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- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Scientist admits that Dolly may not be 'wonder clone'
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980221235237.1ca71c02@dowco.com>
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- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Sunday, February 22nd, 1998
-
- Scientist admits that Dolly may not be 'wonder clone'
- By Christy Campbell
-
- THE scientist who claimed to have cloned Dolly the sheep using DNA from an
- adult animal, has admitted for the first time that Dolly may not be a
- scientific wonder.
-
- Dr Ian Wilmut, leader of the Scottish research team that announced it had
- produced an exact replica of an adult mammal, has confirmed rumours that
- have been circulating that there might have been a mistake. Dolly might
- have had a father after all.
-
- "There is a remote possibility that the cell used to produce Dolly came
- from a foetus rather than from the adult," he told a conference of
- geneticists gathered at the University of Louisville, Kentucky, last week.
- "Foetal cells can be present in the circulatory system of some animals
- during pregnancy," he said. "We and everybody else had completely
- overlooked that fact."
-
- Urgent tests have been commissioned from an independent laboratory and the
- results will be published this spring. They could provide a dramatic twist
- to the ethical controversy over cloning. Seemingly replicating a long-dead
- adult from its preserved DNA genetic material is what made Dolly such a
- scientific sensation.
-
- Clones of sheep, cows and monkeys from foetal origins have become
- commonplace in laboratories for two decades. If Dolly came from a foetal
- cell she is no star of science. A pullover made from Dolly's wool goes on
- show at the Science Museum next month, while her droppings are set to be
- exhibited at a London art gallery.
-
- The then seven-month-old white-nosed Finn-Dorset lamb was produced in a
- glare of publicity in a Scottish barn a year ago. She was the result, her
- creators announced, of the transfer of genetic material taken from the
- deep-frozen mammary gland of a ewe into an unfertilised egg whose own
- nucleus had been removed.
-
- Out of 277 such eggs, only one produced a healthy living animal: Dolly. But
- other scientists have recently begun to question why the Edinburgh-based
- Roslin Institute had not repeated the experiment and why others had failed
- to produce adult clones. The Roslin team came back fighting yesterday. "We
- have no doubt that Dolly was created from a mammary gland cell from a
- six-year-old ewe," said Dr Harry Griffin, assistant director of the institute.
-
- "A few foetal cells are detectable in the maternal circulation of pregnant
- women. If this is the case in sheep," he stressed, "samples of the mammary
- gland that we used might have contained a few contaminating foetal cells. A
- foetal cell would have half its genes from the ewe and half from the ram
- who was the father. The DNA analyses showed identical
- patterns for Dolly and the mammary cells from which she was derived."
-
- Dr Griffin said: "We have samples of the original mammary tissue and will
- be making more exhaustive DNA comparisons that we are confident will
- totally eliminate the very remote possibility that Dolly is of foetal
- origin." Ethical critics of cloning are watching developments closely. The
- doubts over Dolly could yet deny scientists the god-like power to replicate
- adult
- humans - a process that some predict is only a few years away.
-
- Dr Wilmut recently attracted controversy by saying that although he
- strongly opposed human cloning, early human embryos were "just a little
- ball of cells" and could be used for experimental purposes to combat
- disease "as long as they did not survive for more than a few days."
-
- Opponents of such research are calling for a ban on human embryo cloning.
- Helen Watt, of the Linacre centre for research into bioethics, told the
- Catholic newspaper The Universe yesterday: "Human cloning would be horrible
- and I know that companies are already freezing foetal material after an
- abortion so that they can be cloned at a later date."
-
- Dolly, meanwhile, is now pregnant herself.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- Date: Sun, 22 Feb 1998 03:33:33 EST
- From: NOVENAANN@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: ACLU Tells Richmond to Stop Harassing Protesters
- Message-ID: <8d9256b0.34efe2df@aol.com>
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-
- ACLU Tells Richmond to Stop Harassing
- Animal Rights Protesters at Circus
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
- Friday, February 20, 1998
-
- RICHMOND, VA -- The American Civil Liberties Union of Virginia has
- warned city police to cease interfering with the Richmond Animal Rights
- Network's demonstrations before performances of the Ringling
- Brothers/Barnum & Bailey Circus at the Richmond Coliseum.
- In two letters, one faxed yesterday and the other this morning, ACLU
- officials asked police chief Jerry Oliver to instruct Richmond police
- officers to allow demonstrators to use an amplified megaphone outside
- the Coliseum in accordance with the city's noise ordinance.
-
- Representatives of the Richmond Animal Rights Network contacted the ACLU
- yesterday after police told them at their Wednesday night demonstration
- that use of the megaphone violated the city noise ordinance. Despite
- yesterday's warning letter from the ACLU, police again interfered with
- the protesters' use of the megaphone at last night's demonstration.
-
- According to Section 18-18 of the Richmond City Code, voice
- amplification equipment can be used for non-commercial purposes so long
- as the sound is not "audible above the level of conversation speech at a
- distance in excess of two hundred feet from the property on which the
- amplified sound originates."
-
- Kent Willis, the Executive Director of the ACLU of Virginia, said that
- the demonstrators carefully complied with the ordinance but were still
- harassed by police.
-
- "From what the police said to the demonstrators, two things are clear,"
- Willis said. "First, Richmond's police officers do not know their own
- their own noise ordinance. They gave very misleading information to the
- protestors.
-
- "Second," Willis continued, "the general harassment protestors have
- received from police over the last two days indicates that the police
- also do not understand the First Amendment to the Constitution. These
- protestors have a right to be where they are, and so long as they abide
- by the noise ordinance set out by the City, the police must leave them
- alone. I hope we don't have to litigate this one."
-
- The ACLU plans to have lawyers present at the protests of the remaining
- five performances of the circus. The circus performances are scheduled
- for 3:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. today, and 11:00 a.m., 3:30 p.m. and 7:30
- p.m. on Saturday. The protests will begin a little more than an hour
- before each of these performances.
- Date: Sun, 22 Feb 1998 19:12:00 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: RFI: CSPI and IFDP addresses needed
- Message-ID: <199802221112.TAA06907@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- Does anyone have website, email, postal addresses and fax of :
- Institute for Food and Development Policy and
- Center for Science in the Public Interest
-
- Thanks.
-
- - Vadivu
-
- Date: Sun, 22 Feb 1998 09:33:53 -0500
- From: allen schubert <ar-admin@envirolink.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Cc: STFORJEWEL@aol.com
- Subject: HOT WATER
- Message-ID: <3.0.1.32.19980222093353.006a96d4@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- posted for STFORJEWEL@aol.com
- --------------------------------------------------------
- >From the Rocky Mountain News
- February 18, 1998
- Staff & Wire Reports
- Regional News Briefing
-
- HOT WATER DEEPENS FOR GUIDE
-
- SALT LAKE CITY-
-
- More charges were filed this month against a Colorado hunting guide accused of
- participating in the illegal killing of at least 12 cougars around Zion
- National Park.
-
- The case against Samuel R. Sickels, 32, of Naurita, Colorado (home phone:
- 970-865-2629) (home of the infamous Nucla/Naurita Annual Prairie Dog Slaughter
- Contest: whoever can blow away the most prairie dogs wins a prize) has grown
- into one of the biggest Utah poaching investigations involving a hunting
- guide.
-
- Sickels has been charged with wanton destruction, commercialization and
- unlawful taking of protected wildlife, and obtaining hunting licenses through
- fraud, deceit or misrepresentation.
-
- The illegal kills involve clients from as far away as Pennsylvania (!),
- Mississippi, and Ohio.
-
-
- Date: Sun, 22 Feb 1998 13:14:03 EST
- From: JanaWilson@aol.com
- To: AR-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Oklahoma Weekly Hunting News
- Message-ID: <1d1c0d36.34f06aed@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
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-
-
- A/w local Oklahoma City Sunday hunting news:
-
- The Bowhunting Council of Oklahoma's annual meeting and
- banquet featuring (in)famous bowhunter Mr. Chuck Adams
- will be held on Saturday at the Kirkpatrick Museum in Okla.
- City. Mr. Adams will conduct three seminars and be on hand
- to talk bowhunting with visitors. Archery manufacturers and
- distributors will display bowhunting equipment and supplies during
- the day. For more information call (405) 279-3717.
-
- "Kids We Care", an organization originally formed to help children
- affected by the Murrah Federal Bombing in Okla. City has expanded
- its efforts to include all children who have suffered tragedies in their
- lives, founder Mr. Rusty Minick has said.
- The organization is planning to build a 160-acre fishing camp and
- ranch with several ponds east of Guthrie, Okla. near the Lazy E
- Arena (rodeo complex owned by the local newspaper). The camp
- will offer a variety of activities, but the main theme will be fishing.
- A scale model of the ranch layout will be on display during the
- Backwoods Hunting and Fishing show at the OKC Fairgrounds
- next weekend.
-
- Mr. Neal Purdy of Blackwell, Okla. and Mr. Brian Ververka of
- Midwest City, Okla. won the one-day competition in a fun (huh?)
- hunt sponsored by the Canadian Valley Chapter of Quail Unlimited
- in Norman, Okla. They hunted "over" a pointer named "Harley."
- The two-dog event went to Mike Smith of Mounds, Okla. and Richard
- Newberry of Tulsa, Okla. with Patches and Rex, both pointers.
-
- The final fur auction planned for this year by the Oklahoma Trappers
- and Predator Callers Ass. will be this Saturday at the Agri-Civic
- Center in Chandler, Okla. The auction begins at 9 am. For more
- info please call (918) 336-8154.
-
- For the Animals,
-
- Jana, OKC
-
-
- Date: Sun, 22 Feb 1998 15:38:21 -0500 (EST)
- From: "Jeffrey A. LaPadula" <jlapa@pegasus.rutgers.edu>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US-NJ) Fur store owner John Guarino speaks out in local news.
- Message-ID: <Pine.GSO.3.96.980222153330.29577E-100000@pegasus.rutgers.edu>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
- hello all,
- This is the owner of the fur store who was focus to the ADL-NJ
- week
- long fur proteset Feb 7-14th. Letters can be sent to:
- yourviews@thnt.com. I dont know if you have to live in NJ to have your
- letter printed, but it is worth a try if you can think of something to
- say.
- with the letter you MUST include you're full name, the town that you live
- in, and a phone number. your letter will NOT be printed if they cannot get
- a hold of you. read on:::::
-
- Source: Home News Tribune
- Published: February 19, 1998
-
- Don't hold animals as equal to humans
-
- It was our pleasure to host the Animal Defense League during the week of
- Feb. 7 to Feb. 14. We enjoyed their youthful exuberance and zeal for their
- cause and we look forward to their biweekly visits in the future.
-
- However, please do not misconstrue our hospitality as acquiescence. My
- opinion of their case is as follows: animals do not equal people on any
- level. As a Roman Catholic, I believe only man is created in the image and
- likeness of God, with an immortal soul. If heaven is full of cats, dogs and
- woodchucks, I'm not going. Animals are a God-given natural resource to be
- treasured, protected, and used wisely for the benefit of mankind, that
- includes for food, research, companionship and clothing.
-
- Violence against people and property never is acceptable, and most
- assuredly, not in the name of compassion. Adolf Hitler was a vegetarian,
- which is the ultimate debunking of any association of vegetarianism with
- compassion. Further, when an organization and its leaders refuse to condemn
- violence, they embrace it.
-
- There is the childish logic that implies people can exist on Earth without
- killing any animals. Only an adolescent, or someone with the logic and
- reasoning of an adolescent, could arrive at that conclusion.
-
- It is far more damaging to the Earth to consume nonrenewable petroleum and
- mineral products than to consume animal resources. This brings to mind the
- deception that animal rights is in any way an ecological movement. Nothing
- could be further from the truth. Animal rights quite simply is a pagan
- religion, one which feeds upon the cheapening of the value of human life. It
- is not possible to raise animals to the level of humans, but it is possible
- to lower the value of human life to that of animals, if we allow it to happen.
-
- We thank our friends and loyal customers for their support, and assure them
- that after 51 years of operating an honorable, legal and morally correct
- business, we fully intend to continue operating for generations to come.
-
- John Guarino
- FURS BY GUARINO
- EAST BRUNSWICK
- ****************************************************************************
- ANIMAL DEFENSE LEAGUE - NEW JERSEY
- P.O. Box 84
- Oakhurst, NJ 07755
- (732)774-6432
- http://envirolink.org/orgs/adl
- ****************************************************************************
-
-
- Date: Sun, 22 Feb 1998 17:14:12 EST
- From: Snugglezzz@aol.com
- To: ar-news@Envirolink.org
- Subject: Rabbit Hunters
- Message-ID: <6179c8be.34f0a336@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Tulsa World, Tulsa, OK, USA: One of the longest seasons in Oklahoma is winding
- down, but sportsmen, women and children still have several weeks remaining to
- enjoy one of our most traditional forms of hunting. Rabbits remain legal game
- in Oklahoma through March 15 and there's still plenty of these wonderfully
- prolific little game animals out there.
-
- "We don't ever kill very many rabbits, but we sure have a lot of fun," Bill
- Scherman, a hunter from Muskogee, said. He and his buddies hunt behind a pack
- of dogs, most of them beagles.
-
- These particular hunters disdain from using the firearm normally preferred by
- most rabbit hunters. Scherman uses nothing but a .22 caliber pistol on his
- rabbit hunts. He carries a Ruger semi-automatic with one of those aim-point
- sights which puts a red dot on the target.
-
- "Oh, I guess my brother and I started hunting with the beagles about the time
- we were in junior high school," Scherman said.
-
- They even brought Old Bill along that morning. That 15-year-old male beagle is
- totally deaf and almost blind. But as Allen explained, "When I went out to get
- the dogs, Old Bill started jumping up and down, and trying to bark....just
- couldn't leave him home again."
-
- -- Sherrill
- Date: Sun, 22 Feb 1998 18:19:50 -0500 (EST)
- From: Tokitae <tokitae@bellsouth.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Lolita at night
- Message-ID: <199802222319.SAA29196@mail.mia.bellsouth.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Dear friends,
-
- The other night I went to hear Lolita. No, she wasn't giving a talk at the
- local auditorium, she was just breathing, and from about 100 feet away at
- the corner of a chain link fence in a neighboring parking lot, I could hear
- her blows every few minutes. It was dark and there was no one in there with
- her, just like every night since 1970, and especially since 1980 when Hugo,
- a little 13 year old adolescent male from Lolita's family, died in that same
- tank. I believe Lolita is waiting, and I truly believe she is hoping, for
- the day when she again feels her native Puget Sound waters, and can once
- again be with her family, the 94 orcas of the Southern Resident community.
- As a student of whale biology and an observer for 18 years of Lolita's
- extended family, I have no doubt that she can, in a phased program much
- like Keiko's, regain her full strength, her social skills and hunting abilities,
- and rejoin her family. There is plenty of time for her to have a calf or two
- when she does. If, for any reason, she is not able to rejoin her family, she
- can be cared for in a monitored sea pen in a cove in Puget Sound, where
- she was born.
-
- At this phase of the campaign the most important voice is that of Miami-Dade
- County Mayor Alex Penelas. The Seaquarium sits on county land, so the mayor
- is in a sense the landlord. Please write, and encourage your friends,
- family, students, members or perfect strangers to write, to Mayor Penelas to
- ask him to use his influence to help Lolita get home again.
-
- His address is:
- Mayor Alex Penelas
- 111 NW 1st St.
- Miami FL 33128
- or call (305) 375-5071
- or fax (305) 375-3618
-
- Thanks,
-
- Howie
-
- PS: To view, or download, a photo of Lolita, go to:
- http://www.paws.org/activists/taiji/arcphoto.htm
- and scroll down one screen.
-
-
- Howard Garrett
- PAWS
- Lolita Campaign Coordinator
- (305) 672-4039
- tokitae@bellsouth.net
-
- Date: Sun, 22 Feb 1998 17:55:13 -0800
- From: FARM <farm@farmusa.org>
- To: AR-News <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Meatout Celebrities
- Message-ID: <34F0D701.1F8B@farmusa.org>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- RELEASE ON 23 FEBRUARY 1998CONTACT: Caitlin Hills, 301-530-1737
- CELEBRITIES ASK AMERICANS TO æKICK THE MEAT HABITÆ
- Radio and screen stars Casey Kasem, Rue McClanahan, and James
- Cromwell are headlining this yearÆs 14th annual observance of the Great
- American Meatout, the worldÆs largest grassroots dietary education
- campaign. Its purpose is to help consumers evolve from a destructive,
- disease-laden meat-based diet to a wholesome, nonviolent diet of whole
- grains, vegetables, and fresh fruits. The date, on the first day of
- spring (March 20) symbolizes rebirth and renewal.
- Kasem is the popular host of "CaseyÆs Top 40". McClanahan is best
- known for her role in the TV series The Golden Girls. Cromwell is one
- of HollywoodÆs hottest properties after starring in Babe, Star Trek, and
- L.A. Confidential. They will be available for selected media interviews.
- Other members of this yearÆs Meatout National Council include
- consumer advocate Michael Jacob-son, author of Diet for a Small Planet
- Frances Moore Lappe, Buffalo Bills coach Marv Levy, Oprah Libel Trial
- co-defendant and former rancher Howard Lyman, TV hostess Cassandra
- æElviraÆ Peterson, and authors Jeremy Rifkin and John Robbins. Past
- campaigns were headlined by Bob Barker, Doris Day, Chrissie Hynde,
- Hayley Mills, River Phoenix, Sara Gilbert, and Ally Sheedy.
- From humble beginnings in 1985, the Great American Meatout has grown
- explosively to in-volve thousands of consumer, environment, and animal
- protection advocates in over 2,000 com-munities and all 50 states. They
- arrange educational events, ranging from simple exhibits and information
- tables, called æsteakouts,Æ to cooking demonstrations, public dinners,
- and colorful ælifestivals.Æ They ask their friends and neighbors to
- ôkick the meat habit on March 20, at least for a day, and to explore a
- more wholesome, less violent diet.ö
- The growth of Meatout has reflected in important US dietary trends:
- ⌐ More than 30 million Americans have explored a meatless diet
- ⌐ Vegetarianism is æinÆ with teens, who are ækicking the meat habitÆ at
- a record rate
- ⌐ National beef and veal consumption have dropped 25 and 70 percent,
- respectively
- ⌐ Major manufacturers, markets, and restaurants are marketing meatless
- meals
- ⌐ Mainstream health advocacy organizations are touting plant-based
- eating
- ⌐ US Dietary Guidelines for Americans have endorsed vegetarian diets.
-
- The Great American Meatout is coordinated nationally by FARM, a
- nonprofit, public-interest organization formed in 1981 to promote
- planetary health through plant-based eating. All events are planned and
- conducted by local activists. For more information, see
- http://www.meatout.org (after March 3).
-
-
- Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 10:43:30 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (HK) Muslims oppose plan for central slaughterhouse
- Message-ID: <199802230243.KAA08750@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
-
- >Hong Kong Standard
- 23 Feb 98
-
- Muslims oppose plan for central slaughterhouse
- By Patsy Moy
-
- THE Muslim community has expressed strong opposition to a plan to centralise
- the slaughtering of poultry unless the government can meet their religious
- needs.
-
- Abdool Ramjahn, a spokesman for the Islamic Union of Hong Kong (IUHK), said
- many Muslims are worried that poultry would not be killed in accordance with
- Islamic requirements if the government adopted a centralised slaughter system.
-
- In the wake of the bird flu scare, the government has proposed centralised
- slaughter arrangements for web-footed poultry such as geese and ducks to
- avoid cross-contamination.
-
- A spokesman for the Department of Health said the government still planned
- to allow chickens _ which are not web-footed _ to be slaughtered by
- individual stall holders.
- Mr Ramjahn said even if Muslim religious ``halal'' rites were maintained,
- the poultry could easily be grouped with other birds if they were
- slaughtered in the same place.
-
- ``Unlike cattle, which are large and can easily be marked, it is difficult
- to recognise which birds are halal,'' he said.
-
- Mr Ramjahn estimated there were about 60,000 Muslims in Hong Kong, of which
- about half are ethnic Chinese.
-
- With poultry dishes a Chinese favourite, centralised slaughtering could
- affect the eating habits of this group, too, he said.
-
- He appealed to Department of Health officials to make special arrangements
- in order for halal poultry to be kept separate.
- ``We hope the government can arrange a special slaughtering area for us to
- ensure that the birds we consume have been slaughtered in accordance with
- our religious rites,'' Mr Ramjahn said.
-
- Halal cattle and sheep are killed in public slaughterhouses.
-
- A spokesman for the Department of Health said the plan for centralised
- slaughtering was in a preliminary stage and subject to further studies.
-
- He said details such as special arrangements for religious groups were yet
- to be decided.
-
- ``But we are happy to listen to different opinions, especially from those
- whose interests would be affected by the plan,'' the spokesman said.
-
- Date: Sun, 22 Feb 1998 21:41:40 -0500 (EST)
- From: Debbie Leahy <DLEAHY@delphi.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: <US> Calls needed cancel exhibit
- Message-ID: <01ITW8ROHJ6Q96U5HU@delphi.com>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII
-
- URGE PIANO FACTORY MALL TO CANCEL EXOTIC ANIMAL EXHIBIT
-
- The Piano Factory, a mall in far west suburban Chicago, has invited Wildlife
- Inc. (breeder/exhibitor) to bring a menagerie of its exotic animals for public
- display and photo shots with the public, including a baby lion. Wal-Mart
- recently banned Wildlife Inc. from its stores for violating corporate policy
- after we notified Wal-Mart headquarters.
-
- There was at least one incident last year where one of their primates bit a
- child, and they have been warned by the USDA for endangering public safety.
- They are currently under investigation by the USDA regarding the death of a
- cougar, and former employees have come forward to report numerous instances of
- poor animal care.
-
- Please contact Piano Factory ASAP and ask them to cancel the exhibitits
- scheduled for early March. These curiosity displays are stressful for the
- animals, dangerous for the public, and perpetuates a disrespect for animals.
-
- Contact:
-
- Eileen Broderick, Mall Manager
- The Piano Factory
- 410 S. 1st Street
- St. Charles, IL 60174
- Tel: 630/584-2099 Fax: 630/584-2146
-
- ===========================
- Illinois Animal Action
- P.O. Box 507
- Warrenville, IL 60555
- Tel: 630/393-2935 Fax: 630/393-2941
- ============================
- Date: Sun, 22 Feb 1998 22:47:01 EST
- From: NOVENAANN@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Ringling's Barn Manager answers our questions...
- Message-ID: <6f675d02.34f0f137@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Tonight we went to videotape Ringling Bros. load the
- animals back onto the train. A reporter with the local paper
- was with us and he asked the afternoon barn manager a few
- questions after everyone else had left. What we found out was-
-
- The reporter asked the man which group of protesters was the worst and he said
- that DC protesters are the worst for Ringling because "they chain themselves
- in front of the elephants." Way to go Compassion Over Killing!!!!!!
-
- He also said that the animals are exercised when they go on the animals walk
- (which is twice during their run) and before shows. This is the only exercise
- they get in the winter. He seemed to think it was enough. I have heard that
- elephants can walk 25 miles a day in the wild.
-
- He said that he used to be with clyde beatty circus but he left because they
- abuse the animals.
-
- The animals were loaded onto the train cars at 9pm which was less than hour
- after the last show. The train was not leaving until 4 or 5 in the morning,
- and it would take them 10 hours to travel to Norfolk, Virginia which is an
- hour away by car. That is 17 or 18 hours that these animals are on the train-
- or more if they don't unload them right away.
-
- The man said that they are saving these animals because "these elephants would
- have to pull trees in India." But when we asked how many of the elephants were
- from the wild he said "none, they are all captive bred." He said that Ringling
- hasn't had an animal from the wild since "probably when P.T. Barnum was
- around." The night manager wouldn't give us his name because his boss would be
- angry. He shut up as soon as his boss arrived.
-
- When the ringling spokesperson was asked if the cars were heated and a few
- other questions he said he didn't know. He has been with the circus for 17
- years but he doesn't know? Instead he gave the reporter a phone # of the
- Ringling headquarters because they could answer that question.
-
- Alanna
- Richmond Animal Rights Network
- PO Box 4288, Richmond, Va 23220
- http://members.aol.com/novenaann/organiz2.htm
-
- Date: Sun, 22 Feb 1998 22:58:41 -0400 (EDT)
- From: Kimberly.Defeo@oberlin.edu
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: OHIO:FORUM on Animal Use call Kim 440-774-5047 for housing, etc.
- Message-ID: <01ITWBEM2ZOY00AMWV@OBERLIN.EDU>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII
-
- From:IN%"Reagan.Fletcher@oberlin.edu" 22-FEB-1998 17:28:16.50
- To:IN%"kimberly.defeo@oberlin.edu" "kimberly.defeo"
- CC:
- Subj:Forum Press Release (fwd)
-
- Return-path: <Reagan.Fletcher@oberlin.edu>
- Received: from OBERLIN.EDU by OBERLIN.EDU (PMDF V5.1-10 #24033)
- id <01ITVZWK4HK800ESMD@OBERLIN.EDU> for skd5333@OBERLIN.EDU; Sun,
- 22 Feb 1998 17:28:15 EDT
- Date: Sun, 22 Feb 1998 17:28:15 -0400 (EDT)
- From: Reagan.Fletcher@oberlin.edu
- Subject: Forum Press Release (fwd)
- To: "kimberly.defeo" <kimberly.defeo@oberlin.edu>
- Message-id: <Pine.PMDF.3.95.980222172804.690277B-100000@OBERLIN.EDU>
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-
-
-
- ---------- Forwarded message ----------
- Date: Mon, 09 Feb 1998 22:32:37 -0400 (EDT)
- From: Aaron.Simmons@oberlin.edu
- To: "reagan.fletcher" <reagan.fletcher@oberlin.edu>
- Subject: Forum Press Release (fwd)
-
-
-
- ---------- Forwarded message ----------
- Date: Mon, 09 Feb 1998 13:09:18 -0500
- From: Barbara Fuchsman <Barbara_Fuchsman@qmgate.cc.oberlin.edu>
- To: Jonathan Edmonds <jonathan.edmonds@oberlin.edu>,
- Joel Krier <joel.krier@oberlin.edu>,
- Aaron Simmons <aaron.simmons@oberlin.edu>,
- Chuck Thomas <charles.thomas@oberlin.edu>,
- Taylor Allen <Taylor_Allen@qmgate.cc.oberlin.edu>,
- Barbara Blodgett <Barbara_Blodgett@qmgate.cc.oberlin.edu>,
- Albert Borroni <Albert_Borroni@qmgate.cc.oberlin.edu>,
- Mark Braford <Mark_Braford@qmgate.cc.oberlin.edu>,
- Norman Care <Norman_Care@qmgate.cc.oberlin.edu>,
- Gigi Knight <Gigi_Knight@qmgate.cc.oberlin.edu>,
- Al MacKay <Al_MacKay@qmgate.cc.oberlin.edu>
- Subject: Forum Press Release
-
- 2/5/98 10:03 AM
-
- Enclosed and copied below is Betty Gabrielli's press release about the Forum
- that was sent out last week to very many organizations and area newpapers. If
- there are any professional journals or additional organizations that you would
- like to notify of this event, please let Betty or me know right away. Notice
- also the short biographies Betty has included. They may be useful to you in
- advertising other activities of the participants that involve your
- organization or department.
-
- Feb. 6, 1998
- RELEASE ON RECEIPTOBERLIN COLLEGE TO HOST NATIONAL FORUM
- ON ANIMAL USE IN SCIENCE AND MEDICINE
- EDITORS NOTE: Forum schedule & bios are attached; photos available upon
- request.
- OBERLIN-Is it ethical to use animals in science and medicine?
-
- Does a living entity have to possess awareness, intelligence and capacity for
- choice for this ethical question to be raised?
-
- If animal use is sometimes justified, what criteria or support are required
- in teaching and in research?
-
- To help provide responsible answers to these and related questions, Oberlin
- College will initiate a national discussion on its campus Monday, Feb. 23, and
- Tuesday, Feb. 24, under the auspices of the Mead-Swing Lectureship.
-
- Six internationally-recognized ethicists, philosophers and scientists will
- debate the pros and cons of "Animal Use in Science and Medicine: Ethics and
- Policy" in a free public forum.
-
- "Oberlin believes that unless there is a free and open debate by those who
- both understand and respect the position of all seriously engaged persons,
- there will not be any resolution of what has become a very heated and complex
- issue," says Clayton Koppes, Dean of Oberlin's College of Arts and Sciences.
-
- The distinguished presenters include Stuart Zola, research career scientist
- at the Veterans Medical Center and a professor of psychiatry and neuroscience
- at the University of California at San Diego; Andrew N. Rowan, senior vice
- president for research, education and international issues for the Humane
- Society of the United States; Thomas H. Regan, philosophy and religion
- department chair at North Carolina State University; Raymond G. Frey,
- professor of philosophy at Ohio's Bowling Green State University; eco-feminist
- Carol Adams, author of The Sexual Politics of Meat: A Feminist-Vegetarian
- Critical Theory; Jerrold Tannenbaum, an expert in veterinary ethics and
- animal care and clinical professor in environmental and population health at
- Tufts University.
-
- They will offer differing concepts of what is an animal; the basis for
- believing a given species does or does not feel pain; and the appropriate
- roles for animals in scientific/medical research. They will also address the
- implications of those concepts for policy and politics.
-
- The forum will include three plenary sessions followed by question-and-answer
- periods, a concluding panel discussion and meetings with students and faculty.
- For more information, contact Barbara Fuchsman at the Office of Sponsored
- Programs 440/775-8461.
- MORE
- ADD ONE
- FORUM SCHEDULE
-
- MONDAY, FEB. 23
-
- 4:30 p.m. Session I: "Scientific Considerations of Animal Use"
- Room 306, King Building (10 N. Professor St.)
-
- Stuart Zola, research scientist at the Veterans Medical
- Center;
- professor of psychiatry and neuroscience, University of
- California at San
- Diego
- Andrew N. Rowan, senior vice president, Humane
- Society of America
- Moderator:
- Lynda S. Payne, visiting instructor in history, Oberlin College
-
- 8-9:30 Session II: "Moral Considerations of Animal Use"
- Room 106, King Building (10 N. Professor St.)
-
- Thomas Regan, philosophy and religion dept. chair,North Carolina
- State
- University
- Raymond G. Frey, professor of philosophy, Bowling Green
- State
- University
- Moderator:
- Norman Care, professor of philosophy, Oberlin College
-
- TUESDAY, FEB. 24
-
- 4:30 p.m. Session III: "The Politics of the Human-Animal Relationship"
- Room 306, King Building (10 N. Professor St.)
-
- Carol Adams, eco-feminist; author of The Sexual Politics
- of Meat: A
- Feminist-Vegetarian Critical Theory
- Jerrold Tannenbaum, expert in veterinary ethics/ animal care and use
- policy; clinical professor of environmental and population health,
- Tufts University
- Moderator:
- Barbara Blodgett, visiting instructor in religion, Oberlin College
-
- 8-10 p.m. Session IV: Panel discussion
- Room 11, Kettering Hall of Science (130 W. Lorain St.)
- Panelists:
- Stuart Zola, Andrew N. Rowen. Thomas H. Regan
- R. G. Frey, Carol Adams and Jerrold Tannenbaum
- Moderator:
- David Love, director of sponsored programs, Oberlin College
-
- MORE
-
- ADD TWO BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION
-
- STUART ZOLA is a research scientist at the Veterans Medical Center and a
- professor of psychiatry and neuroscience at the University of California at
- San Diego. He has conducted work with humans and nonhuman primates that has
- led to the successful establishment of a model of human amnesia in the monkey,
- and has identified a neural system of memory in the temporal lobe of the
- brain. Identification of the specific sites in the brain important for memory
- has opened the way for more detailed neurobiological investigations and is
- relevant to issues of how memory is organized in the brain and to issues of
- memory impairment associated with a wide range of human conditions, such as
- aging, Alzheimer's disease and stroke. He served as chair of the Committee on
- Animals in Research of the 26,000-member Society for Neuroscience, chair and
- director of the University's graduate program in neuroscience and chair of the
- Animal Subjects Committee.
-
- ANDREW N. ROWAN was named senior vice president for research, education and
- international issues for the Humane Society of the United States in 1997. He
- is on the advisory board for the Johns Hopkins Center for Alternatives to
- Animal Testing and the board for Public Responsibility in Medicine and
- Research. From 1983 to 1997, he served on the faculty of Tufts University,
- where he taught bio-chemistry and was responsible for the development of the
- school's programs on animals in society. He was director of the Tufts Center
- for Animals and Public Policy and professor and chair of the University's
- environmental studies department. He also has worked with FRAME (Fund for the
- Replacement of Animals in Medical Experiments) and was associate director of
- the Humane Society's Institute for the Study of Animal Problems. Rowan is the
- author of Of Mice, Models and Men, The Animal Research Controversy; founding
- editor of Anthozoos, a journal on human-animal environment interactions; and
- editor of People and Animals Sharing the World; Wildlife Conservation, Zoos
- and Animal Protection; and Living with Wildlife. He received a bachelor of
- science degree from Cape Town University and M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from
- Oxford University, England.
-
- R. G. FREY is professor of philosophy at Bowling Green State University, where
- he teaches courses in moral, political, and legal philosophy and 18th-century
- British philosophy. He is the author of numerous articles and books in
- ethical theory, applied ethics and social/political theory. A number of his
- essays focusing on the use of animals in medical experimentation will be
- published in the forthcoming Ethics, Animals, and Medical Experimentation. He
- also is the author of Interests and Rights: The Case Against Animals; and
- Rights, Killing, and Suffering: Moral Vegetarianism and Applied Ethics. He is
- the editor of Utility and Rights and has co-edited Social Policy and Conflict
- Resolution; Violence, Terrorism and Justice; and Value, Welfare and Morality.
- Forthcoming are books on Joseph Butler and an edition of Butler's ethical
- writings; a volume of essays on topics in applied ethics; and the first of two
- volumes on utilitarianism. A book on euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide
- is in process. He is senior research fellow at the Social Philosophy Center
- in Bowling Green, a fellow of the Joseph and Rose Kennedy Institute of Ethics
- at Georgetown University and a fellow of the Westminster Institute of Ethics
- and Public Policy at the University of Western Ontario. He received the Ph.D.
- degree from Oxford University, England.
- MORE
-
- ADD THREE
- BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION
-
- THOMAS REGAN, who has taught philosophy since 1967 at North Carolina State
- University, has established himself as one of the most respected philosophers
- in the world. He is general editor of The Heritage Project, a 14-volume series
- on the foundations of philosophy and ethics, and Ethics in Action, a series
- devoted to the major moral issues of the day. His textbooks on philosophy are
- widely used and, as an authority on the issue of animal rights, he has
- appeared on the Today Show and has given lectures and presentations to the
- United Nations and the U.S. Congress. He is the author of what is considered
- one of the most important works on moral philosophy in recent years: The Case
- for Animal Rights. Among his other books are Understanding Philosophy,
- Earthbound, Matters of Life and Death, and Animal Rights and Human
- Obligations (co-editor). He has served on the faculties of the University of
- Virginia and Sweet Briar College. He received M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from the
- University of Virginia.
-
- CAROL ADAMS is the author of The Sexual Politics of Meat: A
- Feminist-Vegetarian Critical Theory, which won the Continuum Women's Studies
- Awards in 1989. Adams, who has served on national commissions on domestic
- violence, developed one of the country's first hotlines for battered women, in
- the 1970s. She was executive director of New York's Chautauqua County Rural
- Ministry, an advocacy and service agency addressing issues of poverty, racism
- and sexism, and also a visiting lecturer at Southern Methodist University.
- She is on the advisory board of Feminists for Animal Rights. Among her books
- are Beyond Animal Rights: A Feminist Caring Ethic; Violence Against Women and
- Children: A Christian Theological Sourcebook; Animals and Women: Feminist
- Theoretical Explorations (co-editor); Woman-Battering; Neither Man Nor Beast:
- Feminism and The Defense of Animals; and Ecofeminism and The Sacred. Her
- writing has been included in the collection Transforming a Rape Culture and
- her articles have appeared in The Lesbian Reader, Animals, Ms., and The
- Newsletter of the International Association Against Painful Experiments on
- Animals.
-
- JERROLD TANNENBAUM, a former assistant district attorney in New York City, is
- currently clinical professor in the department of environmental and population
- health at Tufts University School of Veterinary Medicine, where he teaches
- veterinary and animal law and ethics and lectures on various issues in ethics,
- law, and bioethics. He is the author of Veterinary Ethics -the first and only
- compre-hensive book on veterinary ethics published in any language. It is a
- required text in veterinary ethics courses at a number of veterinary schools
- in the U.S. and Canada. He also has written numerous papers on veterinary and
- animal law and ethics. He speaks frequently to veterinarians, veterinary
- students, scientists, and humane societies on ethical and legal issues
- relating to animals, and was a founder and is a former president of the
- Society for Veterinary Medical Ethics. He was an assistant professor of
- philosophy at the University of California at Santa Barbara. A graduate of
- Harvard Law School, he did his graduate work in philosophy at the Rockefeller
- University and Cornell University.
- ###
-
- Media Contact: Betty Gabrielli (440/775-8474) 2/6/98 #39 bg
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Attachment Converted: ATTACHMENT DELETED
-
-
-
- Date: Mon, 23 Feb 1998 12:17:14 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (TH) Activists worried over zoo project
- Message-ID: <199802230417.MAA06703@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >Bangkok Post
- 23 Feb 98
-
- Activists worried over zoo project
-
- Call to give NGOs role in monitoring
- construction work
-
- Kanittha Inchukul
-
- A520-million-baht project to develop Dusit Zoo, the oldest zoo
- in the country, has raised concerns among animal rights activists
- about its impact to animals in captivity there.
-
- The Zoological Park Organisation Board has approved in
- principle a proposal by the King Power Development Company
- to develop the zoo including construction of a five-storey car
- park for 1,000 vehicles, a fresh water aquarium, a restaurant as
- well as other facilities.
-
- The car park is planned on the workers' housing area. The
- aquarium is planned around Koh Nok - or the bird island -
- which houses a large number of birds of various varieties. A food
- centre will also be built there.
-
- The contract is not yet signed, pending project approval from the
- board and the cabinet, said a senior zoological official.
-
- A Thai language daily newspaper has been running a series of
- articles strongly critical of the project, alleging zoo
- officials of
- intending to turn the zoo into an amusement park.
-
- Roger Lohanan, manager of Thai Society for the Prevention of
- Cruelty to Animals, cautioned that the zoo board consider the
- project carefully and pay special attention to the impacts to
- animals during construction.
-
- While no amusement park is planned as alleged by the Thai
- newspaper, Mr Roger said impact to the animals is inevitable
- once construction begins.
-
- The construction of the aquarium which will take place
- underneath the water surface around the bird island, for instance,
- will likely result in the discharge of pollutants into the
- existing fish
- ponds if no preventive measures are specified in the contract, he
- said.
-
- Mr Roger complained that zoo officials have provided little detail
- of the project to the public and animal rights organisations. He
- called for the zoo authorities to allow non-governmental
- organisations a role in monitoring construction activities.
-
- Wildlife Fund Thailand secretary general Pisit na Patalung
- expressed concern about the planned car park which would be
- built in the zoo near Chitrlada Palace. It would be incompatible
- with the surrounding environment, he said.
-
- Both animal rights activists warned the zoo administrators to
- ensure that the project be developed for the benefit of the
- captive animals there.
-
- Explaining the reason behind the project initiative, Zoological
- Park Organisation director general Usum Nimmanhaeminda said
- the zoo has received many complaints from visitors about traffic
- and parking problems.
-
- More than 1,000 vehicles enter the 118-rai zoo every weekend.
- The situation becomes chaotic when special events take place in
- the area such as a graduation ceremony in nearby Suan Amporn.
- The influx of vehicles creates traffic chaos and the vehicles park
- in a disorderly manner along the roads. Their exhaust fumes
- polluted the air and expose the animals to health risk.
-
- Mr Usum said the Dusit zoo has not been allocated enough
- budget to provide facilities for vehicles and visitors so it is
- necessary to seek a private company to invest for these
- facilities.
- The plan has been approved by the board and it has been
- ensured that it will not be harmful to animals and will
- benefit zoo
- visitors.
-
- Zoo workers generally agree with the project even though the
- area which is currently their living quarters will be taken over.
- They hope the zoo management would take care of their housing
- needs.
-
- However, some workers are worried that the project will have
- an adverse effect on the zoo's greenery and large trees may have
- to be felled to pave way for certain facilities such as
- restaurants.
-
- An employee of the King Power Development Company said
- the future of the project depends on the decision of the board
- which has considered this project many times until the project is
- adjusted to the satisfaction of the board members.
-
- Article copyright Post Publishing Public Co., Ltd 1998
- Reprinted for non-commercial use only.
- Website: http://www.bangkokpost.net
-
-
-
-
-
- </pre>
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