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- Attachment Converted: "C:\EUDORA2\Attach\out1"
- Date: Mon, 15 Dec 1997 22:35:30 -0800
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Bad news: USDA to "clean up the confusion" about organic foods
- Message-ID: <34962132.7E5@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
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-
- USDA unveils national regulations on organic foods
-
- The Associated Press
- WASHINGTON (December 15, 1997 4:48 p.m. EST)
-
- Just what makes an organic apple organic? For the first time, the
- government started answering that question by proposing rules Monday to
- help consumers get the all-natural foods they think they're getting.
-
- "The rules are going to clear up the confusion that sometimes exists in
- the minds of consumers, processors and merchandisers about what is and
- what is not organic," said Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman.
-
- But the regulations announced by the Agriculture Department drew
- criticism from environmental groups and organic farmers worried that the
- rules could permit use of germ-killing irradiation, growth of
- genetically altered crops and spreading of sewage sludge as fertilizer.
-
- "These things have no place in organic food production," said Ken Cook,
- president of the Environmental Working Group. "The public should say no
- to them, too."
-
- Glickman said more public comment would be accepted before a final
- version of the rules is issued in 1998. The government itself is already
- promoting irradiation to kill bacteria and genetic engineering to
- improve crop yields and reduce use of chemical pesticides.
-
- "I have intentionally left open some of the more divisive questions,"
- Glickman told reporters. "I think it's important to have a full national
- and international discussion of this issue."
-
- Although differences remain on those points, the issuance of the
- proposed rules is a milestone in itself: It has taken seven years, since
- the Organic Foods Production Act was first passed in 1990, to get this
- far.
-
- For the fast-growing organic industry, the regulations finally validate
- their industry as part of mainstream farming, no longer dismissed as
- "low-tech throwbacks to horse-powered agriculture, or as hippie
- gardeners," as Cook put it.
-
- Organic products account for only about 1 percent of national food sales
- but have grown more than 20 percent annually since 1990 and now account
- for about $3.5 billion annually. Agriculture Department officials
- forecast a fourfold increase in sales during the next decade and
- several large food companies have begun marketing organic products.
-
- Yet, because there are no national rules, consumers could never be
- certain that products with "organic" on the label are actually grown,
- processed and handled under the principles of nature over synthetics
- that have developed within the industry. Indeed, there are some 40 state
- and private organic certification programs around the country.
-
- The new regulations, Glickman said, will improve consumer confidence in
- the organic label and provide a boost to the roughly 12,000 farmers
- seeking an edge by marketing all-natural products. The average organic
- farm is about 250 acres, but there are some very large ones.
-
- "We hope this will help small farmers continue to build a niche for
- themselves," Glickman said.
-
- Organic farmers face higher costs because their natural fertilizers and
- pest control efforts tend to be more expensive and they must hire more
- workers to replace the mechanization common in conventional farming.
- Thus, their produce costs more.
-
- To gain an Agriculture Department seal, the proposed regulations require
- that raw products be 100 percent organic and that processed foods
- contain 95 percent organic ingredients.
-
- Processed foods with 50 percent to 95 percent organic content could be
- labeled as "made with certain organic ingredients," while those with
- less than 50 percent organic content must specify the organic
- ingredients.
-
- The rules also set numerous standards for producing and handling the
- foods, including a requirement that cropland be free of prohibited
- pesticides for at least three years before harvest and a prohibition on
- use of antibiotics or hormones to stimulate growth in livestock.
-
- Those selling or labeling products that do not meet the standards could
- be fined up to $10,000. The Agriculture Department will certify states
- and private organizations to oversee the system, and states could adopt
- their own tougher standards.
-
- The Grocery Manufacturers of America, representing the makers of
- name-brand foods and packaged goods, called the new uniform standards "a
- great service to America's consumers and the food-producing industry."
-
- But the group added that the nutrition, health and safety levels of
- organic and "traditionally produced products" were the same and the
- conventional food industry was using new techniques to reduce use of
- crop-protection chemicals.
-
- Since 99 percent of the nation's food is produced using conventional
- practices, Glickman took pains to say that the regulations should not be
- viewed as an endorsement of organic methods as superior or safer.
-
- "These rules are not about creating a category of agriculture than is
- safer than any other," he said. "These rules are about giving consumers
- choices as to how their food is produced."
-
- By CURT ANDERSON, AP Farm Writer
- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 15:45:36 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: US Mclibel Support Campaign needs Help
- Message-ID: <199712160745.PAA25192@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- Re-posted from Mclibel list.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Subject: US Mclibel Support Campaign
- Date: 16 Dec, 1997
- From: Dan Mills and Dave Morris
-
-
- *** APPEAL APPEAL APPEAL ***
-
- For almost four years, the US McLibel Support Campaign has been circulating
- campaigning materials and information about McDonald's, the McLibel Trial,
- other multinationals, and about other important issues of our times (such as
- genetic engineering). The group has also coordinated protests and helped to
- organise events such as the recent and highly successful visit of Helen &
- Dave (the McLibel Defendants) to the US. Even though the McLibel Trial is
- now over, Helen & Dave are appealing parts of the verdict, the issues that
- were examined in the courtcase are as important as ever and the campaign
- against McDonald's and other multinationals continues to grow.
-
- We are funded entirely by donations from the public. Until now, the
- donations we have received have enabled us to operate the e-mail listserver,
- coordinate protests, send out mailings, post materials on request, pay phone
- bills etc. However, we now have a severe shortage of funds which threatens
- our ability to continue this work. We hope that those of you that have been
- receiving our e-mails and who would like to see our work continue will be
- able to help us in this time of need. If we receive more funds than we
- need, the surplus will be sent to London to help pay for expenses related to
- Helen and Dave's continuing legal battles.
-
- Please send checks in US dollars (payable to "McLibel Support Campaign") to
- the following address:
-
- US McLibel Support Campaign
- PO Box 62
- Craftsbury VT 05826-0062, USA
-
- Tel 1-802 586 9628
- E-mail: dbriars@world.std.com
-
- Also, we'd be grateful if you could circulate this appeal and let us know if
- you have any fund-raising suggestions.
-
-
- Dan Mills Dave Morris David Briars
-
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
- U.S. McLibel Support Campaign Email dbriars@sover.net
- PO Box 62 Phone/Fax 802-586-9628
- Craftsbury VT 05826-0062 http://www.mcspotlight.org/
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
- To subscribe to the "mclibel" electronic mailing list, send email
-
- To: majordomo@world.std.com
- Subject: <not needed>
- Message: subscribe mclibel
-
- To unsubscribe, change the message to: "unsubscribe mclibel"
-
-
-
- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 16:00:28 +0000
- From: jwed <jwed@hkstar.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (CN) Breeding tigers
- Message-ID: <3.0.5.32.19971216160028.007b2810@pop.hkstar.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- China daily - 16th December 1997
-
- NANJING -- The city of Suzhou in China's Jiangsu Province has started
- building a breeding base for the South China tiger on Lidao Island, to
- protect the rare species which is on the verge of extinction. The base has
- 13 tigers on its 4 hectares, and plans to increase the number to 30 in the
- near future. The Suzhou Zoo also has 14 South China tigers, the largest
- number in China's zoos. Since 1983, the zoo has produced 38 of the tigers
- in captivity, with 29 surviving. It has sent 15 to zoos in Tianjin,
- Guangzhou, Xiamen and Nanjing.
-
- [Me - i would rather be dead than in any of those zoos]
-
-
-
-
- Every child has the right to a healthy diet - that means no meat.
-
- http://www.earth.org.hk/
- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 16:17:41 +0000
- From: jwed <jwed@hkstar.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (HK) New Zoo proposed
- Message-ID: <3.0.5.32.19971216161741.007a4290@pop.hkstar.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- South China Morning Post - 16th December 1997
-
- by ALLAN ZEMAN
-
- Hong Kong is an international city. The main tourist problem we have is
- perception. People around the world think now that Britain has gone and
- Hong Kong has returned to China, Hong Kong is just another Chinese city.
-
- We must hire a top advertising company to design a campaign telling the
- world we are still international. We have not lost our charm. We are
- better! We need a slogan like New York had in the old days (I Love NY). We
- need something like "HK - Love The Energy!"
-
- We should enlist famous Hong Kong people such as Joyce Ma, David Tang
- Wing-cheung, Li Ka-shing, Tung Chee-hwa, John Woo and Jackie Chan to star
- in commercials telling the world about our wonderful city.
-
- We need international events to keep Hong Kong in the public spotlight. I
- propose having 12 international events a year - one per month. This would
- give tourists a reason to come here any month of the year.
-
- Hong Kong's shopping reputation has been built on famous name brands. To go
- on drawing tourists from around the world we must continue to build on name
- brand concepts.
-
- The number one tourist attraction in Tokyo is Disneyland. Hong Kong should
- allocate a suitable tract of land in the New Territories and we should then
- try to entice Disney to come here. This would help to bring tourists from
- China as well as North and Southeast Asia. We already have the hotels,
- airport, and shops which would all be kept busy.
-
- Turn Government House into a tourist attraction. I would make it into a
- mini-museum featuring the history of Hong Kong under colonial Britain.
-
- It would include a room with a small cinema telling the story of the last
- 100 years, created artistically by someone like Woo. A great indoor and
- outdoor restaurant would serve some of the best Chinese food in Hong Kong.
- This would be a great must-see stopover for tourists.
-
- Allocate another piece of land in the country parks to build the largest
- zoo in the world. This could be done by taking advantage of Hong Kong's
- beautiful parks and creating a natural environment for animals which would
- be unrivalled in the world. We would not destroy the natural surroundings,
- but enhance them to give animals a chance to live in a beautiful environment.
-
- We could then build small natural campsites where tourists could stay for a
- few nights to experience the quieter side of Hong Kong.
-
- The Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre: make Hong Kong the fashion
- capital of Asia. Twice a year, immediately following the pret-a-porter
- shows in Europe, we have the Hong Kong-Asian World Pret-a-porter. Invite
- the top designers such as Chanel, YSL, Armani, Versace, DKNY and Calvin
- Klein. They could be asked to put on their shows at the Convention Centre
- in autumn and spring on an annual basis. This would attract tourists from
- around Asia and keep Hong Kong at the top of the fashion list.
-
- We would invite the fashion reporters from around Asia and have a week of
- European and American fashion shows. Shows must be done on the scale of
- Paris, Italy and New York. This would also be sure to attract many Japanese.
-
- The International Dragon Boat Race: make this event into a week-long event
- with prize money of a million dollars to the winning team. Organise dragon
- boat parties at Sai Kung and Aberdeen. Make this a great world event with
- dragon boat parades and fairs.
-
- The Annual International Music Festival: one week of top singers from
- around the world, performing at the Convention Centre, Coliseum, Cultural
- Centre, Academy for Performing Arts, Jazz Club and any other available
- venues. World-class stars from Pavarotti, Celine Dion and Georgie Fame to
- famous Japanese singers and musicians would perform. This could be run by
- the Jockey Club and operated on a non-profit basis.
-
- Hong Kong International Derby Race week: similar to the Melbourne Cup or
- Kentucky Derby, but with the biggest prize in the world. At the moment
- Dubai has a prize of US$4 million (HK$31 million). Hong Kong should have
- two events in one week: on Wednesday a $23 million race followed by a $38
- million derby race on Sunday. This would put Hong Kong at the top of the
- world racing map, attracting the top horses from around the world.
-
- We could also have the Hong Kong Derby Ball and invite famous trainers,
- owners and jockeys from around the globe. The Wednesday event could be a
- Japan-Hong Kong event where top Japanese horses compete against top Hong
- Kong horses for the Hong Kong-Japan Cup. Promoted in Japan, this would
- attract a lot of Japanese tourists.
-
- Take two of the Hong Kong ferry terminals (one on Hong Kong side, such as
- Central or North Point, and one on Kowloon side - Tsim Sha Tsui or Hunghom)
- and turn them into restaurant and seafood areas. These areas could be
- developed into beautiful outdoor restaurants and cafes, modelled on
- Fisherman's Wharf in San Francisco. This could also work for part of the
- land at Kai Tak airport. We could turn some of that land into wonderful
- seafood and shopping experiences on the harbour.
-
- Japan month in Hong Kong: invite Japanese tourists to Hong Kong during a
- certain month. Any shop, restaurant, or hotel displaying a Japan sticker in
- the window would automatically offer Japanese passport holders a 10 per
- cent discount. During this month, Hong Kong would play host to top Japanese
- chefs, designers and singers. Special package tours from Japan to Hong Kong
- would bring tourists to enjoy the shows and, of course, do some shopping
- while they were here.
-
- Hong Kong Casino: build a Las Vegas-style casino or casinos at the old Kai
- Tak airport site. Operated by the Jockey Club, this would attract tourists
- from all over the world. Unlike in Macau where a crime element exists, this
- would be run by the Hong Kong Jockey Club in the same clean manner as they
- operate the races. All profits would go to charity. At the moment, casinos
- are legal in almost every major city in the world. New York is at present
- very close to building a casino. Hong Kong is an international city and
- this could help us attract many high rollers from around the world who
- spend lots of money in shops. At the moment we are losing that money to
- other cities. Why not keep it here? Gambling at a casino is no different
- from gambling on horse races.
-
- We must tell the world we are still an exciting stand-alone international
- city even though we are now part of China.
-
- Allan Zeman is chairman of California International Investments Group.
-
-
- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 18:18:51 +0200
- From: erez ganor <e_ganor@netvision.net.il>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>,
- "CFN-Views@can-inc.com" <CFN-Views@can-inc.com>,
- Adolfo Sansolini - LAV <lav.sansolini@mclink.it>,
- Barbara Harkaway <bwhwih@erols.com>, Born Free <bornfree@pncl.co.uk>,
- "BreachEnv@aol.com David" <BreachEnv@aol.com>,
- "folkerts@worldonline.nl" <folkerts@worldonline.nl>,
- Glenn Hunt <g.hunt@xtra.co.nz>,
- Karin Zupko <ma.neavs.com!karin@ma.neavs.com>,
- PETA Nederland <petanl@xs4all.nl>, rhus <rhus@msn.com>
- Subject: ISRAEL- Rabies infested country, Minister of health blames Animal welfare
- Organizations.
- Message-ID: <3496A9EB.B22EADB6@netvision.net.il>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- The 3rd victim of Rabies, a child from a village in the north died today
- from Rabies.
- Municipal vets has stopped to deal with stray dogs 2 months ago , as
- part of their pressure on the public to lift a law suit against the
- Municipal vets who were caught violating the Anti-Cruelty Animal
- Protection law.
- It all started when the Municipal vet of the town of Haddera was caught
- killing a stray dog in the most brutal and inhumane way, although the
- Municipal vets are supposed to euthanasia stray dogs by injecting Sodium
- pentobarbital. apparently some one was trying to save the municipal
- budget, by inventing another cheep way to deal with the Stray ones.
- After the media exposed the case, it appears that the Vet of Haddera was
- not the only municipal vet, using that tectonic. as a result a report to
- the police was filled and a law suit against the cruel vets. however The
- Chief Municipal vet in the Ministry of Agriculture decide to support his
- employees by declaration that the municipal vets will not deal with
- rabies control anymore till the lawsuit will be dismissed.
- for 2 months, the municipal vets are not collecting stray dogs from the
- streets , and the quarantines are refusing to accept dogs who were
- brought by good citizen.
- During the past months the Ministry of health is spreading rummers about
- the risk of the disease, misleading the public with horror cases that
- has nothing to do with dogs ( Such as the couple who got bitten from
- ticks after visiting deserted caves in the West Sameria - were Bedouins
- are keeping their Sheep) as a result of that 2 things happened:
- 1)The public is horrified and can be easily manipulated.
- 2)Dog owners are throwing their dogs to the streets.
- Today after the death of the 3rd victim, the ministries of Agriculture
- and Health are declaring war against the Animal welfare organizations in
- Israel, blaming them for the eruption of the Rabies.
- All Animal Welfare Organizations in israel are doing their best to
- accommodate and find placement for stray Dogs and Cats. several
- Educational programs are running in the country, however with the New
- Minister of Environment, the importance of the issue has been ignored
- and budget to help the shelters were not given.
- The Animal Protection Squad- a body formed to protect animals and
- prevent cruelty, under the former minister of Environment Mr. Yossi
- Sarid , was asked by the new minister to resign, and the office is being
- dismissed.
- It is irresponsible to blame the Animal Welfare organizations, while the
- ministers are failing to fulfil their responsibility to the public.
- On the other Hand, what can you expect from a government that has to
- deal with the Stories of Sara Netanyahu and the way she was throwing
- shoes on her workers...
- Any Shipment of Bananas will be appreciated.
-
- Erez Ganor.
-
-
- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 10:30:43 -0500
- From: leah wacksman <lcw2t@avery.med.virginia.edu>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Carriage Horses
- Message-ID: <34969EA1.A54B093@galen.med.virginia.edu>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Saturday, December 13, 1997
-
- Panicked team races out of downtown Roanoke
- pulling
- empty carriage
- Fireworks scare Dickens out of
- horses
-
- The owner of the two horses and carriage chased
- them down
- at a roadblock in a police car.
-
- By LAURA FASBACH
- THE ROANOKE TIMES
-
- It was the kind of chase that had all the
- elements of a Western: a loud
- bang, two frightened horses, a runaway
- wooden-wheeled carriage.
-
- But this one happened in downtown Roanoke.
-
- Josh and Lady, two quarterhorses with the
- Lexington Carriage Co.,
- galloped nearly half a mile from the City Market
- to Kimball Avenue after
- they were spooked by fireworks going off at the
- Dickens of a Christmas
- festivities.
-
- The horses, which had been pulling a
- nine-passenger carriage on tours
- around the city, were taking a break on Market
- Street when the fireworks
- started.
-
- Carriage driver Shana Purdue had just stepped
- to the street when a loud
- boom set off Josh and Lady.
-
- "They are 1,700-pound creatures," Purdue
- said. "We were not going to
- stand in front of them."
-
- The pair bolted down to Church Street, where
- they turned left, ran to
- Williamson Road and turned left again. They
- turned right on Kimball Avenue,
- opposite the Hotel Roanoke. City police officers
- blocked intersections as the
- horses ran through the streets.
-
- Unable to stop the large whinnying creatures,
- carriage owner Kent
- McMichael hopped into city police Officer F.L.
- Pledge's car. The two men
- followed.
-
- At Kimball, McMichael hopped out of the car,
- leapt onto the carriage and
- grabbed the reins. Chase over.
-
- The horses have been pulling passenger
- carriages for at least five years.
- McMichael said Friday's mishap was out of
- character for the usually mellow
- pair.
-
- No tickets were issued, but Officer M.A.
- Harris wondered how he would
- word the incident on a police report.
-
- "DMV will get a kick out of this," he said
- with a smile.
-
- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 09:15:51 -0800
- From: LCartLng@gvn.net (Lawrence Carter-Long)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Cc: VEGAN@MAELSTROM.STJOHNS.EDU
- Subject: Beef Industry Takes Aim at "Food Disparagement"
- Message-ID: <199712161707.MAA14668@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- E: The Environmental Magazine
- November/December 1997
-
- Mad Cowboys: The Beef Industry Takes Aim at "Food Disparagement"
- By John Stauber and Sheldon Rampton
-
- "You said [mad cow disease] could make AIDS look like the
- common cold?" asked TV talk show host Oprah Winfrey. "Absolutely,"
- said her guest, Howard Lyman of the Humane Society of the United
- States (HSUS). "That's an extreme statement, you know," Winfrey
- said. "Absolutely," Lyman said again. "A hundred thousand cows per
- year in the United States are fine at night, dead in the morning. The
- majority of those cows are rounded up, ground up, fed back to other
- cows. If only one of them has mad cow disease, it has the potential
- to affect thousands."
-
- After hearing a bit more of what Lyman, a former Montana rancher
- who now represents HSUS' Eating With a Conscience Campaign,
- had to say about the danger of mad cow disease coming across
- the Atlantic from England, Winfrey was convinced. "It has just stopped
- me cold from eating another burger," she said. "I'm stopped!"
-
- The Oprah show aired on April 16, 1996, less than a month after
- the British government reversed a decade of denial and admitted
- that consumption of beef from mad cows was the "most likely"
- explanation for the appearance of a bizarre, previously unseen
- dementia in humans known as "new variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob
- Disease," an incurable and invariably fatal strain that kills its
- victims by filling their brains with microscopic, spongy holes. To
- date, 19 cases-some of them in teenagers-have been documented.
- Lyman's statement about mad cow disease being "worse than AIDS'
- was based on the fact that both can take years, even decades, to
- incubate, thereby making it impossible to predict the size of an
- outbreak during its early stages.
-
- The broadcast produced a dramatic price drop in cattle futures on the
- Chicago Mercantile Exchange, and an uproar from the meat industry,
- lead by the National Cattlemen's Beef Association (NCBA). Despite
- the fact that Winfrey agreed to a follow-up interview with the NCBA's
- policy director, the industry took legal action anyway, with a $2 million
- lawsuit filed against Lyman and Oprah by beef feedlot operator Paul
- Engler. The suit charges that Lyman made "biased, unsubstantiated,
- and irresponsible claims against beef..."
-
- The lawsuit against Lyman marked the historic first test case for a
- new legal standard which the agriculture industry has spent the past
- five years lobbying into law in more than a dozen U.S. states-"food
- disparagement." Engler's attorney describes the suit as "an historic
- case; it should make reporters and journalists and entertainers-and
- whatever Oprah considers herself-more careful."
-
- Under the new laws, it doesn't matter that Lyman believes in his
- statements, or even that he can produce scientists who will support
- him. The industry will be able to convict him of spreading "false
- information" if it can convince a jury that his statements on the show
- deviated from "reasonable and reliable scientific inquiry, facts, or
- data"-a legal standard which gives a clear advantage to the multi-
- billion-dollar beef industry, particularly in Texas cattle country, where
- the lawsuit was filed.
-
- In legal jargon, food disparagement suits are called
- SLAPPs, for Strategic Lawsuit Against Public
- Participation. The SLAPP against Oprah originated in
- a coordinated campaign spearheaded by the nonprofit
- Washington-based Animal Industry Foundation
- (AIF), whose funding comes from the meat industry.
- AIF developed a "model" food disparagement statute,
- which it distributes to legislators and agribusiness
- interests in state capitols across the country.
-
- Essentially, food disparagement laws are industries'
- payback for the victory won by consumers when,
- following a media campaign, the pesticide Alar
- (sprayed on apples to make them ripen longer before
- falling off the tree) was pulled off the market by its
- manufacturer, the Uniroyal Corporation. The
- Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) concluded in
- 1985 that Alar might be causing as many as 100
- cancers per million people-a risk factor 100 times over
- EPA standards. Alar stayed on the market, though,
- until rocked by a 1989 60 Minutes expose entitled "A is
- for Apple." The documentary's point was reinforced by
- public service announcements from the Natural Resources
- Defense Council (NRDC) featuring actress Meryl Streep,
- who warned that Alar had been detected in apple juice
- bottled for children. The apple industry abandoned Alar,
- but growers in Washington filed a lawsuit the next year
- against CBS, NRDC and its public relations consultant,
- Fenton Communications. In a ringing victory for environmentalists,
- the suit was dismissed by a judge who noted that "governmental
- methodology fails to take into consideration the distinct hazards
- faced by preschoolers." The industry setback led to the 1991
- passage of the first state food disparagement law, pushed
- through by apple growers in Colorado. Biotechnology giant
- Monsanto has taken similar legal action-to protect the image
- of its genetically engineered bovine growth hormone, rBGH.
- Monsanto's own studies have linked rBGH use to increased
- udder infections and other health problems in cows, but the
- company has filed lawsuits against dairies advertising that
- their milk is "rBGH-free," because of its implied notion that
- non-rBGH-free milk is harmful.
-
- Actual court victories are not necessarily the goal of a SLAPP
- suit. They primarily aim to chill speech by forcing defendants
- to spend huge amounts of time and money defending themselves
- in court. "The longer the litigation can be stretched out...the closer
- the SLAPP filer moves to success," observes New York Supreme
- Court Judge Nicholas Colabella. And the industry can simply
- threaten to file a suit, as it did in a recent warning to Food &
- Water Inc., a grassroots group in Vermont that campaigns
- against the use of radiation to extend shelf life in foods.
-
- The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) challenged Georgia's
- food disparagement law, but in 1995 a state court upheld it on a
- technicality. David Bederman, the Emory University Law School
- professor who represented the ACLU in that case, comments,
- "The freedom of speech, always precious, becomes ever more
- so as the agricultural industries use new methods such as exotic
- pesticides, growth hormones, radiation, and genetic engineering
- on our food supply." Perhaps he shouldn't say that too loud-he
- could get SLAPPed.
-
- (The writers are the authors of the book Mad Cow USA, just
- published by Common Courage Press.)
-
- CONTACTS:
-
- Food & Water Inc.
- RR 1, Box 68D
- Walden, VT 05873
- Tel: (802) 563-3300
-
- Pure Food Campaign
- 860 Highway 61 East
- Silver Bay, MN 55614
- Tel: (218) 226-4164
-
- Posted by:
-
- Lawrence Carter-Long
- Science and Research Issues, Animal Protection Institute
- email: LCartLng@gvn.net, phone: 800-348-7387 x. 215
- world wide web: http://www.api4animals.org/
-
- "Civil liberties are always safe as long as their exercise doesn't
- bother anyone." New York Times editorial, 1-3-41
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 09:13:23 -0800 (PST)
- From: Michael Markarian <mmarkarian@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Make-A-Wish Cancels Duck Hunt (US-MS)
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19971216132835.54372a3e@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Below is a press release from the Make-A-Wish Foundation of Mississippi,
- announcing that they have canceled a duck hunt that had been organized as a
- fundraiser. Thank you to everyone who wrote and called!
-
- By siding with the animals and canceling this duck hunt, the Make-A-Wish
- Foundation of Mississippi has refused to accept approximately $8,000 from a
- hunting group, and they are apparently very strapped for cash. It might be a
- nice gesture of "thank you" if people are so inclined to send them a
- donation. -- MM
-
- ====================
-
- Make-A-Wish Foundation of Mississippi
- 931 Highway 80 West, Unit 17
- Jackson, MS 39204
- (601) 352-2408
- FAX: (601) 948-8746
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
-
- Contact: Suzanne Vivier, Executive Director
- Make-A-Wish Foundation of Mississippi
- (601) 352-2408
-
- SPONSOR TO PURSUE ALTERNATE FUNDRAISING EVENTS
- TO BENEFIT THE MAKE-A-WISH FOUNDATION OF MISSISSIPPI
-
- (Jackson, December 11, 1997) -- The organizer of a local duck hunt that was
- to have benefited the Make-A-Wish Foundation of Mississippi has decided to
- pursue other fundraising opportunities for the chapter that do not involved
- hunting.
-
- Bo Prestidge of Wildlife, Inc. says he is working with the Make-A-Wish
- Foundation of Mississippi to explore other fundraising activities, after
- evaluating the event that was scheduled for December 29th at the private
- hunting lodge.
-
- "We have an excellent working relationship with the Make-A-Wish Foundation
- of Mississippi," says Prestidge. "Our goal is to support the fine work of
- this organization and the special kids it serves."
-
- Suzanne Vivier, Executive Director of the Make-A-Wish Foundation of
- Mississippi says she respects Prestidge's decision. "We value our
- partnership with Wildlife, Inc. and look forward to pursuing alternate
- fundraising activities in the very near future. We appreciate that we are
- the beneficiaries of such loyal local support."
-
- The Make-A-Wish Foundation of Mississippi is committed to its mission of
- granting the wishes of children with life-threatening illnesses. The
- organization fulfilled the dreams of 50 children last year, at an average of
- cash cost of $3,700 to grant each wish.
-
- The have many, many wishes of children that are waiting to be fulfilled. The
- canceled fundraisers would have raised approximately $8,000. They need the
- public's help with donations to help replace the lost revenue. You can send
- your donations to: Make-A-Wish Foundation of Mississippi, 931 Highway 80
- West, Unit 17, Jackson, MS 39204.
-
- For more information about the Make-A-Wish Foundation of Mississippi, please
- contact Suzanne Vivier at (601) 352-2408.
-
- # # #
-
- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 12:00:00 -0500
- From: "David A. Balz" <WyHumane@compuserve.com>
- To: AR-NEWS <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Ohio House Bill 437
- Message-ID: <199712161200_MC2-2C33-B196@compuserve.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
- Content-Disposition: inline
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- ******************APPEAL**************APPEAL************************APPEA
- L*
- ****************
-
-
- From: David Balz, Director, Wyandot County Humane Society
-
- To: Any resident Ohio, USA -- and others interested in cruelty prevention.
-
- Ohio's animal cruelty statutes are over 100 years old. Recent attempts to
- improve the laws have been successful for the first time. HB 437, while
- no model for future laws, is a vast improvement in providing an enforceable
- law for our cruelty investigators to use. It provides definitions and
- standards that are documentable and enforceable. Provides for
- reimbursement for agencies involved in the care of seized animals and
- allows judges more options for disposition of cases, including counseling
- for offenders and limited prohibition against future possession of animals.
-
- Recently several groups in southern Ohio have mounted a telephone campaign
- to defeat this bill. The bill is now on the floor of the Ohio House of
- Representatives. The need right now is for anyone in Ohio, but especially
- in southern Ohio to call their elected representative and voice their
- support for Ohio House Bill 437 - The Companion Animal Cruelty Bill.
-
- No one behind this bill thinks it is perfect -- but it is a giant leap
- forward for the animals of Ohio. It is best to call your representative at
- his local office, the public library can give you that number. If nothing
- else call 1-800-282-0253 and leave a message for you representative.
-
- I can be reached at Email WyHumane@compuserve. com or
- 1-888-294-4477
-
- End Message.......
- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 13:53:26 -0500
- From: Mesia Quartano <primates@usa.net>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Scientists count Uganda mountain gorillas
- Message-ID: <3496CE26.E5BCACDA@usa.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Tuesday, December 16, 1997
-
- An international team of scientists recently worked their way through
- the thick and steep terrain of Uganda's Bwindi Impenetrable
- Forest National Park to count populations of endangered mountain
- gorillas. They found about 300, bringing the known total of this gorilla
- sub-species to around 600.
-
- The census, conducted in October and November by the Bronx Zoo-based
- Wildlife Conservation Society, International Gorilla Conservation
- Program, the Institute of Tropical Forest Conservation and the Uganda
- Wildlife Authority resulted in a tally of 292 individual gorillas from
- 28 groups, along with seven lone silverbacks -- adult males.
-
- Using survey techniques developed in the Virunga Conservation Area,
- where the other, much better-known population of mountain gorillas live,
- researchers followed trails and counted nests. A large team was used to
- cover more ground in a shorter period of time and to reduce the risk of
- counting the same gorillas twice.
-
- Each night, gorillas build a new nest, and researchers can tell the age
- of the animal that slept there by the size of dung piles left behind,
- and if it is a female by the presence of infant dung. In addition,
- silvery hairs found in the nest can reveal the presence of adult males.
-
- Researchers collected hairs from every nest for DNA fingerprinting, to
- confirm that no groups were counted twice, and to understand the genetic
- differences between the Bwindi and Virunga populations.
-
- Bwindi gorillas differ from Virunga gorillas by their shorter hair and
- slightly longer limbs. Further research will be needed to confirm
- whether the Bwindi gorillas are themselves a sub-species distinct from
- the Virunga population.
-
- The steep mountains and thick, thorny brush that give the Impenetrable
- Forest its name provided a significant challenge for the census teams
- that scoured all areas of the park in search of gorilla trails.
-
- The future of these rare gorillas remains uncertain, however. "Given
- that the Virunga Volcanos is currently a war zone and that park staff
- cannot even enter this region to monitor the gorillas, there is strong
- concern in the conservation community that there may be even fewer than
- 600 animals," said Dr. Andrew Plumptre, assistant director for Africa
- programs of the Wildlife Conservation Society.
-
- The results of the Bwindi census are being used for a strategic analysis
- being conducted at this week's Mountain Gorilla Population and Habitat
- Viability Analysis Workshop, organized by the Uganda Wildlife Authority
- and the Conservation and Breeding Specialist Group of IUCN.
-
- The workshop participants are designing a regional plan of action that
- will best ensure the conservation of these endangered gorilla
- populations.
-
- For more information, contact Stephen Saunter, WCS, (718)220-5197.
- Copyright 1997, Environmental News Network, All Rights Reserved
-
- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 13:57:05 -0500
- From: Mesia Quartano <primates@usa.net>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: (US) Groups intensify fight to halt wolf ruling
- Message-ID: <3496CF00.3D58D3A9@usa.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Tuesday, December 16, 1997
-
- Environmentalists intensified their fight today against a Friday court
- ruling that the reintroduction of wolves into Yellowstone National Park
- and central Idaho was illegal, saying they would battle all the way to
- the Supreme Court if necessary.
-
- After reviewing the decision by Judge William Downes of Wyoming U.S.
- District Court in Casper, Defenders of Wildlife said it not only will
- join the Interior Department in an appeal, but also take more immediate
- action within the next week to ask the judge to review and reverse his
- decision. Parties have 10 days after a ruling to file a motion for
- reconsideration.
-
- "We have found several legal bases for challenging the judge's
- decision," said Defenders of Wildlife President Rodger Schlickeisen.
- "The reality is that removal could become a death sentence for the
- wolves -- where would they be moved?
-
- "These wolves have become symbols across America and the world of a more
- enlightened way of dealing with the natural world. Our phones are
- ringing off the hook -- the American public has embraced the Yellowstone
- wolves and will not stand for
- dismantling this program. We will fight all the way to the Supreme Court
- if necessary and we will win," added Schlickeisen.
-
- In separate action, attorneys for Earthjustice Legal Defense Fund,
- formerly the Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund, announced that they had
- recommended to their clients National Audubon Society, Predator Project,
- Sinapu and the Gray Wolf Committee that
- they file an appeal of the court decision.
-
- "We want wolves to stay and prosper in the Northern Rockies," said
- Earthjustice Legal Defense Fund attorney Doug Honnold. "We will continue
- to fight to protect all wolves in the region."
-
- Before the release of wolves imported from Canada in early 1995,
- litigation was filed against the Interior Department in an attempt to
- block the reintroduction. Defenders of Wildlife, the National Wildlife
- Federation and others intervened on behalf of the department against the
- Farm Bureau.
-
- The judge's ruling combined what were originally three different suits,
- which has caused some confusion. However, the group's Legal Director
- William Snape emphasizes that, "Although there has been confusion about
- the highly technical legal issues decided under the Endangered Species
- Act, the American people and the environmental community are united in
- their desire to keep wolves in Yellowstone and central Idaho."
-
- This ruling is "a miscarriage of common sense," said Defenders of
- Wildlife northern Rockies representative Hank Fischer. "The wolves are
- reproducing well, mortality is low, livestock losses are minimal; this
- is a success story. Why ruin it?"
-
- "The unfortunate reality is that our case got combined against our
- wishes, with that of the Farm Bureau," Honnold said. "We are trying to
- enhance the recovery of wolves in central Idaho; the Farm Bureau is
- trying to stop wolf recovery in both Yellowstone and central Idaho."
-
- For more information, contact Bill Snape, Defenders of Wildlife,
- (202)682-9400 ext. 232.
- Copyright 1997, Environmental News Network, All Rights Reserved
-
- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 14:17:50 -0500
- From: Mesia Quartano <primates@usa.net>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Escaped Lion Seen but Still Free
- Message-ID: <3496D3DD.6DC5435D@usa.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- (AP Online; 12/16/97)
-
- By MIKE SCHNEIDER Associated Press Writer
-
- KISSIMMEE, Fla. (AP) A full-grown lion that escaped from a roadside
- zoo near Disney World was spotted today in a cypress swamp by wildlife
- officials trying to recapture her.
-
- The lion was spotted from a helicopter around midday, only about 100
- yards from the zoo, but the swampy terrain and thick vegetation made it
- impossible to reach her quickly from the ground. By early this
- afternoon, the animal was no longer visible from the air, said Harley
- Cook, agent from Florida's Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission.
-
- Deputies from the Osceola County Sheriff's Office had joined zoo
- employees and agents from Florida's Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission
- in the hunt.
-
- Residents and tourists in the area surrounded by hotels and restaurants
- were put on alert, but officials described the 2 1/2-year-old lioness as
- hand-raised, declawed and very sociable.
-
- "She loves the public," said Kathy Bacon, the zoo's marketing director.
- "She loves the kids. When they come here, she hams it up."
-
- Because of recent heavy rain, a crew tried to construct a platform in
- Nala's cage Monday so she and other lions could stay dry, said Cynthia
- Potter, JungleLand spokeswoman. "She was startled, and she bolted and
- squeezed through
- a narrow opening," Ms. Potter said.
-
- JungleLand is located on Highway 192 in the heart of a busy tourist
- district of hotels and restaurants near Disney World.
-
- {APWire:Domestic-1216.252} 12/16/97
-
- (yet another circus animal that will probably get shot to "protect the
- public"...)
-
- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 14:51:15 -0500
- From: Mesia Quartano <primates@usa.net>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: (US) PETA Settles Trade-Secret Suit
- Message-ID: <3496DBB3.32761FFF@usa.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- (AP Online; 12/15/97)
-
- By SONJA BARISIC Associated Press Writer
-
- NORFOLK, Va. (AP) A New Jersey pharmaceutical testing company settled
- a lawsuit Monday accusing an animal-rights group of infiltrating the
- firm with a spy and stealing trade secrets.
-
- Huntingdon Life Sciences Inc. contends an undercover worker for People
- for the Ethical Treatment of Animals lied to get a job cleaning cages at
- the lab in East Millstone, N.J.
-
- PETA officials said the worker videotaped lab employees yelling at and
- dangling monkeys, throwing some of them into cages and threading tubes
- down their noses for tests. The group claimed one technician cut into a
- monkey before it was dead.
-
- Under the settlement signed Monday, Norfolk-based PETA must return or
- destroy all the information the worker who signed a confidentiality
- agreement took from the lab.
-
- PETA also must return all information learned about Huntingdon during
- the litigation process and it may not interfere with the lab's business
- relationships. PETA also is barred from any undercover
- information-gathering against the lab for five years.
-
- PETA does not have to pay any damages or admit wrongdoing. The group
- also may respond to any inquiries from the Department of Agriculture
- regarding a complaint it previously filed against Huntingdon.
-
- "We didn't exactly give away the farm, and we did not pay them a penny,"
- PETA president Ingrid Newkirk said.
-
- She said PETA wasn't concerned about the settlement's restrictions
- because it already had written to the lab's clients and distributed the
- videotape.
-
- "We won a great deal for the animals in that Colgate canceled its
- contract with Huntingdon, and Procter & Gamble launched an independent
- investigation that led to its denouncement of Huntingdon's
- animal-handling practices," Ms. Newkirk said.
-
- Huntingdon President Alan Staple said the settlement achieves the
- company's goals of retrieving the lab's materials and protecting the
- business and its clients' interests.
-
- PETA estimated that Huntingdon lost $10 million as a result of its
- investigation and spent $2 million in legal fees.
-
- Staple said the legal fees were closer to $1 million. He said he could
- not put a dollar amount on losses due to PETA, although he said the
- company lost some contracts worth a couple hundred thousand dollars
- each.
-
- "The concern that we had was going into the future," he said. "We were
- concerned about our reputation for maintaining confidentiality."
-
-
- {APWire:Domestic-1215.452} 12/15/97
-
-
- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 14:55:14 -0500
- From: Mesia Quartano <primates@usa.net>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Geneticists bring speed and accuracy to an age-old craft Animals/Food
- Message-ID: <3496DCA1.CD47EF36@usa.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- (Guardian; 12/15/97)
-
- Animals:
-
- COMING soon to a farm near you: pigs with human hearts, cows with
- muscles that turn to jelly and chickens that sing like quails. Hot on
- the heels of self-shearing sheep will be featherless chickens and
- animals that glow in the dark - just the thing for a hill farmer on a
- cold winter night, write Danny Penman and Tim Radford.
-
- The end results of animal experiments carried out over the last few
- years are expected to begin filtering into shops, hospitals and farms in
- five to 10 years.
-
- Although in principle animals could eventually be re-designed for almost
- any use, economics will focus the minds of genetic engineers on a
- relatively narrow range of options. Animals will be engineered to
- produce more meat, wool, eggs or milk. Animals will be re-designed to
- secrete useful drugs into their blood and milk.
-
- Goats, sheep and pigs are seen as future "pharm" stock: producers of
- human medical proteins no laboratory could synthesise.
-
- Others are working on ways of boosting the growth of muscles to produce
- more meat at a faster rate. A gene which normally limits muscle
- development could be knocked out, theoretically causing muscles to grow
- to twice their normal size. Animals such as "double muscled" Belgian
- Blue cattle have already been bred for this mutation using conventional
- selective breeding.
-
- The result, says Dr Tim O'Brien of Compassion in World Farming, has been
- "catastrophic" for animal welfare. The calves are so big they have to be
- delivered by caesarean.
-
- Food:
-
- RIGHT now, you could picnic on genetically engineered tomato sandwiches
- in the shade of genetically engineered trees, writes Tim Radford.
-
- You could, in theory, select from a trattoria menu a meal of roast
- aubergine followed by polenta and tomato sauce, and then salmon served
- with fried potatoes, followed by fruit salad - every item, including the
- oil, pepper and the horseradish sauce, having been genetically
- engineered.
-
- Three years ago, there were no genetically modified foods. Then
- suddenly, the future arrived. It was announced, but most people were not
- listening, and its long-term effects are completely unknown.
-
- So far, all government scientific bodies have approved the products for
- safety but the longer-term public health implications of designer food
- is uncertain.
-
- "We do not know about all the potential allergens. They could also
- increase the number of bacteria that are resistant to antibiotics," says
- the Consumers' Association.
-
- "The overriding worry is that not enough is known about the behaviour of
- genes once they are released and, since genetically modified organisms
- can migrate, mutate and multiply, any mistakes could be irreversible. It
- raises questions about the long-term effects when a wide range of
- products are released. We cannot be sure how they will interact."
-
- Mistakes have been made and there have been unexpected side effects.
- Cross-pollination between genetically modified crops and standard ones
- has occurred, and Danish researchers found that herbicide resistance
- from genetically modified soya plants could spread to weeds.
-
- At Cornell University, New York, there is rice with a potato gene to
- protect it from flying insects. And at Leeds University there is a
- potato with a rice gene to protect it from nematode worms.
-
- In Edinburgh, experimental nicotiana plants have been issued with
- luminescence genes from a jellyfish: tobacco that lights up all by
- itself. The eventual aim is to programme crops to signal when they are
- being attacked by blight or fungus. The farmer will be able to see the
- first gleams of disease and snuff it out before it gets a hold.
-
- Although the first genetic experiments to go on sale involved tomatoes
- that kept better, or made a tastier sauce, most developments have
- involved protecting plants from pests and diseases or weed competition.
-
- Experimental maize yields in Kenya have trebled because of a
- herbicide-resistant corn. The seed was soaked in the stuff and the
- seedling roots were attacked by parasitic witchweed which absorbed the
- herbicide and died.
-
- Around the next corner is the prospect of "nutra-ceuticals".
-
- The US department of agriculture already has a cucumber which retains
- all its beta-carotene even after it is pickled: that means vitamin A for
- better teeth, stronger bones and clearer vision.
-
- Coming to a greengrocer near you could be grapes that reduce the risk of
- heart disease; tomatoes that help control prostate problems, broccoli
- with a powerful anti-cancer arsenal, alfalfa to fight tooth decay, and
- bananas containing hepatitis B vaccines.
-
- (Copyright 1997)
-
- {A5:Guardian-1215.01256} 12/15/97
-
-
- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 15:00:36 -0500
- From: Mesia Quartano <primates@usa.net>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: (US) Judge Won't Block Bison Slaughter
- Message-ID: <3496DDE4.5B1F3697@usa.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- (AP Online; 12/16/97)
-
- By BOB ANEZ Associated Press Writer
-
- HELENA, Mont. (AP) A judge today refused to block government agencies
- from killing bison that wander out of Yellowstone National Park,
- although he limited the number that can be shot in a program to prevent
- the animals from spreading
- disease to cattle herds.
-
- No more than 100 bison can be killed without a court hearing, U.S.
- District Judge Charles C. Lovell said. He said he does not want a repeat
- of last winter, when almost 1,100 bison were shot or shipped to
- slaughter.
-
- Lovell ruled in a lawsuit filed by several conservation groups and the
- Inter-Tribal Bison Cooperative challenging an interim management plan
- aimed at blocking bison from leaving the park.
-
- The plan is designed to keep the animals from spreading brucellosis to
- cattle. The disease causes cows to abort their calves. In humans, it
- causes undulant fever.
-
- Montana ranchers fear that if infected bison are allowed out of the
- park, they could be required to spend millions to test their cattle and
- certify them disease-free before shipment to other states.
-
- In a report last week, the National Academy of Sciences said the risk of
- infection to cattle was small, but real, and that the result of
- infection could be catastrophic.
-
- The conservation and tribal groups argued that state and federal
- agencies should be required to do another environmental analysis of the
- program to better measure the potential impacts on the Yellowstone bison
- herd, which
- numbers about 2,000 animals.
-
- In the meantime, the management plan should be shelved, said Jim Angell
- of Bozeman, attorney for the Earthjustice Legal Defense Fund, formerly
- the Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund.
-
- Justice Department lawyer Martin LaLonde said state and federal
- officials had agreed on changes to the plan that are intended to reduce
- the slaughter of bison.
-
- Increased use of hazing to keep bison in the park, allowing more
- disease-free bison to remain outside the park in one area and a new
- location for a trapping facility near West Yellowstone will make a
- difference, he told Lovell.
-
-
- {APWire:Domestic-1216.266} 12/16/97
-
-
- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 15:27:58 -0800
- From: Dan <xdanx@erols.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.com
- Subject: [Fwd: National Conference on Civil Disobedience]
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- Tue, 16 Dec 1997 14:37:21 -0500
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- To: AUARE-L@AMERICAN.EDU
-
- National Conference on Civil Disobedience
- January 24 & 25, 1998
-
- Civil Disobedience is an old and effectibe technique of resistance and
- protest which has led many oppressed groups to freedom. This conference
- is designed to give activists a variety of tools on how to fight using
- nonviolent civil disobedience to take home, practice, and teach ohters.
- Come to the nation's capitol at the beginning of the new year to educate
- yourself and get active.
-
- Where: The American University, Washington DC
- 4400 Massachusetts Ave NW, Tenleytown Metro
- Served by BWI, Dulles, and Washington National Airports
- Amtrak and Greyhound, Union Station
- When: Saturday January 24 and Sunday January 25, 1998
- Friday Night registration: 7:30 pm - 12-:00 midnight at Mary
- Graydon Center
- Saturday Registration: 8:00 am - 9:00 am Kay Spiritual Life
- Center, AU
- Price: $7.00 registration for all workshops, $15.00 to include two vegan
- lunches
- Free sleeping space scholarships for students (first come)
- Special low cost housing for individuals and groups available but
- limited
- For more info on housing, contact Kate Lowe at 301-649-5838 or
- k8low@hotmail.com
- Preregistration for groups requiring housing advised
- Mail to: AUARE, 4519 Alton Place, NW. Wahsington, DC 20016
- For more information contact Nisha Anand, conference coordinator, at
- lemurx@juno.com or 202-686-7966
-
- List of Worskshops
- Workshops will run all day the 24th and most of the day the 25th. Two
- workshops will be running at all times, some workshops will be repeated.
- Below is a list of workshops as of December 13, 1997. The list is
- subject to expand and possibly change. A confirmed list of workshops,
- speakers, and times will be available soon. Call or email Nisha Anand
- for an up to date list of workshops. (contact information above)
-
- Opening workshop and introduction - HIstory of Civil Disobedience as a
- Means of Resistance
-
- Local and National Issues
- Fighting Nuclear Growth and Weaponry
- Ending Homelessness and Hunger with Nonviolent Action
- Bikes: A means of Mass Protest
- Transformation Through Education - The New Revolution
- Squaters Rights - Squating in the US
-
- International Issues
- Consumer and Economic Means of Protest: A Case for Burmese Liberation
- Escaping the Capitalist Market System: The Silent Revolution in Africa
- East Timor and the US Government: How Can We Fight ?
- Peacemaking Roundtable Discussion: The Role of Mediation and Conflict
- Resolution
-
- Animal Rights Issues
- Civil Disobedience and Animal Rights: Theory and Action
- How to Plan a Successful Civil Disobedience
- What Happens When Arrested?
- Incorporating Eastern Traditions into Soxial Action: Nonviolence and
- Animal Rights
- Politics and Reasoning Behind Fasting and Hunger Strikes as a Means of CD
-
-
- nisha! I do look like a lemur
-
-
- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 17:48:41 -0500
- From: "Leslie Lindemann" <LDTBS@worldnet.att.net>
- To: "AR-news postings" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: The Nature Conservancy info request
- Message-ID: <19971216224803.AAA27690@oemcomputer>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Does anyone have current info on The Nature Conservancy's in regards to the
- snaring of pigs? I thought I'd read somewhere that they stopped, but I
- can't find the info. I ask because I was at Stop N' Shop and saw that they
- make a contribution to TNC every time a customer reuses a bag. I'd like to
- tell them why I don't support TNC, but I need current info.
-
- Also, I've written to TNC several times and demanded to be removed from
- their mailing list, but they ignore me. Any suggestions?
-
- Leslie
- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 19:42:54 -0500
- From: "Leslie Lindemann" <LDTBS@worldnet.att.net>
- To: "AR-news postings" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: info request
- Message-ID: <19971217004217.AAA21295@oemcomputer>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Could someone please repost the article about the graphic endangered
- species video being shown to (mostly Asian I think) schoolkids. It was
- posted a few weeks ago.
- Thanks
- Leslie
- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 21:40:48 EST
- From: Tereiman <Tereiman@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Huntingdon Muzzles Animal Rights Group
- Message-ID: <9e71f267.34973bb2@aol.com>
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Huntingdon muzzles animal rights group
-
-
- LONDON, Dec 16 (Reuters) - Drug research company Huntingdon Life Sciences Plc
- said on Tuesday it had secured a court settlement under which animal rights
- group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) will stop its
- campaign against the company.
-
- Huntingdon, which has faced allegations of cruelty to the animals used at its
- sites, said under the settlement PETA was barred "from any undercover or
- surreptitious information gathering operations" against it for five years.
-
- Huntingdon said PETA also had to return or destroy all stolen documents,
- information and other materials.
-
- PETA is also barred from using any of the documents, information or materials
- taken from Huntingdon and from interfering with any of the company's business
- relationships.
-
- The company's operating licence in the UK was renewed in October after it met
- 16 stringent conditions. Two staff at its Huntingdon centre near Cambridge in
- eastern England admitted charges of cruelty to dogs in September.
-
- 03:22 12-16-97
- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 21:44:27 EST
- From: Tereiman <Tereiman@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Canada Signs Trapping Agreement
- Message-ID: <2a00abf6.34973c8d@aol.com>
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Canada Signs Trapping Agreement
-
- BRUSSELS, Belgium (Reuters) - Canada said it had signed an international
- agreement Monday phasing out the use of jaw-type leghold traps to catch some
- species of fur animals.
-
- Canada and Russia reached agreement with the European Union in July to phase
- out the traps, ending an EU threat to ban imports of fur from animals such as
- beaver and muskrat.
-
- The 15-nation EU has long campaigned against use of the restraining traps,
- saying they are cruel.
-
- Jean-Pierre Juneau, Canada's ambassador to the EU, signed the Agreement on
- International Humane Trapping Standards at a ceremony in Brussels, the
- Canadian mission to the European Union said in a statement. EU officials also
- signed the agreement.
-
- The Russian Federation is expected to sign the agreement soon, the Canadian
- mission said.
-
- ``This agreement sets a precedent by establishing for the first time
- internationally agreed animal welfare standards. It is a good deal for animal
- welfare and a good deal for Canada,'' Juneau said in the statement.
-
- The agreement requires Canada to bar all use of jaw-type restraining leghold
- traps for seven species immediately and to bar all conventional steel-jawed
- restraining leghold traps for five other species from March 2001.
-
- Under the deal agreed to earlier this year, Russia will ban jaw-type leghold
- traps by the end of 1999.
-
- Three EU member nations -- Austria, Belgium and Britain -- voted against the
- agreement last July, feeling it did not go far enough, and the pact was
- condemned by animal rights groups.
-
- In a separate agreement, the EU this month accepted an offer from the United
- States to phase out over six years the use of steel-jawed leghold traps to
- catch fur-bearing animals, averting a threatened EU ban on U.S. fur imports.
-
- Opponents of leghold traps complain that they do not kill outright but often
- break animals' legs and hold them until they drown, starve or bleed to death.
- ^REUTERS@
-
- 17:10 12-15-97
- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 20:36:47 EST
- From: Marisul <Marisul@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Emu Humor Doesn't Fly
- Message-ID: <9a53b0b4.34972cb4@aol.com>
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Emu Humor Doesn't Fly
-
- >From Progressive Farmer
- December 1997
-
- You may remember the TV ad Honda Motor Co. ran last year. A young man named
- Joe struggles to choose a career. Nothing he considers is appealing. He looks
- at a job in home siding, then as a hot dog vendor with a stand in the desert.
- An old, toothless rancher approaches him, shows him a corral, and says, "Emu,
- Joe. It's the pork of the future."
-
- The commercial, which meant life is full of difficult decisions and buying a
- car needn't be one, was funny. Guess who's not laughing?
-
- Emu ranchers. Already suffering from prices that took a nosedive from as much
- as $30,000 a bird to well under $100, some claim prices dropped more after the
- ad ran.
-
- Ten Texas ranchers are suing under a state law that protects ranchers and
- farmers with perishable food products from having those products bad-mouthed.
- They're asking for at least $75,000 each, plus lawyers' fees.
-
- Because of Honda's ad, the suit claims, the emu ranchers have been "exposed to
- the hatred, contempt, and ridicule of the general public, as well as of their
- friends and relatives."
-
- Particularly offensive to them was the old-timer saying, "Joe, let's not call
- it a pyramid scheme."
-
- "If anything, I thought they'd be happy," Honda spokesman Larry Postaer told
- one reporter. "It's more advertising than they've gotten in their entire
- lives."
- Date: Tue, 16 Dec 1997 21:47:39 EST
- From: Tereiman <Tereiman@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: EP Debates Animal Trap Agreement
- Message-ID: <59d0bff9.34973d4d@aol.com>
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- EP Debates Animal Trap Agreement
-
- BRUSSELS, Belgium (Reuters) - Canada said it had signed an international
- agreement Monday phasing out the use of jaw-type leghold traps to catch some
- species of fur animals.
-
- Canada and Russia reached agreement with the European Union in July to phase
- out the traps, ending an EU threat to ban imports of fur from animals such as
- beaver and muskrat.
-
- The 15-nation EU has long campaigned against use of the restraining traps,
- saying they are cruel.
-
- Jean-Pierre Juneau, Canada's ambassador to the EU, signed the Agreement on
- International Humane Trapping Standards at a ceremony in Brussels, the
- Canadian mission to the European Union said in a statement. EU officials also
- signed the agreement.
-
- The Russian Federation is expected to sign the agreement soon, the Canadian
- mission said.
-
- ``This agreement sets a precedent by establishing for the first time
- internationally agreed animal welfare standards. It is a good deal for animal
- welfare and a good deal for Canada,'' Juneau said in the statement.
-
- The agreement requires Canada to bar all use of jaw-type restraining leghold
- traps for seven species immediately and to bar all conventional steel-jawed
- restraining leghold traps for five other species from March 2001.
-
- Under the deal agreed to earlier this year, Russia will ban jaw-type leghold
- traps by the end of 1999.
-
- Three EU member nations -- Austria, Belgium and Britain -- voted against the
- agreement last July, feeling it did not go far enough, and the pact was
- condemned by animal rights groups.
-
- In a separate agreement, the EU this month accepted an offer from the United
- States to phase out over six years the use of steel-jawed leghold traps to
- catch fur-bearing animals, averting a threatened EU ban on U.S. fur imports.
-
- Opponents of leghold traps complain that they do not kill outright but often
- break animals' legs and hold them until they drown, starve or bleed to death.
- ^REUTERS@
-
- 17:10 12-15-97
-
-
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