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- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Sunday, November 2nd, 1997
-
- Dambusters of Ganges declare Hindu holy war
- By Julian West in Hardwar
-
- AN army of Indian holy men, brandishing Shiva tridents, is storming up the
- Ganges in a motorised amphibious temple to wage war on a dam.
-
- In what promises to be an epic battle between Hindu traditionalism and
- progress, the sadhus have sworn to tear apart the dam with their bare hands
- if construction is not halted.
-
- Issuing fearsome cries of "Ganga Mata ki Jai" - "victory to Mother Ganges"
- - the dreadlocked holy men are currently travelling up the 1,500-mile river
- on a 70ft motor launch decked out as a temple, complete with a statue of
- the river goddess Ganga, whipping up agitation against the Tehri dam in the
- upper reaches of the river.
-
- They are drawing massive crowds along their route, which stretches from the
- mouth of the Ganges in the Bay of Bengal to the river's headwaters in
- Gangotri. Indians revere the mighty Ganges as the holiest of India's many
- sacred rivers and thousands of Hindus in holy towns along the river, like
- Hardwar and Varanasi, sing prayers to the Ganges at dusk.
-
- The Tehri dam was first conceived almost 20 years ago. But it has been
- mired in controversy from the outset: mainly over the million people it
- will displace, the risk of flooding and the threat of earthquake damage in
- the seismically active Himalayas. Construction has been
- halted many times by anti-dam activists, and work on concreting the
- 260-metre barrage has only just begun.
-
- The thousands of holy men camping in the many pilgrimage towns downstream,
- as well as many residents, fear that if the dam is breached riverside towns
- such as Rishikesh and Hardwar would be inundated in minutes.
-
- But what incenses the sadhus is what they call a violation of the purity of
- the goddess Ganga. "Ganges is the holy nectar that flows from the lotus
- feet of the god Vishnu, the hands of the god Brahma and the hair of the god
- Shiva," rapsodised holy men on the banks of the river in Hardwar last week.
- "She is the liquid goddess Mother Ganga."
-
- They maintain that the barrage will "enchain the holy goddess" and that the
- 25-mile reservoir will be a catchment for "all manner of impious things",
- such as sewage from villages and, in particular, monsoon rain.
-
- One holy man explained that during the two-month summer monsoon, when the
- river swirls with brown silt, the millions of sadhus who worship the Ganges
- stop their prayers, believing that the river goddess is having her period.
- "We don't worship that water," said Swami
- Shyamsunderadas Shavtri.
-
- What is not clear is why the holy men have only now decided to act. The
- Ganges is already one of the world's most polluted rivers, choked with
- effluent from tanneries and chemical plants along the banks, floating
- animal carcasses and dead bodies with vultures perched on
- them. A campaign to launch carnivorous turtles into the river to eat the
- corpses failed when the turtles themselves were hunted for soup.
-
- Nonetheless, at a World Hindu Conference in Hardwar 10 days ago, attended
- by King Birendra of Nepal, 50,000 holy men vowed to halt the Tehri dam. A
- second, mammoth gathering of sadhus, in eight days, is planned in
- Allahabad, where the amphibious temple will temporarily halt.
-
- As a next step, Swami Chinmayananda, the campaign's chairman, is
- threatening to mobilise India's estimated two million holy men - from
- fearsome naked Naga Babas to trident-wielding Shiva sadhus - at the massive
- Kumbh Mela religious festival in Allahabad early next year. "I demand the
- government of India stops this dam," said Swami
- Chinmayananda. "If they don't listen to me, the holy men will take action."
-
- The Swami commands support from a number of powerful Right-wing Hindu MPs
- from the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party. And it is unlikely that the
- government will entirely dismiss his threat. In 1992, fanatical grassroots
- supporters of the BJP demolished the three domes
- of the Babri mosque in Ayodhya with their bare hands in 45 minutes.
-
- So far, the Tehri dam has withstood one earthquake, in 1991, without
- apparent damage. But even its seismically proofed foundations may not be
- able to withstand a horde of angry holy men.
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- Date: Sun, 02 Nov 1997 06:21:46 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Sheriff suspects animal rights activists freed minks
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971102062144.006d42d8@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- More details on the story from last week.
- from Newsworks http://search.newsworks.com/
- --------------------------------------------
- Sheriff suspects animal rights activists freed minks
-
-
- MEDFORD, WIS.
-
- Raids on three Wisconsin farms over the weekend,
- loosing thousands of minks into the wild, may be
- linked to an animal rights group that has claimed
- credit for mink-farm raids across the country,
- officials said Tuesday.
-
- Federal agents have joined the search because the
- raids may be part of a nationwide campaign targeting
- fur ranchers across the country, Taylor County
- Sheriff Bill Breneman said.
-
- ``We look at this as an act of domestic terrorism,''
- he said.
-
- Over the weekend, three mink farms were hit in
- Wisconsin, the nation's leader in producing mink
- pelts. About 800 minks were released from the Smieja
- Fur Farm near Independence, and on Sunday more than
- 300 were loosed from the Ott Mink Ranch near Tomahawk
- and about 3,000 from the Jack Dittrich farm near
- Medford in Taylor County.
-
- Breneman said the underground Animal Liberation Front
- was among the suspects, but no one had claimed
- responsibility by Tuesday afternoon.
-
- Activists trying to free domesticated minks are
- simply harming the animals, the sheriff said.
-
- ``These animals are not conditioned to survive being
- turned loose in the wild,'' he said. ``It is like
- someone dumping off their cat or dog. They are not
- doing a humane act here.''
-
- In October alone, minks have been freed at ranches in
- Oregon, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa and South Dakota.
-
- The vandalism near Medford was similar to animal
- releases in the past that the Animal Liberation Front
- has claimed responsibility for.
-
- The group's web page says ``the Animal Liberation
- Front carries out direct action against animal
- abusing in the form of rescuing animals and causing
- financial loss to animal exploiters, usually through
- the damage and destruction of property.''
-
- Several days after 5,000 minks and some foxes were
- released in the early hours of Oct. 6 from a Preston,
- Ore., ranch, the Animal Liberation Front claimed
- responsibility.
-
- ``The cages were opened and nesting boxes were
- removed,'' the group said in a notice. ``The minks
- quickly climbed out of their prison cells, jumped to
- the earth, and excitedly ran through the fields,
- enjoying their first taste of freedom, ever.''
-
- The Liberation Front said it was the 38th such
- release it has committed in the United States in the
- last two years.
-
- Police in Wisconsin are searching for the drivers of
- a red, four-door Geo Metro and a red Dodge Neon who
- were reportedly ``acting suspicious'' around mink
- ranches, Breneman said.
-
- A red Geo with out-of-state license plates was seized
- in Sheboygan County Tuesday, but no person was taken
- into custody, according to Sheboygan Sheriff's
- Department Capt. David Adams.
-
- All but about 500 of the minks freed at the Dittrich
- ranch near Medford had been recovered by Tuesday
- afternoon, said Joan Dittrich, Jack's wife.
-
- ``Hopefully, we will get them all. We are working on
- it,'' she said.
-
- Alex Ott Jr., the owner of the Ott Mink farm, said
- there wasn't any graffiti or indication at his ranch
- that animal rights activists were behind the
- break-in. But they did know what they were doing, he
- said.
-
- ``If you start playing with latches at night, the
- minks attack the doors,'' he said. ``They probably
- wore leather gloves.''
-
- In Illinois, authorities discovered an e-mail
- circulated to animal rights activists saying that the
- Animal Liberation Front was behind an Oct. 5 raid
- that freed more than 5,000 minks from an Illinois
- ranch.
-
- On Oct. 17, about 3,000 minks were released from a
- South Dakota ranch after somebody cut a 20-foot
- section of fence.
-
- A motorist driving past Dittrich's farm at 3 a.m.
- Sunday noticed the minks streaming across the road,
- Breneman said The motorist alerted the family and
- they started trying to recapture the animals.
-
- Wisconsin produced 718,100 mink pelts in 1996 from
- the state's 74 mink ranches, state officials said.
- Utah was second with 585,000 pelts from 130 ranchers.
-
-
-
- Date: Sun, 02 Nov 1997 06:31:20 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Defense lawyer calls animal rights activist a "standout
- freak'
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971102063118.006e53f4@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from News works http://www.newsworks.com/
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- Defense lawyer calls animal rights activist a "standout freak'
-
- Trial begins for man accused in incident at West Haven fur company
-
- October 24, 1997
- By TIM GURRISTER
- Standard-Examiner staff
-
- OGDEN -- A defense lawyer asked a 2nd District Court jury not to convict
- his animal rights activist client Thursday because he's a "standout freak"
- with beliefs outside mainstream culture.
-
- In his opening statement, lawyer Geoffrey Clark also promised an alibi
- witness for Trev J. Poulson, who is accused of attempted aggravated arson
- at a West Haven fur company.
-
- Conversely, as Poulson's two- day trial on the second-degree felony began,
- the prosecution said Poulson gave them a detailed confession for the
- incident March 19th at the Montgomery Fur Co., 1678 S. 1900 West.
-
- Deputy Weber County Attorney Gary Heward said two accomplices were ready to
- testify against Poulson. He faces up to 15 years in prison if found guilty.
-
- Agents from the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms joined the
- Weber County Sheriff's Office in investigating the foiled arson, meant as
- protest of harvesting animals for fur or meat.
-
- "We're not trying Mr. Poulson on his beliefs," Clark reminded the
- eight-person jury. "Keep that dear to your heart. . . . this young man is
- different. He's not normal. He's a standout freak.
-
- " . . . he subscribes to an online service for animal rights activists. He
- is anti-government. He is paranoid about law enforcement. He is paranoid
- about big bureaucracies. He subscribes to a magazine that accuses the ATF
- and the FBI of abuses, of planting evidence."
-
- According to the prosecution, Poulson, 19, of Layton, and an alleged
- accomplice were identified by a security guard at Montgomery Fur, who told
- police that he watched the two men pour an estimated 25 gallons of gasoline
- around the base of the building early the morning of March 19.
-
- As the suspects were preparing a one-gallon milk carton to use as a fuse,
- the night watchman yelled at the two men and they fled in a pickup truck.
-
- Terry Montgomery, the owner of the fur company, testified Thursday about
- two other "terroristic" incidents at the business. He said he sells hunting
- and trapping gear, plus "raw furs."
-
- Last November, Montgomery said he went to the office one night to discover
- the place had been broken into and gasoline had been splashed around the
- office.
-
- In January 1997, tires were slashed on several vehicles at the fur company.
- One vehicle had the letters ALF scratched on the body, which Montgomery
- said he took to stand for "Animal Liberation Front." After that, he said,
- he hired a security guard.
-
- In news reports the ALF took credit for planning the abortive March 19
- incident.
-
- Clark said a witness will testify that Poulson was in Logan visiting her at
- the time of the crime.
-
- But Heward said that convicted co-conspirators Cameron M. Kraus, 18, of
- Centerville, and Bret G. Walton, 18, of Bountiful, will testify against
- Poulson.
-
- The trial reconvenes today.
- Date: Sun, 02 Nov 1997 06:40:27 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Skateboards, animal rights, music are his top passions
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971102064025.006e7c88@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from News works http://www.newsworks.com/
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- Skateboards, animal rights, music are his top passions
-
- ANDREW HEDRICK
-
- Where interviewed: Greer Skate Park, Palo Alto
- Occupation: Skateboarder
- Home: Half Moon Bay
- Age: 17
-
- What are you doing out here if you live in Half Moon Bay? ``I was bored
- today. I go to school at Foothill. It's right up there.''
-
- How long you been skate- boarding? ``Off and on for a couple of years but
- seriously the last couple
- of months. I skate usually two to five hours every day. It's just something
- you come out and
- have fun. Even if you're not good at it, you can still have fun doing it.
- There's no
- deepness or yoga to it. You're just thinking about doing different tricks,
- trying to jump over things.''
-
- What do you call a place like this? ``A bowl. It's nice to have a place
- like this you can go to in the daytime and skate because skateboarders are
- so looked down on, everywhere they go they call the cops and kick you out.
- I guess they associate skateboarding with hoodlums.''
-
- You're not a hoodlum. What other things do you do? ``I kickbox. I'm in a
- band, Gaea Bleeds. We play like a cross between metal and hard-core. I play
- the
- drums. We just went down to L.A. We get paid for playing, but we're not
- really signed. We're supposed to do a seven-inch, a compilation. But I
- don't really know if any of that's going to happen.''
-
- What are you studying? ``Math, philosophy and English right now. But I'm
- trying to major in philosophy and computer science. I'd like to go on and
- be a lawyer
- because I'm pretty heavily involved in animal rights and they always need
- lawyers.''
-
- And computers? ``It's something nice to fall back on.''
-
- What do you do about animal rights, Andrew? ``Protests. There's a really
- big one coming up the day after Thanksgiving, Fur Free Friday. It's the
- biggest
- shopping day of the whole year. Ours is going to take place in San
- Francisco, Union Square. There's four big stores there that all sell furs.
- I don't see any reason why we should have to kill innocent animals just to
- clothe somebody -- there's no reason, especially with fur, because of how
- tortured they are. I'm vegan; I don't consume, use or wear animal products
- of any kind.''
-
- You sound awfully busy with hours a day on your board, school, your music
- and protests. ``I also work a lot. I'm the security guard at a gated
- community down where I live.''
-
- You carry a gun? ``Oh, no. I open the front gate for people.''
-
- -- Mike Weiss
-
-
- Date: Sun, 02 Nov 1997 06:46:44 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Supervisors Unlikely To Stop Animal Sales S.F. board
- shows little interest in ban
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971102064642.0068c424@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from San Francisco Chronicle via News works http://www.newsworks.com/
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- Supervisors Unlikely To Stop Animal Sales S.F. board shows little interest
- in ban
-
- April Lynch, Chronicle Staff Writer
-
- Despite the uproar it has caused, San Francisco's proposed ban on the sale
- of live animals in food stores has about as much of a future as a chicken
- being eyed for purchase at the neighborhood poultry mart.
-
- Although city animal welfare officials voted Thursday to prohibit market
- owners from selling live creatures likely to end up as dinner, the Board of
- Supervisors still has the last word. And the board, backed by Chinatown
- merchants and community leaders angry with the proposal, doesn't seem
- inclined to give the idea much support.
-
- ``This ban is nonsense. . .and very divisive,'' Supervisor Tom Hsieh said
- yesterday. ``I don't think the board will support it, or even consider it.''
-
- The proposal approved by the Commission of Animal Control and Welfare would
- put an end to the sale of live chickens, frogs, turtles and other
- creatures. Live fish and shellfish, however, would be exempt. Since it
- first surfaced a few years ago, the idea has put some of San Francisco's
- most powerful groups at odds with each other.
-
- Many Chinese residents see the ban as a cultural insult and a shopping
- nightmare, something akin to closing down Italian delis because some people
- might be put off by the big hunks of prosciutto hanging from the ceiling.
-
- Chinese cooking puts a premium on fresh ingredients, even if that means
- having an animal killed at the store or at home. Many Chinese cooks would
- not serve their families a package of processed, plastic-wrapped,
- thawed-out chicken breasts from a big supermarket.
-
- ``If you think what Chinese stores do is bad, go look at a big chicken or
- steak farm and see what they do,'' said C. K. So, who works at a fresh
- seafood market along Clement Street. ``It is a lot worse, but people don't
- care because it is hidden.''
-
- But animal rights advocates who pushed for the ban say that the live animal
- markets are unnecessarily cruel. San Francisco's markets do not carry the
- same range of creatures as their counterparts in China, where badgers and
- dogs sit in cages awaiting their fate. But turtles, frogs and various live
- fowl are common.
-
- Animal rights supporters say the animals are kept in horrible conditions,
- with birds crammed into cages so tightly that they crush each other and
- frogs piled one on top of the other in big plastic bins. Animal advocates
- also want to make sure that animals are killed before they are skinned, cut
- up or have their shells ripped off.
-
- ``Stop the inhumane slaughter, and eliminate the crushing,'' said Richard
- Avanzino, president of the San Francisco SPCA. ``If they would do those
- things, we would find no necessity to call for a ban. It is not culture or
- national origin that causes shopkeepers to treat animals this way, it is
- profit margin.''
-
- With powerful Chinatown groups lobbying hard, most of the Board of
- Supervisors seems lined up against the ban. For the idea to go forward, a
- board member would need to sponsor it, and so far none has stepped forward.
- Mayor Willie Brown has taken no position on the issue, according to his
- press secretary, Kandace Bender.
-
- But the animal rights groups are no pushover. San Francisco's SPCA
- regularly gets national attention for its innovative programs, and has
- thousands of sponsors and volunteers. The group may help lead a drive to
- put the ban before the voters if the Board of Supervisors will not consider
- it.
-
- ``If we won't get a fair hearing, then our only recourse is the people,''
- Avanzino said. ``The community will have to be given a fair chance to make
- its own decision.''
- Date: Sun, 02 Nov 1997 06:51:56 -0500
- From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Group seeks end to pigeon-shooting event
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19971102065154.006eff70@pop3.clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- ref to Fund for Animals
- from Myrtle Beach Access via News works http://www.newsworks.com/
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- Group seeks end to pigeon-shooting event
-
- OXFORD, N.C. (AP) - Animal-rights activists are citing a century-old court
- ruling in demanding an end to a pigeon-shooting contest that lures
- contestants from as far away as Australia to a private farm here.
-
- The event is the Dogwood Invitational and 28-Gauge Championship. It's one
- of the country's last ''live shoots'' using real birds instead of clay
- targets. More than 100 hunters from all over the world attend the contest
- at the Dogwood Gun Club on John Malloy's farm.
-
- Animal-rights supporters say shooting thousands of live, helpless pigeons
- is cruel. And they've vowed not to let the pigeon shoot planned for next
- week take place.
-
- ''It's impossible to hold a live pigeon shoot without hundreds of
- violations of the animal cruelty law. These birds are maimed and killed for
- a contest, and hundreds of birds are neglected,'' said Angel Gambino,
- director of legal affairs for the Fund for Animals. ''It's illegal, immoral
- and simply must be stopped.''
-
- Most of the pigeons are only wounded by the shotgun pellets, then lie on
- the ground dying, the group said.
-
- Malloy said he doesn't understand why shooting pigeons is so controversial.
- The contest is a social gathering among friends, he said.
-
- ''This is a fairly small group of hunters, and these animal-rights people
- are commenting on something they know very little about,'' he said.
-
- Last week, Granville County Sheriff Marion Grissom got a letter from The
- Fund for Animals asking him to halt the contest.
-
- Grissom turned the letter over to Granville County District Attorney David
- Waters, who said the court ruling the animal-rights group cited is more
- than 100 years old and may not still apply. Waters said he will wait to
- hear from the state attorney general before making a decision.
- Date: Sun, 2 Nov 1997 22:40:26 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: BSE-UK 1980-1985
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19971102223232.319750f0@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- BSE - UK: 1980-1985
- *******************
-
-
- Date: Wed, 29 Oct 1997 18:47:41 -0800
-
- Source: Electronic Telegraph, October 30, 1997.
-
- Approximately 54,000 cows infected with Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy
- entered the food chain in Britain, in the years before the disease was
- identified in 1986, according to a new report.
-
- The study, published in the 30 October 1997 issue of the journal Nature
- (v389, p903) show people were exposed to the disease as early as 1980. Up
- to 54,000 infected animals were slaughtered for human consumption, before
- clinical onset of BSE, between 1980 and 1985.
-
- "Most of those animals were in the early stages of the incubation period so
- hopefully they were not very infectious," said Professor Roy Anderson of
- Oxford University.
-
- ===========================================
-
- Rabbit Information Service,
- P.O.Box 30,
- Riverton,
- Western Australia 6148
-
- Email> rabbit@wantree.com.au
-
- http://www.wantree.com.au/~rabbit/rabbit.htm
- (Rabbit Information Service website updated frequently)
-
- /`\ /`\
- (/\ \-/ /\)
- )6 6(
- >{= Y =}<
- /'-^-'\
- (_) (_)
- | . |
- | |}
- jgs \_/^\_/
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Sun, 2 Nov 1997 22:43:41 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (UK)BSE & CJD (NEW VARIANT), EVIDENCE FOR LINK
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19971102223545.3197405c@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- BSE & CJD (NEW VARIANT), EVIDENCE FOR LINK
- ******************************************
-
- Date: Tue, 28 Oct 1997
-
-
-
- The following is a press release (dated 15 October 1997) from the UK Health
- and Safety Executive issued after consideration of the recent research
- which indicated that mice infected with brain material from nvCJD patients
- exhibit patterns of disease that are apparently the same as those caused by
- BSE and different from normal CJD.
-
-
- 15 October 1997
-
- HSE ADVISES THAT BSE SHOULD BE CONSIDERED A BIOLOGICAL AGENT
- FOLLOWING
- RESEARCH LINK WITH NEW VARIANT CJD
-
- In the light of new research strengthening the link between BSE and new
- variant CJD (nvCJD), BSE must now be considered a biological agent (human
- pathogen) within the meaning of the Control of Substances Hazardous to
- Health (COSHH) Regulations 1994.
-
- The Advisory Committee on Dangerous Pathogens (ACDP) has drawn this
- conclusion after recent research showed that mice infected with brain
- material from nvCJD patients exhibit patterns of disease - incubation
- period and brain lesions - that are apparently the same as those caused by
- BSE and different from normal CJD.
-
- The ACDP believe that this, taken with other experimental data since March
- 1996, provides compelling evidence that nvCJD and BSE are caused by the
- same infectious agent and advise that in view of the severity of nvCJD, the
- BSE agent should be placed in the same hazard group (3 with derogation) as
- the agent responsible for CJD.
-
- BSE has yet to be formally added in the EC classification list under the
- Biological Agents Directive 90/679/EEC, but in the meantime, COSHH Schedule
- 9 requires that employers make their own classification of any agent that
- is not listed in the Approved List of Biological Agents or the ACDP
- publication "Categorisation of biological agents according to hazard and
- categories of containment."
-
- To date there have been no confirmed cases of occupational transmission of
- either BSE or CJD and none of the cases of nvCJD has any obvious link with
- occupational exposure to BSE. Cases of classic CJD have been diagnosed in
- a range of different occupations but there remains no evidence that these
- are linked to occupational exposure to BSE or CJD.
-
-
- The ACDP's advice and recommended worker safety measures have always been
- precautionary in the light of the uncertainty about the risks from BSE.
- Occupations that do not intentionally work with BSE, e.g., abattoir
- workers, vets, should continue to follow the advice given since 1990 and
- updated most recently in ACDP general guidance on BSE published in August
- 1996. Farmers can get specific advice in Agricultural Information Sheet no
- 19 "Occupational health risks from Cattle".
-
- Those intentionally working with BSE infected material or preparations such
- as laboratory researchers should use the same laboratory safety precautions
- as for CJD. Advice on these can be found in the 1992 publication
- "Precautions for work with human and animal Transmissible Spongiform
- Encephalopathies" or in the Categorisation guidance. The 1992 guidance is
- being revised and updated and will be published early in 1998.
-
- Further details of the advice on BSE and CJD can be obtained from the
- following sources:-
-
- Food National Interest Group,Glasgow Tel 0141 275 3000.
- Fax 0141 275 3100
-
- Dangerous Pathogens/Microbiology,Directorate of Science and
- Technology,Bootle
- Tel. 0151 951 3622. Fax. 0151 922 4637 e-mail:
- john.newbold@hse.gov.uk
-
- Health Directorate,Biological Agents Policy section (ACDP Secretariat)
- London
- Tel. 0171 717 6230 Fax. 0171 717 6199 e-mail:
- mark.bale@hse.gov.uk
-
- Notes to editors
-
- 1. Bruce et al (1997) Transmissions to mice indicate that 'new variant'
- CJD is caused by BSE agent. Nature 389:pp498-501. Hill et al (1997) The
- same prion strain causes nvCJD and BSE. Nature 389:pp448-450.
-
- 2. The Advisory Committee on Dangerous Pathogens (ACDP) advises the Health
- and Safety Commission, the Health and Safety Executive and Health and
- Agriculture Ministers on the risks to workers and others from exposure to
- pathogens.
-
- 3. "Categorisation of biological agents according to hazard and categories
- of containment", 1995, ISBN 0-7176-1038-1, price ú8.50, is available from
- HSE Books, PO Box 1999, Sudbury, Suffolk, CO10 6FS - Tel 01787 881165 -
- Fax 01787 313995.
-
- 4. "BSE (Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy): Background and General
- Occupational Guidance", 1996, ISBN 0-7176-1212-0, price ú5.50, and
- Agricultural Information Sheet 19 are available from HSE Books, PO Box
- 1999, Sudbury, Suffolk, CO10 6FS - Tel 01787 881165 - Fax 01787 313995.
-
- 5. "Precautions for work with human and animal Transmissible
-
- Spongiform Encephalopathies" ISBN 0-11-321805-2, 1992, price ú6.50 is
- available from the Stationary Office.
-
- Public Enquiries: Call HSE's InfoLine, tel: 0541 545500, or write to: HSE
- Information Centre, Broad Lane, Sheffield, S3 7HQ.
-
- Press Enquiries: Journalists only: Liz Justice 0171-717 6905.
-
- HSE information and press releases can be accessed on the Internet
- <http://www.open.gov.uk/hse/hsehome.htm>
-
- ===========================================
-
- Rabbit Information Service,
- P.O.Box 30,
- Riverton,
- Western Australia 6148
-
- Email> rabbit@wantree.com.au
-
- http://www.wantree.com.au/~rabbit/rabbit.htm
- (Rabbit Information Service website updated frequently)
-
- /`\ /`\
- (/\ \-/ /\)
- )6 6(
- >{= Y =}<
- /'-^-'\
- (_) (_)
- | . |
- | |}
- jgs \_/^\_/
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Sun, 2 Nov 1997 22:53:21 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: More Mad Cow Disease(Belgium)
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19971102224525.3197b5b2@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Brussels: Belgium reported its first case of mad cow disease,
- calling it a blow to the country's beef sector.
- Agriculture minister Karel Pinxten said the stricken animal was born
- in 1992 on a farm near Namur, 40km south of Brussels. He had informed
- the European Union head office and Belgium's EU partners.
-
- ===========================================
-
- Rabbit Information Service,
- P.O.Box 30,
- Riverton,
- Western Australia 6148
-
- Email> rabbit@wantree.com.au
-
- http://www.wantree.com.au/~rabbit/rabbit.htm
- (Rabbit Information Service website updated frequently)
-
- /`\ /`\
- (/\ \-/ /\)
- )6 6(
- >{= Y =}<
- /'-^-'\
- (_) (_)
- | . |
- | |}
- jgs \_/^\_/
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Sun, 2 Nov 1997 11:48:15 EST
- From: JanaWilson <JanaWilson@aol.com>
- To: Ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Oklahoma Weekly Hunting News
- Message-ID: <9c74cd34.345caea2@aol.com>
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
-
- As reported in local Oklahoma City news:
-
- A special access permit will be required of anyone using Creek
- National Wildlife Management Area in SE Oklahoma. All funds
- raised from permit sales will be used to develop and manage the
- wildlife resources and habitat in the area. The Oklahoma Wildlife
- Dept. and the John Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co, the landowner,
- are working together to manage the fish and wildlife resources
- on the 215,000-acre area. Anyone using the land for hunting,
- fishing, horseback riding, camping or any other activity is required
- to buy an annual access permit. For residents, the cost is $16
- and for non-residents the cost is $25. Lifetime license holders
- are not exempt from having to buy the access permit. Access
- permits are available from anywhere hunting and fishing licenses
- are sold.
-
- A course on nuisance beaver control will be presented by the
- Oklahoma Trappers and Predator Callers Association next
- Saturday at the Okla. Wildlife's Dept. Tulsa office. The four
- hour course has a registration fee of $20.
-
- Deer hunters must get permission to track wounded animals
- onto private land adjoining their hunting area a/w Mr. John Streich,
- law enforcement chief of the Okla. Wildlife Dept.
- "Although hunters have an obligation to the animals they hunt to
- make every attempt to recover deer, they can't track an animal
- onto private land without the owner's permission. If they can't
- get permission, there's nothing legally they can do to recover
- the animal. That's why we strongly advise that hunters get
- permission tot rack wounded deer on adjoining properties
- before going hunting," said Mr. Streich.
- He added that as a last resort, hunters can try to contact their
- local game warden. The game warden may know where to locate
- the landowner, but hunter shouldn't assume they'll be able to
- track down the landowner or get permission to follow the deer.
-
- As part of the Oklahoma Wildlife's Dept. efforts to introduce
- women to the "outdoor life", a one-day outdoor skills workshop
- will be held Nov. 15 at the Chickasaw National Recreation Area
- off Interstate-35 near Sulfur, Okla.
- The workshop, which is co-sponsored by the Wildlife Dept. and
- the Chickasaw National Recreation Area, will provide participants
- with an opportunity to learn such outdoor skills as archery,
- fishing, dutch over cooking, bird watching, nature crafts and
- beginning canoeing. The cost is $15 and enrollment is limited to 60.
-
- For the Animals,
-
- Jana, OKC
- Date: Sun, 2 Nov 1997 17:34:03 -0300
- From: CAF@caf.mas-info.com.ar
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (AR) NEWS AT THE ARGENTINE MILITARY HOSPITAL
- Message-ID: <199711022109.SAA28882@lx1.sicoar.com>
-
- (AR) NEWS ON ANIMALS TORTURE AT THE ARGENTINE MILITARY HOSPITAL
-
- BACKGROUND:
-
- In our ACTION ALERT (October '97) we reported the aberrant
- experiments carried out at The Argentine Military Hospital. To
- perform his work "Traumatic Shock and Liver", Dr. Major Guillermo
- Daniel Vadr a tortured and killed 42 dogs. For this reason we had
- asked you to send contempt messages to Lieutenant General Martin
- Balza.
-
- NEW FACTS:
-
- General Martin Balza answered to this worldwide contempt arguing
- that during his command no medical research endangering the animals
- integrity had been performed. He added that the work carried out by
- Dr. Major Guillermo D. Vadra is actually a worw carried out... in
- 1986!
-
- BUT:
-
- The scientific magazine which pick up the work carried out by Dr.
- Major Guillermo D. Vadra which makes reference to the acts of
- torture instilled on the 42 dogs:
-
- a) is a publication entitled "Revista de la Sanidad Militar
- Argentina" -Argentine Military Health Magazine- and it belongs to
- the Army (which promotes in this way this ruthless work)
-
- b) was published in 1996 and distributed afterwards.
-
- c) in NO PLACE, AT ALL, the scientific issue makes reference to the
- fact that the work done by Dr. Major G.D.Vadra has been carried out
- 10 years ago.
-
- d) the sources cited in the atroucius work "Traumatic Shock and
- Liver" include quotations from issues released AFTER year 1986
- (which would add the talents of fortune-teller to the sadistic
- traits of Dr. Vadra!)
-
- e) in the same publication it is said that Argentine Military Health
- has awarded a prize to Dr. Major Vadra: "PREMIO BIENAL (1995-1996)
- DR. JUAN MADERA" (a curious way the Army has of repudiating a s tudy
- which according to General Balza, it wouldn't have been done during
- his command!)
-
-
- .....................................................................
- THANK YOU VERY MUCH TO ALL OF THOSE WHO HAVE SENT THEIR CONTEMPT
- MESSAGES !!!
-
- We"ll keep you posted about this and other news.
-
- .........................................................................
- Information mailed by CLUB DE ANIMALES FELICES (Happy Animal's Club)
- caf@caf.mas-info.com.ar
-
- Date: Sun, 2 Nov 1997 14:16:36 -0800 (PST)
- From: Dawn <dawnmarie@rocketmail.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: RFI: Fur Free Friday Florida
- Message-ID: <19971102221636.4530.rocketmail@web1.rocketmail.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
-
- Attention Northern and Central Florida:
-
- If anyone is planning a Fur Free Friday in Northern or Central
- Florida, please send details to: dawnmarie@rocketmail.com
-
- Aren't Laura Strickland's group in Jax or FL Voices for Animals in
- Tampa planning a Fur Free Friday?
-
- Common people, don't let up the pressure. We have NOT won this battle
- yet.
-
- TIA and Keep fighting the good fight!
-
- Dawn
- Gainesville, FL
- ===
- DawnMarie@rocketmail.com
-
-
- _____________________________________________________________________
- Sent by RocketMail. Get your free e-mail at http://www.rocketmail.com
-
- Date: Mon, 3 Nov 1997 07:09:02 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: HANTAVIRUS, RODENTS - CHILE
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19971103070059.2cef100e@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- HANTAVIRUS, RODENTS - CHILE
- ***************************
-
-
- Date: Fri, 31 Oct 1997
-
- Source: El Mercurio, Santiago Chile; 14 October 1997
-
-
- Specialists from the CDC of the United States have toured southern Chile
- for the past two weeks to collect information on the incidence of
- hantavirus infection in the rodent population. [The disease has been
- confirmed in 20 cases of human infection in Chile with 12 deaths, a 60%
- case-fatality rate]. In the final report delivered to the Minister of
- Health, they indicated the possibility that there may be two hantaviruses
- in two mouse species.
-
- This could explain how the virus might be transmitted among distinct
- species of mice that share the same habitat. Dr. James N. Mills, one of
- the CDC experts in charge of the work of trapping rodents in the area of
- Cohiaique, Aisen, and Valdivia, indicated that the study of the reservoir
- of disease was very successful, in that close to 2,000 traps placed in
- various areas captured 316 rodents [about 16% trap success rate]
- representing 9 species.
-
- Among them, 50% were _Oligoryzomys longicaudatus_ (the long tailed mouse),
- 35% were _Akodon olivaceous_ (the gray mouse), and a minor percentage were
- _A. longipilis_ (the short furred mouse [?]).
-
- Preliminary analysis indicated that 13% of the _Oligoryzomys_ and 8% of the
- _A. olivaceous_ had antibodies to a hantavirus [which virus is not
- indicated].
-
- "It could be that this occurrence is similar to that in the [1993] outbreak
- in the southwest United States where, owing to the high concentration of
- deer mice, other species of rodents were infected. We found various
- species with antibodies but when we look for virus in species that are not
- specific carriers, we don't find any," added the expert [Jim Mills].
-
- He indicated that the other possibility is that "We found one virus in _O.
- longicaudatus_ and another in _A. olivaceus_, similar to the situation that
- occurred in Argentina in the south of Sante Fe Province, where they found
- four viruses in four species, distinct reservoirs in a restricted area."
-
- In any event, Mills said that they must wait for the sequence results,
- studies that will take place at the CDC to determine if one or two viruses
- are in Chile. The sequence studies will take less than two months to
- establish the situations in Chile.
-
- He also emphasized that many hantavirus have been discovered in North and
- South America but only a small proportion of those are involved in human
- disease.
-
- Mills was cautious to indicate that if they find another virus in _A.
- olivaceous_, they won't [immediately] know whether it is connected with
- disease in humans. He reaffirmed that the long tailed mouse is the same
- species that carries Andes virus of Argentina.
-
- The chief of the mission from the CDC, Ali Khan, pointed out that some of
- the clinical properties of Chilean hantavirus pulmonary syndrome are
- different from those seen in the United States--such as a renal disfunction
- in the patient. At the same time, he highlighted that the study of
- hantavirus cases in Chile showed that 20% were in children "something
- unusual and not seen in the United States," he emphasized. The cases in
- children presented at the start of the outbreak in last August [and are not
- continuing to occur in children?].
-
- Dr. Figueroa, at the same time, indicated that when the population of this
- type of rodent [which, is not clear] increases above normal levels, it is
- due to climatic factors or the availability of food, and it is possible
- that a species is able to invade the habitat of another. "And this
- circumstance is clearly compatible with the idea of infection from one
- species to another in a transitional fashion." [Not clear to me what this
- means.] The Secretary of State said that he was working with Chilean
- scientists to determine the location of the reservoir [When they find it I
- hope they will let us know!] and they are still studying the level of
- antibody titres against hantavirus strains in the rodents they have
- captured.
-
- Epidemiologists: The director of the Chilean Society of Epidemiology,
- Catherine Ferrecio, called upon the Minister of Health to create an
- institutional program to deal with surveillance and control of epidemics.
- The request would be brought before the Third Chilean Congress of
- Epidemiology that is to take place October 15-17 in Vina del Mar [Sorry we
- are late with this posting], where they will deal with advances in facing
- emerging diseases such as hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, and studies on the
- effects of various kinds of human infection.
-
- --
-
- ===========================================
-
- Rabbit Information Service,
- P.O.Box 30,
- Riverton,
- Western Australia 6148
-
- Email> rabbit@wantree.com.au
-
- http://www.wantree.com.au/~rabbit/rabbit.htm
- (Rabbit Information Service website updated frequently)
-
- /`\ /`\
- (/\ \-/ /\)
- )6 6(
- >{= Y =}<
- /'-^-'\
- (_) (_)
- | . |
- | |}
- jgs \_/^\_/
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Sun, 2 Nov 1997 16:07:13 -0700 (MST)
- From: robanne harrison <rharriso@unm.edu>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: dog as Plaintiff
- Message-ID: <Pine.A41.3.96.971102160337.299206A-100000@musca.unm.edu>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
- Has anyone heard of a case in Ohio (I think) where a man, who had been hit
- by a car, wants to include his dog as a Plaintiff in his lawsuit? Any info
- will be helpful- especially the name of the attorney representing them.
- Thx- Robanne rharriso@unm.edu
- (don't forget not to hit forward when
- responding)
-
- Date: Mon, 3 Nov 1997 07:11:28 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: BSE - BELGIUM: FIRST CASE
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19971103070325.2cef0d6e@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- BSE - BELGIUM: FIRST CASE
- *************************
-
- Date: Sat, 01 Nov 1997
-
- The first case of BSE has been reported by the Belgian Minister of
- Agriculture on October 31, 1997 at 2:30 PM local time. The cow was sent to
- the slaughterhouse on the 17th of September, but presented neurological
- disorders, so it was discarded from the food chain. The head was sent to
- the lab and the carcass has been destroyed. The [Belgian laboratory's
- diagnosis of BSE] has been confirmed by the British lab in Weybridge.
-
- [The animal] was a five and a half-year-old cow, born on the same farm from
- which it was sent to the slaughterhouse. [Presently, epidemiological data
- are not available, but an investigation is ongoing involving] particularly
- the cows of the same age on that farm. The farm is located in the province
- of Namur.
-
- ===========================================
-
- Rabbit Information Service,
- P.O.Box 30,
- Riverton,
- Western Australia 6148
-
- Email> rabbit@wantree.com.au
-
- http://www.wantree.com.au/~rabbit/rabbit.htm
- (Rabbit Information Service website updated frequently)
-
- /`\ /`\
- (/\ \-/ /\)
- )6 6(
- >{= Y =}<
- /'-^-'\
- (_) (_)
- | . |
- | |}
- jgs \_/^\_/
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Sun, 02 Nov 1997 17:07:55 -0800
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Frankenstein is running scared
- Message-ID: <345D23EB.10CF@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- Scary science from Frankenstein to genetic clones
-
- Scripps Howard
- (November 1, 1997 12:34 p.m. EST)
-
- Witches, ghosts and vampires still have their ghoulish charms, but to
- really put goosebumps on Americans these days, the magic formula
- seems to be a little stray DNA, a mutant virus, and some conspiring
- space aliens. Forget about the undead; this Halloween, send in the
- clones.
-
- The newly released film "Gattaca," about a future world with a ruling
- class of genetically-engineered "perfect" people, is but one of a series
- of works dealing with cloning issues and hoping to follow the box-office
- success of flicks like "Jurassic Park" and its sequel.
-
- The notion of the mad scientist, of technology run amok, of the
- medically bizarre, is, of course, as old as human storytelling: the
- Bible has the tower of Babel; Greek mythology the stories of Icarus and
- his wings, and Prometheus, who earned the wrath of the gods by stealing
- fire and making men out of clay.
-
- But in a world of instant communications and impression, scientists are
- becoming more than a little worried that people are forgetting the
- "fiction" part of "science fiction," and that public fears may translate
- into laws that ban or cut funding for legitimate research.
-
- It's a concern more often than not expressed with rolled eyes and
- nervous titters, but there are signs that the Ph.Ds are taking the power
- of pop culture over what they do more seriously.
-
- "I think we've all become more aware of the influence the popular
- impression of what we do, and can't do, can have on our work," Scottish
- researcher Ian Wilmut, whose team transplanted the DNA that became Dolly
- the sheep, said in an interview earlier this year.
-
- "The real scare story here is that unwise, though well-intentioned, laws
- could deprive patients of the tremendous promise of genetic research,"
- said Judith Bello, executive vice president of the Pharmaceutical
- Research and Manufacturers Association, which was so spooked by the
- pending release of "Gattaca" that it called a special briefing on the
- promise of real genetic research for science reporters a few weeks ago.
-
- Dr. Francis Collins, the politically astute head of the National Human
- Genome Research Institute, took 60 members of his gene-mapping team out
- for a viewing of "Gattaca" earlier this week, both for fun and to make
- them more aware of what Collins termed "the science fiction buzz" over
- what they're doing.
-
- "People are afraid of things they don't understand, and since a lot of
- people don't understand much about science and its reasoning, they're
- suspicious of it," said University of Connecticut psychologist Stuart
- Vyse, author of "Believing in Magic," a new book on the psychology of
- superstition and related fears in the modern world.
-
- "Science and scientists often get poor treatment by Hollywood, and
- there's long been this unease about disturbing the natural world, or
- attempting to do things that religion might consider reserved to God,
- that plays into this," Vyse said.
-
- Hollywood made the mold for science fiction horror with the 1931
- classic, "Frankenstein," starring Boris Karloff as the corpse brought
- back to monstrous life by Dr. Victor Frankenstein.
-
- Now, the National Library of Medicine in Bethesda, Md., is opening,
- opening, on Halloween, of course, an exhibit examining the written and
- film depictions of the Frankenstein story going back to Mary Shelley's
- original 1818 novel, based on a dream and written on a dare from Lord
- Byron.
-
- Titled "Frankenstein:Penetrating the Secrets of Nature," the exhibit
- traces the medical science trends that influenced Shelley in the early
- 19th century and filmmakers who make the monster an icon more than 100
- years later, but tries to address today's fears, too.
-
- When Shelley wrote her novel, Edward Jenner's smallpox vaccine was just
- emerging from ridicule and scientists were using jolts of electricity to
- make frog legs and other animal limbs twitch into "reanimation." By the
- 1930s, experiments with artificial organs and the iron lung were
- underway, and debate raged over genetic superiority, which caused
- Karloff's monster to be equipped with a "criminal" brain.
-
- "Frankenstein remains alive because it has become a metaphor for
- anxieties and uneasiness about new discoveries in biology and medicine,"
- said Susan Lederer, a medical historian at Penn State University and
- curator of the exhibit, which runs through Aug. 15.
-
- "Many of the fears and issues raised 200 years ago about science are
- still before us today with endeavors like cloning, xenografting (animal
- transplant), the genome project and other developments in biomedicine,"
- added Elizabeth Fee, head of the history of medicine division at
- the library.
-
- While Frankenstein, like most doctors of the day, worked secretively
- with cadavers, "we try to make the point that science today is much more
- open and accessible to the public through the mass media, the World Wide
- Web, our own library," Fee said.
-
- "The challenge is how to navigate this ocean of information to educate
- ourselves about new developments in biomedical science in order to make
- responsible decisions," added Lederer.
-
- But Vyse warns that "science is not a popular topic, and while people
- may appreciate what it can do for them, they still fear what it might do
- to them, that technology may cost them control in their lives. There's
- no question this conflict is going to persist."
-
- By LEE BOWMAN, Scripps Howard News Service
-
- ************************************************
-
- A typical PR piece. Not one single quote that might suggest the that
- fears aroused by genetic manipulation are based on something more
- tangible than public ignorance.
-
- Andy
- Date: Sun, 02 Nov 1997 17:09:06 -0800
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Human chickens released from the cage
- Message-ID: <345D2432.668A@worldnet.att.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- 'Human chickens' fly the coop after 168 hours
-
- Agence France-Presse
- OTTAWA (November 2, 1997 00:34 a.m. EST)
-
- Two "human chickens" were released from their cage Saturday after being
- cooped up together for 168 hours on display for passers-by.
-
- Eric Wolf and Pamela Meldrum, both 27, were paid 2,500 dollars (1,750
- U.S.) each to be cooped up together for a week, surviving on water from
- a hose-pipe and a vegetarian mash, which they both described as
- tasteless.
-
- The exhibit at Canada's national arts center was to demonstrate the
- plight of chicken locked up day after day without food or comfort. The
- idea was dreamt up by artist Rob Thompson for a video production on
- animal slaughter.
-
- The only concession to the two featherless "chickens" was a toilet
- discreetly hidden by a curtain.
-
- The couple, who met only a couple of hours before being caged together
- without any bedding, admitted to getting on well with each other --
- although Meldrum did complain a couple of times about her partner's
- smelly feet.
-
- Wolf said that, for him, sitting on the floor of the cage was difficult.
-
- "My neck is ready to fall right off my shoulders," he said.
-
- Meldrum said that, apart from the physical discomfort and the smell of
- Wolf's feet, one of the most difficult problems was having to answer the
- same questions "hundreds of times" from different journalists.
- Date: Mon, 3 Nov 1997 11:39:07 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (Aust)Natural plant hormones may protect against breast cancer
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19971103113255.2897328a@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Diet Linked With Cancer
-
- by Ann Treweek
-
- Sunday Times, Perth 2nd November 1997
-
-
- Dramatic new evidence that a healthy diet protects women against breast cancer
- has been found in Perth [Western Australia].
-
- Key factors appear to be natural plant hormones in soy and other legumes,
- whole grains and berries, fruit, vegetables and flax seed.
-
- Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital breast centre director Dr David Ingram has
- found a
- substantial reduction in breast cancer risk for women with a high intake of
- natural plant hormones called phyto-oestrogens.
-
- These plant hormones have a similar chemical structure to the female hormone
- oestrogen.
-
- Dr Ingram spoke to the WA Breast Group this weel about his research
- findings, just published in the prestigious medical journal, The Lancet.
-
- His study, with colleagues Katherine Sanders, Marlene Kolybaba, and Derrick
- Lopez, aimed to assess the association between phyto-oestrogen intake
- (measured by urinary excretion) and breast cancer risk.
-
- "It's probably the first big study in the world to look at this," Dr Ingram
- said.
-
- Doctors overseas are showing a lot of interest.
-
- The study involved 144 pairs of women with women newly diagnosed with breast
- cancer paired against age-matched "controls".
-
- After adjustment for factors including alcohol and fat intake, the team
- found that high excretion of two plant hormones were linked with a
- substantial reduction in breast cancer risk.
-
- The study team reported:"These findings could be important in the prevention
- of breast cancer."
-
- Most previous research on diet and breast cancer was based on the hypothesis
- that a fat-rich diet predisposed women to the disease.
-
- End
-
- ===========================================
-
- Rabbit Information Service,
- P.O.Box 30,
- Riverton,
- Western Australia 6148
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- Email> rabbit@wantree.com.au
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- (Rabbit Information Service website updated frequently)
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