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- More British meat products seized
-
- OTTAWA (CP) - Illegally imported British meat products have been seized from
- six more stores by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, and there will
- likely be more as a nation-wide blitz continues.
-
- The survey of retailers was prompted by the discovery of unapproved British
- meat products - including chicken, pork and beef products - in two British
- specialty stores in Calgary.
-
- By Friday, similar products were found in stores in Halifax, Richmond,
- B.C., and four stores around Toronto.
-
- Officials said names of retailers and the dollar value of the seized
- products would not be released immediateely.
-
- The products were removed as a precaution because there's no way of
- knowing whether the meat was prepared to conform to Canadian standards,
- said Lou Skrinar, an agency spokesman.
-
- "This is serious stuff," said Skrinar.
-
- "I'm not saying that anybody who eats this stuff is going to drop dead. By
- the same token I couldn't tell a person it's okay because I don't know
- enough about it. This is the bottom of the problem."
-
- The agency is advising consumers to check labels of meat products. If
- they're made in the UK, they should be viewed with suspicion and if they do
- not have bilingual labels, they were more than likely illegally imported and
- should not be consumed.
-
- The CFIA is also working with Canada Customs to determine how the products
- made it into Canada without being discovered.
-
- Skrinar said it is likely the retailers were independently importing
- relatively small quantities which would not have raised suspicions of
- customs officials.
-
- Canada, along with other countries have banned British beef since a link
- was suspected in 1996 between eating beef infected with mad cow disease and
- a debilitating human disease called Creutzfeld-Jakob.
-
- But that is only one factor in the current sweep, said Skrinar.
-
- "It's about any meat product. Obviously the beef is going to be a little
- more sensitive, but it's being dealt with within the context of the illegal
- importation."
-
-
- Date: Sun, 8 Mar 1998 15:17:09 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (UK) Uri Geller channels veggie mind power to stop offensive
- poster campaign
- Message-ID: <199803080717.PAA00670@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- From:
- http://www.vegsoc.org/press/uri.html
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
- PRESS RELEASE
- March 6th 1998
- SUCCESS!
-
- Uri Geller channels veggie mind power to stop offensive poster
- campaign
- Uri Geller today succeeded in disabling a mechanical counter, used as part
- of a Dansih Bacon campaign, using the power of his mind. Uri Geller was
- helped by vegetarians from the Vegetarian Society and elsewhere who
- channelled their thoughts to help Uri Geller increase his powers.
-
- The animated poster on Cromwell Road, London SW5 is part of a 2 million
- pound campaign, organised by the Danish Bacon and Meat Council. The poster
- showing a picture of rashers being grilled, features a counter depicting the
- effect of the poster on passing traffic. The number of vegetarians, featured
- on the
- counter, slowly falls as the poster supposedly 'converts' them back to meat.
-
- "I can take a joke like any other vegetarian" said Uri Geller "but I found
- this campaign deeply offensive. The Vegetarian Society and I decided that
- the only legal option was to use my brain power to stop the counter
- mechanism and that is just what I did. I don't know exactly what happened
- whether the mechanism exploded or was bent or twisted but it stopped. I had
- witnesses with me, who took
- photographic and film evidence. Meat-free mind power really does work!"
-
- The Vegetarian Society is delighted at the news that Uri Geller has
- succeeded in helping end this offensive campaign.
-
- "It is obvious that vegetarians not only have great taste when it comes to
- food but they also have amazing will power. The meat industry's gimmicks
- have no chance with such veggie power." said Stve Connor, Head of Public
- Affairs for the Vegetarian Society.
-
- The Vegetarian Society believes that the targeting of vegetarians for bacon
- promotion, reveals just how desperate the meat industry is for customers.
- Most pigs in the UK are intensively reared and confined throughout their
- lives. 300,000 pigs are killed each week in the UK for food.
-
- For further information call Chris Dessent, Press Officer, or Steve
- Connor, Head of Public Affairs, in the Press Office on 0161 928 0793
-
- Date: Sun, 8 Mar 1998 15:19:25 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (UK) Demand for enquiry into COMA report
- Message-ID: <199803080719.PAA17114@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- For more information, following the "more" link at
- http://www.vegsoc.org/press/coma.html
- -----------------------------------------------------------
- PRESS RELEASE
- March 5th 1998
-
- COMA Report: Demand for an enquiry
-
- The Vegetarian Society today called for an independent inquiry into the
- COMA report, published today, on the 'Nutritional Aspects of the Development
- of Cancer'. The Society believes the report's recommendations were changed
- after unprecedented pressure from the meat industry and as a result of
- the alarming nature of the original findings. It is the Society's opinion
- that only via an independent inquiry will the true risks of the association
- between meat and cancer be published.
-
- "The acceptable level of meat consumption, in terms of minimising cancer
- risk, remains unknown. Thereport has only led to further consumer confusion
- and a completely understandable lack of confidence in meat. The discrepancy
- over the level of meat acceptable for good health, brings into doubt not
- only the
- legitimacy of the report but goes to show just how unsure the medical
- profession is over the safety of meat" said Steve Connor, Head of Public
- Affairs for The Vegetarian Society.
-
- The Society believes it is time for the Department of Health to promote a
- vegetarian diet. The report recommendations highlight the need to reduce red
- meat consumption, eat more fresh fruit and vegetables and increase the fibre
- intake in your diet. The Society believes 'vegetarianism' is the one dietary
- group that
- fits the report recommendations.
-
- "The Department of Health has a responsibility to promote a healthy diet to
- the nation. Public money must now be directed away from supporting a dying
- meat industry and towards promotion of a diet known to be healthy" concluded
- Steve Connor.
-
- Notes to Editors:
-
- The Vegetarian Society ran a high profile national newspaper
- advertising campaign in Autumn 1997,
- which highlighted the established links between meat eating and cancer.
-
- For further information call Chris Dessent, Press Officer, or Steve
- Connor, Head of Public Affairs, in the Press Office on 0161
- 928 0793
-
- Date: Sat, 07 Mar 1998 23:00:06
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980307230006.117f3b08@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Sunday, March 8th, 1998
-
- Hunt Bill could lose Labour ú1 million
- By Tom Baldwin, Political Correspondent
-
- ANIMAL welfare groups are planning to withdraw their funding to the Labour
- Party following the Government's refusal to support backbench attempts to
- ban hunting.
-
- At the last election the Political Animal Lobby (PAL) gave ú1million to the
- Labour Party because it was convinced that Tony Blair would back large
- parts of its agenda. However, they were disappointed by the Government's
- failure to act decisively against vivisection and they believe that
- ministers may also be seeking to water down international efforts to ban
- the trade in ivory.
-
- Now they are planning a new strategy. They will slash funding for political
- parties' election campaigns and use their considerable war chest to target
- individual opponents instead.
- These will include leading Cabinet ministers such as Jack Straw, the Home
- Secretary, who has suggested that foxhunting could escape a ban for 50 years.
-
- Anger will intensify this week when the Government faces a political
- backlash over its refusal to grant extra parliamentary time to the
- backbencher Bill to outlaw hunting with dogs. Although the proposal has the
- support of most MPs, it is doomed to be "talked out" by opponents in the
- Commons on Friday.
-
- PAL's sister organisation, the International Fund for Animal Welfare, is
- already drawing up plans to exert new pressure on ministers and MPs who
- have opposed the Bill. Many activists
- have contrasted the success of the Countryside March last weekend in
- influencing government thinking with the apparent failure of their own
- low-key approach.
-
- One official said: "We have played it by the book and have not sought to
- embarrass the Government, but we may now need to look at doing this in
- other ways." Among the tactics under consideration is direct mailshots to
- contituents and local newspapers, highlighting the behaviour of particular
- MPs. There will also be concerted lobbying, with backbenchers being
- mobilised to put ministers on the spot - beginning with this week's meeting
- of the Parliamentary Labour Party.
-
- Mr Straw is increasingly the focus of their anger after saying the
- Government had no mandate to ban hunting and should play no part in helping
- the Bill to outlaw the sport. Ian Gibson, a backbench Labour MP, said: "I
- think that parliamentary democracy says we should get it through and that's
- why we're MPs. I think if what he said is true, then it was a stab in the
- back."
-
- Jack Straw has been leading a group of senior ministers opposed to the Bill
- becoming law. Robin Cook, the Foreign Secretary, as well as Jack
- Cunningham, the agriculture minister, and Peter Mandelson, the Minister
- without Portfolio, have also applied pressure behind the scenes to make
- sure it does not receive parliamentary time.
-
- Last week The Sunday Telegraph revealed that the Home Secretary is
- determined to stop any attempt to revive the Bill at a later stage in this
- Parliament. Backbenchers are planning to table the hunting ban as an
- amendment to a Criminal Justice Bill expected within the next two years,
- but Mr Straw is understood to be examining ways of drafting this
- legislation so that it cannot be changed in this way.
-
- Yesterday anti-fox-hunt groups, funded by IFAW, released a Mori opinion
- poll commissioned in Mr Straw's own Blackburn constituency, showing 77 per
- cent of those surveyed believed
- that their MP should support the Bill to outlaw hunting with dogs. Little
- more than one in 10 said they opposed the proposal. Some ministers are
- believed to be backing calls for a
- compromise to take the heat out of the issue, in which an independent
- inquiry would be set up to examine cruelty in all field sports and decide
- if hunts could be licensed.
-
- The plan has been suggested by the cross-party Middle Way group headed by
- Labour MP Kate Hoey. She said yesterday: "This debate is not going to go
- away. The Government should surely seek a solution which can satisfy most
- people." However, officials in both Downing Street and the Home Office last
- night said they had not discussed any plans for an inquiry or a Royal
- Commission into fox hunting.
-
- Members of the Hunt Saboteurs' Association have indicated to The Telegraph
- that they now plan to step up their illegal activity against field sports
- following what they believe is "the failure of the parliamentary route".
- One said yesterday: "Our protests have been more effective than the antics
- in the House of Commons. The public want this barbarism stopped, most MPs
- want it stopped. In our view they are already outlaws and we'll stop them."
-
- But Mike Foster, the Labour MP behind the Bill to ban hunting, yesterday
- appealed to supporters of his Bill to be patient, saying: "I've always
- believed that hunting with dogs is likely to be stopped before the end of
- this Parliament. There is no need to take direct action."
-
- He is planning to ask Tony Blair for a meeting next week to discuss the
- Government's plans for future legislation on the issue. However, he said he
- would be willing to discuss an
- inquiry into field sports "only if there was a moratorium on hunting in the
- mean time."
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- Disclaimer: Articles from the Electronic Telegraph are posted for
- informational purposes. Any views expressed therein are those of the
- Telegraph, and may not agree with those of 'Animal Voices' or anyone
- connected with 'Animal Voices'. I will be pleased to provide furthe
- information, where possible, but comments about the content should be
- addressed to the ET and not myself.
- Date: Sat, 07 Mar 1998 23:06:31
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] MPs act to block pony slaughter
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980307230631.117f9d92@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Sunday, March 8th, 1998
-
- MPs act to block pony slaughter
- By Catherine Elsworth
-
- A LOOPHOLE in the law means that New Forest ponies are being herded into
- lorries and sent on 1,000-mile journeys so that they can be sold for meat
- in France.
-
- The ponies, bought at animal markets for as little as ú3, are taken to
- Scotland in trucks, shipped to Northern Ireland and then driven south to
- Rosslare or Cork to be ferried to France and Belgium for slaughter.
-
- The elaborate route is designed to foil British laws which require all
- horses exported live to be worth more than ú220 and to have an official
- export licence. The Minimum Values Order is designed to prevent the export
- of British horses for the cheap horsemeat trade while still allowing
- racehorses and pets to travel. However, the rules do not apply in Ireland.
-
- Now MPs are urging the Government to legislate to block the loophole.
- Twenty-five MPs have so far signed an early day motion tabled by Robert
- Syms (Poole) and Julian Lewis (New Forest East).
-
- The motion "notes with concern the trade in exporting New Forest ponies to
- France for meat, and that many dealers take these ponies on 1,000-mile
- journeys round Britain to Stranraer to
- be shipped to Southern Ireland and then to France to avoid the requirement
- for export licences". It calls on the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries
- and Food to to crack down on the trade.
-
- Martin Taggart, director of welfare at the British Horse Society, said he
- was concerned by the practice but obtaining evidence was problematic. The
- RSPCA had also been investigating. He said: "MAFF and the Irish government
- are extremely interested in this. If it is happening, it's absolutely
- disgraceful and I would be prepared to do whatever it takes to stop it
- happening."
-
- One butcher in the New Forest area, who declined to be named, said he knew
- of dealers who exported ponies to France via Ireland. "They buy them for a
- few quid at pony sales, bunch them up and take them up to Stranraer in
- trucks," he said. "It's local people - but not forest people - who do it.
-
- "They also deal in cattle and pigs. I don't know how much they make. You
- can get about ú30 for a slaughtered horse, but they like them fresh and
- with a French or Belgian stamp on it, so it must be more than that. They
- wouldn't go all that way for nothing. But it's a long way for the poor
- little things to travel. They take them up live but whether they all
- survive or not, I don't
- know."
-
- Peter Stevenson, of Compassion in World Farming, said: "There's nothing to
- stop somebody taking horses from the New Forest to Northern Ireland and
- then down to Southern Ireland for
- export to the Continent. Shipping them across to Stranraer would be lawful.
- But I'm appalled by it. It's clearly cruel and if this loophole is being
- abused, then the Government should be
- making sure legislation is in place to stop it."
-
- One horse welfare worker said: "These people are making a fortune. My
- understanding is that they take 20 to 70 at a time up to Stranraer or
- Preston, then over to Ireland. I heard about one shipment where they found
- three of the ponies dead and 15 not fit to travel. These people will always
- find a way round the law to make money."
-
- MPs supporting the motion include Alan Clark, (Kensington and Chelsea),
- Martin Bell (Tatton) and David Amess (Southend West).
-
- Mr Syms said he had acted following letters from constituents.He has
- written to Elliot Morley, the minister responsible for animal welfare. He
- said: "I think it is disgraceful that people can
- get away with this trade by exploiting a loophole and I have written to the
- minister asking him to act."
-
- A MAFF spokesman said: "There is provision to prevent the export of horses
- for immediate slaughter but this does not apply to ponies taken from Great
- Britain to Northern Ireland. We would not hesitate to take action if there
- is evidence that this is happening."
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- Disclaimer: Articles from the Electronic Telegraph are posted for
- informational purposes. Any views expressed therein are those of the
- Telegraph, and may not agree with those of 'Animal Voices' or anyone
- connected with 'Animal Voices'. I will be pleased to provide furthe
- information, where possible, but comments about the content should be
- addressed to the ET and not myself.
- Date: Sat, 07 Mar 1998 23:16:46
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Cut-price vet attacks 'greed' over pet jabs
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980307231646.117fcde0@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Sunday, March 8th, 1998
-
- Cut-price vet attacks 'greed' over pet jabs
- By Andrew Morgan
-
- A VETERINARY surgeon has broken ranks with her profession and accused
- "greedy" colleagues of inflating their bills to unjustifiable levels to
- boost profits.
-
- Judy Walker, a vet for 16 years, has set up a clinic offering vaccinations
- for less than half the price of other practitioners. She claims that most
- fellow vets inflate their bills with hidden
- extras. Prices have become so high, she says, that the majority of pet
- owners cannot afford basic vaccinations and treatments.
-
- Colleagues have been so angered at her moves that they have tried to get
- the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons to investigate her reduced prices.
- Ms Walker spays bitches for ú35
- while some vets charge more than ú100. Her ú20 bill for dog castrations is
- far less than the average ú70-ú80 elsewhere.
-
- Kitten vaccinations against two main diseases - cat flu and enteritis -
- cost ú20, compared with ú45 in general practice. An anti- leukaemia vaccine
- is ú14 compared with ú30. She is
- offering a course of injections for puppies at her practice in Coventry for
- just ú17.50 - compared with ú45 charged by most other vets. The
- vaccinations protect against the five deadly diseases of distemper,
- hepatitis, leptospirosis, parvo virus and parainfluenza.
-
- Ms Walker, who accuses colleagues of "greed" through overpricing, began the
- cut-price vaccinations in Coventry last week. She will be offering the
- service in Birmingham from tomorrow. Her practice, the Pets Vaccination
- Clinic, has proved so successful that up to 40 pets a day are brought in,
- compared with only a handful at other practices.
-
- She agrees that many vets have higher overheads than her, but says they
- have more clients and their income is bigger. She said: "Over the years,
- they have chosen to overcharge for
- vaccinations. I think that some vets see their business slipping away with
- me around, but there's nothing to stop them charging the same. I just want
- to ensure that we stop pets from dying. I wanted to make low-cost
- vaccinations available to every household pet because many people don't
- have them done because they're too expensive.
-
- "Other vets see me as a rebel. But I feel I can help people a lot by
- limiting myself to vaccinations and neutering, putting the basics in reach
- of everybody." She claims that as many as 70 per cent of her clients would
- never have had their pets vaccinated if her service was not available. Many
- vets belong to the 1,450-strong Society of Practising Veterinary Surgeons -
- "Spivs" as some know it. Last week, about 70 attended a seven-day
- conference in the French Alps, with skiing thrown in.
-
- SPVS circulates examples of average regional fees to its members and
- charges are often discussed among vets in an area. However, they deny
- price-fixing. Senior vets in some
- London practices earn more than ú90,000 a year, often in addition to perks
- such as a car, free petrol and the payment of telephone bills.
-
- When Ms Walker sold her senior partnership in a practice in Leamington Spa,
- Warwickshire, four years ago, she was earning ú65,000 a year, and had the
- running costs of a sports car paid for. She said: "That's a lot of money.
- Vets are able to do that because of the huge mark-up they include in their
- bills."
-
- She explained how bills in one medium-sized town practice in the Midlands,
- are calculated. The bills were drawn to her attention when an elderly woman
- came into her clinic to
- compare prices. The "raw cost" of an annual booster injection for a dog -
- which covers the animal against the major diseases - is about ú4. But the
- bill sent to the client exceeded ú40.
-
- "The cost of the booster vaccination had been marked up from ú4 to ú26,"
- she said. "Then an 'injection fee' of ú2 was added.That was the charge for
- filling the syringe and giving the
- injection." Added to that, Ms Walker said, was a "consultation fee" of ú11.
- The client had also been "strongly recommended" to give her pet de-worming
- tablets - another ú4. The basic cost of the tablets is about 50 pence.
-
- "It's standard practice for the price of these injections to be given as a
- flat fee," Ms Walker said. "On the whole, the cost is never broken down so
- that the pet owner never knows how much the cost of the treatment is marked
- up."
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- Disclaimer: Articles from the Electronic Telegraph are posted for
- informational purposes. Any views expressed therein are those of the
- Telegraph, and may not agree with those of 'Animal Voices' or anyone
- connected with 'Animal Voices'. I will be pleased to provide furthe
- information, where possible, but comments about the content should be
- addressed to the ET and not myself.
- Date: Sat, 07 Mar 1998 23:20:45
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] 'We need the mark-up to cover overheads and equipment'
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980307232045.1fff1764@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Sunday, March 8th, 1998
-
- 'We need the mark-up to cover overheads and equipment'
- By Tim Reid
-
- THE Society of Practising Veterinary Surgeons denies that the profession
- overcharges.
-
- It says that the mark-up is necessary to cover the cost of overheads and
- equipment. Judy Walker's fellow vets claim that her business offers limited
- services and has tiny overheads
- compared with their own. The Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons confirmed
- that it had received representations over Ms Walker's clinic, including her
- low prices.
-
- But it says there are no statutory charges for services and its remit does
- not include fees. Alan Leyland, a Merseyside vet and the president-elect of
- the SPVS, said: "Price variations can be justified because you will get
- more in terms of facilities if you pay more.
-
- "Most clients aren't too price-conscious if they feel that they've had a
- good service. Vets overall aren't overpaid when you consider the hours that
- they work. Nobody can do the job
- thoroughly at a low fee level."
-
- Another leading SPVS member said that his charges included a follow-up
- consultation several weeks after the vaccination. His costs also included
- "puppy parties" allowing the dogs to "socialise with each other in the
- surgery after their injections".
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- Disclaimer: Articles from the Electronic Telegraph are posted for
- informational purposes. Any views expressed therein are those of the
- Telegraph, and may not agree with those of 'Animal Voices' or anyone
- connected with 'Animal Voices'. I will be pleased to provide furthe
- information, where possible, but comments about the content should be
- addressed to the ET and not myself.
- Date: Sat, 07 Mar 1998 23:30:21
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Tree rustlers strip garden county's orchards
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980307233021.1fff19fc@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- [Is this a sign of the times? In the days gone by, it used to be cattle and
- sheep that were rustled]
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Sunday, March 8th, 1998
-
- Tree rustlers strip garden county's orchards
- By Peter Birkett
-
- FRUIT growers in Kent, many already struggling for survival after losing
- most of last year's crop to the frost, are now losing whole orchards to
- tree rustlers.
-
- In recent weeks thousands of young fruit trees have been dug up and taken
- away in the night by expert thieves who steal trees by named variety and,
- possibly, to order.
-
- One small grower, Roger Butler, who invested in replanting two acres of his
- 20 acre fruit farm at Norton, near Faversham, with apples, was robbed of
- 400 trees worth ú1,200 in one night. Another farmer, Paul Mansfield, who
- grows 1,200 acres of fruit near Canterbury, has lost 5,800 trees worth
- almost ú17,000 in two raids on his orchards and tree nursery.
-
- The outbreak of tree rustling - there have been at least five large raids
- in a month - coincides with the annual orchard planting season and comes at
- a time when young fruit trees are in short supply.
-
- For Mr Butler the loss of two acres of newly planted orchard has come as a
- huge blow. "I bought the farm to fulfil my lifelong dream of becoming a
- fruit grower," he said. "But last year I lost most of my apples to the late
- spring frosts and now I have probably lost a whole year of my investment in
- the future. The thieves just came in the night. There must have been a lot of
- them because removing a whole orchard takes a lot of work. They knew
- exactly what they wanted, they took 300 Cox trees and 50 each of the
- pollinators, Discovery and John O'Gold."
-
- Mr Mansfield lost a total of 5,800 plum, apple and cherry trees when the
- thieves struck 10 days ago. "I am absolutely mortified," he said. "They
- took 5,000 of the trees from my nursery. Then they removed 800 which were
- newly planted in an orchard."
-
- The most baffling element of the orchard crime-wave is who is buying "hot"
- fruit trees in such huge numbers. "I believe we would know if other farmers
- were planting up with stolen trees so the thieves must be selling them in
- small numbers, perhaps though [car] boot fairs or maybe farm shops," Mr
- Butler said.
-
- Kent police urged anyone offered cheap fruit trees to report it. "We are
- trying to find the outlets being used by the criminals," said a spokesman.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- Disclaimer: Articles from the Electronic Telegraph are posted for
- informational purposes. Any views expressed therein are those of the
- Telegraph, and may not agree with those of 'Animal Voices' or anyone
- connected with 'Animal Voices'. I will be pleased to provide furthe
- information, where possible, but comments about the content should be
- addressed to the ET and not myself.
- Date: Sat, 07 Mar 1998 23:59:26
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980307235926.0e3fa450@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- [Sorry, don't know what happened here - this posting was sent with a
- subject header, but came back to me without one. I'll try again, with
- header put back on]
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Sunday, March 8th, 1998
-
- Hunt Bill could lose Labour ú1 million
- By Tom Baldwin, Political Correspondent
-
- ANIMAL welfare groups are planning to withdraw their funding to the Labour
- Party following the Government's refusal to support backbench attempts to
- ban hunting.
-
- At the last election the Political Animal Lobby (PAL) gave ú1million to the
- Labour Party because it was convinced that Tony Blair would back large
- parts of its agenda. However, they were disappointed by the Government's
- failure to act decisively against vivisection and they believe that
- ministers may also be seeking to water down international efforts to ban
- the trade in ivory.
-
- Now they are planning a new strategy. They will slash funding for political
- parties' election campaigns and use their considerable war chest to target
- individual opponents instead.
- These will include leading Cabinet ministers such as Jack Straw, the Home
- Secretary, who has suggested that foxhunting could escape a ban for 50 years.
-
- Anger will intensify this week when the Government faces a political
- backlash over its refusal to grant extra parliamentary time to the
- backbencher Bill to outlaw hunting with dogs. Although the proposal has the
- support of most MPs, it is doomed to be "talked out" by opponents in the
- Commons on Friday.
-
- PAL's sister organisation, the International Fund for Animal Welfare, is
- already drawing up plans to exert new pressure on ministers and MPs who
- have opposed the Bill. Many activists
- have contrasted the success of the Countryside March last weekend in
- influencing government thinking with the apparent failure of their own
- low-key approach.
-
- One official said: "We have played it by the book and have not sought to
- embarrass the Government, but we may now need to look at doing this in
- other ways." Among the tactics under consideration is direct mailshots to
- contituents and local newspapers, highlighting the behaviour of particular
- MPs. There will also be concerted lobbying, with backbenchers being
- mobilised to put ministers on the spot - beginning with this week's meeting
- of the Parliamentary Labour Party.
-
- Mr Straw is increasingly the focus of their anger after saying the
- Government had no mandate to ban hunting and should play no part in helping
- the Bill to outlaw the sport. Ian Gibson, a backbench Labour MP, said: "I
- think that parliamentary democracy says we should get it through and that's
- why we're MPs. I think if what he said is true, then it was a stab in the
- back."
-
- Jack Straw has been leading a group of senior ministers opposed to the Bill
- becoming law. Robin Cook, the Foreign Secretary, as well as Jack
- Cunningham, the agriculture minister, and Peter Mandelson, the Minister
- without Portfolio, have also applied pressure behind the scenes to make
- sure it does not receive parliamentary time.
-
- Last week The Sunday Telegraph revealed that the Home Secretary is
- determined to stop any attempt to revive the Bill at a later stage in this
- Parliament. Backbenchers are planning to table the hunting ban as an
- amendment to a Criminal Justice Bill expected within the next two years,
- but Mr Straw is understood to be examining ways of drafting this
- legislation so that it cannot be changed in this way.
-
- Yesterday anti-fox-hunt groups, funded by IFAW, released a Mori opinion
- poll commissioned in Mr Straw's own Blackburn constituency, showing 77 per
- cent of those surveyed believed
- that their MP should support the Bill to outlaw hunting with dogs. Little
- more than one in 10 said they opposed the proposal. Some ministers are
- believed to be backing calls for a
- compromise to take the heat out of the issue, in which an independent
- inquiry would be set up to examine cruelty in all field sports and decide
- if hunts could be licensed.
-
- The plan has been suggested by the cross-party Middle Way group headed by
- Labour MP Kate Hoey. She said yesterday: "This debate is not going to go
- away. The Government should surely seek a solution which can satisfy most
- people." However, officials in both Downing Street and the Home Office last
- night said they had not discussed any plans for an inquiry or a Royal
- Commission into fox hunting.
-
- Members of the Hunt Saboteurs' Association have indicated to The Telegraph
- that they now plan to step up their illegal activity against field sports
- following what they believe is "the failure of the parliamentary route".
- One said yesterday: "Our protests have been more effective than the antics
- in the House of Commons. The public want this barbarism stopped, most MPs
- want it stopped. In our view they are already outlaws and we'll stop them."
-
- But Mike Foster, the Labour MP behind the Bill to ban hunting, yesterday
- appealed to supporters of his Bill to be patient, saying: "I've always
- believed that hunting with dogs is likely to be stopped before the end of
- this Parliament. There is no need to take direct action."
-
- He is planning to ask Tony Blair for a meeting next week to discuss the
- Government's plans for future legislation on the issue. However, he said he
- would be willing to discuss an
- inquiry into field sports "only if there was a moratorium on hunting in the
- mean time."
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- Disclaimer: Articles from the Electronic Telegraph are posted for
- informational purposes. Any views expressed therein are those of the
- Telegraph, and may not agree with those of 'Animal Voices' or anyone
- connected with 'Animal Voices'. I will be pleased to provide furthe
- information, where possible, but comments about the content should be
- addressed to the ET and not myself.
-
-
-
- Date: Sun, 08 Mar 1998 00:00:57
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [US] At last - no more chips in the sea
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980308000057.0e3fde88@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Sunday, March 8th, 1998
-
- At last - no more chips in the sea
-
- UNTIL recently, Hanauma Bay in Hawaii was teeming. Not just with the
- tropical fish that made it famous, and brought in visitors with masks,
- snorkels and bags of food for the fish. It
- was teeming with visitors.
-
- The beach, 10 miles from Hawaii's main tourist centre, Waikiki, had a
- problem. "We had up
- to 13,000 people a day," said Alan Hong, the manager of Hanauma Bay Nature
- Preserve. "At
- peak times, that was equivalent to a busload of 42 tourists coming every 57
- seconds and
- emptying everyone on to the beach. The bay simply couldn't cope."
-
- But the nature preserve has been so successful at turning people away that
- last week it won
- three of the Tourism for Tomorrow awards sponsored by British Airways.
- These awards
- recognise projects that take steps to minimise the impact of tourism on the
- environment.
-
- David Bellamy, who was one of the judges, said Hanauma Bay won because "a
- group of
- people got together and saw their environment was being destroyed and their
- livelihood
- disappearing. They took a brave decision to limit the number of visitors".
-
- In 1990, tourist buses were banned from the beach. Coach visitors may now
- stop only at the
- upper level, 200ft above the beach, for a maximum of 15 minutes. "But it's
- been a constant
- battle ever since then, with the tour companies trying to sneak people into
- the park," said Mr
- Hong.
-
- The total number of visitors has fallen by 60 per cent, however, and the
- beach is significantly
- cleaner. Sewage from the four restaurants in the area is now fed into the
- island's treatment
- system, and visitors are forbidden from bringing their own food for the
- fish. They have to buy
- special feed locally, although that, too, will be banned from next year.
-
- According to Nancy Westcott, the president of the Friends of Hanauma Bay -
- a voluntary
- organisation that was formed to protect the beach - many people used to
- bring food to feed
- the fish.
-
- "Bread, frozen peas, potato chips, anything," she said. "You'd swim around
- and be
- surrounded by bits of food in the water. It was horrible. And by the middle
- of the day you
- could see an oil slick on the surface, from all the suntan lotion."
-
- Keeping visitors away, says Mr Hong, hasn't been easy: "Tourism in Hawaii
- is in a
- depressed state, but we had to bite the bullet now if we wanted to enjoy
- the park in the
- future."
-
- David Bellamy said that he hoped Hanauma Bay would inspire other tourist
- attractions to find
- "imaginative" solutions to an increasingly overcrowded planet.
-
- "Otherwise, what we enjoy today won't be worth going to any more," he said.
- James
- Bedding
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- Disclaimer: Articles from the Electronic Telegraph are posted for
- informational purposes. Any views expressed therein are those of the
- Telegraph, and may not agree with those of 'Animal Voices' or anyone
- connected with 'Animal Voices'. I will be pleased to provide furthe
- information, where possible, but comments about the content should be
- addressed to the ET and not myself.
- Date: Sat, 07 Mar 1998 23:50:23
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Feeling a charge from the depths
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980307235023.30471d00@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Sunday, March 8th, 1998 - Travel Section
-
- Feeling a charge from the depths
-
- Rosie Walford was only mildly interested in whales, until she took a
- 'research holiday' in the Azores . . .
-
- Report Filed March 1998
-
- AMONG the glossy brochures and razzmatazz of a holiday fair, the literature
- about whale and dolphin research holidays in the Azores stood out: it was
- understated, black and white, scientific. And leaking out between the
- lines, somewhere in the eyes of the bearded man on the stand, was the
- seductive whiff of intense human passion - that curious fanaticism inspired
- by whales.
-
- Ten years ago, Chris and Lisa Beer met on an animal welfare crusade ship,
- trying to convince Azoreans that the lucrative whaling
- industry might be replaced by a less brutal alternative - whale-watching
- for tourists. As part of the persuasion, Lisa started a mammoth study to
- measure the local sperm-whale population. Before her research was complete,
- though, anti-whaling legislation took hold and the welfare boat moved on.
-
- But Lisa was hooked. Determined to keep the study alive, the Beers bought a
- yacht big enough to carry tourists as well as their research equipment, and
- began "whale and dolphin research holidays" to fund their research.
-
- I'd never been more than passingly interested in whales, but I felt
- intrigued by the one-offness of this holiday package. And I wanted to know
- what had so inspired the Beers. Before long, I found myself aboard the
- yacht Colomban, mid-Atlantic with seven complete strangers, scouring the
- horizon for whales.
-
- The others seemed rational, normal people on the outside. But it emerged
- that they were card-bearing whale junkies. They belonged to the Whale and
- Dolphin Conservation Society, and exchanged whale-watching tales in
- reverential tones.
-
- By mid-morning of the first day, we were still close enough to Faial island
- to make out its hedges of hydrangeas and livid green hills, but the other
- two islands within reach, Pico and Sao Jorge, were just distant volcanic
- shapes. Although we ate biscuits, sunbathed and pretended to be content,
- anticipation was edging towards impatience. Through gently gritted teeth,
- one person dared to joke about the awful prospect of going home without
- seeing whales.
-
- Then, from nowhere, the water came alive with arcing forms - a troupe of
- maybe 40 spotted dolphins. Fast and furious, they dived and leapt, surging
- just beneath the clear waves then spinning in the sun. Cutting across the
- bows within inches of their lives, they gave an unbidden, masterly display
- of aquabatics.
-
- >From muted quiet, the deck of Colomban erupted into frenzy. Previously
- sensible adults were running from side to side, whooping and shouting at
- once, anthropomorphising like amateur Johnny Morrises - "Here comes old
- smiling black-back again"; "There's mummy number two, showing off as usual
- . . ." For 20 minutes we jabbered frenetically.
-
- The dolphins eventually dropped behind. Bonded and perhaps embarrassed by
- the noise we'd made jointly, the group giggled for a while and then fell
- quiet, basking in a shared satisfaction as tangible as a post-orgasmic lull.
-
- I found this exciting as a warm-up, especially as I knew that dolphins were
- merely icing on the whale-watcher's cake. To keep our impatience at bay,
- Chris showed us how we were going to find the whales. He demonstrated
- Colomban's hydrophone, a microphone that trails in a long tube behind the
- boat. Though roughly made of rubber piping, old hi-fi headphones and a car
- battery, it worked wonderfully. Against an ethereal watery soundscape, we
- learnt to distinguish a certain clicking emitted like radar by diving sperm
- whales. Then we practised using the stereo to find the direction from which
- the sound was coming. Within an hour, I was steering the skipper towards
- whales that were miles away.
-
- I loved listening to the unearthly noises, but even more I loved the
- concept of an itinerary directed by live, abstract sounds coming from an
- unseen deep.
-
- When Lisa first yelled "blow", I expected a major fountain to rise on the
- horizon, but all I saw was a tiny spume. We were squinting at a small lump
- of blackness, barely moving, like a log on the waves, but Lisa made sure
- Colomban stayed back.
-
- In the absolute quiet of the open sea, eyes, binoculars and cameras
- strained. After a rapt 15 minutes, the log rose slightly, and then the
- famous tail fin swung up into the air and cut down through the water,
- leaving a great hollow of turbulence behind.
-
- My seven companions were beside themselves. But, by a strange quirk of
- human nature, they were discussing the big moment in terms of the photos
- they had or hadn't got. One woman said she'd got her perfect picture, and
- could now quite happily go home. I was feeling faintly disappointed by the
- whole spectacle. Because of the distance, it seemed only an exemplary, tiny
- rendition of pictures in the brochures. I remembered a similar anticlimax
- on seeing the Mona Lisa, distanced behind glass, after knowing her only
- from a teatowel print.
-
- Meanwhile, Lisa was busy recording our bearings and noting sea conditions.
- We rushed towards the shrinking turbulence ring and Chris dived in with a
- butterfly net, hoping to scoop up stray samples of skin for genetic
- identification. The information would feed into records revealing the
- movements of individual whales.
-
- The Azores' waters were teeming with life. On our second day, during a
- glorious orange sunset, we located six whales floating together. They were
- rubbing and nudging each other, audibly grunting in turn. Again we stayed
- far back but through binoculars I pieced together the expanse of their
- flanks in my imagination, and gradually got a sense of the enormous whole.
-
- It was curiously uplifting to witness these huge animals choosing to be so
- close when they had the whole ocean to roam. I could not stop dwelling on
- the idea that there are social instincts - even affection - in a parallel
- universe that we still know so little about. The romance of whales had
- crept up on me and I felt strangely becalmed.
-
- Ten years ago, the same tranquil waters would have witnessed bloody
- massacres. Whales mattered in the Azores only for their flesh, and local
- heroes in flimsy canoes would risk lethal "sleigh rides" as they gripped
- the ropes attached to their harpoons. If their bravery and ingenuity
- overwhelmed sheer strength and size, their efforts were well rewarded with
- cash.
-
- Now, the world has outlawed the trade in whale products. Instead, people do
- yoga to whale music and, as the Azorean whalers play dominoes in honourable
- retirement, a crowd of outside entrepreneurs has descended on the port of
- Horta to capitalise on the new fascination with whales.
-
- All around the marina, there were specialist boats for charter. Two shop
- windows showed footage of diving whales, advertising encounter trips. A
- French artist was at work producing photographs of dancers with whales.
- This seemed quite harmless compared with the recent whaling past, but
- behind the animal-friendly faτade a war is boiling.
-
- Lisa was full of bitter accusations: she claimed the tour operators' noisy
- inflatables were disrupting the whales' breathing cycles. She was venomous
- about the French photographer, condemning the disturbance of whales in the
- name of art as immoral.
-
- But the bitching was mutual. One inflatable crew (which approached whales
- from behind) claimed that other companies were wrong to approach from the
- side. The photographer implied there was no scientific validity to Lisa's
- research.
-
- All parties wanted one thing - the whales relaxed and visible - yet they
- were videoing each others' practices like spies, and snitching to the
- authority that issues licences. Fuelled by the emotive language of animal
- welfare, their wranglings boiled down to a cocktail of financial interest
- and virtuous concern for the whales.
-
- I would have found Lisa more inspiring if she had dropped her surly,
- moralistic tone. But the background carping did nothing to impair the
- revitalising effects of the expedition.
-
- The Whale Watch Azores formula was relaxing without being predictable.
- While I spent much time on the bow sprit, dreamily dangling my toes over
- the waves, I could have been steering the boat or working the hydrophone.
- There was a sense of choice.
-
- I felt I'd been truly exposed to the vagaries of the wild. We left port
- only if the winds were safe, set our itineraries by sounds from the depths,
- let our moods be catapulted from torpor to frenzy in seconds. For a
- refreshing week, we abandoned time-planning and went with nature's rhythms.
-
- With pump loos and tiny shared cabins, Colomban eschewed luxury. Yet I felt
- I'd been pampered enough: the cook appeared each morning with bulging bags
- of food, and spoiled us three times a day. Eating on a sunny deck while
- listening to dolphin cries through a hydrophone brought a particular form
- of bliss.
-
- By the end I knew my sperm whales from my beaked whales, my spotted from my
- bottlenose dolphins. When we picked up a passing turtle and its tag showed
- it had paddled from Florida, I realised that I had caught something of the
- fascination.
-
- The romance came less from the sightings than from getting absorbed in
- imagining their uncharted, roaming lives. For one unusual week, I felt
- involved in the whale's wild freedom, a part of something still unknown,
- much bigger than myself.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- Disclaimer: Articles from the Electronic Telegraph are posted for
- informational purposes. Any views expressed therein are those of the
- Telegraph, and may not agree with those of 'Animal Voices' or anyone
- connected with 'Animal Voices'. I will be pleased to provide furthe
- information, where possible, but comments about the content should be
- addressed to the ET and not myself.
- Date: Sun, 08 Mar 1998 09:29:32 -0500
- From: ar-admin@envirolink.org
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Subscription Options--Admin Note
- Message-ID: <3.0.1.32.19980308092932.006b004c@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
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-
- another routine post.....
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-
- Date: Sun, 08 Mar 1998 09:31:48 -0500
- From: ar-admin@envirolink.org
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Cc: STFORJEWEL@aol.com
- Subject: (US) ORYXES FACE DEATH PENALTY
- Message-ID: <3.0.1.32.19980308093148.0068e594@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- posted for STFORJEWEL@aol.com
- ------------------------------------------------
- FROM THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN NEWS
- DENVER, COLORADO
-
- >From Colorado & The West
- ORYXES FACE DEATH PENALTY IN NEW MEXICO
- By Rebecca Rolwing
- Associated Press Writer
-
- ALBUQUERQUE-
- An efficient solution is proposed for up to 200 African antelope trapped at
- the White Sands National Monument in southern New Mexico: quick, fatal shots
- to the heart.
-
- The large, horned oryxes were brought to the adjoining White Sands Millile
- Range in 1969 to be hunted. Over the years the herd has grown to 2,500 strong
- and some drifted to the national park's 275 square miles of white sand dunes.
-
- The animals at the park have become a nuisance. State officials are
- recommending the majestic, humped animals be killed and their hide, meat and
- heads--with straight or slightly curved horn--be sold.
-
- The proceeds, by law, would go into a game protection fund. The irony is not
- lost on Animal Protection of New Mexico, whic his furious.
-
- "It's particularly bad that we introduced them into that area and when they
- went into an area that we don't want, then the solution is to shoot them,"
- Executive Director Elisabeth Jennings said.
-
- One proposal would have New Mexico Department of Game and Fish hunters shoot
- the animals after Easter.
-
- "They're agressive animals-a game warden was mauled by one and they have
- attacked vehicles," said Bill Conrod, resource management specialist at White
- Sands National Monument. "They're mean, they can fend off the biggest African
- predators."
-
- They're also beautiful creatures whose presence is appreciated by most at the
- military base. "It is quite an animal to see," said Patrick Morrow, a
- wildlife biologist for White Sands Missile Range.
-
- An $885,000, 68-foot mile fence was built in 1996 to keep the oryxes out of
- the national park, a parched environment of sand and desert plants.
-
- While it worked for the most part, a herb of 100 to 200 animals became trapped
- inside the gate, upsetting the ecosystem and threatening native animals,
- Conrod said.
-
- "They eat native plants, they eat cactus, they eat anything, " he said.
-
- And they multiply at a steady rate. removing the animals from the park will
- allow the vegetation and soil conditions to recover and will avert a future of
- oryx overpopulation and eventual starvation, Conrod said.
-
- A plan that proposed five options to deal with the animals is being drafted
- and will be submitted for public review soon, Conrod said.
-
- Wildlife officials could shoot the animals, drive them from the monument or
- use dart guns and drugs to capture and remove the beasts. Other options
- include constructing a one-way fence, "praying" the animals go through it and
- doing nothing, Conrod said.
-
- The monument prefers to have the animals shot as an efficient, cost-effective
- plan for animals that were brought to the area to be hunted.
-
- Jennings said her organization recommends a nonlethal method of removing.
-
- The Las Cruces district office of the state Game and Fish Department supports
- the park's preference, said Lee Duff, district wildlife supervisor.
-
- Still, there are dissenters within the department. Jerry Maracchini, state
- game and fish director, said he prefers moving the animals out of the park
- alive.
-
- "If it's cost-effective and environmentally sound, I'd prefer them to be
- trapped and moved out," he said.
-
- Hunters have been brought in for years to shoot oryxes that wander off the
- military base, Morrow said.
-
- This fall, permits will be issued to 515 hunters and about 700 will likely be
- issued in 1999, officials said.
-
- Contact:
-
- 1. Superintendent; White Sands National Monument; PO Box 1086; Holloman Air
- Force Base, New Mexico 88330; (505) 479-6124; email:
- whsa_interpretation@nps.gov;
-
- 2, Robert G. Stanton, Director, National Park Service; PO Box 37127;
- Washington DC 20013 (202) 208-6843; email: bob_stanton@nps.gov
-
- 3. John E. Cook; Regional Director; National Park Service; 12795 East Alameda
- Parkway; Denver CO 80225; (303) 969-2500; email: john_cook@nps.gov
-
- 4. Bruce Babbitt; Secretary of the Interior;1849 C St NW; Washington DC
- 20240; (202) 208-3100 email: bruce_babbitt@ios.doi.gov
-
- 5. Mr. Jerry Maracchini; Director; New Mexico Department of Fish and Game;
- 3841 Midway Place NE; Albuquerque, NM 87101; (505) 841-8881; email:
- j_maracchini@gmfs.state.nm.us; Web site: www.gmfsh.st.nm.us
-
- 6. Animal Protectin of New Mexico; PO Box 11395; Albuquerque, New Mexico
- 87192; (505) 265-2322; email: AnimalNM@aol.com
-
-
- Date: Sun, 08 Mar 1998 09:39:16 -0500
- From: Liz Grayson <lgrayson@earthlink.net>
- To: ar-news <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Iditarod-Nary a word about the dogs.
- Message-ID: <3502AD87.C9D@earthlink.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Let the mushing begin
-
- Iditarod teams take off on 1,000-mile sled race
-
- Posted: Sat March 7, 1998 at 7:13 PM ET
-
- ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -- Clad in
- yellow glare goggles against the
- spring-like sunshine and striking the
- casual pose of a winner, defending
- Iditarod champion Martin Buser began
- his 15th Iditarod Sled Dog Race on
- Saturday -- one of four ex-champs
- entered.
-
- "You learn not to be nervous," Buser
- said, leaning against the cab of his
- customized dog truck while handlers
- attended to his 12-dog team.
-
- The 26th running of the 1,000-mile
- Anchorage-to-Nome race attracted 63
- teams this year, including nine women
- and 19 rookies. The field is among the
- largest in at least five years. If past
- experience holds, leaders will reach the finish at
-
- Nome in about nine days.
-
- Saturday's start is ceremonial and does not count
- toward a musher's final elapsed
- time. The Anchorage scene -- full of bundled up
- children hoisted for a better look -- is
- staged largely for the hundreds of fans who press
- in on Fourth Avenue.
-
- A typical Saturday morning in winter finds the gift
- shop and saloon-lined street with
- few strollers. Iditarod changes all that.
-
- "I don't want to go home," said race fan Sandra Wallsmith, who arrived
- Friday nite from Houston, Texas, and bought a commemorative pin and Iditarod calendar from a
- street vendor.
-
-
- "Am I excited? Very!" shouted Moira DeMarcos of
- Vancouver, British Columbia, as she rode off in a sled
- driven by musher Matt Hayashida. DeMarcos, celebrating
- her 50th birthday Sunday, is among "Iditariders," who bid
- on a chance to ride the trail's first eight miles in an Iditarod
- sled.
-
- Teams depart every two minutes under a red-white-and
- blue banner declaring Iditarod "the last great race."
-
- Favored to win this year are Buser, driving a 16-dog team
- of Iditarod veterans, as well as Montana's Doug Swingley,
- holder of the Iditarod's speed record, two-time champ Jeff
- King from Denali Park, and Rick Swenson from Two Rivers,
- the Iditarod's only five-time champ.
-
- Swenson generated some pre-race will-he-or won't-he guessing after
- being
- withdrawn from the 1996 race and sitting out last year in protest.
-
- Swenson, who mines a cantankerous musher image, was removed two
- years ago
- when one of his dogs died within the race's first 100 miles. He bitterly
- protested and
- eventually won a reversal of the decision.
- "I'm glad you stayed out and I'm glad you're back, race fan Judy See from Anchorage called to
- Swenson, addressing the musher as he looked over ropes on his sled. "I'm glad you took a stand."
- Appearing relaxed with less than an hour before the start, Swenson wondered aloud about other
- mushers who say they have their race strategy mapped out.
-
- I don't have a clue," Swenson said of his own approach. "Or mayb I'll tie my dogs onto Martin
- Buser and let him pull me.
-
-
- A few blocks away,Willow musher Vern Halter said he's heard other drivers say he may have the
- team to beat. The trail is hard and spare of
- snow in some spots -- good news
- from teams accustomed to fast
- trails, and not so good for others.
-
- A veteran of nine Iditarod's including every race since 1993, Halter
- finished fifth last
- year in nine days and 20 hours. Buser's time was 14 hours faster.
-
- Halter plans three sled changes, starting out with a 45-pound sled capable
- of
- withstanding the early trail's gorges and mountain passes. He plans to
- dash for
- Nome in a new 23-pound sled imported from France.
-
- He has twice claimed the fastest time from Safety to Nome, the Iditarod's
- last 77
- miles.
-
- "You push, you keep it up, keep it up, till you get to Nome," Halter said.
- Date: Sun, 08 Mar 1998 09:45:01 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (TH/US) Thais Seeking Monkeys From Wis. Zoo
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980308094458.0073ff44@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from Associated
- MARCH 08, 05:51 EST
-
- Thais Seeking Monkeys From Wis. Zoo
-
- By GRANT PECK
- Associated Press Writer
-
- BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -- Government officials and animal rights activists
- planned to meet this week to discuss ways to clear obstacles to Thailand
- taking back 51 monkeys facing eviction from a zoo in Madison, Wisconsin.
-
- A flamboyant hotel entrepreneur who arranges an annual feast for wild
- monkeys has offered to provide land for a sanctuary for the zoo animals.
-
- The meeting Wednesday at Thailand's national forestry department in
- Bangkok was to discuss a possible waiver of a legal requirement that
- private individuals cannot own endangered species. Officials also planned
- to take up a request that the Finance Ministry grant an exemption from
- import duties should the animals be sent here.
-
- Yongyuth Kitwatananusont told The Associated Press that he is willing to
- construct an open-air sanctuary surrounded by a moat on 12 acres of land
- in Lopburi province, 70 miles north of Bangkok.
-
- He said he would grow bananas, papayas and beans on the land for the
- monkey's food supply.
-
- ``I love monkeys, I will take good care of them,'' Yongyuth said.
-
- He said that if he cannot hold title to the monkeys, he will donate the
- land anyway and let it be staffed by government employees.
-
- ``But staying with me would be better,'' he added.
-
- Lopburi town is home to a colony of several hundred wild monkeys who
- congregate around an old Buddhist temple. Each year, with great fanfare,
- Yongyuth gives an elaborate banquet for them.
-
- The event attracts tourists to the town, where he owns the major hotels.
-
- The Wisconsin monkeys -- stump-tailed macaques -- are mostly descendants
- of a group that was sent to the United States in the mid-1970s, shortly
- before Thailand passed a law prohibiting the export of monkeys for medical
- research.
-
- The monkeys are housed at the Henry Vilas Park Zoo, but actually belong to
- the Wisconsin Regional Primate Research Center at the University of
- Wisconsin, which had been using them for behavioral research.
-
- Last year, however, the U.S. National Institutes of Health announced
- termination of funding for the research program, leaving no funds for
- their upkeep at the zoo.
-
- Animal rights activists in Thailand wrote to the U.S. ambassador, William
- Itoh, asking his help in having the monkeys sent to Thailand.
-
- ``This colony, the largest of its kind in the world, is in effect a
- Thailand national environmental treasure,'' the leaders of three
- organizations wrote in the letter.
-
- The letter contended that ``the only alternatives open to the animals are
- for them to be killed or sold to a commercial venture for potentially
- painful and lethal product testing and research.''
-
- Their quest acquired some urgency last week when about 100 rhesus monkeys
- at the Wisconsin center, affected by the same budget cutbacks, were
- transferred to another primate research center in Louisiana. Under the
- conditions of the transfer, they could eventually be subjected to invasive
- laboratory testing.
-
- A large number of hurdles remain before the stump-tailed macaques could
- come to Thailand.
-
- Montana Senator Max Baucus, approached when he visited Thailand last year,
- has agreed to help arrange transportation for the monkeys.
-
- But few concrete plans have been made, said Jordana Lenon, a spokeswoman
- for the primate center.
-
- Under the Convention on International Trade of Endangered Species, permits
- are needed before the monkeys can be exported, but so far the center has
- been unable to obtain the information necessary for applying for a permit,
- despite requests to Thai officials.
-
- ``This will delay the possible transfer of the animals by some time,''
- Lenon said by e-mail to the AP.
-
- Lenon said the center also received had a letter last week from The Thai
- Society for the Conservation of Wild Animals, expressing concern that
- there are no places in Thailand ``with either the facilities, resources or
- the expertise to manage these macaques.''
-
- ``We will not send the stump-tail colony to any facility that does not
- have appropriate housing and the ability to properly care for this
- threatened species,'' Lenon said.
- Date: Sun, 8 Mar 1998 11:50:33 EST
- From: Snugglezzz <Snugglezzz@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@Envirolink.org
- Subject: Bowhunter's Buck Breaks State Record
- Message-ID: <64cc3731.3502cc5b@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- (Tulsa World, OK, USA): Oklahoma deer hunting is getting better each year.
- Oklahomans are harvesting (read: killing) more animals than ever before -
- around 60,000 now - and the state's diverse terrain is producing more really
- big bucks each season.
-
- A deer taken (killed) last fall by a bowhunter on a bitterly cold morning one
- day before the modern firearms season opened is the new Oklahoma record
- typical whitetail buck. Larry Luman, 42, of Atoka, was hunting Nov. 21 on a
- private-land deer lease operated by Deer Run Lodge, a 7,100-acre ranch north
- of Durant.
-
- Luman was hunting just inside Bryan County. He was hunting a huge buck which
- he had seen the year before, and had placed a treestand in exactly the same
- location where he had first viewed the massive whitetail.
-
- The buck was trailing a band of does and Luman stopped the buck by using a
- grunt call. Although he said the arrow hit the animal a little high, being an
- experienced bowhunter who has claimed (killed) a lot of good whitetails
- previously, he knew enough to wait a full hour and a half before going after
- the deer. The hit had been good enough and they found the buck a few yards
- from where he had disappeared from sight in thick woods.
-
- Official scorers from the Oklahoma Wildlife Department scored the buck's
- antlers last weekend. They scored the head at 184 1/8 points, surpassing the
- old record of 181 and 6/8ths.
-
-
- -- Sherrill
-
- Date: Sun, 08 Mar 1998 12:28:01 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Do we need more victims?
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980308122759.006f43c4@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- vegetarianism/social justice issues/ethics
- from Centre Daily Times http://www.centredaily.com/
- -----------------------------------------
- Friday, February 13, 1998
-
- Do we need more victims?
-
- -------------------
- By KATHY A. BARTELL
- -------------------
-
- The State College Area School Board is going to discuss whether sexual
- orientation should be added to its nondiscrimination policy. This is Round
- 2 in the role of homosexuality in our school district.
-
- While it is understood that the board desires to appear enlightened and in
- tune with society's politically correct agenda, why stop with sexual
- behavior? Why not be innovative in establishing a policy that includes food
- preferences? Let the district take a leadership role and be the first to
- increase awareness of and provide protection for, say, vegetarians. Think
- of the lack of support and the intolerance vegetarians face. Every week
- chicken nuggets are served in elementary schools, pepperoni adorns pizza,
- and countless turkeys are served each year for Thanksgiving lunch.
-
- Before dismissing this idea as absurd, consider the following: Sexual
- orientation addresses a behavior that recent studies say most of us
- participate in about once per week. In comparison, we eat three or more
- times each day. During each school lunch period, and in some cases
- breakfasts, vegetarians are faced with being different. Should they be
- forced to brown-bag it every day? Think of the humiliation vegetarians face
- when answering the inquiries of insensitive students. This is a fairness
- issue. It is our responsibility to reach out, attempt to understand and
- affirm that which sets them apart. Although they may be a small percentage
- of the population, we need to provide acceptance and support.
-
- It is not enough merely to write a policy which is inclusive. We should
- teach all our children about vegetarians so that a whole new generation is
- aware of and can accept this lifestyle.
-
- Some say being vegetarian is a choice, and that those who make that choice
- must deal with consequent difficulties. That shows just how close-minded
- and misinformed they are. In many cases, health reasons require people to
- eat a meatless diet. Although a specific gene has not been identified to
- make a person vegetarian, there is a tendency for it to run in families.
- Many may have no choice.
-
- Be honest -- have you ever thought about the pain vegetarians feel at
- seeing so many of us talk about and enjoy eating cows and pigs that were
- living, breathing animals? Not only do we not feel their pain, we neglect
- to give them the recognition they deserve.
-
- Unlike homosexuality, a vegetarian diet is considered to be healthy. We can
- all benefit by a greater understanding of this lifestyle. Start young.
- Kindergarten students can bring home pamphlets that explain the benefits of
- the vegetarian lifestyle. This can be followed by meatless recipes children
- can make when the parents are not home. By capturing the minds of children,
- the schools can redefine eating in our society. If we can only release
- ourselves from our restrictive thinking, we could change the way America
- thinks about eating and have the satisfaction of knowing it all started
- here. ...
-
- I urge school board members to give a great deal of thought to the
- potential outcomes before making any changes to the nondiscrimination
- policy. One option is to elevate sexual behavior to the same level of
- importance as race, gender and religion. Another option is to recognize
- that it is not the role of the public school to make policy about
- lifestyles.
-
- It is the board's job to provide an environment that is safe and free from
- ridicule for all students. However, it is futile to attempt this by
- defining victim status for select groups of people. Educating teachers and
- students about the difficulties of being homosexual alienates and discounts
- other groups, who also feel in the minority and victimized. All people are
- worthy of respect and teaching that concept should be enough.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Kathy A. Bartell lives in College Township.
- Date: Sun, 08 Mar 1998 12:37:20 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Animal rights activists protest at Shrine Circus
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980308123718.006e79f8@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- [picture is available at the site]
- from Detroit Free Press http://www.freep.com/news/locway/qshrine7.htm
- -----------------------------------------
-
- Animal rights activists protest at Shrine Circus
-
- Gary Yourofsky of Royal Oak lies chained to his car at the state
- fairgrounds in Detroit on Friday. He was joined by Tiiu Ruben of Ann Arbor.
- (Photo by Jeff Kowalsky)
-
- Animal rights activists protest at Shrine Circus March 7, 1998
-
- BY JENNIFER DIXONFree Press Staff Writer
-
- Two animal-rights activists locked themselves to their car at the entrance
- of the state fairgrounds Friday, blocking traffic for nearly an hour on the
- opening night of the Shrine Circus.
- With his neck connected with a bicycle lock to the axle of his 1992 Toyota
- Corolla, Gary Yourofsky shouted that "animals don't do stupid tricks in the
- wild" and are abused by the circus. Tiiu Ruben knelt silently with a
- U-shaped lock around her neck and the passenger-side door frame.
- After about 40 minutes, firefighters cut through the locks. Police led
- Yourofsky and Ruben away in handcuffs -- but not before an officer snapped
- some photographs.
- "Of course it's illegal," the officer, who didn't give his name, said about
- the protest. "But it doesn't mean it's not a Kodak moment."
-
- Police said Yourofsky, 27, an Oakland University journalism student who
- lives in Royal Oak, and Ruben, 23, a graphics designer from Ann Arbor,
- would be charged with disorderly conduct and released.
- Yourofsky is the president of Animals Deserve Adequate Protection Today and
- Tomorrow. He said he locked himself to his car to call attention to the
- "oppression, discrimination and cruelty that is hurled upon defenseless
- animals."
- Antoinette Pressley, who was at the fairgrounds entrance with three
- children, called the protest "a little bit extreme."
- Said Shriner Kirk Trail of Redford, who was collecting parking fees: "It's
- pretty stupid. It messes everything up for the whole public that wants to
- come and see the circus, and they're late for the show."
-
- Jennifer Dixon can be reached at 1-313-223-4542.
- Date: Sun, 08 Mar 1998 12:58:47 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Fur is back, the fashion magazines tell us,
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980308125844.00689658@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from Philadelphia Online http://www.phillynews.com/sunmag/111/STYLE.shtml
- -----------------------------------------------------
- STYLE by Patricia McLaughlin
- Fur play.
-
- Start with Luxury. Add ingenuity and whimsy.
-
- Fur is back,
- the fashion magazines tell us,
- and it certainly
- is back in the
- magazines - though
- what they're
- showing isn't
- exactly your
- grandma's mink.
-
- Credit the cleverness of the fur industry,
- which all along has been inviting bright young
- designers to work in fur, and showing them how.
- According to the Fur Information Council of
- America, 160 ready-to-wear designers used fur in
- their collections last year - compared to only
- 42 in 1985. All those young designers let loose
- in the furriers' workrooms have learned to use
- fur like a fabric - to drape it, dye it, shear
- it, knit it, crochet it, use it for collars and
- cuffs, muffs and boas, coats you can wear to
- work every day or drive a car pool in.
-
- Some of the credit for moving fur fashion
- forward belongs to the the animal-rights
- movement, too.
-
- Dan Matthews of People for the Ethical
- Treatment of Animals doesn't see it that way,
- and he doesn't think fur is back. "Furriers may
- be able to buy the fashion editors, but they
- can't buy public opinion," he says. Young people
- think fur is "disgusting," he says. And:
- "Conspicuous consumption may be back," he says,
- "but that doesn't mean people want to look like
- Leona Helmsley."
-
- The old lady flaunting her wealth in fur must
- have seemed an irresistible target for
- animal-rights activists - just the way, in
- Depression-era comic strips, the tycoon's top
- hat attracted the surly schoolboy's snowball.
- The rich old lady in the big fur coat had useful
- built-in negative vibes, as Julia Emberley
- found.
-
- Emberley, who teaches women's studies at the
- University of North British Columbia, started
- paying attention when she noticed the misogynist
- tone of anti-fur slogans - such as "It takes 40
- dumb animals to make a fur coat and only one to
- wear it." Her book, The Cultural Politics of
- Fur, will be published by Cornell University
- Press this month.
-
- She found that fur had been defined as an
- unnecessary indulgence of luxury since the 13th
- century, when sumptuary laws began to restrict
- its use to aristocrats and wealthy merchants.
- And the image of the predatory female draped in
- fur (revived last year with Disney's Cruella
- DeVil) has been a staple of darker sexual
- fantasies at least since the 19th-century novel
- Venus in Furs by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, who
- donated his name to masochism.
-
- Emberley also noticed that the anti-fur
- movement, which drew mostly middle-class white
- liberals, arose in the 1980s, when the leveraged
- buyout kings were spending like crazy and
- middle-class wage-earners were being callously
- downsized - which must have made it easier to
- identify with vulnerable minks.
-
- Some animal-rights activists find eating meat
- or wearing leather just as objectionable; some
- even object to wool, since sheep don't volunteer
- to be shorn. That's a hard sell; most Americans
- aren't ready to demonize Big Macs and woolly
- mittens. But the rich old lady in the fur coat
- was an easy mark, just what they needed to build
- an ad hominem argument to exploit the emotions
- and prejudices of their audience.
-
- By pillorying the old lady for wearing the
- skins of dear little furry creatures, instead of
- conducting an intricate philosopical discussion
- about the proper relationship of man and beast,
- the anti-fur campaigns seem to have succeeded in
- stigmatizing - not the wearing of fur per se -
- but the long, shapeless, formal, frankly furry
- fur coat of stereotype.
-
- Date: Sun, 08 Mar 1998 13:04:31 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) PETA wants to decide for everyone
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980308130427.006f2cf8@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from Knoxville News-Sentinel http://www.knoxnews.com/
- ------------------------------------------------
- PETA wants to decide for everyone
-
- By Bob Hodge News-Sentinel outdoor editor
-
- Thirteen years ago Dawn Carr made a lifestyle choice. She not only
- swore off eating meat, she became a vegan.
-
- Vegans don't wear leather, silk or any material that is derived from
- animals. They don't use any product that was tested on animals. They
- don't want to see any animal harmed in any way for any reason.
-
- Carr, a 28-year-old former photographer, went to work for People for
- the Ethical Treatment of Animals about 18 months ago. As coordinator of the
- animal rights group's anti-fishing campaign, it is her goal to protect
- the lips and lives of everything from trout to tarpon.
-
- In her world, fishermen would simply lay down their rods and find
- something else to do. A ban on fishing in the Great Smoky Mountains, and
- other national parks, is just another nifty idea.
-
- "Helping the fish is what I have always wanted to do," Carr said
- about her career choice. "I love this campaign. To me it's all
- about extending compassion."
-
- And if fishermen don't come along voluntarily, she's not opposed
- to doing it by force of law. Carr is not content with making her own
- choices; she wants to make them for everybody.
-
- At PETA's website (www.peta-online.org) you can find all the cyber
- compassion you could want.
-
- You can read about PETA's history, PETA's goals and PETA's
- methods. You can read about Gill, a 7-foot tall leviathan that carries the
- organization's "Get hooked on compassion" anti-fishing message.
-
- You can read "action alerts" that try to rally support for
- PETA's causes. You can read about how to become an activist, which
- includes suggestions on "quotable" phrases you can have for the
- media. You can order neat PETA merchandise.
-
- You can also find PETA's mission statement, which says "PETA is
- dedicated to establishing and protecting the rights of all animals. PETA
- operates under the simple principle that animals are not ours to eat, wear,
- experiment on, or use for entertainment" (the emphasis is theirs).
-
- That's fine for the 600,000 or so folks who've joined PETA and
- the thousands of others who belong to the various animal rights
- organizations. But they want to make their "simple principle" a
- straight jacket we all must wear.
-
- To get its point across PETA advocates everything from taking to the
- field and disrupting hunts - playing loud radios near hunting areas is one
- recommended method - to throwing pies in the face of Ronald McDonald. It
- trivializes history by comparing people's attitudes toward animals to
- the Holocaust or slavery.
-
- And PETA likes to play loose with the facts.
-
- One of its anti-hunting fact sheets says hunters "claim to pay for
- conservation by buying hunting licenses, duck stamps, etc. But the
- relatively small amount each hunter pays does not cover the cost of hunting
- programs or game warden salaries."
-
- PETA needs better researchers in Tennessee.
-
- Here, hunting licenses and other fees pay not only for programs and
- personnel, but they've paid for the purchase of thousands and thousands
- of acres of land. Hunters have paid for the animal and habitat restoration
- projects that benefit not only game, but all wildlife.
-
- PETA claims animals have rights because they are sentient, which means
- they are capable of feeling. But PETA is guilty of acting sententiously,
- which means it is given to pompous moralizing.
-
- Remember, PETA is not only after hunters and fishermen, but also
- everybody who eats meat or chicken or frog legs. It wants the fur hanging
- in the closet and the steak sizzling on the grill.
-
- It wants to choose your diet, your clothes and even how to rid your
- house of mice. It wants you to put your dogs and cats - despite cats being
- nature's most physically advanced predator - on vegetarian diets.
-
- Still, like people, no organization is all bad.
-
- PETA was the organizer of the "I'd Rather Go Naked Than Wear
- Fur" campaign that featured supermodels Cindy Crawford, Tyra Banks,
- Christy Turlington and others posing nude.
-
- Now I am not against wearing fur, but I wholeheartedly support
- supermodels in the altogether.
-
- Call it a lifestyle choice.
-
- Date: Sun, 08 Mar 1998 13:13:06 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Animals' advocates huddle near D.C.
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980308131304.006f9fd8@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from Baltimore Sun http://www.sunspot.net
- ----------------------------------------
- Animals' advocates huddle near D.C. Lobbying groups find advantages in area
-
- By Candus Thomson
- SUN STAFF
- Montgomery County has animal magnetism.
-
- Home to the Humane Society of the United States, the largest office of the
- Fund for Animals and a half-dozen smaller advocacy groups, the county
- recently added renowned primate researcher Jane Goodall to the stable.
-
- The bait?
-
- Proximity to power without residing in the high-rent district. An almost
- limitless pool of volunteers. Access to some of the world's greatest
- research libraries. A large press corps eager to cover a staged event.
-
- And, for some organizations, a short commute for the boss.
-
- "The D.C. area was the attraction," said Jennifer Lindsey of the Jane
- Goodall Institute. "It's an animal- and environmentally friendly area,
- which is icing on the cake. And Bill Kaschak, the executive director, lives
- in Bethesda."
-
- Ditto for the founders of United Poultry Concerns and the Farm Animal
- Reform Movement, who set up shop at or near their homes.
-
- Goodall went to Silver Spring late last month to announce that she has
- exchanged her headquarters in the suburbs of New York City for an office
- just inside the Washington Beltway.
-
- She outlined an agenda that includes international conservation programs,
- working with the World Bank and the Peace Corps and establishing an
- outreach program with local schools.
-
- Goodall also hopes to find homes for retired research chimps from the Air
- Force and the nearby National Institutes of Health. (But there won't be any
- halfway houses downtown.)
-
- "If you want to save the species, you have to save the habitat," Goodall
- said. "If you want to save the habitat, you have to bring people into the
- equation."
-
- Montgomery, with 810,000 residents, has plenty of potential volunteers and
- a history of involvement in social causes.
-
- But it's not just raw numbers but the kind of numbers that is significant.
-
- Northern Virginia has the reputation of being the home of dead animal
- groups: the National Rifle Association, the Fur Information Council of
- America and the Animal Industry Foundation, which notes in a publicity
- blurb, "Animal rights may be trendy, but farmers want consumers to have the
- truth about animal production, not emotion."
-
- Montgomery swings the other way.
-
- "We're more progressive than Northern Virginia," Montgomery County
- Executive Douglas M. Duncan said with a chuckle. "There are those who say
- we get the life sciences and they get the dead sciences."
-
- PETA the exception
-
- The glaring exception to the trend, it seems, is the group that started it
- all in Montgomery County -- People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.
-
- Founded in Takoma Park in 1980, it moved to Rockville and then to Norfolk,
- Va., in July 1996.
-
- "It was economics," said spokesman Brad Whipple. "We could buy a building
- here cheaper than we could rent there. We don't lobby, so we don't need to
- be near Washington."
-
- But PETA bred spinoffs.
-
- United Poultry Concerns, an 8,000-member, 30-hen, eight-rooster, two-duck
- sanctuary near the Potomac River, started after founder Karen Davis took
- part in activities with other animal rights activists.
-
- `Friendly back yard'
-
- "We got to know PETA and FARM. There's a core of activism here, and over
- the years we built a strong friendship," said Davis, who pickets poultry
- farms and nurses ailing fowl. "You can always stage an event and be near a
- lot of people very quickly."
-
- The Fund for Animals is headquartered in New York, home of its founder,
- Cleveland Amory. But it established its national campaign office in Silver
- Spring, eight subway stops from downtown D.C.
-
- "I think with e-mail and online services, we could probably be anywhere,"
- acknowledged Michael Markarian, director of campaigns. "We have campaigns
- all over the country, but it always helps to have a friendly back yard."
-
- Wayne Pacelle, who worked for the Fund for Animals before becoming vice
- president of government affairs and media for the Gaithersburg-based Humane
- Society, agreed.
-
- "It's like an ethnic community," Pacelle said. "You tend to hang around
- with those who share your background."
-
- Originally Published on 2/18/98
- Date: Sun, 08 Mar 1998 10:46:05 -0800
- From: "Bob Schlesinger" <bob@arkonline.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Help Oregon's Other Dogs on Death Row
- Message-ID: <199803081046050360.0058007C@pcez.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- HELP CHANGE OREGON'S LAW REQUIRING DEATH FOR ALL DOGS THAT CHASE
- LIVESTOCK
-
- Although Oregon officials spared Nadas from death for chasing a horse, they did
- not do so willingly and the alternative they forced after 17 months -- lifetime banishment to
- Utah's Best Friends Sanctuary without possibility of adoption or a family -- was needlessly
- cruel to both Nadas and Sean Roach, his young owner.
-
- Three other Oregon dogs now face the fate that Nadas narrowly escaped. In
- Linn County, Cheryl Train is struggling to save the life of Cody, her chocolate Chesapeake
- Bay retriever. Her ten-year-old daughter's cockapoo/chow is already dead. In Klamath
- County, Sherry and Les Wood are appealing the death sentences imposed upon Jake
- and Sebastian, a chow and a shepherd mix that escaped from their kennel on the first
- day in their new home.
-
- It takes extraordinary courage to challenge the livestock industry and Oregon's
- government. Sean Roach [who with his mother paid over $4500 for Nadas' death row
- confinement] endured violations of his civil rights and constant character defamation as
- his fight continued. After her children stood off animal control officers, Cheryl Train was
- told that she would be jailed if she did not surrender her dogs. She could not afford the
- over $600 needed to appeal for both and had to choose which would live: Billie died.
- The Wood family was given 3 days to come up with the $1000 required to keep their
- dogs alive while the appeals continue. Klamath County is attempting to punish the
- Wood's lawyer for his efforts to save the dogs and has even tried to prevent presentation
- of a petition for clemency signed by more than 1000 county residents.
-
- Unless the livestock owner drops the charges, most Oregon counties insist that dogs be killed,
- regardless of circumstance or whether harm occurred. Few livestock owners are willing to
- give up the right to vengeance granted by Oregon's laws. The "hearings" that precede death
- are meaningless, kangaroo trials that refuse to consider any alternatives to death. Oregon's
- largest newspaper -- The Oregonian -- praises the mandatory death law. Without public support,
- Oregon's dogs don't have a chance. Their owners will continue to face impossible "Sophie's
- Choices"
- between their companions' lives and the financial and personal sacrifices of appeals for justice.
-
- But, we can win; we can curb the disproportionate power of the livestock industry. With your
- support, we can force changes that require fair hearings and consideration of alternatives
- to death.
-
- WATCHDOG has established the "Nadas Fund" with Bank of America [400 4th Street, Lake
- Oswego,
- Oregon, 97034]. Your financial contributions will help. Most importantly, your participation in
- the
- efforts to change the laws and protect our animals from needless cruelty is needed. For more
- information, call Gail R. O'Connell-Babcock, WATCHDOG's volunteer coordinator, at (503)
- 590-0290
- or fax her at (503) 635-4354. In the meantime, let Oregon's media and government -- city,
- county,
- and state -- know that you will no longer tolerate what Nadas, Cody, Billie, Jake, Sebastian, and
- thousands of other dogs have endured.
-
- John Kitzhaber, GovernorTel: 503-378-3111
- 254 State CapitolTel: 503-378-4582 [Citizens' Representative]
- Salem, Oregon 97310Fax: 503-378-4863
-
- Klamath County CommissionersTel: 541-883-5100
- 409 Pine, Second FloorFax: 541-883-5163
- Klamath Falls, Oregon 97601Email: bboc@cdsnet.net
- Bill Garrard, Steve West, and Al Switzer
-
-
- City of Klamath Falls, Oregon
- Todd Kellstrom, MayorTel: 541-883-5316
- P.O. Box 237Fax: 541-883-5399
- Klamath Falls, Oregon 97601Email: none provided
-
- Klamath County Newspaper
- The Herald and NewsTel: 541-885-4410
- Editor - Pat BusheyFax: 541-885-4456
- P.O. Box 788Email: handnews@cdsnet.net
- Klamath Falls, Oregon 97601
-
- Linn County Board of Commissioners
- Catherine SkiensEmail: cskiens@co.linn.or.us
- Dave Schmidt dschmidt@co.linn.or.us
- Larry J. Johnson ljohnson@co.linn.or.us
- Linn County CourthouseTel: 541-967-3825
- P.O. Box 100Fax: 541-926-8228
- Albany, Oregon 97321
-
-
- City of Albany, Oregon
- Chuck McLaren, MayorTel: 541-917-7502
- 333 Broadalbin, SW
- Albany, Oregon 97321
-
- Linn County Newspaper
- Albany Democrat-HeraldFax: 541-926-4799
- Hasso Hering, EditorEmail: albanydh@proaxs.com
- P.O. Box 130(note in correspondence this is a letter to the editor)
- Albany, Oregon 97321
-
- Date: Sun, 08 Mar 1998 19:24:04 +0100
- From: Jordi Ni±erola <2063511@campus.uab.es>
- To: AR News <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: [ITA] Sabrina Salermo against fur coats and animal torture.
- Message-ID: <01bd4abf$60918380$LocalHost@default>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: MULTIPART/ALTERNATIVE;
- BOUNDARY="Boundary_(ID_a8tcEu3QFFgbNDXO/8Xscg)"
-
- <x-html><!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD W3 HTML//EN">
- <HTML>
- <HEAD>
-
- <META content=text/html;charset=iso-8859-1 http-equiv=Content-Type>
- <META content='"MSHTML 4.71.1712.3"' name=GENERATOR>
- </HEAD>
- <BODY bgColor=#ffffff>
- <DIV><FONT size=2>Sant Joan despí, Barcelona, Sapin: Today, sabrina
- Salerno, a famous italian eighty years singer explain in a TV program in TV3,
- Catalan Television, that she fight against animal torture. Every year, organize
- a concert, with other italian artists, to collect many founds. She explain that
- when she was a young, she looks fur coats, but an animal activist set in his fur
- coat a sticker that said " YOU ARE A KILLER". After, this accident,
- Sabrina Salerno, hates the fur coats and don't use. In the program, Sabrina,
- says that she intents don't use a cosmetic products that are testing with
- animals.</FONT></DIV>
- <DIV><FONT size=2></FONT> </DIV>
- <DIV><FONT size=2> </FONT></DIV>
- <DIV><FONT color=#000000 size=2>Jordi Ninyerola i Maymí</FONT></DIV>
- <DIV><FONT color=#000000 size=2><A
- href="../../../tppmsgs/msgs21.htm#2174" tppabs="http://www.geocities.com/rainforest/vines/6506/pellcas.htm">http://www.geocities.com/rai
- nforest/vines/6506/pellcas.htm</A><BR><A
- href="../../../tppmsgs/msgs21.htm#2175" tppabs="http://www.geocities.com/rainforest/vines/6506">http://www.geocities.com/rainforest/vine
- s/6506</A><BR><A
- href="../../../tppmsgs/msgs21.htm#2176" tppabs="http://www.geocities.com/hollywood/academy/2855">http://www.geocities.com/hollywoo
- d/academy/2855</A><BR><A
- href="../../../tppmsgs/msgs21.htm#2177" tppabs="http://www.geocities.com/colosseum/loge/3128">http://www.geocities.com/colosseum/log
- e/3128</A><BR><A
- href="mailto:2063511@campus.uab.es">2063511@campus.uab.es</A></FONT></DIV>
- <DIV><FONT color=#000000 size=2>"Matar per sobreviure és un acte de
- la natura, matar per diversió<BR>o per lluïr una pell, és un
- acte que no fan ni els més cruels dels
- animals"</FONT> </DIV></BODY></HTML>
- </x-html>Date: Sun, 08 Mar 1998 15:27:25 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Cc: Veg-Wisc@waste.org
- Subject: Thais Seeking Monkeys From Wisconsin Zoo
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19980308152554.04779790@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Thais Seeking Monkeys From Wis. Zoo
- .c The Associated Press
-
- By GRANT PECK
-
- BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Government officials and animal rights activists
- planned to meet this week to discuss ways to clear obstacles to Thailand
- taking back 51 monkeys facing eviction from a zoo in Madison, Wisconsin.
-
- A flamboyant hotel entrepreneur who arranges an annual feast for wild monkeys
- has offered to provide land for a sanctuary for the zoo animals.
-
- The meeting Wednesday at Thailand's national forestry department in Bangkok
- was to discuss a possible waiver of a legal requirement that private
- individuals cannot own endangered species. Officials also planned to take up a
- request that the Finance Ministry grant an exemption from import duties should
- the animals be sent here.
-
- Yongyuth Kitwatananusont told The Associated Press that he is willing to
- construct an open-air sanctuary surrounded by a moat on 12 acres of land in
- Lopburi province, 70 miles north of Bangkok.
-
- He said he would grow bananas, papayas and beans on the land for the monkey's
- food supply.
-
- ``I love monkeys, I will take good care of them,'' Yongyuth said.
-
- He said that if he cannot hold title to the monkeys, he will donate the land
- anyway and let it be staffed by government employees.
-
- ``But staying with me would be better,'' he added.
-
- Lopburi town is home to a colony of several hundred wild monkeys who
- congregate around an old Buddhist temple. Each year, with great fanfare,
- Yongyuth gives an elaborate banquet for them.
-
- The event attracts tourists to the town, where he owns the major hotels.
-
- The Wisconsin monkeys - stump-tailed macaques - are mostly descendants of a
- group that was sent to the United States in the mid-1970s, shortly before
- Thailand passed a law prohibiting the export of monkeys for medical research.
-
- The monkeys are housed at the Henry Vilas Park Zoo, but actually belong to the
- Wisconsin Regional Primate Research Center at the University of Wisconsin,
- which had been using them for behavioral research.
-
- Last year, however, the U.S. National Institutes of Health announced
- termination of funding for the research program, leaving no funds for their
- upkeep at the zoo.
-
- Animal rights activists in Thailand wrote to the U.S. ambassador, William
- Itoh, asking his help in having the monkeys sent to Thailand.
-
- ``This colony, the largest of its kind in the world, is in effect a Thailand
- national environmental treasure,'' the leaders of three organizations wrote in
- the letter.
-
- The letter contended that ``the only alternatives open to the animals are for
- them to be killed or sold to a commercial venture for potentially painful and
- lethal product testing and research.''
-
- Their quest acquired some urgency last week when about 100 rhesus monkeys at
- the Wisconsin center, affected by the same budget cutbacks, were transferred
- to another primate research center in Louisiana. Under the conditions of the
- transfer, they could eventually be subjected to invasive laboratory testing.
-
- A large number of hurdles remain before the stump-tailed macaques could come
- to Thailand.
-
- Montana Senator Max Baucus, approached when he visited Thailand last year, has
- agreed to help arrange transportation for the monkeys.
-
- But few concrete plans have been made, said Jordana Lenon, a spokeswoman for
- the primate center.
-
- Under the Convention on International Trade of Endangered Species, permits are
- needed before the monkeys can be exported, but so far the center has been
- unable to obtain the information necessary for applying for a permit, despite
- requests to Thai officials.
-
- ``This will delay the possible transfer of the animals by some time,'' Lenon
- said by e-mail to the AP.
-
- Lenon said the center also received had a letter last week from The Thai
- Society for the Conservation of Wild Animals, expressing concern that there
- are no places in Thailand ``with either the facilities, resources or the
- expertise to manage these macaques.''
-
- ``We will not send the stump-tail colony to any facility that does not have
- appropriate housing and the ability to properly care for this threatened
- species,'' Lenon said.
-
- AP-NY-03-08-98 0551EST
-
- Date: Sun, 8 Mar 1998 17:03:37 EST
- From: STFORJEWEL <STFORJEWEL@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: DECLAWING KITTIES
- Message-ID: <6b698469.350315bc@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- FROM THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN NEWS
- DENVER, COLORADO
- Saturday, March 7, 1998
-
- >From the Colorado Critters Section
- Rebecca Jones, Colorado Critters Editor
- (303) 892-5426
- email: spoltlight@denver-rmn.com
-
- DECLAWING NOT UP TO SCRATCH FOR SOME VETS
- By Keren Graham
-
- Linda Ryan's cat, Dallas, adopted 11 years ago as an abandoned kitten, never
- consistently used her litter box--the only one of the Lakewood woman's eight
- cats to have such problems.
-
- Dallas, who died last month, was also the only one of Ryan's cats to be
- declawed, and she suspects that's no coincidence.
-
- "I'd say 75% of cats that get declawed are extremely inconsistent litter-box
- users," says Ryan, who runs The Cat Spa, a feline boarding facility. "Here at
- The Cat Spa, the only ones that don't use the litter boxes are declawed ones,
- period."
-
- Declawing--widely viewed by pets owners and veterinarians as an acceptable
- solution to problem scratching--is coming under increasing scrutiny by those
- who say the surgery's long-term physical and behavioral after-effects are not
- well understood.
-
- Veterinarian Juli White, of Alameda East Veterinary Hospital (Aurora,
- Colorado), refuses to do declawing surgery, called onychectomy. "I see both
- sides of the issue, but my opinion is, you got a cat knowing it has claws,"
- she says.
-
- "The thing that upsets me most is when owners will come in and say, "We want
- to have her spayed and declawed. How old does she have to be for that?' And
- it's an 8-week old kitten."
-
- White says veterinarians should advise clients to wait until the cat is older
- to consider such surgery, and to explore other options first is scratching is
- causing problems.
-
- Veterinarian Kimberly Harrison, who owns The Cat Doctor, an all-cat practice
- in Aurora, says it's not in most vet's financial best interests to discourage
- declawing.
-
- "Declawing is easy money, I will tell you flat out," says Harrison, who no
- longer performs the surgery. "The front claws can be done in 10 minutes."
-
- "It's more financially advantageous to do declaws than any other alternative,"
- Harrison says." "Money is a great, great factor, if not the major factor."
-
- The American Veterinary Medical Association's 1994 policy states, "The
- declawing of the domestic cat is justifiable when the cat cannot be trained to
- refrain from using its claws destructively."
-
- But in a phone survey of 10 Denver veternarians--in which they were asked, "I
- want to get my cat declawed. Could you tell me about the operation, what I
- need to do and how much it costs?"--eight readily agreed to set up an
- appointment for declawing. Prices ranged from $40 to $211.
-
- Two mentioned other measures, including behavior modification, trimming the
- claws, using a type of press-on nails for cats called Soft Paws, or a less
- extreme operation called a tendonectomy.
-
- That even 2 out of 10 veterinarians mentioned alternatives surprised animal
- behaviorist Anne Bruce. She works with cat owners to solve behaviorial
- problems, most of which, she says, are caused by declawing.
-
- "They just don't know how important claws are. Declawing undermines the
- health of the cat," Bruce says.
-
- Bruce says 8 out of 10 abandoned cats in shelters are declawed--animals
- possibly turned out of their homes when their frustrated owners could no
- longer tolerate their litter box problems.
-
- Harrison agrees behavioral problems frequently haunt declawed cats, though
- they may not manifest for some time after the surgery, so the owner never
- makes the connection.
-
- "By far the commonest thing we see is cats not using the litter box," she
- says. "When cats have stress beyond what they can take, it often shows up as
- a litter-box problem and declawing makes them stress intolerant, in general,
- for the rest of their lives. We get anywhere from 3 to 12 calls a day about
- litter-box problems in cats, and after ruling out medical problems, 90% are
- declawed cats."
-
- Among the organizations opposing cat declawing: the American Society for the
- Prevention of Cruelty to Animals; the Humane Society of the US; the
- Association of Veterinarians for Animal Rights; the Cat Fanciers Association;
- and PETA.
-
- But it does have proponents.
-
- "Destructive clawing of furniture, walls, and other items is one of the most
- common reasons cats are abandoned, end up in humane shelters or are
- euthanized," says veterinarian Dr. Mike Richards, a Virginia-based
- veterinarian who writes for veterinary magazine and hosts an internet pet
- health page: www.vetinfo.com.
-
- "I think the loss of the claws, even though it is painful for several days to
- a week, is a small price to pay for harmony in the household and a greatly
- increased chance for continuing to have a home," Richards says. (Until,
- because of the declawing, they won't tolerate stress and get booted out for
- not using the litter box or other undesirable behavior issues. Sounds like
- cats are between a rock and a hard place-Ed.)
-
- Harrison insists behavioral and physical problems are often extreme and
- longlasting--and can be exacerbated by a less-than-skillful surgery.
-
- A 1994 study by the Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences at Washington
- State University College of Veterinary Medicine found that 163 cats having
- declaw surgery, 50% had one or more complications immediately after surgery.
- Of the 121 cats in which follow-up was performed, 20% had continued
- complications such as infection, bone protrusion into the pad, and prolonged,
- intermittent lameness and an abnormal stance.
-
- Harrison puts declawing in the same category as tail docking, ear cropping and
- debarking--all of which are either illegal or considered inhumane in some
- countries.
-
- "It takes time to coach people about declaw alternatives, like behavior
- modification," Harrison says. "In the time it takes us to discuss with an
- owner how to get a cat to use a scratching post, and not to use furniture, I
- could have done the declaw and made $100."
-
- Note: Bubble wrap, plastic wrap, or tin foil pinned, taped or somehow
- attached to the surfaces that kitty is multilating will keep them from using
- it as a scratching post. They don't seem to like scratching on these things.
- They can be removed when company comes and then reattached.-Ed.
- Date: Sun, 8 Mar 1998 18:13:08 EST
- From: Snugglezzz <Snugglezzz@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@Envirolink.org
- Subject: Elephants Try to Break out of the Zoo
- Message-ID: <326f0756.35032608@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Tulsa World, OK, USA: The Tulsa Zoo's two female elephants started pushing on
- the walls of their enclosure Monday, and the fence crumpled under the massive
- weight.
-
- The elephants didn't time their escape so well,though. They made a break for
- it just before the zookeepers left for the day.
-
- Zoo officials asked the City Council on Thursday evening for $25,000 in
- emergency funds to enclose a large part of the yard with a pipe fence. A pipe
- fence encloses the back part of the exhibit, where "the girls" are being kept
- now.
-
- On Friday, Gunda and Sooky put on a show and proved just how strong that pipe
- fence was. Gunda climbed up the fence, leaning half of her weight on the bars
- while her trunk swung over the top, seemingly in protest of the confined
- space.
-
- That small enclosure is "adequate for now," Karen Dunn, large-mammal curator
- said, although the elephants can't be viewed by visitors in the back pen. And
- the elephants have to be shut inside at night - something they don't like in
- warm weather.
-
- A new fence for them should be complete in the next two weeks, but securing
- the area will take about $35,000 more.
-
- -- Sherrill
- Date: Sun, 8 Mar 1998 19:12:07 EST
- From: STFORJEWEL <STFORJEWEL@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: LO DO STUPIDITY
- Message-ID: <8edeabf.350333da@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- FROM THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN NEWS
- DENVER, COLORADO
-
-
- >From the Business Section
- Rob Reuteman, Business Editor
- (303) 892-5177
- (303) 892-5242
- fax: (303) 892-2835
-
- DENVER, INC COLUMN
- By Michele Conklin
- and Al Lewis
-
- LOW-DOWN IN LODO (LOWER DOWNTOWN DENVER)
-
- Our 10-gallon hats are off to Dick's Last Resort for its ad in the souvenir
- program for the National Western Stock Show. The LoDo eatery's ad shows a
- fork dripping with ketchup--or perhaps blood--and asks, "Why view the animals
- when you can eat them?"
-
- CONTACT: Dick's Last Resort; 1909 Blake St; Denver, CO 80202; (303)
- 292-1212; fax: (303) 292-5260
-
- Michele Conklin and Al Lewis are business reporters at the Rocky Mountain
- News. Michele can be reached at (303) 892-2514 or conklin@denver-rmn.com. Al
- can be reached at (303) 892-5155 or ajslewis@aol.com
-
- Date: Sun, 08 Mar 1998 19:45:32 EST
- From: p.a.wood@juno.com (Pinckney Alonzo Wood)
- To: chickadee-l@envirolink.org, breaux@lded.state.la.us,
- burroughs@alpha.nsula.edu, brancont@premier1.premier.net,
- laspca@aol.com, Tanicat@aol.com, MoralesDL@aol.com, dnasr@aol.com,
- nspay4752@alpha.nsula.edu, tangiac@I-55.com, jriope@nomvs.lsumc.edu,
- phrap@linknet.net, carender@ca05.gov, Kea815@aol.com,
- ar-news@envirolink.org, hsusga@ix.netcom.com, hsuswild@ix.netcom.com,
- mmarkarian@fund.org, cfoxapi@aol.com, OnlineAPI@aol.com,
- Waynepp@ix.netcom.com, alicias@aspca.org, ppetersan@fund.org,
- bhg@vvm.com, superegion@aol.com, don@express-news.net,
- peta1@norfolk.infi.net, peta2@norfolk.infi.net
- Subject: Protest for Vilas Monkeys in New Orleans
- Message-ID: <19980308.184354.8159.8.p.a.wood@juno.com>
-
-
- PROTEST IN NEW ORLEANS -- SEND THE MONKEYS BACK!
-
- (Contact: Pinckney Wood, 504 282-5243)
-
- Today in New Orleans, after a day of stormy weather, the sun came out and
- so did ten animal protection activists to bring the story of the Vilas
- Park Monkeys to the doorstep of Tulane University. Maria Alvarez, Paul
- Cory, Adrian Dillon, Rita Leoni, Cathy Musmeci, Angie Strachan, Pat Volk,
- Tracy Whittington, and Gayle and Pinckney Wood stood with placards across
- the street from the university at the entrance to Audubon Park.
-
- The placards read: LEAVE THE ZOO MONKEYS ALONE, EXPERIMENT ON DR.
- GERONE
- ---- TULANE, GIVE MADISON SCHOOL CHILDREN THEIR MONKEYS BACK ----
- MADISON
- CHILDREN HEARTBROKEN BECAUSE TULANE TAKES ZOO MONKEYS ---- SHAME
- ON
- TULANE AND DR. PETER GERONE ---- TULANE PRIMATE CENTER DOESN'T NEED
- MORE
- VICTIMS ---- TULANE, RELEASE YOUR HOSTAGES, THEY'VE ALREADY SUFFERED
- ENOUGH.
-
- The protesters also had a letter to Tulane president, Dr. Emon Kelly, for
- passers-by to sign.
-
- Numerous people who were out walking, biking, walking their dog, etc.
- stopped to inquire. Most who stopped wanted to sign the letter; even a
- biker with a talking Amazon parrot named Chuckie on his shoulder who
- greeted the protesters. Several cars stopped on St. Charles Avenue in
- front of the protest and people got out to sign the letter. One woman,
- who was noticed looking back as she passed, circled around, stopped, got
- out, scrutinized the placards, and signed the letter. She said she had
- been a surgical nurse at Tulane. "That's a good one," she commented about
- the
- "experimenting on Dr. Gerone" placard. A few people didn't want to sign.
- One worked for Tulane. That's understandable. But they all wished the
- protester well.
-
- Pinckney Wood, organizer of the protest, said that he has been to many
- such events over the years, and that this was by far the most productive
- in terms of positive responses from the public. There was a great deal of
- interest and apparent heart-felt concern about the monkeys.
-
- The letter which shall be sent to Dr. Kelly reads as follows:
- March 8,
- 1998
-
- Dr. Emon Kelly, President
- Tulane University
- New Orleans, Louisiana
-
- Dear Dr. Kelly:
-
- A most regrettable thing has happened for the community of
- Madison, Wisconsin involving Tulane University.
-
- Two colonies of zoo monkeys which were considered a treasure by
- the community, and especially loved by the children of Madison, have
- been, as a result of bureaucratic blundering, sent to the Delta Regional
- Primate Center with the promotion and support of the Center's director,
- Dr. Peter Gerone. The University of Wisconsin decided to give up the
- monkeys when it was discovered that they had been using some of them for
- research after they had promised they would not. To maintain good public
- relations, the University decided to give them to the community.
-
- Before having been sent to Delta last week, the two colonies of
- Rhesus monkeys had been kept at the zoo in conjunction with a third
- colony of endangered stump-tailed macaques. All three colonies are
- uniquely valuable because they have been at the zoo for more than 35
- years and consist of a number of matriarchal hierarchy family groups. It
- may be that there is no other such established situation in captivity
- anywhere else in the world. Dr. Gerone has said they will be used as any
- other monkeys at the Center. This undoubtedly means that they will all be
- eventually
- consumed in the "make work" kind of research projects typically done at
- the Center.
-
- The hearings held by Madison officials over the last several
- weeks culminating in a vote of the County Board of Supervisors all
- resulted in recommendations not to allow the monkeys to be sent to
- Tulane's primate center. Most of these decisions were by unanimous vote,
- even though representatives of Delta were there to lobby for sending the
- monkeys here.
-
- Dr. Kelly, these monkeys should be maintained as intact colonies,
- and they should be maintained as such in the community of Madison, a
- community which knows them well, and cares very much about them. We, the
- undersigned, ask that arrangements be made to accomplish this, and that
- the monkeys be returned to the community of Madison.
-
- This letter is respectfully signed by the following:
-
- _____________________________________________________________________
- You don't need to buy Internet access to use free Internet e-mail.
- Get completely free e-mail from Juno at http://www.juno.com
- Or call Juno at (800) 654-JUNO [654-5866]
-
- Date: Sun, 08 Mar 1998 20:07:04 -0800
- From: FARM <farm@farmusa.org>
- To: Veg-News <veg-news@envirolink.org>, AR-News <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: MEATOUT Proclamation
- Message-ID: <35036AE8.4F89@farmusa.org>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- Dear Fellow Activist: If you are positively unable to do a real Meatout
- event this year, you can at least drop a letter to your governor or
- mayor requesting a Meatout proclamation. Suggested text of letter,
- proclamation are provided below. If you do hear from these folks, pleae
- call us ASAP at 1-800-MEATOUT. Thank you. Alex H.
- ---------------------------------------------------------
- Dear Governor/Mayor:
- On March 20 (first day of spring) caring folks in one thousand
- communities in ____________ and the other 49 states will welcome spring
- with information tables, ex-hibits, lectures, cooking demonstrations,
- public dinners, and food festivals. They will ask their neighbors to
- ôkick the meat habit, at least for a day, and to explore a more
- wholesome diet of whole grains, vegetables, and fresh fruits.ö
- The occasion is the Great American Meatout, the nationÆs largest and
- most colorful annual grassroots dietary education campaign.
- We respectfully request that you proclaim March 20 Great American
- Meatout Day in _____________. A suggested text is enclosed. Your
- proclamation will encourage our citizens to explore a diet more
- conducive to better health, cleaner environment, lower costs, and more
- humane treatment of animals. Twenty governors and dozens of mayors have
- signed similar proclamations in the past (see partial list below).
- Some remarkable trends occurred since Meatout was launched in 1985:
- ⌐ Over 30 million Americans have explored the vegetarian diet
- ⌐ Beef and veal consumption are down by 25 and 70%, respectively
- ⌐ Most teens think that vegetarianism is æcoolÆ
- ⌐ Mainstream public health organizations are touting plant-based eating
- ⌐ US Dietary Guidelines has endorsed vegetarian diets
- ⌐ Major manufacturers and retailers are marketing meatless foods.
- These accomplishments are due in large measure to the support of the
- Great American Meatout by consumer and environment protection advocates,
- by health experts and educators, by the mass media, and by public
- officials like you.
- Please feel free to contact us for any additional information you may
- require. Sincerely,
-
- PS: Similar proclamations have been signed in the past by the governors
- of California, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana,
- Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska,
- Oklahoma, Penn-sylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah,
- Washington, West Virginia and by the mayors of Asheville, Baltimore,
- Birmingham, Charleston, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Des Moines, District of
- Columbia, Houston, Huntsville, Indianapolis, Knoxville, Los Angeles,
- Louisville, New Orleans, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Raleigh, Sac-ramento,
- San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle, Tucson, and many smaller cities.
- Copies are available on request.
- --------------------------------------------
-
- PROCLAMATION - The GREAT AMERICAN MEATOUT
- March 20, 1998
- ⌐ WHEREAS a wholesome plant-based diet of whole grains, vegetables, and
- fresh fruits reduces the risk of heart disease, stroke, cancer,
- diabetes, and other chronic and infectious diseases that cripple and
- kill 1.5 million Americans annually, and
- ⌐ WHEREAS such a diet helps preserve topsoil, water, energy, and other
- food production resources that are essential to human survival, and
- ⌐ WHEREAS such a diet helps preserve our forests, grasslands, and other
- wildlife habitats and reduces pollution of our waterways by soil
- particles, debris, manure, and pesticides, and
- ⌐ WHEREAS such a diet helps prevent the suffering and death of more than
- nine billion sentient animals each year in the US, and
- ⌐ WHEREAS, for the past 13 years, many dedicated Great American Meatout
- volunteers in ________________ have encouraged their neighbors to
- explore such a diet,
- ⌐ THEREFORE, I, _____________________________________ hereby proclaim
- March 20, 1998 the GREAT AMERICAN MEATOUT DAY in ___________________ and
- encourage our citizens to explore a wholesome diet of whole grains,
- vegetables, and fresh fruits.
-
- Date: Mon, 9 Mar 1998 09:54:23 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (Australia)Pink and grey galahs clubbed to death.
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19980309094619.3067f9c6@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- On January 22nd 1998 the Adelaide Advertiser (the main daily paper in the state
- of South Australia) featured a large colour picture on the front page of a man
- clubbing to death pink and grey galahs (parrots) that were walking on the
- ground eating. The article stated that the galahs were shot and clubbed to
- death because they were a nuisance in Port Lincoln , Adelaide. They were an
- annual nuisance, eating spilled grain (possibly from harvesting) and because
- they attack the branches of Norfolk pines in Port Lincoln (these trees are
- not native to Australia but are found on Norfolk Island - they are planted
- in Australia , often near the sea in windy areas because they tolerate the
- sea winds and are hardy).
-
- On January the 23rd, an article appeared in which the S.A. minister for
- environment, Mrs Kotz, said it was "not allowed to just take up a club and
- club animals". Police and RSPCA were inundated with complaints after the
- front page feature of the 22nd of January in the Adelaide Advertiser showing
- a close up of a resident clubbing to death several galahs (who were so tame
- they did not even try to escape!).
-
- End.
- =====================================================================
- ========
- /`\ /`\ 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)
-
- Jesus was most likely a vegetarian... why aren't you? Go to
- http://www.zworx.com/kin/esseneteachings.htm
- for more information.
-
- It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
- - Voltaire
-
- Date: Sun, 8 Mar 1998 21:12:51 EST
- From: SMatthes <SMatthes@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Fwd: Enforcing the Animal Welfare Act
- Message-ID: <68ca11f9.35035025@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: multipart/mixed;
- boundary="part0_889409571_boundary"
-
- Re: USDA AND GIBSONTON, FLA., ANIMAL EXHIBITOR SETTLE ALLEGED AWA
- VIOLATIONS
- From: SMatthes <SMatthes@aol.com>
- Return-path: <SMatthes@aol.com>
- To: wag@heritage.com
- Subject: Enforcing the Animal Welfare Act
- Date: Sun, 8 Mar 1998 21:09:50 EST
- Organization: AOL (http://www.aol.com)
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Can you expand on exactly what specific violations were placed against Manual
- Ramos in Gibsonton, Fl? It is our contention that the USDA inspections, in
- most cases, are conducted, some follow-up is made but firm action is seldom
- taken to close or restrict the operation of violators. We have requested this
- matter as a topic item and intent to present this problem to Ron DeHaven
- during the USDA public meeting to be conducted by USDA at 4700 River Road,
- Riverdale, Md. on Tuesday, May 12, 98. We have also contended that one of the
- major reasons that violators have not been shutdown is because of the problems
- associated with the humane disposition of animals that would be confiscated by
- USDA in the event of a shutdown. Since no national or state operated
- sanctuaries are maintained, reliance is placed on private facilities to
- humanely care for and maintain sanctuary for any such confiscated animals.
- >From our personal experiences we know it is extremely difficult to place
- animals in such privately run sanctuaries because funding for their care and
- maintenance is not available from any source other than donations from the
- public. As a result, totally unsatisfactory operations are allowed to retain
- their licenses and flaunt the USDA and AWA standards for animal welfare. To
- resolve this problem, state and national sanctuary facilities are needed right
- now. We hope that you and as many other animal rights and animal welfare
- organizations as possible will atttend the May 12th meeting and express our
- concern for the problems that we all know exist with enforcement of the AWA by
- USDA. Keep sending out the type of violation action information you have
- from USDA. It at least lets others know that in some cases the AWA has a
- little clout. We have also suggested support from USDA of U.S.
- Senate Bill (SB995) and companion U.S. House Bill (HB 1202 The Captive Exotic
- Animal Protection Act 0f 1997 which are presently sitting in their respective
- judiciary committees. Also, USDA should review the state of Michigan House
- Bill No. 4791 passed by the house and presently in committee in the Michigan
- Senate. This bill, in our opinion, is the most comprehensive piece of
- legislation ever drafted regarding the possession of dangerous exotic animals
- by members of the public and should be a model for national legislation on
- this extremely important subject.
-
- Sumner Matthes, Wildlife Coordinator, Sarasota In Defense of Animals and Board
- Member Animal Sanctuary Association
-
-
- Date: Sun, 08 Mar 1998 21:17:15 -0800
- From: Hillary <oceana@ibm.net>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: UN says hormone treated milk/meat safe
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980308211709.0077c24c@pop01.ny.us.ibm.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Subj:UN: Hormone-Treated Milk, Meat Safe
- Date:98-03-05 11:41:03 EST
- From:AOL News
- BCC:FreeAnmls
-
- UN: Hormone-Treated Milk, Meat Safe
-
- .c The Associated Press
-
- ROME (AP) - A new United Nations report says milk and meat from cows
- treated with a growth hormone is safe. The hormone BST is widely used in
- the United States but looked at with suspicion in Europe.
-
- ``There are no food safety or health concerns related to BST residues in
- products such as meat or milk from treated animals,'' said a report
- released Thursday by the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization.
-
- BST, also known as BGH, has also been endorsed as safe by the World Trade
- Organization and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Despite these
- endorsements, the 15-nation European Union banned the importation of beef
- containing hormones in 1989.
-
- The U.N. report noted that the hormone can increase a cow's milk production
- by 10 to 15 percent.
-
- BST is produced naturally in a cow's pituitary gland but can be injected as
- a supplement to increase milk output. The engineered hormone is made by the
- St. Louis-based Monsanto Co., which says it is now used in 25 percent of
- the U.S. dairy herd.
-
-
- Date: Sun, 08 Mar 1998 21:20:32 -0800
- From: Hillary <oceana@ibm.net>
- To: "ar-news@envirolink.org" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: New Controls for animal farms
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980308212030.0077c24c@pop01.ny.us.ibm.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Subj:EPA Plans New Controls on Farms
- Date:98-03-05 10:39:53 EST
- From:AOL News
- BCC:FreeAnmls
-
- EPA Plans New Controls on Farms
-
- .c The Associated Press
-
- By H. JOSEF HEBERT
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) - The Environmental Protection Agency said today it will
- place new controls on thousands of large livestock and poultry farms to
- reduce the flow of animal and chicken wastes into the nation's waterways.
-
- Some farmers claimed the restrictions would lead to higher food prices,
- while environmentalists argued the crackdown was long overdue and only a
- first step to stem growing pollution from agricultural runoff.
-
- The EPA initiative is the first installment of a broader plan to protect
- the nation's waterways. President Clinton last month singled out the need
- to protect lakes and streams from urban and agricultural pollution as one
- of his top environmental priorities.
-
- EPA Administrator Carol Browner said urban and agricultural runoff accounts
- for half of the pollution in the nation's lakes and rivers and waste ``from
- animal feeding operations in particular has been associated with threats to
- human health and the environment.''
-
- The plan, once it is formally adopted, would reflect a significant
- broadening of the federal government's oversight of an estimated 6,000
- commercial livestock and poultry farms across the country.
-
- The agency said the largest of these facilities would have to fully comply
- with new pollution controls by 2002 and the rest by 2005. Currently only
- about a fourth of the animal feedlots are regulated by states, according to
- the EPA.
-
- The EPA strategy called for regulating large poultry and other livestock
- farms, or feedlots, to curb pollution into nearby waterways much as
- factories currently are regulated under the Clean Water Act. The controls
- would not apply to cattle ranches, but only to feedlots where the livestock
- are fattened before slaughter.
-
- Beef or dairy cattle, hog and poultry farms would be subject to regular
- inspections, require pollution permits and be required to develop plans
- limiting release of chemicals, manure and other wastes into waterways, the
- agency said.
-
- Such pollution has been blamed for excessive nutrients and toxic chemicals
- getting into lakes and streams, leading to a growing number of fish kills
- in waterways in many parts of the country.
-
- Wastes from poultry farms on Maryland's Eastern Shore was blamed last
- summer for an outbreak of the microbe pfiesteria that killed thousands of
- fish and forced state officials to close infected rivers along the
- Chesapeake Bay to fishing.
-
- The flow of large amounts of nutrients from livestock into rivers and
- streams also has caused oxygen-choking algae blooms in waterways, creating
- in some cases ``dead zones'' where fish and other aquatic life no longer
- can survive.
-
- The EPA proposal would require permits for farms with more than 1,000
- cattle, 2,500 swine or 100,000 laying hens. Permits also could be required
- for smaller farms that were found to pose an environmental hazard to
- specific environmentally sensitive waterways, the sources said.
-
- Currently cattle feedlots, large commercial hog farms and poultry farms are
- regulated by the state with pollution standards and permits varying from
- one region to another.
-
- The new EPA initiative had been expected within the agriculture industry.
- Some livestock groups have been critical of increased federal controls,
- arguing they would put U.S. farmers at a disadvantage against farms in
- Mexico and other countries, and lead to higher consumer prices for chicken,
- beef, pork and dairy products.
-
- Still other farmers, however, have said federal standards may be an
- improvement over what some consider a hodgepodge of state regulations, with
- farmers in some states required to meet more stringent pollution controls
- than competitors in a neighboring state.
-
- AP-NY-03-05-98 1036EST
-
- </pre>
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