the views of its
- supporters. He said he would be riding as a guest rather than participating
- in the hunt. "I have been invited repeatedly to go on the hunt and they
- have persuaded me it would be a good idea to do so," he said.
-
- "I have made a commitment to represent the views of my constituents on this
- issue. I have had 700 letters since the election and about 80 per cent
- support a ban. But it is right that I should make an informed decision." Mr
- Norris, a novice rider, added: "I will not be attempting any jumps. But I
- want to do my best to get as accurate a picture as I can and getting on
- horseback is the way to do that." He has also attended a drag hunt which he
- found "very interesting with a real sense of occasion".
-
- Kenneth Osborne, joint master of the Mendip Farmers' Hunt, which has been
- hunting since 1760, said: "We just wanted him to come and see for himself
- what hunting is really about. At the moment he is completely ignorant of
- the procedures, as are so many other people."
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- SAY NO TO APEC
- Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 20:22:17
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [CA] Clinton orders veggie meal
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971125202217.36273120@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- BURNABY, BC - President Clinton, in Vancouver for the APEC economic forum,
- found himself with some time on his hands last night. Without the presence
- of wife Hillary, who was unavaible to attend the conference, and turning
- down the invitation of a local strip joint to come sample their
- entertainment, Clinton called up a few friends from Seattle and went to a
- local restaurant for dinner.
-
- Andy Crimp, co-owner of The Raintree restaurant in Vancouver, said they
- only received one hours notice of the visit.
-
- Chefs were asked to prepare what was described as "a low fat, non-dairy
- vegetarian" meal for Clinton and his party of 20.
-
- In a round up of trivia surrounding APEC, it was also noted that Clinton
- refused to use the feather pillows at his hotel - which required a quick
- shoppping trip to a local department store to by foam ones.
-
- On the other hand, a Clinton aide told a local reporter that although the
- president gets a bad press on his diet, he does eat food from the infamous
- golden arches and, along with the other 17 APEC leaders, appeared at the
- final public session wearing a brown leather jacket - supposedly a
- "traditional" Canadian outfit.
-
- David Knowles
- AVN
-
-
- Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 23:49:52 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) FDA clears improved pig heart valve for humans
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971125234949.006fe00c@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from Mercury Center http://www.sjmercury.com/news/breaking/
- ------------------------------------
- Posted at 3:53 p.m. PST Tuesday, November 25, 1997
-
- FDA clears improved pig heart valve for humans
-
- ST. PAUL, Minn. (Reuters) - A new kind of
- artificial heart valve made from pig tissue was
- approved for U.S. marketing Tuesday by the Food and
- Drug Administration.
-
- The Toronto SPV valve is the first pig-tissue valve
- to hit the market that is stentless, or lacking a
- plastic or metal cuff around the opening attaching
- it to the heart muscle.
-
- That lets blood flow through it more efficiently
- and may make it more durable, manufacturer St. Jude
- Medical Inc. of St. Paul, Minn., said in a
- statement. The Toronto SPV is St. Jude's first
- tissue valve available on the U.S. market, which is
- estimated to be worth nearly $150 million, the
- medical devices maker said.
-
- St. Jude is the world's largest maker of artificial
- heart valves, which are implanted in the human
- heart when its natural valves wear out.
-
- Artificial valves that are mechanical can be made
- of long-lasting metal or carbon. Tissue valves are
- fashioned from the heart valves of pigs, whose
- hearts are anatomically similar to those of humans.
-
- Tissue valves work more efficiently than mechanical
- valves, but they tend to calcify, or harden,
- requiring more frequent replacement and limiting
- their usefulness in younger patients. St. Jude has
- been among the leaders in improving the durability
- and efficiency of tissue valves, analysts said.
-
- ``Stentless valves do not have frames or sewing
- cuffs, which provides for a larger orifice area for
- better blood flow,'' the company said, adding that
- the stentless valve might also last longer because
- it works more like a real valve and puts less
- stress on itself.
-
- First implanted in Canada and Europe in 1991, the
- Toronto SPV was cleared for European marketing in
- 1995 and is the leading stentless porcine valve in
- those markets, the company said.
-
-
-
- </pre>
-
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