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- Death-Row Dog Goes to Sanctuary
- .c The Associated Press
- By JEFF BARNARD
-
- MEDFORD, Ore. (AP) - A dog sent to death row for chasing a horse was
- given a reprieve Thursday.
-
- Jackson County Commissioners passed an ordinance that lets the
- collie-malamute mix named Nadas off the hook if his owner agrees
- to ship him off to the wilds of Utah to live out his days at an animal
- sanctuary.
-
- ``I'm sure we will do what's best for Nadas,'' said Sharon Roach,
- whose 22-year-old son, Sean, raised the dog from a puppy.
-
- But first, they want to carefully consider the conditions of the measure,
- which include dropping a lawsuit against the county.
-
- ``It has been a long hard battle,'' she said. ``Emotionally, it has been
- really devastating.''
-
- Linda Rowe of the Portland animal advocacy group Watchdog said the
- ordinance was not a total solution. Dog owners still need a chance to
- correct a problem before a case gets to the point of death or banishment.
-
- ``If Nadas can be spared, that's wonderful,'' she said. ``But there are three
- other dogs in this state on death row.''
-
- Nadas was sentenced to death for chasing a horse in 1996 under a state law
- that allows counties to destroy dogs that kill, injure or chase livestock.
-
- Sean Roach, who manages a storage business in Ashland, hasn't seen his dog
- since he was seized by an animal control officer nearly two years ago.
- Since then, Roach and his mother have paid the county more than $4,000
- to feed and board the dog, who has been kept at a secret location.
-
- Support for Nadas has been building for months over the Internet and among
- animal rights advocates, and peaked this week after the tabloid TV show ``Hard
- Copy'' aired the story. That prompted a deluge of telephone calls that jammed
- emergency lines at the county airport fire department.
-
- While enacting the ordinance, commissioners pointed out that 1,700 dogs
- are euthanized in Jackson County each year because owners don't properly
- care for them, and livestock owners have a right to expect protection for
- their
- animals, as well.
-
- ``This is a dispute between urban and rural people,'' said commission
- Chairwoman Sue Kupillas, herself a cattle rancher. ``What we hope is
- urban and rural people will learn to settle these disputes.''
-
- The ordinance requires a dog owner to request a hearing and prove the
- chased livestock suffered no injury. Dogs determined to have injured or
- killed livestock would be euthanized.
-
- The dog owner must pay the cost of a veterinary inspection of the livestock
- and a $100 penalty to cover the cost of the hearing. The cost of shipping the
- dog to a sanctuary also would be paid by the owner.
-
- AP-NY-02-12-98 2155EST
-
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 01:46:30 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Procter & Gamble CEO Hit With Pie
- Message-ID: <199802140652.BAA28777@mail-out-3.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Procter & Gamble CEO Hit With Pie in Columbus OH by PETA member
- .c The Associated Press
- by KEITH ROBINSON
-
- COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An animal-rights activist walked onto a stage and pushed
- a tofu cream pie into the face of the chairman of Procter & Gamble Co. as he
- was receiving an award from the governor Thursday night.
-
- The woman, a member of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, followed
- John E. Pepper to the podium during the awards banquet. She hit him with the
- pie and said: ``Procter & Gamble poisons animals! Shame on you, John Pepper!
- Shame on you!''
-
- An audience of about 200 people witnessed the episode. Police detained the
- woman for questioning.
-
- Michael McGraw, a spokesman for PETA in Norfolk, Va., identified the woman as
- Melynda Duval of Virginia Beach, Va. McGraw said he did not know her age.
-
- McGraw said the reason for the attack was the Cincinnati-based company's
- continued use of live animals in laboratory product testing.
-
- ``Sometimes a polite word doesn't do it,'' he said. That's why we sometimes do
- unusual things, such as slinging tofu cream pies.''
-
- Pepper was one of seven recipients of a Governor's Award, given each year
- during the annual meeting of the Ohio Newspaper Association. The awards were
- presented by Gov. George Voinovich, who was on the stage at the time of the
- attack.
-
- Pepper wiped the pie from his face, accepted a plaque from Voinovich and
- started an acceptance speech by saying: ``This will be a memorable event for
- more reasons than one.''
-
- On Feb. 4, pranksters in Brussels, Belgium, hit Microsoft Corp. Chairman
- Bill Gates with three pies.
-
- AP-NY-02-12-98 2210EST
-
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 01:48:08 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Groups Oppose Genetic Rule Proposal
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19980214014754.03891870@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Groups Oppose Genetic Rule Proposal
- .c The Associated Press
-
- by PEGGY FIKAC
-
- AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Meet ``Fishberry'' - part fish, part strawberry - and, if
- he really existed, potentially an organically labeled nightmare.
-
- That is the opinion of Greenpeace activists and others protesting proposed
- federal standards for organic foods during a hearing convened by the U.S.
- Department of Agriculture.
-
- To help make their point, they brought along an activist costumed as a fish-
- headed strawberry - an example of what might happen through genetic
- engineering.
-
- In real science, plants with genes from common soil bacteria produce their own
- pest-killing toxins, allowing farmers to skip the use of chemical sprays. But
- opponents say insects may become resistant to the bacteria more quickly if
- they constantly are exposed to the plants, which would hamper the
- effectiveness of new crop sprays that are also bacteria-based.
-
- Some also have said that the foods resulting from genetically engineered
- plants may have harmful side effects. Among other changes, they want the new
- regulations for organic foods to ban use of genetic engineering in products
- labeled ``organic.''
-
- ``Consumers, organic farmers and the whole organic industry don't want this
- stuff. But the USDA has hijacked the process to keep from placing any kind of
- stigma on genetically altered foods,'' Greenpeace spokesman Bill Jackson said
- Thursday.
-
- The Sierra Club says a proposal for allowing genetically engineered food to be
- deemed organic conflicts with current practices and the expectations of
- consumers.
-
- ``If the USDA's proposed rules are adopted as written, consumers will lose all
- faith in the 'organic' label, and a $3.5 billion industry in organic products
- will be threatened,'' said Carl Pope of the Sierra Club.
-
- The Texas Agriculture Department said the state's organic certification
- standards could be significantly weakened if the proposals are adopted as
- written.
-
- Under the state organic certification program, ``consumers are assured the
- products they buy labeled as 'Texas Organic' are truly organic,'' said state
- Agriculture Commissioner Rick Perry. ``National standards should not create
- any doubts for consumers but rather maintain the high level of confidence now
- set in Texas.''
-
- USDA spokesman Andy Solomon emphasized that what the agency has put out is a
- draft, not a final rule for organic labeling.
-
- Even the initial proposal does not suggest allowing the use of genetically
- engineered organisms, but asks for public comment on whether they should be
- included, he said.
-
- ``We're very much engaged in a process now of seeking broad public
- participation and input. ...Nothing is final,'' Solomon said.
-
- U.S. Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman earlier this month delayed action on
- the labeling rules to allow more time for public comment. The deadline is now
- April 30.
-
- The USDA has received hundreds of objections to the possibility that products
- undergoing irradiation, genetic engineering and fertilization with sewage
- sludge could be put under the organic label.
-
- Growers also have said the rules would allow the organic label for livestock
- fed with up to 20 percent non-organic feed, and that loopholes would allow
- synthetic pesticides that never have been permitted.
-
- AP-NY-02-13-98 0116EST
-
- Date: Fri, 13 Feb 1998 23:02:00 -0800 (PST)
- From: The Fund For Animals <vhandley@fund.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, primates@usa.net
- Subject: Re: (US-CA) Cruelty alleged in chef's preparation of exotic entree
- Message-ID: <199802140702.XAA02189@igc4.igc.org>
-
- Please write to the California Fish & Game Commission, 1416 -9th St,
- Sacramento, Calif 95814. fax 916/653-1856. On April 1, they will vote on
- a ban on the
- importation of turtles and frogs for the live animal markets. Ask them
- to vote yes on the ban and to stop the illegal trade in wildlife for
- the Chinatown restaurants. Also, write to SF District Attorney Terence
- Hallinan, 850 Bryant St, San Francisco, Cal 94103 fax 553-9054 to
- prosecute for felony
- animal cruelty against the Grand Palace Restaurant, 950 Grant Ave, SF
- 94108. Also demand action from Carl Friedman, SF Animal Care & Control,
- 1200 - 15th St, SF 94103 and Mayor Willie Brown, City Hall, SF 94102,
- fax 415/554-6160.H F or more info, call The Fund for Animals at
- 415/474-4020 or e-mail me. We are all sickened by this horrendous
- killing and hope that something positive comes of it for the benefit of
- the thousands of animals involved in this brutal trade. Also, look at
- your own city to see if live animal markets are starting. PS The Fund
- for Animals, along with others, are suing the markets for violations of
- anti-cruelty and health laws. That suit will be heard in April.
- Date: Fri, 13 Feb 1998 22:55:01
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Cool Britannia becomes a hot spot
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980213225501.2757153a@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Saturday, February 14ty, 1998
-
- Cool Britannia becomes a hot spot
- By A J McIlroy
-
- BRITAIN enjoyed its warmest February day on record yesterday, bringing
- spring in winter and confusing nature. The top reading of 19.6C (67.3F) at
- Worcester eclipsed the previous highest of 19.2C in Cambridge 18 years ago.
-
- London, where people flooded into the parks, had its warmest recorded
- February day - 19.4C beating the previous best of 18.5C. Children built
- sandcastles on beaches all around the coast as Mediterranean resorts were
- put in the shade. Rome managed 17C, Athens 19C and Gibraltar only 16C.
-
- Plants, birds and [other] animals have been fooled into thinking that
- spring is already with us. The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds
- said birds had been singing for two weeks and many, including robins,
- blackbirds and song thrushes, were already breeding. "They will be in
- trouble if the cold returns," said a spokesman. "Some young would die."
-
- Anne Jenkins, of the British Hedgehog Preservation Society, said: "There's
- no point in hibernating. They could start mating and the hoglets could be
- born in snow. They would just get abandoned."
-
- A Meteorological Office spokesman said: "The warm weather is going tolast
- into early next week. But even the cooler weather we expect later next week
- will be milder than normal."
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- Date: Fri, 13 Feb 1998 22:59:14
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [FR] French hunters protest at EU curbs
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980213225914.37273da4@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Saturday, February 14ty, 1998
-
- French hunters protest at EU curbs
- By Julian Nundy and Charles Clover
-
- FRENCH field sports bodies expect more than 100,000 supporters to march
- through Paris today in protest against European legislation that threatens
- to curtail the shooting season for wildfowl.
-
- The march organisers say they have hired 2,400 coaches and four trains to
- bring supporters to Paris.
-
- British field sports enthusiasts who are planning their own march in London
- on March 1 have been warned that the European legislation could also affect
- them.
-
- The commission is trying to stop French wildfowlers shooting ducks and
- geese on the foreshore in February, which British law permits until Feb 20.
-
- Seven EU states are affected by the commission's interpretation of a
- directive which says that birds should not be shot once the migration
- season has begun. Non-compliance proceedings served on France could lead to
- the European Court.
-
- Dr Yves Lecocq, secretary- general of the European Hunters' Union, said:
- "The implication is that the French government has no alternative but to
- change its law and shorten the season. There is talk about February being a
- time of spring migration, but this is the coldest time of year."
-
- One of the hunters' particular" opponents is the actress Brigitte Bardot
- who, at the opening of every season, heads for south-western France to
- stage her protests.
-
- The south-west is home to one of the most cruel forms of hunting in France.
- This is for the small ortolan bird which is considered a delicacy. The
- bird, too small to be shot since this would tear away most of its flesh, is
- caught in wire traps.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- Date: Fri, 13 Feb 1998 23:07:48
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [US/UK] Think about the clone's interests, urge scientists
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980213230748.37274976@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Saturday, February 14ty, 1998
-
- Think about the clone's interests, urge scientists
- By Aisling Irwin, Science Correspondent
-
- THE rights of the clone are in danger of being ignored in the debate about
- whether to clone humans, leading ethical thinkers and scientists said
- yesterday.
-
- Brought into the world as a carbon copy of someone else who could be
- several decades older, deeply confused about the identity of his or her
- parents, the clone's life would be a traumatic one, they said.
-
- Yet the ethical debate, particularly in America, has instead considered the
- issue in terms of adults' rights to have children in any way they choose,
- the American Association for the Advancement of Science annual meeting in
- Philadelphia was told.
-
- "Cloning should be about 'is it good for the clone?'," Arthur Caplan, of
- the University of Pennsylvania, told the meeting. "It might not be in your
- interests to be a clone because you are taking the greatest genetic test
- ever foisted on people," he said. "You will see biologically what happens
- to you in your parents.
-
- "As they go through life you will know that you will become bald at 40 and
- depressed at 50 and die of stomach cancer at 62. . . . If we already worry
- about whether it's right to release the results of Alzheimer's or breast
- cancer tests to people when they want to know - well, the clone
- involuntarily knows a lot more because he is going to have all this
- biological information thrust upon him. The focus has to be, is it in the
- interests of the person to be made in this way? That's very hard for
- Americans because our emphasis has always been on the individual rights to
- procreate.
-
- "People may have the right to do what they want in the bedroom but when
- they have to use unusual means to make children then society has an
- interest in whether it is in the child's interests to be made in this way."
-
- Likening the use of reproductive technologies in America to the Wild West,
- he said: "I would not be optimistic that this country is going to be able
- to do a good job with reference to cloning."
-
- Another problem for clones would be in working out who their parents were.
- Already this is proving to be an important question for children born as a
- result of in-vitro fertilisation and who have begun long searches for their
- biological parents.
-
- A baby cloned from another adult would share that person's parents,
- biologically speaking, but there would also be surrogate mothers and others
- to consider, said Lori Andrews, of the Chicago-Kent School of Law. "There
- are 13 different legal parental combinations where you could have between
- one and 10 parents," she told the meeting.
-
- Dr Ian Wilmut, of the Roslin Institute in Scotland, leader of the team that
- cloned Dolly the sheep, said the phrase "is it good for the clone?" was the
- best way he had heard for summarising the ethics. He said: "I have not
- heard of a reason for copying people that I find ethically acceptable. By
- contrast, there are some other techniques that I think deserve a lot of
- careful thought."
-
- One, he said, was a technology that emerged 10 years ago but was now being
- viewed seriously in the wake of the Dolly achievement. "It could benefit
- women who carry a serious genetic disease in their DNA; not in the nucleus,
- where most of a person's DNA is, but in the mitochondria, elsewhere in the
- cell."
-
- It would soon be possible to take a fertilised egg from the woman, remove
- the nucleus of the cell and transplant it into the egg of another woman who
- did not carry serious diseases in her mitochondria. The resulting baby
- would carry nuclear DNA from its mother and father but mitochondrial DNA
- from the other woman.
-
- Dolly the cloned sheep is been transformed again - into a woolly jumper.
- Her first fleece is to be made into a sweater which will go on show at the
- Science Museum in London from March 13. Scientists at the School of Textile
- Industries at Leeds University are preparing and dying the wool, which will
- be knitted by a firm in nearby Ilkley. It will be officially presented to
- the museum by the actress Jenny Agutter - a carrier of cystic fibrosis.
-
- The competition to design the jumper was launched in September by the
- museum and the Cystic Fibrosis Trust. The research surrounding Dolly may
- help towards an eventual cure for the disease, the museum said.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 13 Feb 1998 23:13:04
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [US] Chocolate theory melts away
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980213231304.0df74ffa@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Saturday, February 14ty, 1998
-
- Chocolate theory melts away
- By Aisling Irwin, Science Correspondent
-
- CLAIMS that chocolate soothes unrequited love and creates "chocaholics"
- have little basis in fact, a psychologist said yesterday.
-
- Dr Paul Rozin, of the University of Pennsylvania, said the science of
- chocolate was running out of control. "People like chocolate because it
- tastes good," he said. "It has nothing to do with the pharmacological
- effects."
-
- About 40 per cent of women say they crave chocolate - and about half of
- those say they crave it during their menstrual cycle. Dr Rozin tested the
- reason for their craving by isolating the active ingredient in chocolate -
- theobromine - and feeding it to volunteers in the form of pills.
- Theobromine is a relative of caffeine and is known to be a mental stimulant.
-
- "The pills didn't satisfy the craving," Dr Rozin reported. "There is some
- craving at certain stages in the menstrual cycle and there may be a
- hormonal element to that," he said. But the effect, if present, is weak.
-
- Dr Rozin told the association that he had concluded that chocolate craving
- was not the result of the depletion of some brain chemical but merely the
- desire to experience the food's aroma, taste and texture.
-
- Chocolate is unique because it is virtually the only food to melt at body
- temperature - which produces a sensation people like as it coats the inside
- of the mouth.
-
- "People treat chocolate like a tempting toxin. They should just think
- 'yum'," he said.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- Date: Fri, 13 Feb 1998 23:33:38
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [UK] Believe me, we do care
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980213233338.3727417e@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Saturday, February 14ty, 1998
-
- Believe me, we do care
-
- Michael Meacher, the Environment Minister hits back at critics who accuse
- the Government of
- ignoring rural concerns
-
- THERE are many rural myths. The most recent is that this Government doesn't
- understand or care about the countryside. But unlike many myths, this one
- has no basis in reality. Labour does care about the countryside, and the
- people who live in it, because we care about the whole of our country and
- all of our people. Rural communities have distinctive characteristics, but
- the problems they face are, in many respects, the same as those of urban
- areas. The countryside should not be parcelled up as if it is somehow
- separate from the rest of society.
-
- Labour's rural vision has five strands. First, we believe in a living
- countryside. By that we mean that we should not conserve it in a historical
- time warp as a museum or theme park.
-
- We need to keep rural communities functioning - by including rural areas in
- our plans for educational improvement, for integrated transport, for a
- national childcare strategy: rural schools, for example, will particularly
- benefit from our proposals to link every school to the Internet. Crucial to
- the survival of rural communities is affordable housing for those who grew
- up there and have no wish to leave. We are releasing local authority
- capital receipts - the money they have from selling council housing in the
- past - to help provide homes which the children of rural families can
- afford to live in.
-
- Secondly, we believe in a working countryside, where jobs are available and
- the residents are not forced to commute or move into town. Overall
- employment in rural areas has increased in recent years, but this picture
- masks pockets of real deprivation. Our new deal for the unemployed covers
- rural as well as urban areas. The new regional development
- agencies will, among other things, promote employment and economic
- opportunity, and have a specific remit to serve rural areas. And the
- national minimum wage will cover the countryside too, to ensure that those
- who live in rural areas get a fair share of our country's growing prosperity.
-
- Third, we recognise that town and country are one nation. Many of those who
- live in the country rely on towns for their work; many of those who live in
- towns rely on the countryside for relaxation and leisure. Nowhere is this
- interdependence clearer than in the debate about where to build the
- millions of new homes we need. We are determined to build as many as
- possible of these in existing urban areas, to prevent wherever possible
- urban sprawl and the loss of green field sites. But we cannot do this
- successfully unless more people choose to live in towns, and for this we
- need to improve the urban environment. Our plans for an integrated
- transport system will help both rural and urban areas.
-
- Fourth, we believe in maintaining and celebrating the beauty and richness
- of the countryside. When Tony Blair and John Prescott rewrote clause four
- of our Party constitution, they included for the first time a commitment to
- preserve and enhance our environment. We have made plain our determination
- to protect the rich variety of plants and animals - what is
- called biodiversity - of the British countryside.
-
- Our manifesto promised that we would increase protection for wildlife, and
- we will. At the same time, I have asked the Countryside Commission, the
- Government's official advisers on landscape protection, to bring forward
- proposals to increase the safeguards for areas of outstanding natural beauty.
-
- It was a Labour Government, 50 years ago, that introduced the first
- national parks into England and Wales, to preserve our most beautiful
- areas. We will take forward that legacy, ensuring that wider areas of
- natural beauty are protected.
-
- Finally, we believe in a countryside open to all. That is why we are
- determined to increase access, so that the beauty and tranquillity of rural
- Britain can be enjoyed by the many, not the few. Let me dispel some of the
- myths that you will be hearing in coming weeks about our access proposals.
- They will not mean people trampling through the gardens of rural dwellers:
- we are talking about limited and carefully defined areas. They will not
- mean a licence for people to behave exactly as they like on other people's
- property: increased access will be coupled with a duty of care on the
- walker. Access will be for people, not for their motor vehicles, and not
- necessarily for their dogs.
-
- Our proposals, which we will publish very soon, are balanced and
- reasonable. That is why we are determined to secure our objective -
- increased access for the millions who enjoy walking and relaxing in
- Britain's beautiful landscapes.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1998.
-
- Date: Fri, 13 Feb 1998 23:55:58 PST
- From: "Cari Gehl" <skyblew@hotmail.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Re: Conrail Spills Oil, Shoots Beavers
- Message-ID: <19980214075559.29830.qmail@hotmail.com>
- Content-Type: text/plain
-
- Someone posted this action alert either in late January or February to
- the AR-News mailing list and I in turn, posted it to
- rec.animals.wildlife on the net. Now I have someone who is asking for
- further verification of the the facts in this alert. Unfortunately, I
- deleted the original post from my Forwarded folder last week as I was
- running out of space. Now I don't even know who originally sent the
- post!
-
- If anyone has a copy or if you are, or know who posted it to the list,
- please e-mail me here at:
-
- skyblew@hotmail.com
-
- Thanks much!
-
- Cari Gehl
-
- ______________________________________________________
- Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
- Date: Fri, 13 Feb 1998 23:59:48 PST
- From: "Cari Gehl" <skyblew@hotmail.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (NY) Burned Kitten Dies
- Message-ID: <19980214075949.4677.qmail@hotmail.com>
- Content-Type: text/plain
-
- While looking for news articles on the Conrail oil spill, I ran into
- this article on the Syracuse Post-Standard web site. Does anyone have
- any more info on this (addresses to write to, updates, etc.)?
-
- Thanks and take care,
- Cari Gehl
-
- -----------------------------------------
- Burned Kitten Dies
-
- Cruel act that killed Cindy prompted a reward offer and a site on the
- Worldwide Web.
-
- Published Feb. 11, 1998, in The Post-Standard.
-
- By PETER ORTIZ
-
- A kitten that galvanized supporters from around the world after it was
- set on fire last week in Syracuse died Tuesday morning.
-
- Cindy was about 6 months old when she was found engulfed in a ball of
- flames by a Syracuse man riding his bicycle in the 600 block of South
- Salina Street Feb. 4. Dr. Robert Putnam of the Fayetteville Veterinary
- Hospital said Cindy died of general organ failure due to toxins from the
- burns she suffered.
-
- "She certainly has touched a lot of people, and I just wished she could
- have pulled through," Putnam said.
-
- Cindy's story touched people in Canada and as far away as South Africa
- after a Syracuse couple created a Web page detailing her plight. Pilot
- Towers and Joan Conley said they decide to create the Web page to inform
- people and take pressure off the veterinarian staff who were bombarded
- with phone calls.
-
- A pet owner from South Africa said she would donate blankets and food to
- her local SPCA in honor of Cindy. Other Web browsers expressed sympathy
- and outrage. About 400 people had visited the Web page by Tuesday.
-
- "We have had private e-mail from people who want to adopt and from
- people who want to work on legislative measures" against animal cruelty,
- Conley said.
-
- Syracuse police say they have a possible suspect in the burning, but no
- arrest has been made yet.
-
- Betsie Puffer, animal cruelty investigator, said she hopes Cindy's death
- encourages people to report cases of animal cruelty.
-
- "Thankfully she is not suffering anymore," Puffer said.
-
- Cindy's killer can face a misdemeanor count of unjustifiable killing of
- an animal, Puffer said. The maximum penalty under the charge is one year
- in jail or a $1,000 fine, she said.
-
- The Central New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
- has offered a $1,000 award to anyone with information that leads to an
- arrest in the kitten burning.
-
- Cindy suffered severe burns throughout her body and lost most of her
- hair.
-
- Donations that have been sent for Cindy's care will probably go toward
- her burial at Pet Haven Cemetery, Putnam said.
-
- Contributions in care of cruelty investigations for the SPCA's
- Prosecuting Animal Cruelty Together (PACT) program can be sent to the
- Central New York SPCA, 5878 E. Molloy Road, Syracuse 13211. The phone
- number is 454-3469 or 454-4479.
-
-
-
- Copyright (c) 1998 The Herald Company. All rights reserved. The material
- on this site may not be reproduced, except for personal, non-commercial
- use, and may not be distributed,
- transmitted or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission
- of Syracuse OnLine.
-
-
-
-
- Talkback! Tell us what
- you think.
-
- Syracuse OnLine contains only a portion of the text, photos and
- advertising published daily in The Syracuse Newspapers.
- Subscribe to The Syracuse
- Newspapers.
-
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- coverage
-
- [ News ] [ Sports ] [ Leisure ]
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- ] [ Photos ] [ Postcards ]
-
- Copyright (c) 1998, The
- Herald Company
- www.syracuse.com
-
-
-
-
- ______________________________________________________
- Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 18:11:05 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (USA) re NADAS
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19980214180321.2ea71e48@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- AnimalTalk ALERT (Special Edition)
- (Permission Granted To Quote/Forward/Reprint Any Or All Of This
- ALERT/Newsletter)
-
- Following received from---
-
- eric@lcanimal.org (Eric Mindel @ LCA)
- Last Chance For Animals
-
- For the animals.
-
- Dick Weavil
- nyppsi@aol.com
-
- QUOTE
-
- <<JACKSON COUNTY AMENDS ORDINANCE TO GIVE SANCTUARY TO
- LIVESTOCK-CHASING DOGS
-
- DEATH-ROW DOG'S OWNER CONSIDERING COUNTY'S CONDITIONS TO SPARE
- DOG'S LIFE
-
- LONG INVOLVED IN THE CASE, LAST CHANCE FOR ANIMALS REMAINS IN
- OREGON AND IN COMMUNICATION WITH DOG OWNER AND ATTORNEY
-
- MEDFORD, OR-- Less than a week after Last Chance For Animals (LCA)
- assisted in the production of the February 5 'Hard Copy' story that first
- nationally aired the plight of Nadas, a dog sentenced to death in
- September 1996 for chasing a horse, Jackson County Commissioners were
- overwhelmed with calls and faxes from across the country of outraged animal
- lovers. Tonight, County officials amended a local ordinance, which no longer
- absolutely mandates the dog's death and County counsel has given dog owner
- Sean Roach an opportunity to spare the dog's life by sending it to a Utah
- sanctuary.
-
- At time of this release, 21 year old Sean Roach is in a Medford hotel
- room with LCA President Chris DeRose, talking about his options with his
- attorney via phone and discussing what is best for his dog. Sean states,
- "They [the County] have put a lot of extremely harsh conditions on what I
- need to do so they don't kill Nadas, and it seems like they want to make
- sure they have the last word. I just need to make sure that none of it is
- going to hurt my dog." Two conditions of the County's offer reportedly of
- concern to Sean are his pledge to never again see his dog and that the Utah
- sanctuary can never place Nadas into a private home. Additionally, to save
- his dog's life, Sean must waive all rights to sue the County for
- constitutional violations and defamation of character.
-
- LCA has been in regular communication with Sean's attorney Robert
- Babcock, has discussed the case with Jackson County officials, and has
- discussed the case and applicable state statute with the Governor's office.
- LCA offered a proposal to Jackson County on February 8 to resolve the
- situation, including a suggestion to amend the ordinance and relocate Nadas
- out of state. On February 12, despite the similarities of the County's
- solution, Jackson County rejected LCA's proposal. Working with LCA's Chris
- DeRose, Hard Copy has been closely following developments in the case and
- aired a second piece on February 12.
-
- Chris DeRose (Last Chance For Animals) and Sean Roach (Nadas' owner) are to
- appear on NBC's Today Show on February 13 (this morning).
-
- Please contact Last Chance For Animals at 310-271-6096 for most recent
- developments surrounding Nadas and Sean Roach. Go to
- www.arkonline.com/nadas.htm for background "../REDIRE~1.HTM" tppabs="http://www.envirolink.org/arrs/digest/information.">>
-
- UNQUOTE
- =====================================================================
- ========
- /`\ /`\ 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.geocities.com/RainForest/4620/essene.htm
- for more information.
-
- It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
- - Voltaire
-
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 09:46:26 EST
- From: Tereiman@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, areiman@erols.com
- Subject: Urge Tide NASCAR Driver to Help Stop Animal Tests
- Message-ID: <4f50bcce.34e5ae45@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Urge Tide NASCAR Driver to Help Stop Animal Tests
-
- Please ask NASCAR driver Ricky Rudd to urge Procter & Gamble (P&G) to
- stop all animal tests not required by law. Sponsorship is everything in
- the racing world, and, while Ricky reaps the benefits of having Tide as
- a sponsor, animals are suffering and dying in P&G laboratories.
-
- Write a nice letter to:
-
- Ricky Rudd
- c/o Kirby Boone
- 124 Summerville Dr.Mooresville, NC 28115tel.: 704-663-7778
- fax: 704-663-7149
- e-mail: mediapromotions@rickyrudd.com
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 09:47:17 EST
- From: Tereiman@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, areiman@erols.com
- Subject: Help Stop Animal Abuse in Taiwan
- Message-ID: <6496b9cc.34e5ae78@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Help Stop Animal Abuse in Taiwan
- Abandoned Dogs Are Being Buried or Cremated Alive or Drowned
-
- The appalling conditions of Taiwan's more than 2 million abandoned dogs,
- which the World Society for the Protection of Animals stated "could be
- the worst in the world," has caused great concern worldwide.
-
- The country's standard methods of destroying dogs are by starvation,
- electrocution, drowning in cages, poisoning, live burial, or cremation.
-
- Please contact the government of Taiwan and ask it to stop the barbaric
- torture and killing of abandoned dogs by instituting guidelines for
- humane euthanasia. Write:
-
- Premier Vincent Siew, Executive Yuan
- No. 1, Sec. 1, Chung Hsiao E. Rd.
- Taipei, Taiwan
- fax: 011-886-2-2396-9546
- e-mail: ey-mail@ey.gov.tw
-
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 09:51:04 EST
- From: Tereiman@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org, areiman@erols.com
- Subject: Kim Basiner Calls for Suspension of RBBB License
- Message-ID: <344a6ccd.34e5af5a@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- KIM BASINGER CALLS ON FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
- TO SUSPEND RINGLING BROTHERS' LICENSE
-
- Death of Baby Elephant Prompts Star's Action
-
- For Immediate Release:
- February 12, 1998 á
- á
- Contact: Mary Beth Sweetland 757-622-7382á
- á
- Norfolk, Va. -- Academy Award nominee and long-time PETA supporter Kim
- Basinger has asked Secretary of Agriculture Daniel Glickman to suspend
- Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus' license to perform until the
- January 24 death of a baby elephant is fully investigated.
-
- Ringling employee whistleblowers told PETA that a 3-year-old baby
- elephant named Kenny was forced to perform in three shows in
- Jacksonville, Fla., although the circus knew he was ill. According to
- the employees, the baby was "dizzy" and "wobbly on his legs" during the
- performances and was "wailing" throughout the day. Circus officials
- admitted that Kenny was sick enough to have been given antibiotics that
- morning and that he died in his stall soon after the third performance.
- Ringling hauled Kenny's body away during the night and did not announce
- his death.
-
- In her letter to Secretary Glickman, written on behalf of PETA, Ms.
- Basinger states, "This elephant most likely suffered more anguish and
- misery than we will ever know. As a mother myself, I cannot fathom the
- thought of this poor, sick baby cruelly and prematurely removed from his
- mother's side, being shunted from town to town in railway cars and
- shackled when not performing."
-
- Ms. Basinger has been a stalwart friend to elephants and in 1992
- testified before Congress on the abuse of animals in circuses. In 1997
- she met with Secretary Glickman to discuss the cruel training methods
- and treatment of elephants used in circuses.
-
- -30-
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 11:01:14 -0500
- From: Constance Young <conncat@idsi.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: AR-class (at the New School for Social Research)
- Message-ID: <34E5BFCA.1D45@idsi.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- I was scheduled to teach a distance learning course, "Society and Animal
- Rights" through the New School For Social Research in New York this
- Spring but it was cancelled because of insufficient enrollment. I think
- the problem was that the class was being offered in the Department of
- Science and Mathematics.
-
- The course, which is conducted over the Internet, will be offered again
- in the Fall -- this time in the Department of Society and Culture. Iwill
- present an overview of the major animal rights issues and open it to
- discussion and individual research. The syllabus is flexible and will
- reflect the students' interests. You may contact me for more information
- (conncat@idsi.net). Constance Young
-
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 12:12:02 -0400
- From: Ty Savoy <ty@North.nsis.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (Ca) Author Offers Veggie Heart-Health Cookbook
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.32.19980214161202.0080a6a8@north.nsis.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- AUTHOR OFFERS HEALTHY MEALS FOR THE HEART
-
- By Judy Creighton, The Canadian Press -- Valentine hearts, flowers and
- dreams of romance aren't the only thoughts on the Rose Reisman's mind.
-
- Heart Disease is "rampant" among members of her family so Reisman is
- constantly aware that a diet low in fat, cholesterol and sugar is absolutely
- essential to avoid becoming a victim herself.
-
- Her new cookbok, Rose Reisman's Light Vegetarian Cooking, is in
- bookstores "I lost my father due to a sudden heart attack when I was 16 and
- his sister and brother also had coronary heart disease," says Reisman, who
- is 44 and found her cholesterol skyrocketing nine years ago.
-
- "I am quite small and I run and I did enjoy eating meat," she said.
- But she decided to change what she ate and except for the occasional meal
- opted to become a vegetarian.
-
- "I did not want to give up dairy or eggs because I really enjoy
- these foods," she says, "and that would make me a total vegan which was not
- my goal."
-
- The mother of four children, Reisman was a little stumped last
- summer when her eldest daughter, Natalie, 14, came home from camp announcing
- she had decided not to eat "anything with a face."
-
- "I asked her why she wanted to stop eating meat considering she
- liked the chicken fingers at MacDonald's and Natalie said that it was no
- longer cool. I thought, I can't fight this but maybe I can get her to eat
- properly."
-
- Reisman was working on her eighth cookbook at the time ans it
- happened to be vegetarian. Her daughter's decision gave her the inpetus to
- include the necessary nutrients to a growing teenager.
-
- "I try to watch Natalie's dairy intake because her body is stil
- building bone, so I choose low-fat yogurts, milk and cheeses."
-
- Although the book is vegetarian, it includes traditional fare such
- as pizza, minestrone, risotta, quiche, and desserts that appear rich in
- calories. However, a mocha fudge roll with chocolate fudge filling has only
- 5 grams of fat and 300 calories.
-
- Some of the proceeds from every cookbook that Reisman has written
- are donated to the National Breast Cancer Fund (NBCF). This provides direct
- financial support for breast cancer prevention, treatment and research
- accross Canada. To date, her books have raised $600,000 for NBCF.
-
- Reisman demonstrates her cooking skills on television each Wednesday
- at 1 p.m. on Free for the Asking on the Life Network. As host of the show
- which reruns every Sunday at 11 a.m., she deals with topics such as
- nutrition, food, fitness and wellness.
-
-
-
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 08:20:24 -0800
- From: "Eric Mindel @ LCA" <eric@LCAnimal.org>
- To: <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Cc: <chickadee-l@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Nadas about to become an interstate traveler
- Message-ID: <199802141617.LAA13091@envirolink.org>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Hi all,
-
- Yesterday, Sean Roach's attorney, Robert Babcock, submitted the signed
- documents required to give up Nadas to Best Friends Animal Sanctuary in
- Utah. Roach and Jackson County now have a legal contract that Nadas will
- not be killed, and Babcock anticipates the dog will be moved to Best
- Friends some time within a week.
-
- According to Babcock, Roach had to agree to the following conditions: 1)
- Nadas can never be adopted into another home from Best Friends, 2) Roach
- cannot sue the County for any actions or behavior involving this case. The
- earlier reported condition of Roach not being allowed to visit the dog was
- not specified in the final offer drafted by Jackson County.
-
- However, Best Friend discourages visits from Sean out of concern for the
- dog's well-being... that Nadas will become confused and distressed every
- time Sean were to visit and leaves. I tend to agree with this but also
- recognize it would likely be very healthy for Sean to have one last visit
- with Nadas after his roller coaster of emotions for the past year and a
- half.
-
- NOTE: Nadas is just one dog that was sentenced to die under the
- livestock-chasing state statute. Every year, hundreds of dogs are killed
- in Oregon under this law. Nadas is the "poster dog" to the whole issue
- that we need to continue to address until the law is amended to better
- protect dogs AND livestock.
-
- eric
-
-
-
- Eric Mindel
- Last Chance For Animals
- 8033 Sunset Blvd, Suite 35
- Los Angeles, CA 90046
- ph 310-271-6096
- fx 310-271-1890
- www.LCAnimal.org
-
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 09:36:36 -0800
- From: "Anne S. Shih" <anneshih@gte.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [Fwd: Taiwan]
- Message-ID: <34E5D623.44BA8CE6@gte.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: multipart/mixed; boundary="------------F65D5A3257F12DC79E11C3F4"
-
- This is a letter I got from Joy Leney of WSPA. They are the
- organization that is working with the Taiwanese government on the stray
- dog issue.
-
- Anne
- --
- My favorite site:
- http://www.earth.org.hk
-
- Received: from relay1.mailsrvcs.net ([192.168.129.40]) by mta2.gte.net
- (Intermail v3.1 117 234) with ESMTP
- id <19980209151405.ZKIY7618@relay1.mailsrvcs.net>
- for <anneshih@gte.net>; Mon, 9 Feb 1998 09:14:05 -0600
- Received: from post.mail.demon.net (post-10.mail.demon.net [194.217.242.154])
- by relay1.mailsrvcs.net with SMTP id JAA05400
- for <anneshih@gte.net>; Mon, 9 Feb 1998 09:14:03 -0600 (CST)
- Received: from wspa.demon.co.uk ([193.237.58.213]) by post.mail.demon.net
- id aa1008059; 9 Feb 98 14:56 GMT
- Received: by mailhost.wspa.org.uk with Internet Mail Service (5.0.1457.3)
- id <1JHQC7N7>; Mon, 9 Feb 1998 14:43:19 -0000
- Message-ID: <71C441826F45D11187540000E2030FD402B70B@mailhost.wspa.org.uk>
- From: Joy Leney <joyleney@wspa.org.uk>
- To: "Anne Shih (E-mail)" <anneshih@gte.net>,
- "Jyrki Raikka (E-mail)" <jyrki.raikka@icon.fi>,
- "Mine Sharp (E-mail)" <sharptpe@pristine.com.tw>,
- "Vicky Lynn (E-mail)" <AHAN@worldnet.att.net>
- Subject: Taiwan
- Date: Mon, 9 Feb 1998 14:43:18 -0000
- X-Priority: 3
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- X-Mailer: Internet Mail Service (5.0.1457.3)
- Content-Type: multipart/mixed;
- boundary="---- =_NextPart_000_01BD3569.105FBD70"
-
-
- Dear All
-
- Please see the latest information re: Taiwan.
-
- I must emphasise that there is still much to be done regarding the
- welfare of dogs in Taiwan, but the government are taking steps to create
- change. It is important to keep sight of the overall picture and not
- continue to focus on one or two bad pounds, however we will continue to
- monitor the situation through LCA.
-
- Please contact me if you need further information. I am sorry that I am
- not always able to respond quickly to you, but I am away from the office
- more than 60% of the time, so as you can imagine the work builds up
- considerably whilst I am away, also I work on many issues in other
- countries besides Taiwan.
-
- Thank you all for your on-going support and concern for the stray dog
- situation and very best wishes for your own projects re: Taiwan.
-
- Joy Leney.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Attachment Converted: "C:\EUDORA2\Attach\TaiJan981.doc"
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 12:59:55 EST
- From: JanaWilson@aol.com
- To: AR-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Oklahoma Waterfowl Season Report
- Message-ID: <90a9f22f.34e5db9e@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
-
- A/w local Okla. City hunting news:
-
- Oklahoma's 1997 thru 98 waterfowl season will go down as being
- good, but probably not as good as it could have been if El Nino
- hadn't interfered with traditional weather patterns.
- Call it El Nino, call it the mildest winter in decades, call it
- what you will, this winter wasn't really winter at all for the northern
- Great Plains. And winter, or lack of it, usually dictates how many
- ducks and geese migrate thru Okla.
- With waterfowl populations high, the state saw lots of birds, but not
- the record nos. reported for a/w the Okla. Wildlife Dept.
- Mike O'Mellia, migratory bird biologist for the dept., said "Last
- summer, meteorologists were predicting a mild, dry winter for the
- Northern Plains, and that's exactly the type of weather our neighbors
- to the north experienced. Ducks and geese are pushed south when
- the air temperatures freeze lakes and rivers and snow covers up
- food sources. During especially mild winters, like this one, many of
- those birds delay migration or don't migrate farther south than
- Nebraska or Kansas.
- "One reservoir in South Dakato reported a count of 300,000 mallards
- in Decembers. That's almost unheard of. We also got lots of rain
- late in our season. That unusual winter precipitation flooded marshes,
- pastures and creek bottoms, providing a lot of quality habitat which
- resulted in birds being widely scattered. Small groups of birds
- were almost everywhere, but that was part of the problem for hunters
- seeking concentrations of waterfowl." He also added that hunters
- who were mobile and hunted a variety of locations reported the best
- success.
- The key is to find local concentrations of birds rather than hunt in
- the same spot thruout the season, O'Meilia said. Hunters will
- probably see media reports in the coming months that question
- the validity of duck population counts. But O'Meilia is quick to
- take exception to those criticisms.
- "I'm sure some people will question the Fish and Wildlife Service's
- population nos. based on how well they did this season, but individual
- hunting success isn't always an accurate reflection of population,"
- he said.
-
- For the Animals,
-
- Jana, OKC
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 13:00:02 EST
- From: JanaWilson@aol.com
- To: AR-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Oklahoma Snow Goose Hunting Report
- Message-ID: <3c532b1a.34e5dba4@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
-
- A/w Okla. City hunting news:
-
- The snow goose population has grown so much in the past 10
- years that the birds are destroying Artic nesting habitat, leading
- biologists to worry that they entire ecosystem could suffer
- long-term consequences.
- A/w Mr. Mike O'Meilia, migratory bird biologist for the Okla. Wildife
- Dept, "Snow goose nos have increased to the point that they're
- permanently degrading the fragile Artic environment by overgrazing
- Artic breeding colony sites. If drastic measures are not taken,
- continued irreversible damage will occur to habitat that not only
- supports snow gesse, but also is critical for a variety of other
- migratory bird species."
- Hunters can "assist" (?) with population control by hunting the birds
- during the second split of Oklahoma's snow goose season. This
- season runs thru Feb. 27th with a daily bag limit of 10. A/w
- O'Meilia, the state offers the most liberal hunting season, 107 days,
- and limits currently allowed by federal law. However, he fears it
- won't be enuf.
- "I believe hunters must continue to be an integral part of the solution,
- but I don't think they can have a big enuf impact given the current
- regulations and framework. A number of extreme methods (?)
- are being discussed as possible solutions, but these are extreme
- times for snow geese. We must act before it is too late."
- Some of the solutions waterfowl managers are considering include
- extending the time period that hunting is allowed and the actual
- season length to maximize hunting opportunity. Also, for a part
- of the snow geese seaon, officials are considering legalizing
- the use of live decoys, baiting and electronic calls. Changes in
- refuge management practices, including allowing additional snow
- goose hunting on refuges, will help thin nos.
- Snow geese in Oklahoma are most commonly found in the eastern
- portion of the state, with large nos. of birds frequently seen
- feeding in crop fields next to refuge areas.
-
- For the Animals,
-
- Jana, OKC
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 14:11:28 EST
- From: NOVENAANN@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Animal rights activists protest milk contest
- Message-ID: <837b1b26.34e5ec69@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- By Marsha Jaquays, February 9, 1998
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Animal rights activists protest contest;
- prompt discussion among shoppers
-
- Joe Taksel tried to blend into the crowd as he stood in line at
- Bloomingdale's Fashionable Milk Drinker Search Sunday at Town Center
- mall.
-
- He quietly checked to make sure film was loaded in the camera that was
- strapped across his chest and then he turned on his video camera to
- record.
-
- He had wanted to appear as if he was an ordinary tourist who wanted to
- take pictures as he tried to become named Boca Raton's most Fashionable
- Milk Drinker.
-
- But Taksel was anything but ordinary.
-
- He graciously accepted his cup of milk and took his seat before the
- professional photographer.
-
- But as soon as he gulped back the milk, he spit it and sprayed across
- the floor in Bloomingdale's.
-
- "Pooh - this taste likes something that came out of a cows stomach,"
- Taksel said.
-
- As he was subdued by security personnel, he wasn't shy about letting
- them know he represented the Animal Rights Foundation of Florida.
-
- "Milk is for babies, and cow's milk is for baby cows," Taksel said.
- "Humans, like cows, can get all the calcium they need from plant foods."
-
-
- Taksel and other animal rights activists protested the milk mustache
- promotion. They passed out pamphlets in the store and in the parking lot
- of Bloomingdale's which claimed that cows are bred to be forcible
- artificially inseminated to induce lactation.
-
- Beth Kleinman didn't have a chance to see the pamphlets, but as a
- vegetarian she was outraged by the animal rights activists tactics.
-
- "I won't eat anything that has been killed, but I do think that cows
- milk is a healthy and nourishing and a gift from God," said Kleinman,
- who was visiting her parents in Boca Raton. "The people here, who are
- participating in the contest, are here for fun. Those animal rights
- activists need to keep politics out of Bloomingdale's."
-
- For Fran Izzo, it wasn't about politics, it was personal.
-
- Her mother recently suffered a stroke and Izzo attributes her illness to
- the affects of dairy products. She believes that soy milk, soy cheese,
- rice milk and nuts are good alternative sources of calcium.
-
- The Bloomingdale's at Town Center was the last on an 18-store national
- tour; it was also the only location where protesters raised questions
- about animal cruelty, officials said.
-
- "We have never had a response like this," said Marianne Langan, a home
- economist retained by Bloomingdale's. "Taking milk from a human mother
- is not cruel and it is not cruel to take milk from a cow, either."
- Date: Sun, 15 Feb 1998 07:28:43 +1100
- From: Lynette Shanley <ippl@lisp.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Animal Cruelty Attack
- Message-ID: <3.0.1.32.19980215072843.00731400@lisp.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Sun Herald 15/2/98
- Activists are trying to close down one of Australia's most famous medical
- research centres by pressing its sponsors with allegations of its cruelty
- to animals.
-
- They have demanded the Commonwealth Bank, accountants Ferrier Hodgson,
- Macquarie Bank and others withdraw financial support from Microsearch
- Foundation, pioneer of microsurgery techniques.
-
- The Foundation enjoys the support of NSW Governor Gordon Samuals, Lady
- Sonia McMahon, former CSR chairman Allan Coates, Macquarie Bank's David
- Clarke, Ferrier Hodgson senior partner Ian Ferrier and Commonwealth Bank
- chairman Tim Besley.
-
- The foundation used animal experiments to pioneer the replacement of limbs
- and digits by micrsurgery, foetal surgery, fertility problems, nerve
- grafts, reversal of vasectomies, and tubal ligations, regeneraion and
- microlaser surgery.
-
- Yhe acticists action was prompted by the removal of the Internation Primate
- Protection league president Lynette Shanley from the foundation's animal
- care and ethics committee.
-
- Such committees were set up by the state government to access animal
- experiments.
-
- "I rang the minister for Agriculture Richard Amery's office and they told
- me that Microsearch said I had leaked information to the press". Miss
- Shanley said. "I have only commented about allegations made public by the
- government".
-
- Its founder and medical director, Professor Earl Owen, said Miss Shanley
- had not been sacked.
-
- The committee had been unworkable because Miss Shanley would allow no work
- with animals, he said.
-
- The Commonwealth Bank spokewoman Lyndall Fraser said the bak was deleighted
- to support the foundation.
-
- The foundation uses rats and rabbits in experiments.
-
- End of article.
-
- The system in Australia allows an experiment to go through even if I
- disagreed. The rest only had to vote yes. I raised questions about
- experiments which was my job. Does this mean all other animal activists in
- Australia just say yest to experiments.
-
- I am not ashamed of being sacked.
-
-
- Lynette Shanley
- International Primate Protection League - Australia
- PO Box 60
- PORTLAND NSW 2847
- AUSTRALIA
- Phone/Fax 02 63554026/61 2 63 554026
- EMAIL ippl@lisp.com.au
- Date: Sun, 15 Feb 1998 07:54:54 +1100
- From: Lynette Shanley <ippl@lisp.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Message-ID: <3.0.1.32.19980215075454.006c13a8@lisp.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Sorry about the typing errors in my previous post. I was led to beleive the
- article would be sympathic to the AR movement. I was a bit upset at the time.
-
-
- Lynette Shanley
- International Primate Protection League - Australia
- PO Box 60
- PORTLAND NSW 2847
- AUSTRALIA
- Phone/Fax 02 63554026/61 2 63 554026
- EMAIL ippl@lisp.com.au
- Date: Sun, 15 Feb 1998 07:03:29 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: New Report indicates RHD may affect people
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19980215065546.2f0f0f3c@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- News Report
- Source :Rabbit Information Service (Western Australia)
- Date: 14th February 1997
-
- A new CDC report indicates that the incidence of illness in some humans (who
- were part of a small RCD/RHD health study in Australia ) increased greatly
- after RCD escaped onto the Australian mainland. RCD or rabbit calicivirus
- disease
- (renamed thus by Australian authorities to be less emotive than the true
- name for the disease - rabbit hemorrhagic disease -ref BRS RHD report 1994)
- escaped onto mainland Australia in September 1995.
-
- The CDC report is now available on the USA CDC website of Emerging
- Infectious Diseases Volume 4 Number 1 January - March 1998 titled
- Calicivirus Emergence from Ocean Reservoirs: Zoonotic and Interspecies
- Movements.
-
- The URL for this report is
-
- http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/EID/vol4no1/smith.htm
-
- and the CDC report is also mirrored at
-
- http://www.wantree.com.au/~rabbit/alprof.htm
-
- The Australian human health study included blood testing and a health
- questionnaire of persons with low and high or no exposure to RCD.
- Increases in ill health ranged over several symptoms which
- included "any illness, flu/fever, diarrhea/gastroenteritis,
- neurologic symptoms , rashes/skin and bleeding/hepatitis".
- In many cases, incidence of illnesses in those with "High exposure"
- to RCD/RHD was nearly double that of those with "Low exposure" in the
- two six month periods compared in this test.
-
- The first 6 month period (mentioned in Table 2 of the CDC report) contained
- the month RCD/RHD escaped from Wardang Island in South Australia (September
- 1995) and the second six month period lay in the time period when heavy
- RCD/RHD infestation of the Australian continent was evident after RCD/RHD
- spread across vast areas by epidemic and human interference.
-
- Australia is allowing the deliberate spread of RCD/RHD as a biological control
- agent of wild European rabbits. Dr Brian Walker, a senior CSIRO spokesperson,
- stated on "60 Minutes" in 1996 that no guarantees could be given that RCD/RHD
- would never infect any other species. The Australian Government has written that
- the "benefits [of spreading RCD/RHD] outweigh the risks [of potential
- infection / danger to other species]". Recent reports by South Australian
- environmentalist Mr John Wamsley and recent reports from Tasmania, indicate that
- native animals have already died from infection by RCD/RHD based on visual
- observation (whole colonies of native animals died as RHD swept through
- areas of Australia).
-
- The CDC report (Calicivirus Emergence from Ocean Reservoirs: Zoonotic and
- Interspecies Movements) has the following preamble :
-
- "Caliciviral infections in humans, among the most common causes of
- viral-induced vomiting and diarrhea, are caused by the Norwalk group of
- small round structured viruses, the Sapporo caliciviruses, and the hepatitis
- E agent. Human caliciviruses have been resistant to in vitro cultivation,
- and direct study of their origins and reservoirs outside infected humans or
- water and foods (such as shellfish contaminated with human sewage) has been
- difficult. Modes of transmission, other than direct fecal-oral routes, are
- not well understood.
- In contrast, animal viruses found in ocean reservoirs, which make up a
- second calicivirus group, can be cultivated in vitro. These viruses can
- emerge and infect terrestrial hosts, including humans. This article reviews
- the history of animal caliciviruses, their eventual recognition as zoonotic
- agents, and their potential usefulness as a predictive model for
- noncultivatable human and other animal caliciviruses (e.g., those seen in
- association with rabbit hemorrhagic disease). "
-
- The report is vital reading to those interested in the future health of all
- species in Australia.
-
- End
-
- =====================================================================
- ========
- /`\ /`\ Rabbit Information Service,
- Tom, Tom, (/\ \-/ /\) P.O.Box 30,
- The piper's son, )6 6( Riverton,
- Saved a pig >{= Y =}< Western Australia 6148
- And away he run; /'-^-'\
- So none could eat (_) (_) email: rabbit@wantree.com.au
- The pig so sweet | . |
- Together they ran | |} http://www.wantree.com.au/~rabbit/rabbit.htm
- Down the street. \_/^\_/ (Rabbit Information Service website updated
- frequently)
-
- Jesus was most likely a vegetarian... why aren't you? Go to
- http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/4620/essene.htm
- for more information.
-
- It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
- - Voltaire
-
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 18:25:36 EST
- From: CircusInfo@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Circus hits back at Basinger's call for closure
- Message-ID: <344bd977.34e627f3@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
-
- VIENNA, Va., Feb 14 (Reuters) - Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus
- fought on Saturday an effort by actress Kim Basinger to close the show down
- after the death of a baby elephant last month.
-
- The nation's biggest circus denied the baby Asian elephant named Kenny had
- been mistreated. The animal died Jan. 25 in Jacksonville, Florida, after
- performing two shows the day before.
-
- The lobby group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) said on
- Friday that Basinger had written to Agriculture Secretary Daniel Glickman
- urging him to suspend the circus' license to exhibit animals.
-
- ``Based on Ringling Bros. employees' sworn affidavits before (United States
- Department of Agriculture) inspectors, there was no indication that Kenny was
- 'dizzy' or 'wobbly on his legs' or that he was 'wailing,''' the circus
- responded in a statement on Saturday.
-
- ``In response to Basinger's statement concerning Kenny's treatment, Kenny's
- condition was carefully monitored at all times by Ringling's veterinarian and
- staff. Kenny was never treated cruelly or prematurely removed from his
- mother.''
-
- Circus veterinarian Gary West said Kenny died from a gastrointestinal
- infection but the exact cause of the illness was not known.
-
- Ringling Bros. said it had co-operated fully with the agriculture department
- in its investigation. The circus said it was proud of its record of animal
- care and ``for the past 30 years has never been cited for a violation of the
- Animal Welfare Act.''
-
- Basinger, nominated this week for an Academy Award for best supporting actress
- for her role in the film ``L.A. Confidential,'' is a long-time critic of the
- treatment of circus animals and has been working with PETA on the issue.
-
- ``This elephant most likely suffered more anguish and misery than we will ever
- know,'' Basinger wrote in her letter.
-
- REUTERS
- 17:17 02-14-98
-
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 19:35:36 -0500
- From: "Bina Robinson" <civitas@linkny.com>
- To: <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: address correction for MRMC
- Message-ID: <199802150025.TAA12508@net3.netacc.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Sorry. My address book was out of date.
-
- The correct address for the Medical Research Modernization Committee is
-
- PO Box 2751 Grand Central Station New York NY 10163-2751
-
- New phone number too. 212-579-3477
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 19:27:18 EST
- From: Parkton@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Animal organ transplants
- Message-ID: <f4762af3.34e63669@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Patient: Animal Organs Not Accepted
-
- By PAUL RECER
- .c The Associated Press
-
- PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Science may be ready to transplant animal organs into
- humans before society is ready to accept the procedure, according to a San
- Francisco man who was grafted with the bone marrow of a baboon.
-
- Jeffrey Getty, an AIDS patient, said his health improved markedly after he
- received an experimental transplant of baboon bone marrow, but he found that
- people were horrified at the idea.
-
- ``We're not ready to have part human, part animal people walking around,''
- Getty said Saturday. ``There is some deep-seeded psychological barrier against
- it.''
-
- Getty, speaking at the national meeting of the American Association for the
- Advancement of Science, said his experimental transplant of baboon bone marrow
- was an attempt to place within his body a partial animal immune system that is
- resistant to the virus. For a time, it seemed to work.
-
- ``I did get better, but we don't know if that was because of the baboon bone
- marrow,'' he said. ``We couldn't find baboon DNA (genes) in me after three
- weeks. It apparently was rejected.''
-
- What he did find was a visceral reaction against the transplant by many
- people. He said he endured jokes, angry comments and signs of revulsion.
-
- ``We react on a subconscious level to the thought of people who are part
- animal,'' said Getty. ``I don't know where it is coming from.''
-
- He calls the December, 1995, baboon transplant a success because it proved
- that the procedure could be performed safely.
-
- ``That was a good sign because that means that one day technology will allow
- people to have animal organs,'' he said.
-
- Getty said the baboon transplant was a last ditch effort to combat his HIV, a
- disease he has had for 18 years. After the transplant, Getty said his viral
- load, the amount of HIV virus in his blood, dropped to zero and his immune
- system got stronger.
-
- In the last few months, however, Getty said his condition has gotten worse and
- he now is taking experimental anti-viral drugs.
-
- Dr. Suzanne T. Ildstad, a transplant surgeon at the Allegheny University of
- the Health Sciences, said that Getty is pioneer in xenotransplantation, the
- transfer of animal organs into humans, that eventually may be the only
- solution for people who need new hearts, kidneys and livers.
-
- Ildstad said that the number of human donor organs has remained about the same
- 1988, while the need for such transplants continued to grow.
-
- ``Three hundred thousand Americans, candidates for transplants, die every year
- without even getting on the waiting list,'' she said. About half of all heart
- transplant candidates die before they get can find a donor.
-
- The only solution, she said, is to learn how to transplant organs from pigs or
- other animals.
-
- AP-NY-02-14-98 1710EST
-
- Copyright 1998 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news
- report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed
- without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active
- hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 19:30:33 EST
- From: Parkton@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Ringling's statement
- Message-ID: <37572f7.34e6372b@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Refutes PeTA and Basinger's False
- Allegations
-
- VIENNA, Va.--(ENTERTAINMENT WIRE)--Feb. 14, 1998--Ringling Bros. and Barnum &
- Bailey, in response to false allegations issued by PeTA and Kim Basinger,
- wants to set the record straight in regard to the tragic death of Kenny, a
- 3-1/2 year-old male Asian elephant, on Jan. 24th, in Jacksonville, Florida:
-
- -- Ringling Bros. has fully cooperated with the United States Department of
- Agriculture (USDA) investigation into Kenny's death.
-
- -- After Kenny's death, Ringling Bros. promptly notified the USDA and a full
- necropsy was performed to determine the cause of death. Results revealed the
- elephant died from what appeared to be a bacterial or viral gastrointestinal
- infection, but the specific agent was not identified from culture and
- histopathology tests. The results were shared with the USDA. Ringling Bros.
- also issued a press release as soon as these results were obtained.
-
- -- Kenny did not perform three shows as alleged by PeTA. During the third
- show, Kenny accompanied the other elephants into the arena and stood outside
- the ring during the elephant act because it was more comfortable for Kenny to
- stay with the herd than to be separated from them.
-
- -- Based on Ringling Bros. employees sworn affidavits before USDA inspectors,
- there was no indication that Kenny was "dizzy" or "wobbly on his legs" or that
- he was "wailing."
-
- -- In response to Basinger's statement concerning Kenny's treatment: "Kenny's
- condition was carefully monitored at all times by Ringling's veterinarian and
- staff, and he was examined and treated as soon as any signs of change in
- behavior occurred. Kenny was never treated cruelly or prematurely removed from
- his mother. Ringling Bros. animals are treated with the greatest care and
- respect, and young elephants are kept with their mothers throughout the
- appropriate weaning period."
-
- Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey is proud of its record of animal care and
- for the past 30 years has never been cited for a violation of the Animal
- Welfare Act. It meets all federal, state and local guidelines for the care and
- treatment of its animals.
-
- CONTACT:
-
- Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey
-
- Public Relations, 703/448-4120
-
- KEYWORD: VIRGINIA
-
- BW1377 FEB 14,1998
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 19:32:46 EST
- From: Parkton@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: more Ringling problems
- Message-ID: <bad0bdf6.34e637b0@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Mauled British tiger trainer's condition improves
-
- ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., Feb 13 (Reuters) - Richard Chipperfield, the British
- animal trainer mauled by a circus tiger last month, has been upgraded from
- critical to good condition, a hospital official said on Friday.
-
- Bayfront Medical Center spokesman Rob Sumner said Chipperfield had been moved
- from the neuro intensive care unit to another unit in the hospital.
-
- Chipperfield, 24, suffered serious head injuries when attacked on Jan. 7 by
- one of the tigers he and his brother Graham performed with at the Ringling
- Bros. and Barnum and Bailey Circus.
-
- The brothers, members of one of England's oldest circus families, were posing
- with 12 tigers for publicity pictures at the time of the attack.
-
- Graham Chipperfield, 28, killed the 350-pound (158 kg) tiger with a shotgun
- immediately after the attack. He quit the circus a few days later.
-
- Doctors said Richard Chipperfield was making good progress in his recovery and
- was expected to be in the hospital at least two more months.
-
- ``He's a very determined man,'' Sumner said. ^REUTERS@
-
- 00:42 02-14-98
-
- Copyright 1998 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or
- redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similiar means, is
- expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters
- shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any
- actions taken in reliance thereon. All active hyperlinks have been inserted
- by AOL.
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 19:40:09 EST
- From: Parkton@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: lynx to become "endangered"
- Message-ID: <ca5d0a70.34e6396b@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Rare lynx headed for protection under U.S. law
-
- DENVER, Feb 12 (Reuters) - The lynx will be listed under the Endangered
- Species Act, U.S. officials said on Thursday, in a move likely to limit
- logging practices on federal lands in parts of a few western states.
-
- Still to be determined is whether the rare feline, which historically lived in
- forests across the northern United States but whose population numbers under a
- thousand now, will be listed as endangered, the most serious classification,
- or threatened.
-
- ``Lynx need old, undisturbed roadless forest for its dens,'' said Bill Snipe,
- legal director of Defenders of Wildlife, an environmental group that sued the
- federal government to get the lynx, an elusive wild cat, listed.
-
- The lynx, which weighs between 20 and 30 pounds (10 and 15 kg), historically
- roamed 16 northern states but is believed to remain in small populations in
- only a few.
-
- Some 400 lynx are believed to be in Montana, about 100 in Washington and maybe
- 50 or so in Maine, Snipe said. A handful may be found in Idaho, Michigan and
- Minnesota.
-
- Lynx tracks have also been spotted in Colorado, a sure sign the animal may
- still be living in the state, Snipe said.
-
- State officials in Colorado have been mulling a plan to reintroduce the
- species in the state by bringing it in from Canada, much the way the gray wolf
- was reintroduced into Yellowstone National Park and the wilds of Idaho.
-
- Under an out-of-court settlement between the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
- and a coalition of 13 environmental groups, the federal government will
- publish a proposed rule to list the animal by June 30.
-
- A final listing decision will come a year later after groups, individuals and
- affected industries have a chance to comment. The agreement must still be
- submitted to a federal judge in Washington, D.C. for approval.
-
- Butch Bernhardt, spokesman for the Western Wood Products Association, a trade
- group in Portland, Oregon, said western logging companies now only take about
- 11 percent of their product from national forests, down from 40 percent at the
- beginning of the 1990s. He cited environmental restrictions and a move toward
- multiple use of the forests as reasons for the decline. ^REUTERS@
-
- 08:04 02-13-98
-
- Copyright 1998 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or
- redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similiar means, is
- expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters
- shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any
- actions taken in reliance thereon. All active hyperlinks have been inserted
- by AOL.
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 19:41:14 EST
- From: Parkton@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: antibiotics in animals threaten humans
- Message-ID: <58d92ce0.34e639ac@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Antibiotics in animals threaten humans, expert says
-
- Release at 4 p.m. EST (2100 GMT)
-
- WASHINGTON, Feb 12 (Reuters) - The widespread use of antibiotics in farm
- animals is helping the spread of drug-resistant germs and should be phased
- out, a German expert said on Thursday.
-
- Although evidence of this was clear, most countries had done little or nothing
- to stop farmers from dosing pigs, cattle and chickens with unnecessary drugs,
- Wolfgang Witte of the Robert Koch Institute in Wernigerode, Germany said.
-
- ``All of the pathogens usually found in hospitals are affected, as well as
- mycobacteria (which include the tuberculosis bug) pneumococci and
- Enterobacteriacae (which include E coli and salmonella),'' Witte wrote in a
- commentary in the journal Science.
-
- There is a good reason that farmers feed drugs to their stock. ``Animals
- receiving antibiotics in their feed gain four to five percent more body weight
- than animals that do not receive antibiotics,'' Witte wrote.
-
- In fact, animals get many more drugs than people do. ``In Denmark in 1994, 24
- kg (53 pounds) of ... (the antibiotic) vancomycin were used for human therapy,
- whereas 24,000 kg (53,000 pounds) of the similar (antibiotic) avoparcin were
- used in animal feed,'' Witte wrote.
-
- ``From 1992 to 1996 Australia imported an average of 582 kg (1,300 pounds) of
- vancomycin per year for medical purposes and 62,642 kg (138,100 pounds) of
- avoparcin per year for animal husbandry.'' But he said this was not necessary.
- Better hygiene could lead to healthier farm animals as well -- something
- argued by organic farmers who eschew crowded factory farming.
-
- In 1969 a British panel called the Swann Committee decided that antibiotics
- used to treat people or drugs closely related to medical antibiotics -- which
- could make bacteria resistant -- should not be given to animals. The World
- Health Organization reinforced the recommendations in 1997.
-
- ``That the Swann committee's resolution needs repetition after 28 years
- indicates that we have not seen sufficient adherence to the principles
- stated,'' Witte wrote.
-
- This was a global problem, Witte added. ``Meat products are traded worldwide,
- and evolving bacterial populations do not respect geographical boundaries.''
-
- It was not enough for some countries to develop controls. ``In the countries
- of the developing world, which are responsible for about 25 percent of world
- meat production, policies regarding veterinary use of antibiotics are poorly
- developed or absent,'' he said.
-
- ``In Southeast Asia use of antimicrobials in shrimp farming is unregulated.''
-
- Vancomycin is one of the strongest antibiotics known and is the last line of
- treatment for some resistant bacteria. But cases of vancomycin-resistant
- bacteria have worried doctors in the United States, Europe and Japan.
-
- Bacteria can evolve resistance when an incomplete or light course of drugs
- allows just a few to live. But they can also give resistance to one another.
- Bacteria such as the very common E coli can meet up and swap genes, and pass
- resistance to new bacteria. ^REUTERS@
-
- 14:38 02-12-98
-
- Copyright 1998 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or
- redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similiar means, is
- expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters
- shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any
- actions taken in reliance thereon. All active hyperlinks have been inserted
- by AOL.
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 19:42:48 EST
- From: Parkton@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: ultrasound in feedlots
- Message-ID: <37572fc.34e63a0b@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- FEATURE-Ultrasound comes to the feedlot
-
- By Bob Janis
-
- DENVER, Feb 12 (Reuters) - Ultrasound, the technique employed by doctors to
- look at human fetuses in the womb, is being used by a growing number of U.S.
- cattlemen to get a peek at steaks and roasts yet to come.
-
- The technique, discussed at a recent cattle industry meeting in Denver, is
- designed to take the guesswork out of the optimum time in the feedlot to
- finish fattening cattle for market. In this case, it is not a fetus the cattle
- experts are looking at but the amount of fat and marbeling under the hide.
-
- "What we hope to do is make feedlot cattle as profitable as we can make them
- and improve the quality and consistency of the end product to the consumer,"
- Lynn Locatelli, a veterinarian with Twin Forks Clinic in Benkelman, Nebraska,
- said.
-
- By taking an ultrasound picture of cattle 60 to 70 days before they are sold
- from a feedlot to a meat processor, managers can more accurately judge the
- animals' quality than the current practice of "eyeballing," she said.
-
- Locatelli said traditional methods of evaluating potential carcass quality can
- result in more than one-third of cattle in a pen being marketed 25 days away
- from optimal quality.
-
- If an animal leaves the feedlot with too much fat it means a loss of money
- both for the lot and for the slaughterhouse, which has to trim it away. Too
- little fat leaves some cuts unsuitable for consumer tastes.
-
- CATTLE FEEDER CAN ADJUST RATI0NS
-
- After a steer or heifer has its ultrasound reading taken, a computer delivers
- a picture that shows how much back fat and marbling is hidden under the hide.
- A cattle feeder can then adjust rations and feeding schedules to finish the
- animal at an optimum level.
-
- Locatelli said the process has an accuracy rate of up to 80 percent, depending
- on breed and genetic characteristics.
-
- Ultrasound scanning is conducted when cattle are moved through chutes for
- normal feedlot maintenance so there is no extra work, she said. "We can run
- comfortably at 70 (head) an hour and can go to 90 an hour if the facilities
- are good and the cattle cooperate. It's not a big time-consuming project and
- it's not stressful on the cattle."
-
- Tom Holtorf, general manager of Schramm Feedlot, a 12,000-head operation in
- Yuma, Colorado, said the ultrasound system saves money and can really help
- feeders in tough markets. "It gives our feeders a little more confidence in
- what we're doing because it's a little more predictable," he said.
-
- John Brethour, a beef cattle scientist at Kansas State University's Fort Hays
- Experiment Station, said he developed software for livestock ultrasound
- evaluations in 1986, adapting technology that had been around since the late
- 1950's.
-
- "Actually, the machine she (Locatelli) uses was originally made as a low-cost
- machine for obstetricians," Brethour said. He said he used a research feedlot
- at KSU to develop the automated machine.
-
- "She can get her image and in a matter of a few seconds the information is all
- processed and tells how many days to feed that animal, what his grade
- potential is going to be, sorting and what pen to put him into," Brethour
- said.
-
- There are 20 cattle ultrasound machines being used commercially across the
- country that evaluate about 20,000 cattle a month or more, he said.
-
- 00:00 02-13-98
-
- Copyright 1998 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or
- redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similiar means, is
- expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters
- shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any
- actions taken in reliance thereon. All active hyperlinks have been inserted
- by AOL.
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 19:45:42 EST
- From: Parkton@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: hunter demonstration
- Message-ID: <ca5d0a72.34e63ab8@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Some 130,000 Hunters March in Paris
-
- By JEAN-MARIE GODARD
- .c The Associated Press
-
- PARIS (AP) - Led by a pack of dogs and a wild pig, at least 130,000 hunters
- marched across Paris on Saturday to protest a European directive limiting the
- bird-hunting season. It was among the biggest demonstrations in recent years.
-
- The marchers, who came to the capital from all parts of France, including the
- Mediterranean island of Corsica, sounded hunting horns and tossed firecrackers
- the length of the protest route, halting traffic for hours on main
- thoroughfares, including the Boulevard du Montparnasse.
-
- Men with whips drove forward a pack of dogs and a wild pig, traditionally
- hunted by French farmers, at the head of the parade.
-
- Police estimated the crowd at 130,000 people; organizers put the figure at
- 150,000.
-
- The hunters are angry over a European directive limiting the hunting season
- for migrating birds until the end of January. French hunters want it extended
- until the end of February.
-
- The hunters also are angry over what they perceive as an anti-hunting
- environment in Brussels, EU headquarters, and in France. French Environment
- Minister Dominique Voynet of the Green Party was castigated in banners and
- chants and hung in effigy.
-
- AP-NY-02-14-98 1701EST
-
- Copyright 1998 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news
- report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed
- without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active
- hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 19:48:21 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: Veg-News@Envirolink.Org
- Cc: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Oprah Plaintiffs Change Damages
- Message-ID: <199802150048.TAA17384@mail-out-1.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- NOTE the cavalier way that Mark Babineck misreports things,
- and uses "loaded language" to make claims that are controversial,
- such as that BSE has not been detected in the USA."
- --------------------------------------------
-
-
- Oprah Plaintiffs Change Damages
- By MARK BABINECK
-
- AMARILLO, Texas (AP) - Now it's Oprah Winfrey's turn.
-
- The talk show host's attorneys plan to begin calling witnesses Wednesday
- morning in defense of allegations that her television show was responsible for
- a drop in cattle prices that cost a group of Texas cattlemen millions of
- dollars.
-
- The cattlemen rested their case in their beef defamation trial Friday after 18
- days of testimony spread over four weeks.
-
- Attorneys finished two days of arguments over what damages, if any, Ms.
- Winfrey, her production company and a vegetarian activist guest should pay
- after cattle prices slumped after her April 16, 1996, show on mad cow disease.
-
- Once the plaintiffs rested, defense attorneys immediately filed motions asking
- U.S. District Judge Mary Lou Robinson to grant a directed verdict in their
- favor.
-
- ``There's a lot of material to be covered here,'' Judge Robinson said,
- inspecting the thick filings from the bench. She then recessed for the holiday
- weekend and ordered the jury to return Wednesday morning.
-
- Lawyers will argue the directed verdict motions outside the jury's presence on
- Tuesday.
-
- One of the cattlemen spent much of Friday explaining why he had lowered by
- almost $4 million his estimate of how much the ``Oprah'' show cost him.
-
- Bill O'Brien stuck by his initial estimate of $4.5 million in damages, based
- on what he says were changes in the value of cattle he and associates owned
- before and after the show.
-
- But O'Brien also said they lost just $525,000 in actual sales in the
- succeeding three months.
-
- Ave Tucker, an accounting consultant hired by the cattlemen, increased his
- estimate of co-defendant Paul Engler's losses. Tucker said Engler has lost
- $6.5 million, which is $700,000 more than his attorney claimed in opening
- statements.
-
- Engler's claim stems from the fact that he sold off an unusually high amount
- of his stock in the futures market directly after the show. He also claims
- $1.5 million in losses on the cash market in the days following the program.
-
- Ms. Winfrey's lawyer, Charles Babcock, implied that Engler wouldn't have lost
- as much money had he simply held onto his cattle, rather than hedge by selling
- futures.
-
- ``We're asked to pay the first element of damages (on the cash market) because
- prices went down, then we're asked to pay again (on the futures market)
- because they went back up,'' Babcock said.
-
- In asking the judge for a directed verdict, Ms. Winfrey's lawyers said the
- cattlemen's attorneys failed to prove that she and her show falsely disparaged
- perishable food products. Furthermore, they argued that the state's ``veggie
- libel'' law, itself, is unconstitutional.
-
- Texas is among 13 states that have laws protecting agricultural products from
- slander.
-
- The cattlemen are suing because they say the 1996 show gave activist Howard
- Lyman too much leeway in saying that U.S. cattle were at risk for mad cow
- disease.
-
- Other guests on the show pointed out that bovine spongiform encephalopathy, as
- mad cow disease is formally called, never has been detected here.
-
- AP-NY-02-14-98 0413EST
-
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 20:16:06 EST
- From: Snugglezzz@aol.com
- To: ar-news@Envirolink.org
- Subject: Dog Survives Vicious Assault With His Spirit Still Intact
- Message-ID: <9aa8df2e.34e641d8@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Bartlesville, OK, USA: Gondo the dog landscapes yards on weekdays, cheers
- girls' softball players each summer and generally spreads good will among
- teams visiting the city each year.
-
- Known for his extraordinary trust, Gondo also has held fast to his role as
- man's best friend, despite a brutal attack four weeks ago that shattered his
- hip in six places and almost took his life.
-
- Now recovering from a hip operation, Gondo is expected to be back on the
- fields this season serving as the mascot for the girls' softball team the
- Blazers.
-
- "I can't imagine anyone hurting him, because of the way he is," said Gondo's
- owner, Benny McClintock. "This dog, he's just an exception of loyalty and
- trust-
- worthiness. That's just the way he is; it hasn't changed him at all."
-
- A German Shepherd mix breed, Gondo has been McClintock's close companion since
- he rescued the dog six years ago from an area ranch where a litter of puppies
- had been dumped. Gondo quickly became an assistant at Hadco Lawn and Landscape
- Maintenance where McClintock works, sometimes accompanying him on jobs.
-
- And it was at the Hadco office, which Gondo considers home, where he met his
- second brush with death in early January.
-
- Sometime during late afternoon or early evening, someone lured Gondo to the
- fence and then hit him forcefully with what authorities think was a club
- containing two nails, McClintock said.
-
- The nails left long holes in Gondo's bone, and fragments of his hip are
- missing. Veterinarian Tom Loafman operated to save Gondo's life and his limb.
-
- Initially, McClintock thought Gondo would have to be euthanized because of the
- medical costs and intensive procedures required.
-
- But Gondo's spirits rallied under Loafman's care, and the doctor even slashed
- his fees from $700 to $400 to save the dog.
-
- A few other people have chipped in for the dog's medical bills.
-
- The most likely suspects are some neighborhood youths who have in the past
- thrown rocks at the dog and shot a BB gun at him. McClintock sees the
- incident as an especially cold-blooded act because the assailants most likely
- had to pet the dog to get him to stay by the closed fence long enough for them
- to beat him with the club.
-
- Bartlesville police are continuing to investigate Gondo's attack, and
- McClintock is considering taking up offers from community members who wanted
- to post a reward for conviction of the offenders.
-
- McClintock said of the neighborhood youths, "Gondo will bark at them, but he
- won't bite them. And they all know him; they've all petted him before."
-
- Gondo's ballpark duties include wearing a Blazers T-shirt and shorts, posing
- for pictures and trading pins with players from visiting teams.
-
- He also performs tricks, including rollovers, flipping and catching things and
- getting things that are put on his nose.
-
- Gondo got his stitches out last week, and he's adjusting to the smaller living
- quarters McClintock had to create to restrict the dog's movements so he can
- heal.
-
- Despite the attack, Gondo remains happiest when he resides at the landscaping
- headquarters, so McClintock is letting him stay in his "home."
-
- Gondo is expected to regain some use of his leg, but he'll never be the same
- physically. McClintock just hopes the sweet spirit that remained unchanged by
- the attack doesn't lead to Gondo's downfall.
-
- "That's my greatest fear," McClintock said. "There's a chance it could happen
- again. He's still just as trustworthy as ever. If you come up to the fence,
- he'll come up to be petted. He thinks you are his buddy."
-
-
- -- Sherrill
- Date: Sun, 15 Feb 1998 09:58:52 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Transcripts-BSE/CJD "The Brain Eater" TV program
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19980215095109.2edf1328@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- BSE: THE BRAIN EATER, TRANSCRIPTS - USA
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Feb 1998 14:28:22 -0800
-
- Source: Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy
-
-
- For those wishing to see the transcript of Tuesday night's TV program on
- BSE, the web address is as follows:
-
- http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/transcripts/2505braineater.html
- =====================================================================
- ========
- /`\ /`\ 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.geocities.com/RainForest/4620/essene.htm
- for more information.
-
- It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
- - Voltaire
-
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 20:44:30 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: School Makes `Mad Cow' Discovery - how prion works
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19980214204419.015c9c70@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- School Makes `Mad Cow' Discovery - how prion works
- By PAUL RECER
- .c The Associated Press
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) - Researchers have found how one form of prion, the abnormal
- protein thought to cause mad cow disease, is able to start a process that
- causes a massive destruction of brain cells.
-
- A team from the University of California, San Francisco, says it has
- discovered a type of prion that attaches to a key structure in neuron cells
- and triggers a signal that causes the cell to die.
-
- Dr. Vishwanath R. Lingappa, the study's lead author, said that the research
- reveals a process ``that is at the heart of at least one prion disease.'' But
- he said it is not clear if the same process occurs in all prion diseases.
-
- A report on the study is published today in the journal Science.
-
- A prion is an abnormal form of a protein that is present in the brains of
- humans, animals and birds.
-
- Nobel laureate Stanley B. Prusiner, a team member, has established a theory
- after many years of research that abnormal prions cause the widespread death
- of neurons, resulting in disorders such as scrapie in sheep, mad cow disease
- in cattle and a fatal brain disorder called Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in
- people.
-
- The theory is that a mutated form of prion attaches to normal prions in the
- brain and causes mutations. This leads in turn to massive and progressive
- destruction of brain cells and, eventually, death.
-
- Although the theory remains controversial, Prusiner was awarded the Nobel
- Prize last year for his prion research.
-
- In the latest study, the California researchers used a form of mutated prion
- that is different from the mad cow prion to search for an explanation of how
- the proteins cause disease.
-
- Lingappa said they found that when the abnormal prion is made in the cell, it
- becomes stuck in a structure called the endoplasmic reticulum, a membrane that
- makes proteins and moves them around within the cell.
-
- When the prion is lodged in the membrane, said Lingappa, it triggers a signal
- that causes the cell to die.
-
- ``What we have found is why cells die in some prion diseases,'' said Lingappa.
- ``In these diseases, the prion gets made in a form that turns on a signaling
- event to other parts of the cell. Apparently, neurons are triggered to die in
- this way.''
-
- He said the disease mechanism on a molecular level is one that has not been
- seen before in studies of fundamental cell processes.
-
- Lingappa said the process was discovered when a mutated type of prion was
- placed into the brains of newborn laboratory rats. The animals died within 60
- days.
-
- A study of the rats' brains linked the deaths to abnormal prions stuck within
- the internal membrane of neuron cells.
-
- Researchers then tested specimens from patients who died of a brain disorder
- called Gerstmann-Straussler-Scheinker disease, or GSS. Lingappa said that the
- abnormal prion was found in this brain tissue.
-
- GSS is a rare disease that destroys the brain in a way close to Creutzfeldt-
- Jakob disease.
-
- Lingappa said the prion linked to GSS is not infectious, while prions that
- cause mad cow disease and Cruetzfeldt-Jakob can be spread from one victim to
- another.
-
- A variant of Creutzfeldt-Jakob is thought to have caused the death of 23
- people in Britain since 1995. Scientists believe the victims contracted the
- disease from eating meat infected with bovine spongiform encephalopathy, or
- mad cow disease. The export of British beef was banned in 1996 because of the
- disease.
-
- But GSS, said Lingappa, apparently is not infectious and results from an
- inherited mutation.
-
- ``We're dealing with a disease where a mutation in the prion protein causes
- cells to die,'' he said. ``We don't know how this relates to the other prion-
- associated diseases.''
-
- Dr. Frank O. Bastian of the University of South Alabama, an expert in the
- Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, said he is uncertain whether the experiment
- reported by Lingappa will prove to be important in combating the disease.
-
- ``It is unclear if this really advances the understanding of the prion protein
- disease process,'' said Bastian.
-
- AP-NY-02-06-98 0223EST
-
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 20:45:45 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Acorns key to Lyme disease, study finds
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19980214204507.015c5720@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Acorns key to Lyme disease, study finds
-
- Release at 4 p.m. EST (2100 GMT)
-
- By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent
-
- WASHINGTON, Feb 12 (Reuters) - Acorns, and not deer, may be the key to how big
- a risk Lyme disease is, researchers reported on Thursday.
-
- How many acorns are produced by oak trees in a forest may eventually determine
- how many infected ticks are out there to spread the disease, which can cause
- fever and sometimes permanent physical damage to victims, they said.
-
- Writing in the journal Science, Clive Jones and Rick Ostfeld of the Institute
- of Ecosystem Studies in Millbrook, New York, said they hoped to eventually
- come up with a way to predict the risk of Lyme disease.
-
- ``What our data suggests is that the risk of Lyme disease might be higher two
- years after an acorn crop, so it is potentially feasible to risk-rate the
- forest,'' Jones said in a telephone interview.
-
- Just as the U.S. Forest Service posted signs telling of a high, medium or low
- risk of forest fires, perhaps they could post signs warning of the relative
- risk of being bitten by a tick infected with Lyme disease, Jones suggested.
-
- But not quite yet. ``The final link between the number of infected nymphs
- (ticks) -- the ones that get on you and bite you -- we haven't tied that one
- down yet,'' he said.
-
- What Jones's team did find was that acorns are important to populations of the
- mice that infect the ticks in the first place, and the deer that pick up the
- ticks and carry them to places from which they get onto people.
-
- Oak trees produce large crops of acorns every two to five years, but produce
- few or none at all in between. These acorns are the major food source for
- white-footed mice, as well as white-tailed deer.
-
- Mice and deer both carry the black-legged tick. Mice infect the ticks with the
- spirochete bacteria that causes Lyme disease -- Borrelia burgdorferi.
-
- ``Adult ticks feed and mate on white-tailed deer before dropping to the ground
- in autumn, laying eggs the following spring or early summer,'' they wrote.
-
- The more acorns there are around, the longer the deer spend in the woods and
- the more likely the ticks are to get on them.
-
- Jones's group did an experiment when the acorn crop was light in 1995, adding
- acorns to some areas and sticking some into mouse nests. Sure enough, the
- mouse population grew too.
-
- Furthermore, there were more ticks on the mice where acorns had been added.
-
- So would removing mice solve the problem? Probably not, said Jones. Not only
- would it be hard to do, but the mice also eat gypsy moths.
-
- ``This introduced insect periodically undergoes outbreaks that defoliate
- millions of hectares (acres) of oak forests, decreasing tree growth, survival
- and mast (acorn) production,'' they wrote.
-
- In a second experiment, Jones's team showed that removing mice (which they
- trapped and moved elsewhere) allowed gypsy moths to proliferate.
-
- ``Our results provide strong support for the idea that a chain of events links
- acorns to gypsy moth outbreaks and Lyme disease risk,'' they wrote. As is
- often the case with real-life nature, these links are complex.
-
- Lyme disease is spread to humans by ticks from deer and is prevalent in the
- northeastern United States and Canada. It usually starts with a rash, followed
- by fever and headache and in some cases can lead to heart, joint or neurologic
- disease.
-
- The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported a record 16,461 Lyme
- disease cases in the United States in 1996, a 41 percent increase from 1995.
-
- Its name is taken from the town of Lyme, Connecticut, where it was first
- identified in 1975. ^REUTERS@
-
- 14:26 02-12-98
-
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 20:46:54 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Antibiotics in animals threaten humans, expert says
- Message-ID: <Version.32.19980214204646.015c4540@pop.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Antibiotics in animals threaten humans, expert says
-
- Release at 4 p.m. EST (2100 GMT)
-
- WASHINGTON, Feb 12 (Reuters) - The widespread use of antibiotics in farm
- animals is helping the spread of drug-resistant germs and should be phased
- out, a German expert said on Thursday.
-
- Although evidence of this was clear, most countries had done little or nothing
- to stop farmers from dosing pigs, cattle and chickens with unnecessary drugs,
- Wolfgang Witte of the Robert Koch Institute in Wernigerode, Germany said.
-
- ``All of the pathogens usually found in hospitals are affected, as well as
- mycobacteria (which include the tuberculosis bug) pneumococci and
- Enterobacteriacae (which include E coli and salmonella),'' Witte wrote in a
- commentary in the journal Science.
-
- There is a good reason that farmers feed drugs to their stock. ``Animals
- receiving antibiotics in their feed gain four to five percent more body weight
- than animals that do not receive antibiotics,'' Witte wrote.
-
- In fact, animals get many more drugs than people do. ``In Denmark in 1994, 24
- kg (53 pounds) of ... (the antibiotic) vancomycin were used for human therapy,
- whereas 24,000 kg (53,000 pounds) of the similar (antibiotic) avoparcin were
- used in animal feed,'' Witte wrote.
-
- ``From 1992 to 1996 Australia imported an average of 582 kg (1,300 pounds) of
- vancomycin per year for medical purposes and 62,642 kg (138,100 pounds) of
- avoparcin per year for animal husbandry.'' But he said this was not necessary.
- Better hygiene could lead to healthier farm animals as well -- something
- argued by organic farmers who eschew crowded factory farming.
-
- In 1969 a British panel called the Swann Committee decided that antibiotics
- used to treat people or drugs closely related to medical antibiotics -- which
- could make bacteria resistant -- should not be given to animals. The World
- Health Organization reinforced the recommendations in 1997.
-
- ``That the Swann committee's resolution needs repetition after 28 years
- indicates that we have not seen sufficient adherence to the principles
- stated,'' Witte wrote.
-
- This was a global problem, Witte added. ``Meat products are traded worldwide,
- and evolving bacterial populations do not respect geographical boundaries.''
-
- It was not enough for some countries to develop controls. ``In the countries
- of the developing world, which are responsible for about 25 percent of world
- meat production, policies regarding veterinary use of antibiotics are poorly
- developed or absent,'' he said.
-
- ``In Southeast Asia use of antimicrobials in shrimp farming is unregulated.''
-
- Vancomycin is one of the strongest antibiotics known and is the last line of
- treatment for some resistant bacteria. But cases of vancomycin-resistant
- bacteria have worried doctors in the United States, Europe and Japan.
-
- Bacteria can evolve resistance when an incomplete or light course of drugs
- allows just a few to live. But they can also give resistance to one another.
- Bacteria such as the very common E coli can meet up and swap genes, and pass
- resistance to new bacteria. ^REUTERS@
-
- 14:38 02-12-98
-
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 21:47:45 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Farmers Scale Back Popular Cotton
- Message-ID: <199802150251.VAA01063@mail-out-2.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Farmers Scale Back Popular Cotton
- .c The Associated Press
-
- By CURT ANDERSON
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) - As corporate ``casual Fridays'' have expanded to more days
- of the week, and as khakis gained in popularity among baby boomers, demand for
- cotton has been strong in recent years. But farmers figure to plant a lot less
- of it this spring.
-
- Depressed prices at the farm level have led American cotton growers to scale
- back acreage by 12.3 percent compared to last year. The 1998 crop is forecast
- at about 12.1 million acres compared to about 13.8 million acres in 1997,
- according to the National Cotton Council.
-
- ``We, along with the entire industry, were anticipating a decline in cotton
- acreage this year,'' said Kent Lanclos, economist with the council. ``At
- current prices, many growers are finding that competing crops such as corn and
- soybeans offer greater profit potential than cotton, with less risk.''
-
- Indeed, mid-December cotton spot market prices fell to 64.7 cents a pound,
- compared to 72 cents a pound in December 1996. Futures prices are at their
- lowest levels in four years.
-
- At the same time, cotton's share of the retail market is growing, as jeans
- continue to sell well - one quarter of all cotton clothing sold is denim - and
- more people are wearing casual clothing at work.
-
- Industry market research shows that cotton commands 59 percent of the U.S.
- apparel market, a 15 percent increase since 1980. The No. 2 fiber, polyester,
- has plummeted from 31 percent to 19 percent over the same time span.
-
- This rising demand led farmers across the Sun Belt to plant the second-largest
- U.S. cotton crop ever in 1997, with production estimated at 19 million bales.
- The big crop was more than enough to meet demand - when combined with strong
- world production - and prices began to fall.
-
- That translates into thinner profit margins for farmers.
-
- ``Until demand begins to tax the world's capacity to produce, or until prices
- fall to levels that prompt resources to be directed to other enterprises, I
- believe we can expect a buyer's market to prevail,'' said William Lovelady,
- outgoing president of the Cotton Council.
-
- Still, cotton analysts were unprepared for a planting intentions survey
- indicating U.S. farmers would produce only about 16 million bales this year.
-
- ``Cuts of this magnitude were surprising,'' Lanclos said.
-
- The biggest acreage reductions will occur in the region that includes
- Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri and Tennessee, where a 21 percent
- combined drop is forecast. Louisiana alone will plant roughly 192,000 fewer
- acres in cotton this year, a 30 percent decrease.
-
- There is much other uncertainty for cotton growers. The financial crisis in
- Asia could put a crimp on U.S. exports to those countries and hurt U.S.-made
- products by making available more clothing from Asia, at cheaper prices, than
- otherwise would be available for American consumers.
-
- Overall, cotton exports are projected to drop 17 percent from last year's
- levels. Changes proposed by President Clinton in the fiscal 1999 budget could
- reduce that still more.
-
- The budget would cap a major cotton export subsidy program at $140 million.
- Another $110 million that had been expected for the program would be shifted
- into programs to help farmers use environmentally sound cropping and grazing
- methods and to help pay commissions for crop insurance.
-
- ``We're reducing export subsidies, but we're increasing payments to farmers in
- other ways,'' said Deputy Agriculture Secretary Richard Rominger.
-
- Agency economists estimate the cap would reduce exports by only about 100,000
- bales out of a projected total of more than 6 million bales. But cotton-state
- lawmakers in Congress are not pleased.
-
- ``The competitiveness of some of our cotton producers may be harmed,''
- said Sen. Thad Cochran, a Mississippi Republican who chairs the
- Senate Appropriations Committee panel on agriculture.
- ``I don't think we're going to approve that.''
-
- AP-NY-02-14-98 1205EST
-
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 21:51:23 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: ar-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Ringling Brothers Press Release Denies PETA charges
- Message-ID: <199802150252.VAA01084@mail-out-2.tiac.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- Ringling Brothers Press Release Denies PETA charges
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- ------------
- Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Refutes PeTA and Basinger's False
- Allegations
-
- VIENNA, Va.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Feb. 14, 1998--Ringling Bros. and Barnum &
- Bailey, in response to false allegations issued by PeTA and Kim Basinger,
- wants to set the record straight in regard to the tragic death of Kenny, a
- 3-1/2 year-old male Asian elephant, on Jan. 24th, in Jacksonville, Florida:
-
- áááá -- Ringling Bros. has fully cooperated with the United States Department
- of Agriculture (USDA) investigation into Kenny's death.
-
- áááá -- After Kenny's death, Ringling Bros. promptly notified the USDA and a
- full necropsy was performed to determine the cause of death. Results revealed
- the elephant died from what appeared to be a bacterial or viral
- gastrointestinal infection, but the specific agent was not identified from
- culture and histopathology tests. The results were shared with the USDA.
- Ringling Bros. also issued a press release as soon as these results were
- obtained.
-
- áááá -- Kenny did not perform three shows as alleged by PeTA. During the third
- show, Kenny accompanied the other elephants into the arena and stood outside
- the ring during the elephant act because it was more comfortable for Kenny to
- stay with the herd than to be separated from them.
-
- áááá -- Based on Ringling Bros. employees sworn affidavits before USDA
- inspectors, there was no indication that Kenny was "dizzy" or "wobbly on his
- legs" or that he was "wailing."
-
- áááá -- In response to Basinger's statement concerning Kenny's treatment:
- "Kenny's condition was carefully monitored at all times by Ringling's
- veterinarian and staff, and he was examined and treated as soon as any signs
- of change in behavior occurred. Kenny was never treated cruelly or prematurely
- removed from his mother. Ringling Bros. animals are treated with the greatest
- care and respect, and young elephants are kept with their mothers throughout
- the appropriate weaning period."
-
- áááá Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey is proud of its record of animal care
- and for the past 30 years has never been cited for a violation of the Animal
- Welfare Act. It meets all federal, state and local guidelines for the care and
- treatment of its animals.
-
- CONTACT:
-
- Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey
- Public Relations, 703/448-4120
-
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 19:11:28 -0800
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Idea of animal organ transplants horrifies many
- Message-ID: <34E65CE0.119B@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Idea of animal organ transplants horrifies many, patient says
-
- The Associated Press
- PHILADELPHIA, February 14, 1998
-
- Science may be ready to transplant animal organs into humans before
- society is ready to accept the procedure, according to a San Francisco
- man who received the bone marrow of a baboon.
-
- Jeffrey Getty, an AIDS patient, said his health improved markedly after
- he received an experimental transplant of baboon bone marrow, but he
- found that people were horrified at the idea.
-
- "We're not ready to have part human, part animal people walking around,"
- Getty said Saturday. "There is some deep-seeded psychological barrier
- against it."
-
- Getty, speaking at the national meeting of the American Association for
- the Advancement of Science, said his experimental transplant of baboon
- bone marrow was an attempt to place within his body a partial animal
- immune system that is resistant to the virus. For a time, it seemed to
- work.
-
- "I did get better, but we don't know if that was because of the baboon
- bone marrow," he said. "We couldn't find baboon DNA (genes) in me after
- three weeks. It apparently was rejected."
-
- What he did find was a visceral reaction against the transplant by many
- people. He said he endured jokes, angry comments and signs of revulsion.
-
- "We react on a subconscious level to the thought of people who are part
- animal," said Getty. "I don't know where it is coming from."
-
- He calls the December, 1995, baboon transplant a success because it
- proved that the procedure could be performed safely.
-
- "That was a good sign because that means that one day technology will
- allow people to have animal organs," he said.
-
- Getty said the baboon transplant was a last ditch effort to combat his
- HIV, a disease he has had for 18 years. After the transplant, Getty said
- his viral load, the amount of HIV virus in his blood,
- dropped to zero and his immune system got stronger.
-
- In the last few months, however, Getty said his condition has gotten
- worse and he now is taking experimental anti-viral drugs.
-
- Dr. Suzanne T. Ildstad, a transplant surgeon at the Allegheny University
- of the Health Sciences, said that Getty is pioneer in
- xenotransplantation, the transfer of animal organs into humans, that
- eventually may be the only solution for people who need new hearts,
- kidneys and livers.
-
- Ildstad said that the number of human donor organs has remained about
- the same 1988, while the need for such transplants continued to grow.
-
- "Three hundred thousand Americans, candidates for transplants, die every
- year without even getting on the waiting list," she said. About half of
- all heart transplant candidates die before they get can find a donor.
-
- The only solution, she said, is to learn how to transplant organs from
- pigs or other animals.
-
- -- By PAUL RECER, AP Science Writer
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 22:45:00 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Patient: Animal Organs Not Accepted
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980214224457.007788ec@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from Associated Press http://wire.ap.org
- ---------------------------------------------------
- 02/14/1998 17:10 EST
-
- Patient: Animal Organs Not Accepted
-
- By PAUL RECER
- AP Science Writer
-
- PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- Science may be ready to transplant animal organs
- into humans before society is ready to accept the procedure, according to
- a San Francisco man who was grafted with the bone marrow of a baboon.
-
- Jeffrey Getty, an AIDS patient, said his health improved markedly after
- he received an experimental transplant of baboon bone marrow, but he
- found that people were horrified at the idea.
-
- ``We're not ready to have part human, part animal people walking
- around,'' Getty said Saturday. ``There is some deep-seeded psychological
- barrier against it.''
-
- Getty, speaking at the national meeting of the American Association for
- the Advancement of Science, said his experimental transplant of baboon
- bone marrow was an attempt to place within his body a partial animal
- immune system that is resistant to the virus. For a time, it seemed to
- work.
-
- ``I did get better, but we don't know if that was because of the baboon
- bone marrow,'' he said. ``We couldn't find baboon DNA (genes) in me after
- three weeks. It apparently was rejected.''
-
- What he did find was a visceral reaction against the transplant by many
- people. He said he endured jokes, angry comments and signs of revulsion.
-
- ``We react on a subconscious level to the thought of people who are part
- animal,'' said Getty. ``I don't know where it is coming from.''
-
- He calls the December, 1995, baboon transplant a success because it
- proved that the procedure could be performed safely.
-
- ``That was a good sign because that means that one day technology will
- allow people to have animal organs,'' he said.
-
- Getty said the baboon transplant was a last ditch effort to combat his
- HIV, a disease he has had for 18 years. After the transplant, Getty said
- his viral load, the amount of HIV virus in his blood, dropped to zero and
- his immune system got stronger.
-
- In the last few months, however, Getty said his condition has gotten
- worse and he now is taking experimental anti-viral drugs.
-
- Dr. Suzanne T. Ildstad, a transplant surgeon at the Allegheny University
- of the Health Sciences, said that Getty is pioneer in
- xenotransplantation, the transfer of animal organs into humans, that
- eventually may be the only solution for people who need new hearts,
- kidneys and livers.
-
- Ildstad said that the number of human donor organs has remained about the
- same 1988, while the need for such transplants continued to grow.
-
- ``Three hundred thousand Americans, candidates for transplants, die every
- year without even getting on the waiting list,'' she said. About half of
- all heart transplant candidates die before they get can find a donor.
-
- The only solution, she said, is to learn how to transplant organs from
- pigs or other animals.
-
- Date: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 22:50:34 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Study Questions Beliefs on Fat
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19980214225032.00778c20@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from Associated Press http://wire.ap.org
- ---------------------------------------------------
- 02/14/1998 15:52 EST
-
- Study Questions Beliefs on Fat
-
- By DANIEL Q. HANEY
- AP Medical Editor
-
- PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- The often repeated advice that everyone should eat
- less fat and more carbohydrates is coming under challenge.
-
- New research finds that cutting fat levels much below the typical
- American diet probably won't lower the risk of heart disease for the
- majority of adults, and it might even increase the hazard for some.
-
- On average, fat makes up 34 percent of the calories in the American diet,
- and this is already close to the level recommended by major health
- organizations. The American Heart Association suggests that 30 percent or
- less of calories should come from fat.
-
- Nevertheless, ``there is a movement toward even further fat
- restriction,'' said Dr. Ronald Krauss of the Lawrence Berkeley National
- Laboratory at the University of California.
-
- He noted that many individuals, sometimes with the encouragement of
- doctors and other health professionals, believe that if a low-fat diet is
- good, an even lower fat one should be better still.
-
- Krauss is head of the heart association's nutrition committee, which
- writes the organization's dietary guidelines. At a meeting Saturday of
- the American Association for the Advancement of Science, he presented new
- evidence of why very low fat diets may be good for some but bad for
- others.
-
- He said his data suggest that about one-third of the U.S. population may
- benefit from reducing fat intake below 30 percent. Another one-third will
- neither be helped nor harmed by this. And the final third may actually
- increase their risk of heart disease.
-
- Krauss noted that evidence in favor of lowering fat and replacing it with
- carbohydrates comes from studies that look at average cholesterol levels
- across large population groups.
-
- ``These fail to reflect the tremendous amount of individual variation,''
- he said.
-
- Just how someone's cholesterol level responds to diet depends, at least
- in part, on the genes that he or she inherits. Probably many genes are
- involved, and no one knows what they are.
-
- However, once these genes are identified, Krauss said it should be
- possible to tailor people's diets to match the needs of their genetic
- profiles.
-
- One factor in all this appears to be the kind of low-density lipoprotein
- cholesterol, or LDL, that people produce. While LDL is generally known as
- the bad cholesterol, since it increases the risk of clogged arteries, it
- comes in two varieties.
-
- By far the worse is what experts call small, dense LDL. Between 20
- percent and 30 percent of adults make this kind of LDL. It is part of a
- syndrome that also often includes low levels of HDL, the protective good
- cholesterol, and high triglycerides, among other things.
-
- Those with small, dense LDL have what's known as a pattern B cholesterol
- profile. Their risk of heart disease is about three times higher than the
- majority of Americans, who have larger LDL and are considered to be
- pattern A.
-
- Krauss put 105 men on a low-fat diet in which 24 percent of calories came
- from fat. This is close to what's typically achieved with AHA's more
- rigorous Step 2 diet, intended for those who have trouble lowering their
- cholesterol.
-
- He found that men with pattern B cholesterol responded strongly to the
- low-fat diet, significantly improving their cholesterol levels. However,
- those with more normal pattern A showed little or no benefit.
-
- Indeed, about 40 percent of them actually shifted from pattern A to
- pattern B. Their protective HDL dropped significantly, and they developed
- the small, dense LDL.
-
- ``This may give some caution to very low-fat diets in these
- individuals,'' said Krauss.
-
- For now, doctors cannot easily determine whether their patients are
- pattern A or pattern B, although Krauss said such tests should soon be
- available.
-
- Dr. Jan Breslow of Rockefeller University questioned whether the
- apparently damaging effects seen among the pattern A men on low-fat diets
- truly will put them at higher risk of heart trouble.
-
- He noted that large population studies generally conclude that the less
- fat people eat, the lower their risk.
-
- ``This is a big raging debate,'' he said, that will require more research
- to settle.
-
-
-
- </pre>
-
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