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-
- >The Straits Times
- 11 Mar 98
-
- SEX SELLS: Aboriginal communities are cashing in on Asia's fascination with
- aphrodisiacs by exporting crushed emu eggs which are believed to contain a
- powerful sexual stimulant, a community leader said yesterday.
-
- Australia's indigenous population has traditionally carved emu eggs,
- laid by the world's second-largest flightless bird, and have discovered that
- hidden in the shell dust is an elixir that contains a strong stimulant. -- AFP.
-
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 14:08:44 +0800 (SST)
- From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (UK) Tests on pig intellect
- Message-ID: <199803110608.OAA13776@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
-
- >The Straits Times
- 11 Mar 98
-
- British scientists to pick pigs' brains in complex tests
-
- LONDON -- British scientists are investigating whether pigs are the
- farmyard
- intellectuals they are reputed to be.
-
- Researchers at Bristol University in south-west England are conducting
- a series of
- complex tests over three years, designed to tax the brains of even the
- cleverest porker.
- "We know that pigs are quick learners," said Mr Michael Mendl of the
- university's
- Animal Behaviour Department. "But it is not clear what higher levels of
- cognitive ability they have.
-
- "To what extent, for example, are they capable of understanding the
- intentions of other pigs and making use of the knowledge they possess?"
-
- In one experiment, a small pig, trained to recognise where food has
- been hidden, will be put in a pen with a bigger, untrained hog.
-
- Will the uninformed pig be clever enough to follow his colleague to the
- food tray and then use his extra weight to push him out of the way and
- scoff the food?
-
- Or will the smart pig be capable of luring the heavier hog to a remote
- corner of their pen, then scuttle back to the food tray without the
- other realising?
-
- About 80 pigs are taking part in the test. -- AFP.
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 01:37:27 -0500
- From: Dietrich Haugwitz <dvh@mindspring.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Request for info: "Collectors"
- Message-ID: <3.0.1.32.19980311013727.006b47fc@pop.mindspring.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Can anyone suggest sources (books, articles, web sites) which explore
- the topic of "collectors": individuals, usually well meaning but
- quite impoverished, who keep 50 or 100 dogs and/or cats in inadequate
- conditions. Often they are charged with animal cruelty; sometimes
- psychiatric evaluations are odered.
-
- Please send literature suggestions directly to D.v.Haugwitz -
- dvh@mindspring.com
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 08:39:34 +0100
- From: oetvtier@salzburg.co.at (oetvtier)
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: petition for preservation of wildlife and biodiversity
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.32.19980311073934.00686c70@pop3.salzburg.co.at>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
-
- >
- >Dear friends,
- >
- >This petition is directed to all those who are concerned with preserving
- >our planet, its wildlife and biodiversity. On behalf of the Popular
- >Culture Institute (Instituto de Cultural Popular--INCUPO) and the Unions of
- >Educational Workers in Corrientes and Cacho, all of which are based in
- >northern Argentina, we request that you sign at the bottom and forward
- >to others to sign. If you prefer not to sign please send to the e-mail
- >address indicated or return to me.
- >
- >This petition is being passed around the internet, please keep it
- >rolling.
- >Please add your name to it to support the above named organizations'
- >struggle against the construction of hydroelectric dams, which are displacing
- >peasants and indigenous tribes, causing the disappearance of a unique
- ecosystem, and destroying local economies.
- >
- >This list will be forwarded to the President of the United States, the
- >Vice President of the United States, and Representative Newt Gingrich.
- >
- >Please forward this to everyone you know. Thank you.
- >
- >If you happen to be the 50, 100th, 150th, 200th, 250th, etc. signer of
- >this petition, please forward a copy to: postmaster@incucc.org.ar. If that
- >address is inoperative, please send it to: san_bonifacio@msn.com.
- >
- >NOTE: It is preferable that you SELECT the entirety of this letter and
- >then COPY it into a new outgoing message rather than simply forwarding it.
- >
- >
- >Here it goes:
- >
- >Petition Against the Construction of the Hydroelectric Dam at Rio
- >Parana, Argentina
- >
- >WHEREAS the formation of a 750,000 hectare body of water will entomb
- >islands and river valleys rich in agriculture, archeology, tourism, natural
- >reserves, historical and cultural sites; WHEREAS various cities, towns
- >and settlements and all of the river ports in the region will be affected;
- >the associated regional economies will be exterminated or overturned, and
- >the community's habitat changed for eternity; WHEREAS the PARANA MEDIO
- >Project is designed specifically for the generation of hydroelectric
- energy, and
- >not to control the flooding which will affect the valleys, islands and islets;
- >WHEREAS all the local fish which are common to the PARANA (the dorado,
- >sombi, pacu, amarillo, boga and muchot) will disappear because of the change in
- >their environment and transform our abundant river into a gigantic lake filled
- >with stagnant waters contaminated with local and industrial waste; WHEREAS
- >the touristic and recreational potential of the islands which each year
- >generate $5,000,000 for local economies will be lost; WHEREAS the
- experience >of the Salto Grande dam demonstrates how the dam destroyed the
- river as well >as the regional economy; and WHEREAS the short term benefit
- of a few extra >jobs will undermine the long term, developed economies and
- leave thousands of
- >people unemployed, without work, without sustenance, on the islands of
- >PARANA MEDIO between the cities of Santa Fe, Entre Rios, and Corrientes.
- >We the undersigned protest the construction of the DAM AT PARANA MEDIO as
- >BAD BUSINESS, and urge the Argentinean and North American authorities to
- >halt the development of this dam
- >
- >SIGNERS/FIRMADORES
- >1)Lori Ramos, Centro San Bonifacio, Chicago, IL
- >2)Nora Duran, Chicago, IL
- >3)Randy Spreen Parker, University of IL, Chicago
- >4)Juan Gonzalez, Centro San Bonifacio, Chicago, IL
- >5)Oscar Garcia, Alexandria, VA
- >6)Jaime Martinez, Centro San Bonifacio, Chicago, IL
- >7)Francisco Trevino, Centro San Bonifacio, Chicago, IL
- >8)Diana Brooke, Howard Area Community Center, Chicago, IL
- >9)Paulo Taveira, CHEC, Boston, MA
- >10)Christian Hansen, Autonomous Zone, Chicago, IL
- >11)Martin Vazquez, Health Advocacy Project, Chicago, IL
- >12)Benjamin Rosales, Health Advocacy Project, Chicago, IL
- >13)Blanca Vazquez, Health Advocacy Project, Chicago, IL
- >14)Ana Martinez, Howard Area Community Center, Chicago, IL
- >15)Juana Gonzales, Health Advocacy Project, Chicago, IL
- >16)Aminya Mohammed, National Health Mothers, Healthy Babies Coalition,
- >Washington, DC
- >17)Luis Cavero, PROMESA Coalition, Chicago IL
- >18)Cornell Goodwill, Howard Area Community Center, Chicago, IL
- >19)Karynn Cavero, Centro San Bonifaico, Chicago, IL
- >20)Orlando Sanchez, Centro San Bonifacio, Chicago, IL
- >21)Samantha Bollinger, Austin TX
- >22)Cynthia Bianchi, Proyecto San Cristobal, Chicago, IL
- >23)Rosario Sanchez, Centro San Bonifacio, Chicago, IL
- >24)Maribel Martinez, Centro San Bonifacio, Chicago, IL
- >25)Aura Escobedo, Centro San Bonifacio, Chicago, IL
- >26)Irma Pacheco, Centro San Bonifacio,Chicago, IL
- >27)Maria Villanueva, Centro San Bonifacio, Chicago, IL
- >28)Abelina Trevino, Centro San Bonifacio, Chicago, IL
- >29)Eladia Cardenas, Centro San Bonifacio, Chicago, IL
- >30)Tomas Lopez, Centro San Bonifacio, Chicago, IL
- >31)International Rivers Network, Berkeley, CA
- >32)Jorge Cappato, Fundacion Proteger, Argentina,
- >33) Centro de Proteccion a la Naturaleza - Argentina
- >34) Roberto Bystrowicz; La Casa de la Humanidad ONG - Argentina
- >35) Dra. Lilian Corra, Fundacion Proteger, Argentina, Foro GLOBAL 500
- >UNEP
- >36)Asocaicion Argentina de Medicos por el Medio Ambiente
- >37)─rzte fⁿr eine Gesunde Umwelt (─GU, ISDE Austria)
- >38) Dr. Hanns Moshammer, Vienna, Austria
- >39) Angela Maschessnig, ╓sterreichischer Tierschutzverein, Salzburg, Austria
-
- >++++++++++Aleta Brown
- >++++++++++Campaign Associate
- >++++++++++International Rivers Network
-
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 02:47:37 -0500
- From: Doris & Dan <doris@alum.mit.edu>
- To: civitas@linkny.com
- Cc: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Re: Fw: VIRUS WARNING !
- Message-ID: <35064199.6821@alum.mit.edu>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- I have heard repeatedly that these warnings of viruses carried in e-mail
- are all hoaxes. There is no way a virus could infect your computer just
- from reading an e-mail. Perhaps someone with more computer savvy could
- explain this further, but this is what I've heard from reliable sources.
-
- Peace,
- Doris
-
- Bina Robinson wrote:
- >
- > ----------
- > > From: Gary L Krasner <gk-cfic@juno.com>
- > > To: Mariposa03@aol.com; Nandaya@aol.com; Momnshlby@aol.com;
- > alison@ctanet.fr; BatistaJ@aol.com; MCVCHQ@juno.com; AmColbin@aol.com;
- > noshots@sprynet.com; peter@duesberg.com; HEALINTL@aol.com; chirho@ime.net;
- > franz@aldus.northnet.org; gargoyle@echonyc.com; werpave@yahoo.com;
- > va-sk@juno.com; akarlb@aol.com; duesberg@ina.com; mmasarik@fdldotnet.com;
- > noshotz@erie.net; wwithin@nccn.net; HAVENLANE@aol.com; mother@ni.net;
- > cezzium@hotmail.com; prove@swbell.net; civitas@linkny.com;
- > dromeo@worldnet.att.net; via@access1.net; nms5ces@mail.ggg.net;
- > pattys@web.net; ilanastein@aol.com; eddawest@netidea.com; KWNVIC@aol.com;
- > dkwilson@cyberramp.net; peter@netlink.co.nz; peter.mancer@teltrend.co.nz
- > > Subject: VIRUS WARNING !
- > > Date: Tuesday, March 10, 1998 6:14 AM
- > >
- > > From: COEURL <COEURL@aol.com>
- > > Subject: Fwd: VIRUS WARNING
- > > Date: Mon, 9 Mar 1998 13:47:22 EST
- > >
- > > Dear Folks
- > > attached a cautionary note for your interest. I'm hesitant about any
- > > forwardings en masse because this in itself can be a kind of "Mail bomb"
- > > calculated to exceed a server's e-mail handling capacity, so caution is
- > > apropriate in more than one way. This has the stink of legitimacy, but so
- > > would a well-thought-out "jammer." Equivocality of the millennilum
- > > best
- > > Steve f LunOff Press
- > >
- > >
- > > From: Immkd <Immkd@aol.com>
- > > Return-path: <Immkd@aol.com>
- > > Subject: Fwd: VIRUS WARNING
- > > Date: Mon, 9 Mar 1998 08:04:48 EST
- > > Organization: AOL (http://www.aol.com)
- > >
- > > Subject: VIRUS WARNING
- > > Date: Thu, 5 Mar 1998 06:48:36 EST
- > > Organization: AOL (http://www.aol.com)
- > >
- > > > VIRUS WARNING !!!!!!
- > > >
- > > > If you receive an email titled "WIN A HOLIDAY" DO NOT open it. It
- > > > will erase everything on your hard drive. Forward this letter out to
- > > > as many people as you can. This is a new, very malicious virus and not
- > > > many people know about it. This information was announced yesterday
- > > > morning from Microsoft; please share it with everyone that might
- > > access the
- > > > internet. Once again, pass this along to EVERYONE in your address
- > > > book so that this may be stopped. Also, do not open or even look at any
- > > > mail that says "RETURNED OR UNABLE TO DELIVER" This virus will attach
- > > > itself to your computer components and render them useless. Immediately
- > > > delete any mail items that say this. AOL has said that this is a very
- > > > dangerous virus and that there is NO remedy for it at this time.
- > > Please
- > > > practice cautionary measures and forward this to all your online
- > > friends
- > > > ASAP.
- > > >
- > > > Janeen A. Jones
- > > > Georgia Institute of Technology
- > > > George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering
- > > > Structural Acoustics
- > > > Voice: 404.894.7404 (O)
- > > > 770.319.0180 (H)
- > > > Email: gt0905b@prism.gatech.edu
- > >
- > > _____________________________________________________________________
- > > 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: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 16:06:46 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (NZ)Did VHD/RCD kill New Zealand sea lions?
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19980311155836.38b70d62@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Posted for your information from the Promed mailing list by bunny.
-
- SEA LION DIE-OFF - NEW ZEALAND (02)
- ***********************************
- A ProMED-mail post
-
- Date: Mon, 09 Mar 1998 00:36:02 -0500
- From: Ken Coleman
-
-
- I was wondering if anyone has looked for chemical accumulation in the brain
- of these animals. Or for that matter, the chemical contamination in the
- liver or spleen of these beasts?
-
- Just a thought!
-
- --
- Ken Coleman
-
-
-
- [and]
-
- Date: Mon, 9 Mar 1998 23:02:48 +1300
-
-
- I have no objective reason at all for suggesting this, but has the
- possibility of a calicivirus been eliminated?? With the wholesale
- distribution of RCV throughout much of New Zealand, there must have been
- some runoff into rivers and then oceans. Only a thought.
-
- --
- Dr Paul Mason
- Consultant Parasitologist
- 72 Rockside Road
- DUNEDIN, NEW ZEALAND
- Voice: +64 3 467 9631
- Fax: +64 3 467 9631 (but phone first)
-
-
- [One can perceive some problems with this suggestion starting with the fact
- that the affected islands are some hundreds of miles off-shore, but there
- are always defaecating scavenging seabirds. - MHJ]
-
-
- [3]
-
- Date: Tue, 10 Mar 1998 08:59:18 -0500
- From: Larry Glickman
-
-
- Searching for causes of mortality among the dead sea lions certainly makes
- sense. However, when a potentially pathogenic virus or bacterium is
- recovered from dead animals, one cannot be certain that this organism is
- statistically associated with dead animals and therefore, a likely cause of
- the epidemic, without also knowing its prevalence among healthy animals.
- This is why case-control studies are becoming a routine tool used during
- outbreak investigations. While the idea of killing apparently healthy sea
- lion pups as part of the investigation is not attractive or mainstream, it
- is needed to establish the prevalence of infection with bacteria and viruses
- and to describe nature and frequency of background lesions in various
- tissues.
-
- This approach seems to make scientific sense and could potentially save many
- more lives in the long run than it costs in the short run. Using this
- case-control approach, one could calculate risk ratios for death associated
- with suspected pathogens as well as the population attributable risk for
- each. This would then help target future research and prevention efforts. As
- with any case-control study, consideration should be given to selection
- criteria for controls (e.g. age and sex matching) as well as sample size and
- power. Without use of some type of controlled study, it is unlikely that
- statistically valid conclusions can be reached about the cause(s) of this
- epidemic.
-
- --
- Larry Glickman
- Professor of Epidemiology & Environmental Medicine
-
- [I don't think that Larry is suggesting anything revolutionary in the
- routine use of case-control studies in epidemiological investigations; in
- fact I believe that they have been part of their traditional design since at
- least the mid-60s. However there may be problems with recovering agents from
- healthy juveniles a month or longer after this epidemic, or put another way
- of being confident in one's negative findings, with or without serology
- (which could be obtained by darting without killing pups). Also the politics
- might be overwhelming. Better done at the time if done at all. All of which
- is armchair epidemiology.
-
- There is an extraordinary silence from Massey concerning these
- investigations. I wonder if someone in their pathology department would be
- willing to share the rule-outs from their investigations. - Mod.MHJ]
- .............................................mhj/es
- --
- =====================================================================
- ========
- /`\ /`\ 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: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 00:38:37 PST
- From: "Cari Gehl" <skyblew@hotmail.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Seattle wolf benefit concert - Mar. 14
- Message-ID: <19980311083838.20780.qmail@hotmail.com>
- Content-Type: text/plain
-
- >From alt.wolves....
-
- SAVE THE YELLOWSTONE WOLVES 1998 BENEFIT CONCERT!
-
- Help Us Stop Them From Killing the Yellowstone Wolves
-
- When: Saturday, March 14 1998 8pm
-
- Doors open at 7pm to give people time to get the best couches! All Ages
- Show!
-
- Where: Dixon╣s Used Furniture 12th & Pine Capitol Hill Seattle
- All ages Smoke Free Non Alcohol
-
- How Much: $5 at the door (suggested donation)
-
- featuring live performances by....
-
- LARA LAVI LONNIE ROSE DUOTONE COLORFAST
-
- e-mail: laralavi@speakeasy.org
-
- presented by:
-
- Spiritwater Canadian Glacial Water
- Defenders of Wildlife
- Veryjuicy Records (www.veryjuicyrecords.com)
- Dixon╣s Used Furniture
-
- Please come suport wolf re-establishment to their former range!
-
-
- ______________________________________________________
- Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 00:40:04 PST
- From: "Cari Gehl" <skyblew@hotmail.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Audubon Advisory 3/6/98
- Message-ID: <19980311084005.23295.qmail@hotmail.com>
- Content-Type: text/plain
-
- >From talk.environment....
-
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
- T H E A U D U B O N A D V I S O R Y
- National Audubon's Weekly Policy Report
- March 6th, 1998
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
-
- AUDUBON MAKES THE CASE FOR ENVIRONMENTAL FUNDING
- That, plus a Senate solution to massive bird die-off in Salton Sea!
-
-
- INTERIOR APPROPRIATIONS
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
- Audubon Testifies Before Appropriations Subcommittee
-
- On Tuesday, Dan Beard, Audubon Sr. VP for Public Policy, testified
- before the
- House Subcommittee on Interior Appropriations.
-
- Audubon's testimony supported funding increases for: land acquisition,
- including
- the historically under-funded Land and Water Conservation Fund; refuge
- operations and maintenance, which is currently severely backlogged; and
- non-game
- bird monitoring and management.
-
- To these ends, Mr. Beard recommended the following: $900 million for the
- Land
- and Water Conservation Fund; $277 for National Wildlife Refuge System
- Operations
- and Maintenance; $28 million for the US Fish and Wildlife Service's
- Office of
- Migratory Bird Management; and $175 million for the Biological Resources
- Division of the US Geological Survey.
-
- Additionally Audubon supports the President's budget recommendations for
- Everglades Restoration ($144 million), Endangered Species Programs ($113
- million) and the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation ($6 million.)
-
- In his testimony, Mr. Beard also requested additional funding for
- maintenance
- and closing of forest roads. He spoke out against the purchaser credit
- program
- of the US Forest Service, which encourages logging operations in
- National
- Forests by subsidizing the construction of logging roads.
-
- ENDANGERED SPECIES
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
- No News is Good News
-
- The negotiations between the four principal sponsors of S 1180 over
- weakening
- amendments requested by Majority Leader Trent Lott continued this week
- without
- result.
-
- Senate sources indicate that Senators Baucus (D-MT) and Reid (D-NV) are
- unhappy
- with Senator Lott's amendments, which include removal of a provision
- that would
- set strict conservation standards for including unlisted, but declining,
- species
- in Habitat Conservation Plans and other conservation agreements. Lott
- has said
- that he will not allow S 1180 floor time until these amendments are
- added to
- the
- bill.
-
- On Thursday March 4th Congressman George Miller (D-CA) announced the
- 100th
- co-sponsor of the Audubon supported ESA reauthorization bill, HR 2351.
-
- FORESTS
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
- Committee Approves More Money for Bad Logging
-
- Chairman Bob Smith's (R-OR) inappropriately named "Forestry Protection
- and
- Recovery Act" (HR 2515) was approved by the House Agriculture Committee
- on
- Wednesday, March 4th, by voice vote. Similar to the 1995
- salvage-logging
- rider,
- HR 2515 promotes logging as the solution to pest infestation and
- wildfire
- problems facing our federal forests. HR 2515 creates another off-budget
- fund,
- which would primarily be used for salvage logging and thinning. In
- reality,
- insects, disease, and fire appear to be at normal historic levels while
- logging
- and grazing cause the most damage to our forests.
-
- Although originally scheduled to be to be referred to the House
- Resources
- Committee, HR 2515 now appears headed straight to the House floor,
- sidestepping
- opponents of the bill in the Resources Committee. It is possible a vote
- could
- be scheduled within a few weeks. Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman
- issued a
- statement opposing the bill.
-
- First "State of the Forests" Focuses on (Surprise!) Conservation...
- Chief Dombeck gave the first "State of the Forest" address to Forest
- Service
- employees last Monday, in which he laid out his Natural Resources Agenda
- for
- the
- 21st Century. Chief Dombeck laid out four major goals: watershed
- restoration
- and maintenance, sustainable forest ecosystem management, forest roads,
- and
- recreation. Chief Dombeck's agenda is a welcome change in Forest
- Service
- thinking. It can be read at http://www.fs.fed.us/news/agenda/.
-
- Chief Dombeck's agenda must be carried out through the Forest Service
- budget,
- in
- which the Administration requested $120 million in new spending on
- watershed
- protection and restoration.
-
- The Administration proposed another very significant change in National
- Forest
- management as part of the Forest Service 1999 budget. With
- Congressional
- approval they will improve the way they compensate counties with federal
- forests.
-
- Currently, the Forest Service must give 25% of all receipts from timber
- and
- other activities to the state in which the activity occurred. The state
- distributes this money to the counties in which the national forests are
- located
- to pay for roads and schools. Because payments are based on the amount
- of
- timber cut, the system encourages local governments to support more
- logging.
-
- The Forest Service would stabilize payments to states so they are not
- directly
- dependent on the amount of trees cut. If approved by Congress, this
- change
- will
- remove a major obstacle to National Forest management reform.
-
- WETLANDS
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
- Takings Now Moves in the House
-
- The "Tucker Act Shuffle Relief Act of 1997" (HR 992), Representative
- Lamar
- Smith's (R-TX) takings bill, will probably move to the House floor
- within the
- next week.
-
- The legislation would weaken wetland protection standards nationwide by
- overriding "preclusive review" provisions in the Clean Water Act. Under
- Smith's
- legislation, litigants could challenge agency rules in several different
- courts
- instead of filing in a specified court within a limited period of time.
- Developers and other claimants could then find the most favorable
- federal judge
- for their claims and could also file identical claims in two different
- courts
- simultaneously.
-
- The legislation would also expand the powers of the US Court of Federal
- Claims
- and the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, two courts that have
- historically sided with developers in takings cases.
-
- REFUGES
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
- Senate Bill Could Solve Bird Die-Off
-
- In response to what Audubon President John Flicker has called an
- "environmental
- Chernobyl", Senators Barbara Boxer (D-CA) and Dianne Feinstein (D-CA)
- introduced
- legislation on March 5th that would remedy the massive bird die-off that
- currently plagues the Salton Sea Refuge. Mr. Flicker praised the bill
- for
- examining a "full range of possible solutions," and for carefully
- analyzing the
- problems before recommending a solution.
-
- Senator Boxer and Feinstein's introduction of the "Sonny Bono Memorial
- Salton
- Sea Remediation Act" (S 1716) comes a week after Representatives in the
- House,
- including Californians Hunter, Brown and Calvert, introduced their
- version, HR
- 3267. As reported, we believe the House version "chooses haste over
- thoroughness in an effort to expeditiously honor the late congressman"
- and
- would
- fail to solve the problem.
-
- EVERGLADES
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
- Everglades Agenda Set as Florida Legislature Opens Session
-
- While Congress slowly settles into its 1998 legislative session, the
- Florida
- legislature opened its annual 60-day session with a flurry of activity
- related
- Everglades restoration.
-
- Topping the list of pending related issues is a decision on how to
- implement a
- polluter-pay ballot initiative overwhelmingly approved by Florida voters
- in
- 1996. Known as Amendment 5, it would require Everglades polluters to
- pay for
- environmental clean-up, and directly effects agriculture in the area
- just south
- of Lake Okeechobee known as the Everglades Agricultural Area (EAA).
- This area
- is dominated by sugarcane production.
-
- This measure would correct the inequity of the State's Everglades
- Forever Act,
- which requires taxpayers to foot too much of the bill for Everglades
- restoration
- while allowing its polluters to not pay their fair share of the
- clean-up. In a
- response to this legislation, one Florida sugarcane producer has already
- launched an expensive television advertising campaign designed to kill
- legislation that would implement the polluter-pay amendment.
-
- Other issues expected to receive consideration include the acquisition
- of the
- Talisman properties which was announced by Vice President Al Gore last
- December;
- extending Florida's model land acquisition and preservation program and
- extending it to Everglades restoration; and authorization of an
- Everglades
- River
- of Grass automobile license plate.
-
- POPULATION AND HABITAT
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
- ..And They Don't Let Up
-
- Anti-family planning members of Congress continue to hold UN arrears and
- IMF
- credit hostage until the Administration accepts unrelated "global gag
- rule"
- restrictions on international population assistance. Representative
- Chris Smith
- (R-NJ) and the Republican leadership have vowed to attach the
- restrictions as
- part of the supplemental appropriations bill. Movement on the bill is
- expected
- as early as next week. Look for updates as the situation develops on the
- population listserv (to subscribe, send a message to:
- listserv@list.audubon.org
- and in the body, write: SUB audubon-population).
-
-
-
- The Audubon Advisory is published weekly, only when Congress is in
- session.
-
- Action@
-
- Find Your Representative's Email Address!
- http://www.audubon.org/net/congress.html
-
- Find out how your Representative and Senators score on the environment!
- http://scorecard.lcv.org
-
- Call Congress (202) 224-3121
-
-
- How To Reach Us
- National Audubon Society
- 1901 Pennsylvania Avenue NW,
- Washington, DC 20006
- (202) 861-2242 (unless noted)
-
- Policy Division
- Dan Beard,
- Senior Vice President, Public Policy
- dbeard@audubon.org
-
- Eric Draper,
- Senior Vice President, Campaigns and State Policy
- 904-222-2473 edraper@audubon.org
-
- Advisory Editor
- Steve Daigneault sdaigneault@audubon.org
-
- Human Population and Habitat
- Rhonda Schlangen rschlangen@audubon.org
-
- Refuges
- Lora Wondolowski lwondolowski@audubon.org
-
- Wetlands
- Mac Blewer mblewer@audubon.org
-
- ESA
- Mary Minette mminette@audubon.org
-
- Agriculture
- Maureen Hinkle mhinkle@audubon.org
-
- Forests
- Mike Leahy mleahy@audubon.org
-
- Everglades
- Tom Adams tadams@audubon.org
-
- Interior Appropriations
- Mark Lovett mlovett@audubon.org
-
- Press Secretary
- Perry Plumart pplumart@audubon.org
-
- Posted by:
- ________________________________________________
- | |
- | Steve Daigneault, sdaigneault@audubon.org |
- | Grassroots Communications Specialist |
- | National Audubon Society |
- | 1901 Pennsylvania Ave., #1100 |
- | Washington, DC 20006 |
- | ph (202)861-2242 fx (202)861-4290 |
- | |
- | To subscribe to Audubon-News and receive |
- | timely press releases, action alerts and |
- | other news items, send a message to: |
- | listserv@list.audubon.org |
- | Leave the subject line blank, and in the |
- | body of your message, write: |
- | SUB audubon-news |
- | |
- | Visit us on the World Wide Web! |
- | http://www.audubon.org/ |
- |______________________________________________|
-
-
-
-
-
- ______________________________________________________
- Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 00:42:47 PST
- From: "Cari Gehl" <skyblew@hotmail.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: LA Times: A Dog Is Man's Most Grateful Friend
- Message-ID: <19980311084247.25800.qmail@hotmail.com>
- Content-Type: text/plain
-
- I really enjoyed this one! :-)
-
- Cari
-
-
- Wednesday, March 4, 1998
- http://www.latimes.com/HOME/NEWS/LIFE/t000020959.html
- The LA Times
-
- By CHRIS ERSKINE
-
- The dog and I are watching TV, one of those real-life cop shows where
- they arrest real people and dish out real justice.
-
- In this segment, the police are pursuing a suspect under a house.
- Instead of crawling under the house themselves, the cops send in the
- police dogs, who really seem to enjoy chasing bad guys under houses.
-
- "One of these days," I tell my cocker spaniel, "I'm taking you on a
- police raid."
-
- This fills the fluffy little dog with excitement. He's watched a lot of
- these cop shows, seen a lot of police raids, but he's never seen a
- cocker spaniel chase a suspect under a house.
-
- "Yep," I tell him, "I think the police could use a cocker spaniel like
- you."
-
- The dog looks at me. This really pumps him up, hearing that one day he
- could become a police dog. He is so grateful, he is almost in tears.
-
- "Hey, police dogs don't cry," I warn him.
-
- Two years ago, the dog was a reject, an outcast puppy in need of a home.
- Neighbors offered him to us when he "didn't quite work out."
-
- "We don't really need a dog," I told my wife at the time.
-
- "Everybody needs a dog," she said.
-
- In weeks, the dog and I became best buddies. Not just friends, but
- buddies, the kind of pals who can laugh about anything, especially each
- other.
-
- And I soon found that he believes everything I say. One day I convince
- him I'm a cop. The next day, a neurosurgeon. He even believes I once
- played fullback for the Green Bay Packers.
-
- "That Lombardi was a heck of a coach," I tell him. "And a darned good
- dancer as well."
-
- He loves it when I tell stories about my football career. Can't get
- enough of them. He sits on my lap and looks up at me, encouraging me to
- tell him more.
-
- "Really enjoyed the NFL," I tell him. "Might even make a comeback."
-
- The dog's eyes get real big when I mention comeback. He'd like to see me
- play, would love to sit right here on the couch on Sunday afternoons and
- watch his 155-pound owner run the ball up the middle against the Chicago
- Bears, dragging gigantic defenders into the end zone.
-
- "Dad, you spend too much time with that dog," my lovely and patient
- oldest daughter says, shaking her head in disbelief. "You treat him like
- . . . like a person."
-
- My daughter is probably right. I do spend a lot of time with the dog.
- He's good company. Everything I do seems to interest him. When I stir my
- coffee he waits and watches, his head going round and round with each
- rotation of the spoon. One day he spent four hours just watching me make
- soup.
-
- "This dog's grateful for every little thing," I tell her.
-
- "And I'm not?" she asks.
-
- There is a long pause. I try to think how to phrase my response. She's a
- good daughter. Lovely. Patient. And, generally, pretty darned grateful.
-
- "Dad?"
-
- "You're grateful," I say. "But not as grateful as he is."
-
- The cocker spaniel is grateful in ways that kids seldom think of. He's
- grateful that there's always food in the house. He's grateful when the
- furnace kicks on in the middle of a chilly night. He's grateful when I
- accidentally drop a piece of bacon off the counter.
-
- "I'm grateful, too," says the little red-haired girl.
-
- "Me too," says her brother.
-
- Suddenly, everybody in the house is grateful. I guess that's all you
- have to do sometimes is bring up the word "grateful," and sure enough,
- they'll all line up and nod their little heads.
-
- "Yep, we're grateful," they'll say.
-
- "I know you're all grateful," I assure them. "Everybody here is
- grateful. And I'm grateful for it."
-
- As this fine display of gratitude comes to a close, I go to the closet
- and grab my old sweater.
-
- The dog knows this is his cue, that when I grab my old sweater, it's
- time for our nightly walk, a stroll up the road, where I will entertain
- him with stories of cop life and the difficulties of performing an
- arterial bypass.
-
- He stands by the door like a live mop, all jumpy and wiggly, doing a tap
- dance on the tile floor, hoping we're on our way to catch our first
- criminal.
-
- "Want to come along?" I ask my patient and lovely oldest daughter.
-
- "I don't know," she says.
-
- "Oh, come on," I say. "We might catch a criminal."
-
- The teenager looks at me. Then down at the dog. Apparently, the two of
- us look like a comedy act. Or at least a couple of guys in need of some
- decent company.
-
- "I'll get my coat," she says.
- * * *
- * Chris Erskine's column is published on Wednesdays. His e-mail address
- is chris.erskine@latimes.com.
-
- Search the archives of the Los Angeles Times for similar stories. You
- will not be charged to look for stories, only to retrieve one.
-
- Copyright Los Angeles Times
-
-
-
- ______________________________________________________
- Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 00:45:29 PST
- From: "Cari Gehl" <skyblew@hotmail.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: LFAS-Mass stranding (Nature paper) (fwd)
- Message-ID: <19980311084530.5027.qmail@hotmail.com>
- Content-Type: text/plain
-
- The following is a post that was made to alt.animals.whales as well as
- to other groups. This paper has been referenced in various recent
- articles on the subject.
-
- Cari
-
- --------------start forwarded post---------------------
- Dear all,
-
- Most of you are aware of the Low Frequency Active Sonars (LFAS) issue
- and
- the dramatic impact this military project can cause on marine mammals.
- During summer 1996, a two-month discussion regarding LFAS occured in
- Marmam and Bioacoustics-L lists. I think that the following paper which
- was published today (5 March 1998) in Nature (Scientific Correspondence)
- can be of your interest. Below you can read the entire text (Nature's
- copyright).
-
- As no aknowledgements exist for this kind of paper, I would like to
- address my thanks to H. Whitehead, J. Potter and J.C. Goold. Their help
- through advices, information and comments on the review of the
- manuscript
- was really precious. I would also like to thank D. Ketten, J. Mead, M.
- Simmonds and all others who contributed through Marmam and
- Bioacoustics-L.
-
- I close this message hoping that the following article could be a
- "useful
- tool" in the hands of specialists who are discussing with the US navy,
- in
- order to convince them to stop their dangerous games.
-
-
- DOES MILITARY ACOUSTIC TESTING STRAND WHALES?
-
- Mass strandings of live whales have been explained by proposing
- many 'natural' or human related factors. I found that a recent stranding
- of Cuvier's beaked whales coincided closely in time and location with
- military tests of an acoustic system for submarine detection that were
- being carried out by the North Atlantic Treaty Org anization (NATO).
-
- Cuvier's beaked whale (Ziphius cavirostris) seems to be abundant
- in the East Ionian Sea (Mediterranean Sea), as indicated by strandings
- and
- sightings, record ed there from 1992 to 1997. This species is a
- deep-diving pelagic cetaceans that rarely mass strands; only seven cases
- of more than four individuals have been recorded since 1963 worldwide
- ---
- the individuals on these occasions numbering 5, 6, 6, 10, 12, 15, and 19
- respectively. In the Kyparissiakos Gulf specifically, the average number
- of indi vidual whales stranded every half-year is 0.7 (sd=0.9, n=11),
- with
- the exception of a mass stranding that occured on 12-13 May 1996.
-
- From the morning of the 12 until the afternoon of the 13 May
- 1996,
- were corded 12 Cuvier's beaked whales stranded alive along the coasts of
- Kyparissiakos Gulf. The whales were spread along 38.2 kilometres of
- coast
- and were separated by a mean distance of 3.5 km (sd=2.8, n=11). This
- spread in time and location was atypical , as usually whales mass strand
- at the same place and at the same time. And two weeks later, one more
- animal was found decomposing on a remote beach of the neighbouring
- Zakynthos Island, 57 km away from the closest stranding on the mainland.
-
- Necropsies of eight stranded animals were carried out, but no
- apparent abnormalities or wounds were found. Many of the stomach
- contents
- that were colle cted contained cephalopod flesh, indicating that recent
- feeding had taken place.
-
- After looking for possible causes of the mass stranding, we
- discovered that 'sound-detecting system trials' had been performed by
- the
- NATO research vessel Alliance, from 24:00 11 May to 24:00 15 May 1996
- (Warning to mariners 586 of 199 6, Hellenic Navy Hydrographic Service)
- ---
- a period that encompassed the mass stran ding. Also, the officially
- declared area where the sea trials had been carried out enclosed all the
- coordinates of the stranding points.
-
- The tests that RV Alliance performed were for Low Frequency
- Active
- Sonar (LFAS), a system for the detection of quiet diesel and nuclear
- submarines. This system generates extremely loud, low frequency sound
- (maximum output >=230 dB re 1 micropascal, broadband waveforms centered
- at
- frequences which range from 250 to 3000 hertz), which enables long
- detection ranges. Research on LFAS began in 1981 and a statement on its
- environmental impact was formally initiated in July 1996 by the US navy.
- The adverse effects of low frequency sound on whales are poorly studied,
- b
- ut many specialists warn that at high levels, as occurs with LFAS, they
- could be dr amatic.
-
- The proximity of military manoeuvres has been suspected of
- causing
- three previous atypical mass strandings of Cuvier's beaked whales,
- spread
- over wide areas of the Canary Islands. On most of the extremely rare
- occasions that mass strandings are seen in this species, they show
- characteristics unlike those that occur with oth er whales. This
- suggests
- that the cause has a large synchronous spatial extent and a sudden
- onset.
- Such characteristics are shown by sound in the ocean. Also deep-diving
- whales seem to be especially affected by low-frequency sounds, even at
- quite low receiv ed levels. We know that LFAS was used in Kyparissiakos
- Gulf. We also know that no other LFAS tests or mass strandings have
- occured in the Greek Ionian Sea, since 1981. Taking the past 16.5-year
- period into account, the probability of a mass strandi ng occuring for
- other reasons, during the period of the LFAS tests is less than 0.0 7%.
- Although pure coincidence cannot be excluded, it seems improbable that
- the
- two e vents were independent. Little is known about whales' reactions to
- LFAS to obtain defi nitive answers. More information needs to be
- gathered.
- but unfortunately, most of the d ata about the use of LFAS are subject
- to
- military secrecy.
-
- (References have been omitted. Please see Nature)
-
- Dr. Alexandros Frantzis
- Zoological Laboratory
- Dept. of Biology
- University of Athens
- Panepistimioupolis
- GR-157 84 ATHENS
- GREECE
- tel : ++301 / 7284634
- fax : ++301 / 7284604
-
- --------------end forwarded post-----------------
-
-
-
-
- ______________________________________________________
- Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 00:53:46 PST
- From: "Cari Gehl" <skyblew@hotmail.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Court Ruling May Spell Doom for Park Wolves
- Message-ID: <19980311085347.15477.qmail@hotmail.com>
- Content-Type: text/plain
-
- Press release from the NPCA (National Parks and Conservation
- Association) located at:
-
- http://www.npca.org:80/np/98-03/ma98-ne02.html
-
- WILDLIFE
-
- Court Ruling May Spell Doom for Park Wolves
- Complex case threatens restored biodiversity in Yellowstone
- By Katurah Mackay
-
-
- CASPER, WYO.ùWolves in the greater Yellowstone region are running for
- their lives once again because a federal judge in Wyoming ruled recently
- to eliminate
- more than 150 canines from the park and parts of central Idaho. Other
- than some livestock owners and the American Farm Bureau, very few are
- celebrating the
- judge's decision.
-
- The basis for Judge William Downes' complex ruling is the Endangered
- Species Act and the environmental impact statement (EIS) prepared in
- 1995 that examines
- wolf recovery efforts for Yellowstone and Idaho. Prior to
- reintroduction, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service issued a rule that
- wolves introduced to Yellowstone and
- central Idaho would be given "experimental nonessential" status as
- opposed to being fully protected as an endangered species. This approach
- was taken to address
- ranchers' concerns: they wanted the authority to shoot any wolves that
- preyed on livestock.
-
- There is evidence that some wolves have migrated from Canada into
- northwestern Montana. These wolves normally would be classified as
- endangered but may have
- mixed with Idaho wolves that were reintroduced. The judge's concern was
- that these naturally occurring wolves would then be mistaken for
- "experimental
- nonessential" wolves and run the risk of being shot. Downes found that
- potential confusion between the two types of wolves could undermine the
- protections that
- naturally occurring wolves should receive, and he ordered the removal of
- the "experimental nonessential" wolves.
-
- To adhere to the order of the district judge, biologists must relocate
- all of the wolves to other areas, an option that is not viable. Two more
- breeding seasons will
- have passed by the time the appeal is settled, and by then, biologists
- may face capturing as many as 300 wolves--a daunting and nearly
- impossible task.
-
- Canada cannot accept the wolves back because they would disrupt
- established packs. Olympic National Park in Washington could be
- considered, but in other
- parks, such as Isle Royale National Park in Michigan and Voyageurs
- National Park in Minnesota, aggressively territorial timber wolf packs
- would likely kill any
- newcomers, especially those of a different sub species. With few options
- available for relocation, the park could be forced to kill hundreds of
- wolves to fulfill the
- order. Fortunately, the judge has ordered a stay on wolf removal until
- the appeal from environmental groups and the Interior Department is
- heard.
-
- Absent from Yellowstone for more than 60 years, gray wolves were the
- only known species missing from the park's historic ecosystem. Today
- Yellowstone hosts
- approximately 90 wolves in seven packs--a remarkable wildlife success.
- According to park officials and to Mark Peterson, NPCA's Rocky Mountain
- regional
- director, wolves have replaced grizzly bears in the last two years as
- the park's number one wildlife attraction. (For more information, see
- 'The Music of the Woods,"
- January/February, 1998.)
-
- Despite federal protections, wolves in some areas still suffer from
- human assault. Recently, an injured timber wolf, still alive but unable
- to walk, was found in
- northeastern Minnesota, a victim of hit and run snowmobilers. According
- to conservation officers on the scene, the tracks indicate chat the
- snowmobilers hit the wolf
- once, circled back, and hit it again in the head as it tried to crawl
- away. Extensive damage to the wolf's head and legs left it maimed beyond
- recovery and the animal
- was shot by game wardens. Incidents such as this indicate that wolves
- require every measure of federal protection.
-
- The fear among members of the ranching community that wolves regularly
- attack their herds is deeply ingrained but lightly supported by facts.
- There have been fewer
- interactions between wolves and livestock outside of Yellowstone--only
- nine since reintroduction--than were expected by the federal EIS
- completed for the 1995
- wolf release. According to Deb Guernsey, assistant on the Yellowstone
- gray wolf restoration project, scientists have found that most wolves
- prefer wild game as
- their food source rather than domestic livestock. One theory is that
- wolves kill what they are taught to kill as pups.
-
- Ben Cunningham, a fourth generation rancher living 20 miles north of
- Yellowstone, helped the wolf project in 1995 by hauling meat to the
- animals in acclimation
- pens. "The wolf is the real victim here," says Cunningham. "Yellowstone
- just isn't big enough." Although Cunningham does not necessarily agree
- with a compensation
- fund for lost livestock, he also says, "You can't put a price on finding
- a wolf and her pups outside their den in the wild. There just isn't a
- prettier picture than that."
- TAKE ACTION: Sign up for Yellowstone's Park Watcher Network for the
- latest information on wolf activities in the park Call 1 800 NAT PARK,
- ext. 229,
- or email Stephany Seay at sseay@npca.org.
-
-
-
- Return to National Parks Table of Contents
-
- Return to NPCA Home Page
-
-
- Copyright 1998, National Parks and Conservation Association
- URL: http://www.npca.org
- E-Mail: npca@npca.org
- Posted: 2/27/98
-
- ______________________________________________________
- Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 01:02:42 PST
- From: "Cari Gehl" <skyblew@hotmail.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Major wolf die-off recorded on Isle Royale
- Message-ID: <19980311090243.22823.qmail@hotmail.com>
- Content-Type: text/plain
-
- >From CNN at:
-
- http://cnn.com:80/EARTH/9803/06/wolves/
-
- Major wolf die-off recorded on Isle Royale
-
- March 6, 1998
- Web posted at: 7:11 p.m. EST (0011 GMT)
-
- By Environmental News Network staff
-
- Officials at Isle Royale National Park near
- Houghton, Michigan, reported Thursday
- that more than half of the timber wolves
- that were present on the Lake Superior
- island park last year have died.
-
- Park Superintendent Douglas Barnard said
- that 13 of the 24 wolves seen in the park during a survey held
- during the winter of 1997 have since succumbed. He said it was
- one of the steepest declines recorded since wolves first migrated to
- the island during the winter of 1947-48.
-
- "We had anticipated a modest increase in wolf numbers this year,"
- said Barnard. "Mother Nature is unpredictable."
-
- Barnard said this winter's survey showed 14 wolves in the park,
- including three pups born since the completion of the 1997 survey.
- Biologists aren't certain what caused the decline, but suspect it may
- be tied to a sharp drop in the available food supply, since the
- island's moose population suffered a major die-off in 1996
- because of a severe winter and a very late spring. Many of those
- animals were older moose that normally provide the main food
- source for wolves.
-
- Could be 'aftershock' of a moose die-off
- "This year's wolf decline could just be an
- aftershock of the moose die-off in the
- spring of '96 when we lost nearly 2,000
- animals -- almost 80 percent of the herd,"
- said Dr. Rolf Peterson, a wildlife biologist at
- Michigan Tech University who heads the park's annual wolf-moose study.
- "Many of the animals that died then were old and weak -- the kind wolves
- love to prey on.
-
- "Those animals are no longer available, so wolves have had to rely
- on calves they could kill, since healthy adult moose are quite able
- to defend themselves against attack under most circumstances."
-
- Peterson said Isle Royale's moose herd is up to about 700 this
- year, an increase of almost 200 from the 500 animals recorded last
- year. He said the island's moose are in good shape because
- competition for food is not nearly so fierce as it was when the herd
- numbered 2,500.
-
- "One thing that has happened is that we've moved to a completely
- new generation of wolves," he said. "All of the wolves in the park
- now are less than five years old. Their reproductive performance
- will be of great interest, since they are even more inbred than their
- parents."
-
- Peterson said there were 10 wolf pups alive on the island last
- summer and only three have survived to this winter. That leads
- biologists to wonder if perhaps canine parvovirus is again present
- in the population. "We plan to live-capture some of the wolves this
- spring and take some blood samples to see if that's the case," said
- Peterson.
-
- Major funding for the Isle Royale study is provided by the National
- Park Service, the National Science Foundation and Earthwatch.
-
- Copyright 1998, Environmental News Network, All Rights
- Reserved
-
- ______________________________________________________
- Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 00:34:26
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] CJD destroyed my daughter, father tells inquiry
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980311003426.09cf1f16@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Wednesday, March 11th, 1998
-
- CJD destroyed my daughter, father tells inquiry
- By David Brown, Agriculture Editor
-
- THE father of Clare Tomkins, who is dying from the human form of mad cow
- disease, said yesterday that his daughter had been destroyed by the illness.
-
- Roger Tomkins gave a harrowing description of the 18 months of "hell"
- endured by his 24-year-old daughter since the disease took hold in 1996.
- His account reduced officials and members of the public to tears on the
- second day of the BSE inquiry in London.
-
- Mr Tomkins, managing director of an engineering company from Tonbridge,
- Kent, said that Clare had become a vegetarian in 1985 because she loved
- animals. He blamed the food
- system for reducing his daughter to an emaciated wreck who cowered in fear
- from her own family, cried constantly and "howled like a sick, injured
- animal".
-
- He said: "She looked at you as though you were the devil incarnate. Her
- eyes filled with fear." For many months doctors treated her as a
- psychiatric case because they did not recognise the symptoms of
- Creutzfeldt- Jakob disease.
-
- The inquiry is investigating the origins of BSE and its connections with a
- new variant of CJD, which has killed 23 people. Mr Tomkins said that the
- Government measures to protect public health had "not worked for Clare". He
- said that, as a layman, he did not know the technical route taken by the
- disease. He asked: "Why did it happen to my daughter? I ask that question
- every day. I believe there was an element of risk-taking and my daughter
- and other cases are the result of that risk. It is maybe a minimal risk but
- it has happened. The results are terrible. She has lived a hell for 18
- months now. No, the system has not worked for her."
-
- Mr Tomkins said that before Clare became a vegetarian in 1985 she ate all
- meats including burgers and hot-dogs. She was happy, engaged to be married
- and had everything to live for.
- She enjoyed working in the pet section of a local garden centre.
-
- Then, in October 1996, after Clare returned from a week's holiday in
- Norfolk with her fiance, Andrew Beale, her family noticed that she was
- unwell. She told her mother, Dawn, that she had cried most days for no
- apparent reason and had not enjoyed the break. She had also developed a
- nasty taste in her mouth which has never been explained. Her weight fell from
- seven to six stones.
-
- One morning she drove her car out of the garage to go to work as usual but
- ran indoors in tears, saying she could not face it. She never worked again.
- Clare became increasingly
- depressed. She gave up horse-riding and refused to socialise.
-
- Her fiance thought their relationship was to blame, so he tried to end it.
- She was "devastated". Mr Tomkins said that he challenged Mr Beale the next
- week and "gave him a very hard time". He pleaded with her fiancΘ to be
- patient. "They reconciled their differences and I am proud to say that
- Andrew has supported Clare from that day."
-
- During Christmas 1996, Clare complained of numb lips, pains in her knees
- and double vision. She became unsteady on her feet and her depression
- worsened. Her memory began to fade.
-
- On the advice of a psychiatric nurse, Mr Tomkins persuaded her to keep a
- diary. Between January and March 1997 her "flamboyant" handwriting was
- reduced to a quarter of its usual
- size until it became an "indecipherable scrawl". Despite stronger
- anti-depressant drugs prescribed by her GP, Clare's condition worsened.
-
- A psychiatrist said that she was suffering from acute anxiety and suggested
- it was caused by conflicts about leaving a secure home to be married. By
- the end of February 1997, Clare
- was thrashing her head from side to side and hallucinating. She was
- admitted to a clinic. By May 27, there were serious concerns for her
- health. She was exhausted and bruised on her
- arms and hands. There were cuts around her elbows, knees and ankle joints -
- inflicted when she hid in fear under her bed. She kicked at anyone
- approaching her. After treatment for her injuries she was given
- electric-shock treatment. Her mother agreed to have her sectioned under
- the Mental Health Act.
-
- Cranial scans showed nothing amiss but a lumbar puncture indicated an
- illness. On Aug 5, 1997, after Clare had been sent to St Mary's Hospital,
- Paddington, for a biopsy of her tonsils,
- doctors confirmed that she had new variant CJD for which there was no cure.
- Mr Tomkins said: "We were devastated by the news".
-
- After that, her parents decided she must be looked after at home. Mr
- Tomkins praised the standard of support the family received from their
- local health authority after his private health
- insurance company refused to make a contribution. Clare is now
- deteriorating slowly. She is at home and receiving round-the-clock
- professional care plus the constant attentions of her family and her fiancΘ.
-
- Mr Tomkins, his voice breaking at times, said Clare's illness had a
- "devastating effect" on the family. He believed that it triggered, or
- exacerbated, his wife's ovarian cancer. She wanted to look after Clare
- herself. He said: "We have had Clare at home for five and a half months and
- my wife has been in hospital for four. Without Andrew, I don't know what I
- would have done."
-
- He said he tried to be strong, "as the anchor for the family". But he cried
- when he was alone out of frustration at being unable to help his daughter
- recover and the knowledge that she would die an untimely death. The public
- gallery burst into spontaneous applause as Sir Nicholas Phillips, the
- Appeal Court judge heading the investigation, told Mr Tomkins how much the
- inquiry team admired his courage for giving evidence.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- [Notes:
-
- 1 - For those unfamiliar with British terms, a stone is a unit of weight
- which equals 14 lbs.
-
- 2 - "Sectioned" means commited and refers to one of several sections of the
- MHA which allows for involuntary detention in a psychiatric hospital. These
- still include sections which allow for a registered nurse or police
- officers to detain someone for up to 8 hours without the authority of a
- doctor.
-
- 3 - The pet sections of garden centres generally sell pet supplies but not
- animals.]
-
- Disclaimer: Articles from the Electronic Telegraph are posted for
- informational purposes. Any views expressed therein are those of the
- Electronic Telegraph, The Daily Telegraph and The Sunday Telegraph, and may
- not necessarily agree with those of 'Animal Voices' or those connected with
- 'Animal Voices'. I will be pleased to provide further information, where
- possible, but comments about the content should be addressed to the ET and
- not myself.
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 00:38:55
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Vet's reference to scrapie 'was cut from speech'
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980311003855.09cf313a@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Wednesday, March 11th, 1998
-
- Vet's reference to scrapie 'was cut from speech'
- By David Brown
-
- THE first vet to recognise BSE as a new disease in cattle claimed yesterday
- that the Ministry of Agriculture had a comparison of the illness with
- scrapie in sheep withdrawn from a scientific paper.
-
- Colin Whitaker told the BSE inquiry that he had produced a scientific paper
- on the disease, which he described as "a new scrapie-like syndrome," for a
- British Cattle Veterinary Association conference in Nottingham in July, 1987.
-
- Scientists now believe that BSE was caused when cattle were given food
- containing the contaminated rendered remains of sheep infected with scrapie.
-
- He found the cattle suffering from disease at Plurendon Manor Farm, High
- Halden, Kent, during 1986 and concluded that the symptoms were similar to
- those of scrapie.
-
- But when he prepared the paper, with Carl Johnson, a local ministry
- veterinary investigation officer at Wye, "someone senior in MAFF" asked to
- see a copy before it was presented and requested that the words
- "scrapie-like" were not used.Mr Whitaker said: "I do not know who it was
- was. You will have to ask Carl Johnson. [He] came to me and said, look,
- we've been asked not to use this. It came down the line. We discussed it at
- length as I was reluctant to cross it out. But in the end, in deference to
- Carl Johnson whohad given me a great deal of help, I agreed. I had never
- come across this interference before or since."
-
- The Veterinary Investigation Centre at Wye was closed in July 1987. Mr
- Whitaker said that it would have taken longer to establish the existence of
- BSE without the laboratories. But David Bee, a vet from Hampshire, told
- how BSE could have been identified nearly two years earlier when he was
- called to Pitsham Farm, Midhurst.
-
- There were several cases of "downer cows" which suffered from tremors, a
- staggering gait, loss of appetite and aggression. On one occasion, a sick
- cow chased a fellow vet while on its knees. Peter Stent, the farmer,
- "donated" a sick animal for post-mortem tests in September 1985. Carol
- Richardson, a pathologist at the Central Veterinary Laboratory in Surrey,
- tested the brain and diagnosed a "spongiform encephalopathy" - a brain
- illness in the scrapie family.
-
- Mr Bee said: "I recall my disbelief at this statement at the time".
-
- The condition was known to him and ministry investigators as Pitsham Farm
- Syndrome because nothing like it had been seen in cattle. He felt that the
- disease had something to do with animal food contaminated with toxins. The
- disease died out on the farm after the cattle food store was cleaned when
- traces of a toxin were found in food samples.
-
- Mr Bee said organophosphate warble-fly treatments, blamed by some for BSE,
- were not used on the farm. He agreed with the inquiry team that some
- BSE-infected cattle may have escaped detection before 1984 because the
- symptoms were confused with hypomagnesaemia, a shortage of magnesium in the
- blood. In 1981 a cow had shown similar symptoms to the animals at Pitsham
- Farm.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- Disclaimer: Articles from the Electronic Telegraph are posted for
- informational purposes. Any views expressed therein are those of the
- Electronic Telegraph, The Daily Telegraph and The Sunday Telegraph, and may
- not necessarily agree with those of 'Animal Voices' or those connected with
- 'Animal Voices'. I will be pleased to provide further information, where
- possible, but comments about the content should be addressed to the ET and
- not myself.
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 00:45:01
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Farmers rally in support of hotelier
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980311004501.09cf22d2@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Wednesday, March 11th, 1998
-
- Farmers rally in support of hotelier
- By Richard Savill
-
- LIVESTOCK farmers demonstrated noisily outside a court in the Scottish
- Borders yesterday in support of the first person to be prosecuted under the
- Government's beef safety regulations.
-
- James Sutherland, 44, a hotelier, who is alleged to have served beef on the
- bone at a dinner for farmers, was cheered as he left Selkirk Sheriff Court
- after the case against him was adjourned until next month.
-
- Sutherland, the owner of the Lodge Hotel, Carfraemill, Berwickshire, was
- reported by environmental health officers after he held a well-publicised
- "prohibition dinner" on Dec 22, five days after beef on the bone was
- outlawed. He is alleged to have served beef on the bone to 170 guests.
-
- Sutherland's case looks set to become a cause cΘlΦbre for the farming
- community. He is accused under the Beef Bones Regulations 1997 of supplying
- beef which had been roasted "while still attached to the bone". If
- convicted, he could face a fine of ú5,000 and/or a six-month jail term.
-
- His lawyer, David Kidd, said that he would argue that ministers were acting
- "illegally and irrationally" when they created the regulations banning the
- supply of beef on the bone for
- consumption. The risk of harm was "negligible" and the regulations were
- "manifestly absurd".
-
- Sheriff James Paterson adjourned the case to April 6, when five days have
- been set aside for a preliminary hearing into the legality of the regulations.
-
- As he left court Sutherland was applauded by a crowd of 100 farmers,
- butchers, publicans and other local people carrying placards denouncing the
- Agriculture Minister, Jack Cunningham.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- Disclaimer: Articles from the Electronic Telegraph are posted for
- informational purposes. Any views expressed therein are those of the
- Electronic Telegraph, The Daily Telegraph and The Sunday Telegraph, and may
- not necessarily agree with those of 'Animal Voices' or those connected with
- 'Animal Voices'. I will be pleased to provide further information, where
- possible, but comments about the content should be addressed to the ET and
- not myself.
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 00:52:32
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] BSE inquiry transcripts
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980311005232.0fc7275e@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Transcripts for the BSE inquiry, which started in London yesterday are
- available on the web at the following site.
-
- www.bse.org.uk/transcripts/
-
- Transcripts are available as either *.txt files or *.zip files. They are,
- due to their nature, long so I will not be posting them to the list.
-
- If anyone, however, does not have access to the web and would like a copy,
- please forward me a mailing address via private e-mail.
-
- Thanks,
-
- David J Knowles
- Animal Voices News
-
-
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 01:00:11
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Huntsman cleared over fox trampling
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980311010011.0fc70ec4@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Wednesday, March 11th, 1998
-
- Huntsman cleared over fox trampling
- By Nigel Bunyan
-
- A HUNTSMAN was cleared yesterday of causing unnecessary suffering to a fox
- which was trampled by his horse.
-
- Alex Sneddon, 61, a veteran of the Holcombe Hunt, had been accused of
- deliberately steering his mount towards the animal. But a stipendiary
- magistrate at Rawtenstall, Lancs, yesterday ruled that the trampling had
- been an accident, exacerbated by the activities of animal rights protesters.
-
- The private prosecution, brought by Edmund Shephard, 26, a hunt saboteur
- from Bolton, Greater Manchester, was the first to be directed against a
- huntsman under the Protection of Wild Mammals Act 1996.
-
- The hunt was on moorland near Rawtenstall on Nov 16, 1996, when a vixen was
- caught by the hounds and Mr Sneddon, from Tottington, Lancs, moved in to
- push them off the kill.
-
- Mr Shephard said the huntsman deliberately allowed his horse to trample the
- fox, but Mr Sneddon said his mount accidentally caught the animal with a
- hoof after becoming overexcited by the "shouting and screaming". Mr
- Sneddon, who has worked for the hunt for 32 years, said: "If I had
- deliberately trampled the fox I would have been sacked."
-
- The injured vixen was handed to protesters who took it to a vet where it
- died. The magistrate, Jonathan Finestein, said he did not believe that Mr
- Sneddon had deliberately allowed his horse to trample the fox. Mr Sneddon
- was awarded costs, estimated at several thousand pounds, out of central funds.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- [Note: A stipendary magistrate is one who is fully paid for their work.
- Most magistrates in the UK are lay persons who are only paid expenses]
-
- Disclaimer: Articles from the Electronic Telegraph are posted for
- informational purposes. Any views expressed therein are those of the
- Electronic Telegraph, The Daily Telegraph and The Sunday Telegraph, and may
- not necessarily agree with those of 'Animal Voices' or those connected with
- 'Animal Voices'. I will be pleased to provide further information, where
- possible, but comments about the content should be addressed to the ET and
- not myself.
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 01:03:42
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Wife wins fight to keep dog
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980311010342.0fc75346@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Wednesday, March 11th, 1998
-
- Wife wins fight to keep dog
- By Sean O'Neill
-
- A MAN lost his best friend to his former wife yesterday after a court was
- asked to rule on a custody battle over a dog.
-
- A judge settled the dispute between Chris Dyson, 48, and Lesley, 43, his
- former wife, by deciding that Billy, a two-year-old springer spaniel,
- should live with Mrs Dyson.
-
- Billy stayed with Mr Dyson at the Burtle Inn, Burtle, near Bridgwater,
- Somerset, when he and his wife separated in January 1997 after 20 years of
- marriage. Mrs Dyson moved to nearby
- Edington with two of their three daughters and Shona, another spaniel. She
- was Billy's registered keeper, but Mr Dyson claimed she had given the
- animal to him as a birthday present.
-
- Shortly after the separation Mr Dyson returned home to find Billy missing
- from the pub and learned that his former wife had him at her new home. He
- accused her of abducting the dog and issued a summons for its return. But
- after a hearing behind closed doors at Bridgwater county court, Judge Carol
- Crowdie ruled that Billy should stay with Mrs Dyson.
-
- After the hearing Mrs Dyson said: "I am just so relieved he is staying with
- me and the children. My daughters are going to be so pleased." But Mr Dyson
- was "very disappointed". He said: "As in a lot of divorce cases and custody
- battles the judge sided with the woman."
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- Disclaimer: Articles from the Electronic Telegraph are posted for
- informational purposes. Any views expressed therein are those of the
- Electronic Telegraph, The Daily Telegraph and The Sunday Telegraph, and may
- not necessarily agree with those of 'Animal Voices' or those connected with
- 'Animal Voices'. I will be pleased to provide further information, where
- possible, but comments about the content should be addressed to the ET and
- not myself.
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 01:08:03
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [MX] Loggers blamed as millions of butterflies die in Mexico
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980311010803.0fc7391a@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Wednesday, March 11th, 1998
-
- Loggers blamed as millions of butterflies die in Mexico
- By Jeremy McDermott, Latin America Correspondent
-
- CARPETS of dead Monarch butterflies have prompted intellectuals to denounce
- widespread logging that, combined with freak weather conditions, has
- created an ecological disaster in Mexico.
-
- Millions of the butterflies have been found dead, in layers up to 12in deep
- in some places, as a result of unseasonal low temperatures and forest
- fires. Now many more are at risk because traditional wintering grounds in
- western Mexico are being lost to the logging industry, say protesters.
-
- Writers, painters, poets and photographers are among the "Group of 100"
- that is campaigning to protect areas to where the butterflies migrate from
- Canada and the United States. Mexico's greatest living writer, Octavio Paz,
- 83, winner of the 1990 Nobel Prize for literature, is among the group.
-
- They have called on President Ernesto Zedillo to declare the San Andres
- reserve in western Mexico, where many Monarchs winter, a federally
- protected area, and halt the logging. Other
- environmental groups and politicians are also opposing the deforestation in
- the area. "It's not moderate logging, they are razing the mountains," said
- Ramiro Duarte, president of the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party in
- the town of Maravatio.
-
- A spokesman for the Colombian NGO Nature Foundation said: "The Monarchs
- need the cover of the woods, for the protection and food they provide, to
- be able to survive their migration. Without that cover, the chances are
- slim." Biologists have also warned that the traditional Monarch migration
- phenomenon will disappear in 20 years if the rate of timber clearing
- continues.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- Disclaimer: Articles from the Electronic Telegraph are posted for
- informational purposes. Any views expressed therein are those of the
- Electronic Telegraph, The Daily Telegraph and The Sunday Telegraph, and may
- not necessarily agree with those of 'Animal Voices' or those connected with
- 'Animal Voices'. I will be pleased to provide further information, where
- possible, but comments about the content should be addressed to the ET and
- not myself.
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 06:45:02 -0500
- From: ar-admin@envirolink.org
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Admin Note -- Inappropriate Posting
- Message-ID: <3.0.1.32.19980311064502.0069b858@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- This is in support of the new "posting policy" to AR-News (11/11/97). Now,
- "Bina Robinson" <civitas@linkny.com> will be banned from direct posting for
- a minimum of 2 weeks for the post: Fw: VIRUS WARNING !
-
- Virus warnings are not to be posted to an entire e-mail list. Almost
- always, virus warnings of this type are hoaxes. Posting to the list only
- perpetuates a hoax. Plus, such matters do not fit in the category of
- animal rights.
-
- Do not pursue this thread further on AR-News!
-
- Allen Schubert
- AR-News Listowner
- ----------------------------------------------------
- Due to the sudden surge of inappropriate postings to AR-News, the Listowner
- (me) will implement a new policy in dealing with such postings. At the
- _earliest_possible_convenient_time_, I will ban the offending individual
- from posting to AR-News for a minimum of two (2) weeks. An individual who
- repeatedly posts inappropriate material _may_ be banned from posting
- permanently.
-
- ***NOTE: If you are banned from posting, be sure to remind me when the two
- weeks are up. The process to REMOVE the person from a "banned" status does
- not always work well. A potential side effect of the process is that it
- may "lock" the AR-News list, meaning that no one may post or
- subscribe/unsubscribe.
-
- If you have questions as to the appropriateness of a post, DO NOT HESITATE
- to contact the Listowner ( ar-admin@envirolink.org ) concerning the
- appropriateness of a news item. I have supported this in the past, though
- these discussions did not make it to the list.
-
- I am avoiding making this a "moderated" list (one in which the Listowner
- approves/releases posts to the list) as such action will reduce the speed
- of posting -- plus, it puts the decision of what is considered "animal
- rights" in the hands of one person. My goal here is to eliminate non-news,
- discussion/opinion posts to AR-News and not to decide what is/isn't *animal
- rights* and to allow news items to be posted as rapidly as possible.
- Further, a "moderated" list would punish the many for the infractions of
- the few. (Something that I found highly offensive since childhood.)
-
- ***If you have problems with this policy, please feel free to e-mail me
- _privately_ to discuss this. (Posting to the list would be inappropriate.)
-
- allen
- -------------------------------
- Please do not post commentary or personal opinions to AR-News. Such posts
- are not appropriate to AR-News. Appropriate postings to AR-News include:
- posting a news item, requesting information on some event, or responding to
- a request for information. Discussions on AR-News will NOT be allowed and
- we ask that any
- commentary either be taken to AR-Views or to private E-mail.
-
- Continued postings of inappropriate material may result in suspension of
- the poster's subscription to AR-News.
-
- Here is subscription info for AR-Views:
-
- Send e-mail to: listproc@envirolink.org
-
- In text/body of e-mail: subscribe ar-views firstname lastname
-
- Also...here are some websites with info on internet resources for Veg and
- AR interests:
-
- The Global Directory (IVU)
- http://www.ivu.org/global
-
-
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 07:12:52 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Animal Trafficking In Chinatown
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980311071250.0068ce50@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from CNN http://www.cnn.com
- ----------------------------------------------
- New York State News
- Reuters
- 11-MAR-98
-
- Animal Trafficking In Chinatown
-
- (NEW YORK) -- The owner and manager of a New York City trading company are
- under arrest for trafficking live animals. State environmental officials
- seized 50 turtles, ten rattlesnakes, 90 largemouth bass, a box of razor
- clams, and 700 pounds of Ramid frogs from Ocean King Trading in Chinatown.
- The company owner, 45-year-old Bill Huynh Lam, and its manager, 58-year-old
- Gau Kwong Lui, were charged for the offense and will be arraigned next month.
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 07:18:46 EST
- From: Tereiman <Tereiman@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: President Reserves Right to Change His Mind About Neutering
- Message-ID: <1d473794.35068129@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
-
- Clinton To Neuter New Puppy
-
- .c The Associated Press
-
- By SONYA ROSS
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) - Sorry, Buddy, it's for your own good.
-
- After consulting with his vet - and hearing an appeal from actress Doris Day -
- President Clinton has decided to neuter his new puppy.
-
- But the reluctant president reserved the right to change his mind. In
- announcing Clinton's decision Tuesday, White House spokesman Barry Toiv said
- Clinton was ``inclined'' to allow the procedure.
-
- The Humane Society of the United States, the nation's largest animal
- protection group, applauded Clinton's decision, saying he was doing the right
- thing by his pet.
-
- ``Neutering or spaying dogs and cats is one of the most important acts a
- responsible pet owner can take,'' said Martha Armstrong, a society vice
- president. ``It promotes better physical and behavioral health for dogs and
- cats, and it helps to address the pet overpopulation crisis.''
-
- Clinton set no immediate date for putting Buddy under the knife, leaving some
- to wonder whether the 7-month-old chocolate Labrador retriever has been told
- of his fate.
-
- ``Buddy's a little too young to understand,'' Toiv said.
-
- Indeed, Buddy, seemed blissfully unaware of any pending surgery as he played
- fetch with Clinton on the South Lawn with a green tennis ball Tuesday.
-
- Toiv said Clinton's decision was driven by concerns for Buddy's health. He
- denied that it was motivated by the more than a few salty confrontations the
- dog has had with Socks the family cat - who, for the record, is neutered too.
-
- Dr. Jacqueline Suarez, a veterinarian with the Alexandria (Va.) Animal
- Hospital, said neutering can help curb dogs' aggression toward other animals
- and tendency to urinate in unwelcome places.
-
- ``Although, if we have people questioning if they should or shouldn't, those
- health reasons are good reasons to neuter as well, so we'll use them as part
- of the case for neutering,'' Suarez said.
-
- Miss Day, president of the Doris Day Animal League, sent Clinton a letter in
- December expressing concern that Buddy would suffer health problems if he were
- left intact. Among them was a risk of testicular cancer and prostate
- infections that could lead to problems with urination.
-
- In January, Clinton spokesman Mike McCurry said there were no plans to neuter
- Buddy, who had moved into the White House in mid-December.
-
- However, Clinton physician Connie Mariano has now told Miss Day in a letter
- that the Clintons had decided to neuter the dog on the advice of their
- veterinarian.
-
- Armstrong said Buddy need not worry about losing his procreative abilities.
-
- ``Pets don't have any concept of sexual identity or ego. Neutering a male dog
- or cat will not change his basic personality,'' she said. ``He doesn't suffer
- any kind of emotional reaction or identity crisis when neutered.''
-
- Got that, Buddy?
-
- AP-NY-03-11-98 0252EST
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 07:51:04 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Test: Wild Horses Died of Stress
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980311075102.0068c2d0@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- BLM horses
- from Associated Press http://wire.ap.org
- ----------------------------------------------------------
- MARCH 11, 07:00 EST
-
- Test: Wild Horses Died of Stress
-
- By SANDRA CHEREB
- Associated Press Writer
-
- RENO, Nev. (AP) -- Nine young mares that survived the barren deserts of
- the West died of stress induced by their capture and a 1,000-mile truck
- ride to Colorado.
-
- The horses died of ``capture myopathy,'' a condition in wild animals
- triggered by anxiety of capture, according to test results released
- Tuesday by the Bureau of Land Management.
-
- Forty mares and 10 studs were loaded into a truck Feb. 17 at the BLM's
- center in Palomino Valley north of here for the 24-hour trip to a similar
- facility south of Denver.
-
- Nine horses arrived showing signs of distress. None survived.
-
- Handling of the animals is a topic being addressed by a new advisory board
- looking into issues surrounding the estimated 44,000 wild horses and
- burros that roam free across 11 Western states.
-
- ``The advisory board will be looking into ways to minimize stress, whether
- on the range, during gathers or as they move through the adopt-a-horse
- program,'' said Robin Lohnes, a board member and the executive director of
- the American Horse Protection Association in Washington, D.C.
-
- The 26-year-old adoption program was intended by Congress to reduce the
- number of animals competing with ranchers' cattle for scant forage on
- federal lands. Horses are rounded up into corrals and put up for adoption.
-
- The establishment of the advisory panel followed reports last year by The
- Associated Press that thousands of animals adopted through a federal
- program were sold for slaughter with BLM employees among those who
- profited.
-
- The AP also reported that the BLM lost track of about 32,000 adopted
- animals and that agency officials gave false information to Congress.
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 98 08:14:21 UTC
- From: SDURBIN@VM.TULSA.CC.OK.US
- To: ar-news@Envirolink.org
- Subject: Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo
- Message-ID: <199803111417.JAA18365@envirolink.org>
-
- (Houston Chronicle, TX, USA): Lifestyles and Entertainment, by Ken Hoffman
-
- Here's how the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo can draw fans back inside
- the Astrodome, where attendance was down this year.
-
- Cut some events from the rodeo. Just call it the Houston Livestock Show
- and Country Music Festival. That's what the fans really come for, anyway,
- the music. Everything else, can stay. The same amount of scholarship money
- would be raised.
-
- I'm convinced that if they held a rodeo, and didn't invite country stars
- like Tanya Tucker, practically nobody would buy a ticket.
-
- I've never seen them put a cowboy's name on a ticket to the Houston
- Livestock Show and Rodeo.
-
- Who really wants to see a 200-pound bully jump on a frightened barnyard
- animal, snap its neck, and kill it? That's exactly what happened at the
- rodeo this year.
-
- Steer wrestling and calf roping are not sports. They're cruelty to animals.
- The SPCA was all over the rodeo's case this year.
-
- It's not even an "accident" or a "fluke" when an animal is killed or
- injured during these events.
-
- I'm also convinced these events eventually will be outlawed. Houston could
- show its heart and ban steer wrestling and calf roping now. That way, the
- country superstars could sing for 30 minutes longer. They'd be able to give
- real concerts instead of the greatest hits medley they currently rush through.
-
- Rodeo officials always insist that rodeo animals are treated with loving
- care. They're treated better than most household pets, they say.
-
- Oh, really? I have a 15-year-old Cairn Terrier named Lilly who sleeps in
- bed with me. Somehow, I've resisted the urge to jump on Lilly, slam her to
- the ground, and tie her up.
-
- Despite my fondness of sports, I have never broken Lilly's neck and
- killed her.
-
- I guess I just don't treat her with the same tenderness as the rodeo.
-
- If rodeo cowboys think steer wrestling is a harmless sport, let them
- beat the heck out of each other. Now, that I'd buy a ticket for.
-
- Even without Tanya Tucker.
-
- www.houstonchronicle.com
-
- -- Sherrill
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 09:44:54 EST
- From: Tereiman <Tereiman@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Cincinnati P&G Action Alert!
- Message-ID: <90fc3015.3506a368@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- P&G Action Alert
-
- We need your help to stop Procter & Gamble from poisoning animals
- in unnecessary and cruel product tests.
-
- Please join People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA)
- and In Defense of Animals (IDA) on Global Day of Action against
- P&G for a death march in Cincinnati on Saturday, March 28. The
- march will begin at Fountain Square, on 5th between Vine and
- Walnut Streets at 11:45 AM and end at P&G's headquarters on
- Broadway between 5th and 6th Streets. Please bring friends
- and family for an even stronger showing of support and please
- wear all black for the event.
-
- If you have any questions, please call Jason Baker at 757-622-
- 7382, ext. 490 or lauren Sullivan at 415-388-9641, ext. 29. We
- hope to see you on the 28th. Thank you for all you do for
- animals.
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 09:49:58 -0600
- From: paulbog@jefnet.com (Rick Bogle)
- To: "AR-News Post" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Vilas - Become a broken record
- Message-ID: <19980311095405374.AAA221@paulbog.jefnet.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- The Vilas monkeys have been in solitary confinement now for five or six
- days. Most of these monkeys have never been away from their large families.
- More social than humans, one can only begin to imagine their anguish. They
- have 85 more days of solitary confinement to go. This punishment is
- routinely reserved for only the most intractable human criminals.
-
- As long as only one of these monkeys remains alive, the University of
- Wisconsin will be continuing to break its pledge not to harm these animals
- or disrupt their lives.
-
- I intend to make it part of my daily routine to remind university and
- county staff that they are continuing to break their promises. Perhaps some
- of you will do the same.
-
- R
-
- Contact:
-
- David Ward, Chancellor (he has the authority to return them)
- University of Wisconsin Chancellor's Office
- 161 Bascom Hall
- 500 Lincoln Dr., Madison 53706
- telephone 608-262-9946.
- [E-mail: WARD@MAIL.BASCOM.WISC.EDU]
-
- Joseph Kemnitz, Interim-director (strawdog, but might whine to Hinshaw)
- Wisconsin Regional Primate Research Center
- 1223 Capitol Court, Madison 53715
- telephone 608-263-3500.
- [E-mail: KEMNITZ@PRIMATE.WISC.EDU]
-
- Kathleen Falk, County Executive (could be embarrassed into some sort of
- legal action)
- County Executive's Office
- Room 421, City-County Building
- 210 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.
- Madison 53709
- telephone 608-266-4114
- [E-mail: falk@co.dane.wi.us]
-
- Dean Virginia Hinshaw (the villain, her decisions have been the driving
- force all along)
- Bascom Hall
- 500 Lincoln Drive
- Madison, WI 53706
- Ph: 608-262-1044Fax:608-262-5134
- [E-mail: hinshaw@mail.bascom.wisc.edu]
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 09:50:19 -0600
- From: paulbog@jefnet.com (Rick Bogle)
- To: "AR-News Post" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Vilas background
- Message-ID: <19980311095405374.AAD221@paulbog.jefnet.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- Background information relating to why the Vilas monkeys should be saved
- from Tulane:
-
- >From a letter to Zoo Director, David Hall dated June 15, 1989:
-
- More than a few of the monkeys housed at [the zoo] facility have lived
- their entire lives there, and animals are removed from their natal groups
- only to prevent overcrowding.
-
- . . . . As a matter of policy, no invasive physiological studies are
- carried out on these animals. In addition, the CenterÆs policy regarding
- animals removed from these established groups ensures that they will not be
- used in studies at our facility involving invasive experimental procedures.
- Such animals will be assigned to the CenterÆs non-experimental breeding
- colony, where they are exempt from experimental use.
-
- This policy on the uses of monkeys at the WRPRC Vilas Park Zoo facility
- has the endorsement of my administrative council as well as the staff
- veterinarians and animal care supervisors responsible for the care and
- humane use of all Center animals. As evidence of this, their signatures are
- also affixed.
-
- Let me take this opportunity to point out that the Center has long taken a
- leadership role in the humane treatment of research animals. . . . and our
- assistant veterinarian [Viktor Reinhardt] has developed a highly regarded
- program of pairing caged monkeys to enhance their psychological well-being.
-
-
- Yours Truly,
-
- Robert W. Goy, Director
- Administrative Council
-
- Then on April 18, 1990 the new director wrote to Zoo Director Hall again:
-
- Dear Dr. Hall:
-
- I confirm that the existing and future policies of the Wisconsin Regional
- Primate Research Center are that any animals bred at the zoo are used in
- non-interventive behavioral research or for breeding purposes only. . . .
- . . . My predecessor, Dr. Goy wrote to you last year on June 15 and on
- July 17. Our policies were spelled out in detail in those letters and
- these policies will remain in place. In particular, Dr. GoyÆs letter of
- June 15 addresses this topic.
-
- Sincerely yours,
- John Hearn [Director]
-
- And on Feb. 1, 1995 Director Hearn said in another letter to Zoo Director
- Hall:
-
- . . . These animals are studied in non-invasive research or assigned to
- our breeding colony. Investigative procedures include those, with no
- damage or consequence to the animal . . .
-
- After it was reported on Aug.9 in the local newspaper that this agreement
- had been breached hundreds of times the Wisconsin Regional Primate Research
- Center Web Page reported that:
-
- A number of factors contributed to the breach, Hinshaw, [UW Graduate School
- Dean], says. Hinshaw plans to meet soon with the directors of the center .
- . . noting that UW-Madison is committed to following the spirit of the
- [1989] agreement.
-
- And then on March 3, 1998 Dean Hinshaw ordered that 147 (? the total number
- is unclear) rhesus monkeys from the zoo be sent to Tulane to be used in any
- way Tulane wishes.
-
- R
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 16:04:15 +0000 (WET)
- From: Daniel Paulo Ferreira <dmartins@alumni.dee.uc.pt>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: About drugs
- Message-ID: <Pine.BSF.3.96.980311160128.17842A-100000@alumni.dee.uc.pt>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
-
-
- Hello!
-
- Does anyone know how much different drugs are in the market worldwide?
- It's important.
-
- Thanks in advance.
-
- Daniel
-
-
- ______________________________________ ________________________________
- | || |
- | Daniel Paulo Martins Alves Ferreira || "The vivisector is either a |
- | || morally pathologically |
- | || disposed individual, or else, |
- | dmartins@alumni.dee.uc.pt || if he is normal, a complete |
- | || criminal; in the first case, |
- | Rua de Angola, 5-2║ || his place is in a mental |
- | 3030 Coimbra || institution; in the second |
- | Portugal || case, it is in jail." |
- | || |
- | 0943 912 602 || Dr. Johannes Ude |
- |______________________________________||________________________________|
-
- "Economics and politics simply intertwine in shaping conventional
- medicine's approach to cancer. Very simply put, treating disease is
- enormously profitable, preventing disease is not."
- -- The British Cancer Control Society, Outrage, Oct/Nov, 1986
-
- "In a deliberate effort to expand the market for their products, drug
- companies are literally creating new diseases."
- -- Dr. Joel Lexchin, "The Real Pushers"
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 16:42:59 +0000 (WET)
- From: Daniel Paulo Ferreira <dmartins@alumni.dee.uc.pt>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: About AIDS
- Message-ID: <Pine.BSF.3.96.980311163759.18732A-100000@alumni.dee.uc.pt>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
-
-
-
- I think you might be interested in the following site:
-
- http://www.virusmyth.com/aids
-
- It deals, once again, with the great medical fraud.
-
-
- Daniel
-
-
- ______________________________________ ________________________________
- | || |
- | Daniel Paulo Martins Alves Ferreira || "The vivisector is either a |
- | || morally pathologically |
- | || disposed individual, or else, |
- | dmartins@alumni.dee.uc.pt || if he is normal, a complete |
- | || criminal; in the first case, |
- | Rua de Angola, 5-2║ || his place is in a mental |
- | 3030 Coimbra || institution; in the second |
- | Portugal || case, it is in jail." |
- | || |
- | 0943 912 602 || Dr. Johannes Ude |
- |______________________________________||________________________________|
-
- "Economics and politics simply intertwine in shaping conventional
- medicine's approach to cancer. Very simply put, treating disease is
- enormously profitable, preventing disease is not."
- -- The British Cancer Control Society, Outrage, Oct/Nov, 1986
-
- "In a deliberate effort to expand the market for their products, drug
- companies are literally creating new diseases."
- -- Dr. Joel Lexchin, "The Real Pushers"
-
-
-
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 11:44:20 EST
- From: DDAL <DDAL@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: White House Letter
- Message-ID: <eaac2b25.3506bf66@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
-
-
-
- DORIS DAY ANIMAL LEAGUE RECEIVES LETTER FROM
- WHITE HOUSE CONFIRMING BUDDY TO BE NEUTERED
-
- WASHINGTON, D.C., March 9, 1998 - The Doris Day Animal League today received
- a letter from The White House indicating that the First Family plans to have
- Buddy, their new Chocolate Labrador puppy, neutered. Miss Day, President of
- the Doris Day Animal League, recently wrote to President Clinton urging him to
- have Buddy neutered as a sign of responsible pet ownership as well as to make
- a statement that all Americans can help eliminate the tragedy of pet
- overpopulation. An estimated 8 to 10 millions dogs and cats are killed each
- year in our shelters and pounds, simply because there are not enough good
- homes for them.
- The Doris Day Animal League asked that Buddy be neutered in conjunction with
- Spay Day USA, the annual, national event during which humane Americans are
- asked to take action against pet overpopulation by having one dog or cat
- altered. The fourth annual Spay Day USA took place two weeks ago on Tuesday,
- February 24th. While final numbers are still being tallied, the League is
- optimistic that at least 100,000 companion animals were spayed or neutered in
- conjunction with Spay Day USA 1998.
- Joining Miss Day in writing to President Clinton were Tony La Russa, Manager
- of Major League Baseball's St. Louis Cardinals and noted animal advocate, as
- well as the heads of five leading national animal protection organizations.
- Holly Hazard, Executive Director of the League, stated "I am thrilled to see
- the Clinton family set such a fine example of responsible pet ownership for
- all Americans. It truly shows that we can all be part of the solution to end
- the tragedy of pet overpopulation."
-
- ###
-
- Contact: Holly Hazard/Margaret Carpenter
- 202-546-1761
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 98 12:35:34 UTC
- From: SDURBIN@VM.TULSA.CC.OK.US
- To: ar-news@Envirolink.org
- Subject: Carson and Barnes Circus
- Message-ID: <199803111828.NAA29744@envirolink.org>
-
- Does anyone have any info. on the Carson and Barnes Circus? It's going
- to the Houston area this month. Thanks for anything you can give me on
- them.
-
- -- Sherrill
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 13:52:43 EST
- From: SimonChai <SimonChai@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, esavers@scn.org
- Subject: (US-Seattle/Kirkland) Cruelty-free products
- Message-ID: <ac09e1e8.3506dd7e@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- (If you live or shop in the Seattle/Kirkland area and can spare a few minutes,
- please send a thank-you note to Puget Consumers Co-op for recently approving a
- cruelty-free product policy.)
-
- .......
- GOOD NEWS!
-
- The Board of Trustees at Puget Consumers Co-op, one of the largest food
- cooperatives in the United States, recently voted to support the cruelty-free
- product initiative a group of concerned members brought forward last fall.
- This means that PCC will no longer purchase household products, personal care
- items, and cosmetics from companies that still conduct or commission any non-
- required tests on animals.
-
- If you live in the Seattle or Kirkland area and can spare a few minutes,
- please write PCC and THANK THEM for their decision. You do not need to be a
- member to send a thank-you note; PCC's customer base is much larger than its
- membership base.
-
- The reason we suggest you send a letter of support is that once PCC stops
- carrying certain products, there are bound to be some customers who will
- complain because they can't get this or that favorite item. If management has
- just as many letters on file complimenting them for passing this new policy,
- it will help validate their decision and confirm they've done the right thing.
- PCC staff wants to be responsive to their customers and to their members.
-
- Please e-mail, fax, or mail your thank-you notes to either:
-
- Kathy Blackman
- Board Administrator
- Puget Consumers Co-op
- 4201 Roosevelt Way NE
- Seattle, WA 98105
- Fax (206) 545-7131
- kathyb@pcc.pccsea.com
-
- or
- Bridgette Boudreau
- Member Services Coordinator
- Puget Consumers Co-op
- 4201 Roosevelt Way NE
- Seattle, WA 98105
- Fax (206) 545-7131
- bridge@pcc.pccsea.com
-
- * * *
- More history on the Initiative:
-
- A group of concerned PCC members gathered more than 700 signatures in less
- than two weeks to qualify this issue for the May ballot. (For anyone who's not
- a member, PCC is a cooperative and members have the ability to vote for
- trustees and on issues raised by members.) Rather than waiting until May for
- the membership vote, the Board voted in January to support the initiative.
- Over the next few months, they will begin implementing the purchasing policy
- we laid out in our petition. Apparently, PCC merchandisers were already
- considering such a policy. PCC will be using the list of companies that don't
- test compiled by PETA.
-
- PCC will use our initiative wording as a basis for writing their purchasing
- policy guidelines. The one change we agreed to gives PCC the flexibility to
- purchase from companies that currently have a moratorium on testing.
- Exemptions will also be made for any products for which no cruelty-free
- product currently exists and for those products required by law to be tested
- on animals such as pharmaceuticals.
-
- Although the new policy does not address household products, cosmetics, or
- personal care items with animal ingredients or PCC's merchandising of meat, it
- does represent a positive policy change by PCC. Staff have told us they will
- be replacing some 70 products within the next few months.
-
- If anyone has any questions about the initiative, please call Simon Chaitowitz
- in Seattle at (206) 784-1479 or e-mail simonchai@aol.com.
-
- Please pass this message along to anyone you know who shops at PCC and might
- be willing to send a quick note saying "Thank-you PCC." This is one case where
- our voices will definitely be heard!
-
- Thanks so much; I know you're all busy!
-
- Simon Chaitowitz
- Seattle/Washington
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 13:04:21 -0600 (CST)
- From: In Defense of Animals <idausa@ix.netcom.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Looking for Activists
- Message-ID: <199803111904.NAA27164@dfw-ix10.ix.netcom.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Posted for lauren Sullivan, National Campaign Director
- In Defense of Animals
- 131 Camino Alto, Suite E
- Mill Valley, CA 94941
- 415/388-9641 x29
- ida@idausa.org
-
- In Defense of Animals is looking for activists who can organize events in
- the following areas:
-
- Louisville, KY
- Detroit, MI
- St. Paul, MN
- Lincoln, NB
- Tulsa, OK
- Myrtle Beach, SC
-
- If you are interested in helping an IDA campaign, please contact lauren
- Sullivan at the phone or email listed above.
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 98 14:26:19 UTC
- From: SDURBIN@VM.TULSA.CC.OK.US
- To: ar-news@Envirolink.org
- Subject: Easter Bunnies and Moto Foto
- Message-ID: <199803112023.PAA22726@envirolink.org>
-
- Moto Foto in Tulsa, OK (USA) is advertising using live rabbits for "props"
- with children for Easter. We have been told they get the rabbits from breeders.
- Please call the owner, Jim Brown, at 918-492-0076 and ask that he please not
- use live rabbits for props. The rabbits are very stressed doing this, and
- he could get sued if the rabbits bite the children. If he wants props for
- Easter photos with children, he can use toys.
-
- -- Sherrill
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 12:47:55 -0800
- From: Sandy <elliotts@usfca.edu>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: RE: Virus/How to tell if hoax
- Message-ID: <l03102800b12ca79a366f@[138.202.236.80]>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- If you get a warning of a virus, you can check it out on the web to find
- out if it's really something you need to worry about...
-
- This web page has very useful information about which virus warnings are
- hoaxes:
- http://kumite.com/myths/
-
- It's recommended by the CIAC, linked to from their web page on Hoaxes,
- which is also useful but less easy to navigate:
- http://ciac.llnl.gov/ciac/CIACHoaxes.html
- (CIAC is the US Dept of Energy's Computer Incident Advisory Capability)
-
- *Sandra
-
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 15:45:55 EST
- From: JanaWilson <JanaWilson@aol.com>
- To: AR-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Oklahoma State Senate Hog Farm Debate
- Message-ID: <4c27cd78.3506f805@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
-
- A/w local Okla. City news:
-
- A bill which imposes tougher standards on Oklahoma's rapidly
- growing hog industry sailed thru the Okla. Senate on Tuesday,
- but some other legislators reportedly are working behind closed
- doors to undo some of its features. Senate Bill 1175 by Sen.
- Paul Muegge, D-Tonkawa, passed 45 to 1, with only Sen. Gene
- Stipe, D-McAlaster, opposing it. It now goes to the House
- and ultimately to a House-Senate conference committee that will
- write the final version of the legislation.
- Meanwhile, a special House-Senate task force is reveiwing the same
- bill in "closed session". The group meant twice this week. Two
- Republican members said Rep. Jim Glover, D-Elgin, is leading a move
- gut any provisions unfavorable to the hog industry. Some members
- are "systemically moving to gut the bill and Glover is leading the
- charge," said Sen Own Laughlin, R-Woodward, who objects to closed
- meetings.
- Sen. Muegge said on the Senate floor, "I hope we don't let some
- lobbyist tell you what the bill needs to be." Muegge said later the
- was referrring to Clem McSpadden, lobbyist for several hog corporations
- and the Okla. Pork Producers. Muegge added the Legislature will
- pass a bill with strong regulations because the legislative leadership
- wants it.
- The bill passed on the Senate floor contains a provision that would
- require all hog farms with more than 2500 swine to be licensed. Now,
- only farms with more than 5000 hogs must be licensed.
- Other major features now in the bill are:
-
- 1. A requirement for hog farms to develop a plan to reduce odor
- coming from the farms.
- 2. A requirement that hog farms contribute to a fund to clean up
- any land damage caused by hog operations.
- 3. A requirement that operators planning to establish new hog farms
- notify neighbors within a two-mile radius of the proposed farm.
- Current law requires notification of neighbors in a one-mile
- radius, Muegge said.
- 4. A requirement that the bottom of hog sewage lagoons be 10
- feet from the water table. (Current law requires the lagoon
- bottoms to be just 4 ft from the water table.)
-
- The bill was amended by Laughlin to requre new farms to install
- a leak detection system or monitoring wells around the perimeter
- of each hog structure used for storage of liquid waste. Laughlin
- also got an amendment passed changing the 1993 law that now
- exempts licensed hog farms from nuisance complaints.
- Hog farms would not be exempted from nuisance complaints
- involving odors, water contamination, flies or other pestilence
- from farms using a liquid animal waste management system.
-
- For the Animals,
-
- Jana, OKC
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 14:40:42 -0600
- From: Steve Barney <AnimalLib@vaxa.cis.uwosh.edu>
- To: AR-News <AR-News@envirolink.org>
- Subject: [US-WI] LEGISLATION: LRB-4985: WI Moratorium on Factory Farms
- Message-ID: <3506F6CA.8C39EC47@uwosh.edu>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: multipart/mixed; boundary="------------41D374FDED947393E97CF46E"
-
- The following is the text of a draft of legislation (LRB-4985 or
- "Legislative Reference Buruea draft #4985") calling for a moritorium on
- factory farms (i.e. farms with 750 or more 'animal units;) in the state
- of Wisconsin. A copy of this draft was sent to me today, Feb. 11, 1998,
- by Senator Alice Clausing's office.
-
- -- Beginning --
-
- State of Wisconsin
-
- 1997 - 1998 LEGISLATURE
-
- LRB-498511
- RCT:jlg:hmh
-
-
- 1997 BILL
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- 1AN ACT to create 281.165 of the statutes; relating to: limiting the
- establishment
-
- 2 or expansion of certain livestock operations.
-
- Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau
-
- Current law requires the department of natural resources (DNR) to
- promulgate rules containing performance standards and prohibitions
- designed to limit water pollution from agricultural facilities and
- agricultural practices that are nonpoint (diffuse) sources of water
- pollution. The law also requires the department of agriculture, trade
- and consumer protection (DATCP) to promulgate rules containing
- conservation practices to implement the performance standards and
- prohibitions established by DNR. This bill prohibits the establishment
- of new livestock operations with 750 or more animal units and the
- expansion of existing livestock operations so that they have 750 or more
- animal units until DNR and DATCP have promulgated these rules. An
- animal unit is a measure developed by DNR. A beef cow weighing 1,000
- pounds or more is one animal unit. Each kind of farm animal is assigned
- a value relative to a beef cow. A livestock operation is a feedlot or
- other facility where animals are fed or maintained.
-
-
- The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and
- assembly, do
- enact as follows:
-
- 3 SECTION 1. 281.165 of the statutes is created to read:
-
- 1997 - 1998 Legislature- 2 -LRB-4985/1
- RCT:jlg:hmh
- BILLSECTION 1
-
- 1281.165 Moratorium on certain livestock operations, (1) In this
- section:
-
- 2(a) 'Animal unit' has the meaning given in s. NR 243.04 (3), Wis. Adm.
- Code.
-
- 3(b) 'Livestock operation' has the meaning given in s. 281.16 (2).
-
- 4(2) No person may establish a livestock operation with 750 or more
- animal
-
- 5units or expand a livestock operation that has fewer than 750 animal
- units on the
-
- 6effective date of this subsection .... [revisor inserts date], so that
- the livestock
-
- 7operation has 750 or more animal units until rules required under s.
- 281.16(3)(a)
-
- 8and (b) are in effect.
-
- 9 (END)
-
- -- End --
- Attachment Converted: "C:\EUDORA2\Attach\vcard7.vcf"
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 16:28:41 -0500
- From: "Leslie Lindemann" <LDTBS@worldnet.att.net>
- To: "AR-news postings" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: superintendent letter
- Message-ID: <19980311212831.AAA10659@oemcomputer>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Could someone please send me the letter written by a school superintendent
- to a student regarding dissection? I accidentally deleted it.
- Thanks!
-
- Leslie
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 16:39:13 EST
- From: SMatthes <SMatthes@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, EnglandGal@aol.com, chrisw@fund.org,
- Pandini1@prodigy.net, RonnieJW@aol.com, dawnmarie@rocketmail.com,
- Chibob44@aol.com, OneCheetah@aol.com, Ron599@aol.com, nbgator@ibm.net,
- jdanh@worldnet.att.net, GAK97@webtv.net, anmlpepl@whidbey.com,
- alf@dc.seflin.org, connie@mack.senate.gov,
- bob_graham@graham.senate.gov, miller13@mail.house.gov,
- MChasman@aol.com, vice.president@whitehouse.gov
- Subject: Sexual Animal Abuse in Manatee County, Florida
- Message-ID: <379b7258.35070483@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Sarasota In Defense of Animals is in receipt of an arrest report from the
- Bradenton Florida Police Department, Case No: 98-4939, and Probable Cause
- Affidavit, Manatee County, Florida, on defendant Juan J. Alonzo, charging
- cruelty to animals under Florida Statute 828.12.2.. The documents indicate a
- court date of March 13, 1998.
-
- The arrest documents describe a witnessed incident of the defendant, Juan
- Alonzo, having anal sex with a 50 pound black dog who was yelping with pain
- when police were called. The investigating police officer found Alonzo in the
- process of pulling his pants up and was with the dog. He was arrested and is
- being held at the Manatee County jail unable to post the $500 bond.
-
- Contact the State Attorney for prosecution to the full extent of the law:
- (Note that court date is set for March 13, 1998)
-
- State Attorney Earl Moreland, 12th Judicial Circuit
- Criminal Justice Center
- P.O. Box 880
- Sarasota, FL 34230
- Fax: (941) 951-5449
- Telephone: (941) 951-5400
- no email address
-
- Some of you may recall that Manatee County, Florida is the same county where
- Bruiser, the Rotweiller, was murdered in his own yard in view of his owner and
- her young daughter several months ago. The defendant in that animal cruelty
- case was prosecuted by the same state's attorney's office. The judge handed
- down a sentence of 20 days in jail --- served on week-ends!
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 15:54:27 -0800
- From: Bob Chorush <BChorush@paws.org>
- To: "'ar-news@envirolink.org'" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Problem Pet Stores Closed [Seattle]
- Message-ID: <0036E62F4D76D111AD4B004095020B3602A20A@EXCHANGE>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain
-
- March 10, 1998
- Contact: Stephanie Bell / sbell@paws.org
-
- Dolphin Aquarium and Pets in Alderwood Mall closed about two weeks ago.
- Dolphin has regularly been importing and selling puppies purchased from
- Midwest puppy mills.
-
- In 1995, PAWS documented purchases of puppy mill dogs by Dolphin Pets
- and filed charges with Consumer Affairs since Dolphin had a sign in
- their store that said "We do not buy puppy mill dogs." Rather than
- contest the charges, Dolphin agreed to remove the sign; although they
- continued to purchase and sell puppy mill dogs.
-
- Dolphin Aquarium and Pets in Alderwood Mall accounted for almost half of
- all pet store complaints received by PAWS. Following our expose of their
- puppy mill purchases, many owners came forward to report problems with
- their "purebred" dogs purchased at Dolphin.
-
- Dolphin Pets used to operate four stores in the greater Seattle area.
- Following a divorce, ownership of the stores was divided. The husband's
- two stores have already gone bankrupt. Nadine Finley, the wife, still
- maintains one pet store in Redmond. This is Dolphin Aquarium and Pets,
- 15230 NE 24th, Redmond, WA 98052
-
- Dolphin Pets has been looking for another location on the Eastside. They
- recently applied to rent space at Crossroads but management there
- contacted PAWS and we were able to provide Crossroads with enough
- information about Dolphin Pets so that they were unwilling to lease to
- them.
-
- Although we have not checked USDA or King County records recently, there
- is every reason to believe that this Redmond store continues to sell
- puppy mill dogs.
-
- ----------
-
- Seattle Pet Center, 15009 Aurora N, Shoreline, WA 98133 - also a problem
- pet store for selling puppy mill dogs and for filthy conditions, went
- out of business about five months ago shortly after intense protests by
- local groups.
-
- ----------
-
-
- Bob Chorush, Web Administrator
- Progressive Animal Welfare Society (PAWS)
- 15305 44th Ave W. Lynnwood,WA 98046
- 425-787-2500 ext 862 fax 425-742-5711
- bchorush@paws.org
- to
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 20:43:33 -0400
- From: Ty Savoy <ty@north.nsis.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (Ca) James Bond And the Seal Hunt
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.32.19980312004333.00818708@north.nsis.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- James Bond joins celebrities in attempt to stop seal kill
-
- By TERA CAMUS / Cape Breton Bureau
-
- Sydney {Nove Scotia} - Bond, James Bond is hoping to take away Canadians'
- licence to kill seals.
-
- Pierce Brosnan is joining several other stars, including William Shatner,
- Brigitte Bardot, Linda Blair and Jackie Chan on ice floes near Prince Edward
- Island on Friday to protest the seal hunt.
-
- They will sail with Paul Watson on board the conservationist's Sea Shepherd,
- which stopped Tuesday in Sydney to pick up film crews from Australia,
- Austria, Germany and France.
-
- "For Canada to be involved in that (hunt) is deplorable," said Mr. Watson,
- who made news in 1993 after ramming several ships off the coast of
- Newfoundland for similar reasons.
-
- "The hunt has been escalating in numbers and it was done for political
- reasons, not scientific reasons, mainly so Brian Tobin could become premier
- of Newfoundland."
-
- The hunt this year has a quota of 275,000 coats.
-
- "This is the largest slaughter of wildlife anywhere in the world," he said.
-
- "These seals are not just threatened by the hunt but they're threatened by
- lack of fish, distraction of habitat, heavy metal poisoning. ... There's so
- many factors that we have to take a long-term look at what's happening to
- the populations."
-
- More than a half-million seals are on melting ice near P.E.I. to whelp their
- young.
-
- "I would say there will be a high natural mortality rate (this year)."
-
- The stars will film public service announcements condemning the hunt and the
- uses of seal carcasses, such as the sales of seal penises to cure impotence,
- something Mr. Watson referred to as "voodoo medicine."
-
-
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 19:56:45 EST
- From: RiotFrog <RiotFrog@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Houston Livestock "Show" and rodeo
- Message-ID: <45813e53.350732cf@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- There were two protests at the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo this
- year. The first had an astounding 7 participants and second had a much nicer
- 13. Favorite comments from pseudo-cowboy passers by were, "Eat sh@! you commie
- bastards" and "rope this bitch". A few of the news media showed up, asked a
- few questions, and never aired their footage.
-
- The apathetic behavior of so called "activists" in Houston is quite
- depressing indeed. For a city so huge with so much abuse going on (furriers,
- dog track, horse track, slaughterhouses, research labs, and inadequate
- shelters etc...) one would think that there would be an amazing number of
- humans trying to further the cause.
-
- "But what can one person do anyway.......nothing will ever
- change.....they aren't going to stop the killing....."
-
- What a load of bullocks.
-
-
- Frog
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 21:23:22 -0400
- From: Ty Savoy <ty@north.nsis.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (Mex) Loggers fingered as butterflies die
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.32.19980312012322.0081d610@north.nsis.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Loggers fingered as butterflies die
-
- BOGOTA - Carpets of dead monarch butterflies have prompted intellectuals to
- denounce widespread logging that, combined with freak weather conditions,
- have created what they describe as an ecological disaster in Mexico.
-
- Millions of the butterflies have been found dead, in layers up to a third of
- a metre deep in places, as a result of unseasonal low temperatures and
- forest fires. Now many more are at risk because traditional wintering
- grounds in western Mexico are being lost to the logging industry, protesters
- say.
-
- Writers, painters, poets and photographers are among the "Group of 100" that
- is campaigning to protect areas to where the butterflies migrate from Canada
- and the United States.
-
- Mexico's greatest living writer, Octavio Paz, 83, winner of the 1990 Nobel
- Prize for literature, is among the group.
-
- They have called on President Ernesto Zedillo to declare the San Andres
- reserve in western Mexico, where many monarchs winter, a federally protected
- area, and to halt the logging. Other environmental groups and politicians
- also oppose the deforestation in the area.
-
- "It's not moderate logging - they are razing the mountains," said Ramiro
- Duarte, president of the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party.
-
- - The Daily Telegraph
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 18:20:50 -0600
- From: Steve Barney <AnimalLib@vaxa.cis.uwosh.edu>
- To: AR-News <AR-News@envirolink.org>
- Subject: [US-WI] "Thai Entrepreneur Wants UW Monkeys" (TCT-030998)
- Message-ID: <35072A62.D6ADDD3B@uwosh.edu>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- "Thai Entrepreneur Wants UW Monkeys"
- The Capital Times
- Madison, Wisconsin
- United States
- Monday, March 9, 1998
- Pape 2A
-
- -- Beginning --
-
- THAI ENTREPRENEUR WANTS UW MONKEYS
-
- BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - A meeting of government officials and animal
- rights activists could clear the way for moving 51 Monkeys to Thailand
- from Madison 's Henry Vilas Zoo.
-
- The meeting, scheduled for Wednesday, will include in its agenda the
- offer of a flamboyant hotel entrepreneur - who hosts an annual feast for
- wild monkeys - to provide land for a sanctuary for the animals.
-
- 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 fruits and vegetables - 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.
-
- 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 hosts an elaborate banquet for them. It's not a
- completely selfless gesture - 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 Vilas Zoo, but actually belong to the
- Wisconsin Regional Primate Research Center at the University of
- Wisconsin-Madison, which had been using them for behavioral research.
-
- The research ended in June, however, and the U.S. National Institutes of
- Health later announced termination of funding for the zoo monkeys,
- leaving no funds for their upkeep.
-
- Animal rights activists in Thailand were concerned enough to write the
- U.S. Ambassador to Thailand, William Itoh, to ask for 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 scores of the UW's
- rhesus monkeys, also housed at the zoo and affected by the same budget
- cutbacks, were transferred to the Primate Research Center at Tulane
- University 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
- possibly come to Thailand.
-
- Montana's U.S. Sen. Max Baucus, asked for his assistance during a trip
- last year to Thailand, has agreed to help in arranging transportation
- for the monkeys.
-
- But few concrete plans have been made, said Jordana Lenon, a
- spokesperson for the UW 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 Associated Press.
-
- Lenon said the UW center had also received 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.
-
- Issues to be discussed at Wednesday's meeting at the national forestry
- department in Bangkok include a possible waiver of a legal requirement
- that private individuals cannot own endangered species, as well as a
- request that the finance ministry grant an exemption from import duties
- should the animals be sent here.
-
- Hotelier Yongyuth said he will consult with authorities over the
- ownership issue, and if he cannot hold title to the monkeys, he will
- donate the land regardless and let it be staffed by government
- employees.
-
- "But staying with me would be better, because I love monkeys and will
- take good care of them," he said.
-
- -- End --
-
- More information about the UW-Madison monkey scandal is available at:
-
- http://www.uwosh.edu/organizations/alag/Issues.html
-
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 18:38:10 -0600
- From: Steve Barney <AnimalLib@vaxa.cis.uwosh.edu>
- To: AR-News <AR-News@envirolink.org>
- Subject: [US-WI] "Animal advocates: Return zoo monkeys" (TCT-031098)
- Message-ID: <35072E72.E2BB04CD@uwosh.edu>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- "Animal advocates: Return zoo monkeys"
- By Paul Norton
- The Capital Times
- Madison, Wisconsin
- United States
- Tuesday, March 10, 1998
- Page 2A
-
- -- Beginning --
-
- ANIMAL ADVOCATES:
- RETURN ZOO MONKEYS
-
- By Paul Norton
- The Capital Times
-
- A Louisiana animal rights group is calling for the return to Madison of
- 71 Vilas Zoo monkeys that have been moved to a primate research center
- in New Orleans.
-
- On Monday, 10 members of the Coalition of Louisiana Animal Advocates
- collected 40 signatures on a petition asking Tulane University President
- Emon Kelly to return the rhesus monkeys to Madison.
-
- The 71 monkeys, which were owned by the University of Wisconsin-Madison,
- were shipped to Louisiana last Wednesday with 66 monkeys from the UW's
- Regional Primate Research Center. Earlier reports saying that 101
- monkeys were sent from the zoo were incorrect, according to UW primate
- center veterinarian Christine O'Rourke.
-
- The monkeys all now live in a primate center where some of them could be
- subject to research on infectious diseases such as leprosy and simian
- AIDS, said Debbie Grant, Tulane public relations director.
-
- In the petition mailed to Kelly Monday, the animal rights coalition
- asked him to order the monkeys removed from the Tulane Regional Primate
- Research Center and returned to the zoo in Madison, coalition spokesman
- Pinckney Wood said in an interview this morning from New Orleans.
-
- The Tulane president's office said that they could not respond to the
- petition because it had not been received in the mail yet.
-
- "I've been to a lot of these kinds of things, and this is the most
- positive event of this kind that I've ever been a part of," Wood said.
- It's really something."
-
- Dr. Peter Gerone, director of the Tulane primate center, could not be
- reached for comment this morning.
-
- -- End --
-
- More information about the UW-Madison monkey scandal is available at:
-
- http://www.uwosh.edu/organizations/alag/Issues.html
-
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 19:14:27 -0600
- From: Steve Barney <AnimalLib@vaxa.cis.uwosh.edu>
- To: AR-News <AR-News@envirolink.org>
- Subject: [US-WI] "Hog factory stinks figuratively and as matter of fact"
- (TCT-031098)
- Message-ID: <350736F3.E2C00CF1@uwosh.edu>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- "Hog factory stinks figuratively and as matter of fact"
- Letter to the Editor
- By Nancy Harvell
- The Capital Times
- Madison, Wisconsin
- United States
- Tuesday, March 10, 1998
- Page 7A
-
- -- Beginning --
-
- HOG FACTORY STINKS FIGURATIVELY AND AS MATTER OF FACT
-
- Dear Editor: How would you like it if your family had to live 1,000 feet
- from a hog factory?
-
- The simple fact is hogs stink and the greater the number of hogs the
- stronger the odor.
-
- Maybe people are not aware of the fact that this facility has to have
- fans running 24 hours to take the gases the mature emits out of the
- building. There is even a backup system where canvas panels drop if
- electric problems occur.
-
- This is because the pigs will die within a few hours if they are trapped
- in these gases.
-
- Yet, it doesn't appear to be a problem that these same gases will be
- blown onto six neighboring families within a quarter mile of this site.
-
- In a study done at Duke University Medical Center, it was reported that
- "those who lived downwind suffered from a variety of illnesses including
- increased tension, depression, flu-like symptoms, fatigue, dizziness,
- blackouts, loss of appetite, and sleep disturbances.
-
- This was a mile or more from the direct source of the odors, not a mere
- 1,000 feet! To have such close contact 24 hours a day is more than any
- family should have to endure.
-
- There are further health risks to area residents as well. Wastes
- threaten well water with parasites, bacteria and viruses.
-
- The nitrates from hog waste have been linked to "blue baby syndrome,"
- which is fatal to infants and can cause miscarriages. And then there is
- the problem of flies - swarming and breeding in a two-mile radius.
-
- Another sad fact is Badgerland Family Farms, which is building this hog
- factory, is a LLC. This limited liability corporation formed by
- Blumers, Hobson, Amolds, and others in LaFayette County can only lose
- the amount of money they put into the operation.
-
- If our neighborhood creek is polluted when manure is spread right beside
- it, or our wells are contaminated, or we become ill from the hog
- factory, who will be responsible?
-
- The members of the LLC will only have limited liability. Small farmers
- are certainly responsible for their farms. Why aren't they?
-
- The citizens of Green County may be forced to pick up the cost if
- pollution occurs. Do you want to be taxed to do this?
-
- Board of Adjustment was asked to put some conditions on the conditional
- use permit. They considered none and put none on. They left residents
- of Green County responsible instead of the farmers who should be.
-
- I still believe if this is such a wonderful idea, then one of the
- members of this LLC should build it on their farm. Their neighborhood
- would be as suitable as mine. And why not make it a partnership, so LLC
- members are financially responsible for it, too? If it is as state of
- the art as they claim, this should not be a problem.
-
- Nancy Harvell
- Albany
-
- -- End --
-
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 22:36:33 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) free range chickens
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980311223630.0072ae4c@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from Associated Press http://wire.ap.org
- --------------------------------
- OPEN-DOOR POLICY: Free-range chickens conjure up in some consumers' minds
- pictures of contented fowl strolling around the barnyard, but the truth
- is, all a chicken grower needs to do is give the birds some access to the
- outdoors. According to Consumer Reports magazine, whether the chickens
- decide to take a gambol or stay inside with hundreds or thousands of other
- birds, under government rules growers are free to label them free-range.
- Chickens sold as free-range supposedly taste better than the cooped-up
- variety, but Consumer Reports testers said there isn't necessarily any
- difference between the two.
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 19:48:27
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [CA] Plant a tree - save a salmon
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980311194827.19c7ad6c@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Plant a tree - save a salmon
- By David J Knowles
-
- BURNABY, BC - Students at Stoney Creek School are getting a hands-on
- experience about the local environment.
-
- Students from the school are busy planting the first of 700 sapplings on
- the banks of Stoney Creek, Burnaby's only salmon-bearing stream.
-
- The creek has been subject to severe damage during recent years after
- development above the stream on Burnaby Mountain have led to the
- destruction of the banks. It has also meant the loss of shade from the
- stream, leading to a warming of water temperatures.
-
- The end result has been a significant decrease of salmon returning to spawn
- in the creek.
-
- The students say they are glad of the opportunity to particpate in helping
- to save their local environment.
-
- David J Knowles
- Animal Voices News
-
- Animal Voices News is a news service of "Animal Voices" - an animal
- advocacy radio show airing weekly on Vancouver's Cooperative Radio.
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 23:26:28 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Canadian Sealers Are Spin Doctors
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19980311232537.04e03140@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Canadian Sealers Are Spin Doctors
- .c The Associated Press
-
- By DAVID CRARY
-
- ST. JOHN'S, Newfoundland (AP) - Weary of being branded vicious thugs, Canada's
- seal hunters are fighting back with a slick marketing campaign touting such
- products as seal pepperoni and cure-almost-anything seal-oil pills.
-
- It's a new tactic for the sealers, who face a high-decibel transatlantic
- protest campaign as the seal-hunting season moves into full swing over the
- next few weeks.
-
- The anti-sealing lobby is recruiting celebrities to help oppose what it calls
- ``the largest slaughter of marine mammals in the world.'' Rallies are planned
- in London and Ottawa this month to protest the federal government's
- willingness to raise the seal quota to its highest level in years.
-
- ``The seal hunt will be shut down - make no mistake about it,'' said animal-
- rights activist Paul Watson, the cofounder of Greenpeace. ``If we have to drag
- the Canadian flag through the mud to do it, we'll do so.''
-
- But in Newfoundland, base of the sealing industry, there is equally strong
- determination to keep the hunt going - even to expand it by finding markets
- for virtually every part of a seal carcass.
-
- Public-relations kits being prepared by the sealing industry contains no
- images of seals, but plenty of glossy photos of appetizing dishes prepared
- with seal meat.
-
- Samples of seal sausage and seal pepperoni are being offered at food fairs
- across Canada. Newfoundland's first seal-leather tannery recently opened. And
- Canadian and Asian health stores are stocking seal-oil pills which allegedly
- ease arthritis pain, unclog arteries and relieve symptoms of diabetes.
-
- Seal penises are sold in Asia for use in aphrodisiacs - something more quietly
- noted by the sealing industry.
-
- ``We've been carrying on the seal hunt in Newfoundland for 200 years,'' the
- provincial fisheries minister, John Efford, said in an interview. ``There's no
- group in the world that's ever again going to stop it.''
-
- The hunt almost was stopped in the 1980s. Protests resulted in a European ban
- on the import of seal pelts, driving large commercial sealing ships out of the
- business.
-
- Newfoundlanders continued small-boat hunting, but the market was so poor by
- the early 1990s that only about 50,000 seals were taken annually.
-
- Starting in 1996, the annual kill rose to more than 200,000. Government
- officials decided to back the industry with temporary subsidies in hopes of
- partly offsetting the loss of 27,000 jobs when Newfoundland's vital codfish
- industry collapsed in 1992.
-
- This year's quota is 285,000, and Efford said it could increase if markets for
- seal products are strong.
-
- Efford says animal-rights activists are more concerned about seals than
- Canadians struggling to survive in a province with 18 percent unemployment.
- ``Why are these so-called humanitarians not concerned about 400 communities in
- Newfoundland left without work?'' he asks.
-
- Anti-sealing activists have tried to counter the economic argument by
- suggesting that sealers shift to eco-tourism, serving as guides for tourists
- wanting to view the seals close-up on their ice floes.
-
- But mostly, the anti-sealing campaign depicts the sealers as vicious.
-
- The industry's most vocal antagonist, the London-based International Fund for
- Animal Welfare, alleges that many seals are skinned alive and abandoned on the
- ice after their penises are removed for export to Asia. It contends that
- white-coated baby seals continue to be killed, even though the practice was
- banned a decade ago.
-
- Last year, the group sent federal fisheries officials a videotape that it
- claimed showed sealers committing 140 violations of hunt regulations.
-
- The government charged seven sealers with 17 offenses, including failure to
- kill a seal quickly and using improper instruments.
-
- Tina Fagan, a former radio host who heads the Canadian Sealers Association,
- says the issue of cruelty is pivotal. Her group has enlisted a national
- veterinarian watchdog panel to help ensure that the 6,000 licensed sealers use
- the most humane methods possible.
-
- Efford, however, admits that the hunt is inherently bloody.
-
- ``Who would suggest that killing is pretty?'' he asked. ``You can go into any
- slaughterhouse in the world - who'd want to take pictures?''
-
- One argument the anti-sealing lobby cannot use is that the seals are
- endangered. The last government count, in 1994, estimated there were 4.8
- million harp seals in the region. Efford says today there are about 6 million,
- posing a threat to already dwindling fish stocks.
-
- The IFAW says there is no proof that seals are responsible for the codfish
- shortage. The group also disputes claims that the seal industry is worth
- nearly $20 million a year, saying its net value is minimal if costs of
- enforcement and government subsidies are deducted.
-
- AP-NY-03-10-98 1440EST
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 23:27:05 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Clinton To Neuter New Puppy 'Buddy'
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19980311232639.04e6d140@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Clinton To Neuter New Puppy
- .c The Associated Press
-
- By SONYA ROSS
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) - Sorry, Buddy, it's for your own good.
-
- After consulting with his vet - and hearing an appeal from actress Doris Day -
- President Clinton has decided to neuter his new puppy.
-
- But the reluctant president reserved the right to change his mind. In
- announcing Clinton's decision Tuesday, White House spokesman Barry Toiv said
- Clinton was ``inclined'' to allow the procedure.
-
- The Humane Society of the United States, the nation's largest animal
- protection group, applauded Clinton's decision, saying he was doing the right
- thing by his pet.
-
- ``Neutering or spaying dogs and cats is one of the most important acts a
- responsible pet owner can take,'' said Martha Armstrong, a society vice
- president. ``It promotes better physical and behavioral health for dogs and
- cats, and it helps to address the pet overpopulation crisis.''
-
- Clinton set no immediate date for putting Buddy under the knife, leaving some
- to wonder whether the 7-month-old chocolate Labrador retriever has been told
- of his fate.
-
- ``Buddy's a little too young to understand,'' Toiv said.
-
- Indeed, Buddy, seemed blissfully unaware of any pending surgery as he played
- fetch with Clinton on the South Lawn with a green tennis ball Tuesday.
-
- Toiv said Clinton's decision was driven by concerns for Buddy's health. He
- denied that it was motivated by the more than a few salty confrontations the
- dog has had with Socks the family cat - who, for the record, is neutered too.
-
- Dr. Jacqueline Suarez, a veterinarian with the Alexandria (Va.) Animal
- Hospital, said neutering can help curb dogs' aggression toward other animals
- and tendency to urinate in unwelcome places.
-
- ``Although, if we have people questioning if they should or shouldn't, those
- health reasons are good reasons to neuter as well, so we'll use them as part
- of the case for neutering,'' Suarez said.
-
- Miss Day, president of the Doris Day Animal League, sent Clinton a letter in
- December expressing concern that Buddy would suffer health problems if he were
- left intact. Among them was a risk of testicular cancer and prostate
- infections that could lead to problems with urination.
-
- In January, Clinton spokesman Mike McCurry said there were no plans to neuter
- Buddy, who had moved into the White House in mid-December.
-
- However, Clinton physician Connie Mariano has now told Miss Day in a letter
- that the Clintons had decided to neuter the dog on the advice of their
- veterinarian.
-
- Armstrong said Buddy need not worry about losing his procreative abilities.
-
- ``Pets don't have any concept of sexual identity or ego. Neutering a male dog
- or cat will not change his basic personality,'' she said. ``He doesn't suffer
- any kind of emotional reaction or identity crisis when neutered.''
-
- Got that, Buddy?
-
- AP-NY-03-11-98 0252EST
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Mar 1998 21:03:34 -0800
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Wild horses die of stress after captured
- Message-ID: <35076CA6.1AD8@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Wild horses died of stress after capture
-
- The Associated Press
- RENO, Nev., March 11, 1998
-
- Nine young mares that survived the barren deserts of the West died of
- stress brought on by their capture and a 1,000-mile truck ride to
- Colorado.
-
- The horses died of "capture myopathy," a condition in wild animals that
- is triggered by anxiety of capture, according to test results released
- Tuesday by the Bureau of Land Management.
-
- Forty mares and 10 studs were loaded into a truck Feb. 17 at the BLM's
- center in Palomino Valley north of here for the 24-hour trip to a
- similar facility south of Denver.
-
- Nine horses arrived showing signs of distress. None survived.
-
- Handling of the animals is a topic being addressed by a new advisory
- board looking into issues surrounding the estimated 44,000 wild horses
- and burros
- that roam free across 11 Western states.
-
- "The advisory board will be looking into ways to minimize stress,
- whether on
- the range, during gathers or as they move through the adopt-a-horse
- program," said Robin Lohnes, a board member and the executive director
- of the American Horse Protection Association in Washington, D.C.
-
- The 26-year-old adoption program was intended by Congress to reduce the
- number of animals competing with ranchers' cattle for scant forage on
- federal lands. Horses are rounded up into corrals and put up for
- adoption.
-
- The establishment of the advisory panel followed reports last year by
- The Associated Press that thousands of animals adopted through a federal
- program were sold for slaughter with BLM employees among those who
- profited.
-
- The AP also reported that the BLM lost track of about 32,000 adopted
- animals and that agency officials gave false information to Congress.
-
- By SANDRA CHEREB, Associated Press Writer
-
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