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- Anyone have contact details for the Jane Goodall Institute (in
- > Washington?) I am interested in finding out whether what she has
- learnt
- > could be applied to tiger conservation.
- >
- > Pamela Sutton
- > Wild Tiger Fund, Australia
-
- Date: Sat, 07 Mar 1998 00:12:25
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [CA] Cat spay rebate program expanded
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980307001225.08b79324@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From INFOBURNABY - February 1998 edition
-
- Do you have a new kittenor cat? If you can answer yes, then you should know
- that Burnaby is helping pet owners play an active role in reducing our
- surplus cat and kitten population.
-
- Council recently expanded our Cat Spay Rebate Program to include a rebate
- for both the spaying and neutering of kittens and cats.
-
- More good news: the spay or neuter rebate amount for cats has been
- increased to $15. There is a limit of two rebates per Burnaby household.
-
- As a pet owner you face the choice of adding to the problem or being part
- of the solution. By spaying and neutering your cat you enhance its chances
- of living a long, healthy life, save yourself a great deal of potential
- trouble and cost and reduce the number of unwanted and homeless cats and
- kittens.
-
- Make an appointment with your veterinarian today. To claim your rebate,
- please bring your cat or kitten's spay or neuter certificate to the Burnaby
- SPCA Animal Shelter at 3202 Norland Avenue.
-
- [Although the amount of the spay/neuter rebate appears small, Burnaby
- Council is the only municipality in the Lower Mainland of B.C. to offer
- such a rebate. The rebate scheme was initiated following the unsucessful
- attempt by the Burnaby Spay/Neuter Coalition to have a spay/neuter bylaw
- passed.]
-
-
-
-
- Date: Sat, 07 Mar 1998 00:00:29
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [CA] Racoons in the city
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980307000029.08b77c64@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From INFOBURNABY - February 1998 edition
-
- This past fall, the City of Burnaby brought together a working group to
- redpond to neighbourhood concerns about the unauthorized and illegal
- leg-hold trapping and snaring of racoons in and around Forest Glen Park.
- The working group included the RCMP, the SPCA, and the Wildlife Rescue
- Association.
-
- With the generous support of the SPCA, the working group was able to
- advertise a reward of $2,000 for information leading to the arrest and
- conviction of the individual responsible for this inhumane trapping. To
- date, the culprit has not been identified, but fortunately we have recieved
- no further reports of illegal leg-hold trapping in Burnaby.
-
- In addition to reaching out to local schools with educational programs, the
- Wildlife Rescue Association provides the following Urban Wildlife Tips:
-
- - Never feed racoons or coyotes. To do so causes them to:
-
- i ) lose their natural fear of humans
- ii ) have larger families
- iii ) increase the potential for damage to homes and gardens
-
-
- - Always feed dogs and cats INSIDE the home. Never put pet food on a porch
- or other outside area.
-
-
- - Keep chimneys capped with heavy wire mesh.
-
-
- - Keep dumpsters tightly closed and garbage cans in a shed or garage.
-
-
- - Teach children to inform an adult immediately if they see an unusual
- animal. This removes them from potential danger and keeps them safe.
-
-
- We are fortunate to have an abundance of wildlife in our parks. Please use
- these tips to ensure that these creatures are here for future generations.
-
- [INFOBURNABY is the quarterly newsletter published by the City of Burnaby.
- It is delivered to all households and businesses in the city.]
-
- Date: Sat, 07 Mar 1998 00:26:29
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [CA] British Meat Seized in Canada - Further Info.
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980307002629.20577ec2@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Here are a few more details.
-
- Examples of products seized include items such as Heinz's oxtail &
- muligatawny soups and baked beans produced in the UK. Also included are
- products like Fray Bentos Steak & Kidney pie and Atora beef suet.
-
- Officials from the Canadian Food Inspection Agency told CTV News tonight
- (Friday) they are not sure if the products which were on sale arrived in
- Canada illegally, or were imported legally and jsut slipped through
- customs. They add that there is a black market for such products, and that
- as long as there is a demand, there will be attempts to get such products
- into Canada.
-
- This was confirmed by the owner of a British store in Calgary, who told CTV
- News that his customers were amazed that the CFIA were seizing their
- favourite foods, and many had asked him to "get some on the side."
-
- (The store was named on CTV, but I didn't make a note of it. The store in
- Richmond, BC, is called the British Home Store. There is at least one local
- butcher who also sells such products.)
-
- Although responsible for Vancouver-area supermarkets removing British dairy
- products from their shelves immediately following the confirmation of the
- link between mad cow disease (BSE) and the human version - CJD - this
- writer cannot claim any credit for the latest move.
-
- David
-
- Date: Sat, 07 Mar 1998 01:13:21
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Hunting ban looks doomed as Tories put up fierce
- resistance
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980307011321.20573300@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Saturday, March 7th, 1998
-
- Hunting ban looks doomed as Tories put up fierce resistance
- By Jon Hibbs, Political Correspondent
-
- THE prospect of a parliamentary ban on foxhunting appeared doomed to a
- lingering death last night after anti-hunting MPs failed to make headway
- against determined resistance in the Commons.
-
- Five hours of trench warfare over the private member's Bill introduced by
- the Labour MP Michael Foster ensured that hardly any legislative progress
- was made by the close of business. The Wild Mammals (Hunting with Dogs)
- Bill is set to return for further debate at the Report Stage next Friday
- but faces a mass of amendments tabled by opponents.
-
- The measure is now likely to run out of parliamentary time without gaining
- a Third Reading, and therefore will fail to reach the Lords. This will be a
- relief to ministers who had feared that
- the Government's legislative programme could be held up by discussion of
- the Bill in the Upper House, where there is no restriction on the amount of
- time provided for debate.
-
- Mr Foster reluctantly acknowledged that his efforts were in vain. "It looks
- as if my opponents may get away with it, for this time," he said. The
- Conservatives deployed the full range of
- parliamentary traditions and tactics yesterday in a concerted campaign to
- talk the measure out. Pro-hunting MPs from Labour and the Liberal Democrats
- also joined in the rearguard tactics by tabling 14 new clauses and dozens
- of amendments.
-
- Douglas Hogg, the former Tory agriculture minister, put down 150 separate
- amendments of his own. But amid bitter recriminations, some anti-hunting
- campaigners rounded on Jack Straw, the Home Secretary, for quashing their
- hopes of government intervention to implement a ban.
-
- Ruling out any rescue attempt, Mr Straw said the Criminal Justice Bill,
- which the Home Office intends to introduce in the autumn, will be framed so
- tightly that it would be impossible for
- the anti-hunting lobby to hijack it as a vehicle for a hunting ban. Labour
- promised in its election manifesto to allow a free vote on the issue and
- the Bill gained a Commons majority of 260 at its Second Reading last November.
-
- However, ministers have been dampening down expectations of government
- intervention since last weekend when 280,000 people took to the streets of
- London partly in defence of the sport.
-
- The Campaign for the Protection of Hunted Animals (CPHA), which includes
- the RSPCA and the League Against Cruel Sports, vowed to step up its
- campaign for a ban and blamed the
- imminent demise of the Bill on the filibustering of a small minority of MPs.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- [ Note: The Electronic Telegraph is the on-line version of the British
- newspapers the Daily and Sunday Telegraph. The Telegraph Group is part of
- the Holinger Group of newspapers owned or controlled by media baron Conrad
- Black.]
-
- 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, 7 Mar 1998 17:15:07 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: RFI Scientific American Animal Exp Issue
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19980307170700.3b3778c0@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Does anyone know what the month of issue was or volume number
- for the Scientific American Magazine that featured all the articles
- for and against vivisection/experimentation ?
- Please email me privately at rabbit@wantree.com.au if you have details of
- this issue.
- =====================================================================
- ========
- /`\ /`\ 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: Sat, 07 Mar 1998 08:06:22 -0500
- From: Constance Young <conncat@idsi.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Cc: ar-views@envirolink.org
- Subject: Howard Lyman to speak in Kingston, NY for The Great American Meatout
- Message-ID: <3501464E.7E74@idsi.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- To get the word across about The Great American Meatout, DR. HOWARD F.
- LYMAN -- that noble ex-cattleman who caused the uproar (and lawsuit
- based on Texas food-liable laws) on the Oprah Winfrey show (which they
- ultimately won)-- will be in New York to help the Mid-Hudson Vegetarian
- Society, Inc. to celebrate The Great American Meatout.
-
- There will also be a potluck dinner (obviously vegan).
-
- THE SPEAKER: DR. HOWARD LYMAN
- THE DATE: Saturday, March 14 at 4:30 PM.
- THE PLACE: Unitarian Universalist Congregation of the Catskills
- 320 Sawkill Road
- Kingston, NY
-
- THE PRICE: $5 for members of the Mid-Hudson Vegetarian Society (with
- dish)
- $ 8 for non-members (with covered dish serving at least four
- people)
-
- CONTACT: For more information call 914- 338-8223 or 914-338-7990
- In New York City call 718 238-4035.
-
- Date: Sat, 7 Mar 1998 08:07:39 -0500
- From: "Bina Robinson" <civitas@linkny.com>
- To: <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Fw: National Day of Prayer
- Message-ID: <199803071323.IAA23534@net3.netacc.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
-
-
- ----------
- > From: buffalo folks <stop-the-slaughter@wildrockies.org>
- > To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- > Cc: enviroforum@envirolink.org
- > Subject: National Day of Prayer
- > Date: Friday, March 06, 1998 11:50 AM
- >
- > Greetings web warrior friends,
- > I am requesting your assistance in helping to get the word out about the
- > National Day of Prayer on March 21st
- >
- > i should be able to have the buffalo nations web space updated about this
- > wonderfull event by tomorrow (so much to do...so little time ~GRIN~)
- >
- > It is snowing here in Montana...
- > the camp could use volunteers
- >
- > thank you for your assistance in helping to get the word out
- >
- > for the earth,
- > su
- >
- > *************************
- > *E-mail Update: Buffalo Nations, 03/03/98
- >
- > *There is a Day of Prayer called for ALL PEOPLE, by Arvol Looking
- > Horse, keeper of the White Buffalo Calf Pipe.
- > >From this week's issue of Wotanging Ikche..
- > ***********************
- >
- > Update to Buffalo Nations supporters and friends:
- >
- > Watch NBC's Today Show March 9th for a special expose on Buffalo Nations!
- > Join us for a Day of Prayer for the Buffalo on March 21st.
- >
- > Hello from the all volunteer crew at Buffalo Nations. The last
- few
- > weeks have been very busy. We've been visited by a film crew from NBC's
- > Today Show and by activist Winnona LaDuke. For most of February we
- > maintained a house with between 25 and 30 people and, as planned, we kept
- > dawn to dusk vigil with the buffalo.
- > Over the last few weeks we've been especially thankful for some
- > great media work done by Rosalie Little Thunder and Winnona LaDuke. We
- > also received help from the staff of Patagonia who were generous enough
- to
- > send its
- > employees to work with us throughout the month of March!
- >
- > Robert Blackwolf spent weeks with us putting together a decent
- > field communications outfit.
- > A wonderful person in Bozeman ran a fantastic ad for us in the Bozeman
- > Chronicle. And people everywhere continue to offer their support for the
- > bison.
- > Right now there are less than a dozen bison out of the park in
- West
- > Yellowstone and nine close to the border in Gardiner. Snow has been
- > falling all day. I went north last week and felt Spring in the air but
- > here Winter still rules. We continue to stand with the buffalo everyday.
- >
- > We still wish for new folks who want to come out and volunteer
- with
- > us. So far this winter more than 130 volunteers have visited Buffalo
- > Nations! The Department of Livestock seems hesitant to show their face
- now
- > that so much of the world is watching and praying.
- > March 21st will be a day of prayer for the buffalo. Through
- our
- > actions and our spirit we will demonstrate that we want these buffalo to
- > return. Please join us in praying in your own way.
- >
- > *****************************************
- >
- >
- > There is a Day of Prayer called for ALL PEOPLE, by Arvol Looking
- > Horse, keeper of the White Buffalo Calf Pipe.
- > >From this week's issue of Wotanging Ikche..
- >
- > Date: Thu, 26 Feb 1998 18:42:17 -0500
- > From: "elaine flattery" <flattery@primeline.com>
- > Subj: A Call to World Peace
- >
- > Mitakuye oyasin,
- > My name is Chief Arvol Looking Horse. As the 19th Generation Keeper of
- > the Sacred White Buffalo Calf Pipe, I invite you to attend the third
- World
- > Peace and Prayer Day at the Sacred Pipestone quarries in Pipestone,
- > Minnesota on June 21, 1998. According to Lakota Star Knowledge, June 21
- > is set as time to pray. Pipestone is the home of the stone from which our
- > Sacred Pipes are created, the place that holds the blood of our
- ancestors.
- > The necessity of the gathering was first brought to us in 1994 when the
- > birth of the first White Buffalo Calf signaled the changes that are
- coming
- > and the fulfilling of the prophecies of the seventh generation. Since
- > then, three more White Buffalo Calves have been born. Their birth relates
- > to our ceremonies and signifies the impact of what we are facing. The
- > prophecies have directed that we pray for four years at sacred sites in
- > the four directions on June 21st of each year.
- > Our prophecies tell us that we are at the crossroads. We are faced with
- > either chaos and disaster, or we can unite spiritually in peace and
- > harmony. It is time to bring the message of the need for peace throughout
- > the world. As a keeper of a sacred bundle, I ask for prayers for Global
- > Healing! Our Mother Earth is suffering. Her wonderful gift of water,
- > trees, and air is being abused. Her children the two-legged, the four-
- > legged, those that swim, crawl and fly are being annihilated. We
- > continuously see these atrocities. Our relatives, the animal nations
- > reflect our well-being. What happens to them, happens to us. The
- buffalo,
- > wolf, salmon, bear, caribou, eagle and other relatives in this fragile
- > ecosystem are all in danger and suffering.Their voices must be heard.
- They
- > need our help.
- > This is a call to all peoples. We ask that all people join us in prayer
- > on June 21, 1998. If you are unable to be with us, we ask that you gather
- > at your own sacred site, wherever the Spirit guides you to pray. To those
- > that can join us we ask you to bring your stories and prayers. We make a
- > special call to the wisdom and sacred bundle keepers, our storytellers,
- > medicine society knowledge keepers, peacekeepers.
- > We gather so that our future generations may survive through peace and
- > balance.
- > In our circle of life there is no beginning and no ending. The process
- > of mending the sacred hoop continues. May peace be with you, my
- relatives.
- > Mitakuye oyasin,
- > The gathering will take place in Pipestone, Minnesota from June 19-21,
- 1998
- > Special invitation to our youth
- > Plan to bring tobacco, food, a gift, sage and your own dishes to share
- > For the Pipestone Gathering Information call (612)837-1754
- > Email: flattery@primeline.com
- >
- >
- > ********************************************************
- > This is an all volunteer effort. Your actions make the difference.
- >
- > TELL YOUR FRIENDS ABOUT the Stop-the-Slaughter SITE
- > http://www.wildrockies.org/bison
- >
- > ********************************************************
- > Check out Buffalo Nations site! constantly updated with new info from
- the
- > field!
- > http://www.wildrockies.org/Buffalo
- > write a letter to the editor of one of the papers listed there!
- > ***********************************
- >
- > For the Buffalo!
- > Mitakuye Oyasin (All My Relations)
- > ********************************************************
- >
- > ********************************************************
- > This is an all volunteer effort. Your actions make the difference.
- >
- > TELL YOUR FRIENDS ABOUT the Stop-the-Slaughter SITE
- > http://www.wildrockies.org/bison
- >
- > ********************************************************
- > Check out Buffalo Nations site! constantly updated with new info from
- the
- > field!
- > http://www.wildrockies.org/Buffalo
- > write a letter to the editor of one of the papers listed there!
- > ***********************************
- >
- > For the Buffalo!
- > Mitakuye Oyasin (All My Relations)
- > ********************************************************
- >
- >
- Date: Sat, 7 Mar 1998 09:49:56 EST
- From: HudaKore <HudaKore@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Detroit activists out on bail
- Message-ID: <5cff89cf.35015e96@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- All 3 Detroit lock-down activists were released at about 6 this morning on
- $100 bail each. Their charge is for disorderly conduct. Gary's car had the
- window frame cut out of it to release Tiiu and it was impounded. He cannot
- get his car back until March 11 as it is being held for "evidence." They will
- be arraigned on March 11th. They are all in good spirits and have made quite
- an impact. Positive media coverage. All need to be congratulated.
-
- For the animals,
- Hilma
- Date: Sat, 7 Mar 1998 11:17:34 EST
- From: HudaKore <HudaKore@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: A note from Gary Yourofsky
- Message-ID: <8eb0662.35017320@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Here's an update from Gary:
-
- "After 10 hours in the 11th Precinct (Detroit), I am finally out on $100 bail
- for disorderly conduct. The car lockdown went as planned even though eight
- police officers were scattered around the front entrance to The Michigan State
- Fairgrounds. However, never underestimate 'the element of surprise' when
- conducting acts of civil disobedience. When I slid underneath my car at 6:10
- p.m. and locked my neck to the wheel axle, a few officers yelled. 'Sir, sir,
- what are you doing?' Obviously, they were startled, confused and dumbfounded.
- I will be going to 36th District Court Wednesday morning at 8:30 a.m. EST.
- This incident does not affect my prior arrest (Chatham 3) for allegedly
- freeing 1,500 minks from The Eberts Animal Concentration Camp in Blenheim,
- Ontario, last April. Remember, as long as animals are enslaved, mistreated and
- deprived of their freedom, there should be no quietude from animal rights
- activists. By the way, today's Detroit Free Press actually ran a pretty good
- story on the The Shrine Circus lockdown."
-
- For total liberation,
- Gary
- Date: Sat, 7 Mar 1998 13:46:38 -0500
- From: "Bina Robinson" <civitas@linkny.com>
- To: <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: WHALES / SONAR
- Message-ID: <199803071835.NAA00623@net3.netacc.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- THE ECONOMIST March 7, 1998
-
- Quiet, please. Whales navigating
-
- As if whales did not have enought to cope with, being chased across the
- oceans by Japanese and Norwegian fishermen, and swarmed around by
- Californian tourists in small boats, it now looks as though they may suffer
- "collaterial damage" from the use of sonar by the world's navies. Such
- damage has long been suspected, since whales employ their own form of sonar
- for navigating and hunting, and also use sonar-like low frequency sound for
- communicating with each other (so-called whale song). But Alexandros
- Frantzis, of the University of Athens, believes he now has evidence to
- support the idea.
-
- Dr. Fratzis, who has just published his data in NATURE, studies Cuvier's
- beaked whale--a denizen of the Ionian sea off Greece's west coast, among
- other places. Like many whales, individual of this species sometimes
- misnavigate and end up stranding themselves on the world's beaches.
- Occasionally a whole group of them will do so together in what is called a
- mass stranding. But during two days in May 1996, Dr Frantzis observed
- something he had never seen before--a dozen beaked whales stranded as
- individuals, rather than a group, along a 40 km (25 mile) stretch of coast.
-
- Normal mass strandings are thought to be caused when a group of whales
- follows a leader that (sic) has made a mistake. That cannot explain how
- 12 whales ended up on the beach with an average distance of 3 1/2 km
- between them. But Dr Frantzis subsequently discovered that a NATO research
- vessel was in the area at the time and was carrying out tests of a sonar
- that produces extremely loud low-frequency sound (it has a maximum output
- of 230 decibels, compared with 100 decibels for a jumbo jet). This, he
- thought, might be the explanation. He reckons the chance that the
- strandings in Greece were a conincidence is less than one in a thousand.
- And he found that three similar mass strandings in the Canary Islands were
- also associated with military manoeuvres.
-
- What, if anything, can be done to reconcile the interests of navies and
- whales? Perhaps nothing. But now that the problem has been exposed, those
- who plan sonar tests whould at least try to be good neighbours, and keep
- the noise down to the absolute minimum. -30-
-
- The Economist
- 25 St James's Street London SW1A 1HG FAX 0171 839 2968/9
- 111 West 57th St New York NY 10019 FAx 212 541 9378
-
- Date: Sat, 7 Mar 1998 13:48:05 EST
- From: BanFurNow <BanFurNow@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Dallas - ALT Upcoming Actions
- Message-ID: <3567ec67.35019669@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Animal Liberation of Texas
- P. O. Box 820872
- Dallas, TX 75382
- (972) 664-6760
- ALTorg@aol.com
- http://www.envirolink.org/orgs/alt/animalrights.html
-
- Upcoming Actions
-
- Saturday, March 7, 1998
- Neiman Marcus anti-fur protest at the downtown store. Activists are to meet
- at the corner of Ervay and Main at 2:00 p.m.
-
- Thursday, March 26, 1998
- ALT will be protesting against the March of Dimes for their participation in
- animal testing. This action is in support of a national campaign against
- March of Dimes organized by Physican's Committee for Responsible Medicine.
- Activists are to meet in front of the March of Dimes office located at 8131
- LBJ Freeway in Dallas at 1:45 p.m. Please call ALT for more information.
-
- Saturday, March 28, 1998
- Neiman Marcus anti-fur protest at the downtown store. Activists are to meet
- at the corner of Ervay and Main at 2:00 p.m.
-
- Saturday, April, 11, 1998
- Neiman Marcus anti-fur protest at the Northpark store. Activists are to meet
- in front of TGI Friday's at the corner of Park and Central at 1:30 p.m.
-
- Saturday, April 18, 1998
- Animal Damage Control protest in Ft. Worth. Activists are to meet in front of
- the United States Courthouse located at 501 W. 10th in Ft. Worth at 1:45 p.m.
-
- Sunday, April 26, 1998
- National Lab Week - Dallas kick off vivisection Demonstration. Details to be
- announced at a later date.
-
- Please check our info. line and/or web page for updates on upcoming actions
- ╖ (972) 664-6760 Information Line
- ╖ http://www.envirolink.org/orgs/alt/animalrights.html
- Date: Sat, 07 Mar 1998 11:34:09 -0800
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Coatimundi said to be boiled alive
- Message-ID: <3501A131.2933@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Little progress in coatimundi killing case
-
- Scripps Howard
- SAN FRANCISCO, March 5, 1998
-
- Authorities investigating the alleged illegal killing of a raccoon-like
- animal -- a coatimundi -- in a restaurant in San Francisco's famed
- Chinatown in October say they're pursuing the case aggressively but
- making little progress.
-
- "Our investigators are working very hard," said Lt. Miles Young of the
- California Fish and Game Department, "but we're running into a dead end.
- This is months old and people aren't really talking."
-
- Carl Friedman, city director of animal care and control, said
- investigators are "getting a little closer" to people believed to have
- been eyewitnesses, but haven't yet spoken to them.
-
- Meanwhile, the restaurant where the animal was allegedly boiled alive --
- the Grand Palace -- was held in violation of state food sanitation law
- by the city Health Department.
-
- The ruling followed a Feb. 24 abatement hearing prompted by allegations
- made by the same three ex-workers who accused the restaurant of cooking
- the coatimundi alive.
-
- In affidavits made in connection with a state claim for back wages, the
- former employees also alleged various unsanitary conditions in the
- restaurant's kitchen and storage areas.
-
- According to a letter signed by health director Mitchell Katz, the
- restaurant was found to be in violation of the state Uniform Retail Food
- Facilities Law and allowed to close voluntarily. Upon re-inspection Feb.
- 26, health authorities determined that "significant improvements" had
- been made and the restaurant re-opened.
-
- According to the statements given by the fired employees in early
- February to the state labor commissioner, a live coatimundi was plunged
- into a pot of boiling water on Oct. 21 and killed over a 20- to
- 30-minute period, apparently in order to be prepared as a $1,000-a-plate
- dish.
-
- Coatimundis look like raccoons with elongated snouts; they are native to
- the American Southwest, Mexico and South America.
-
- After the charges became public, they were sharply denied by Cheng and
- by the restaurant's attorney, Alia Samad Salameh.
-
- On Feb. 23, the fired workers' claims for an undisclosed amount of back
- wages were settled confidentially, according to Samad Salameh.
-
- Friedman said that because of the settlement, "these people might not be
- as cooperative."
-
- Samad Salameh reiterated her previous denial of the animal cruelty
- charge.
-
- "Somehow things got taken out of context and there was this horrible
- allegation that devastated my client unfairly," she said. "I understand
- the concerns of animal rights groups, but the bottom line was it wasn't
- true.'
-
- By SCOTT WINOKUR, San Francisco Examiner. Distributed by Scripps Howard
- News Service.
- Date: Sat, 07 Mar 1998 11:53:29 -0800
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: EPA chief reassures factory farmers
- Message-ID: <3501A5B9.947@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
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-
- New pollution rules not intended to punish hog farmers, EPA chief says
-
- The Associated Press
- WASHINGTON, March 6, 1998
-
- A proposal to cut animal waste pollution in waterways is not designed to
- punish livestock producers or cause economic damage to agriculture,
- Environmental Protection Agency chief Carol Browner said Friday.
-
- In a speech to a national hog farmer conference, Browner said the EPA
- intends to work closely with livestock producers to determine how best
- to
- reduce manure pollution so that no single segment is put at a
- competitive
- disadvantage.
-
- "No one livestock industry will be singled out. All will be required to
- do a
- better job of managing their waste," Browner told the National Pork
- Industry
- Forum in Reno, Nev., in the speech carried by satellite.
-
- The draft EPA initiative announced Thursday would for the first time
- require
- some 6,000 larger hog, cattle and poultry operations to obtain federal
- permits and meet national water pollution guidelines. Now, state rules
- cover
- only about a quarter of them.
-
- Browner said that the EPA, working with the Agriculture Department and
- farmers, would identify ways to provide financial and technical
- assistance
- to implement the regulations. She promised the government will listen to
- producers' concerns and consider regional differences before issuing a
- final
- version.
-
- "Can you tell us what you need us to do?" she asked. "What are the
- resources
- we need to provide you with?"
-
- Corporate hog farms have sparked controversy around the country because
- of
- fish kills, odor problems and their economic impact on smaller
- producers.
- Yet Browner said the pork industry is at the forefront in facing up to
- pollution and working with regulators on solutions.
-
- "We're learning firsthand from you how all your operations work, what
- makes
- sense and what doesn't make sense," she said.
-
- Before the speech, Iowa Pork Producers Association president Norman
- Schmitt
- said farmers are worried about added costs and whether federal
- regulations
- might be less flexible than state rules. He also said farmers don't need
- another paperwork burden.
-
- "Any time you create a program at the federal level, it's just another
- layer," said Schmitt, a hog farmer in Rudd, Iowa. "If it's truly going
- to
- protect the environment, we will do that. The biggest problem is the
- bureaucracy."
-
- Delegates to the pork forum are scheduled to vote Saturday on
- resolutions dealing with government waste regulation, including one that
- favors state or federal regulations over those imposed by counties or
- towns.
-
- By CURT ANDERSON, AP Farm Writer
- Date: Sun, 08 Mar 1998 09:28:26 -0800
- From: Coral Hull <animal_watch@envirolink.org>
- To: AR-News <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Circus Tiger Not To Blame For Biting Off Trainer's Forearm (The True Story)
- Message-ID: <3502D53A.2C57@envirolink.org>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- .......NEW RELEASE.......THE TRUE STORY......
-
- Circus Tiger Not To Blame For Biting Off TrainerÆs Forearm
-
- The Bengal tiger which bit off the arm of a Chipperfield circus keeper
- Nigel Wessman 32 was not to blame for the incident, its breeder said
- yesterday. æThe tiger didnÆt do it. His teeth did it.Æ
-
- Four-year-old Rajah was in his pen with his sisters, Sita and Rani. Mr
- WessmanÆs left forearm was severed below the elbow when he put it into
- RajahÆs cage on Wednesday evening, ignoring the usual procedure of using
- a metal bar to open a partition and bash the tigerÆs head in. æI thought
- they were my friends,Æ the distraught Wessman said, æI trusted them.Æ
-
- Surgeons who later amputated the limb above the elbow gave Mr Wessman
- some advice at the hospital, æYou may as well take this with you and
- feed it to Rajah. It seems like a waste just throwing it away.Æ
-
- Rajah was bred and beaten up for circus work, and is hired out each
- summer to European circuses. Circus owner, Mr Turncliffe was confident
- that the tiger would fulfill this years engagements with other
- inexperienced forearms in Belgium.
-
- æRajah is a very good natured tiger who loves the trainers who beat him,
- and there is no reason to think that he will be too full, to cope with
- future forearms offered to him,Æ he said.
-
- æHe probably thought that Mr Wessman was feeding him, with himself. ItÆs
- not uncommon for tiger trainers to have this kind of personal commitment
- to the animals.
-
- As far as IÆm concerned Wesson is an experienced tiger keeper. He was
- also very brave, telling everyone to calm down, whilst he gently coaxed
- Rajah to let go of his jugular.
-
- Anyway, I really donÆt see how we can blame the tiger for this incident.
- ItÆs a completely humane method of removing a circus trainerÆs forearm.
- It was just one of those things, over in a couple of seconds.Æ
-
- WessmansÆs wife added to this, saying, æNigel was very brave. He simply
- placed his forearm in my handbag on the way to the hospital. It was a
- bit grose, like carrying a dogÆs bone home from the butchers without the
- wrapping. But I did it for him.Æ
-
- A portable television normally watched by the tigers in the evenings,
- featuring a local advertisement for TCP lozenges with a tiger biting a
- manÆs throat out, was later withdrawn from the cages.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- Coral Hull
- Animal Watch Australia
- http://www.envirolink.org/orgs/animal_watch/au.html
- Date: Sat, 07 Mar 1998 18:37:04 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Bull Finds New Home With Vegetarian
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980307183701.007456a4@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from Associated Press http://wire.ap.org
- ---------------------------------------
- MARCH 07, 17:41 EST
-
- Bull Finds New Home With Vegetarian
-
- GOOD HOPE, Calif. (AP) -- In the eyes of the law, Richard is just steak.
- To vegetarian Julie Boldizar, he's a new pet with beautiful eyes.
-
- The 900-pound Holstein bull crashed into the Boldizar's 1 1/2 -acre rural
- yard a week ago, tearing down a fence and taking up residence with the
- family's cats, dogs, roosters, chickens, a sheep named Madeline and two
- teen-age sons.
-
- Never mind the damage. Boldizar has fallen for the intruder.
-
- ``Have you ever looked into the eyes of a cow?'' asked Boldizar, whose
- home is accented with cow knickknacks.
-
- ``They're just beautiful,'' she said. ``Look at him. How can you eat him?
- He gives big old kisses, and he has a big old rough tongue like sandpaper,
- and he's wonderful.''
-
- Nobody else has claimed the bull, but keeping him may cost the family
- money because state law mandates that unclaimed stray cattle be auctioned
- off after 15 days. The statute was intended to keep rustlers from
- ``finding'' animals that aren't theirs.
-
- The family may be able to buy Richard at market value, said Myrlys
- Williams, a spokeswoman for the state Food and Agriculture Department.
-
- Boldizar has started a ``Trust for Richard Bull Fund'' at a bank in this
- Riverside County town 60 miles southeast of Los Angeles.
-
- ``I think God gave him to me because this law is so stupid,'' Boldizar
- said.
- Date: Sat, 07 Mar 1998 18:45:57 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) It's Bull When It Comes to Dairy
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980307184555.007444b8@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- factory farming
- from Associated Press http://wire.ap.org
- ----------------------------------------
- MARCH 07, 10:45 EST
-
- It's Bull When It Comes to Dairy
-
- By CURT ANDERSON
- AP Farm Writer
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) -- In the female world of dairy cows, it's the bulls that
- command the greatest attention. Especially a major stud like Round Oak.
-
- Round Oak spent his career in the 1970s at Select Sires in Plain City,
- Ohio, and is widely considered the most successful bull ever, with direct
- offspring believed to have sired 2.7 million Holstein dairy cows around
- the globe.
-
- ``Everybody wants to use the top bulls,'' said Rex Powell, a research
- geneticist at the Agriculture Department.
-
- Every dairy farmer wants his cows to produce the most high-quality milk
- possible, and bulls such as Round Oak have the genes to do it. And with
- such studs in short supply, a high-tech global matchmaking service has
- evolved to enable farmers to buy bull semen containing the genetic traits
- they want.
-
- It's not exactly romance, but it works.
-
- ``We have an industry where we identify our best genetics, and we make
- that available around the world at a low cost,'' said Tom Lawlor, research
- director at Holstein U.S.A. in Brattleboro, Vt.
-
- The system traces its roots to World War II, when the United States
- brought genetically superior cows to Europe to provide milk for its
- soldiers. The cows behind when the Army left, and European farmers noticed
- output of the American cows was much greater than their European sisters'.
-
- ``They kind of showcased the genetics that we have here,'' Lawlor said.
- ``That started getting people's attention.''
-
- Since then, the United States has led the way in providing the world with
- bull semen, mainly for the dominant Holstein breed. It's an industry with
- $60 million in exports every year.
-
- The most recent advance is a Sweden-based international rating service
- called Interbull, which this year ranked 90,000 bulls in 22 countries by
- careful evaluation of the milk their offspring produce.
-
- ``It's all based on the daughters,'' geneticist Powell said. ``It really
- is a female world in dairy.''
-
- For the bulls, the ratings can literally mean life or death. ``That's how
- we evaluate whether a bull is a keeper or a hamburger,'' Powell said.
-
- The Interbull service, 18 years in the making, removes much doubt by
- enabling farmers to examine objective data for breeding. It also funnels
- the different rating systems used in different countries into one list
- that applies worldwide.
-
- Rankings are adjusted for each country's environment, because factors such
- as climate and type of feed play a role in a cow's milk production.
-
- ``A bull whose daughters perform well on a pasture in New Zealand won't
- necessarily perform the same in confined feeding in California,'' Powell
- said.
-
- Semen from a solid but unspectacular bull costs upwards of $12 a dose, but
- for the top producers it can run to $100. Only about one out of every 10
- bulls is kept for semen, and experts say only the top 500 or so are
- responsible for most of the world's cows.
-
- ``They will have thousands and thousands of daughters. Some will have tens
- of thousands,'' Powell said.
-
- As strong U.S. genetic traits spread, more bulls in other countries are
- joining the elite stud ranks. American farmers are importing increasing
- amounts of semen as they seek new genetic advantages.
-
- ``We've sold our best genetics everywhere, and they've made good use of
- it. Now they're starting to sell it back to us,'' Powell said.
-
- For now, milk fat and protein content, and the quantity a cow produces,
- are the most sought-after traits. In the future, Interbull could include
- ratings for resistance to disease, cow longevity and ability with
- withstand udder disease, or mastitis.
-
- The system could play a role in cloning of dairy cattle to keep the best
- animals consistently in production. Holstein U.S.A.'s Lawlor said the
- ratings could enable breeders to keep a superelite core group that
- constantly would be updated genetically and the clones sold.
-
- ``The elite population would always be one or two generations ahead,''
- Lawlor said. ``You wouldn't be selling something that could be sold back
- to you.''
- Date: Sat, 07 Mar 1998 18:30:02 -0600
- From: Steve Barney <AnimalLib@vaxa.cis.uwosh.edu>
- To: AR-News <AR-News@envirolink.org>
- Subject: [US-WI] "Animal Rights Protesters Say Falk Shares Monkey Blame"
- (TCT-030698)
- Message-ID: <3501E68A.A2407F04@uwosh.edu>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- "Animal Rights Protesters Say Falk Shares Monkey Blame"
- By Chris Murphy
- The Capital Times
- Madison, Wisconsin
- United States
- Friday, March 6, 1998
-
- -- Beginning --
-
- ANIMAL RIGHTS PROTESTERS SAY FALK SHARES MONKEY BLAME
-
- By Chris Murphy
- The Capital Times
-
- Members of the Alliance for Animals protested on the steps of the
- City-County Building on Thursday afternoon to say that County Executive
- Kathleen Falk should share the blame for the departure of 101 rhesus
- monkeys from Henry Vilas Zoo.
-
- Protesters also planned to express displeasure at a UW Board of Regents
- meeting this morning.
-
- About 10 animal rights activists came to the City-County Building with
- flowers and carried placards with pictures of monkeys. In front of
- television news cameras, some held a banner that read: ``Monkeys Lost --
- U.W., Falk Why??''
-
- The monkeys belonged to the University of Wisconsin, but were housed
- for decades in an exhibit at the county's Henry Vilas Zoo. About 50
- stump-tailed monkeys remain at the zoo, and their fate is uncertain.
-
- Alliance for Animals director Tina Kaske conceded Thursday that the
- university forced Falk's hand and that the Dane County Zoological
- Society pressured her with concerns about how a monkey fund-raising
- drive might affect other projects.
-
- But Kaske added that Falk should have taken a risk to make sure that
- the rhesus monkeys were not shipped to Tulane University in New Orleans.
-
- The university moved the animals out Wednesday morning, but Tuesday
- night, the Wild Animal Orphanage in San Antonio made an offer to take
- all of the zoo monkeys for $15,000, which the Alliance for Animals was
- ready to pay.
-
- ``The monkeys are gone now. It's water under the bridge, and she should
- be held accountable,'' Kaske said of Falk.
-
- But the county executive was not eager to shoulder any blame.
-
- ``I understand that they're angry, and that they want to protest. But I
- don't really understand why they've chosen to focus on me, except
- perhaps that I was willing to talk to them,'' Falk said of the
- protesters Thursday. ``I've kept my door open, I've taken their calls,
- I've met with them. Maybe they just feel that I'll listen.''
-
- UW officials have said the county refused to take almost any
- responsibility for the monkeys, but Falk aide Topf Wells said Thursday
- that university officials insisted on deadlines that were too difficult
- to meet and that they required a simultaneous solution for both the
- rhesus and stump-tailed monkeys.
-
- It was late in the negotiations when Falk heard from those who raise
- money for the zoo that there might be too much competition for other
- scheduled projects if people were also raising money to keep the
- stump-tails in Madison, Wells said.
-
- Given the uncertainty, Falk was unwilling to make a firm commitment to
- pay for the stump-tails' ongoing upkeep, and the university moved the
- rhesus monkeys out shortly afterward.
-
- ``Kathleen, as county executive, felt she had to balance the county's
- concerns for the UW monkeys with her responsibility to keep the zoo in
- good shape,'' Wells said.
-
- Kaske said the university is primarily to blame for the rhesus monkeys'
- departure, and the protest before the regents will be much larger than
- the one staged Thursday.
-
- THE CAPITAL TIMES
-
- Demonstrators came to the City-County Building on Thursday to protest
- the departure of rhesus monkeys from the county zoo.
-
- -- End --
-
- More info about the UW-Madison monkey scandal is available at:
-
- http://www.uwosh.edu/organizations/alag/Issues.html
-
-
- Date: Sat, 07 Mar 1998 18:43:22 -0600
- From: Steve Barney <AnimalLib@vaxa.cis.uwosh.edu>
- To: AR-News <AR-News@envirolink.org>
- Subject: [US-WI] "So What Happens To The 50 Monkeys Remaining Here?"
- (TCT-030598)
- Message-ID: <3501E9AA.840889CE@uwosh.edu>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- "So What Happens To The 50 Monkeys Remaining Here?"
- The Capital Times
- Madison, Wisconsin
- United States
- Thursday, March 5, 1998
-
- -- Beginning --
-
- SO WHAT HAPPENS TO THE 50 MONKEYS REMAINING HERE?
-
- The Capital Times
-
- The Henry Vilas Zoo may yet be able to preserve at least part of its
- monkey colony.
-
- The two players holding all the cards -- the University of
- Wisconsin-Madison and Dane County -- are being very guarded if not
- pessimistic in their predictions, however.
-
- Some 50 monkeys remain at the zoo and, unlike their more common
- cousins, they might stay.
-
- Citing funding problems, the UW on Wednesday shipped 101 rhesus monkeys
- to Tulane University, leaving 50 rare stump-tailed macaques at the zoo.
-
- The UW also is having ongoing discussions with a wildlife center in
- Thailand about shipping those monkeys back to their native land.
-
- But the door is still open to keep them in Madison.
-
- Charles Hoslet, special assistant to the chancellor for governmental
- affairs at the UW, said Tuesday: ``If the county were to come to us with
- some reasonable proposal, the stump-tails could possibly remain here.''
-
- County Board Chairman Jonathan Becker said the county has always
- supported keeping some monkeys in Madison, and he would be willing to
- continue talking.
-
- ``I don't think I can be described as optimistic, but we'll continue to
- see what can be accomplished,'' he said.
-
- Topf Wells, an aide to Dane County Executive Kathleen Falk, sounded
- skeptical.
-
- ``I think if the university wants any assistance from the county, we'll
- just wait to hear from them,'' he said.
-
- Told that the university indicated a willingness to consider some
- ``reasonable proposal'' to keep the remaining monkeys in Madison, Wells
- burst out laughing.
-
- One reason earlier negotiations failed, Wells then explained, is that
- the university would not negotiate separately about the fate of the
- stump-tails as opposed to the rhesus monkeys.
-
- It is hard to consider re-opening talks when some UW officials were
- quoted as saying the county negotiated in bad faith, he said. That's
- ``not only false, but outrageously false,'' he said.
-
- ``If they call, I'm sure Kathleen will certainly listen,'' Wells added.
-
- The county operates the zoo, but the UW owns the monkeys. The UW
- decided to get rid of the monkey colony, which it had maintained for
- roughly 35 years, after behavioral research on the monkeys ended in June
- and the National Institutes of Health announced last fall that its
- federal grant could no longer be used to support the zoo monkeys.
-
- Dane County officials negotiated with the UW for several months in an
- effort to keep the entire colony at the zoo. The UW wanted the county to
- take over all upkeep costs starting in 1999, but the county was looking
- for more of a financial commitment from the UW.
-
- Talks broke down Tuesday and the rhesus monkeys were quickly dispatched
- to Tulane over the protests of animal rights groups as well as first
- lady Sue Ann Thompson, who had sought to keep them here.
-
- How long the county has to come up with a proposal to keep the
- stump-tailed macaques is unclear. A UW source said the animals may still
- be here for a month or so.
-
- Tina Kaske of the Alliance for Animals said the group would continue
- its fund-raising efforts to help keep the stump-tailed monkeys at the
- zoo.
-
- The group had raised more than $20,000, she said.
-
- Another group, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, had also
- pledged $35,000 to help preserve the entire colony in Madison, Kaske
- said. She said she believed that money would still be on the table to
- help the stump-tails.
-
- ``The stump-tails are precious and we want to make sure they are
- secured,'' she said Wednesday. ``We want them to stay in Madison. Not
- only are they an endangered species, but they are extremely beautiful.
- This is their home.''
-
- Kaske said she did not want to rule out the Thailand wildlife center as
- an option.
-
- ``My first choice would be to keep them in the United States so we
- could keep track of them,'' she said, adding that Thailand now has a lot
- of abused and neglected monkeys to deal with from the pet trade.
-
- The cost of supporting the 50 stump-tailed macaques is still a question
- mark.
-
- The cost for maintaining the entire 150-monkey colony was estimated at
- anywhere from $100,000 annually to more than $200,000.
-
- Susan Trebach, director of the UW office of news and public affairs,
- said she is unable to calculate the cost of maintaining the remaining
- monkeys, roughly one-third the size of the original colony.
-
- Maintaining a small colony could actually cost more per monkey than
- keeping a larger colony because of large base expenses for housing,
- handlers and other overhead costs.
-
- ``We can't take past costs that have been given and divide them by
- three, because there are basic costs for handlers and so on,'' she said.
-
- [Photograph by] DAVID SANDELL/THE CAPITAL TIMES [with caption reading]
-
- A protester is arrested Wednesday at the Henry Vilas Zoo.
-
- -- End --
-
- More info about the UW-Madison monkey scandal is available at:
-
- http://www.uwosh.edu/organizations/alag/Issues.html
-
-
-
-
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