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- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [US] Chocolate puppy moves in on Sox
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971209010021.090fd9e0@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
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-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Monday, December 8th, 1997
-
- Chocolate puppy moves in on Sox
- By Hugo Gurdon in Washington
-
- A CHOCOLATE-brown Labrador puppy has moved into the White House in an
- effort to fill the gap in President and Mrs Clinton's life left by the
- departure to university of their daughter, Chelsea, in September.
-
- The as-yet unnamed three-month-old dog played with Mr Clinton for half an
- hour on Friday. Officials said it was love at first sight as far as the
- President was concerned, but the puppy's feelings are unknown.
-
- So are those of Sox, Chelsea's cat, which was not in the vicinity when the
- puppy turned up and is still not aware that it will have to share its home
- at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue with another pet.
-
- After meeting its new owners, the puppy was taken away again to be house
- trained; fears that it would sully the the Oval Office carpet proved
- decisive in debate over whether it should take up residence at the White
- House immediately.
-
- The Sox dilemma - will it get on with the chocolate puppy or not? - is
- occupying the minds of the White House staff.
-
- "That's the key question," said Eric Rubin, who as spokesman for the
- National Security Council is more commonly called on to comment on Iraq and
- weapons of mass destruction. "Sox doesn't know yet."
-
- He said that Sox would never be evicted - the fate of Humphrey, the Downing
- Street cat that was banished to suburbia.
-
- Since Chelsea left Washington for Stanford University in California, her
- parents have worn their bleeding hearts on their sleeves. The emotional
- wrench of doing without their only child prompted a family friend, Tony
- Harrington, to offer the Clintons the puppy.
-
- ⌐ Copyright The Telegraph Group Limited 1997
-
-
-
- Date: Tue, 09 Dec 1997 01:12:23
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [US] Excessive ultraviolet rays kill amphibians
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971209011223.090f934a@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Vancouver Sun website (www.vancouversun.com)
- Tuesday, December 9th, 1997
-
- Excessive ultraviolet rays kill amphibians
- PAUL RECER
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) û Biologists have shown for the first time that excessive
- ultraviolet radiation from sunlight kills amphibians, a sign of the dangers
- of a thinning ozone layer.
-
- Oregon State University researchers found that sunlight contains enough
- ultraviolet-B radiation to kill most embryos of the long-toed salamander in
- lakes of the Cascade Mountain Range, a home for the animals for thousands
- of years.
-
- Salamanders shielded from UVB were able to reproduce normally in the lakes,
- said Andrew Blaustein, leader of the Oregon team.
-
- ⌐ Copyright The Vancouver Sun/Southam Newspapers
-
- "We were stunned by our findings," he said. "This is proof that excess UVB
- radiation in nature can cause death and deformity in this species."
-
- A report on the study is to be published Tuesday in the Proceedings of the
- National Academy of Sciences.
-
- Other scientists said the study sharpens concern about the thinning of the
- ozone layer of the atmosphere that normally shields the Earth from high
- levels of UVB. Studies have shown the ozone layer has been eroded by
- industrial chemicals, principally chlorofluorocarbons used in refrigeration.
-
- Most such chemicals are being phased out or have been banned worldwide, but
- the chemicals from earlier years remain in the atmosphere and continue to
- affect the ozone layer.
-
- Among the effects is the so-called ozone hole that forms annually over the
- Antarctic, but similar thinning has been detected over North America.
-
- Blaustein said the findings strongly support the theory that increased
- solar UVB has played a role in the decline of amphibian species. Most of
- these animals reproduce by laying eggs in jelly-like masses in shallow
- water where they can be affected by solar radiation.
-
- Scientists have reported a sharp decline in the number of frogs, toads and
- salamanders in many locations.
-
- Although earlier studies in laboratories have shown that UVB can cause
- genetic damage and death for some amphibians, the Oregon work is the first
- to precisely measure the effects of UVB in a comparative study in nature.
-
- The Oregon State study "is a serious thing," said Gary Ankley, an
- Environmental Protection Agency scientist, but he cautioned that the result
- applies to only one animal species and does not prove that UVB is the cause
- for all of the declines of frogs, toads and salamanders. Water pollution is
- also blamed.
-
- In the study, egg masses of some long-toed salamanders in lakes were
- shielded with UVB filters, while other egg masses were left exposed. All
- other factors were the same, said Blaustein, with many of the comparative
- groups of eggs side by side in the same lake.
-
- Blaustein said 85 per cent of the embryos in the exposed eggs died. Of the
- 15 per cent that hatched successfully, all but four animals were deformed.
-
- Among the eggs shielded from UVB, there was a 98 per cent hatch rate and
- virtually all of the animals were normal, said Blaustein.
-
- Copyright The Vancouver Sun / Southam Newpapers 1997
- Date: Tue, 09 Dec 1997 01:12:38
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [US] Researchers try to boost broccoli's cancer-fighting
- ability
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971209011238.32b79a70@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Vancouver Sun website (www.vancouversun.com)
- Tuesday, December 9th, 1997
-
- Researchers try to boost broccoli's cancer-fighting ability
-
- URBANA, Ill. (AP) û Researchers at the University of Illinois are trying to
- produce a "better broccoli" with many cancer-fighting compounds that
- wouldn't affect the taste of the already good-for-you vegetable.
-
- "If there was one vegetable to eat, you'd want it to be broccoli," said
- Barbara Klein, a researcher on the project.
-
- "It's high in vitamin C, it's high in beta-carotene, it's high in vitamin
- E, it's high in folate. And it has all these other non-vitamin compounds in
- it that are good for you. From my perspective George Bush had it all wrong."
-
- She was referring to the former U.S. president who once complained about
- broccoli's taste and said it was his least favorite veggie.
-
- Klein's answer? Try another variety. There are dozens of types of broccoli
- with different tastes and a different grocer or producer of frozen foods
- may use another kind.
-
- "They're all in the same family, but they're like a bunch of cousins who
- don't look the same or taste the same," she said.
-
- The project Klein is working on revolves around compounds called
- glucosinolates. Research says these compounds can increase
- resistance to cancer, and they're found in the so-called cruciferous
- vegetables û cabbage, brussels sprouts, cauliflower, kale and the most
- popular of the group, broccoli.
-
- But each of those different-tasting varieties of broccoli also has a
- different level of the cancer-fighting compounds.
-
- The University of Illinois researchers want to breed a broccoli plant with
- the best and most potent combination of these compounds. Some day they
- envision heads of broccoli at the grocery store being labeled "high in
- glucosinolates" just as cookies are called "low-fat" and cereals "high in
- fibre."
-
- But it's not just about breeding. The researchers have to worry about how
- the varieties taste and smell, how they hold up when frozen or cooked, and
- how they resist pests in the fields.
-
- "What I would love is if we could come up with something where we can
- identify strains that are potent enough that people could just eat broccoli
- or a related type of vegetable two or three servings a week. I think people
- would really do that," said Elizabeth Jeffery, an associate professor of
- nutrition.
-
- And she says many people could be helped by a modification in their diet û
- more than would ever go to their doctor's office for a shot or drug
- treatment.
-
- While glucosinolates are the compounds researchers are interested in
- generally, they don't have much benefit on their own. But when the
- vegetable is cut up or chewed, an enzyme is released that turns them into
- products researchers believe can fight cancer two ways û by detoxifying
- carcinogens and by suppressing the growth of existing cancerous tumors.
-
- Jeffery said studies have shown as little as 10 g of broccoli a day could
- have a small but significant effect on a person's risk of contracting
- cancer. A serving is about 150g.
-
- Earlier studies showed that sulforaphane, a product of the glucosinolates,
- prompts the body to make an enzyme that prevents tumors from forming. In
- laboratory animals exposed to carcinogens, a 1994 study found cancer
- development was reduced by 60 percent to 80 percent when the animals were
- fed sulforaphane extracted from broccoli.
-
- As for the suppression of tumor growth, Jeffery is about to begin research
- involving laboratory mice injected with cancerous human cells to study that
- further.
-
- Klein, a professor of foods and nutrition, is concentrating on preserving
- the taste of this "better broccoli" the university researchers are trying
- to create.
-
- To do that, she is using a professional panel of tasters who rate different
- varieties of broccoli on taste qualities such as sweetness,
- earthiness and bitterness, and smell qualities such as how
- floral, hay-like and musty the vegetable is.
-
- Some of the other concerns for the project are determining how broccoli
- plants with high levels of cancer-fighting compounds would hold up in the
- fields. And researchers want to determine the best way to process, store
- and serve the vegetable to keep the maximum cancer-fighting potential.
-
- But while the researchers do their work, Klein has some advice: "My bottom
- line is eat your broccoli."
-
- Copyright The Vancouver Sun / Southam Newpapers 1997
- Date: Tue, 09 Dec 1997 01:25:26
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [CA] Hog plant planned for Manitoba
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971209012526.32b7ab32@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- By David J Knowles
- Animal Voices News
-
- Maple Leaf Foods, Canada's largest food processing companies, announced
- plans last week to build a hog processing plant in Brandon, Manitoba.
-
- Maple Leaf decided to locate the plant, which will employ 2,500 people and
- will have a capacity to handle 45,000 pigs per week, in the praire town
- because there is a major transportation system available, there is a cheap
- supply of grain and there already are several factory-farm pig units in the
- area.
-
- The plant will cost $112 million (CDN), but Maple Leaf expects to recoup
- the money with both Noth American and Asian pork sales.
-
-
- Date: Tue, 09 Dec 1997 11:16:16 -0500
- From: Mesia Quartano <primates@usa.net>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: (US) ImmunoGen anti-cancer product passes key animal trial
- Message-ID: <348D6ED0.3640EFEB@usa.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- (Boston Herald; 12/06/97)
-
- A Cambridge company's potentially powerful anti-colon cancer compound
- passed a key test in trials with monkeys.
-
- ImmunoGen Inc. released data yesterday showing that the primates
- withstood powerful doses of the drug without detectable side effects.
-
- The doses given to monkeys were higher, proportionally, than those
- needed to destroy human colon tumors that had been transplanted into
- specially bred mice.
-
- About 140,000 Americans are diagnosed with colon cancer annually and
- about half eventually die when the disease spreads to other organs,
- ImmunoGen said.
-
- Human trials of the new drug could begin next year, with approval
- possible in about three years, said Mitchel Sayere, chairman and chief
- executive.
-
- "If this drug really fills the need that we think it will - that is for
- patients who otherwise would succumb to their disease - it's likely to
- be greeted by the (Food and Drug Administration) with the kind of
- enthusiasm that
- yields expedited review and accelerated approval," he said.
-
- ImmunoGen's compound - called C242-DM1 - combines DM1, an anti-cancer
- drug the firm claims is 100 times more powerful than anything now in
- use, with C242, an antibody that binds itself to cancer cells.
-
- Because the antibody does not attach itself to healthy cells, patients
- presumably will be able to tolerate much stronger doses than with
- typical drugs, which indiscriminately attack cells they contact.
-
- ImmunoGen's compound does not have any major rivals, Sayare said.
- C242-DM1 is the small company's biggest project.
-
- Shares in ImmunoGen, which has no drug on the market, closed up 6.3
- cents yesterday at $1.19.
-
- (Copyright 1997)
-
-
-
- Date: Tue, 09 Dec 1997 11:18:31 -0500
- From: Mesia Quartano <primates@usa.net>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Finnish Farmer Wounds Fur Activist
- Message-ID: <348D6F57.973D8CE3@usa.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- (AP Online; 12/08/97)
-
- HELSINKI, Finland (AP) A farmer who breeds fox and mink shot and
- wounded an anti-fur activist who tried to free the animals on his farm,
- a news report said Monday.
-
- The shooting Saturday at Markku Kuisma's farm was the fourth such
- incident there, the Helsingin Sanomat newspaper reported.
-
- The injured person, whose name was not given, was hospitalized in stable
- condition, the report said.
-
-
-
- Date: Tue, 09 Dec 1997 12:08:05
- From: Dirk Anton Boeckx <dab34@cornell.edu>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (UK, Belgium, Holland) Jim Mason
- Message-ID: <3.0.2.16.19971209120805.2d67fb54@postoffice2.mail.cornell.edu>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- (UK, Belgium, Holland)
-
- Jim Mason will come to the UK, Belgium and Holland in March-April 1998. We
- still need some organizations that are willing to host a talk by Mason, or
- individuals who want to organize such a talk. He will not charge anything,
- but will expect a contribution towards traveling costs that will not be
- higher than ú50, or fl. 150, or 3000 BFR.
-
- Mason is guaranteed to attract a good number of people. He is author of
- "Animal Factories", which he wrote in 1980 with Peter Singer. This book was
- the first to expose the cruelty of modern intensive livestock production to
- a large audience. It was updated in 1990. Mason's most recent book is "An
- Unnatural Order: Why We Are Destroying the Planet and Each Other. A
- Manifesto for Change" (1993)
-
- During his stay in Europe, Mason will speak about the agricultural
- revolution in 8000 BC, and how it affected our relations with animals, with
- the earth and with each other, culminating into the present mad intensive
- livestock practices and environmental destruction. (To explain the present
- malaise, Mason goes much further back in time than the industrial
- revolution or the dawn of capitalism in renaissance Europe.) He will also
- argue that the oppression of women, just like the oppression of animals,
- originated with the shift from forager groups to agricultural societies.
- The attitudes of our society towards animals will then be contrasted with
- data from science and psychology showing that we need caring relations
- towards animals for our mental development, and to be at peace with
- ourselves (cf. the role of animals in children's development).
-
- If you are interested in organizing a talk with your organisation, please
- contact me as soon as possible. I can also send you the chapter outline of
- Mason's 1993 book, as well as his biographical data and some other
- information.
-
- Dirk Boeckx
- 100 Fairview Square, 3M
- Ithaca, NY 14850
- (607) 273 1376
-
-
- Date: Thu, 04 Dec 1997 22:48:05 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Humans nicer to animals thought "smarter'
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19971204224751.0168b730@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- .c The Associated Press
-
- CORVALLIS, Ore. (AP) - Chickens and turkeys come in last when people are asked
- to rank animals by brainpower, which may be one of the reasons they end up on
- the menu.
-
- ``The smarter we think animals are, the more humanely we care for them,'' said
- Steve Davis, an Oregon State University researcher who conducted the survey.
-
- Not surprisingly, dogs and cats ranked highest. Horses and pigs followed, then
- cows and sheep.
-
- Those surveyed ranged from faculty and graduate students to members of the
- Oregon chapter of the American Association of Laboratory Animal Sciences,
- which is in charge of university research animals.
-
- Davis said it's difficult to show whether animals can actually ``think'' on
- any level approaching human thought.
-
- ``When I was young, I thought, `Animals probably have minds, but mostly they
- react out of instinct,''' said Davis, who was raised on a farm. ``Now I
- believe animals do think. ... But they are different from humans in that they
- don't have the depth of intelligence.''
-
- AP-NY-08-11-97 0628EDT
-
- ⌐1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center info@vegetarian.org
- Date: Thu, 04 Dec 1997 22:51:35 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Coyote runs into Seattle building
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19971204225125.0168d100@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- .c The Associated Press
-
- SEATTLE (AP) - A coyote being chased by crows scampered through downtown
- streets and ducked into a busy federal building to escape. It ran into an open
- elevator and the door closed, trapping the panicked animal.
-
- It may sound like an urban myth, but the bizarre episode actually happened
- Wednesday in the Pacific Northwest's largest city.
-
- ``Fortunately there was no one in the elevator,'' said spokesman Ken Spitzer
- with the General Services Administration, which supervises the Henry M.
- Jackson Federal Building.
-
- Animal-control officers removed the animal unharmed after about 2 1/2 hours
- Wednesday, but it left a mess behind for building maintenance crews.
-
- ``I've been in this business 26 years, and this is the first time I've run
- across anything like this,'' Spitzer said.
-
- A witness ``saw the coyote, which he thought of course was a wild dog, running
- down First Avenue and it was being dived at by crows, and kind of being
- harassed,'' Spitzer said.
-
- As it ran past the federal building, an automatic door opened ``and he darted
- into the building and right into the first available elevator that had the
- doors open,'' he said.
-
- Seattle Animal Control manager Don Jordan said the animal appeared to be
- healthy, though a little stressed. It was released later Wednesday in a rural
- area east of Seattle.
-
- AP-NY-12-04-97 1836EST
-
- ⌐1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center info@vegetarian.org
- Date: Thu, 04 Dec 1997 22:53:20 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Jawbone chews hole in Australian 'prehistory'
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19971204225238.0168fa80@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- WASHINGTON, Nov 20 (Reuters) - A tiny jawbone may force scientists to re-write
- the pre-history books on Australia's unique animal life, researchers said on
- Thursday.
-
- They said the little creature, which lived 115 million years ago, seemed to
- have had a placenta -- unlike most of Australia's native mammals which are
- marsupials.
-
- Mammals like mice and humans grow their young inside the womb using a
- placenta, which acts as a conduit for nourishment to the fetus. In marsupials
- like kangaroos, the young develop in a pouch outside the mother's body.
-
- Thomas Rich and colleagues at the Museum of Victoria examined a little piece
- of jaw, only about 16 mm across, found in southeast Australia.
-
- They named the new animal Ausktribosphenos nyktos, and classified it as a
- tribosphenic mammal, meaning that some of the teeth are specialized for
- cutting and crushing. Primitive marsupials and placentals both had this type
- of teeth.
-
- But this specimen looks like another fossil found in Mongolia that is
- considered to have belonged to a placental mammal, they reported in the
- journal Science.
-
- This puzzled them because placental mammals were not believed to have appeared
- in Australia until about five million years ago.
-
- If they are right, placental mammals evolved in Australia, died out and then
- were re-introduced. ^REUTERS@
-
- 00:35 11-21-97
-
- ⌐1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center info@vegetarian.org
- Date: Thu, 04 Dec 1997 22:50:57 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Corporate alliances to increase pet adoptions
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19971204224941.0168d3d0@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nov. 13, 1997--InnoPet Brands Corp.
- (Nasdaq SmallCap:INBC) today announced that it will donate a portion of the
- purchase price of every bag of InnoPet(R) Veterinarian Formula(tm) Dog Food
- sold at local supermarkets between November 1 and December 31 for the
- specific purpose of increasing pet adoptions at local animal shelters. Every
- dollar donated, with no administrative costs deducted, will go to local
- humane organizations solely to fund new pet adoptions.
-
- Monies raised by this program will be administered through The Pet Savers
- Foundation, a not-for-profit corporation promoting the well-being of dogs and
- cats through its efforts to unite more than 6,000 humane organizations.
-
- In announcing this program Marc Duke, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of
- InnoPet Brands Corp. commented, "We are delighted with the opportunity to
- help support the adoption of thousands of homeless pets, especially during
- the holiday season. We are particularly pleased to be working with The Pet
- Savers Foundation in this effort because, like InnoPet Brands Corp., they have
- always placed the highest value on proper pet nutrition."
-
- InnoPet Brands Corp. produces, markets and sells InnoPet Veterinarian Formula
- premium lifestage dog foods through supermarket and grocery outlets in the
- eastern and southern United States. InnoPet Brands Corp. can be found on
- the World Wide Web at http://www.innopet.com .
-
- CONTACT:
-
- InnoPet Brands Corp., Fort Lauderdale
- Marc Duke, Chairman & CEO
- John Bieber, VP-Marketing
- 954/453-2400
-
- KEYWORD: FLORIDA
- BW1086 NOV 13,1997
-
- ⌐1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center info@vegetarian.org
- Date: Thu, 04 Dec 1997 23:12:51 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Apple Computer contributes to HSUS, 2nd Harvest, (ugh)
- Make-A-Wish
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19971204231231.01497b40@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- Consumers Direct Financial Donation Purchase of Mac OS 8 Upgrade:
- Humane Society of the United States, Second Harvest Food Bank,
- and The Make-A-Wish
-
- Foundation to Benefit from National Campaign
-
- CUPERTINO, Calif., Nov. 21 /PRNewswire/ -- Apple Computer Inc. (Nasdaq: AAPL)
- announced today that it will donate U.S. $10 for every consumer purchase of
- Mac OS 8 software before Jan. 15, 1998 to one of the following charities: The
- Humane Society of the United States, which promotes the humane treatment of
- animals of all kinds; Second Harvest Food Bank, which collects and distributes
- more than 500 million pounds of food to people in need each year; or The Make-
- A-Wish Foundation, which fulfills the special wishes of children under the age
- of 18 who have life-threatening illnesses. All contributions will be made in
- the name of the consumers who participate in the upgrade program.
-
- "Mac OS 8 once again demonstrates that Apple is committed to improving its
- products to meet the growing needs of our customers in the design and
- publishing and education market places, and ensuring that they can take full
- advantage of their existing computer systems," said Peter Lowe, Mac OS product
- line manger, Apple Computer, Inc. "During the holiday season, we want to
- demonstrate our commitment to worthwhile non-profit organizations through
- direct contributions on behalf of our customers."
-
- Since its introduction in late July 1997, more than two million Mac OS 8 units
- have been shipped worldwide. The software is available for an estimated retail
- price of U.S. $99, while an upgrade version costs an estimated retail price of
- U.S. $69. Mac OS 8 is the latest operating system software release for the
- Macintosh -- and the most significant Mac OS upgrade since 1984. Mac OS 8 also
- represents the latest milestone in the Company's operating system strategy
- which includes the delivery of ongoing Mac OS releases and system updates, as
- well as Rhapsody, the code name for Apple's next-generation operating system.
-
- Mac OS 8 includes a multitude of new features and technologies to offer
- customers an improved user experience with increased productivity and
- efficiency, greatly simplified Internet access and leading-edge tools, state-
- of-the-art multimedia capabilities, and enhanced performance and stability.
-
- For additional information on Mac OS 8, visit the Mac OS 8 website at:
-
- http://www.macos.apple.com/macos8/.
-
- Apple Computer, Inc. ignited the personal computer revolution in the 1970s
- with the Apple II, and reinvented the personal computer in the 1980s with the
- Macintosh. Apple is now recommitted to its original mission -- to bring the
- best personal computing products and support to students, educators,
- designers, scientists, engineers, businesspersons and consumers in over 140
- countries around the world.
-
- NOTE: Apple, the Apple logo, Macintosh, and Mac OS are registered trademarks
- of Apple Computer, Inc. Additional company and product names may be trademarks
- or registered trademarks of the individual companies and are respectfully
- acknowledged.
-
-
- SOURCE Apple Computer Inc.
- CO: Apple Computer Inc.
- ST: California
- IN: CPR MLM
- SU: PDT
- 11/21/97 13:29 EST http://www.prnewswire.com
-
- ⌐1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center info@vegetarian.org
- Date: Thu, 04 Dec 1997 22:52:35 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Britain's ban of beef on bone
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19971204225230.01690100@pop.tiac.net>
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- By Patricia Reaney
-
- LONDON, Dec 4 (Reuters) - Consumers were up in arms and butchers and farmers
- vented their anger on Thursday but medical experts said Britain had no
- alternative but to ban beef on the bone.
-
- Although the risk of new infection of mad cow disease is slight, they agreed
- that the government could not take a chance of letting contaminated beef into
- the food chain.
-
- ``It was certainly the right move. It would have been better to make that move
- years ago like in 1993 during the peak of BSE (bovine spongiform
- encephalopathy),'' said Hans Kretzschmar, a neuropathologist at the University
- of Gottingen in Germany.
-
- The scientist who has done research into prions, the brain protein that
- mutates and causes the disease, said Britain had no alternative after
- experiments showed that the agent that causes BSE and its human equivalent
- Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) could be transmitted through nerves near the
- spinal cord.
-
- ``Knowing that the infectious agent is in there, there was no other move,'' he
- added.
-
- Agricultural Minister Jack Cunningham wiped T-bone steaks and ribs off the
- British menu after expert advisers on the government's Spongiform
- Encephalopathy Advisory Committee (SEAC) warned that infected tissue in the
- dorsal root ganglia -- swellings on the nerves near the spine -- could be left
- in the bone.
-
- Dr Richard Lacey, a professor at the University of Leeds and a staunch critic
- of Britain's handling of the BSE crisis, applauded the action, but like
- Kretzschmar felt it should have been done years ago.
-
- ``It was too little too late,'' he said. ``It's ridiculous that beef, in
- general being consumed is safe, and the bones are dangerous.''
-
- More than a decade after BSE first broke out in British herds, nearly two
- years since the European Union banned all export of British beef and despite
- the slaughter of 1.4 million cattle over the age of 30 months, the BSE crisis
- continued with a new twist which left Britons confused about which parts of
- the animal are safe to eat.
-
- Given the latest scientific findings, Cunningham chose what he said was the
- only option.
-
- ``Beef can only be allowed for consumption when there are no bones,'' he told
- a hastily arranged news conference after the shock move.
-
- The new evidence that dorsal root ganglia (DRG), and bone marrow in cattle in
- a late stage of the disease, could be infected emerged after scientists fed
- experimental animals with a large dose of BSE by mouth.
-
- Groups of the infected cattle were slaughtered and tissue was injected into
- mice. SEAC stressed that the cattle were given a heavy dose of BSE and the
- infected tissue was found only in cattle aged over 30 months -- older than any
- cattle that would be allowed into the food chain.
-
- It emphasised that the bone marrow result was provisional and required further
- tests. There was no evidence that meat, muscle or blood contained the BSE
- infection.
-
- SEAC estimated that ``next year of the approximately 2.2 million cattle to be
- slaughtered for human food only three will be near enough to the end of the
- incubation period to raise the possibility of infectivity in their DRG.''
-
-
- Although there is only a five percent chance of one new case of the new
- strain
- of CJD resulting in 1998, the government felt it was still too high.
-
- Two scientific studies published in September confirmed that mad cow disease
- causes the new strain of CJD, which scientists first identified in 1996, and
- that eating infected beef was the likely cause.
-
- Scientists believe that BSE was caused by feeding cattle with the carcasses of
- sheep that died from scrapie, a related brain disease. Although Britain banned
- the practice in 1988, scientists suspect cattle still ate infected feed for
- many years.
-
- Seeking to calm the furore caused by the latest twist in the mad cow saga,
- Cunningham said every requirement ``that is necessary to safeguard British
- beef has been taken.'' But he admitted the crisis would probably continue into
- the new century.
-
- The research that resulted in the beef on the bone move will be published in
- the journal Veterinary Record.
- ^REUTERS@
-
- 18:36 12-04-97
-
- ⌐1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center info@vegetarian.org
- Date: Thu, 04 Dec 1997 22:49:37 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@TIAC.NET>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Pets are at risk during the holidays: pet insurance
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19971204224926.0168f100@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
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-
- Covering Emergency Holiday Veterinary Medical Procedures
-
- ANAHEIM, Calif., Nov. 25 /PRNewswire/ -- This year thousands of pets will end
- up at an animal hospital for a holiday related injury or illness.
- Unfortunately, this unexpected expense doesn't always fit into a family's
- budget. This year Veterinary Pet Insurance has the holiday gift solution.
-
- "Christmas morning our dog, Sunny, got into all sorts of mischief," described
- Maureen Ault, Veterinary Pet Insurance policyholder. "We came home and Sunny
- had unwrapped half of the Christmas presents, ate a box of chocolate, and ate
- a ton of ribbon and gift wrap. We definitely didn't plan on spending
- Christmas morning at an animal hospital. And, we didn't plan on incurring a
- couple of hundred dollars in veterinary bills. Veterinary Pet Insurance
- covered about 70% of the bill. This was our family's best Christmas gift."
-
- For pet owners like Ault, Veterinary Pet Insurance will conduct a Holiday
- Promotion. Each new pet insurance policy will come with a holiday pet package
- from Three Dog Bakery and Sergeant's Pet Products. Veterinary Pet Insurance
- of Anaheim, California, offers pet owners medical coverage for dogs and cats.
- Their policies cover unanticipated accidents and illnesses during the holiday
- season and throughout the year.
-
- According to the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA), 34 million
- households in the United States own a dog and 32 million households own a cat.
- In a 1995 study the American Animal Hospital Association (AAHA) reported that
- pet owners spend $8 billion annually on pet health care services. According
- to a recent AAHA survey, 79 percent of people give their pets' holiday or
- birthday presents.
-
- "Veterinary Pet Insurance is the solution because it provides for those
- unexpected veterinary costs that your pet may incur during the holidays and
- throughout the whole year," stated Jack Stephens, DVM, President and Founder,
- Veterinary Pet Insurance. "That makes pet insurance the perfect gift for your
- pet and family. It is a gift that really keeps on giving throughout the
- year."
-
- In order to provide pet owners with immediate access to information,
- Veterinary Pet Insurance has established a special Holiday Promotion web site
- (www.petgift.com). Visitors to www.petgift.com can learn about all the
- insurance policies and options available in their home state. In addition,
- owners can directly order Veterinary Pet Insurance and take advantage of the
- Holiday Promotion on line.
-
- "Veterinary Pet Insurance is just like human health insurance, except better,"
- stated Stephens. "We cover the necessary veterinary medical bills for your
- pet. In addition, our policies allow pet owners to use any veterinarian
- worldwide, including specialists, with no pre-authorization required."
-
- Veterinary Pet Insurance is the largest and oldest pet health and accident
- insurer in the United States covering cats and dogs. Exclusively endorsed by
- the American Humane Association, their policies are licensed in 45 states and
- the District of Columbia. Since 1982, they have sold over 750,000 insurance
- policies and boast an 82 percent renewal rate.
-
-
- Holiday Veterinary Costs
-
- "During the holidays pets can get into all sorts of things while you're out
- shopping, spending time with the family, or going out to a party," explained
- Bernadine Cruz, DVM, Laguna Hills Animal Hospital. "They'll get into
- poinsettia plants, knock over the tree, and chew on electrical cords."
-
- Some of the more common pet accidents that veterinarians see between November
- and January include choking (from eating tinsel, holiday decorations, small
- toys, and bones), electrocution (from chewing on Christmas Tree lights and
- electrical cords), poisoning (from poinsettia plants, chocolate, alcohol, and
- antifreeze) and driveway mishaps.
-
- "Then when you come home, you now have a pet who needs to see a veterinarian,"
- stated Cruz. "Usually this extra added expense, was not planned for. After
- budgeting for parties, gifts, etc. the credit cards are maxed out. All too
- often families are faced with tragedy of putting their pet to sleep because
- they just can't afford that added expense."
-
- Treatment for chocolate toxicity and bloat can cost upwards of $1,400 and
- $2,000 respectively. Medical diagnostic tests like MRIs and CAT scans can
- cost between $750 and $950.
-
- Veterinary Care Costs
-
- "Veterinary care costs are the same as human health care costs," stated David
- Aucoin, DVM, West Los Angeles Animal Hospital. "We do the same procedures
- that your doctor would perform on you during an emergency like x- rays,
- surgery, MRIs and CAT scans. All these procedures and more are done by your
- veterinarian and they have a cost."
-
- Veterinary Pet Insurance policies pay for prescriptions, lab fees, x-rays,
- surgery, hospitalizations, diagnostic tests, treatment and office calls for
- any covered medical problem.
-
- "We on the human side tend not to see the costs because our insurance carriers
- take care of the bill for the most part," explained Aucoin. "On the
- veterinary side, however, you are usually unprotected and must bear the burden
- of those costs directly."
-
- Veterinary Pet Insurance offers two accident and illness plans for pet owners
- -- Gold Plan and Advantage Plus. The Gold Plan and Advantage Plus Policies
- start as low as $89 and $159 per year, respectively.
-
- Pets have become valued members of our family. In fact, people are treating
- their pets more like children. A recent survey reported in the Journal of the
- AVMA, found that 78 percent of pet owners thought of their pets as children
- and 84 percent of pet owners display photographs of their pets.
-
- "Pets are members of our family. Like any other member of our family, we want
- high quality, affordable healthcare for them," explained Stephens. "As pan of
- our family we share the holidays with them. We give them gifts, toys and even
- special treats during the holidays and special occasions. That's why we're
- doing a Holiday Promotion this year. When your family gives and receives the
- gift of pet insurance you can tangibly share it with your pet in the form of a
- treat and toy from Veterinary Pet Insurance."
-
- Veterinary Pet Insurance was founded in 1980 by independent veterinarians to
- provide pet owners an alternative to unnecessary euthanasia or continued pet
-
- suffering because of economics. According to the company two out of every
- three pets will have a serious illness during their lifetime that will require
- medical treatment for a chronic or potentially life threatening condition.
-
- Pet gifts for the Veterinary Pet Insurance Holiday Promotion have been
- supplied by Three Dog Bakery of Kansas City, Missouri, and Sergeant's Pet
- Products, a division of ConAgra Pet Products of Omaha, Nebraska. Three Dog
- Bakery produces a diverse line of wholesome, freshbaked, all-natural bakery
- treats available via mail order or from one of 1O stores throughout the United
- States and England. Sergeant's Pet Products are distributed throughout the
- United States at grocery stores and other mass merchandise retailers.
-
- Dog and cat owners can find additional information on Veterinary Pet
- Insurance, order pet insurance and take advantage of the holiday promotion on
- the World Wide Web at www.petgift.com. Owners can also call 1-888-PET-HEALTH
- (1-888-738-4325).
-
- SOURCE Veterinary Pet Insurance
- CO: Veterinary Pet Insurance; Three Dog Bakery; Sergeant's Pet Products
- ST: California
- IN: INS
- SU:
-
- 11/25/97 04:11 EST http://www.prnewswire.com
-
- ⌐1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center info@vegetarian.org
- Date: Thu, 04 Dec 1997 22:45:29 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: LA shelter bans Halloween cat adoptions
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19971204224511.01688db0@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- .c The Associated Press
-
- LOS ANGELES (AP) - Play all the tricks you want on Halloween,
- just keep black cats out of the line of fire.
-
- Like humane societies and animal shelters across the nation, the Society for
- the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Los Angeles will ban adoptions of black
- cats between Oct. 18 through Oct. 31 at its two shelters in Los Angeles and
- Hawthorne.
-
- ``Because some people consider them good luck or bad luck, things tend to
- happen to them by pranksters on Halloween,'' said Madeline Bernstein,
- president of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Los Angeles.
-
- The Halloween ban has been in place for a number of years in order to prevent
- adoptions that have ulterior motives, Bernstein said.
-
- ``We don't want any of our adoptions to be insincere,'' she said.
-
- AP-NY-10-17-97 0300EDT
-
- ⌐1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center info@vegetarian.org
- Date: Thu, 04 Dec 1997 23:11:41 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@TIAC.NET>
- To: Veg-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Woman with Mad Cow Disease donated her eyes
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19971204231132.01495900@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- .c The Associated Press
-
- LONDON (AP) - Scottish health authorities are investigating how tissue from
- the eyes of a woman who had suffered from the human form of ``mad cow
- disease'' was transplanted into three other people.
-
- ``We are aware there is a potential infection risk from tissue retrieved from
- a patient in Scotland,'' a spokesman for the government Scottish Office said
- Saturday on customary condition of anonymity.
-
- ``We do not know the full facts, but we are making urgent inquiries into how
- this could have occurred,'' he said.
-
- The 53-year-old woman suffered from lung cancer, but after she died a post-
- mortem examination showed she also had Creutzfeldt Jakob Disease. The brain-
- destroying disease is the human form of bovine spongiform encephalopathy,
- which afflicts cattle and is known as ``mad cow disease.''
-
- No further details were given on the grounds of patient confidentiality.
-
- But the tabloid Sunday Mail said the post-mortem findings were not passed on
- to officials handling organ donor arrangements, and parts of her eyes,
- including the corneas, were transplanted into two men and a woman in her
- eighties.
-
- AP-NY-11-30-97 1224EST
-
- ⌐1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center info@vegetarian.org
- Date: Thu, 04 Dec 1997 22:45:07 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Rescued CT puppies ready for adoption
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19971204224452.0168b420@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- NEWINGTON, Conn., Nov 20 (Reuters) - Nearly 100 puppies rescued from a truck
- wreck in Bridgeport, Connecticut in October will be getting new homes,
- officials said on Thursday.
-
- The Connecticut Humane Society received nearly 5,000 offers from around the
- world to adopt the puppies since they were found in filthy, overcrowded cages
- in the back of a truck October 7, Humane Society President Richard Johnston
- said.
-
- The plight of the so-called ``Bridgeport puppies'' sparked outrage at the
- cruel conditions of the puppy mill industry.
-
- Some of the adoption offers came from as far away as England, South Africa and
- South America, Johnston told Reuters. However, only applicants from within the
- United States will be considered because of U.S. animal quarantine laws.
-
- The 97 Bridgeport puppies came from a puppy nursery in Missouri and were
- headed for pet stores along the East Coast when the accident occurred.
-
- Truck driver Larry Jenkins of Tunis, Missouri, was charged with cruelty to
- animals and put on probation for two years.
-
- Johnston said justice was not served because the puppy mill owner was never
- charged. He urged Connecticut and other states to enact stronger laws to
- discourage the puppy industry.
-
- ``When we received these puppies, they were lethargic and incubating serious
- diseases,'' Johnston said.
-
- ``They're much better now,'' he said of the 10-week-old puppies, who represent
- 29 breeds including beagles, dachshunds, boxers and bloodhounds.
-
- A drawing was held Thursday to select 200 prospective owners, of whom all but
- seven were from the state of Connecticut.
-
- The candidates will now be interviewed to determine if they should indeed be
- given puppies, Johnston said.
-
- ``I have mixed feelings about this tragedy,'' Johnston said. ``I'm gratified
- by the outpouring of concern, but there are also hundreds of thousands of
- other animals that are waiting for adoption in shelters around the country.''
- ^REUTERS@
-
- 23:30 11-20-97
-
- ⌐1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center info@vegetarian.org
- Date: Thu, 04 Dec 1997 23:11:54 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: Veg-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: US says boat sewage caused oyster illnesses
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19971204231146.01498e70@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- By Mike Cooper
-
- ATLANTA, Nov 28 (Reuters) - Sewage dumped from oyster harvesting boats in the
- Gulf of Mexico caused an outbreak of intestinal illness that sickened hundreds
- of people who ate raw oysters last winter, health officials said Friday.
-
- The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) said people in Alabama,
- Florida, Georgia, Louisiana and Mississippi developed gastroenteritis because
- they ate oysters contaminated with at least three different strains of
- caliciviruses.
-
- Health officials interviewed 153 people who became sick after eating raw
- oysters. When they traced the source, they concluded the oysters had become
- contaminated because of sewage routinely dumped into the water by Louisiana
- oyster harvesters.
-
- ``It was from oyster fishermen dumping overboard their fecal waste without the
- proper treatment,'' Dr. Jimmy Guidry of the Louisiana Office of Public Health
- said.
-
- The illnesses last winter were the third oyster-related gastroenteritis
- outbreak in Louisiana linked to calicivirus since 1993. An outbreak in 1993
- sickened more than 200 people.
-
- The outbreak prompted Louisiana public health officials to close eight
- waterways southeast of the Mississippi River for three weeks in January.
-
- Louisiana produces about 11 million pounds of oysters every year.
-
- ``We're working with the oyster industry to make sure that we develop and
- enforce laws for appropriate sewage containers on boats with dump pump-out
- stations at the docks,'' Guidry said.
-
- Eating oysters contaminated with the viruses can cause vomiting, abdominal
- cramps, diarrhea, headache and flu-like symptoms. Guidry said caliviviruses
- sicken about 181,000 people every year. ^REUTERS@
-
- 20:56 11-28-97
-
- ⌐1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center info@vegetarian.org
- Date: Thu, 04 Dec 1997 22:51:21 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Anti-fur protests erupt in several US cities
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19971204225102.0168d740@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
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-
- SAN FRANCISCO, Nov 28 (Reuters) - Five animal rights activists took over a
- 175-foot crane near Macy's in San Francisco on Friday and unfurled a banner
- declaring ``Fur is Murder,'' while activists in other cities were arrested for
- protesting outside several exclusive stores.
-
- Organizers in California said the protest marked ``Fur Free Friday'' at the
- start of the Christmas shopping season and the launch of a new national
- campaign against leghold animal traps and the sale of animal fur.
-
- Eight people were arrested for protesting in front of the exclusive Nieman
- Marcus store in San Francisco's busy Union Square, police said, although no
- action was anticipated against the protesters still on the crane.
-
- ``We'll arrest them when they come down,'' a police spokesman said. ``They say
- they are going to stay there all night.''
-
- Protests also took place in New York, where 22 people were arrested outside
- two stores that sell furs, and at stores in New Jersey and Long Island, New
- York.
-
- In Dallas, five protesters were arrested after chaining themselves together to
- block the entrance of the Neiman Marcus downtown store. Five others were
- arrested for interfering with police officers, a dispatcher said.
-
- In Beverly Hills, seven people were arrested after they lay down in front of
- the exclusive Fendi shop on Rodeo Drive, blocking the entrance.
-
- The store's manager, Jean-Marc Mondolini, said Fendi was ``well-known for
- furs'' and added that he did not argue with the protesters, saying, ``Oh, I
- would never do that.''
-
- A statement issued by the Animal Rights Direct Action Coalition said the
- primary focus of the new anti-fur campaign would be Federated Department
- Stores, which owns several major chains including Macy's and Bloomingdale's.
-
- ``Fur sales are on the downward trend, but still nearly 40 million animals are
- killed by neck-breaking, anal electrocution and suffocation every year for
- vanity,'' a coalition statement said.
-
- In Manhattan, 22 anti-fur activists from the group Friends of Animals were
- arrested at demonstrations outside of Saks Fifth Ave. and the Revillon Fur Co.
- in midtown, police said.
-
- The protest began at Saks, near Rockefeller Center, as about 300 demonstrators
- began a march up Fifth Ave. Eight of them sat down in front of Revillon,
- blocking the entrance.
-
- As police moved in to remove them, two vans pulled up and 14 people bound
- together got off, sat down in a circle and refused to move. Police arrested
- the eight without incident but emergency services officers were needed to take
- the group of 14 into custody.
-
- The protesters were charged with trespassing, criminal trespassing and
- obstructing governmental administration.
-
- Organizers said that at least 53 people were arrested in about 100 separate
- demonstrations against fur across the country. ^REUTERS@
-
- 20:54 11-28-97
-
- ⌐1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center info@vegetarian.org
- Date: Thu, 04 Dec 1997 23:12:26 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: Veg-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Bioethics links
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19971204231205.01497100@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- http://ccme-mac4.bsd.uchicago.edu/CCMEDocs/EthLinks
-
- ⌐1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center info@vegetarian.org
- Date: Thu, 04 Dec 1997 22:47:48 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Don't get trapped, ProPAW warns Californians
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19971204224728.0168b140@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nov. 13, 1997--A coalition of seven major
- animal protection groups organized as "Protect Pets and Wildlife" (ProPAW) is
- warning Californians to keep their pets indoors or on leashes as California's
- trapping season gets underway this weekend.
-
- "Each year in California, more than 15,000 animals including bobcats, foxes
- and beavers are trapped for their fur with cruel body-gripping traps," said
- ProPAW Campaign Manager Aaron Medlock. "But wildlife isn't the only casualty,"
- he added. "Countless dogs and cats get caught and die in these
- indiscriminate traps as well."
-
- This Sunday, Nov. 16, trapping season opens for badger, gray fox, mink,
- muskrat and raccoon. Beaver trapping began at the beginning of the month,
- and on Nov. 24 the bobcat joins the list of targeted animals.
-
- "Most people would be surprised to learn that commercial trappers commonly
- snare animals in 48 of 58 counties throughout the state," said Medlock.
- "Pets living in outlying areas particularly are in danger. ProPAW is
- advising pet owners to keep close tabs on their animals and keep them indoors
- as much as possible during trapping season."
-
- ProPAW is presently working to qualify a citizens' initiative for the
- November 1998 ballot. The ProPAW initiative will protect wildlife and family
- pets by banning cruel and indiscriminate traps
-
- -- including the steel-jawed leghold -- for recreation or the fur trade. It
- also will ban especially dangerous poisons that are harmful to animals and
- the environment. Exceptions are provided to control nuisance animals and to
- protect public health and safety.
-
- The ProPAW initiative is sponsored by the American Society for the Prevention
- of Cruelty to Animals, Animal Protection Institute, The Ark Trust, Inc.,
- Doris Day Animal League, The Fund for Animals, The Humane Society of the
- United States and The International Fund for Animal Welfare.
-
- Pep rallies for campaign volunteers are being held throughout the state
- beginning Nov. 15. Registered voters interested in attending a rally in
- their area or helping to collect signatures to qualify the measure should
- contact ProPAW headquarters at 310/207-7706. NOTE TO EDITORS: Video of
- trapped animals available by request.
-
- CONTACT:
-
- The Ark Trust, Inc.
- Lisa Agabian, 818/501-2275
-
- or
-
- ProPAW Campaign
- Aaron Medlock, 310/207-7706
-
- KEYWORD: CALIFORNIA
- BW0146 NOV 13,1997
-
- ⌐1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center info@vegetarian.org
- Date: Thu, 04 Dec 1997 22:47:24 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Hollywood stars lend efforts to ban cruel traps
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19971204224632.0168c280@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- City Desks and Entertainment Writers
-
- ADVISORY...for Tuesday (Dec. 2)
-
- --(BUSINESS WIRE)--
-
- As Trapping Season Gets Under Way, Alicia Silverstone, James Cromwell, Kevin
- Nealon, Ed Begley, Jr., Shari Belafonte and Tippi Hedren Speak Up for
- Statewide Initiative at News Conference
-
- WHAT: A celebrity news conference to urge public support of the Protect Pets
- and Wildlife (ProPAW) initiative to protect wildlife and family pets by
- banning cruel and indiscriminate traps -- including the steel-jawed leghold
- -- for recreation or the fur trade, and two especially dangerous poisons
- which are harmful to animals and the environment. Visual/photo opportunities
- will include a giant ProPAW petition which celebrities will sign to urge the
- public to sign on to help qualify the ballot initiative and volunteer time in
- support of the measure; video of animals in traps (b-roll available at news
- conference); and a demonstration of the force of the brutal steel-jawed
- leghold trap.
-
- WHO: Speakers will include:
-
- -- Alicia Silverstone ("Batman and Robin," "Clueless") -- James Cromwell
- ("Kiss The Girls," "Babe") -- Kevin Nealon ("Hiller and Diller," "Saturday
- Night Live") -- Ed Begley, Jr. ("Meego," "St. Elsewhere") -- Shari Belafonte
- ("Hotel," "Babylon 5") -- Tippi Hedren ("The Birds") -- ProPAW representatives
-
- WHEN: Tuesday, Dec. 2 10 a.m.
-
- WHERE: The Sportsmen's Lodge/Redwood Rm. 12833 Ventura Blvd., Studio City
- 818/755-5000
-
- WHY: Each year in California, more than 15,000 animals including bobcats,
- foxes and beavers are trapped for their fur with cruel body-gripping traps.
- Untold numbers of dogs and cats -- many of them family pets -- also get
- caught and die in these indiscriminate traps. ProPAW volunteers must collect
- signatures of more than 433,000 registered California voters by Jan. 31, 1998
- to qualify the proposed ballot measure. The ProPAW initiative is sponsored
- by the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, Animal
- Protection Institute, The Ark Trust, Inc., Doris Day Animal League, The Fund
- for Animals, The Humane Society of the United States, and the International
- Fund for Animal Welfare.
-
- NOTE: All attending media must be cleared in advance.
-
- --30--LES/la TJM/la
-
- CONTACT: ProPAW Campaign, Los Angeles
- Wayne Pacelle, 310/207-7706
-
- or
-
- The Ark Trust, Inc.
- Lisa Agabian, 818/501-2275
-
- KEYWORD: CALIFORNIA
- INDUSTRY KEYWORD: ADVISORY ENTERTAINMENT
-
- Today's News On The Net - Business Wire's full file on the Internet with
- Hyperlinks to your home page.
-
- URL: http://www.businesswire.com
-
- BW0153 NOV 25,1997
-
- ⌐1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center info@vegetarian.org
- Date: Tue, 09 Dec 1997 13:06:38 -0500
- From: Mesia Quartano <primates@usa.net>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: (US) Conservationists question Yellowstone bison policy
- Message-ID: <348D88AD.90DC40E0@usa.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Tuesday, December 9, 1997:
-
- Yellowstone National Park's strategy for managing its bison herd this
- winter will do little to prevent the intentional slaughter of the
- animals, conservationists warned Friday.
-
- Yellowstone Superintendent Michael Finley announced the park's decision
- on animal management under the Interim Bison Management Plan for this
- winter. Finley announced measures aimed "to reduce the number of bison
- that are killed," but the National Parks and Conservation Association
- warned that a repeat of last year's slaughter depends more on Montana's
- plans than on measures the park takes on its own.
-
- The Park Service hopes to maintain the bison herd at its current level
- of about 2,200 animals. To do so, bison who leave the park in North
- Yellowstone will be tested for brucellosis and only those who test serol
- positive will be killed. The others will be held in captivity until
- spring time when they will be herded back into the park.
-
- Untested, low risk bison that roam out of the park in West Yellowstone
- will be allowed to graze freely. Low risk bison are bulls, yearlings and
- calves, as the most common cause of brucellosis infection is from
- aborted fetuses.
-
- Some Yellowstone bison, as well as elk and other wildlife, carry
- brucellosis, a bacterial disease that can cause cattle to abort. The
- U.S. Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection
- Service has determined that Yellowstone's intentions to allow untested
- low-risk bison on public lands in the West Yellowstone area this winter
- will not jeopardize Montana' brucellosis class-free status. However,
- Montana may still object to Yellowstone's plan, claiming that other
- states may refuse Montana cattle over brucellosis fears.
-
- "The State of Montana can still shoot any bison that leave Yellowstone,
- no matter what the Park Service does," said Mark Peterson, NPCA Rocky
- Mountain Regional Director. "The federal agencies involved have reached
- a consensus on how they would like to manage the herd, but there is
- still no agreement with state officials. There's no indication Montana
- won't go right ahead with the zero tolerance policy that wiped out
- nearly 1,100 bison last year."
-
- Montana has defended its policy toward Yellowstone's bison by claiming
- that the APHIS would sanction Montana's cattle industry if bison were
- allowed in the state.
-
- "The bison kill problem will not be solved until suitable public lands
- outside the park are found where bison can graze without being shot,"
- said Peterson.
-
- NPCA has endorsed a land exchange deal being negotiated by the U.S.
- Forest Service and the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation with the Royal
- Teton Ranch, a prime migration corridor just outside the north entrance
- to Yellowstone. The exchange would provide a route for bison leaving the
- park to reach safe grazing lands.
-
- For more information, contact Jerome Uher, NPCA, (202)223-6722 ext. 122.
-
- Copyright 1997, Environmental News Network
-
- Date: Thu, 04 Dec 1997 22:44:40 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Santa Claws and PetSmart
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19971204224354.0168a170@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- PHOENIX, Nov. 26 /PRNewswire/ -- This holiday season, people can get
- picturebook memories of their pets if they bring them into participating
- PETsMART stores to pose with Santa Claws(R). All pet owners are invited to
- indulge in the holiday spirit by bringing their dogs and cats (other domestic
- animals welcome too!) into their local PETsMART to get photographed with Santa
- between the hours of 11:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. on November 28, 29 and 30
- (Friday - Sunday) and December 6 and 7 (Saturday - Sunday).
-
- "The Santa Claws promotion is an event that PETsMART and our partner animal
- welfare organizations provide to brighten the holidays for our customers and
- help homeless animals at the same time," said Sara Stredney, special events
- manager for PETsMART. "Our customers love it because it helps them create a
- special memory of their pet. We love to see the variety of pets that come in
- to see Santa; we've had llamas, lizards and even a monkey."
-
- PETsMART has teamed with local animal welfare organizations across the country
- for the Santa Claws promotion. A portion of the proceeds raised by the Santa
- Claws photo sessions will benefit local animal welfare organizations and
- PETsMART Charities. In 1996, PETsMART, in partnership with organizations
- like: The Arizona Humane Society, Chicago's Anti-Cruelty Society and The
- Orlando Humane Society, raised $295,000 for PETsMART Charities and local
- animal welfare organizations throughout the country.
-
- For areas without partner shelters, funding goes to PETsMART Charities which
- helps animal programs throughout the country, whether or not PETsMART stores
- service those communities.
-
- Santa Claws portrait packages start at $10.95. Customers who purchase a 20
- lb. bag of Science Diet feline or canine food during November receive a free
- 5"x7" portrait of their pet with Santa (November 28, 29 and 30 only).
-
- PETsMART, Inc. is a leading operator in North America and the United Kingdom
- of superstores specializing in pet food, supplies and services. PETsMART
- operates 381 superstores in North America and 71 superstores in the United
- Kingdom.
-
- Six items to check off your holiday list at PETsMART:
-
- 1. Get your pet groomed for the holidays (available at almost all PETsMART
- locations).
-
- 2. Get a jump on the new year -- sign your pet up for obedience classes.
-
- 3. Buy that special holiday present for your pet -- hundreds of items to
- choose from, from pigs ears to play toys.
-
- 4. Get a picture taken of your pet with Santa Claws(R).
-
- 5. Get a gift certificate for that hard-to-buy-for pet.
-
- 6. Dress your pooch in style in Companion Road apparel -- a portion of
- proceeds goes to PETsMART Charities.
-
- SOURCE PETsMART
- CO: PETsMART
- ST: Arizona
- IN: REA
- SU: PDT
- 11/26/97 08:05 EST http://www.prnewswire.com
-
- ⌐1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center info@vegetarian.org
- Date: Thu, 04 Dec 1997 22:46:18 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Bounce from truck saves turkey
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19971204224536.01689340@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- .c The Associated Press
-
- COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) - A well-timed bounce sent Fortuna the turkey from the
- slaughter truck to a bird's paradise.
-
- Instead of a dinner table, the trip down U.S. 63 bounced Fortuna out of the
- truck and onto the side of the road. A kindly traveler saw him, picked him up
- and called the Central Missouri Humane Society.
-
- Jim Johnson, who runs a foster program for strays and is on the society's
- board, took the bird home and gave him a name befitting his luck. He and his
- wife, Glenna, gave Fortuna the run of five acres, and have developed quite a
- fondness for the bird.
-
- ``Maybe it is because they are not real bright, but they are real gentle
- creatures,'' Johnson said.
-
- AP-NY-11-27-97 0802EST
-
- ⌐1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center info@vegetarian.org
- Date: Tue, 9 Dec 1997 14:24:18 EST
- From: CFOXAPI <CFOXAPI@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: RE: EU/U.S. TRAPPING PROPOSAL
- Message-ID: <36ab33cf.348d9ae5@aol.com>
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- December 9, 1997
-
- For some reason this letter was posted on December 9th on ar-news even though
- it was sent to the list on December 5th. For those groups that signed on to
- the letter and to clarify any confusion, the letters were sent out to the EU
- Foreign Affairs Ministers on Friday, December 5.
-
- Yesterday (December 8) the final vote on the U.S./EU trapping proposal was
- postponed until Wednesday, December 10. The postponement is a good sign as it
- gives us more time to lobby and indicates that there may be dissent among the
- various EU nations regarding the proposed trapping agreement.
-
- Camilla Fox
- Animal Protection Institute
- ________________________________________
-
- Thank you to all of the following organizations that endorsed the sign-on
- letter opposing the U.S. trapping proposal. Letters went out this morning to
- each of the European Union Ministers of Foreign Affairs.
-
- We will keep you posted as to what unfolds in the next week.
-
- Camilla Fox
- Animal Protection Institute
-
- Ben White
- Animal Welfare Institute
- _____________________________________________________
- The Honorable-----------------
- Minister of Foreign Affairs
-
- Re: Opposition to U.S. Trapping Proposal Set for a Vote on Dec. 8
-
- Dear Minister----------------:
-
- On behalf of the organizations listed at the end of this letter, we
- respectfully request that you reject the trapping proposal offered by the U.S.
- Government. We strongly object to the excruciating pain caused by all leghold
- traps, and the proposal does not mandate any significant change in trapping
- practices to reduce the trauma.
-
- As you know, the U.S. Federal Government has stated repeatedly that it does
- not have the authority to regulate trapping in each of the fifty states.
- Therefore, it would be up to the state game departments to implement the terms
- of the Agreed Minute and Side Letter. These documents, which comprise the U.S.
- offer, are full of loopholes which the state authorities are poised to
- exploit.
-
- "Conventional" leghold restraining traps can continue to be used after 6 years
- because of the numerous derogations. Further, any state game department can
- allow use of leghold traps if it claims these traps are necessary.
-
- The current U.S. proposal is weaker than the proposal offered in October
- (calling for a phase out of leghold traps in 4 years) which was determined to
- be unacceptable to the Commission and Council of Ministers! It is not
- equivalent to the Canada/ Russia Agreement and will not stop the terrible
- suffering caused to millions of animals annually in leghold traps.
-
- Please uphold the intent of Regulation 3254/91 by voting "no" on the
- fraudulent U.S. trapping proposal.
-
- Sincerely,
-
- Action for Animals- USA
- Actors and Others for Animals-USA
- Advocates Working for Animals and Respect for the Environment-USA
- Alliance for Animals-USA
- American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals- USA
- Animal Defense League-USA
- Animal Emancipation-USA
- Animal Legal Defense Fund-USA
- Animal Legislative Action Network-USA
- Animal Liberation League-USA
- Animal Protection Institute-USA
- Animal Rights Direct Action Coalition-USA
- Animal Rights Foundation of Florida-USA
- Animals Alliance of Canada-Canada
- Animal Welfare Institute-USA
- Association of Veterinarians for Animal Rights-USA
- Born Free Foundation-UK
- Cetacea Defense- UK
- Coalition to Abolish the Fur Trade-USA
- Compassion over Killing- USA
- Djurens Stod Grupp- Sweden
- Djurratts Alliansen- Sweden
- Dolphin Action and Protection Group-South Africa
- Dolphin Data Base-USA
- Doris Day Animal League-USA
- Earth Island Institute-USA
- ECCEA- St. Lucia
- Eliminera Palsindustrin-Sweden
- Elsa Nature Conservancy-Japan
- European Cetacean Organization-UK
- Forenade Djur-Sweden
- Free Animals Network-Japan
- Freedom Information Network-USA
- Friends of Animals-USA
- Great Bear Foundation-USA
- Grupo de Los Cien-Mexico
- Hawley and Wright-USA
- Humane Society of the United States-USA
- Humane SPCA of Columbia, South Carolina-USA
- Humanitarians for Animal Rights, Education-USA
- I CARE- USA
- In Defense of Animals-USA
- International Fund For Animal Welfare-USA
- International Wildlife Coalition-USA, Brazil
- Last Chance for Animals-USA
- Letters for Animals-USA
- Marin Humane Society- USA
- Marine Mammal Fund-USA
- Mountain Lion Foundation-USA
- National Humane Education Society-USA
- New England Anti-Vivisection Society-USA
- No Compromise-USA
- Nordiska Samfundet Mot Plagsamma Djurforsok-Sweden
- Orange County People for Animals- USA
- Orca Lab-USA
- Osterreichischer Tierschutzverein-Germany
- People Acting for Animal Liberation-Canada
- People for Parks-USA
- People for Reason in Science and Medicine-USA
- People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals
- -PETA-USA
- -PETA-Europe
- -PETA-Netherlands
- -PETA-Germany
- Performing Animal Welfare Society-USA
- Pet Hope-USA
- Pet Assistance-USA
- Predator Education Fund-USA
- Progressive Animal Welfare Society-USA
- Propaw-USA
- Protect Our EarthÆs Treasure-USA
- Rada Delfinerna-Sweden
- Rainforest Action Network-USA
- Re-Earth-Bahamas
- RespecTiere -Verein zur Beendigueng von Tierland-Austria
- S.K.U.N.K.S.-USA
- Society for Animal Protection Legislation-USA
- Sonoma Peope for Animal Rights-USA
- South Carolina Association for Marine Mammal Protection-USA
- Tennesee Network for Animals-USA
- THE ARK TRUST INC-USA
- The Fund for Animals, Inc-USA
- The WRITE CAUSE-USA
- Tsitka-USA
- United for Life-USA
- Vegan Resistance- Sweden
- Veganska Ambassaden-Sweden
- Voice for a Viable Future- USA
- Whale Rescue Team-USA
- Wildlife Damage Review-USA
- World Society for the Protection of Animals-USA, Canada
- Zoocheck-Canada
-
-
- Date: Tue, 09 Dec 1997 14:24:34 -0500
- From: Mesia Quartano <primates@usa.net>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Vets euthanize Milwaukee zoo gorilla
- Message-ID: <348D9AF2.FBE29C35@usa.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- MADISON, Wis. (AP)
-
- A Milwaukee County Zoo gorilla named Joe Willie has been euthanized
- after a year of poor health.
-
- The 360-pound silver-colored gorilla was put to sleep at the University
- of Wisconsin-Madison Veterinary School, deputy zoo director Bruce
- Beehler said.
-
- Joe Willie was 24, considered middle age for a gorilla and prime
- breeding age for males, Beehler said.
-
- "Joe had a ruptured disk and a degenerative bone disease in his hips,
- but that didn't explain all the problems he had," Jan Rafert, curator of
- primates and small mammals at the zoo, said Tuesday.
-
- The death of Joe Willie, patriarch of the zoo's western lowland gorilla
- family, leaves the zoo with six of the gorillas, he said.
-
- The UW-Madison Veterinary School is conducting a post-mortem
- examination, Rafert said.
-
- Beehler said zoo doctors decided to euthanize the gorilla because it was
- suffering.
-
- The gorilla was anesthetized and brought to Madison, where it was
- euthanized Thursday night.
-
- The western lowland gorilla is an endangered species. It is part of a
- species survival plan coordinated by the American Zoo Association,
- Beehler said.
-
- Joe Willie had no living offspring, so a Chicago specialist went to
- Madison to collect and freeze the gorilla's semen for possible
- artificial insemination.
-
- Researchers throughout North America had specific requests for
- information from the post-mortem exam, Beehler said.
-
- "We try to gain as much knowledge as we can from this unfortunate
- occurrence for the benefit of the species," he said.
-
-
-
- Date: Tue, 9 Dec 97 20:13:08 UT
- From: "Stephen Wells" <farnorth@classic.msn.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: meat-eaters better for the environment
- Message-ID: <UPMAIL03.199712092014300888@classic.msn.com>
-
-
- The article below appeared Monday. Sunday the Daily News ran a big cover
- story on violent, vegan, animal-right Straight Edgers. Saturday they ran a
- cover story on how hunting was on the decline, but now people are realizing it
- is a valuable family tradition and, thank god, the numbers are picking up
- again-especially in alaska, where we care about tradition. UGH!!!
- Alex.
-
- ANCHORAGE DAILY NEWS
- Monday, December 8, 1997
- "Environment hurt less by meat eaters"
- By Fred Pearce
- New Scientist
-
- Vegetarians may be healthier, but meat eaters do more for the environment. A
- survey of the energy used to produce and distribute various foods has found
- that meat and processed food such as sweets, ice cream, potato chips and white
- bread are among the most energy-efficient-and least polluting-foods in the our
- diet. Tea coffee, tomatoes, salad vegetables and white fish, on the other
- hand, are distinctly environmentally unfriendly.
- David Coley and colleagues of the Centre for Energy and the Environment at
- the University of Exeter in England have analyzed how much energy from fuel is
- used in the complete production cycle of food in a typical shopping basket.
- The analysis included the manufacture and application of fertilizers and
- other chemicals, harvesting, processing, packaging, transport and waste
- disposal. Geographical differences have been averaged out.
- In a study of diets of more than 2,000 people, they found that it takes about
- 18,000 megajoules-4.186 million calories-of energy each year to get a typical
- Briton's food to the table. This is almost six times the energy contained in
- the food itself. In all, the process consumes almost a tenth of the national
- energy budget, adding 15 million tons of carbon to the atmosphere in the form
- of carbon dioxide.
- But people's diets vary hugely. The study suggests that a sixth of Britons
- consume food over a year that requires less than 10,000 megajoules to produce,
- while the annual diets of another sixth require more than 25,000 megajoules.
- The study will trouble those trying to be both healthy and green. The most
- energy-intensive item is coffee, which requires 177 megajoules of energy to
- produce 1 megajoule of food intake. But typical salad vegetables require 45
- megajoules and white fish 36 megajoules, compared to 8 megajoules for beef and
- burgers, 7 megajoules for chicken and 6 megajoules for lamb.
- Worse still, while fresh fruit consumes between 10 and 22 megajoules, sugary
- confectionery, crisps, white bread and ice cream are all right at the bottom
- of the table, consuming less than 1 megajoule each.
- "Meat does well because it is not highly processed, provides a lot of
- calories and is often grown locally," Coley says. "But obviously it makes a
- lot of difference whether the meat comes from the local farm or Brazil."
- In a sense, Coley says, we all "eat oil." The modern food industry is "in
- many ways a means of converting fossil fuels into edible forms. Food is a
- large part of an individual's impact on the greenhouse effect. Many of us
- could change our diets to have a lot less impact."
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Tue, 9 Dec 1997 12:22:35 -0800 (PST)
- From: Michael Markarian <mmarkarian@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, en.alerts@conf.igc.apc.org
- Subject: Mary Tyler Moore Speaks Out Against Canned Hunts in NYS
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19971209162918.57574efa@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Tuesday, December 9, 1997
-
- CONTACT: The Fund for Animals, (518) 478-9760
-
-
- MARY TYLER MOORE ASKS SPEAKER SILVER TO GO FOR THE GOLD
-
-
- ALBANY, N.Y. -- Today, Mary Tyler Moore sent a letter asking Sheldon Silver,
- Speaker of the New York State Assembly, to end the sadistic business of
- canned shoots in the State. She decries the bloody practice, writing,
- "During the last session, the Assembly passed a bill which would have banned
- some practices used in canned hunts. However, it was limited to canned hunts
- of certain animals which take place on ten acres or less and therefore did
- not fully ban these hunts. Speaker Silver, let's go for the gold and ban
- these bloody canned hunts completely, without regard to species or size.
- This activity is as sporting as shooting puppies and kitties in a pet store."
-
- Canned hunts take place in enclosed areas where hunters pay a fee to shoot
- captive animals, often with a guaranteed "No Kill, No Pay" policy. Many
- times the victims are surplus zoo or circus animals. Because the animals are
- used for trophies, a shot to the head producing a quick kill is avoided and
- the terrified animal is, instead, placed in agony, riddled with arrows or
- bullets in other parts of the body, resulting in a long and tortuous death.
-
-
- # # #
-
-
- http://www.fund.org
-
- Date: Tue, 9 Dec 1997 14:16:38 -0800 (PST)
- From: Michael Markarian <mmarkarian@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Ch. 7 (DC) Survey on Deer Hunting
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19971209182222.4b8f2e56@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Ch. 7 in the Washington, D.C. area is taking a survey on their web site on
- whether deer should be killed in nearby Montgomery and Fairfax Counties.
- Please vote! The address is:
-
- http://www.abc7dc.com
-
- Date: Tue, 9 Dec 1997 15:37:49 -0800 (PST)
- From: Michael Markarian <mmarkarian@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, en.alerts@conf.igc.apc.org
- Subject: Fund Shoots Holes in Christian School's Sixth Grade Hunting
- Class
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19971209194402.5cb70a6e@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Wednesday, December 10, 1997
-
- CONTACT: Norm Phelps, 301-739-7087
- Mike Markarian, 301-585-2591
-
-
- FUND SHOOTS HOLES IN CHRISTIAN
- SCHOOL'S SIXTH GRADE HUNTING CLASS
-
-
- NEW FREEDOM, Pa. -- The Fund for Animals, the nation's largest and most
- active anti-hunting organization, today asked the New Freedom Christian
- School in New Freedom, Pennsylvania to stop teaching hunter education in its
- sixth grade classrooms.
-
- Calling sport hunting "a form of legalized cruelty to animals," Norm Phelps,
- Program Coordinator for The Fund, wrote in a letter today to Principal
- Thomas Getz, "In an age of unprecedented violence, most of which is carried
- out with guns, the idea of any school requiring students to learn to use
- firearms is offensive; that a school claiming to promote the compassionate
- gospel of Christ would do so boggles the mind."
-
- According to an Associated Press story which appeared on December 3, Getz
- teaches a mandatory "outdoors/wildlife appreciation course" for sixth
- graders that includes a two-week unit on hunting and trapping.
-
- "Mr. Getz' claim that animals have to be killed by hunters to protect them
- from being killed by cars just doesn't compute," adds Phelps. "It's an
- effort to deflect public outrage at the idea of a Christian school teaching
- killing instead of compassion."
-
- The Fund for Animals provided the school with its Youth Education Kit, which
- includes a video titled "What's Wrong With Hunting," featuring Marv Levy,
- head coach of the Buffalo Bills, and the booklet, "Think Like the Animal:
- Questions to Ask Before You Kill." The Fund also offered to send a
- representative to the New Freedom Christian School to tell the students the
- animals' side of the story.
-
- Copies of the letter to Principal Getz, and copies of The Fund for Animals'
- report titled "Killing Their Childhood: How Public Schools and Government
- Agencies Are Promoting Sport Hunting to America's Children," are available
- upon request by calling 301-585-2591.
-
-
- # # #
-
-
- http://www.fund.org
-
- Date: Tue, 9 Dec 1997 19:31:40 EST
- From: MIITZIE <MIITZIE@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: noah's ark killings
- Message-ID: <6e32c96d.348de2fa@aol.com>
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Iowa v. Chad Lamansky and Daniel Myers
-
-
- "The Cat Killers Trial"
-
-
- Chad Lamansky and Daniel Myers were accused of breaking into the Noah's Ark
- animal shelter on March 1997 and bludgeoning more than 20 cats with baseball
- bats. Sixteen animals died while eight other animals were hospitalized for
- veterinary treatment. Lamansky and Myers, ages 18 and 17 at the time of the
- incident, were each charged with willfully injuring animals maintained by an
- animal facility, entering an animal facility with the intent to injure an
- animal, and third-degree burglary.
-
- A third teen-ager involved in the attack, Justin Tobin, pled guilty to third
- degree burglary before the trial and agreed to testify against Lamansky and
- Myers.
-
- Carnage at Noah's Ark
-
- On the morning of March 8, 1997, volunteers for the Noah's Ark Animal Shelter
- arrived at work to find 15 cats dead and six others severely injured. Animal
- blood was splattered on the walls and furniture had been overturned. David and
- Laura Sykes, the founders of Noah's Ark, found dozens of other cats hiding and
- trembling in fear, but a number of other animals were missing. Days after the
- gruesome discovery, the body of another dead cat was found as well as two
- other injured cats. However, several other animals never were found. Three of
- the injured cats were sent to veterinarian school at Iowa State University for
- specialized treatment and five others were treated at the Fairfield Animal
- Clinic. Most of the treated cats survived and were adopted, but one eventually
- died from its injuries.
-
- Chad Lamansky, Daniel Myers, and Justin Tobin were arrested for the attack one
- week later. According to police, a few days before the break-in at Noah's Ark,
- Lamansky and Myers shot, killed, and skinned a cat that belonged to Lamansky's
- mother and showed it off to their friends. Apparently, the defendants also
- began telling their friends that they were planning to "get some cats" or "get
- some bats to get some cats" at the Noah's Ark shelter. And, on the night after
- the attack, Myers allegedly bragged about the crime to several friends at a
- party.
-
- Tobin pled guilty to burglary charges on July 15, 1997. He admitted driving
- his two co-defendants from a local restaurant to pick up baseball bats and
- then taking them to Noah's Ark on March 7. Tobin claimed that he never
- participated in the actual bludgeoning of the cats and that he only kicked a
- cat out of the way during the attack without injuring it. In addition, Tobin
- said that he was so sickened by the actions of his two friends that he waited
- in the doorway of the shelter and insisted that they leave after five minutes
- passed.
-
- As part of his plea agreement, Tobin will serve three years probation and will
- be required to perform between 100 and 200 hours of community service. Tobin
- also will partcipate in a Youthful Offender Program.
-
- The Verdict
-
- This is from www.courttv.com
-
- During jury selection, the defense revealed for the first time that Lamansky
- and Myers would admit entering the Noah's Ark animal shelter with the intent
- to injure the animals. So, the only issue at the trial was the cost of the
- damage they inflicted. On November 8, 1997, Lamansky and Myers were each
- convicted of willfully injuring the cats at Noah's Ark. They were also
- convicted of misdemeanors such as criminal trespass with the costs of injury
- and damage each exceeding $100 and entering an animal facility with intent to
- injure an animal. Lamansky and Myers are scheduled to be sentenced December
- 19, 1997. They each could face as much as five years in prison and fined
- between $1250 and $11,500.
- Date: Wed, 10 Dec 1997 10:08:57 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (NZ)Relief at RCD Result
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19971210100219.2dd7b3a8@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Evening Standard (New Zealand)9/12/97
-
- Relief at RCD Result
-
- Wellington- The rabbit calicivirus disease (RCD)
- in New Zealand is identical to the strain in Australia,
- dispelling fears of unwanted diseases, an applicant
- group said today.
- RCD Applicant Group spokesperson Greame Martin
- said tests carried out at Wallaceville Animal Research
- Centre had shown New Zealand RCD had come from
- Australia.
- Samples from Central Otago had been compared with
- those from Europe, Australia and Asia. Final tests are
- being carried out at the world reference laboratory for
- RCD in Italy.
- NZPA
- ===========================================
-
- 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: Wed, 10 Dec 1997 10:38:12 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (Australia)TV Programs re AR and GE
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19971210103136.2c1f7da2@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- On Sunday night on ABC TV there is a programme called Compass.
- This Sunday night they are going to discuss animal experimentation.
- I believe it is a Christian based program and have no idea what specific
- areas they will cover.
-
- On the 10th December remember ABC TV is screening a documentary re
- people who are oversensitised to chemicals and there is a debate afterwards.
- Well worth watching with regards to GE foods, Glyphosphate contaminated
- soybeans etc.
-
- Kind regards,
-
- Marguerite
- ===========================================
-
- 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, 09 Dec 1997 21:22:03 -0500
- From: joemiele <veegman@qed.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: NJARA Fur Protest 12/13
- Message-ID: <3.0.5.32.19971209212203.007b7c50@qed.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- New Jersey Animal Rights Alliance
- P.O. Box 174
- Englishtown, NJ 07726
- 732-446-6808
-
- Fur Action Task Force
- Contact: Joe Miele 201-342-5119
-
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
- December 10, 1997
-
-
- FUR INDUSTRY KILLS TWENTY-FIVE MILLION ANIMALS ANNUALLY
- NJARA ACTIVISTS SHOW OUTRAGE
-
- Paramus - Steven Corn Furs, located on Rt. 17 North will be the focus of
- ongoing protests by the New Jersey Animal Rights Alliance (NJARA). A
- peaceful demonstration against the gassing, trapping, and anal
- electrocution of small animals for their fur is scheduled to begin at 1:00
- p.m. on Saturday, December 13.
-
- "Steven Corn Furs is complicit in the perpetuation of animal torture." Said
- Joe Miele of NJARA's Fur Action Task Force. "While society is waking up
- and acknowledging that killing animals to satisfy one's own greed and
- vanity is despicable behavior, Steven Corn Furs, and others like them are
- preying on the uneducated and selfish members of our society who are
- vulnerable to peer pressure."
-
- Past actions by NJARA's Fur Action Task Force include leafletings and
- informational tablings, statewide demonstrations, and acts of civil
- disobedience.
-
- Date: Wed, 10 Dec 1997 11:26:22 +0000
- From: jwed <jwed@hkstar.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (PI) Law takes dog meat off menu
- Message-ID: <3.0.5.32.19971210112622.007b0100@pop.hkstar.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
-
- South China Morning Post WednesdayááDecember 10áá1997
-
- Philippines
-
- by RAISSA ROBLES
-
- Eating dog meat will soon be punishable with fines of up to 5,000 pesos
- (HK$1,100) and up to two years in jail.
-
- Congress is poised to pass the Animal Welfare Act, which will make the
- killing and eating of animals other than cattle, pigs, goats, sheep,
- poultry and rabbits illegal.
-
- Killing also has to be humane, a provision that would outlaw a traditional
- practice in northern Luzon, where live chickens are plucked and lightly
- beaten until they die, said to lock in flavour.
-
- The proposed law will forbid fights involving dogs or horses but not
- cockfights, which many lawmakers indulge in, gambling huge sums of money.
-
- Neglect and maltreatment of animals and their unauthorised use in
- experiments and research will also be punishable.
-
- Foreigners who break the new law will be deported after they have been
- fined and served jail terms.
-
- Date: Tue, 09 Dec 1997 23:22:38 -0500
- From: Mesia Quartano <primates@usa.net>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Court Dismisses Lawsuit on Primates
- Message-ID: <348E190E.B4AF9DC2@usa.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- (AP Online; 12/09/97)
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) A federal appeals court on Tuesday dismissed a lawsuit
- filed by animal rights activists over the treatment of primates.
-
- A three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of
- Columbia Circuit reversed a lower court's decision in 1996 that had
- ordered the Agriculture Department to write new rules aimed at improving
- the animals' treatment.
-
- The judges found that the Animal Legal Defense Fund and four individuals
- who brought the lawsuit did not have legal standing to sue because they
- suffered no direct injury from the department's current rules.
-
- The activists had detailed what they said were several abuses at zoos
- such as a chimpanzee whose hands were covered with cuts and other
- primates housed in isolation and said they suffered emotionally from
- seeing the animals treated that way.
-
- "It is part of the price of living in society, perhaps especially a free
- society, that an individual will observe conduct that he or she
- dislikes," Circuit Judge David Sentelle wrote for the court.
-
- The judges also determined that even if the lawsuit caused new rules to
- be written, the activists would be unlikely to have their emotional
- distress alleviated.
-
- Valerie Stanley, attorney for the animal rights group, noted that
- Circuit Judge Patricia Wald's dissent pointed out that the ruling would
- make it harder for average citizens to challenge government rules.
-
- "It says basically, whenever an agency decides that it simply will not
- carry out a statutory mandate that people cannot complain about their
- failure to act," Stanley said.
-
- She said the group could ask the judges for a rehearing or possibly
- appeal to the Supreme Court.
-
- {APWire:Washington-1209.387} 12/09/97
-
-
-
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