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- The Israeli Animal rights groups start protesting after the Municipal
- vet of Haddera City was found ( and Documented by the media) killing
- dog in the most brutal Way:
- the hind legs were tied to a tree, a heavy stick on the dog's back and
- neck to restrain him to the ground, while the intra-cardiac injection of
- salt solution was administered.
- Later it was found that The Municipal vet of hedderra was not the only
- municipal vet who was doing that ( in order to save money... and not
- using Pental ( Sodium Pento-barbitol).
- as a result to that exposure the municipal vet assn. with the support of
- Prof. Shimshoni - head of Vet services, declared that they will stop
- dealing with Rabies control. so they became the primer cause for the
- eruption of Rabies.
-
- Erez.
- Vegetarian Resource Center wrote:
-
- > JERUSALEM, Dec 16 (Reuters) - An Israeli man died of rabies on Tuesday
- > in the
- > third incident of the virus this year, a hospital spokeswoman said.
- >
- > She said the 58-year-old man from northern Israel contracted the virus
- > after
- > being scratched by a stray animal.
- >
- > ``For 30 years we never had a single case of rabies in Israel,'' Dr
- > Isaac
- > Klinger, deputy director of veterinary services in the Agriculture
- > Ministry,
- > said on Monday.
- >
- > He said two other Israelis have died of rabies this year.
- >
- > Klinger said pressure by animal rights groups had made doctors
- > reluctant to
- > kill stray animals.
- >
- > ``After animal rights groups started protesting, doctors became afraid
- > to do
- > their work and the number of strays drastically increased,'' Klinger
- > said.
- > ^REUTERS@
- >
- > 03:11 12-17-97
- >
- > β1997 Maynard S Clark Vegetarian Resource Center
- > info@vegetarian.org
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 26 Dec 1997 00:20:16
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [HK] Four more victims hit by bird flu
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971226002016.4e37de5c@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Friday, December 26th, 1997
-
- Four more victims hit by bird flu
-
- FOUR more suspected cases of "bird flu" were identified in Hong Kong
- yesterday, bringing to 19 the number of people known or believed to have
- contracted the potentially fatal disease.
-
- Parents with children suffering from cold and flu symptoms queued outside
- government clinics.
-
- Graham Hutchings, Hong Kong
-
- β Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- Date: Fri, 26 Dec 1997 00:37:32
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Hen Heaven
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971226003732.0ba72870@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Source: CTV National News
-
- Wendy Turvey has her hands full this Holiday Season looking after her
- turkeys. But these birds won't be going to slaughter and ending up on
- someone's dinner plate.
-
- Turvey has rescued several turkeys from their usual holiday fate, and now
- they enjoy the freedom of Turvey's Hen Heaven sanctuary.
-
- Hen Heaven originally stared as a rescue shelter for freed battery hens,
- who now enjoy the freedom to peck in the soil, dust bathe, and run around
- freely in the sanctuary grounds.
-
- Turvey says she then began rescuing turkeys as well, and they now number
- well into double-digits.
-
- She says that the cost of feed has almost doubled since the arrival of the
- turkeys, but that she recoups some of the costs by selling the eggs layed
- by the hens.
-
- Locals told the CTV reporter that they didn't mind paying a higher price
- for the eggs, as they knew the hens were humanely treated. One woman said
- her husband swore the eggs tasted better than any others he had eaten.
-
- One local resident said some people believed Turvey was a bit mad, but, in
- fact, she was doing a great job and deserved some help.
-
- Turvey says she hopes to have an adoption scheme in place soon, where
- people could "adopt" a hen or turkey, but the bird would not leave the
- sanctuary.
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 26 Dec 1997 01:01:57
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Cans of beef given to poor
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971226010157.0ba7c420@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- [I originally posted this on December 24th, but it bounced back because the
- headed contained the word "free". David]
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Wednesday, December 24th, 1997
-
- Free cans of beef for the poor
- By David Brown, Agriculture Editor
-
- MORE than 10 million cans of stewed steak will be given away by the
- Government in the New Year in a ΓΊ20.3 million EU scheme to reduce Britain's
- beef mountain.
-
- The beef, which was withdrawn from sale and frozen after Europe's global
- export ban hit the market last year, will be distributed to the homeless
- and other low-income people in need. The Ministry of Agriculture said
- yesterday that all of the beef comes from animals under 30 months of age.
-
- A total of 8,000 tons of the beef has been allocated for the give-away
- which is expected to start at the end of next month. It will be processed
- in1lb cans with recipients rationed to eight cans. A double allocation will
- be given to organisations that provide meals.
-
- The Government is seeking applications from local authorities, hostels for
- the homeless and charities dealing with the homeless, people living on
- income support, family credit, jobseekers allowance or disability working
- allowance.
-
- Canning has been selected as the most practical and hygienic way of
- distributing the beef through a range of voluntary organisations which may
- not have cold-stores and refrigerators. Jeff Rooker, Food Safety Minister,
- said: "This is a practical way to use the extra beef and I encourage
- non-profit-making organisations to make it available to those in need. The
- beef is of high quality and of the same standard as the beef in shops."
-
- The mountain has risen to 96,000 tons since the beef crisis began in March
- last year. The Intervention Board for Agricultural Produce, the Government
- agency administering the give-away, said the cans would contain prime beef
- from animals processed under the Government's strict controls to protect
- consumers from BSE.
-
- β Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- Date: Fri, 26 Dec 1997 01:16:03
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Stable destroyed in wind storm
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971226011603.08b779ca@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- According to the Electronic Telegraph (December 26th), winds hitting parts
- of the UK early Christmas Day, blew down a stable in Scarborough, North
- Yorkshire.
-
- All the horses inside are believed to have been rescued.
-
- There are no details on any injuries.
-
- David
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 26 Dec 1997 08:03:57 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Pfiesteria can affect memory, tests show
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971226080355.007137c4@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- environment/human health/factory farming
- from USA Today http://www.usatoday.com
- -----------------------------------------------------------
- Pfiesteria can affect memory, tests show
-
- Researchers have confirmed that pfiesteria, a toxic one-celled marine
- creature, can cause memory loss in animals. Pfiesteria outbreaks killed
- thousands of fish earlier this year - millions over several outbreaks - and
- frightened consumers and fishers on the East Coast. Researchers at North
- Carolina State University say tests show that it could affect memory in
- rats. Scientists say there is no evidence that pfiesteria can make seafood
- harmful to people or animals.
- Date: Fri, 26 Dec 1997 09:06:16 -0500
- From: liberation2@juno.com
- To: ar-wire@waste.org, ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: BP Bow Hunt/ calls needed
- Message-ID: <19971226.090622.3710.2.liberation2@juno.com>
-
- ******
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
- December 26, 1997
-
-
- Bethel Park Teen Refuses Food
- To Protest Dangerous Deer Bow
- Hunt, Concern About Public Safety
-
- BETHEL PARK, PA =96 A Bethel Park teen has pledged not to eat for
- the next=
- 16
- days =96 beginning Friday =96 to protest a deer bow hunt, which she
- charges=
- not
- only causes great harm to the animals, but is a public safety threat.
-
- Kim Chicchi, 19, begins a hunger strike Friday =96 the first day
- of hunt =
- =96
- that will last through Jan. 15 to show her opposition to the deer hunt in
- the Bethel Park section of South Park. It is the third bow hunt in Bethel
- Park since October, when Chicchi also went on a brief strike.
-
- "I will not eat until the hunt is stopped," said Chicchi, who
- will consume
- only water on the hunger strike, whose health could be seriously
- endangered,
- say supporters..
-
- In a letter to the Bethel Park Council, Chicchi said that bow
- hunting was a
- "brutal sport" in which the wounding rate is a very high 50 percent.
- During
- a previous hunt, Chicchi said a deer was found in "South Park with an
- arrow
- in his eyes. (He) wandered off into a pond and drowned."
-
- She also said the hunt is extremely dangerous to humans because
- hunters are
- permitted to hunt in people's back yards, and the specific hunt area is
- being kept a secret, even to residents because of "fears" of protests by
- animal rights activists.
-
- A national "phone blockade" -- involving phone calls to the local
- Municipal
- Council and Mayor from animal protections activists across the U.S. -- is
- also being co-ordinated to protest the hunt.
-
- -30-
- Contact phone: Kim 412/831-1141
-
- NOTE: The hunt takes place on Guttman property on Baptist Rd, the upper
- portion of Simon's Park on Clifton Rd, and Allegheny County's South Park)
- =09
-
- ************************************************
- This is a listing of the BP Coucnil members and other people who are 'kep
- players' in this masacre. PLEASE call them often!!!!!! Don't forget
- that if you use 1-800-collect & get an answering machine that you can
- leave up to a 5 minute message on their machine. SO THERE ARE NO
- EXCUSES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! CALL/ WRITE/ FAX & then CALL/ WRITE/ FAX
- again & again & again!!! These deer do NOT deserve what is happening to
- them...
-
- PLEASE ACT UP & FIGHT BACK FOR THEM, THEY DESERVE NO
- LESS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
- -Kim
-
- *****************************
- Those marked qith a * will change in January, so if you can only
- call/write a few of the council members it would be better to contact the
- other members.
-
- All phone #'s have an area code of 412. All addresses end in Bethel
- Park, PA 15102
-
- Municipal council:
-
- Timothy J. Moury(president)
- 108 Heather Dr.
- 833-4615
-
- *George K. Beck(vice president)
- 3327 Forest Rd.
- 833-5992
-
- John A. Pape
- 5415 California Ave.
- 835-3087
-
- *Charles G. Koch
- 6078 Great Dane Dr.
- 833-5786(home)
- 429-2204(business)
-
- Judith A. Lorigan
- 7090 Dumbarton Place
- 835-5064(home)
- 833-2800(business)
-
- Donald L. Harrison
- 4673 Prescot Dr.
- 833-0449
-
- Mark J. O'Brien
- 1134 Mcknight Dr.
- 831-0774
-
- Philip B. Ehrman
- 3100 Eastview Rd.
- 831-1868home)
- 225-3355(business)
- 225-4058(fax)
-
- Susan J. Hughes
- 1160 Tidewood Dr.
- 833-4989
-
- Mayor:
- *Alan F. Hoffman
- 1190 Grouse Run Rd.
- 833-4109(home)
- 833-6850(business)
- 833-3938(fax)
-
- Municipal Building:
- 831-6800
-
- Whitetail Management Assosciates("conservation" group who is in charge of
- recruiting/training hunters for the BP hunts):
- P.O. Box 58031
- Pittsburgh, PA 15209
-
- Sgt. Rogan(he was given the responsibility of finding a sollution to the
- problem of the so-called over population of the deer in Bethel Park.
- Obviously, and unfortunately, he decided on the bow hunt. He can be
- reached via the municipal building(412-831-6800)
-
-
- Date: Fri, 26 Dec 1997 11:39:12 EST
- From: Snugglezzz <Snugglezzz@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@Envirolink.org
- Subject: Hog Farm's Deadline Extended
- Message-ID: <75d4d9cc.34a3ddb2@aol.com>
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Oklahoma City, OK,USA: A hog farm where state inspectors found dead and
- decomposing hogs spilling from open containers received an eight-day reprieve
- Tuesday to decide whether to pay part of a proposed $157,500. fine.
-
- Seaboard Farms, Inc., the Oklahoma Panhandle's largest hog farm, had been
- given until Tuesday afternoon to decide whether to pay $105,000. of the
- proposed penalty or request an administrative hearing.
-
- Agriculture officials have said if Seaboard makes partial payment, the balance
- of the fine - the largest ever proposed by the Agriculture Department - will
- be deferred if the company meets state agriculture guidelines.
-
- The penalty was proposed Monday following an informal hearing between
- Agriculture Department and Seaboard officials. Under the proposed fine,
- Seaboard must pay $5,000. for each of 28 major violations and $2,500. for
- seven lesser violations.
-
- The allegations stem from inspection of 44 Seaboard sites during a two-day
- period last month by the department's director of water quality, Dan Parrish.
- Parrish said he found alleged violations at 35 of the Seaboard sites.
-
- "All of it is carcass disposal on a timely manner," said Parrish. "We have
- concerns about some health and environmental problems."
-
- A report prepared by Parrish indicates he saw decomposing hogs spilling out of
- containers or lying on the ground at some Seaboard sites. Agriculture
- Department rules require the containers to have lids.
-
- Bloated carcasses were found around barns, and a big container was "full of
- skeleton and bones stuck to (the) bottom," according to his report. Another
- inspection found a carcass "totally decomposed with only skin, hair,and bones
- left."
-
- -- Sherrill
- Date: Fri, 26 Dec 1997 14:42:46 EST
- From: CFOXAPI <CFOXAPI@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Cc: OnlineAPI@aol.com
- Subject: EU/ U.S. Trapping Agreement Update
- Message-ID: <faf72d8c.34a408bc@aol.com>
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- A number of people have contacted me to obtain an update on the EU leghold
- trap fur import ban situation. For a brief update on this issue and
- information about federal and state legislation that would ban or restrict
- trapping, please visit the Animal Protection Institute's web site at
- www.api4animals.org
-
- When you're in the web site, go to:
- Issues & Advocacy Campaigns/ go to:
- Wildlife & Public Lands/ go to:
- Support for the European Union Fur Import Ban
-
- Camilla Fox
- Animal Protection Institute
- Date: Fri, 26 Dec 1997 14:42:53 EST
- From: CFOXAPI <CFOXAPI@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Cc: OnlineAPI@aol.com
- Subject: WILD ANIMALS OF KENTUCKY NEED YOUR HELP!
- Message-ID: <b065566d.34a408c0@aol.com>
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Posted by:
- Animal Protection Institute
- P.O. Box 22505
- Sacramento, CA 95822
- Phone (916) 731-5521
- Fax (916) 731-4467
- Email= onlineapi@aol.com
- Web= www.api4animals.org
-
- ****ANIMAL PROTECTION INSTITUTE****
-
- WILD ANIMALS OF KENTUCKY NEED YOUR HELP!
-
- The Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources (KDFWR) is proposing
- new regulations for Nuisance Wildlife Control Operators in Kentucky that will
- perpetuate the inhumane treatment of wild animals deemed as "pests." We need
- your help to convince the KDFWR to cancel these proposed regulations and
- instead adopt new regulations that include guidelines for humane treatment of
- wildlife.
-
- What's Wrong with the Proposed Regulations:
-
- *The proposed regulations do not include any method of ensuring that wildlife
- removed from residential areas, farming facilities, and commercial properties
- will be treated humanely.
-
- *The proposed regulations actually allow Nuisance Wildlife Control Operators
- to sell captured animals directly to hunters to be gunned down or maimed by
- their hunting hounds.
-
- *The proposed regulations do not include any requirement for property owners
- to be informed that wildlife removed from their homes may be killed, most
- likely by inhumane methods such as drowning or injection of acetone.
-
- *The proposed regulations contain no guidelines regarding humane euthanasia of
- captured animals. Nuisance Wildlife Control Operators will be able to continue
- using cruel devices such as snares, leghold traps, and body-crushing type
- traps.
-
- Please write to the Governor of Kentucky and the Commissioner of KDFWR to urge
- them to cancel these proposed regulations and adopt new regulations that
- include guidelines for humane treatment and euthanasia of wildlife.
-
- In addition to the points above, you might want to include these points in
- your letter:
-
- *The new regulations need to include euthanasia guidelines provided by the
- American Veterinary Medical Association.
-
- *Animal welfare representatives should be included in the advisory committee
- in formulating the new wildlife control regulations.
-
- *A large percentage of wildlife problems can be eliminated by basic public
- information. This will save homeowners huge amounts of money and will prevent
- problems from reoccurring.
-
- Please write to:
- Governor Paul Patton
- 100 State Capitol
- Frankfort, KY 406011
- 502-564-2611
-
- Commissioner Tom Bennett
- KDFWR
- #1 Game Farm Road
- Frankfort, KY 40601
- 502-564-3400
-
- Your letters will make a tremendous difference in the treatment of wildlife in
- Kentucky.
-
- If you have any questions, please contact Camilla Fox at API at 916-731-5521
- or email to CFOXAPI@aol.com. Or contact the Fund for Animals' Kentucky office
- at 502-587-0508.
- Date: Fri, 26 Dec 1997 11:23:04 -0500
- From: Liz Grayson <lgrayson@earthlink.net>
- To: ar-news <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Cat scratch fevers plays role in AIDS
- Message-ID: <34A409C8.27@earthlink.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- 12:21 PM ET 12/24/97
-
- Trench, cat scratch fevers play role in AIDS
-
-
- Release at 5 p.m. EST (2200 GMT)
- By Gene Emery
- BOSTON (Reuters) - The bacteria responsible for cat scratch
- fever and for trench fever, which felled more than a million
- soldiers during World War I, may be responsible for an often
- overlooked illness among AIDS patients, according to a study in
- Thursday's New England Journal of Medicine.
- A team led by University of California San Francisco
- researcher Dr. Jane E. Koehler studied 49 patients with a
- recurrent infection known as bacillary angiomatosis-peliosis.
- Most also suffered from AIDS.
- They found that in 53 percent of the cases the infection
- came from the bacteria that causes cat scratch fever. In the
- remaining 47 percent the trench fever bacteria was responsible.
- The findings demonstrated that microbes thought to be
- responsible for one disease can produce a seemingly different
- illness in people whose immune systems have been crippled, such
- as people infected with the AIDS virus or who are receiving
- chemotherapy.
- Cat scratch fever from bacteria on a cat's claws can cause a
- fever, rash and headache, along with a swollen lymph node near
- the site of a scratch. Fleas spread the disease from cat to cat
- and 40 percent of the cats tested in one study carried that type
- of bacteria.
- ``More than 40,000 cases of catch scratch disease are
- reported each year, many more than for Lyme disease,'' noted Dr.
- Lucy S. Tompkins of Stanford University Medical Center in an
- editorial in the Journal. One in three U.S. households have a
- cat.
- Trench fever, which afflicted more than a million troops in
- World War I and killed many of them, causes headaches, muscle
- pains and fever when bite wounds that have been contaminated by
- the feces of infected lice are scratched.
- In those with a debilitated immune system, the bacteria can
- produce weight loss, anemia, cardiovascular damage,
- non-malignant growths throughout the body and death.
- AIDS patients can get the disease from their cats, said
- Koehler, who advises people with AIDS to wash after exposure to
- felines and do as much as they can to control fleas.
- Among homeless people, the greatest threat of bacillary
- angiomatosis comes from exposure to lice, researchers said.
- Bacillary angiomatosis-peliosis can usually be cured by the
- same antibiotics that are already routinely given to AIDS
- patients to prevent another disease known as mycobacterium avian
- complex.
- Although it is readily curable, the illness often goes
- undiagnosed, Koehler said.
- ^REUTERS@
- Date: Fri, 26 Dec 1997 11:27:12 -0500
- From: Liz Grayson <lgrayson@earthlink.net>
- To: ar-news <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Don't forget-eat your tofu!
- Message-ID: <34A40ABF.2D56@earthlink.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- 03:10 PM ET 12/24/97
-
- Estrogen helps memory as women age, study finds
-
-
- WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Hormone replacement therapy may do
- more than protect aging women from bone loss -- it could also
- slow memory loss, researchers said Wednesday.
- The National Institute on Aging study found that women
- taking estrogen to prevent symptoms of menopause did better on
- memory tests than women of the same age who did not take
- estrogen.
- Writing in the journal Neurology, they said their study was
- the first to document the effect of estrogen on age-related
- memory loss over a long period of time.
- The researchers, led by Susan Resnick, tested 288 women
- taking part in a long-term aging study in Baltimore from 1978 to
- 1994.
- The women took regular memory tests known as Benton Visual
- Retention tests. The 116 who took estrogen replacement therapy
- made significantly fewer errors than women who never took
- hormones.
- ``Animal studies show that estrogen can directly influence
- structural characteristics of neurons in the brain, particularly
- in regions that are important for new learning,'' Resnick said
- in a statement.
- ``These regions are also most vulnerable to neuron loss in
- Alzheimer's disease. Thus, lessening the effects of these
- changes with ERT (estrogen replacement therapy) holds promise as
- a drug intervention.''
- In June, scientists at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore
- reported in Neurology that women who took the hormone had a 54
- percent lower chance of developing Alzheimer's.
- Both teams of scientists stressed that more research was
- needed to confirm the effects.
-
- ^REUTERS@
- Date: Fri, 26 Dec 1997 11:42:05 -0500
- From: Liz Grayson <lgrayson@earthlink.net>
- To: ar-news <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Sacraments and Sacrifice
- Message-ID: <34A40E3B.69BC@earthlink.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- New United Arab Emirates law limits wedding costs
-
-
- ABU DHABI, Dec 25 (Reuters) - The United Arab Emirates on
- Thursday adopted a law banning unusually high wedding expenses
- which officials have blamed for a large number of UAE men
- marrying foreign women.
- The official news agency WAM said UAE President Sheikh Zaid
- bin Sultan al-Nahayan issued a decree approving the law which
- set a ceiling of 20,000 dirhams ($5,450) on mahr, the money paid
- by a bridegroom to his future wife.
- The law also set a limit of 30,000 dirhams on compensation
- paid by men to their former wives upon divorce and said wedding
- celebrations should not be more than a day long during which not
- more than NINE CAMELS could be SACRIFICED, WAM said.
- Fines of up to 500,000 dirhams are foreseen for those who
- violate the law, which analysts say aims to encourage weddings
- between UAE nationals by reducing wedding costs in the oil-rich
- Gulf Arab state.
- In a region where men may have up to four wives at the same
- time, high marriage costs are driving up to 40 percent of UAE
- men to seek a foreign wife, a trend officials blame for rising
- divorce rates and a growing number of UAE spinsters.
- Thirty-six in every 100 marriages in the UAE in recent years
- ended in divorce, compared with 10 in every 100 in the 1980s,
- according to a Labour and Social Affairs Ministry study last
- year.
- Sheikh Zaid's decision finalised the adopton of the federal
- law which was approved by the UAE cabinet in September.
- The UAE set up a state-sponsored Marriage Fund in 1992 to
- encourage nationals to marry local women.
- According to Islam's teachings, Moslem men are allowed to
- marry non-Moslem women, while Moslem women cannot marry
- non-Moslem men. Islam does not set a rule on mahr, but it
- requires moderation.
- ($1-3.67 dirhams)
- ^REUTERS@
- Date: Fri, 26 Dec 1997 23:12:34 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Fish Farm Planned in Boston Harbor
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971226231227.00705cbc@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from Associated Press http://wire.ap.org
- ----------------------------------
- 12/26/1997 12:37 EST
-
- Fish Farm Planned in Boston Harbor
-
- By JON MARCUS
- Associated Press Writer
-
- BOSTON (AP) -- There was a time when all Boston Harbor seemed able to
- produce was stink and slime.
-
- Now they want to raise fish there.
-
- In the first such urban aquaculture project in the nation, Massachusetts
- Institute of Technology scientists are raising a tasty type of fish
- called red drum in a tiny trailer on an old Navy pier, using untreated
- harbor water -- so far, with no ill effects.
-
- ``We're really trying to explore what the worst situation is,'' said
- Cliff Goudey, director of MIT's Center for Fisheries Engineering and the
- captain of the cramped metal shipping container that has been converted
- into a harborside fish factory.
-
- The 120 fish, each about 10 inches long, seem right at home in their
- 300-gallon tanks, where the water is warmed with simple home aquarium
- heaters and circulated through a homemade system of plastic pipes.
-
- They're happier, at least, than the codfish that were the first to be
- raised when the project began in 1996. They died within six months -- not
- because the water was polluted, but because it was too warm for the
- coldwater species.
-
- Warmer water red drum were next in the pool, since it's easier to heat
- the tanks than cool them. So far, they've doubled in size since August on
- their diet of catfish food released automatically by a machine six times
- a day.
-
- In fact, the muggy former shipping container, 20 feet long by 8 feet
- wide, needs little maintenance. Between 5 percent and 10 percent of the
- ocean water is replaced daily at high tide, and the only treatment comes
- before the excess is returned to Boston Harbor, when it passes through a
- filter system to remove ammonia excreted by the fish.
-
- Such strict environmental controls are required as part of the
- multibillion-dollar effort that helped clean the notoriously filthy
- harbor. Lobstermen are setting traps again, and harbor seals have
- returned.
-
- ``Those are pretty good monitors of the quality of the water,'' said
- Jerry Schubel, president of the New England Aquarium. ``Ten years ago it
- was one of the most polluted harbors in the United States, and now it's
- one of the cleanest.''
-
- Meanwhile, aquaculture has grown to a $30 billion industry worldwide,
- helping meet an international demand for seafood that is projected to
- rise by 19 million tons to 91 million tons within the next 15 years.
-
- ``What is different is that we're doing it here, that we're bold enough
- to try it in Boston Harbor,'' Goudey said, standing on his pier with the
- city skyline in the background.
-
- The MIT project and another planned by a chain of seafood restaurants in
- South Boston call for raising fish in harborside tanks with closed-loop
- recirculating water systems. Empty warehouses would provide the perfect
- sites, energy and food expenses would be minimal compared to growing fish
- outdoors, and the water could be treated and re-used.
-
- Work is well under way already on a large-scale space in an abandoned
- Navy building, where 40,000-gallon tanks 30 feet in diameter will be used
- to grow haddock. The building was made available by the National Park
- Service, and Goudey and some students have refurbished it.
-
- If that expansion is successful, Goudey said, he hopes it will persuade
- entrepreneurs to open profit-making fish factories on Boston Harbor
- within the next year.
-
- Haddock is a popular New England dish, and no less a culinary authority
- than chef Paul Prudhomme recommends red drum in his blackened redfish
- recipe.
-
- City officials hope to attract an aquaculture institute that could
- produce seafood for local restaurants, provide education and training and
- serve as a tourist attraction. Mayor Thomas Menino is eyeing an unused 50
- million-gallon 19th-century wastewater treatment tank on Moon Island in
- the harbor as a potential aquaculture site.
-
- There's another advantage to urban aquaculture, according to Goudey:
- Cities provide a huge, close-by market for fresh fish, with no need for
- expensive and time-consuming transportation. And the public's appetite is
- heightened, he said, after years of restrictions on commercial fishing
- grounds.
-
- ``It's an exceptional market in the value placed on fresh seafood,''
- Goudey said. ``What aquaculture can do is bring back the kind of
- freshness Boston used to enjoy.''
-
- The drawback? Fish farms could undercut the price paid to already
- struggling commercial fishermen.
-
- In the meantime, the red drum grow in their tank. They eventually will be
- tested for metals or other contaminants, but for now are small enough to
- be protected from the frying pan.
-
- ``It would take a lot of these fish to make a sandwich,'' Goudey said.
-
-
-
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