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- Woman Gets Jail for Cat Killings
-
- KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -- A Missouri woman is going to jail for four months
- -- for
- stabbing to death a cat and five kittens.
-
- The woman said she wanted to teach her son a lesson, after he became
- fascinated
- with knives.
-
- But court records say Vicki Hill had become fed up with the commotion that
- the cat
- family was causing in her small duplex.
-
- Her 6-year-old son was traumatized by the incident -- and he's been in
- state custody
- at a group home ever since.
-
- Hill claims that she's really an animal lover -- and that ``no one has
- suffered more''
- than she has. But animal-rights activists are applauding the sentence.
-
- Prosecutors say the case has generated more calls and letters than most
- murder
- cases.
- Date: Sun, 30 Mar 1997 02:06:54 -0500 (EST)
- >From: LMANHEIM@aol.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Fwd: Woman Gets Jail for Cat Killings
- Message-ID: <970330020654_-901644389@emout06.mail.aol.com>
-
- Mommy Dearest!....
-
- In a message dated 97-03-29 22:00:03 EST, AOLNewsProfiles@aol.net writes:
-
- << Subj:Woman Gets Jail for Cat Killings
- Date:97-03-29 22:00:03 EST
- From:AOLNewsProfiles@aol.net
-
- .c The Associated Press
-
- KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - A Missouri woman is going to jail for
- four months - for stabbing to death a cat and five kittens.
- The woman said she wanted to teach her son a lesson, after he
- became fascinated with knives.
- But court records say Vicki Hill had become fed up with the
- commotion that the cat family was causing in her small duplex.
- Her 6-year-old son was traumatized by the incident - and he's
- been in state custody at a group home ever since.
- Hill claims that she's really an animal lover - and that ``no
- one has suffered more'' than she has. But animal-rights activists
- are applauding the sentence.
- Prosecutors say the case has generated more calls and letters
- than most murder cases. >>
-
-
- ---------------------
- Forwarded message:
- >From:AOLNewsProfiles@aol.net
- Date: 97-03-29 22:00:03 EST
-
- <HTML><PRE><I>.c The Associated Press</I></PRE></HTML>
-
- KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - A Missouri woman is going to jail for
- four months - for stabbing to death a cat and five kittens.
- The woman said she wanted to teach her son a lesson, after he
- became fascinated with knives.
- But court records say Vicki Hill had become fed up with the
- commotion that the cat family was causing in her small duplex.
- Her 6-year-old son was traumatized by the incident - and he's
- been in state custody at a group home ever since.
- Hill claims that she's really an animal lover - and that ``no
- one has suffered more'' than she has. But animal-rights activists
- are applauding the sentence.
- Prosecutors say the case has generated more calls and letters
- than most murder cases.
- AP-NY-03-29-97 2148EST
- <HTML><PRE><I><FONT COLOR="#000000 SIZE=2>Copyright 1997 The Associated
- Press. The information
- contained in the AP news report may not be published,
- broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without
- prior written authority of The Associated Press.<FONT COLOR="#000000
- SIZE=3></I></PRE></HTML>
-
-
- To edit your profile, go to keyword NewsProfiles.
- For all of today's news, go to keyword News.
-
- Date: Mon, 31 Mar 1997 03:15:41 -0500
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) A Poodle Named Louie Stirs Up a Real Dogfight in New York
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970331031538.006bdd80@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from WashingtonPost.com:
- ----------------------------------------
- A Poodle Named Louie Stirs Up a Real Dogfight in New York
-
- By Blaine Harden
- Washington Post Staff Writer
- Sunday, March 30 1997; Page A03
- The Washington Post
-
- NEW YORK, March 29 -- There are a million dogs in the naked
- city. This is the story of one of them. Be warned. It deals
- with mature themes of sex, violence and urban planning.
-
- His name is Louie. He's a black, unneutered, 6-year-old
- standard poodle of excellent pedigree who as a puppy sold for
- $700. He grew up with a urologist and his wife in their
- splendid four-bedroom, prewar apartment that overlooks
- Washington Square Park. It was down in that Greenwich Village
- quadrangle, where rappers schmooze with chess masters as
- nannies coo over the children of investment bankers, that
- Louie came to grief.
-
- The poodle is alleged to have provoked a dogfight in the park,
- a blood-spattered encounter that the urologist's wife says
- left Louie "scarred for life." The fight took place a year
- ago, but it echoes still in the daily lives of all New York
- dogs who love to run, wrestle and sniff under each other's
- tails without having to wear a leash.
-
- Furthermore, the fallout from Louie's fight has confronted New
- Yorkers with fundamental questions about urban life: Should
- dogs be allowed off leash in a densely populated city? What
- slice of a city's precious green space should be reserved
- exclusively for dogs? And what is to be done with a handsome
- dog who is beloved by its owners but known in the neighborhood
- as a promiscuous bully?
-
- For such was Louie's unsavory reputation prior to his fight on
- March 5, 1996.
-
- "Louie is a beautiful dog. He is an expensive dog. But he
- wants to mount everything in sight," said Maureen Byrne, a dog
- owner who knows Louie.
-
- Much of the poodle's problematic romancing took place inside
- the confines of the dog run at Washington Square Park. That
- dog run -- one of 16 in the city, with seven more under
- construction -- is a relatively new wrinkle in the management
- of what is by far the largest urban park system in the
- country.
-
- Dog runs address what Parks Commissioner Henry J. Stern says
- is "one of the most contentious issues in running the parks.
- We have dog lovers and dog haters. The dog lovers want the
- dogs to run free. The dog haters can't stand the sight, the
- sound or the smell of them."
-
- It may be impossible to overstate the ubiquity of dogs in this
- city, especially in the concrete confines of Manhattan. They
- reside in one of every three apartments, according to the
- ASPCA, and it is difficult to walk down a hallway in any
- residential building without setting off paroxysms of snarling
- and barking from behind closed doors. Dog urine and feces
- stain nearly every sidewalk. From Harlem to Wall Street, warm
- spring days scream with the odor of dog.
-
- During the work day, armies of dog walkers (at $15 an hour)
- clog the parks. In the pre-dawn morning and all through the
- night, panting, barking, drooling canines drag around hundreds
- of thousands of blurry-eyed owners. Manhattan even has a sweet
- shop exclusively for dogs. The Bow-Wow bakery on East 54th
- Street offers salt- and sugar-free quiche flavored with
- chicken liver.
-
- Dog runs came to the city in 1989 as a way to give dogs a
- separate peace. Surrounded by a chain-link fence, surfaced
- with gravel and supplied with long-handled pooper scoopers,
- dog runs give unleashed dogs an opportunity to gratify their
- highly social pack animal instincts in a way that does not
- torment dog haters.
-
- Dog runs, too, have become sanctuaries for dog owners. They
- are a convenient and safe place for like-minded people to
- share the trials of keeping a high-maintenance beast in a
- small apartment. Washington Square's dog run, with its many
- fashion models and actors and artists who own dogs, has become
- an excellent place to find a date.
-
- A bad dog, though, can ruin everything.
-
- "Not every dog is dog friendly," explained Jane Kopelman, an
- animal behavior counselor for the ASPCA in New York. "There
- are dogs who cannot read dog body language, who cannot tell
- when another dog is telling them, `Hey, you have stepped over
- the line here. Back off!' "
-
- According to several witnesses, Louie is this kind of dog.
-
- He began frequenting the dog run at Washington Square 5 1/2
- years ago. From the beginning, according to witnesses, he had
- an irritating habit of mounting dogs of all breeds, male and
- female. Being a poodle (generally acknowledged as the most
- intelligent breed of dog), Louie was smarter than most of his
- would-be paramours. In many cases, he was also bigger.
-
- Louie routinely provoked resentful mewling, angry growls and
- brief eruptions of faux biting before he could be separated
- from other dogs. A year ago, however, violence spiraled out of
- control.
-
- "Louie's big fight occurred when I was busy talking," recalls
- Alice Amelar, the urologist's wife and primary caretaker of
- the poodle. "I never saw that dog before who got into it with
- him. Suddenly, Louie is covered with blood and everybody in
- the dog run is yelling at me for having such a vicious dog.
- Louie was bred to be calm. He is an incredibly docile dog. But
- he is not a wimp. My detractors are wimps."
-
- Louie suffered a nasty chomp on the nose. Later, his
- veterinarian strongly suggested that Louie never return to the
- dog run. His owner decided to write a letter of protest to the
- parks commissioner, police and local community board. That
- letter has caused many Gotham dog owners to get red in the
- face and lose sleep. It says that all dog runs should be
- dismantled.
-
- "Dog runs in New York City do not work," Amelar wrote.
- "Unleashed dogs in a confined area all want to be top dog
- whether or not they have been [neutered]. I don't think the
- answer is to allow dogs off the leash where they destroy the
- grass and flowers. I do not know what the answer is. I do know
- dog runs are not the answer."
-
- That letter rattled around harmlessly in the city bureaucracy
- until last month, when it surfaced at a public hearing as
- evidence for not building a new dog run in lower Manhattan.
- News of the letter's existence triggered a rapid-response
- mobilization from dog-run devotees across the city.
-
- Sixty of them -- dog owners who serve as officers in volunteer
- associations that keep dog runs tidy and feces-free -- packed
- a public hearing last month. They were beside themselves with
- indignation. They said hurtful things about Louie, about his
- owner and about city government in general.
-
- "Louie has tormented the other dogs in the Washington Square
- dog run for years," said Monay Germaine, the presiding officer
- for a dog run at Tompkin's Square Park and a professional dog
- walker. "Mrs. Amelar has ignored the pleas of her fellow dog
- owners because she claimed it was never Louie's fault.
- Finally, one day Louie met his match. Now, she says all dog
- runs must go, they don't work! I suppose if Louie was a child
- and the playground bully, and he got bested, then she'd want
- all the playgrounds closed down."
-
- Germaine and other dog-run supporters suspect a conspiracy by
- unnamed power brokers in the city to squelch the dog-run
- movement. Parks Commissioner Stern says he does not take
- Boomer, his unneutered golden retriever, to dog runs because
- Boomer tends to get into fights. Nevertheless, Stern insists
- he supports dog runs and believes them to be a useful and
- appropriate innovation in urban design.
-
- Dog-run supporters remain suspicious. They are busily writing
- newsletters on the Louie-inspired threat and girding for
- another public hearing in April.
-
- Louie's owner, meanwhile, continues to insist on Louie's
- innocence, as regards last year's fight. She accepts the
- poodle's de facto banishment from the dog run at Washington
- Square but frequently takes Louie for a walk within barking
- distance of it.
-
- "Rumors of Louie's aggressiveness are entirely apocryphal,"
- Amelar said. "I thoroughly enjoy taking Louie to the park and
- snubbing everyone. It is my delight."
-
- Date: Sun, 30 Mar 1997 00:33:24 -0800 (PST)
- >From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Vancouver protest
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970330003432.0d9fc0c2@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- VANCOUVER, BC - As part of the 'Easter Bunnies Around The World' ( World Day
- of Action against Proctor & Gamble), 30 activists participated in a peaceful
- demonstration and public information session outside the Vancouver Art
- Gallery on Robson Street Saturday.
-
- The protesters were not put off by less than perfect weather - cold & rain -
- and received a good response from passers-by, many of whom signed a petition
- against the continued use of animal testing.
-
- Local media, including CBC-TV, UTV, and radio stations CkWX and CFRO covered
- the demo.
-
-
-
-
- Date: Sun, 30 Mar 1997 05:11:45 -0500 (EST)
- >From: Paul Shapiro <shapiro5@CapAccess.org>
- To: AR-News <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: COK DELAYS RINGLING BROS!!!
- Message-ID: <Pine.SUN.3.91-FP.970330051101.4820B-100000@cap1.capaccess.org>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
-
- While more than 50 activists from Compassion Over Killing (COK)
- protested in DC this past Saturday against the Ringling Bros. circus,
- five COK activists locked themselves together with steel pipes on the
- loading dock where the animals are brought into the arena.
- It took police approximately two hours to remove the five
- activists from the loading dock, thereby seriously delaying the show.
- While some animals were able to be skirted around the activists, the
- majority could not be used.
- However, the circus did manage to retaliate by strategically
- placing a blocked elephant just uphill from the activists and allowing her
- to urinate. Needless to say, all five activists continued to lay boldly,
- as they marinated in elephant urine for more than an hour.
- The five activists arrested are: Dan Beben, Miyun Park, Paul
- Shapiro, Ryan Shapiro, and Franklin Wade. After being held in police custody
- for nearly 11 hours, all five were released on their own recognizance.
- Miyun, Ryan and Franklin were all charged with "unlawful entry" and have
- court dates set for April 22nd. All charges against Dan and Paul were
- dropped, as they are both minors.
- NBC, Fox, and ABC all had clips on the evening news regarding
- the demo and CD. Local radio station WTOP also had updates every
- thirty minutes letting listeners know what the situation was. These
- updates inlcluded interviews with COK spokesperson Mike Markarian.
- In all, it was a great day for the animals who had part of the
- day off as a result of COK's event.
-
- Date: Sun, 30 Mar 1997 08:23:29 -0800
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: E-Coli outbreak & government inaction in UK
- Message-ID: <333E9381.59FA@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- British government slammed by E-coli report
-
- Agence France-Presse
-
- LONDON (Mar 29, 1997 7:37 p.m. EST) - A report on an outbreak of food
- poisoning in Scotland last year in which 18 people died after eating
- food contaminated with E-coli germs, is severely critical of government
- action, The Sunday Times reported.
-
- The report, due to be published later this week, said the government had
- failed to implement reforms to improve hygiene in the food industry
- because of the high costs involved.
-
- A commission led by Professor Hugh Pennington, particularly criticises
- the "softly softly approach" of the Ministry of Agriculture.
-
- Pennington told The Sunday Times that "the government was quite relaxed
- about the implementation because clearly it was technically difficult
- and it cost money and would have had a big effect on the industry."
-
- The E-coli epidemic broke out in November in the Glasgow region of
- Scotland and was traced to a butcher in Wishaw who supplied several
- other butchers and delikatessen shops in the region with meat and
- ready-cooked dishes.
-
- More than 500 people were affected by the outbreak and 18 died.
-
- In January, the government announced a thorough overhaul of hygiene
- rules in the food sector and promised additional funds for research into
- E-coli 0157 bacteria and its consequences.
-
- However only last week, the government was accused of having tried in
- 1996 to cover up a damaging report about poor hygiene at certain
- slaughterhouses. In particular the report spoke of meat being
- contaminated by faeces.
-
- The E-coli bacteria is found in cattle and is spread by eating
- contaminated meat and dairy produce. It can also be transmitted between
- humans by poor hygiene. Young children and old people are most
- vulnerable.
- Date: Sun, 30 Mar 1997 08:55:26 -0800
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: "Not a moral threat but an exciting challenge"
- Message-ID: <333E9AFE.475E@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- BMJ No 7085 Volume 314 (British Medical Journal)
-
- Editorial Saturday 29 March 1997
-
- The promise of cloning for human medicine
-
- Not a moral threat but an exciting challenge
-
- The production of a sheep clone, Dolly, from an adult somatic cell(1) is
- a stunning achievement of British science. It also holds great promise
- for human medicine. Sadly, the media have sensationalised the
- implications, ignoring the huge potential of this experiment.
- Accusations that scientists have been working secretively and without
- the chance for public debate are invalid. Successful cloning was
- publicised in 1975,(2) and it is over eight years since Prather et al
- published details of the first piglet clone after nuclear transfer.(3)
-
- Missing from much of the debate about Dolly is recognition that she is
- not an identical clone. Part of our genetic material comes from the
- mitochondria in the cytoplasm of the egg. In Dolly's case only the
- nuclear DNA was transferred. Moreover, we are a product of our
- nurture as much as our genetic nature. Monovular twins are genetically
- closer than are artificially produced clones, and no one could deny that
- such twins have quite separate identities.
-
- Dolly's birth provokes fascinating questions. How old is she? Her
- nuclear DNA gives her potentially adult status, but her mitochondria are
- those of a newborn. Mitochrondia are important in the aging process
- because aging is related to acquired mutations in mitochondrial DNA,
- possibly caused by oxygen damage during an individual's life.(4)
- Experimental nuclear transfer in animals and in human cell lines could
- help elucidate mechanisms for many of these processes.
-
- Equally extraordinary is the question concerning the role of the egg's
- cytoplasm in mammalian development. Once the quiescent nucleus had
- been transferred to the recipient egg cell, developmental genes
- expressed only in very early life were switched on. There are likely to
- be powerful factors in the cytoplasm of the egg that make this happen.
- Egg cytoplasm is perhaps the new royal jelly. Studying why and how
- these genes switch on would give important information about both
- human development and genetic disease.
-
- Research on nuclear transfer into human eggs has immense clinical
- value. Here is a model for learning more about somatic cell
- differentiation. If, in due course, we could influence differentiation
- to give rise to targeted cell types we might generate many tissues of
- great value in transplantation. These could include skin and blood
- cells, and possibly neuronal tissue, for the treatment of injury, for
- bone marrow transplants for leukaemia, and for degenerative diseases
- such as Parkinson's disease. One problem to be overcome is the existence
- of histocompatibility antigens encoded by mitochondrial DNA,(5) but
- there may be various ways of altering their expression. Cloning
- techniques might also be useful in developing transgenic animals-for
- example, for human xenotransplantation.
-
- There are also environmental advantages in pursuing this technology.
- Mention has been made of the use of these methods to produce dairy
- herds and other livestock. This would be of limited value because
- animals with genetic diversity derived by sexual reproduction will
- always be preferable to those produced asexually. The risk of a line of
- farm animals prone to a particular disease would be ever present.
- However, cloning offers real prospects for preservation of endangered
- or rare species.
-
- In human reproduction, cloning techniques could offer prospects to
- sufferers from intractable infertility. At present there is no
- treatment, for example, for those men who exhibit total germ cell
- failure. Clearly it is far fetched to believe that we are now able to
- reproduce the process of meiosis, but it may be possible in future to
- produce a haploid cell from the male which could be used for
- fertilisation of female gametes. Even if straight cloning techniques
- were used, the mother would contribute important constituents-her
- mitochondrial genes, intrauterine influences, and subsequent nurture.
-
- Regulation of cloning is needed, but British law already covers this.
- Talk of "legal loopholes"(6) is wrong. The Human Fertilisation and
- Embryology Act may need modification, but there is no particular
- urgency. A precipitate ban on human nuclear transfer would, for
- example, prevent the use of in vitro fertilisation and preimplantation
- diagnosis for those couples at risk of having children who have
- appalling mitochondrial diseases.(7) Self regulation and legislation
- already work well. Apart from any other consideration, it seems highly
- unlikely that doctors would transfer human clones to the uterus out of
- simple self interest. Many of the animal clones that have been produced
- show serious developmental abnormalities,(8) and, apart from ethical
- considerations, doctors would not run the medicolegal risks involved.
- Transgenic technology has been with us for 20 years, but no clinician
- has been foolish enough to experiment with human germ cell therapy.
- The production of Dolly should not be seen as a moral threat, but rather
- as an exciting challenge. To answer this good science with a knee jerk
- political reaction, as did President Clinton recently,(9) shows poor
- judgment. In a society which is still scientifically illiterate, the
- onus is on researchers to explain the potential good that can be gained
- in the laboratory.
-
- References
-
- 1 Wilmut T, Schnieke A K, McWhir J, Kind A J, Campbell K H S.Viable
- offspring derived from fetal and adult mammalian cells. Nature
- 1997;385:810-3.
-
- 2 Gurdon J B, Laskey R A, Reeves O R. The developmental capacity
- of nuclei transplanted from keratinised skin cells of adult frogs. J
- Embryol Exp Morph 1975;34:93-112.
-
- 3 Prather R S, Simms M M, First N L. Nuclear transplantation in early
- pig embryos. Biol Reprod 1989;41:414-8.
-
- 4 Ozawa T. Mitochondrial DNA mutations associated with aging and
- degenerative diseases. Exp Gerontol 1995;30:269-90.
-
- 5 Dabhi V M, Lindahl K F. MtDNA-encoded histocompatibility
- antigens. Methods Enzymol 1995;260:466-85.
-
- 6 Masood E. Cloning technique "reveals legal loophole." Nature
- 1997;385:757.
-
- 7 Winston R M, Handyside A H. New challenges in human in vitro
- fertilization. Science 1993;260:932-6.
-
- 8 Campbell K H S, McWhir J, Ritchie W A, Wilmut I. Sheep cloned
- by nuclear transfer from a cultured cell line. Nature 1996;380:64-6.
-
- 9 Wise J. Sheep cloned from mammary gland cells. BMJ
- 1997;314:623.
-
- Robert Winston
- Professor of fertility studies
-
- Institute of Obstetrics and Gynaecology,
- Hammersmith Hospital,
- London W12 0HS
- Date: Sun, 30 Mar 1997 21:37:08 +0000
- >From: "L.I.D.A." <mc8410@mclink.it>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Messaggio Idella LIDA via INTERNET al Papa
- Message-ID: <199703302028.WAA24016@ammi.mclink.it>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT
-
- A Sua Santita'
- Giovanni Paolo II
- Citta' di Vaticano
-
- Santo Padre, nell'inviarLe un affettuoso augurio per la S. Pasqua Le
- chiedo di intervenire nei confronti di quei Vescovi e Parroci che in
- Italia e altrove, forse per opportunismo o per timore di turbare
- tradizioni e coscienze, non dicono una parola sulla strage che si fa
- ogni giorno di animali innocenti per soddisfare la gola degli uomini e
- per lo strazio di altri animali sacrificati e torturati in feste
- incivili e sanguinarie effettuate in nome della Madonna e di Santi e
- Patroni. Cio' accade particolarmente nella Cattolica Spagna con la
- benedizione dei sacerdoti. Cristo, che mostro' nell'ultima Cena il pane
- e il vino quali cibi gia' naturalmente puri e degni del divino, durante
- la Sua vita ebbe a volte momenti di ribellione di fronte a
- comportamenti umani ingiusti o errati.
- Si ribelli anche Lei con la passione e con la dolcezza che trapelano dal
- suo desiderio di giustizia e di vera Pace.
- Grazie Papa
-
- Laura Girardello
- coordinatore LIDA
-
-
- LIDAmatic
- http://www.mclink.it/assoc/lida
- lida@mclink.it
- Date: Sun, 30 Mar 1997 18:27:58 -0500 (EST)
- >From: Debbie Leahy <DLEAHY@delphi.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [US] Elephant Rides Canceled
- Message-ID: <01IH4G4WMUXE9LWDRA@delphi.com>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT
-
-
- Illinois Animal Action - NEWS RELEASE
-
- FESTIVAL CANCELS ELEPHANT RIDES
- Animal Protectionists Praise Committee's Decision
-
- SKOKIE, IL - Organizers of Skokie's Festival of Cultures
- have decided to discontinue elephant rides. The decision
- follows a meeting between Illinois Animal Action (IAA) and
- the festival's executive committee. The committee
- graciously allowed IAA to present its concerns during a
- private session held last week.
-
- "Clearly the celebration of cultural diversity is the
- product of a progressive community," says IAA president
- Debbie Leahy. "We are very pleased that the festival
- concluded elephants were not a necessary component to make
- this event a success."
-
- Performing elephants used for rides and circus tricks endure
- a miserable life of chains, confinement, and abusive
- training. Elephant rampages--and now the added danger of
- tuberculosis discovered in captive elephants--pose a very
- serious public safety issue.
-
- IAA is an all-volunteer, non-profit, animal rights
- organization dedicated to promoting the humane and ethical
- treatment of animals.
-
- ###
-
-
- Illinois Animal Action, Inc.
- P.O. Box 507
- Warrenville, IL 60555
- 630/393-2935
- Date: Sun, 30 Mar 1997 16:54:39 -0800
- >From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Hunter-turned-rhino-rescuer dies at 67
- Message-ID: <333F0B4F.41B7@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Hunter-turned-rhino-rescuer dies at 67
-
- The Associated Press
-
- LONDON (Mar 30, 1997 12:31 p.m. EST) -- Count Maurice Rudolf Coreth von
- und zu Coredo und Starkenberg, a big game hunter-turned-conservationist
- who helped save Kenya's black rhinoceros from extinction, has died. He
- was 67.
-
- Coreth died Feb. 11, according to The Daily Telegraph. It did not give
- the cause of death.
-
- Born in Austria in 1929, Coreth moved to England in 1936 to escape the
- Nazis. He bought a farm in Kenya in 1954 and for many years hunted game
- in the African bush and went on safaris in sub-Saharan Africa.
-
- When Kenya gained independence from Britain in 1963, Coreth gave up his
- farm and returned to England.
-
- In 1985, he attended a meeting of the Shikar Club, a group of former
- African and Indian hunters living in Britain, and listened to a speech
- about the number of rhinos killed by poaching.
-
- A year later, Coreth founded Rhino Rescue, which is still dedicated to
- saving the black rhino from extinction. The group also organizes
- projects to save the tiger and India's one-horned rhino.
-
- As a result of his efforts, a game preserve for rhinos was established
- in Kenya and tough anti-poaching operations were initiated in Zimbabwe
- and Namibia.
-
- Coreth also had a lifelong love of the sea.
-
- An accomplished yachtsman, he spent 63 days sailing from Rio de Janeiro
- to Cape Town, South Africa, after leaving Kenya. He later worked as a
- charter skipper in the Seychelles before sailing the Mediterranean Sea.
-
- He is survived by his wife, three sons and a daughter.
- Date: Sun, 30 Mar 1997 23:16:18 -0500
- >From: Wyandotte Animal Group <wag@heritage.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Canada Mink Farm Liberated?
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19970331041618.24174bfe@mail.heritage.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- A news report in Detroit just said that some 1,000 mink were released today
- from a Canadian mink farm with most of them being found and returned. 5
- Michigan activists have been arrested in connection with the raid, they
- reported.
-
- Does anyone have any other info on this and a list of the arrestees?
-
- Jason Alley
- Wyandotte Animal Group
- wag@heritage.com
-
- Date: Mon, 31 Mar 1997 23:54:53 -0500
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (CA) Tiger Escapes in Ontario, Canada
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970331235451.0068ee2c@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from NY Times web page:
- ------------------------------------------
- March 30, 1997
-
- Tiger Escapes in Ontario, Canada
-
- Filed at 10:04 p.m. EST
-
- By The Associated Press
-
- BARRIE, Ontario (AP) -- An 800-pound Siberian tiger
- escaped Sunday from an exotic animal farm on the
- western outskirts of this city, and police warned
- residents to stay indoors.
-
- Zarak, a 4-year-old male, was described as being
- docile. He has been in captivity all his life.
-
- Zarak was delivered to the Bear Creek Exotics animal
- farm Saturday evening and escaped by scaling a fence
- about noon Sunday.
-
- Bear Creek Exotics, about a mile west of Barrie, is
- owned by a man who started collecting exotic animals
- about six years ago.
-
- Police officers aided by a helicopter called off a
- search at the end of the day, but sharpshooters were to
- remain at the farm overnight. A bait trail was laid out
- to lure Zarak into a cage.
-
- Barrie is about 50 miles north of Toronto.
-
-
-
-
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