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- NEW YORK, Nov. 5 /PRNewswire/ -- The dynamic duo get a double dose of
- beauty when Cindy Crawford and Pamela Lee visit "LIVE with Regis and Kathie
- Lee" on November 7, 1997. Cindy Crawford chats about her ten years with
- Revlon, and Pamela Lee discusses her role with PETA (People for the Ethical
- Treatment of Animals).
-
- Don't miss a LIVE moment.
-
- SOURCE LIVE With Regis and Kathie Lee
-
- CO: Live With Regis and Kathie Lee
- ST: New York
- IN: ENT
- SU:
- 11/05/97 12:01 EST http://www.prnewswire.com
-
- ⌐1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center info@vegetarian.org
- Date: Tue, 2 Dec 1997 14:05:36 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: GASTROENTERITIS, VIRAL, OYSTERS - USA (LOUISIANA)
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19971202135905.2c175eda@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- GASTROENTERITIS, VIRAL, OYSTERS - USA (LOUISIANA)
- *************************************************
-
- Date: Fri, 28 Nov 1997 11:32:38 -0800
-
- Source: November 28, 1997 - MMWR - Vol. 46 / No. 47
-
-
- Viral Gastroenteritis Associated with Eating Oysters ù Louisiana, December,
- 1996 û January, 1997
-
- Viral gastroenteritis outbreaks caused by caliciviruses (i.e. Norwalk-like
- viruses or small round-structured viruses) have been associated with eating
- contaminated shell-fish, particularly oysters (_Crassostrea virginica_).
- This report describes the findings of the investigation of an outbreak of
- oyster-associated viral gastroenteritis in Louisiana during the 1996-97
- winter season and implicates sewage from oyster harvesting vessels as the
- probable cause of contaminated oysters.
-
- MMWR Editorial Note: Caliciviruses are small single-stranded RNA viruses
- that cause acute gastroenteritis characterized by vomiting and/or diarrhea.
- The viruses are difficult to detect, requiring relatively sophisticated
- molecular methods to identify the virus in fecal specimens and in oysters.
- There is no reliable marker for indicating presence of the virus in oyster
- harvesting waters.
-
- This report represents the third oyster-related gastroenteritis outbreak
- attributed to calicivirus in Louisiana since 1993...In this outbreak, the
- link to the large number of wholesalers and retailers suggests that the
- oyster contamination preceded distribution and probably occurred in the
- oyster beds. In addition, harvest sites were 12-15 miles from the nearest
- community sewage outlet, recreational boating was infrequent in December,
- commercial boating traffic was infrequent because of the shallow depth of
- the water, and all oil rigs were considered to have had adequate sewage
- facilities. The only known source of caliciviruses, such as that implicated
- in this outbreak, is feces from ill persons. Therefore, based on these
- considerations, the probable source of human sewage found in the implicated
- waterways was oyster harvesters, who admitted to routinely discharging
- their sewage overboard, despite recent recommendations in Louisiana for
- proper sewage collection and disposal. Prevention of oyster-related
- outbreaks of gastroenteritis requires intensified efforts to 1) develop and
- enforce laws for appropriate sewage containers on oyster harvesting boats
- with dump-pump out stations at docks, 2) educate workers in the oyster
- industry about the consequences of improper sewage disposal, 3) improve
- record-keeping by oyster harvesters, wholesalers, and retailers to enhance
- the reliability of traceback investigations, and 4) further assess the
- relation between environmental conditions and contamination of oysters.
- ===========================================
-
- Rabbit Information Service,
- P.O.Box 30,
- Riverton,
- Western Australia 6148
-
- Email> rabbit@wantree.com.au
-
- http://www.wantree.com.au/~rabbit/rabbit.htm
- (Rabbit Information Service website updated frequently)
-
- /`\ /`\
- (/\ \-/ /\)
- )6 6(
- >{= Y =}<
- /'-^-'\
- (_) (_)
- | . |
- | |}
- jgs \_/^\_/
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Tue, 02 Dec 1997 00:32:28 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Nude Skaters Stage Protest Against Fur
- Message-ID: <199712020555.AAA23334@mail-out-1.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- .c The Associated Press
-
- NEW YORK (AP) - Ah, the holiday season in New York. The Christmas shows. The
- tree lightings. And don't forget the nude ice skaters.
-
- Two animal rights activists shed their clothes at Rockefeller Center's ice
- skating rink Tuesday as part of a holiday protest against fur coats by the
- People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.
-
- Nora Burns and Lisa Permut - nude from the waist up except for
- leopard-marking body paint, fake tails and ears - skated before a lunchtime
- crowd of gawking tourists before being escorted off the outdoor rink. The two
- PETA members held a banner in front of them that read ``Only Animals Should
- Wear Fur.''
-
- Prosecutors decided the protesters had not shown enough skin to violate
- public nudity laws. But the weather might have been punishment enough. It was
- 38 degrees.
-
- ``A few minutes of freezing cold does not compare to the 3 million animals
- who will be in cages in snow, sleet and rain,'' said Toni Vernelli, campaign
- coordinator for PETA.
-
- AP-NY-11-26-97 0712EST
-
- ⌐1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center info@vegetarian.org
- Date: Tue, 02 Dec 1997 00:26:57 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Regulated Antlerless Deer Hunt Scheduled for Slocum State Park
- in PA
- Message-ID: <199712020555.AAA23308@mail-out-1.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- HARRISBURG, Pa., Nov. 17 /PRNewswire/ -- The Pennsylvania state Department
- of Conservation and Natural Resources (DCNR) will conduct a regulated
- antlerless deer hunt at Frances Slocum State Park, Luzerne County, on
- Monday, Dec. 15, to help control the deer population in the park.
-
- The hunt, a two-day event last year, has been reduced to one day because of
- a lower deer population in the park.
-
- The hunt, for antlerless whitetail deer only, will be conducted in areas
- not normally open to hunting. To ensure the safety of all park visitors,
- the park will be closed to all other activities during the hunt.
-
- To participate, hunters must hold a Luzerne County antlerless license and a
- special state park permit. Only manually operated shotguns or
- muzzleloading firearms will be allowed, and the hunt will be limited to 40
- hunters, chosen by random drawing.
-
- "The park's ecosystem can't support the current number of deer in the park
- without damage to itself," DCNR's Bureau of State Parks Director Roger
- Fickes said. "Deer need to consume large quantities of food. Simply by
- eating what they need to survive, an overpopulated deer herd destroys the
- balance of the
- ecosystem, eliminating new growth and diversity and taking habitat from
- other creatures."
-
- Fickes further explained that such hunts have been successful at other
- state parks, generally resulting in the return of long absent wildflowers,
- shrubs and small trees.
-
- Safety zones, no hunting areas and park boundaries will be posted and
- strictly enforced. Extra park rangers, Pennsylvania Game Commission
- personnel and Pennsylvania State Police will be stationed throughout the
- park area during the hunt.
-
- Applications for the controlled hunts can be obtained at the Frances Slocum
- State Park Office weekdays from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Applications must be
- received by Nov. 21. Hunters will be chosen by a random drawing and
- notified by mail. Hunters must attend a hunter safety program at the park
- before the
- hunt.
-
- More information about the regulated hunt is available by calling the park
- office at 717-696-3525.
-
- SOURCE Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources
- CO: Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources
- ST: Pennsylvania
- IN:
- SU:
- 11/17/97 14:10 EST http://www.prnewswire.com
-
- ⌐1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center info@vegetarian.org
- Date: Mon, 01 Dec 1997 23:29:48 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: Veg-FL@waste.org
- Subject: Rats as big as dogs roam in Florida
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19971201232704.0162ba20@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- .c The Associated Press
-
- TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Like something escaped from a mad scientist's laboratory,
- the monstrous rodents creep through the underbrush.
-
- Don't worry, these critters just want some salad.
-
- These rats - as big as the family dog and weighing more than a Thanksgiving
- turkey - are nutria, roaming eastern Hillsborough County as the result of
- commercialism gone to seed.
-
- ``I saw this humongous rat on the road,'' said JoAnn Hoffmann, who
- encountered a nutria while driving to work. ``My jaw just dropped.''
-
- The nutria are the remnants of a get-rich-quick scheme some 40 years ago,
- said Bill Kern, urban wildlife specialist with the Florida Cooperative
- Extension Service.
-
- Entrepreneurs imported nutria - an extremely large South American aquatic rat
- - to start a fur trade in Florida. But people didn't want to walk around in
- coats or mittens made of the hide or fur of 3-foot-long rats with naked,
- scaly tails.
-
- ``The prices dropped so low, nobody bothered to trap them,'' Kern said in
- Monday's editions of the Tampa Tribune.
-
- The nutria found homes along lakes, drainage ditches and ponds at dairy
- farms. Exclusively vegetarian, they dine on aquatic plants.
-
- The nutria are not considered game animals, so it's always open season on
- them. Just don't expect to get rich as a trapper: A nutria pelt might fetch
- $4, Kern said.
-
- AP-NY-11-18-97 0837EST
-
- ⌐1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center info@vegetarian.org
- Date: Tue, 02 Dec 1997 01:07:58
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Protesting farmers hurl Irish beef into the sea
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971202010758.0eefadb8@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Tuesday, December 2nd, 1997
-
- Protesting farmers hurl Irish beef into the sea
- By Nigel Bunyan
-
- MILITANT Welsh farmers who blockaded the port of Holyhead for 10 hours
- faced condemnation yesterday from the Government and their own leadership.
-
- During the disturbance 40 tons of beefburgers being imported from Ireland
- were taken from a hijacked lorry and hurled into the sea. The estimated 400
- farmers involved in the protest agreed to leave only after the port
- authorities threatened them with legal action.
-
- Jack Cunningham, the Agriculture Minister, said although he sympathised
- with the farmers' plight he joined the Welsh Secretary, Ron Davies, in
- condemning their decision to take direct action as "totally unacceptable
- and counter-productive". He said: "This kind of action is not going to win
- us either support or votes in Europe. I advise farmers to have nothing to
- do with it."
-
- The sharp decline in prices for British beef has left Welsh farmers feeling
- increasingly frustrated in recent months and they feel that the Government
- is doing little to compensate them. Their initially peaceful and
- good-humoured protest began at Holyhead on Sunday afternoon when they
- succeeded in preventing two ferries from docking.
-
- But just after 1am yesterday the mood changed, with some militants in the
- crowd deciding to attack the lorry laden with beefburgers. One beef farmer
- said later: "They'd just had enough. We've had weeks and weeks of worsening
- problems, yet no one seems to want to help us." Another farmer said:
- "Markets are collapsing and our livelihoods are being threatened. What else
- were these lads supposed to do?"
-
- Noel Ellis, a farmer from Bangor, said: "Thousands of farmers have got
- together because they are fed up with this game. If the Government won't
- bend and help us out then the farmers have got to do something and that's
- what's happened. This is just the start of something. The whole country is
- about to explode over this one."
-
- Bob Parry, of the Welsh NFU, said he had hoped that the protest would be
- peaceful. "After I was called in to negotiate the release of the lorries,
- two or three people dashed forward and opened the back door of the lorry,"
- he said. "They discovered there was meat on it and the whole load was
- dumped into the Irish Sea. It shouldn't have happened."
-
- Mr Parry said he was concerned about the consequences if the Government
- failed to take sufficient action to help Welsh farmers. "If they don't,
- then God knows what will happen next time they come here," he said.
-
- Sir David Naish, president of the National Farmers' Union, said he was
- dismayed to see his members taking part in a Continental-style blockade.
- "Farmers are actually right to make the points they are making, but I can
- in no way accept them breaking the law," Sir David said. "Threats will not
- deliver the solution we want. What will deliver it is a strong case and
- that is what we have."
-
- Sir David said beef farmers were concerned at how the BSE crisis was
- continuing to reduce their incomes. He believed that money to meet
- compensation claims was available in Brussels and all the Government had
- to do was to apply for it.
-
- But Mr Cunningham said: "There is no easy pot of gold in Brussels waiting
- for me to pick up. If that was the case I would have done so a long time
- ago." Mr Cunningham said he was determined to get sensible levels of
- British beef back into international markets, rather than to over-produce
- and seek "more and more subsidies".
-
- The Holyhead protest was also condemned by the Road Haulage Association.
- Its spokesman, Daniel Hodges, said: "Having taken on and defeated strikers
- and blockades in France, the last thing our members need is to experience
- similar action at home."
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- Date: Tue, 02 Dec 1997 08:28:13 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Fur Protestor On Hunger Strike
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971202082810.00745ba4@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from CNN custom news http://www.cnn.com/
- -----------------------------------------
- New Jersey State News
- Reuters
- 02-DEC-97
-
- Fur Protestor On Hunger Strike
-
- (EATONTOWN) -- An anti-fur activist continues a hunger strike in a New
- Jersey jail. Twenty-one-year Andrew Nicosia of Hewlett, New York, has been
- held in the Monmouth County Jail since being arrested Friday at Macy's in
- the Monmouth Mall. Two other protestors were released after posting bail...
- but Nicosia is being held in lieu of 250 dollars cash. Animal rights
- activists selected last Friday... generally the busiest shopping day of the
- year... as a day of protest that they dubbed Fur-Free Friday.
- Date: Tue, 02 Dec 1997 08:35:37 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Geese Moving To Oklahoma
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971202083534.00746240@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from CNN custom news http://www.cnn.com/
- ------------------------------------------
- Oklahoma State News
- Reuters
- 02-DEC-97
-
- Geese Moving To Oklahoma
-
- (STATEWIDE) -- Several hundred Canadian Geese are headed to Oklahoma but
- this isn't their usual migration. The U-S Department of Natural Resources
- says the birds were captured near the Minneapolis-Saint Paul International
- airport because they posed a threat to airplanes. Experts say the giant
- birds can damage a jet airliner if they get caught in turbine engines.
- After they're shipped to Oklahoma, the birds will be released at the
- Choctaw Nation Indian reservation.
- Date: Tue, 02 Dec 1997 09:32:49 -0500
- From: Miyun Park <miyun@erols.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: PRIMATE PROTEST--YERKES CENTER FOR TAXPAYER WASTE
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971202090429.0068ede8@pop.erols.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- YOU MADE A DIFFERENCE IN APRIL
-
- RETURN AND MAKE HISTORY IN DECEMBER
-
- APE ARMY commander Rick Bogle along with other animal activists from around
- the country will gather at the stone gate entrance of Emory University in
- Decatur, Georgia on Saturday, Dec. 6, 1997 at 10:30 am for a peaceful
- protest against the inhumane and unproductive 'research' being conducted at
- Yerkes Regional Primate Research Center. During its history, Yerkes
- Primate Center has been the discoverer of nothing.
-
- The only benefit to mankind that has proceeded from Yerkes has been to
- increase the personal wealth of a few individuals; borne by the pain and
- suffering of man's closest genetic relative.
-
- Of the 3,000 primates at Yerkes, almost 500 die each year and for what? What
- has Yerkes produced? The cocaine addiction studies, started years ago,
- continue
- and still no help for human addicts.
-
- Now Yerkes, ever mindful of the need to keep federal grant money rolling
- in, is stepping up its campaign to find a cure for AIDS. Yerkes is
- constructing a new $12
- million vaccine research center so that even more primates can undergo
- intense, grueling experiments. Yerkes is giving false hope to HIV/AIDS
- victims for a cure that it cannot produce. Yerkes' AIDS research is on a
- road that leads nowhere.
-
- You are invited to join other like-minded individuals to tell Emory/Yerkes
- their cruel, useless experiments are a dying industry. Unlike other
- movements, these victims cannot speak. Will you speak for them?
-
- Together we can make a difference. Together we will make change. Together
- we
- will win.
-
- For more information, please contact:
-
- Animal Abuse Watch 770-945-4709 Sue McCrosky
- ActUp San Francisco 415-522-2907 Michael Bellefountaine
- Animal Defense League 404-252-1357 Nikki or Joel
- In Defense of Animals 770-242-4343 Jean Barnes
-
-
- Date: Tue, 02 Dec 1997 11:06:20 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) FDA Approves Beef Irradiation
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971202110618.006abb9c@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from Associated Press http://wire.ap.org
- ---------------------------------------
- 12/02/1997 09:43 EST
-
- FDA Approves Beef Irradiation
-
- By CURT ANDERSON
- AP Farm Writer
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) -- Coming soon to your local meat market: Fresh beef
- irradiated with cobalt gamma rays?
-
- The Food and Drug Administration today approved use of irradiation to
- kill harmful bacteria such as E. coli in beef, a decision favored by an
- industry that was rocked this year by several meat recalls and consumer
- food safety fears.
-
- Dr. Michael Friedman, acting FDA commissioner, said in an interview that
- irradiation will become a useful tool in combating food-borne illness,
- but that ultimate responsibility still will rest with the food handler
- and preparer.
-
- ``We think it is safe and we think it is appropriate,'' Friedman said of
- the procedure. ``But the consumer should not believe that he or she does
- not have to use good cooking and handling techniques.''
-
- Some anti-nuclear activists have protested irradiation as unsafe, but
- Friedman said FDA scientists determined that the process does not change
- the fundamental properties of meat and does not make it radioactive in
- any way.
-
- ``There is no contact with a radioactive substance. There is nothing left
- on the meat,'' Friedman said.
-
- The FDA acted on a three-year-old petition from Isomedix Inc., a New
- Jersey company with long experience in medical sterilization that wants
- to offer meat processors irradiation with cobalt-60 gamma rays. There are
- many other ways to safely irradiate meat and other companies in the
- market.
-
- Such techniques would enable meat packers to kill bacteria at the end of
- the production line, after it is already sealed in packages and cannot be
- contaminated further. This is particularly important in ground beef,
- where bacteria can easily get beneath the surface during grinding.
-
- Although irradiation has been available for years for poultry, pork,
- spices and some fresh produce, interest in the process for beef
- intensified after this summer's recall of 25 million pounds of Hudson
- Food Co. hamburger tainted with E. coli.
-
- The meat industry lobbied vigorously for irradiation as an alternative to
- Clinton administration proposals for greater government authority to
- recall contaminated products and punish violators.
-
- ``I think there is a greater degree of interest,'' said Patrick Boyle,
- president of the American Meat Institute, a meatpacking industry
- organization.
-
- In this year's FDA spending bill, Congress ordered the agency to act
- within 60 days on the Isomedix petition. The bill also changed labeling
- requirements for all foods treated with irradiation so that the words
- need be no larger than those for the ingredients.
-
- The three years it took to act on the petition were necessary, Friedman
- said.
-
- ``There were some very complex scientific issues that had to be dealt
- with,'' he said. But, he added: ``We believe the safety of food is so
- important that we will be focusing our efforts in a more effective way in
- the future.''
-
- The FDA's action today approves safe irradiation dosage levels for
- various forms of meat, such as frozen, fresh and so on. It is now up to
- the Agriculture Department to issue regulations for processing plants
- that conform to those levels.
-
- Once that is done, Boyle said meat plants would have to figure out how to
- use irradiation, whether they can afford it and whether there is a
- consumer demand. It is uncertain how adaptable the process would be for
- hamburger that is ground in the grocery store.
-
- Most likely, consumers would see products marketed in the future that
- would offer them the choice of purchasing irradiated meat.
-
- ``I think it's going to take a little time for industry and consumers to
- move towards the adoption of irradiation as a purchasing option,'' he
- said.
-
- One reason irradiation is not widely used on other products is consumer
- wariness of the process and lack of education about it, said Brian
- Folkerts, vice president for governmental affairs at the National Food
- Processors Association.
-
- ``We need to stop giving consumers the impression that the label is a
- warning when it has been found safe,'' Folkerts said.
-
- Date: Tue, 02 Dec 1997 11:12:14 -0500
- From: allen schubert <ar-admin@envirolink.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Embedded Code/Attachments--Admin Note
- Message-ID: <3.0.1.32.19971202111214.0069e868@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Second attempt (first attempt was an hour ago)...apologies in advance if
- this was posted to the list twice.
-
- (This is not often a problem.) Please avoid attaching files to posts to
- AR-News (if an attachment may be useful, offer to send it privately to
- those who respond to you via private e-mail). Also, do not used embedded
- html (or other code) in your posts to AR-News.
-
- Both of these reduce the effectiveness of your post as many subscriber
- (worldwide) do not have the same software as you. Your important news item
- may appear as gibberish -- people do not like reading such things. And,
- considering the international nature of the list, people may find the
- "English" of html quite confusing. Most people still get their e-mail in
- ASCII format. (For those who don't understand, too get an idea of embedded
- codes, on Netscape, you can view the source code of a web page by clicking
- "view" and then clicking "document source". Internet Explorer has a
- similar feature.)
-
- While many subscribers may have no problem handling attachments, some do.
- For some people, an attached file is downloaded as gibberish, gibberish
- that takes time to download. For others, it may be a useless thing that is
- "forgotten" after the message was deleted--however, the "attachment" may
- still be on the hard drive.
-
- And...depending on the attachment, it *might* contain a virus if it uses a
- "template" (this type of virus is known as a "macrovirus"). (For virus
- information, there are a number of sources on the web.)
-
- So...please offer to send the attachment via private e-mail (for those
- subscribers who reply privately).
-
- Allen Schubert
- AR-News Listowner
- ar-admin@envirolink.org
-
-
- Date: Tue, 2 Dec 1997 08:22:50 -0800 (PST)
- From: Friends of Animals <foa@igc.apc.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Offensive Christmas Song Dropped
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19971202112259.502ff640@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From "The Advocate" in Connecticut
-
- Taking a stance for animals' rights
-
- Darien-based Friends of Animals won an unexpected victory last week.
- After much controversy, the Norwalk Community Chorale agreed to
- drop one of its Christmas parody songs about animals from its
- upcoming program.
-
- Dot Hayes, director of public information for Friends of Animals
- received a complaint form some involved in Wednesday's show at
- Norwalk City Hall who objected to "The Twelve Days After
- Christmas."
-
- The words of the parody of "The Twelve Days of Christmas" describe
- the wringing of necks and the shooting and drowning of animals as
- part of a holiday celebration.
-
- "Why take the chance? Evidently the song was controversial, and I
- guess the feeling was that it wouldn't be in good taste, so it isn't
- going to be played. The intention wasn't to insult anybody, this is
- supposed to be a festive event," said Tim Scheibel, acting director of
- Recreation and Parks in Norwalk. The chorale operates under the
- auspices of the parks board.
-
- After receiving complaints, the animal rights organization stepped in
- and did what it does best -- argued for the protection of animals.
-
- "If it was a joke, it was done in bad taste. Killing animals in a
- Christmas song just isn't funny." Hayes said.
-
- The battle began with a phone call to Martin Diamond, director
- of the Norwalk Community Chorale, and ended with letters and
- phone calls to Norwalk Mayor Frank Esposito. The mayor decided
- to review the parody himself.
-
- "We thought the song in itself was inappropriate, " City Clerk
- K.C. Senie said. "The mayor looked at the song and suggested to
- Martin Diamond that it be pulled.
-
- "It raised our spirits, it made us feel pretty good that they actually
- listened,"
- Hayes said with a smile.
-
- "Whoever wrote the song was attempting to be humorous," Scheibel
- said. "However, everybody has different personalities, and some would
- have laughed and others would have been offended. This ceremony isn't to
- offend anyone, it is something to enjoy."
-
- Friends of Animals is an international animal protection organization
- of about 200,000 members and supporters who stand up for animal
- rights It's national headquarters is located in Darien, with three other offices
- in New York City, Washington, DC and Jerusalem.
-
- Hayes wasn't counting on the chorale to rethink its song choices.
-
- "I didn't have much faith it would work because when we called the Chorale
- twice, we were met with such hostility and they became so furious they hung
- up on us," Hayes said. "Somebody must have intervened, but who cares,
- it worked."
-
- "All of the animal abuse included in the song actually happens daily to
- animals."
-
- The lyrics included: "Then with a single cartridge, I shot the blasted
- partridge...
- The second day after Christmas I pulled on the rubber gloves and very gently
- wrung the necks of both turtle doves."
-
- "Those we represent consider animals the children of the earth, deserving
- of to respect we give our children," Hayes said. "If they replaced the
- animals with children, would they still think this is funny?"
-
- Not that Hayes is against any offbeat holiday song involving animals.
-
- "I would be happy if they sing 'Grandma Got Run Over By a Reindeer,"
- Hayes said, "because there is no chance of grandma getting run over by
- a reindeer."
-
- Date: Tue, 2 Dec 1997 08:49:45 -0800
- From: LCartLng@gvn.net (Lawrence Carter-Long)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Newswire: Anti-drug, animal-loving punk rock fans use violence (US)
- Message-ID: <199712021641.LAA21078@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Anti-drug, animal-loving punk rock fans use
- violence, police say
-
- BY ARLENE LEVINSON AP NATIONAL WRITER
-
- SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -- The scar in Rich Webb's back is dark pink and
- puckered, a souvenir of the night in 1995 he was attacked by a crowd of
- Straight Edgers. They carved an X, the movement's signature, just above
- Webb's waist. The doctor said a knife must have been used to slice his
- flesh so cleanly.
-
- They cut him for smoking pot.
-
- Straight Edge could be every frightened parent's dream. A youth
- movement born in the underground punk rock scene of the early 1980s,
- its devotees swear off drugs, drink, smoking and casual sex. These are
- youngsters in revolt against the dangerous temptations of youth.
-
- And thousands of Straight Edgers in this country generally confine
- themselves to attending punk rock concerts and trying to set an example
- of clean living.
-
- That goes for Utah too. But here, the Straight Edge philosophy can also
- become a bludgeon. Beatings, brawls and vandalism by Straight Edge
- toughs are common, police say. They say Straight Edgers use chains,
- mace and clubs to enforce their abstinent lifestyle. It takes place in school
- yards, at concerts and shopping center parking lots.
-
- ``If they can't get you, you wake up in the morning, your car will be just
- pulverized, every window broken out,'' said Scott Magleby, a detective in
- the Salt Lake County sheriff's gang unit.
-
- Some Straight Edgers have gone further, turning their intolerance on the
- fur, leather and fast-food trades. Firebombings and burglary in the past
- two years and in the name of rescuing animals are the work of current
- and one-time Straight Edgers, authorities say.
-
- >From Davis County to the north to the southern end of Salt Lake County,
- police see the intersection of Straight Edge and the animal rights
- movement: firebombings of a mink feed cooperative, a McDonald's
- restaurant and a Tandy Leather and Crafts Supply store; the near-arson
- of an animal trap business; minks ``liberated'' from two farms.
-
- ``I've become more and more bitter,'' said Terry Montgomery, owner of
- the trap business, a mom-and-pop enterprise. ``I don't really care if they
- eat 20 heads of lettuce a day. But you can't force your ideas on people.''
-
- This activity is also getting attention from the FBI.
-
- Bret Walton, a tall, sad-eyed 18-year-old, is one of three Straight Edgers
- caught trying to burn down Montgomery's store in March. He was the
- lookout as the others poured gasoline around the place. A night
- watchman asleep inside was aroused by the commotion and chased
- them away.
-
- Sentenced to three years' probation after pleading guilty to arson
- conspiracy, Walton, a diesel mechanic from North Salt Lake, said it
- ``was disappointing, it really was,'' that the attack failed.
-
- ``I don't know if it would have done any good if it had burned down,''
- Walton said. ``I realized the risk, but I felt I wasn't doing enough to help
- save animals.''
-
- Authorities say Straight Edgers like Walton are committing crimes in the
- name of Animal Liberation Front, a shadowy force that seeks to halt the
- use of animals for human purpose, whether in the research lab, the leather
- shoe or fur coat, the hamburger or fish fry. Even dairy products are under
- ALF assault.
-
- ``The FBI's domestic terrorism unit is active in this field,'' said John
- Russell, a Justice Department spokesman in Washington. Utah is one of
- two ALF hot spots under investigation, he said, declining to identify the
- other.
-
- It all seems out of place in this wholesome slice of country between the
- Great Salt Lake and the Rocky Mountains' Wasatch Range, where the big
- preoccupation is the 2002 Winter Olympics.
-
- But Salt Lake teens have their problems too, and ``Straight Edge is giving
- them a feeling of security and support and identity,'' says Michelle
- Arciaga of the Salt Lake Area Gang Project.
-
- ``This is the neediest generation that America has ever seen.''
-
- ------
-
- The movement takes its name from a 1981 song, ``Straight Edge,'' by Ian
- MacKaye of the Washington, D.C.-based band Minor Threat:
-
- ``I'm a person just like you
-
- But I've got better things to do
-
- Than sit around and smoke dope ...
-
- I've got a straight edge.''
-
- It fit an attitude among punk fans and gave the attitude a name. ``Straight
- Edge'' gained followings in Boston, New York and Southern California,
- and as far away as Poland and Australia. To highlight its wholesome
- credo, it adopted an X as its symbol, X being what music clubs stamp on
- the hands of patrons too young for alcohol.
-
- The typical Utah Straight Edger is white, male and middle class, aged from
- early teens to early 20s, bearing the tattoos, shorn hair and pierced ear
- lobes of punkdom.
-
- Those who know them say most Straight Edgers are law-abiding and
- some adherents lash out with violence, local police label Straight Edge
- a gang. Straight Edgers reject the tag and say any fights are self-defense.
-
- The problem is so serious that a Salt Lake City police detective, Brent
- Larsen, is assigned exclusively to Straight Edge-related crime.
-
- ``Don't get me wrong; there are some good kids in Straight Edge,'' Larsen
- said. He estimated the movement numbers 600 or 700 in the valley, about
- 200 of them violent while ``50 or 60... do the firebombing.''
-
- Ms. Arciaga of the area gang project travels outside the state and hears
- similar stories. ``It's not just a Salt Lake thing,'' she said. In Texas,
- Washington state and California ``people have come and talked to me
- about troubles they're having with Straight Edgers.''
-
- A dozen Straight Edgers are rattling Dayton, Ohio.
-
- ``We call them 'Hate Edgers,' '' said Sgt. David Williams. In Dayton, a man
- was smacked in the head with a skateboard for smoking a cigarette.
-
- ``This particular group of people hating people who eat meat, hate gays
- as well,'' Williams noted. In this ``strange twist of the just say no'
- campaign,'' he said, some also proclaim ties to the Animal Liberation
- Front.
-
- AP-CS-12-01-97 1425EST
-
- Akron Beacon Journal
- Akron, Ohio
-
- -------------------------------------------
-
- Lawrence Carter-Long
- Science and Research Issues, Animal Protection Institute
- email: LCartLng@gvn.net, phone: 800-348-7387 x. 215
- world wide web: http://www.api4animals.org/
-
- "All censorships exist to prevent any one from challenging current
- conceptions and existing institutions. All progress is initiated by
- challenging current conceptions, and executed by supplanting
- existing institutions. Consequently the first condition of progress
- is the removal of censorships." - George Bernard Shaw
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Tue, 2 Dec 1997 08:50:34 -0800
- From: LCartLng@gvn.net (Lawrence Carter-Long)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Newswire: Liberation Front (US)
- Message-ID: <199712021642.LAA21241@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- SALT LAKE CITY: Liberation Front.
-
- Jacob Kenison, 19, was raised in a solid Mormon family. Like all
- Mormons, he was taught to shun tobacco, caffeine and alcohol and to
- obey the law. He could take comfort in his faith's emphasis on family and
- church.
-
- Yet it was the Straight Edgers who helped him cope with his fears at 14.
-
- ``I was scared of drugs. I heard they make you do weird things,'' Kenison
- said. Straight Edge, he said, ``was a protection.''
-
- Now he is about to serve a 16-month prison term on a federal gun offense
- and awaits sentencing on a state arson charge to which he pleaded
- guilty.
-
- A red jumpsuit hanging loose over his lanky 6-foot-2-inch frame, Kenison
- spoke in mid-November, hugging himself and swallowing nervously as he
- explained how he ended up in Salt Lake County Metro Jail.
-
- He violated his parents' curfew and was thrown out of the house. At 16,
- he was expelled from school for assaulting another student. A witness
- told police he rapped a student on the head with spiked brass knuckles.
- His parents got him reinstated, but school couldn't hold him. Straight
- Edge did.
-
- A freckled redhead, Kenison is festooned with tattoos: Chinese
- characters on his neck, a demon and a nude winged fairy dancing on his
- arm. He says ``hardline'' in red across his chest indicates he takes the
- most stringent Straight Edge line. That line, according to Kenison, is
- anti-sexist, anti-racist, anti-abortion; sex is purely for having children,
- though marriage ``doesn't really matter.''
-
- He is also a vegan, following a diet doctrine promoted by ardent animal
- rights activists. Vegans (pronounced VEE-gans), reject all animal
- products. They wear no leather, wool or silk. ``I wouldn't eat refined
- sugar, white rice -- nothing bleached. No meat. No dairy. No honey,''
- Kenison said.
-
- At 18, he fell into a depression and had ``worthless'' tattooed inside his
- left arm. He felt he would never save the animal world; his car was
- wrecking the environment; visiting a doctor or dentist might entail
- benefiting from research on animals.
-
- Even buying cotton clothes afflicts the helpless, in Kenison's view.
- ``There's animals that live in the cotton plants -- some live in the shade.
- The main reason I'm vegan is, I felt bad.''
-
- In June 1995, a leather crafts store in Murray, south of Salt Lake City, was
- firebombed and destroyed. In February this year, Kenison was arrested.
- On Nov. 24 he pleaded guilty to taking part in the attack.
-
- A month after his arrest he and friends bought an assault rifle for fellow
- Straight Edger Joshua Ellerman. Kenison admitted lying when he failed to
- state in the federal gun-purchase form that he was charged with a crime.
- He says he made an honest mistake.
-
- Meanwhile, 19-year-old Ellerman is living with his mother, DeAnn Taylor,
- awaiting federal trial for the mink co-op bombing. If convicted, he could
- spend the rest of his life in prison.
-
- Ms. Taylor declined interviews for them both while the case is pending.
- Her elder son, Colby Ellerman, a former Straight Edge who turned 21
- Thanksgiving Day, pleaded guilty to freeing minks. He too declined an
- interview.
-
- ``My son Joshua is not guilty,'' Ms. Taylor said. Both her sons, ``are
- very, very good boys.'' As for Straight Edge, ``there's a lot of good in it,''
- she said.
-
- Authorities say violence associated with animal rights is ebbing. One
- Straight Edger who took part in protests at fur stores said police
- surveillance -- picture-taking and constant questions -- is turning kids off.
- Some are letting their short hair grow out, to deflect attention.
-
- Still, at hardcore punk rock concerts, Salt Lake police have picked up
- fliers like one that describes the proper fuel mixture to make a firebomb
- (add motor oil and get a ``longer-lasting hotter flame.'')
-
- It's at such concerts that Dave Wilson seeks recruits for his cause,
- marrying the moralistic outlook of Straight Edge to his own animal rights
- campaign.
-
- ``Years down the road, people are going to view us as freedom fighters
- and saints for freeing these animals,'' said Wilson, who at 19 has dropped
- ambitions to become a fashion model to devote his life to animal rights.
- ``We used to have black slaves. Now we have mink slaves or fox slaves
- or pig slaves.''
-
- Officially, he speaks for a Texas-based group called Coalition to Abolish
- the Fur Trade, and issues statements claiming responsibility for attacks in
- the name of the Animal Liberation Front.
-
- Straight Edge, having started by saying no to drugs and sex, and a
- fervent core having moved on to fighting for animal rights, now shows
- signs of turning against itself, according to police and failed firebomber
- Bret Walton.
-
- ``The kids who were for animal rights and Straight Edge, they were for
- each other,'' Walton said. ``But now everybody hates each other and they
- get into fights. It seems like over nothing. And then tons of cops come.''
-
- Akron Beacon Journal
- Akron, Ohio
-
- Lawrence Carter-Long
- Science and Research Issues, Animal Protection Institute
- email: LCartLng@gvn.net, phone: 800-348-7387 x. 215
- world wide web: http://www.api4animals.org/
-
- "All censorships exist to prevent any one from challenging current
- conceptions and existing institutions. All progress is initiated by
- challenging current conceptions, and executed by supplanting
- existing institutions. Consequently the first condition of progress
- is the removal of censorships." - George Bernard Shaw
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Tue, 2 Dec 1997 08:46:58 -0800 (PST)
- From: Michael Markarian <mmarkarian@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, en.alerts@conf.igc.apc.org,
- wild-rockies-alerts@wildrockies.org
- Subject: Letters Needed on Winter Use Settlement
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19971202144434.414fae38@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- ACTION ALERT
-
- SNOWMOBILE TRAIL CLOSURE IN YELLOWSTONE NEEDS YOUR SUPPORT:
- FIRST STEP TOWARD ENDING BISON SLAUGHTER
-
- The National Park Service (NPS) has recently published a draft environmental
- assessment (EA) analyzing the impacts of closing at least one snowmobile
- trail in Yellowstone Park to all winter use.
-
- Since the late 1960s, the NPS has permitted snowmobiles in Yellowstone and
- has facilitated their use by packing down or grooming the snow on all Park
- roads. Park Service scientists and The Fund for Animals have argued that
- bison use of the groomed trail system not only facilitates bison emigration
- from the Park into Montana where they are slaughtered, but has completely
- and artificially altered bison population size, distribution, movements, and
- the natural ecology of the Park.
-
- This EA is a product of a settlement of a lawsuit filed by The Fund for
- Animals and other organizations against the NPS over its management of
- winter recreation in Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks. The EA
- proposes to close at least one trail segment in Yellowstone to all winter
- use in oredr to study the impact of groomed trails on Yellowstone bison.
- This is the first time that a trail may be closed in Yellowstone since it
- was opened to snowmobiles.
-
- The information gained from this study will be used in an Environmental
- Impact Statement that the NPS will prepare on the impacts of winter
- recreation on Park wildlife and Park ecology. The Fund believes that the
- EIS must conclude, based on the scientific and legal evidence, that trail
- grooming and snowmobile use in Yellowstone must end. This would be
- enormously beneficial to Yellowstone's bison because without the groomed
- trails far fewer bison are likely to migrate into Montana. Over the last 10
- years, over 3,000 bison have been killed due to the unsubstantiated fear of
- disease transmission to domestic livestock.
-
- THE NPS WILL ACCEPT PUBLIC COMMENTS ON ITS EA THROUGH DECEMBER 15,
- 1997.
- YOUR LETTERS IN SUPPORT OF CLOSING SNOWMOBILE TRAILS TO PROTECT
- BISON ARE
- NEEDED BY THAT DATE. THE FUTURE OF YELLOWSTONE'S BISON, OTHER
- WILDLIFE, AND
- OF YELLOWSTONE PARK IS IN YOUR HANDS.
-
- In your letter tell the NPS that:
-
- * You support Alternative 1 but that you believe more snowmobile trails
- must be closed this winter in order to engage in a proper study of the
- impact of groomed trails on bison and to prevent bison from wandering into
- Montana where they are unnecessarily killed.
-
- * Trail grooming and snowmobiling in Yellowstone causes significant
- adverse impacts on bison and other Park wildlife, including grizzly bears
- and wolves, pollute Yellowstone's air, and destroy the serenity of the Park
- experience and, therefore, must be banned.
-
- Send your comments to Yellowstone National Park, P.O. Box 168, Yellowstone
- National Park, WY 82190.
-
- In addition, please send a letter to Yellowstone National Park
- Superintendent Mike Finley at the same address thanking him for agreeing to
- prepare an Environmental Impact Statement on winter use and its impact to
- the wildlife and natural resources within the Park despite harsh criticism
- he has received for so doing from numerous public officials and interest
- groups.
-
- For more information about this issue please contact D.J. Schubert at
- 202-588-5206 or <djschubert@aol.com> or visit The Fund for Animals' home
- page at <http://www.fund.org>. A copy of the EA is available at
- <http://www.nps.gov/yell/winterroadea.htm>.
-
- Thank you for participating in this critically important issue.
-
- Date: Tue, 2 Dec 1997 08:46:28 -0800 (PST)
- From: Michael Markarian <mmarkarian@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, en.alerts@conf.igc.apc.org,
- wild-rockies-alerts@wildrockies.org
- Subject: Fact Sheet on Winter Use Settlement
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19971202144417.414f4a3c@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- FACT SHEET
-
- SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT ON WINTER
- USE OF YELLOWSTONE AND
- GRAND TETON NATIONAL PARKS
-
- In May 1997, The Fund for Animals, Biodiversity Legal Foundation, Predator
- Project, Ecology Center and several individuals filed suit against the
- National Park Service (NPS) for its violation of several federal laws in
- administering winter use of Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks. The
- plaintiffs claimed that the NPS was in violation of the National
- Environmental Policy Act and Endangered Species Act for failing to evaluate
- the environmental impacts of winter recreation, particularly snowmobiling
- and grooming snowmobile trails, on Park wildlife, including threatened and
- endangered species like the grizzly bear and gray wolf, air quality,
- solitude, and Park ecology.
-
- Among the many impacts associated with winter recreation in the Parks is
- the impact of the groomed snowmobile trail system on wildlife, particularly
- bison. These trails facilitate bison emigration out of Yellowstone where
- nearly all have been killed as a consequence of Montana's unjustifiable and
- abhorrent bison management policies. Moreover, since the trails provide
- bison with energy efficient travel routes, scientists and others believe
- that bison use of these trails has substantially altered bison population
- dynamics, movements, distribution, and habitat use to the detriment of the
- bison and Park ecology. Dr. Mary Meagher, the world's foremost expert on
- Yellowstone bison, has concluded that bison use of the groomed trail system
- led to a doubling of the size of the bison population by the fall of 1994
- compared to what would have existed if trail grooming did not occur.
-
- After nearly two months of negotiations, on September 23, 1997 a settlement
- agreement was reached between the parties. This settlement was subsequently
- approved by the Court on October 28, 1997.
-
- As delineated in the settlement, the NPS has agreed to:
-
- 1.Prepare an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) to evaluate the
- environmental impacts of all forms of winter recreation and use on Park
- wildlife and Park ecology. The NPS will initiate scoping for the EIS no
- later than April of 1998. A draft EIS will be available for public comment
- on or before August 1, 1999 with a final EIS and decision notice expected by
- September 2000.
-
- 2.Prepare an Environmental Assessment (EA) to evaluate the impacts of
- closing at least one road segment to winter use this winter and in
- subsequent winters to study the impact of groomed trails on bison. The
- proposed action in the EA, which became available to the public on November
- 15, is to close the trail segment between Fishing Bridge and Canyon,
- approximately 14 miles, to all winter use except in the case of an
- administrative emergency. The public comment period will close on December
- 15, with a decision to be made by January 10, 1998. If the NPS decides to
- close the trail to winter use, then it will not be groomed beginning on the
- date the decision is made. The NPS is not limited to only closing this
- trail but could close additional trails to winter use this coming winter.
-
- In addition, the NPS must consider closing at least a similar length of
- trail in subsequent winters to study the impact of groomed trails on bison.
- In other words, at least 14 miles of trails must be considered for closure
- in Yellowstone Park each winter until the EIS is completed.
-
- 3.Each winter until the EIS is completed, the NPS will solicit public
- comment through publication of a notice in the FEDERAL REGISTER on the type,
- location, and methodology for studying bison use of the Park's snowmobile
- trail system. This information will be used to determine where trail
- closures may be needed to facilitate the study of the impact of the groomed
- trail system on bison. After considering comments generated by the public,
- the NPS will publish notice of its intended study plans by December 1 of
- each year.
-
- This is a fair and reasonable settlement which will permit all interested
- parties to participate in the NPS decision-making process regarding the
- study and management of winter use, particularly snowmobiling and trail
- grooming, in Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks.
-
- Date: Tue, 02 Dec 1997 13:01:38 +0000
- From: Ione Smith <ilsmith@utkux.utcc.utk.edu>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Ontario--beans for the poor
- Message-ID: <348406EC.2C0B@utkux.utcc.utk.edu>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- I tried to send this from another account the other day, got an error
- message. Many apologies if it has already appeared on the list. This is
- forwarded by request, because I know there's several Ontario folks on
- the list.
-
- ----------
-
- Hi there. This is just a note we are sending to the different food banks
- and soup kitchens either by telephone or e-mail.
-
- The Elora/Fergus Unitarian Universalist Church and the Bean Growers of
- Ontario have joined together in a pilot project to help distribute
- healthy and nutritious beans to Ontario's needy.
-
- We have available, in Paris, Ontario, 100 pound bags of beans to be
- distributed to food banks and soup kitchens in Wellington county. There
- are currently four varieties: Kidney, Romano, Black and Dutch Browns.
- You can pick them up yourself or a member of our congregation will
- collect them from Paris and deliver them to you at a cost of $10 per 100
- pound bag.
-
- We have many nutritious recipes and other literature available for those
- unfamiliar with the best methods of preparing dried beans.
-
- Please call me for more information:
-
- Jim Sannes
- 25 Main Street East
- Drayton, ON
- N0G 1P0
- 519 638-5444
- sannes@compuserve.com
- --
-
- Ione
-
- ==================================================
- http://funnelweb.utcc.utk.edu/~ilsmith/SVME.html
- The Society for Veterinary Medical Ethics
- http://funnelweb.utcc.utk.edu/~ilsmith/ethics.html
- for all sides of the AR/AW/anti-AR debate
- ==================================================
- Reality is whatever refuses to go away
- when I stop believing in it. -- Philip K. Dick
- Date: Tue, 2 Dec 1997 13:10:13 -0500 (EST)
- From: PAWS <paws@CapAccess.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Watch Inside Edition Thursday
- Message-ID: <Pine.SUN.3.91-FP.971202130440.4400A@cap1.capaccess.org>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
- On Thursday, December 4, "Inside Edition" will air a segment on exotic
- animals--especially lions and tigers--and the problems of surplus
- breeding. In the Sacramento area, the program airs at 7:30 p.m. on
- channel 31. Check your local listings for time and station.
-
- (In New York city, the show is delayed one day and will air on Friday,
- December 5 at noon.)
- Date: Tue, 2 Dec 1997 14:19:47 -0800 (PST)
- From: Michael Markarian <mmarkarian@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, en.alerts@conf.igc.apc.org
- Subject: MD DNR Offering Black Bear Stamp Promotion
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19971202201722.578f9f32@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- [Ed. note: Please support the Maryland black bear stamp program. Help us
- prove that Maryland residents can live with black bears rather than hunt
- them. -- MM]
-
-
-