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- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] New Forest ponies face cull as sale prices fall
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980202000537.1ecf8b64@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegaph - Monday, February 2nd, 1998
-
- New Forest ponies face cull as sale prices fall
- By Michael Fleet
-
- New Forest ponies could be culled to increase prices and save the ancient
- way of life the breed supports.
-
- Some foals are now selling for less than the price of a packet of
- cigarettes because of a collapse in values brought on by over-supply and
- the strong pound, which has hit exports.
-
- The Verderers' Court, which organises the commoners' rights to the forest,
- is to spend ú250,000 over the next four years to encourage selective
- breeding and is looking at suggestions that poor-quality mares should be
- weeded out by a cull.
-
- The forest is home to more than 2,500 ponies, which freely roam the 50,000
- acres. They are a major draw to a million tourists every year and their
- grazing also prevents the landscape from running wild. But there are
- growing worries among the 420 commoners that it is becoming economically
- unviable to exercise their traditional rights to turn out livestock.
-
- Each year the new colt foals are rounded up and sold at auction. In 1990
- they fetched an average of ú46 each but last year the average was ú12 with
- many selling for much less. Most go as children's riding ponies but some
- are sold for meat in France or pet food.
-
- John Bundy, managing director of Southern Counties Auctioneers, said: "Some
- colts have been sold for ú3, which means there is nothing left after
- commission, and plenty go for ú5. There is over-supply and the meat trade
- has been badly hit because the pound is so strong."
-
- Olly Collins, 52, a commoner from Brockenhurst, Hants, said: "No one has
- ever made a lot of money out of it but now it has reached the stage where
- it is costing us money."
-
- Mrs Collins, who has a "handful" of ponies, said: "There is no incentive
- for people to keep ponies and cattle and sooner or later they will stop. If
- the animals stop grazing we will lose a unique habitat and the forest will
- become an overgrown wilderness. There is a real feeling of despair among
- commoners at the moment."
-
- James Young, 41, a commoner who also lives in Brockenhurst, started keeping
- ponies at the age of five. He said: "I have 15 ponies on the forest and I
- have never known it this bad. I think there is a significant danger that
- people are going to start bailing out and if the grazing goes so does the
- character of the area."
-
- Anthony Pasmore, 54, one of 10 verderers who are responsible for regulating
- the commoners and preserving the traditional character of the forest, said
- he favoured a cull. "The market is grossly over-supplied with small ponies
- - it is just economics," he said. "I think there should be some sort of
- cull. If you could get everyone to agree you could buy up large numbers of
- foals and kill them. It might be an unpopular way of proceeding but it is
- the only way to do it."
-
- In the hope of saving the situation, the Court of Verderers is trying
- improve the quality of the ponies and find new markets for them. Sue
- Westwood, clerk to the Verderers' Court, said: "There is considerable
- concern about the future of the commoners. Starting in February we will be
- paying a premium of ú50 a year to what we believe are the best 500 mares in
- the
- New Forest.
-
- "The top four will each get ú100 and the best one will get a cup as well.
- The idea is to try to get better quality animals who will hopefully have a
- market. We have also commissioned a marketing initiative and will wait to
- see what recommendations are made. If they suggest a cull then we would
- have to consider it, but if possible we would rather work with incentives."
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 16:20:31 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: RFI Bees and Honey
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19980202161302.38374f98@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Hi,
- Someone posted an item today or yesterday on bees and honey.
- I accidentally deleted it but I'm sure this article was posted to AR-news.
- Could someone please re-post this article to me (rabbit@wantree.com.au)
- The article was a response to a previous RFI.
-
- Thanks,
- Marguerite
- =====================================================================
- ========
- /`\ /`\ Rabbit Information Service,
- Tom, Tom, (/\ \-/ /\) P.O.Box 30,
- The piper's son, )6 6( Riverton,
- Saved a pig >{= Y =}< Western Australia 6148
- And away he run; /'-^-'\
- So none could eat (_) (_) email: rabbit@wantree.com.au
- The pig so sweet | . |
- Together they ran | |} http://www.wantree.com.au/~rabbit/rabbit.htm
- Down the street. \_/^\_/ (Rabbit Information Service website updated
- frequently)
-
- It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
- - Voltaire
-
- Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 07:30:33 -0800
- From: "Linda J. Howard" <ljhoward@erols.com>
- To: "AR NEWS" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: [US] World Laboratory Animals Week preparation
- Message-ID: <01bd2fef$80f0dd00$ac63accf@default>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain;
- charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- WORLD LABORATORY ANIMALS WEEK
- APRIL 19-26, 1998
-
- If you would like to have a World Laboratory Animal
- Day (WLAD) event in your area, but do not know where
- to begin, please see the guidelines below for looking up
- information about NIH funded research facilities and
- research projects on the internet. [It's all FREE!]
-
- * To find a facility in your area which does research
- using animals, go to the USDA's Animal Care
- home page at <<www.aphis.usda.gov/ac>>.
-
- You can download the entire USDA publication
- 'Animal Welfare: List of Registered Research
- Facilities' which has to be opened with an Acrobat
- reader. [Note: You can download Acrobat Reader from
- the Animal Care home page.] To simplify the
- process, you can choose to "Search for Facility"
- which allows you to look at animal research
- facilities by state and then by city.
-
- * After you have located an animal research facility
- near you, you can find out more about the type of
- research being done at the facility by doing a
- CRISP search. [CRISP is an acronym for Computer
- Retrieval of Information on Scientific Projects.]
-
- Go to <<www.ncrr.nih.gov/grants.htm>> and choose
- CRISP under the 'Grants Database' menu item.
- [From the screen which follows, you can go directly to
- the database or you can review a help file explaining
- how to use the CRISP database.] You can type
- in keywords you are interested in finding -- such as
- the name of the facility near you. The CRISP reports
- give specific information about the animal research being
- conducted.
-
- For more detailed information:
-
- * Lawrence Carter-Long put together a wonderful
- comprehensive guide "Useful Tools for Investigation
- Animal Experimentation" which is accessed from
- Animal Protection Institute's web address
- <<www.api4animals.org>>.
-
- * Guidelines for Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
- requesting can be found in the web pages of
- Animal Emancipation! Online
- <<www.envirolink.org/orgs/ae/index.html>>
-
- * For more information about World Week for Laboratory
- Animals, contact In Defense of Animals at
- 131 Camino Alto, Mill Valley, CA 94941
- or visit IDA's web site at <<www.idausa.org>>.
-
- Let's make 1998
- THE YEAR OF LABORATORY ANIMAL LIBERATION!
-
-
- Date: Mon, 02 Feb 1998 08:51:52 -0800
- From: Barry Kent MacKay <mimus@sympatico.ca>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Is this the greatest threat to animals in trade?
- Message-ID: <34D5F9A8.2A0A@sympatico.ca>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- A surprising number of AR activists seem not to know much about
- MAI...the Multinational Agreement on Investment.
-
- As we seek domestic legislation in our respective countries to protect
- animals used for commercial purposes, MAI has the potential to undo it
- all, as it pertains to animals that provide products that enter trade:
- meat, fish, furs, exotic pets, leather, tortoiseshell, eggs, milk...the
- list is endless.
-
- For a discussion about MAI, what it is and the threat it posses go to
- <http://www.api4animals.org>, which is the home page of the Animal
- Protection Institute, and click on the current issue of Opinionatedly
- Yours.
-
- Earlier editions can be obtained through the archives.
-
- Barry Kent MacKay
- International Program Director
- Animal Protection Institute
-
-
- Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 14:31:20 EST
- From: AAVSONLINE@aol.com
- To: minglee@ntcn.edu.tw, owner-ar-news@envirolink.org, ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Re: looking for a website
- Message-ID: <712a2476.34d61f0a@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- The American Anti-Vivisection Society has a complete list of products not
- tested on animals, as well as who doesn't contain animal ingredients. Our
- website is <www.aavs.org>
- -Stephanie Shain
- Executive Coordinator
- American Anti-Vivisection Society
- Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 12:15:06 -0800 (PST)
- From: Michael Markarian <mmarkarian@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, en.alerts@conf.igc.apc.org
- Subject: Alert: Migratory Birds Under the Gun
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19980202162356.2d7ff028@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- ACTION ALERT
-
- MIGRATORY BIRDS UNDER THE GUN
-
- The infamous anti-wildlife legislator, Congressman Don Young (R-AK), has
- introduced H.R. 2863, the Migratory Bird Treaty Reform Act. This bill would
- seriously relax the provisions in the Migratory Bird Treaty Act that
- prohibit the hunting of migratory birds over bait. Currently, a hunter is
- breaking the law if he or she shoots a migratory bird over an area that is
- baited with corn, millet, or other food that attracts the birds.
-
- Under the Young bill, the strict liability provision is removed, and the
- arresting wildlife officer would have to prove that the hunter had prior
- knowledge of the area being baited. This means that hunters can simply
- claim that they were unaware of any bait in the vicinity of their hunting
- activities. We do not allow ignorance of the law to justify the
- perpetration of other crimes, and we certainly should not allow it for slob
- hunters who lure birds to piles of food and shoot them at point-blank range.
- There may be more challenge in shooting caged birds at pet stores.
-
- Call or write to your U.S. Representative and your two U.S. Senators and
- tell them to OPPOSE H.R. 2863, which would make it easier for hunters to
- gain an unfair advantage over migratory birds.
-
- Please write to your Representative at: The Honorable ____________, U.S.
- House of Representatives, Washington, D.C. 20515, or call the House
- switchboard at 202-225-3121.
-
- Write to your Senators (in separate letters) at: The Honorable ____________,
- U.S. Senate, Washington, D.C. 20510, or call the Senate switchboard at
- 202-224-3121.
-
- You may wish to make the following points when you write or call:
-
- * Re-writing the baiting provisions of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act would
- erase decades of case law that have aided in the prosecution of hunters who
- shoot birds over bait.
-
- * Liberalizing the anti-baiting regulations would place further burdens on
- U.S. Fish and Wildlife officers, when there are already too few of them in
- the field enforcing the law.
-
- * Most hunters claim to have an ethic of sportsmanship and fair chase, and
- find repugnant the practice of luring birds with food and shooting them at
- point-blank range.
-
- For further information, or to find out who your elected officials are,
- please call Christine Wolf at The Fund for Animals (301-585-2591 or
- cwolf@fund.org). Thank you for your help!
-
- Date: Mon, 02 Feb 1998 13:43:49 -0800
- From: Karen Purves <samneph@earthlink.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Chicago Tribune editorials on bison and vegetarianism
- Message-ID: <34D63E15.627F@earthlink.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Chicago Tribune 2-2-98 Section 1 page 10
-
- Save the bison
- Green Bay, WI--After last season's elimination of nearly 1,200 bison, the
- State of Montana has begun to kill Yellowstone bison again.
-
- Montana is concerned that bison pose a disease threat to cattle and that
- unless the bison are removed, the state's brucellosis-free status may be
- revoked.
-
- But the risk of disease transmission to cattle is virtually nonexistent, and
- a sensible risk management strategy could eliminate risk altogether. Most
- brucellosis experts agree that bull bison pose zero risk of disease
- transmission, but bull bison are the first victims of this year's actions by
- the Montana Department of Livestock.
-
- After the number of bison deaths mounted last season, the USDA assured the
- state of Montana that it did not need to kill bison to maintain its
- brucellosis-free status. Despite this assurance, Montana is continuing to
- kill bison. The animals are captured at a facility on the outside of
- Yellowstone's west boundary. Animals testing positive are sent to
- slaughterhouses, infectious or not.
-
- Please write Gov. Marc Racicot of Montana (State Capitol, Helena, MT 59620)
- to express your disappointment over the senseless killing of one of our
- nation's great wild animals.
- --Gene Schubert
- ____________________________________________________
- Time to veg in
-
- Buffalo Grove, IL--First it was the E.coli and salmonella poisoning, then
- came the mad cow disease, and now it's the Hong Kong flu, which has killed
- six people and sickened a dozen more. Hong Kong may be thousands of miles
- away, but the virus is as close as the the nearest international airport.
-
- What do these growing epidemics have in common? They are all transmitted to
- human consumers through chickens and other animals raised in factory farms.
- And little wonder. In the filthy, crowded pens, harmless microorganisms
- mutate into virulent pathogens. Routine use of antibiotics ensures their
- resistance to life-saving drugs. It makes one wax nostalgic about the good
- old days when meat-eating was associated only with heart disease, stroke,
- cancer, diabetes and atherosclerosis.
-
- What will it take for consumers to get the message? Grains, vegetables and
- fresh fruits contain all the nutrients we require. They don't carry disease,
- and they don't do drugs. They are touted by every major health advocacy
- organization and appear to have been ther recommended fare in the Garden of
- Eden.
-
- The beginning of the new year is a great time to turn over a new leaf.
- --Alison I. Johnson
-
- Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 17:17:08 -0500 (EST)
- From: Franklin Wade <franklin@smart.net>
- To: Undisclosed recipients: ;
- Subject: HONG KONG BIRD FLU ONE MORE WARNING TO "CHICKEN OUT"
- Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.3.95.980202171552.38A-100000@smarty.smart.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
-
- For Immediate Release For More Information Contact
- January 1998 Karen Davis (301) 948-2406
-
-
- HONG KONG BIRD FLU ONE MORE WARNING TO "CHICKEN OUT"
- "This virus has done something new--it jumped from birds to
- humans"--USA TODAY December 23, 1997
-
- As of January 11, 1998, Hong Kong confirmed at least 17
- people sick and four dead from the new form of Avian Influenza
- known as H5N1. Scientists say this flu has all the signs of a
- highly virulent strain that can pass from bird to bird, from bird
- to human, and human to human.
-
- While avian flu virus can be found in wild birds, Diseases
- of Poultry notes the critical difference: "In contrast to
- domestic or confined birds, free-flying birds typically do not
- experience significant disease problems due to influenza virus."
-
- The ecological cause of avian influenza and other contagious
- diseases is confinement and severe overcrowding of living
- creatures. Concentrated confinement of humans, birds, and other
- animals leads to contaminated air, build-up of feces and sewage,
- immune-system breakdown, bad sanitation, and disease. The poultry
- industry in Asia, Europe, and the U.S. is breeding infectious
- diseases like salmonella, campylobacter, and avian influenza. As
- microbiologist John Avens told a poultry meeting, "[I]nfection of
- animals will occur more frequently and affect more individual
- animals as concentration of confinement increases."
-
- As long as people demand billions of birds and other animals
- to be warehoused, slaughtered and consumed, infectious diseases
- will flourish, mutate and jump species barriers. Disease
- organisms now link chickens, turkeys, fish, cattle, sheep, pigs
- and humans--"mad cow," salmonella, campylobacter, pfiesteria,
- avian influenza--a growing list. Veterinarian Richard Slemons at
- Ohio State University stated in 1997, "Avian influenza outbreaks
- by viruses of both low and high pathogenicity will undoubtedly
- continue to occur in the future."
-
- An outbreak of avian flu H7N2 in Pennsylvania in 1997 led to
- the extermination of over a million chickens within a 75-mile
- area of Lancaster County. Mass consumption of chickens has
- spawned pfiesteria from poultry manure on the Eastern Shore.
- (Pfiesteria eat the fish that are fed to chickens as fishmeal.)
- The Potomac River is polluted with poultry feces from West
- Virginia. The Center for Science in the Public Interest reported
- in 1997 that "Eggs have become the number one contributor to food
- poisoning outbreaks with hundreds of thousands of Americans
- getting sick or dying each year." Nature is sending the human
- species a wake-up call. Are we listening?
-
- _____________________________________________________________________
- franklin@smart.net Franklin D. Wade
- United Poultry Concerns - http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/upc
-
-
- Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 17:28:24 EST
- From: MINKLIB@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Marsha Kelley Out as Fur Trade PR Hack
- Message-ID: <772e60cd.34d6488a@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Marsha Kelly and Robert Buckler have announced that they are both resigning
- from Fur Commission USA. The two have a company called Issues Strategies
- Group which will go to work for international corporate clients. The animal
- rights movement may very well run into Kelly again, but for now, she is out of
- the fur industry.
-
- Coalition to Abolish the Fur Trade
- PO Box 822411
- Dallas, TX 75382
- Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 17:26:07 EST
- From: MINKLIB@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Inside the Fur Industry
- Message-ID: <c0c5f3ca.34d64801@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- The following article is from our newsletter, Inside the Fur Industry. IFI is
- designed to be a resource for anyone who wants in depth, up to date
- information on what is happening in the fur industry, and the campaigns to
- stop it.
-
- IFI is quarterly and is $18 for a one year subscription. We are encouraging
- anyone who runs a local fur campaign to subscribe.
-
- You can help IFI by informing us of fur store openings and closings in your
- area, as well as any other fur related news.
-
- Coalition to Abolish the Fur Trade
- PO Box 822411
- Dallas, TX 75382
-
-
- EUROPEAN SELL OUTS AND US BACKED RUBBER STAMP COMMITEES
-
- The European Union has agreed to a watered down compromise which allows US
- wild caught furs to continue flowing into EU member nations.
-
- Under the proposal the US has to phase out ôconventional steel jawed leghold
- restraining trapsö over a period of 6 years. Every word in that phrase has
- implications. By implementing the word ôrestrainingö the govt. has ensured
- that leghold traps will be allowed to be used in the water where they are set
- to drown the animal, as opposed to restrain it until the trapper returns.
-
- By use of the word ôconventionalö the govts. have ensured that a modified
- leghold trap could still be used if it met certain standards set by a rubber
- stamp commitee made up of fur industry interests.
-
- The term ôsteel jawedö implies that padded leghold traps could still be used,
- despite the fact that these traps still cause considerable injury to animals.
-
- Furthermore, this is a non-binding agreement that has to be implemented on a
- state by state basis. Therefore, each state has to phase the trap out on its
- own, and is not bound to do so.
-
- The US govt. has granted $350,000 of your federal tax dollars to the National
- Trap Testing Program, which is working to develop the traps that will meet the
- ôstandardsö which will determine if a trap is ôhumaneö or not.
-
- This is a part of the Best Management Practice (BMP) process. Trappers are
- implementing a BMP process where they will conduct tests to see which traps
- they can use to convince the public that trapping is acceptable. They will be
- doing focus group sessions, and surveys, to find out the best way to promote
- their pro-trap message to the public. Thanks to the Congress of the United
- States, you are paying for this.
-
- This has led to a call for animal rights groups to become more politically
- active, and to campaign against politicians who support fur trapping. It is
- expected that anti fur activists will become more aggressive in their efforts
- to get trapping banned. 88 nations have banned the use of the leghold trap,
- and only the US, Canada, and Russia are major wild fur producers.
-
- Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 14:36:08 -0800 (PST)
- From: Michael Markarian <mmarkarian@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, en.alerts@conf.igc.apc.org
- Subject: Conrail Spills Oil, Shoots Beavers
- Message-ID: <2.2.16.19980202184501.3bc73462@pop.igc.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- (This alert was previously posted in November, but please note a new address
- to which to send letters.)
-
- ACTION ALERT
-
- CONRAIL SPILLS OIL, SHOOTS BEAVERS
-
- A Conrail train derailed on November 3 near West Danby, NY, spilling 5,000
- gallons of oil into the Cayuga Lake inlet. The resulting massive fish kill
- also threatens great blue herons and otters. Shortly after the spill, a
- neighbor saw a Conrail employee shooting two beavers -- one was reportedly
- shot five times and took more than fifteen minutes to die.
-
- A Conrail spokesperson denied the shooting until Syracuse TV Channel 9 aired
- the neighbor's video. Conrail blames beaverwork for causing the accident,
- but since a wetland runs alongside the tracks, beaver activity should have
- been expected. Please ask Conrail to do the right thing and install beaver
- bafflers at all such track sites next to streams to prevent future
- environmental devastation.
-
- Write to:
-
- David LeVan, CEO.
- Conrail
- 2001 Market Street
- Philadelphia, PA 19101-1408
-
- Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 18:03:32 -0500
- From: "Bina Robinson" <civitas@linkny.com>
- To: <ar-news@envirolink.org>, <BreachEnv@aol.com>
- Subject: dolphins dead on Cape Cod
- Message-ID: <199802022253.RAA08338@net3.netacc.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- AP Report printed in THE SPECTATOR (Hornell NY) Feb. 1, 1998
-
- Wellfleet, Mass. (AP) At least 35 white-sided dolphins have died and more
- were in trouble today after becoming stranded on the shores of Cape Cod.
-
- Rescuers who spent "Thursday trying to save dozens of dolphins headed back
- to Wellfleet to try to save two more that beached themselves in mud-flats
- this morninig.
-
- There were still many dolphins swimming in Wellfeet harbor and rescueres
- were watching to make sure they got out safely, said Connie Merigo of the
- New England Aquarium. At least four more were in the nearby Herring River.
-
- The shoreline search resumed after being called off Thursday night because
- of darkness.
-
- The dolphins may have been driven ashore by unusually high tides caused by
- a new moon and stormy coastal weather, said Sue Knapp, an aquarium
- spokeswoman.
-
- By nightfall Thursday, 35 dolphins had either been euthanized or died from
- exposure, according to David Wiley a senior scientist with the
- International Wildlife Coalition.
-
- "I believe we'll be finding a lot more in the sands tomorrow," Wiley said
- as he oversaw a euthanization near Wellfleet Harbor.
-
- Rescue workers were first called to Wellfleet on Thursday morning to assist
- four stranded dolphins. Volunteers eventually herded about 20 animals back
- to sea.
-
- Throughout the day, dolphin sightings were reported in neighboring areas,
- and rescuers from the New England Aquarium, the Center for Coastal Studies
- and the International Wildlife Coalition rushed to aid the stranded
- mammals. -30-
-
- Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 16:55:26 -0600
- From: "Alliance for Animals" <alliance@allanimals.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: CALLS TONIGHT WILL HELP MONKEYS!
- Message-ID: <199802022254.QAA17330@mendota.terracom.net>
-
- The Public Works Committee will meet Tues. eve at 5:45pm to discuss
- the fate of the Vilas Zoo Monkeys..WE NEED YOUR CALLS to convince
- them that the community wants them protected!
- Thanks!
- The AREA CODE is 608
- Monday, February 2nd..
-
- THANKS TO YOUR EFFORTS....
- We have crossed one hurdle..that the Zoo Commission met this morning
- and voted unanimously to SUPPORT the resolution to protect the
- monkeys. There are still calls to make to the WAYS AND MEANS
- Committee and the PUBLIC WORKS Committee to ensure that they too will
- vote to support the resolution. Please don't delay. We can win for
- the monkeys and work together on this important issue.
- THEY NEED TO HEAR HOW YOU FEEL
- Please Contact the following committee members who are assigned to
- work on Resolution 241: Directing the Zoo Commission and Zoo Director
- to Develop options to retain the monkey colonies at the Henry Vilas
- Zoo. Ask that they work to keep the Vilas Monkeys here in Madison.
- We know it takes time to make so many calls, but if we fail to
- generate enough phone calls, the monkeys are sure to be sent to
- Tulane Primate Research Facility where they will be used in invasive
- research.
- They do NOT deserve such a fate.
- We CAN still work to keep them safe!
-
- Public Works & Facilities Management Committee/MEETS TUES EVE!!
- Name,District
- David Ripp, Chair,29Hm:849-7643
- James Mohrbacher, Vice-Chair,18Hm:246-9153
- Eugene Craft, Sec.,30Hm:437-5652
- David Blaska,7Hm:271-4882
- Jonathan Becker,11Hm:238-7076Wk:266-4360
- Judith Pederson,1Hm:274-4016
-
- Thank you for your help on this important issue! Alliance for Animals
- 608-257-6333
- Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 17:54:07 -0500 (EST)
- From: alathome@clark.net
- Message-ID: <199802022254.RAA10010@envirolink.org>
-
- from CNN http://www.cnn.com
- --------------------------------
- Horse adoption program overwhelmed with too many animals
-
- A wild horse fights as officials work to brand and vaccinate it
-
- January 30, 1998
- Web posted at: 9:20 p.m. EDT (2120 GMT)
-
- (AP) -- A federal program to round up excess wild horses and burros on
- public land and offer them for adoption is overwhelmed with too many
- animals and not enough people willing to take them home.
-
- More than 6,000 unadopted animals have accumulated in government corrals
- and sanctuaries.
-
- This is the latest problem for a Bureau of Land Management
- program exposed a year ago for allowing people to sell adopted horses for
- slaughter.
-
- The 26-year-old Wild Horse and Burro Program was intended by Congress to
- save the lives of wild horses that compete with
- ranchers' cattle grazing on public land in the West. The BLM has decided to
- limit the number of horses and burros on public lands to 26,000, but an
- estimated 44,000 are roaming free in 10 Western states.
-
- The BLM has tried to get the situation under control by rounding up about
- 10,000 animals a year and offering them for adoption. However, The
- Associated Press reported last year that thousands of adopted animals had
- been sold for slaughter and that BLM employees were among those profiting.
-
- AP also found that the BLM lost track of about 32,000
- adopted animals and that agency officials gave false information about the
- program to Congress.
-
- Finding homes for the horses has been difficult
-
- Pat Shea, a Utah lawyer with a passion for the outdoors, took
- charge of the BLM in October and promised to overhaul the program. However,
- he said the reform is not coming easily. "When a mistake is made," he said,
- "there is a tendency to gather together and avoid recognition of the problem."
-
- In the wake of disclosures, finding homes for the animals has
- been more difficult. For one thing, people who adopted large
- numbers of horses in the past and then sold them for slaughter are no
- longer allowed to participate. Jim Edwards of Columbus, Montana, was the
- first to be rejected.
-
- Tim Murphy, manager of the BLM's district office in Miles City, Montana,
- rejected Edwards' application.
-
- "This decision is based on the fact that you were involved in the sale of
- wild horses for slaughter in the mid-1980's," he wrote in October, "and
- that you were the caretaker of more than 20 horses that died from
- malnutrition during that period."
-
- Edwards did not return calls. His wife, Sherry, said BLM agents encouraged
- the family to adopt the horses in the mid-'80s and sell them for slaughter.
-
- At that time, she said, it seemed the only way to get rid of
- excess horses.
-
- "There are good people in the BLM, there are
- lunatics in the BLM, and there are some people who have no clue about
- horses," she said.
-
- Last year, BLM crews rounded up 10,443 horses and burros and
- were unable to find homes for 1,751 of them. They joined thousands more
- left unadopted from previous roundups. A January BLM survey counted 6,285
- wild horses in BLM corrals and sanctuaries. This year the agency hopes to
- round up even more animals.
-
- Animal welfare
-
- In the next three months, some of these animals will find homes during 31
- adoptions around the country. But other animals, some of them old, ugly or
- mean, are destined to live out their days as federal welfare cases.
-
- Wild horses and burros are not cheap or easy for the government to keep.
- Already, the BLM is spending $50,000 a week to maintain them, and their
- numbers are growing. They also catch and share viruses, suffocate in
- snowdrifts and, if not carefully separated, reproduce.
-
- An internal audit of the program released in August blamed both the BLM and
- Congress for the program's problems. It said Congress hamstrings the BLM by
- prohibiting the agency from killing healthy animals. And it said the agency
- has not "aggressively pursued other options for controlling herd sizes,
- such as birthrate controls."
-
- Shea said such options require a bigger budget. He said he needs $19.4
- million to care for the animals and reorganize the adoption program, but
- Congress has appropriated only $15.8 million. He plans to ask Congress this
- month for permission to move money from other BLM programs.
-
- Shea hopes to find more adopters this year through publicity and education.
- He is also asking program managers to use better science and pushing for
- some kind of birth control.
-
- And he's asking them for straight answers. "The people I have met in the
- program are very, very dedicated public servants," he said. "But faced with
- an impossible job they have shown a tendency to cover up their mistakes and
- problems rather than try to resolve them."
-
-
- Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 18:04:43 -0500 (EST)
- From: UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net
- Message-ID: <199802022304.SAA11966@envirolink.org>
-
- Agence France-Presse
- SYDNEY, January 30, 1998
-
- An Australian biologist plans to use mice as surrogate testicles to
- produce human sperm, New Scientist magazine reported Friday.
-
- The concept will help researchers probe the poorly-understood process of
- human sperm production and the causes of testicular cancer.
-
- "The first time you say to anyone we want to produce human sperm in
- mice, they look at you with frank horror," said Professor Roger Short of
- Melbourne's Royal Women's Hospital.
-
- "But once people overcome the initial gut reaction, many accept the
- proposal."
-
- He has applied to the United States National Institute of Health for
- funding and has already won ethical approval from his local animal
- research committee.
-
- He said he hopes to begin experiments later this year but has yet to
- present his proposal to the equivalent committee covering human
- subjects.
-
- Short, one of the world's leading reproductive biologists, said stand-in
- testicles could also lead to treatments for some infertile men.
-
- Theoretically, they could nurture genetically-altered sperm cells.
-
- Developments in invitro fertilisation (IVF) mean women with fertility
- problems can now conceive but men who produce little or no sperm have
- virtually no chance of becoming fathers.
-
- "The cause may be a mutation in one of the genes on the Y chromosone
- that control spermatogenesis -- the production of sperm from germ
- cells," he said.
-
- "Being able to study human spermatogenesis in a laboratory animal may
- help researchers work out why the process fails in many infertile men."
-
- If the genetic fault lies with the cells that nurture developing sperm,
- transplanting germ cells into a mouse with healthy cells might allow
- mature sperm to form.
-
- The concept has already been successfully carried out between rats and
- mice.
-
- Bioethicists have generally given the research their approval, but urged
- caution.
-
- New Scientist said there were two main safety concerns if sperm produced
- in mice were ever to be used for IVF.
-
- The human sperm could undergo changes that produce congenital defects or
- mouse viruses could infect the sperm, raising similar fears of viral
- contamination to those that have dogged attempts to use animal organs
- for human transplants.
-
- University of Sydney reproductive expert Rob Loblay was similarly
- apprehensive but said it should not raise ethical problems.
-
- "It's not like Dolly (the cloned sheep)," he said.
-
- "Providing this research is done according to all the currently
- established guidelines, it should not raise any serious ethical
- objections."
-
- David Shapiro, former executive secretary of Britain's Nuffield
- Hospital, said strict monitoring must take place at every stage of the
- research, but fears some fertility researchers may be tempted to rush
- ahead.
-
- "There's this gung-ho attitude of let's have a go," he told the
- magazine.
-
- By MARTIN PARRY, Agence France-Presse
-
- Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 18:07:00 -0500 (EST)
- From: UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net
- Message-ID: <199802022307.SAA12313@envirolink.org>
-
- Copyright =A9 1998 Nando.net
- Copyright =A9 1998 The Associated Press=20
-
- NEW ORLEANS (January 30, 1998 10:13 p.m. EST http://www.nando.net) -- A
- lawsuit filed by a slain man's mother alleges eyes, bones and other body
- parts were removed from corpses at the city morgue and sold by the
- coroner without permission from relatives.
-
- Barbara Everett, whose son was shot three years ago, was in court
- Friday, seeking to turn her lawsuit against the coroner, Dr. Frank
- Minyard, into a class-action.
-
- The judge said he would rule on the request in two to three weeks.
-
- Mrs. Everett said she learned of her son's slaying about five hours
- after he was shot. She called the coroner's office and was told it had
- an unidentified body, but no Leroy Everett. She went to Charity Hospital
- and was told that the body had been given to the coroner's office.
-
- "I went back to the coroner's office. They said I had to wait for the
- head coroner," she testified. Finally, she said, she was shown a
- videotape of his head and identified her son. By then, the autopsy was
- over.
-
- Nine months later, Mrs. Everett learned that her son's hip bone and
- corneas had been removed when a woman from Southern Transplant Services
- Inc. called to ask about her son's medical history. The Food and Drug
- Administration required the transplant agency to make the survey after
- finding it had failed to determine whether donor bodies had hepatitis or
- AIDS.
-
- Minyard said it was Southern Transplant's job to get the family's
- permission if the body and relatives had been identified. However, he
- said, if there was no identification on the body and the hospital and
- police were unable to trace it, he approves the harvesting.
-
- Under Louisiana law, if relatives cannot be reached for permission, the
- coroner can approve the taking of parts from any body.
-
- Minyard said Southern Transplant paid one worker in his office $10 per
- corpse to take the bone and corneas, paid clerks to call when bodies
- arrived and paid at least one pathologist with the LSU Medical Center,
- which has a contract to perform autopsies and testify to grand juries.
-
- Minyard said he had no objection to the payment to the workers in his
- office, but told the pathologist that payment to him was inappropriate.
-
- State law requires organs to be donated, not sold.
-
- T.J. Picou Jr., head of Southern Transplant, testified that between
- January 1991 and April 1995, his firm took bone from 686 bodies after
- autopsies in New Orleans.
-
- He said 117 of those bodies were unidentified at the time of the
- autopsy, though nearly all had been identified by the time the autopsy
- report was typed up. In 1995, after an investigation by the FDA,
- Southern Transplant stopped taking bone from unidentified corpses.
-
- The coroner's office performs about 1,500 to 2,000 autopsies a year,
- Minyard said.
-
- Mrs. Everett said Southern Transplant indicated in the telephone call
- that it was unable to trace her son's relatives.
-
- "I said, 'Leroy never was unknown,"' Mrs. Everett recalled. "She said,
- 'Yes, but you were."'
-
- By JANET McCONNAUGHEY, The Associated Press
-
- Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 18:12:54 -0500 (EST)
- From: dknowles@dowco.com
- Message-ID: <199802022312.SAA13832@envirolink.org>
-
- By David J Knowles
- Animal Voices News
-
- VANCOUVER, BC - The Vancouver public Aquarium announced Friday that Bjossa,
- the facility's remaining orca, was not pregnant.
-
- Bjossa was believed to have been pregnant for the past 10 months, after
- mating with Finna prior to his death last year.
-
- Bjossa has had three previous pregnancies, but none of her calves survived.
-
- Local animal-rights group the Coalition for No Whales in Captivity, has
- just one question following today's announcement - if Bjossa isn't
- pregnant, what is wrong with her?
-
- The aquarium noted a change in Bjossa's health over the past 10 months, and
- have been monitoring her by taking regular blood tests and ultrasounds.
-
- Aquarium vet Dr David Huff is in charge of Bjossa's medical care - small
- comfort for the Coalition, who note that he is the same vet who issued
- Finna with a clean bill of health only four hours before he died in his tank.
-
-
-
-
- Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 15:28:06 -0800
- From: LCartLng@gvn.net (Lawrence Carter-Long)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Scientists Urge Xenotransplantation Moratorium
- Message-ID: <199802022318.SAA14981@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- As published in Marketletter :
-
- Moratorium In Xenotransplantation Urged
- February 2, 1998
-
- Leading scientists have called for a moratorium on clinical
- xenotransplantation "until ethical issues associated with
- the transfer of organs from animals to humans are resolved. "
-
- The call came just as the US National Institutes of Health
- began a two-day meeting last month, entitled Developing US
- Public Health Service Policy in Xenotransplantation, to propose
- tightening control over animal-to-human transplants. Fritz Bach,
- a researcher of xenotransplantation at Harvard University and
- a consultant to Novartis Pharma, joined six other public health
- experts and bioethicists in urging a moratorium.
-
- The heightened interest in xenotransplantation stems from
- considerable advances in genetic engineering which makes
- it conceivable that the technology will become a reality.
-
- Currently, more than 53,000 Americans are waiting for an
- organ transplant, but the shortage of donors means that 10
- patients die every day, reports the Associated Press. The
- need for donor organs greatly outweighs the resources
- available and it is hoped that success in xenotransplantation
- will help to alleviate the human donor shortage and save
- thousands of lives.
-
- In a commentary in Nature Medicine (February issue) Dr Bach
- and his colleagues stressed that "despite the fact that lives of
- patients needing transplants may be lost with delay, we believe
- that the risks are sufficient to warrant refraining from human
- xenotransplantation until public deliberations on the ethical
- issues have occurred." However, he noted that "research in
- xenotransplantation should be strongly encouraged."
-
- At the meeting, a number of points were put forward to help
- structure a new policy on xenotransplantation. Leroy Walters of
- Georgetown University said that regular public discussions
- should be conducted and xenotransplantation protocols should
- be reviewed. He added that all clinical xenotransplantation trials
- should be publicly listed and that a register to track all volunteers
- in these trials should be established. A review of global literature
- concerning public health risks associated with xenotransplantation
- should be conducted annually, he noted.
-
- The US Food and Drug Administration now looks set to monitor
- all xenotransplantation clinical trials, according to Louisa Chapman
- from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, who presented
- the revised draft guidelines at the meeting. Responsibility for the
- trials will come under one sponsor who must submit data to the
- regulatory authority at every stage of the investigation, reports Reuters.
- Furthermore, the revisions will also allow for a National Advisory
- Committee, although this has not been finally authorized and there
- is, as yet, no funding available.
-
- Playing Russian Roulette?
-
- After the presentation of the revised guidelines, which will be made
- available in the summer following review by the FDA, CDC, NIH and
- the Health Research Services Administration, Jonathan Allen of the
- Southwest Foundation for Medical Research in Texas confronted the
- panel, saying that he was "dumbfounded" that no differentiation had
- been made between the species used, adding that "it may leave the
- door open for the potential use of non-human primates in
- xenotransplantation." He stressed that the panel was "playing
- Russian roulette" in seemingly ignoring the fact that a non-human
- primate transplant could result in the transmission of viruses.
-
- Philip Noguchi, the FDA's director of cellular and gene therapies,
- said that "as the regulators, we're the ones in the hot seat and the
- ones who will get blamed if anything goes wrong." The journal Nature
- states in its January 22 issue that Dr Noguchi also said that "the FDA
- is neutral on the question of whether a moratorium is needed."
-
- Non-human primate organ donors are favored by some because
- their genetic make- up is similar to humans. However, it is widely
- recognized that non-human primates are unsuitable for
- xenotransplantation procedures because of the increased risk of
- disease transmission. The organisms of the greatest concern are
- the retroviruses and the herpes viruses, among others.
-
- Pigs now appear to be the animal of choice and, in 1995, Imutran
- (which was acquired by Novartis the following year) revealed that it
- was able to overcome cross-species hyperacute rejection by using
- the organs from genetically- engineered pigs. According to Nature,
- at least three other companies have also genetically-engineered
- pigs, these being Protein Pharmaceuticals, Alexion and Nextran,
- a subsidiary of Baxter International.
-
- Technology Dealt A Blow However, the possibility that disease-
- free animals might be bred was dealt a blow last year when studies
- demonstrated that the pig genome comprised multiple copies of
- endogenous retroviruses, which are not harmful to pigs, but which
- were able to infect human cells in vitro. Although this does not predict
- in vivo infectivity, patients who have already received pig-to-human
- transplants are being tracked to establish whether they are showing
- signs of infection.
-
- In October 1997 all trials involving porcine xenotransplantation
- procedures were halted by the FDA pending further research, but
- this ban was recently lifted on an ad hoc basis. Concerns about
- xenosis (the transfer of infections by transplantation of xenogeneic
- tissue) led Dr Bach to stress in his commentary that "not only would
- atients receiving animal organs have to be continuously monitored
- for xenosis, but so would relatives, colleagues and friends of those
- recipients." He added that while xenotransplantation "offers potential
- benefit to the individual," it also puts the population at risk.
-
- Backing this idea, Robert Michler from the Columbia-Presbyterian
- Medical Center in New York, in an article posted on the CDC's web
- site, said that although "the risk for xenozoonoses is likely to be
- restricted to the xenogeneic tissue recipient...one must consider
- and anticipate the potential for xenozoonotic transmission through
- the human population, constituting a public health concern."
-
- Meantime, research goes on and pig cells are being implanted
- into the brains of patients with Parkinson's disease or Huntington's
- disease, while the FDA has tentatively approved the practice of
- using pig livers as ex vivo bridges through which the patients'
- blood is perfused whilst they are waiting for a human donor.
-
- Pig Cells In Epilepsy?
-
- One of the latest studies to be made public is being conducted
- by Massachusetts-based Diacrin and the Beth Israel Deaconess
- Medical Center. Physicians say they have become the "the first in
- the world" to implant fetal pig brain cells into the brain of a patient
- with epilepsy. The trial, which has been approved by the FDA, will
- enroll up to eight patients with intractable seizures who have failed
- on conventional medications and whose only hope of control is the
- removal of the part of the brain responsible for the seizures.
-
- The pig brain cells produce gamma-aminobutyric acid which has
- anticonvulsant properties and prevents neurons from firing too
- rapidly and triggering a seizure. Some months after the transplant,
- the portion of the brain injected with the porcine cells will be removed
- and investigated to see whether the cells survived, whether they were
- still producing GABA and whether any inflammation occurred as a
- result of the xenograft. Patients will be monitored throughout their
- lives to safeguard against possible infection or other side effects,
- according to a statement.
-
- Despite being beset with problems, the field of xenotransplantation
- looks set to become big business, with Peter Laing, an analyst from
- Societe Generale, commenting that the market may be worth $6 billion
- by 2010.
-
- According to Nature, Swiss giant Novartis is prepared to invest up
- to $1 billion in xenotransplantation in the next few years. The company
- is looking at patients who have received either porcine skin transplants
- for severe burns, pancreatic islet cells or who had a pig liver "bridge"
- whilst awaiting a human donor, the journal reports.
-
- Novartis is also investing heavily in the area of immunosuppression.
- Research has indicated that the T cell response to xenografts may be
- different, which means that even if the problems of hyperacute rejection
- can be overcome, new immunosuppressants may be required to
- prevent graft rejection.
-
- However, Dr Bach and Harvey Fineberg, from the Harvard
- School of Public Health, said that "overcoming the huge
- obstacles to cross-species rejection is much further off than
- some biotechnology companies would like their investors
- and the public to believe."
-
- Public In Favor?
-
- Meantime, a survey carried out on behalf of the US National
- Kidney Foundation, and reported in Nature, discovered that
- over 75% of the 1,200 people polled would "consider a
- xenotransplant for a loved one if the organ or tissue was not
- available from a human." Only 2%-5% would not even consider
- it even if it was a matter of life or death. 27% had some concerns
- over organ compatibility, while only 13% expressed concerns
- over the risk of transmissible diseases.
-
- Whatever happens, many seem to agree that substantial
- preclinical research is required to determine the actual risks
- involved. "Politicians would do well to err on the side of caution
- and agree on an international moratorium on clinical trials,"
- reports Nature, which adds that "what is at stake is not only
- risk to public health, but the real promise of xenotransplantation,
- which can only be compromised by undue haste."
-
- So far the UK has taken the strongest stand, last year banning
- clinical xenotransplantation trials until the risks are better understood
- and it is clear that it will be of real benefit to the patient. It has also
- established the Xenotransplantation Interim Regulatory Authority to
- regulate developments in the field. Similar structures are also in
- place in Sweden, France and Germany.
-
- <<Marketletter -- 02-02-98>>
-
- [Copyright 1998, The Marketletter Publications]
-
- ===========================================
- NOTE:
- Dr. Bach's commentary is available at:
- http://medicine.nature.com/xeno/
-
- For information on the U.S. government National
- Organ and Tissue Donation Initiative go to:
- http://www.organdonor.gov
- ===========================================
-
-
-
- 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/
-
- "There's so much comedy on television. Does that cause
- comedy in the streets?" - Dick Cavett
-
- -----Long, but Important Warning Notice -----
-
- My email address is: LCartLng@gvn.net
-
- LEGAL NOTICE: Anyone sending unsolicited commercial
- email to this address will be charged a $500 proofreading
- fee. This is an official notification; failure to abide by this
- will result in legal action, as per the following:
-
- By U.S. Code Title 47, Sec.227(a)(2)(B), a computer/modem/printer
- meets the definition of a telephone fax machine.
- By Sec.227(b)(1)(C), it is unlawful to send any unsolicited
- advertisement to such equipment.
- By Sec.227(b)(3)(C), a violation of the aforementioned Section
- is punishable by action to recover actual monetary loss, or
- $500, whichever is greater, by each violation.
-
-
-
- Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 18:42:47 -0500 (EST)
- From: jwed@hkstar.com
- Message-ID: <199802022342.SAA20277@envirolink.org>
-
- Phnom Penh
-
- Three sun bears rescued from certain death and consumption in restaurants
- were flown yesterday from the Cambodian capital to new homes in Australia.
-
- Two-year-old Barbara, 18-month-old Sean and 14-month-old Viva will be
- housed initially at Perth Zoo before joining captive breeding programmes in
- Melbourne and other cities to try to boost numbers of the endangered species.
-
- Their paws, considered a delicacy, would have fetched up to US$700
- (HK$5,400) in restaurants.
-
- They were the second group of sun bears to be rescued from restaurants and
- sent to Australia in the past year under a programme headed by American
- Randy Steed.
-
- Last year Mr Steed and Australian friends sent a group of rescued sun bears
- to Taronga Park Zoo in Sydney.
-
- With the help of the Free the Bears Foundation in Perth, he and Australian
- businessman John Stephens have bought land along the Mekong River, just
- outside Phnom Penh, to house rescued animals.
-
- Barbara, Sean and Viva had been cared for in Cambodia for several months
- while arrangements were being made for their departure.
-
- It took more than six months for the Cambodian Government to approve the
- paperwork for the three to leave.
-
- Rapid deforestation due to illegal logging is forcing sun bears out of
- their natural habitat, making it easier for hunters to catch and sell them.
-
- Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 16:07:34 -0800
- From: LCartLng@gvn.net (Lawrence Carter-Long)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Hundreds die as disease jumps species barrier
- Message-ID: <199802022358.SAA23570@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- Sydney Morning Herald
- Saturday, January 31, 1998
-
- Hundreds die as disease jumps species barrier
-
- By FRED PEARCE in Nairobi
-
- For the second time in six months, the world is
- glimpsing the health consequences of escalating
- climate change. After triggering the choking havoc
- of smoke from Indonesian forest fires late last year,
- the worst El Nin~o for 50 years has in the past two
- months unleashed plagues of disease across east
- Africa in the wake of unprecedented dry-season
- rains and floods.
-
- Cholera and malaria have claimed record numbers
- of victims across Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and Somalia.
- Pests, such as a toxic insect known as the Nairobi fly,
- have proliferated. Locusts may be on the way.
-
- However, most frightening of all is an outbreak of Rift
- Valley Fever, a cattle disease that has decimated herds
- across eastern Kenya and southern Somalia and
- jumped the species barrier to kill hundreds of humans.
-
- Rains in parts of Kenya in the past month have been
- 20 times normal. El Nin~o, a climatic convulsion in the
- Pacific, has warped tropical weather fronts round the
- globe and left a band of intense rain, known as the
- inter-tropical convergence zone, over the country for
- weeks on end.
-
- The real havoc has been caused in north-eastern Kenya -
- a vast, normally arid land of cattle herders which has
- effectively been cut off by floods for more than two months
- now.
-
- Just before Christmas, news began to filter out of
- thousands of cattle deaths and a mysterious "bleeding
- disease" among humans. Victims of the disease were
- struck down literally overnight. They became delirious,
- began bleeding from ears, nose and mouth and died
- within hours. On Christmas Eve, a disease consultant
- with the World Health Organisation in Nairobi, Ms Louise
- Martin, collected samples of blood, had them analysed
- in South Africa and Kenya and discovered both animals
- and humans had now contracted deadly Rift Valley Fever.
- Last week, the Red Cross said the virus had killed "more
- than 450 people" and remained out of control. Things may
- be even worse over the border in Somalia, a land without
- any form of central government.
-
- The disease invaded a rural population without medical
- help and already severely weakened by malnutrition, TB,
- malaria and a range of parasitic diseases.
-
- The death rate from the disease appeared to be around
- 50 per cent in humans and even higher in animals.
-
- Ms Martin said: "One family I met had a herd of 200
- goats one week, and only four left the next." The virus
- spreads among animals via mosquitoes, rather like
- malaria. However, a human disease specialist at the
- International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology
- near Nairobi, Mr John Githule, said transmission was
- much faster.
-
- With malaria, each succeeding generation of mosquitoes
- has to be reinfected with the disease to spread it. By
- contrast, female mosquitoes carrying the Rift Valley Fever
- virus lay eggs ready infected.
-
- This produces a rapid magnification of the number of
- insects carrying the disease, Mr Githule said. The eggs
- are laid in wet, marshy areas. They can lie dormant
- through drought and hatch with the return of rains,
- infecting animals coming to graze.
-
- The disease was first identified in 1931 in the Rift
- Valley in Kenya. Until now, the largest known outbreak
- in humans was in Egypt during floods in 1977, when
- 600 people died. Some researchers have suggested
- the virus could have been responsible for biblical
- plagues in Egypt.
-
- Humans, like animals, can be infected by mosquitoes
- but also by eating infected meat. Either way, with humans
- and animals huddled together against the floods, animal
- carcasses the only available food, and standing water
- causing an explosion in mosquito numbers, the people
- of north-eastern Kenya are a sitting target.
-
- A human vaccine was developed secretly by the United
- States Army 30 years ago, but it has never been licensed
- for wider use.
-
- The Guardian
-
- 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/
-
- "There's so much comedy on television. Does that cause
- comedy in the streets?" - Dick Cavett
-
- -----Long, but Important Warning Notice -----
-
- My email address is: LCartLng@gvn.net
-
- LEGAL NOTICE: Anyone sending unsolicited commercial
- email to this address will be charged a $500 proofreading
- fee. This is an official notification; failure to abide by this
- will result in legal action, as per the following:
-
- By U.S. Code Title 47, Sec.227(a)(2)(B), a computer/modem/printer
- meets the definition of a telephone fax machine.
- By Sec.227(b)(1)(C), it is unlawful to send any unsolicited
- advertisement to such equipment.
- By Sec.227(b)(3)(C), a violation of the aforementioned Section
- is punishable by action to recover actual monetary loss, or
- $500, whichever is greater, by each violation.
-
-
-
- Date: Mon, 02 Feb 1998 19:28:00 -0600
- From: Steve Barney <AnimalLib@vaxa.cis.uwosh.edu>
- To: AR-News <AR-News@envirolink.org>
- Subject: [US] "Monkeys' fate may hinge on Friday parley" (TCT, 1/29/98)
- Message-ID: <34D672A0.E700E7C4@uwosh.edu>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Since this article was published, the zoo commission resoundingly passed
- Resolution 241 - a good thing for the monkeys. To read the resolution,
- go to #3.1.15.1 at:
-
- http://www.uwosh.edu/organizations/alag/#Issues
-
-
-
- The Capital Times
- Madison, WI, United States
- January 29, 1998
- Page 1
-
- -- Beginning --
-
- Monkeys' fate may hinge on Friday parley
-
- By Jason Shepard
-
- Correspondent for The Capital Times
-
- A special Friday morning meeting of the Dane County Zoo Commission will
- likely be a decisive moment in the continued fight to save some of the
- UW-Madison monkeys that live at the Henry Vilas Zoo.
-
- That's because commission members will debate a proposal that calls for
- the county to study keeping at least some of the monkeys in Madison,
- even though their owner - the University of Wisconsin - plans to get rid
- of them.
-
- As a Feb. 1 funding deadline looms over the heads of the 150 macaque
- monkeys at the zoo, the Friday morning meeting will be the fist time the
- three key players in the monkey controversy - UW officials, county
- politicians and animal rights activists - will be in one room together.
-
- "This meeting is going to be very significant and it is about time that
- we all get to share our views about the monkeys," said Tina Kaske,
- executive director of the Alliance for Animals, a Madison animal rights
- group that has been following the monkey situation for months.
-
- Comments from the members of the three key sides seem to indicate that
- keeping some of the monkeys at the zoo remains a long shot.
-
- Hopes were raised last week when the county intervened in the matter
- with two separate actions, one by County Executive Kathleen Falk and one
- by County Supervisor Tom Stoebig.
-
- Falk instructed members of her staff to investigate possibilities of
- keeping the monkeys in town. And Stoebig called for the study on
- whether the county should take over control of some of the animals. UW
- officials say the monkey house costs about $100,000 a year to run.
-
- As of last week, the university had planned on shipping the 100 rhesus
- macaques to the Tulane Regional Primate Research Center in Louisiana
- where they would simply serve as a breeding colony.
-
- The stump-tailed macaques, a federally defined threatened species, will
- possibly be shipped to a wildlife center in Thailand, the species'
- native land.
-
- UW officials insist plans to relocate the monkeys have not changed. But
- three UW officials - Graduate School Associate Dean Tim Mulcahy,
- Wisconsin Regional Primate Research Center interim director Joe Kemnitz,
- and primate center spokeswoman Jordana Lenon - are expected to attend
- Friday's meeting.
-
- "We're still planning to send the rhesus to Tulane, and we're still
- working on the Thailand possibility," Lenon said Wednesday.
-
- As for the chance of keeping any of the monkeys at the zoo, Lenon said:
- "If the money could be found and the zoo wanted to take them, it would
- still be an option . . . I don't know how likely it is at this point."
-
- The county interest has come after months of controversy over the zoo
- monkeys.
-
- The controversy started in August when The Capital Times reported that
- the primate center repeatedly violated an agreement with the zoo not to
- use monkeys housed at the facility in invasive research projects. A
- later investigation by Graduate School Dean Virginia Hinshaw found that
- the UW broke its promises 201 times since 1989.
-
- Then, in November, the National Institutes of Health announced it was
- prohibiting the UW from using federal money to fund the Vilas facility.
-
- Ironically, the NIH cited the UW/zoo agreement as one of the reasons the
- monkeys are no longer viable, because they will not be available for
- research projects involving invasive studies.
-
- So, the very agreement that aimed to protect the monkeys played a role
- in the decision that could threaten their future.
-
- The zoo commission's discussion Friday will affect Falk's deliberations
- of the matter. And aides say she plans to receive her staff report on
- the issue by Friday.
-
- Commission members contacted Wednesday night said they still have many
- questions and were noncommittal to any particular view. And ultimately,
- they say, their decisions matter very little if the county doesn't have
- the money and if the UW won't donate the monkeys.
-
- Obviously no one wants the monkeys, if it is at all avoidable, to be
- placed somewhere cruel," said commission chairwoman Karen West.
-
- "But we as a zoo commission do not have the power to levy taxes or
- create funds. We can develop all the options in the world, but if the
- county doesn't want to fund them, and if the UW doesn't agree, since
- they own the monkeys, then our ideas are worthless."
-
- Commissioner Linda Scheid agreed, saying, "Sure, we all want to see the
- monkeys at the zoo. But there are a lot of other issues that surround
- them," including costs of both the daily care, the need to update the
- facility, and the potential spread of a herpes B virus that about
- one-third of the monkeys are thought to carry.
-
- But West said she isn't ruling anything out. She hopes Friday's meeting
- will open communication among the key players, and that UW officials and
- animal rights come with important and relevant information for the
- commission.
-
- Meanwhile, other top county officials say it's money that continues to
- be the sticking point about any county involvement in the future of the
- monkeys. "Costs continue to be a major concern about any county role,"
- said Helene Nelson, Falk's chief of staff.
-
- "You can come up with all the options you want, but if you don't have
- the money, it's pretty academic," said zoo director David Hall. "The
- bottom line is where the money is coming from."
-
- -- End --
-
- Date: Mon, 02 Feb 1998 20:32:07 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Vegetarian Talks in Oprah Cow Trial
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980202203203.0073be40@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from AP http://wire.ap.org
- ----------------------------------------------
- 02/02/1998 12:02 EST
-
- Vegetarian Talks in Oprah Cow Trial
-
- By CHIP BROWN
- Associated Press Writer
-
- AMARILLO, Texas (AP) -- A vegetarian activist being sued for his
- comments about U.S. beef on the ``Oprah'' show said today that
- he merely gave his opinion about the risk of mad cow disease and
- that ``no one can say a future event has facts associated with
- it.''
-
- Attorneys for Texas cattlemen continued attempts to show that
- Howard Lyman's comments on the April 1996 show were not based on
- facts.
-
- The cattleman are suing Lyman, Oprah Winfrey and her production
- company for at least $10.3 million. They say the show, titled ``Dangerous
- Foods,'' pushed already slumping beef prices to 10-year lows.
-
- Joe Coyne, a cattleman lawyer, asked Lyman this morning what facts he had
- to back up his claim that ground-up cattle parts were being fed to cattle
- herds, a practice linked to the spread of the disease in England.
-
- Lyman said his comments on the show were based on his experience as a
- former cattle rancher.
-
- ``I was there to give my opinion on the risk factors of whether mad cow
- disease could happen here. I believe I did that,'' Lyman said.
-
- Coyne: ``Show me the facts that you based your comments on.''
-
- Lyman: ``No one can say a future event has facts associated with it.''
-
- Lyman also appeared to hurt Ms. Winfrey's case when he said that
- reassuring pro-beef comments that were edited out of the show would have
- been relevant to viewers as long as the statements were true.
-
- Attorneys for the cattlemen want to show that Ms. Winfrey intentionally
- deleted comments from the show that would have soothed concerns among
- viewers about U.S. beef possibly becoming infected with mad cow disease.
- They said she favored the more fear-raising, ratings-grabbing statements
- by Lyman.
-
- Although Ms. Winfrey has yet to take the witness stand, she has sat in
- court for every minute of testimony over nine days of the trial before
- going to a local theater to tape her talk show. The trial is expected to
- run through mid-February.
-
- The cattlemen are suing under a state law that protects agricultural
- products from false and defamatory remarks.
-
- Date: Mon, 02 Feb 1998 17:50:53 -0800
- From: "Bob Schlesinger" <bob@arkonline.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Feb 14th Rally in OR for Dogs Sentenced to Die
- Message-ID: <199802021750530320.022E9F7F@pcez.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- Hillsboro, OR
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
- Contact: Watchdog
- (503) 590-0292
-
- A rally will be held at noon on Saturday Feb. 14th at the State Capitol Building in Salem, Oregon
- to
- protest the death sentences of Nadas and several other dogs in Oregon for chasing
- livestock. No harm came to any of the livestock involved.
-
- Nadas, the most well-known victim of this law, is to be put to death on Feb 17th. The Oregon
- Supreme Court recently refused to review the case involving the 3 1/2 year old collie-malamute.
-
- The rally will be held on the front steps leading to the State Capitol Building Steps at:
-
- 900 Court Street
- Salem, Oregon
-
- Speakers will urge that the livestock law be changed in light of the epidemic of dogs being put to
- death, as well as issue an immediate appeal that Nadas be spared. Organizers note that this law
- currently can affect any pet owner in Oregon as well as those who visit the state.
-
- An additional rally may be held in Medford, Oregon on the same date. Medford is where Jackson
- County government is headquartered, and is where Nadas was impounded and sentenced to die.
- Nadas has been denied visitors for 1 1/2 years, and recently was moved by county officials from
- county animal control facilities to an undisclosed location.
-
- According to Medford rally organizer Linda Rowe, plans for a rally in that city will only be
- confirmed after
- committments are obtained for a sufficient turnout. An earlier rally originally scheduled for Feb.
- 6th was postponed after reports were received that the County Commissioners might meet in
- secret to
- consider alternatives for Nadas. These reports have not yet been confirmed.
-
- Organizations in particular are urged to contact Watchdog in order to pledge support for the rally
- and
- provide attendees. Pledges for attendees are particularly needed for Medford.
-
- Background information on Nadas and the other dogs sentenced to die can be found at
- http://www.arkonline.com/nadas.htm
-
- Date: Mon, 02 Feb 1998 20:56:50 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Ex-employee says Oprah wanted `boring beef guy' edited out
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980202205647.0073ebd4@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from Amarillo Globe-News http://www.amarillonet.com/
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Web posted Monday, February 2, 1998 6:53 p.m. CT
-
- Ex-employee says Oprah wanted `boring beef guy' edited out
- Cattlemen vs. Oprah Winfrey
-
- By CHIP CHANDLER
- Globe-News Staff Writer
-
- Oprah Winfrey told a producer to edit out a "boring beef guy" in a segment
- about mad cow disease, a former Harpo Productions Inc. employee testified
- via video on Monday.
-
- Former supervising senior producer LaGrande Green said he was told by
- producer James Kelley that Winfrey wanted Kelley to edit what she called
- rambling comments by Dr. Gary Weber, a beef industry spokesman.
-
- Later Monday, Kelley said Winfrey told him to cut out Weber's redundancies.
- Kelley also testified via video deposition.
-
- The testimony came during the 10th day of the cattlemen vs. Winfrey
- beef-defamation trial at U.S. District Court in Amarillo.
-
- Green, in a videotaped deposition from December, also said Kelley felt like
- Winfrey and other Harpo officials were making him the scapegoat for the
- lawsuit, and they wanted him to lie in a deposition for the case.
-
- He said other employees were "laughing about what would happen if Kelley
- told the truth."
-
- Winfrey's attorney Charles Babcock tried to discredit Green's testimony by
- asking why he was fired from Harpo. Green described himself as a sex addict
- and said he often left work during the day.
-
- "As a former sexual-abuse victim, I consider myself a sexual addict and
- sometimes felt the need to leave the building and go to an adult bookstore
- or walk around," Green said.
-
- He also said he told a Harpo attorney he might be more willing to talk to
- Harpo about what he knew about the "Dangerous Foods" show if he still had a
- job with the company. Green said he was not involved in the production of
- the show - which prompted the lawsuit - but that he had many discussions
- with those who were.
-
- Green said Kelley often talked with him about job difficulties even after
- Green was fired.
-
- "(Kelley) told me he told Oprah and Diane (Hudson, executive producer) that
- he was tired of being blamed for the lawsuit," Green said.
-
- Kelley said in his video deposition from June that he edited the show so
- that the most relevant points would remain.
-
- "You listen to the show, and you make sure that you keep the substance in,"
- he said.
-
- Kelley said he assigned associate producers to research the show and find
- guests, which eventually included Weber, Dr. Will Hueston of the U.S.
- Department of Agriculture and vegetarian activist Howard Lyman.
-
- Lyman, who is a defendant in the case, concluded his testimony Monday
- morning.
-
- He repeatedly was asked by plaintiff attorney Joe Coyne whether the
- statements he made on the show were truthful and based on fact.
-
- "I went on the show to present my opinion," he said.
-
- "I believe it represented a way I felt on the issue," Lyman said, but he
- never would say whether his opinion was based on fact.
-
- Date: Mon, 02 Feb 1998 21:01:45 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Lyman says opinion based on research
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980202210142.0076d824@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from Amarillo Globe-News http://www.amarillonet.com/
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Web posted Monday, February 2, 1998 1:14 p.m. CT
-
- Lyman says opinion based on research
- Cattlemen vs. Oprah Winfrey
-
- By KAY LEDBETTER
- Farm and Ranch Editor
-
- Vegetarian activist Howard Lyman doesn't maintain that the statements he
- made were based on fact, but rather that he based his opinion on research,
- according to testimony in the 10th day of the area cattlemen vs. Oprah
- Winfrey Trial.
-
- Court started Monday morning with an admonishment by U.S. District Court
- Judge Mary Lou Robinson telling counsel to "move along as fast as we can."
- She said repetition had been allowed earlier for the benefit of educating
- the jury, but "the court will not allow it anymore."
-
- Lyman, who appeared as a guest on the Oprah Winfrey show on April 16, 1996,
- and is a defendant in the case, was repeatedly asked by plaintiff attorney
- Joe Coyne whether the statements he made on the show were truthful and
- based on fact.
-
- Lyman in return said, "I went on the show to present my opinion.
-
- "I believe it represented a way I felt on the issue," Lyman said, but would
- never say whether his opinion was based on fact.
-
- When asked by Coyne for the third time, "Can you identify any statements
- you made that were fact," attorneys were called to the judge's bench, and
- an early recess was taken.
-
- Lyman said he sold his ranch to pay debts. For that reason, he got out of
- the cattle business. He also said he was 6-feet 1-inch tall and weighed
- more than 300 pounds. The doctor recommended he change his diet, and he
- became a vegetarian.
-
- Coyne asked Lyman why those things were not said on the show.
-
- "You just like to tell people things that sound good?" he said.
-
- Lyman said that Coyne's statement was not totally correct.
-
- Lawyers also questioned Lyman about his business card, which reads "Howard
- Lyman, J.D." The "J.D." indicates a law degree, however Lyman said he had
- no such degree. He said he has an honorary doctorate degree of law.
-
- "Your card misrepresents your education background?" Coyne said.
-
- "That's possible," Lyman said.
-
- Date: Mon, 02 Feb 1998 18:32:11
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Circus men beat their animals on secret video
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980202183211.21f7e006@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Tuesday, February 3rd, 1998
-
- Circus men beat their animals on secret video
- By David Millward
-
- A VIDEO showing circus elephants, camels and tigers being beaten with iron
- bars by their keepers brought calls yesterday for new laws to control the
- industry.
-
- The film, in which beasts were seen chained and confined in cages, is to be
- shown at Westminster tomorrow by Angela Smith, Labour MP for Basildon.
-
- Mrs Smith believes the footage provides compelling evidence for new
- legislation which she hopes will be backed by MPs on all sides.
-
- The film was put together by the campaign group, Animal Defenders. It was
- compiled by five volunteers who spent 18 months collecting evidence after
- infiltrating five circuses.
-
- Entitled The Ugliest Show on Earth, it also alleges that circus animals
- suffered routine neglect and had little chance to exercise naturally. It
- also claims that one sick lioness was hidden from an RSPCA inspector.
-
- Animal Defenders, which is calling for a ban on the use of animals in
- circuses, has passed the 18-minute video - taken from 400 hours' footage -
- to its lawyers as well as Mrs Smith.
-
- The undercover operation visited several circuses including centres used
- for wintering animals in several southern counties and showed creatures
- being hit, shouted at and abused.
-
- Footage includes:
-
- A chimpanzee being kicked and whipped.
- A camel being kicked and beaten with a stick.
- An adult elephant being hit around the head and knees with a metal rod.
- A monkey having a prolapsed rectum forced back by two keepers.
- A heavily pregnant lioness being forced to perform.
- Big cats being left in flooded cages.
- Elephants being chained for hours.
-
- Jan Creamer, Director of Animal Defenders, said the animals' treatment was
- "sickening". He added: "Our people worked in circuses for months."
- Volunteers were given basic training before being infiltrated into circuses
- by getting jobs such as "beast men", responsible for maintenance of the
- animals.
-
- "Circus life for the animals is just deprivation, boredom and physical
- abuse. We have video evidence of a tiger urinating after being shouted at.
- This video is just the tip of the iceberg of what animals go through.
-
- "It is the first to look at circuses as a whole, including travelling
- arrangements, training, breeding and supply. Many of the animals, such as
- the big cats and the elephants, have been taken from the wild and put into
- this life of slavery."
-
- After seeing the film, Mrs Smith called on the Government to bring circuses
- into line with zoos. "I do not see why they should be exempt from the Zoo
- Licensing Act.
-
- "I intend to show the film to other MPs. My reaction to the film was that
- it made me feel sick inside. Anyone who sees this film will never want to
- go to the circus again."
-
- A spokesman for one of the circuses defended the workers filmed pushing
- back the monkey's prolapsed rectum saying they were acting on the advice of
- a vet. "The animal had this problem before and it was put back by the vet
- who told us if it happened again we should do it ourselves and the quicker
- it was done the better. If what we did didn't work, he would have been here
- within an hour to carry out an operation.
-
- "Our premises are inspected by the local authority. We also have a vet here
- once a week. We have a specialist zoo vet come once a month to make sure
- that every thing is in the animals' best interest."
-
- An RSPCA spokesman said anyone found guilty of cruelty to animals could be
- jailed for six months, fined ú5,000 and banned from keeping animals.
-
- "In general, we could prosecute for causing unnecessary suffering to an
- animal and that includes beating. "Prosecutions are brought either by the
- police or ourselves and video evidence can be used if the quality is good
- enough."
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- Date: Mon, 02 Feb 1998 18:36:25
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [US] Pupils in vampire cult go on trial for ritual murder
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980202183625.087f26b6@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Tuesday, February 3rd, 1998
-
- Pupils in vampire cult go on trial for ritual murder
- By David Sapsted in New York
-
- TEENAGE members of a high school vampire cult, who drank human blood and
- sacrificed animals, went on trial in Florida yesterday accused of the
- ritual murders of one of their parents.
-
- Rod Ferrell, 17, the alleged leader of the cult which sprang up among a
- group of teenagers at Eustis High School, about 35 miles from Orlando,
- faces death in the electric chair if convicted.
-
- In a statement to Tavares district court, one of the cult members said
- Ferrell had "become possessed with opening the gates of Hell, which meant
- he would have to kill a large number of people in order to consume their
- souls. By doing this, Ferrell believed that he would obtain super powers".
-
- Ferrell is accused of bludgeoning to death Richard and Naoma Wendorf. They
- were the parents of Heather Wendorf, 16, who, on the day of the killings in
- November 1996, was inducted into the cult by drinking other members' blood
- in a ceremony in a local cemetery. Miss Wendorf has been cleared by a grand
- jury of any involvement in her parents' death.
-
- When Ferrell suggested killing them, she told him not to harm them and only
- discovered they were dead afterwards. Mr Wendorf's body was found in his
- home with a "V" sign surrounded by circular marks burnt into his chest.
-
- Jury selection for the trial began yesterday. Only Ferrell is charged with
- the murders. Howard Anderson, 17, also faces the death penalty on a charge
- of being a principal accessory to murder. Prosecutors say he was in the
- house at the time of the killings and did nothing to stop them.
-
- Dana Cooper, 20, and Charity Keesee, 17, face lesser charges of being
- accessories, though police say they were not in the Wendorfs' home. All
- four plead not guilty.
-
- Prosecutors say that Ferrell and Miss Wendorf were misfits at school and
- kept in touch after he moved to Kentucky.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- Date: Mon, 02 Feb 1998 19:31:28 PST
- From: "Cari Gehl" <skyblew@hotmail.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Fwd: MarmamNews for January 1998
- Message-ID: <19980203033129.24998.qmail@hotmail.com>
- Content-Type: text/plain
-
- This is being forwarded from MARMAM:
-
- ---------------------------
- >The following articles were uploaded to MarmamNews in January 1998.
- >MarmamNews can be found at
- >
- >http://members.aol.com/marmamnews
- >
- >01/02/1998
- > 1998 Expected to be a Bad Year for the Dolphins
- >
- >01/06/1998
- > Irish Whaling Compromise Condemned
- > Bathers beat shark to death in South Africa
- > Scientists call for urgent action on oceans
- > Dead dolphins wash up on Caribbean island
- > 90 Dolphins Die on Venezuelan Beach
- > Environment-Oceans: Scientists say sea life "In ...
- > Dolphins Aground and Die In Mass In Venezuela
- > Weldon calls for White House Conference on the Seas
- >
- >01/07/1998
- > FED: Aust to oppose Irish proposal on Whaling
- >
- >01/08/1998
- > TAS: Mystery Sea Monster to be DNA-tested
- > Arbitrator rules on Keiko's care
- >
- >01/09/1998
- > UAE fighting to contain 4,000-tonne Gulf oil spill
- > Environment-Gulf: Oil spill threatens Persian Gulf ...
- >
- >01/11/1998
- > QLD: Sanctuaries will save endangered dugong
- >
- >01/12/1998
- > TAS: Scientist confirms that "Monster" is whale blubber
- > Britain-Endangered Seas
- > Nine pilot whales beached on Florida east coast
- > CSIRO: Scientists kill marine 'monster' mystery
- >
- >01/13/1998
- > Environment: Super Trawler threatens marine food
- >
- >01/15/1998
- > New Zealand's 'extinct' right whale rediscovered
- > Ecuador Expands No-Fishing Zone
- >
- >01/16/1998
- > NSW: Three whales stranded on NSW coast
- > VIC: Dolphin survey covers Port Phillip Bay
- > Sea lions in Peru
- > Restriction on Tuna Drift Net Fishing
- > New Zealand Finds Extinct Whales
- >
- >01/17/1998
- > NSW: Beached whales euthanised after their health worsens
- >
- >01/18/1998
- > Prince Philip gives boost to whale campaign
- > Concern about boats, jet skis as whales visit Wellington Harbour
- >
- >01/19/1998
- > Police concerned as motorists try to catch glimpse of Orcas
- > Second dolphin dies at Puponga
- >
- >01/22/1998
- > Pollution, not hunting, is whale's greatest threat
- > Children 'Adopt' trapped dolphin
- > `Free Willy' Could Go Back to Sea
- >
- >01/23/1998
- > Last dolphin dies in golden Bay
- > FOCUS-Three whales stranded on north German coast
- > 3 Beached Whales Die in Germany
- > Six Whales Stranded off Northern German Coast, 3 Died
- >
- >01/25/1998
- > Huge pod of dolphins visit Dunedin Beach
- >
- >01/26/1998
- > PHOTO: Germany - Whales: Sankt Peter Ording, Germany
- >
- >01/27/1998
- > Project Launched in Zanzibar to Protect Dolphins
- > Seal aphrodisiacs often fake -Canadian researchers
- > PHOTO: Whales: Terranceville, Newfoundland
- > PHOTO: Whales: Terranceville, Newfoundland
- >
- >01/28/1998
- > Whaling Commission to meet in bid to end impasse
- > Clinton Proclamation of the Year of the Ocean
- > Campaign group fears for future of whales
- >
- >01/29/1998
- > Hundreds of rare sea lion pups found dead at breeding colony
- > Unknown catastrophe wipes out sea lions
- > Warning against speculation over sea lion deaths
- > Call for halt to fishing until seal investigation completed
- > Whaling Commission to meet in bid to end impasse
- > `Free Willy' Star in Good Health
- > Sea lions shot, decapitated off California coast
- > Sea Lions Found Dead Off Antarctica
- > Hundreds of sea lion deaths baffle NZ experts
- >
- >01/30/1998
- > More seals die in Subantartic
- > Deaths treated as Biohazard
- > Dolphin death toll mounts on Cape Cod
- > WWF campaigns for Mediterranean whale sanctuary
- > Dolphin death toll mounts on Cape Cod
- > Dead Sea Lions Prompt Investigation
- > Rescuers Try To Save Dolphins
- > Beached Dolphins Die at Cape Cod
- > Center for Marine Conservation Announces Program ...
- >
-
-
- ______________________________________________________
- Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
- Date: Mon, 02 Feb 1998 19:39:54 PST
- From: "Cari Gehl" <skyblew@hotmail.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Fwd: Summary Report of Keiko Evaluation Panel
- Message-ID: <19980203033956.14819.qmail@hotmail.com>
- Content-Type: text/plain
-
- Also from MARMAM...
-
- ----------------->
- >Summary Report of Evaluation Panel
- >Convened to Assess the Health of Keiko
- >January 28, 1998
- >
- >
- >
- >Panel Members:
- >
- >Dr. James McBain, Sea World, Inc.
- >Dr. Al Smith, Oregon State University
- >Dr. Jeffery Stott, University of California at Davis
- >Dr. Joseph Geraci6 National Aquarium in Baltimore
- >Mr. Bud Krames, Dolphin Quest
- >Dr. Barbara Kohn, USDA, APHIS, AC - Facilitator
- >
- >Other Contributors:
- >
- >Dr. Isis Johnson, USDA, APHIS, AC
- >Dr. Randy Ridenour, USDA, APHIS, AC
- >
- >This independent evaluation was done with the full backing and support
- of
- >the Free Willy Keiko Foundation. Foundation liaisons were Mr. Joseph
- >Gaskins, and Mr. Robert Ratliffe.
- >
- >The Panel wishes to thank the staff at the Free Willy Keiko Foundation
- and
- >the Oregon Coast Aquarium for their cooperation with this evaluation.
- The
- >Panel was welcomed with open arms. We wish to thank Dr. Lanny Cornell
- for
- >his cooperation.
- >
- >Keiko, a male killer whale, Orcinus orca, was transported to the United
- >States and housed at a newly built facility within the Oregon Coast
- Aquarium
- >(OCA) in January 1 1996. Since that time the animal has been under the
- care
- >of the OCA and the Free Willy Keiko Foundation (FWKF). Due to the
- history
- >and popularity of the whale, his health and well being have been
- subjected
- >to a high degree of public and media scrutiny. In August 1997, after a
- >change in personnel handling the day-to day care of Keiko and after
- >conflicting reports of his health status, APHIS was asked to facilitate
- the
- >formation of an independent panel of marine mammal experts who would
- assess
- >the current health status of Keiko. This panel was formed in October
- 1997
- >with the cooperation of the FWKF. The panel included veterinary
- experts,
- >including a virologist and immunologist, as well as two veterinary
- >clinicians, a behaviorist, and an APHIS representative as a
- facilitator. The
- >animal was evaluated by the panel members during December 1997 and
- January
- >1998.
- >
- >Keiko is an approximately 18 year old killer whale whose living
- condition
- >and health concerns came to light when he was chosen to star in the
- movie,
- >Free Willy. At that time, Keiko resided in a facility in Mexico (Reino
- >Aventura), in which the pool was small and water quality was poor
- including
- >inappropriate temperature. Keiko has had no conspecific companionship
- since
- >he resided in Canada, but he did have dolphin companionship at Reino
- >Aventura. After several years of negotiations and attempts to move
- Keiko to
- >a more appropriate facility, arrangements were made to move him to the
- OCA
- >facility, which was leased by the FWKF. Keiko's health has been a
- constant
- >concern with the most visible problem being a viral (assumed) skin
- condition
- >which was visible even during the filming of the movie. The skin
- condition
- >did appear to improve after the transfer to the Oregon facility with
- its
- >improved water quality.
- >
- >APHIS has, when deemed necessary, formed and/or overseen ad hoc panels
- that
- >dealt with specific allegations and concerns raised about regulated
- animals.
- >This process is not automatic, but is used when the nature and
- implications
- >of the situation warrants such measures. Due to the media focus and
- history
- >of this animal. APHIS agreed to help form and facilitate a Blue Ribbon
- panel
- >to assess the current health status of Keiko. The scope and sole
- mandate of
- >this panel is to examine Keiko's current health, not to comment on or
- infer
- >support or opposition to his releasability in The future. The panel was
- >formed to look at the current veterinary and behavioral issues, the
- current
- >facility status with respect to the Animal Welfare Act (AWA) and to
- provide
- >recommendations as appropriate
- >
- >Methodology:
- >
- >Keiko was examined by a marine mammal veterinarian and samples were
- obtained
- >for generally accepted routine medical testing, including a complete
- blood
- >count and chemistry profile. Additional blood and biopsy samples were
- >obtained to run room specialized testing to evaluate the immunological
- >status and viral exposure/response of the animal. Medical tests were
- carried
- >out at the panel member's own facilities utilizing currently accepted
- >methodologies for the respective analysis. Medical and training records
- were
- >reviewed as needed by panel members, and FWKF and OCA personnel were
- >interviewed when appropriate. Keiko's behavior was observed by several
- panel
- >members on two separate occasions during the veterinary examination and
- >sample collection in December 1997, and again during the course of 10
- >observation sessions in January 1998. Conference calls and one-on-one
- >communications were utilized by the panel to discuss and evaluate the
- >findings. During the tenure of the panel, APHIS inspectors conducted an
- >unannounced compliance inspection.
- >
- >Results and Evaluation:
- >
- >To gain the best picture of the health status of any animal, one should
- >monitor appropriate parameters over time, using repeated testing. This
- panel
- >was formed to evaluate a "snapshot" of Keiko's medical and behavioral
- >condition. To provide the best evaluation under these circumstances,
- the
- >panel relied on the medical and behavioral records of the animal, as
- well as
- >examinations and testing done in November 1997 through January 1998.
- >
- >Based on clinical pathology results, there is a high probability that
- Keiko
- >developed a hepatopathy beginning in June 1997. The primary
- manifestation of
- >this event was a significantly elevated liver enzyme which did not
- return to
- >normal until December 1997. Keiko was treated with an antifungal drug
- for a
- >suspected lung infection during the latter period of enzyme elevation.
- This
- >complicated interpretation of the enzyme values since the antifungal
- agent
- >used is known to occasionally produce a transient elevation in liver
- >enzymes, which may persist over a long period of time. The return of
- the
- >liver enzymes to normal levels indicated that, in the very least, the
- >condition is in remission.
- >
- >During his residency in Oregon, Keiko experienced a tooth fracture
- which
- >later required extraction. There have also been multiple episodes of
- >hematuria. Recent urinalyses demonstrate that hematuria is no longer
- >present. Dr. Lanny Cornell, attending veterinarian for the FWKF,
- indicated
- >that Keiko has a penile lesion which was the likely source of blood in
- the
- >urine. The lesion has healed. Observers have reported the occurrence of
- >behaviors described as "cramping" and "twitching." The Panel's
- veterinary
- >clinicians have not seen these behaviors, nor is any video available.
- As a
- >result their cause and significance cannot be determined. The behaviors
- have
- >been noted since Keiko's arrival in Oregon, and to date no disease
- condition
- >has been associated with them.
- >
- >In late December 1997, a small skin lesion on the leading edge of the
- right
- >pectoral flipper was observed. It was approximately 1" in diameter and
- >visually appeared to be a papilloma. The lesion was biopsied, and
- although
- >cytopathology was evident on the first but not the second and third
- growth
- >passages, histology and initial cell culture tend to support the growth
- >being the result of a papilloma (wart) virus. This condition is known
- to
- >occur in wild and captive whales and is not considered a health
- challenge to
- >Keiko. Other skin lesions which have been observed on Keiko have been
- >examined and biopsied when appropriate (fresh lesions). Although such
- >lesions resembled possible viral skin lesions, no specific viral
- etiology
- >has been identified.
- >
- >Blood (serum and buffy coats) samples were subjected to rigorous viral
- >isolation and/or viral antigen testing for 49 antigens, including 33
- >serotypes of caliciviruses (oceanic and nonoceanic), marine species
- virus
- >isolates of herpes virus, rotavirus-like virus, entorvirus-like virus,
- >retrovirus-like virus, and three adenoviruses, as well as other
- >miscellaneous viruses, including morbillivrius, parvovirus, and human
- >hepatitis virus, canine adanovirus, and LDH virus. Antibody testing for
- 48
- >to the 49 viruses is complete at this time. Antibody tests were
- negative,
- >and there were no viruses isolated.
- >
- >Samples collected to evaluate the immunological status of Keiko
- revealed
- >that he has a low circulating B-lymphocyte count and a slightly
- elevated
- >total immunogloubulin level. Immunealactrophoresis of the serum
- proteins
- >indicated that there may be a missing isotype of IgG. However, the
- >significance of this finding is unknown. T-lymphocyte function appears
- to be
- >adequate in this animal.
- >
- >Behavioral observations of Keiko indicate a variation in his behavior
- >patterns. In December 1997, he appeared "frustrated" and not content.
- In
- >January 1998, Keiko appeared calm, if bored. Both observers felt Keiko
- might
- >be feeling the effects of not having any control over his environment.
- >However, no stereotypic or destructive (typical neurotic behaviors such
- as
- >head butting or staring into the walls) swimming or other behaviors
- were
- >observed.
- >
- >Keiko related well to his trainers, but it was felt that the response
- >thresholds for the training sessions were low, and Keiko's response to
- >stimuli, though not normal, was slow. The primary reinforcement tool
- >preferred by Keiko was tactile stimulation after a session. He does not
- >appear to be food driven in his interactions. Keiko was provided
- enrichment
- >devices and interacted with them randomly, especially enjoying the
- >high-powered water jets used for environmental enrichment.
- >
- >Overall, Keiko appeared to have no behavioral problems that adversely
- >affected his health. Several panel members expressed concern that
- Keiko, may
- >not have a great deal of stamina and that even small body movements
- created
- >visible movement of skin. This apparent flaccidity of Keiko's body
- could
- >indicate insufficient muscle mass, lack of muscle tone, or recent
- changes in
- >weight. Keiko continues to gain weight and grown since his move to
- Oregon.
- >
- >APHIS inspections, conducted by a 2-person team, showed the facility in
- >compliance with the AWA regulations and standards in July 1997 and
- December
- >1997.
- >
- >Summary and Recommendations
- >
- >There is no current indication that Keiko is ill. He showed no clinical
- >pathological evidence of chronic deep-seated infection during his
- residence
- >in Oregon. Immunological test results are apparently within known
- normal
- >parameters, and there was no evidence of recent viral challenges to 48
- >different viruses. Keiko appeared to be exhibiting no abnormal behavior
- >patterns. At the time of the study, Keiko was recovering from an
- illness
- >(probable hepatopathy) of several months' duration. The only known
- chronic
- >condition in evidence is probable papillomatosis. This snapshot
- analysis
- >must be viewed as that a look at one point in time. Questions and
- concerns
- >about Keiko's long-term health status and options for his future need
- to be
- >studied over a much longer period of time. Given Keiko's past health
- history
- >and ongoing concerns and scrutiny of his health, the panel makes the
- >following recommendations:
- >
- >1. Continue monitoring and follow-up testing to further establish a
- baseline
- >for Keiko's medical results and to provide reliable scientific
- documentation
- >of his overall health picture.
- >2. Given Keiko's past health history and potential future plans, a
- written
- >line of authority must be established, which assures that the husbandry
- and
- >medical programs are integrated in a way which places a single person
- in
- >ultimate authority. This will required commitment, cooperation, and
- >communication between the husbandry staff, water quality engineers and
- >operators, and veterinary care personnel.
- >
- >3. Ancillary to "2" above, complete and useful medical, training, and
- >feeding records are necessary for any future evaluation of Keiko's
- health.
- >These records should be well organized and readable and provide an
- accurate
- >picture of all tests, treatments and responses.
- >
- >4. Keiko appears to have flaccidity in his body, evidenced by highly
- movable
- >skin. This could bean insufficient muscle mass or lack of muscle tone.
- Keiko
- >should continue a program to improve his body tone and endurance. Such
- a
- >program should include, at least, a program of regular, increasing
- exercise,
- >and monitoring of weight and appetite
- >
- >6 .Although Keiko's dependence on human interaction may facilitate
- handling
- >by the trainers, killer whales are social creatures and should be
- afforded
- >interactions with same or other compatible marine species. Section
- 3.109 of
- >the AWA regulations and standards requires such access. A companion
- animal
- >is recommended and should be a compatible cetacean or, if necessary,
- >pinniped species.
- >
- >6. Any decision on the rehabilitation of Keiko should be made in
- concert
- >with an ongoing, long-term health study and evaluation. An expert panel
- >assembled by the responsible parties is recommended to oversee this
- task.
- >
- >Steve Dickey
- >oregon_coast_aquarium@writeme.com
- >Aquarium Webmaster
- >
-
-
- ______________________________________________________
- Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
- Date: Mon, 2 Feb 1998 21:41:41 -0600
- From: "Alliance for Animals" <alliance@allanimals.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Ca;;s needed, Meeting 2/3/98 for Vilas Monkeys..
- Message-ID: <199802030341.VAA26114@mendota.terracom.net>
-
- Call now to help monkeys! Area Code is 608..
- e-mail addresses for persons on Public works list are:
- example..
- ripp.david@co.dane.wi.us
-
- They need to hear from people who are concerned..and we CAN protect
- the monkeys if we all write and call. Thanks!
-
-
- Their meeting is Tues, the 3rd at 5:45pm at the Vilas Zoo Admin Bldg.
- Call today.
- Monday, February 2nd..
- THANKS TO YOUR EFFORTS....
- We have crossed one hurdle..that the Zoo Commission met this morning
- and voted unanimously to SUPPORT the resolution to protect the
- monkeys. There are still calls to make to the WAYS AND MEANS
- Committee and the PUBLIC WORKS Committee to ensure that they too will
- vote to support the resolution. Please don't delay. We can win for
- the monkeys and work together on this important issue.
- THEY NEED TO HEAR HOW YOU FEEL
- Please Contact the following committee members who are assigned to
- work on Resolution 241: Directing the Zoo Commission and Zoo Director
- to Develop options to retain the monkey colonies at the Henry Vilas
- Zoo. Ask that they work to keep the Vilas Monkeys here in Madison.
- We know it takes time to make so many calls, but if we fail to
- generate enough phone calls, the monkeys are sure to be sent to
- Tulane Primate Research Facility where they will be used in invasive
- research.
- They do NOT deserve such a fate.
- We CAN still work to keep them safe!
-
- Public Works & Facilities Management Committee/MEETS TUES EVE!!
- Name,District
- David Ripp, Chair,29Hm:849-7643
- James Mohrbacher, Vice-Chair,18Hm:246-9153
- Eugene Craft, Sec.,30Hm:437-5652
- David Blaska,7Hm:271-4882
- Jonathan Becker,11Hm:238-7076Wk:266-4360
- Judith Pederson,1Hm:274-4016
-
- Thank you for your help on this important issue! Alliance for Animals
- 608-257-6333
-
-
- </pre>
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