A n i m a l   W r i t e s © sm

The official ANIMAL RIGHTS ONLINE newsletter


   
Publisher ~ EnglandGal@aol.com                                       Issue # 09/10/00
         Editor  ~ JJswans@aol.com
  Journalists  ~ Park StRanger@aol.com
                    ~ MicheleARivera@aol.com
                   
~ SavingLife@aol.com
        Layout  ~ Corrynthia@aol.com


    THE NINE ARTICLES IN THIS ISSUE ARE:
  
 1  ~ Another Step Towards Success!
 2  ~
Raised in Fear by Scott Lustig
 3  ~
Hounds Return to the Woods in Pursuit of Washington's Cougars
                from BuniHugR@aol.com
 4  ~
Strolling With Our Kin, Available Now!! from Aavsal@aol.com
 5  ~ APNM 2000 Humanitarian Awards Dinner from BHGazette@aol.com
 6  ~ Calling All Songbirds! Animal-Protection Group Seeks Submissions for
                   Annual Genesis Award from Phillip Nawroth
 7  ~ World Farm Animals Day Website Launched from FARM
 8  ~  Poem: JAWS by WantNoMeat@aol.com
 9  ~  Quote to Remember: Marc Beckoff

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Another Step Towards Success!

McDonald's Tells Farmers To Treat Chickens Better - August 23, 2000
http://www.upc-online.org/000823mcdonalds_announcement.html

Be sure to read the exciting news at the United Poultry Concerns (UPC) website shown above.  This is a big step forward for animal welfare.  It won't prevent the slaughter of these animals, but will make their treatment a little better while we continue to work towards the veganism that will better protect "farm" animals.

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Raised in Fear
by Scott Lustig
<Scotso76@aol.com>

At the State University of New York Health Science Center, infant monkeys are being torn from their mothers.  Help put an end to the shameful, decades-long practice of maternal deprivation experimentation

For over 30 years at the State University of New York (SUNY) Health Science Center in Brooklyn, Professor Leonard Rosenblum has been tearing baby monkeys away from their mothers to induce anxiety, panic and depression.  Why? To study the effects of maternal deprivation on the development of panic and other anxiety disorders in children and to investigate the workings of these disorders. But 50 years of research from clinical (human) studies have already demonstrated that children raised in stressful conditions and denied their mother's attention are more likely to develop anxiety disorders in later life. Still, the monkey experiments continue at huge expense. Indeed, since 1990, Rosenblum has collected over $2.5 million in taxpayers' money, on top of several more millions received over the last three decades. The National Institutes of Health serves as a primary public source for his funds.

Raised in Fear
In his most common experimental model, Rosenblum forces macaque monkey mothers and infants to live with unpredictable access to food. At first, the mothers find food easily. Then, the food is hidden and dispersed, making it hard to gather.  The mother monkeys must repeatedly endure this alternating access to food. Unable to feed their infants regularly, the mothers suffer constant anxiety.  The babies, in turn, deprived of their mother, become isolated and withdrawn.  These normally playful, curious infant monkeys sit hunched over, crying, shaking and clasping themselves. When the infants' mother returns, they cling to her desperately, never knowing when she will unpredictably be forced away from them again.

Three decades after Woodstock and Neil Armstrong's walk on the moon, Rosenblum's severely painful and invasive experiments are continuing. He began them in the 1960s, when monkey maternal deprivation experiments were first conceived. At the time, it was thought that monkey experimentation would shed light on the association between maternal deprivation and psychological distress in humans, first identified by researchers in the 1940s and 50s. Since then, infant monkeys have been subjected to numerous cruelties in the name of "research," all varying in the nature of the deprivation and isolation forced upon them. Infant monkeys have been given artificial "puppet" mothers that are manipulated by researchers. In some experiments, their body temperatures are made ice cold, preventing the infants from clinging to them. Other artificial "mothers" have been constructed of sandpaper or other uncomfortable materials, and some "mothers" even dislodged the clinging infants with hidden spikes, catapults, compressed air, or vigorous shaking.
   
Researchers have also placed mother-deprived infants with foster mothers, then repeatedly deprived them of the foster mothers and placed them with other foster mothers, preventing the infant monkeys from ever experiencing any real bonding or maternal care. In one of the most egregious of maternal deprivation experiments, during the early 1970s University of Wisconsin's Harry Harlow confined infant monkeys alone for weeks in metal isolation chambers. Harlow himselfplk referred to these chambers as "a modified form of sadism." In addition to monkeys, other animals used in maternal deprivation research have included rats, dogs and cats.
   
Other researchers today besides Rosenblum perpetuate this cruel practice. At Emory University in Georgia, Charles Nemeroff, Paul Plotsky, Charlotte Ladd, and a host of other researchers are studying the mechanisms of certain brain chemicals involved in producing the distress reaction to maternal deprivation. These experiments have included subjecting monkeys to the same model of unpredictable food access "perfected" by Rosenblum. At the University of Wisconsin, Gary Kraemer deprives female infant marmoset monkeys of maternal attention in order to study the neurochemical reasons why female human children who are raised abusively and neglectfully tend to become abusive and neglectful themselves as mothers.

Conflict and Inconsistency
Animal advocates, along with a growing number of scientists, have criticized the experiments of Rosenblum and his colleagues. According to Stephen Suomi, himself a noted and continuing maternal deprivation researcher, "Most monkey data...have only verified principles that have already been formulated from previous human data. To date the monkey data have added little to knowledge of mother-infant interactions." Murray Cohen, a psychiatrist and director of the Medical Research Modernization Committee, says that Rosenblum's animal studies do not validly represent panic and other human psychological disorders. Cohen says, "Rosenblum knows that the diagnostic symptoms of panic disorder (e.g., palpitations, sensation of respiratory distress, feeling of choking, chest pain... feeling of loss of control, fear of dying, numbness) simply cannot be assessed in monkeys because these symptoms must be subjectively experienced and reported by the patient rather than observed by the clinician. The diagnosis, then, cannot, by definition, be given to non-human primates."
   
Among Dr. Cohen's other arguments are that monkeys differ in reactions to maternal deprivation depending on their species, making it impossible to determine which species is the valid model for humans. Moreover, Cohen argues that aside from the stress they suffer from deprivation experiments, the monkeys suffer additional stress from the injections, restraining jackets, and other devices and tests they are forced to undergo. Also stressful are the standard conditions of the lab, including repeated transport and handling, artificial lighting, caging, noise levels and chemical sterilizers. These types of laboratory stressors influence the monkeys' behavior and physiology, distorting the research results.
   
The gamut of maternal deprivation experiments, including those being conducted by Rosenblum, are fraught with conflicting and inconsistent data, according to Martin Stephens, Vice President for Animal Research Issues at the Humane Society of the United States. Stephens states that in the majority of experiments, the monkeys' responses have contrasted widely with what the researchers had expected based upon information from previous experiments. "The time is long past when such experiments, which cause considerable distress in animals, are tolerable," says Neal Barnard, psychiatrist and president of Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine. "These vaguely rationalized and obviously distressing experiments should not have been done."
   
Even Rosenblum himself has cast doubt on his own research, writing in 1995:
     "Because of limitations imposed on the interpretation of behaviors observed
      in nonverbal primate subjects, extrapolations of primate findings to human
       panic and anxiety should be made with caution." (Psychiatric Clinics of
       North America) And, cementing the fundamentally weak usefulness of
       Rosenblum's studies for making sound contributions to understanding of
       panic and other anxiety disorders, the esteemed British medical journal
     
The Lancet stated succinctly, "animal models of anxiety cannot substitute
       for clinical [human] studies
." (10/3/98)

Money Wasted, Human Needs Unmet
Currently, 16 million Americans suffer from panic and other anxiety disorders.  Thankfully, many are getting help through therapy and medication-treatments developed through clinical studies with humans, not animals. But while Rosenblum's research continues to attract large amounts of funding, the needs of many human anxiety disorder sufferers go unmet. Even though one of the stated purposes of Rosenblum's research is to help children suffering from anxiety disorders, the New York Times reported last December that nearly 400 severely mentally ill children in New York State alone (where Rosenblum works) are on waiting lists to enter residential treatment facilities, "but cannot be admitted because the existing facilities are filled to capacity. They are languishing in hospitals, foster care, or jail." (12/24/99)
   
Shortages of funding also hamper provision of clinical treatment services like outpatient therapy, medication, mobile crisis teams and day treatment-all increasing the risk that children with anxiety disorders will experience suicide, school violence, juvenile crime and family break-up.
   
Criticism of animal models is further justified by the availability today of technologies in brain imaging, like positron emission tomography (PET) and magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS), which are providing more accurate data on human brain processes. As the mental disorders research community has become more familiar with the usefulness of these devices, it has become more outspoken in admitting to the weakness of animal models-while at the same time advocating for further study into the potential of other non-animal research tools.  According to an editorial in the American Journal of Psychiatry (May, 1999), "From reliance on animal models of psychopathology with all of their shortcomings, the field has evolved to the use of multidisciplinary techniques, of which functional brain imaging represents one of the most promising."
   
It is past time for the termination of Leonard Rosenblum's 30-plus years of experimentation, which has contributed so little to our understanding of human panic and anxiety and yet cost so much-millions of public dollars, significant numbers of animal lives, and incalculable amounts of animal suffering. SUNY Health Science Center would do much more to honor its "commitment to confront the health problems of urban communities," as expressed in their mission statement, by terminating Rosenblum's studies and further directing its resources and its considerable expertise to current human mental health needs. Then, the macaque monkeys-infants and their mothers-who have spent so much of their lives in Rosenblum's lab in small, desolate cages, can gain their freedom and touch the ground and see the sun. By affirming policies that are just, humane, and responsive to human needs, we can truly promote public health.

  What You Can Do 
  Contact: Dr. John C. LaRosa, President
               SUNY Health Science Center
               450 Clarkson Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11203
               Tel: 718-270-2611; Fax: 718-270-4732,

       and   John W. Ryan, Chancellor
               State University of New York
               SUNY Plaza, Albany, NY 12246
               Tel: 518-443-5157.

Tell them to end Rosenblum's cruel and wasteful experiments and direct the resources of SUNY's Health Science Center to services for and research with anxiety disorder patients. Also contact your federal and (if you are a New York resident) state representatives and urge them to stop the use of taxpayers' money for Rosenblum's and other maternal deprivation studies. Tell them that such money would be better spent meeting current human needs.
   
You can read the abstracts to Rosenblum's studies on-line:

  visit MedLine at Entrez-PubMed    
  http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=PubMed

Murray Cohen's extensive critique is available at:
                         Medical Research Modernization Committee
                                  http://www.mrmcmed.org/

Scott Lustig lives in New York City. He is a co-leader with Urban Action Engine, Inc. of this campaign against psychological experiments on monkeys at the SUNY Health Science Center in Brooklyn. He works as a case manager for people with developmental disabilities.

  Contact: scotso76@aol.com
  or visit www.urbanactionengine.org for information (website under construction).

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Hounds Return to the Woods
in Pursuit of Washington's Cougars

from BuniHugR@aol.com

In 1996, Washington State citizens passed Initiative 655 by a landslide 63% vote.  1-655 banned the unfair practices of bear baiting and hound hunting of bears, cougars and bobcats. Just two years later, Washington State legislators began a concerted effort to weaken or overturn 1-655 and during the 2000 legislative session they passed SSB 5001 - a bill that severely undermines I-655.  SSB 5001 essentially reinstates hound hunting of cougars for sport. It allows the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) to issue permits for hound hunters to randomly hunt cougar populations in areas where there are perceived problems.

The proposed rules for implementation of SSB 5001 include: hunt areas and kill quotas will be decided one year in advance; hunters can keep the hide of any cougar killed; professional guide services and an unlimited number of "observers" can participate in each hunt; hunt boundaries can extend up to 22 miles beyond any "problem" area; and 68 cougars will be killed the first year

The WDFW is calling these hunts "public safety cougar removals" but in fact, this plan has all the elements of a trophy hunt. This ill-conceived scheme will do nothing to alleviate the WDFW's perceived "cougar problems". Prominent cougar biologists unequivocally state that cougar hunting, with or without hounds, does not decrease the chances of human-cougar encounters.

WHAT YOU CAN DO (If you live in Washington State)
1.  Attend the Fish and Wildlife Commission Hearing. The Commission will take public comments on the WDFW's proposal. An overwhelming number of 1-655 supporters from across the state MUST attend the meeting. Car pools will be arranged. Saturday, September 16, Red Lion Hotel, 1225 N. Wenatchee Avenue, Wenatchee, Washington

2.  Contact Governor Gary Locke immediately at:
       The Honorable Gary Locke
       Office of the Governor
       Legislative Building
       P0 Box 40002, Olympia, WA 98504-0002
       email:  governor.locke@governor.wa.gov
       phone: 360-753-6780 or fax: 360-753-4110
       Let him know that the WDFW's proposed implementation of SSB 5001
       blatantly violates the intent of the bill as well as citizens' 1-655. 

       Important: Send a copy of your letter to the Fish & Wildlife Commission,
       600 Capitol Way N, Olympia, WA 98501 by Sept 8.

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Strolling With Our Kin, Available Now!!
from Aavsal@aol.com

Animalearn Publishes Strolling With Our Kin: A Powerful New Book By Marc Bekoff That Encourages Young People To Make Ethical Decisions And Take Action On Behalf Of Our Animal Kin

Philadelphia, September 7, 2000: As a part of 2000: Year of the Humane Child, the American Anti-Vivisection Society's (AAVS) education division, Animalearn, released today Strolling With Our Kin: Speaking For and Respecting Voiceless Animals by noted ethologist Marc Bekoff, A.B., Ph.D. The book's foreword is written by Jane Goodall.  The AAVS-supported work is a piece that encourages young people to examine our relationship with other species.  Bekoff takes readers on a philosophical and ethical odyssey examining how we can all live in harmony with our fellow kin.  He asks us to explore our thoughts and expand our views of a world made up of many species, only one of which is human.  He enables readers to examine our own ethical inconsistencies and asks us where we go from here.  Bekoff leaves us with the feeling that we too can help save and heal animals in this world, that we too can stroll with our kin by acting on behalf of them.

Katherine Lewis, Director of Animalearn, stated that "Strolling With Our Kin will be a valuable book for young adults who are interested in broadening their perspective of the world."  She noted that "AAVS was happy to publish a book that makes such a valuable contribution, drawing on young peoples natural connection to other species and allowing them to make connections, ask questions, and ultimately make a difference." This powerful and positive book relates strong messages regarding the way we treat animals.

Marc Bekoff is professor of Environmental Population and Organismic Biology at the University of Colorado, Boulder.  He is also an author and lecturer.  Jane Goodall is a world-famous primatologist, whose work with chimpanzees in Gombe, Tanzania revolutionized our understanding of our closest ancestor.  She is the author of In the Shadow of Man and many other books.  Bekoff and Goodall have recently initiated a non-profit organization called Ethologists for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.

  Contact: Katherine Lewis, Director
               Animalearn
               Phone (215) 887-0816
               Fax (215) 887-2088

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APNM 2000 Humanitarian Awards Dinner
From: BHGazette@aol.com

Animal Protection of New Mexico will hold its 2000 Humanitarian Awards dinner on November 18 in Santa Fe, New Mexico.  APNM is seeking nominations to recognize individual and collaborative acts of humane integrity. Agencies, organizations, business and individuals can be nominated in each category. 

Deadline is October 1.

For more information, contact 505-265-2322  or  www.apnm.org.

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Calling All Songbirds!
Animal-Protection Group Seeks
Submissions for Annual Genesis Award

from Phillip Nawroth <pnawroth@arktrust.org>

LOS ANGELES  -- Sept. 8, 2000 -- The Ark Trust, Inc., a national, non-profit animal-protection organization and presenter of the annual Genesis Awards, is seeking positive animal-related songs for submission in the Doris Day Music Award category.

Each year, The Ark Trust screens applicants for the award which honors outstanding, animal-sensitive musical work. Last year's Doris Day Music Award winner was Kingfish for "Sundown on the Forest", a song dedicated to Julia Butterfly Hill who spent two years in an ancient redwood tree 180-feet above ground in northern California in order to prevent a timber company from cutting it down. After prolonged negotiations and worldwide media attention, she succeeded in protecting the environment and surrounding wildlife.

Past winners of the prestigious award include Sir Paul McCartney ("Looking for Changes"), Megadeth ("Countdown to Extinction"), David Crosby and Graham Nash ("To the Last Whale"), a Grateful Dead music video ("We Can Run"), Michael Jackson for two music videos ("EarthSong" and "Man in the Mirror") and the late John Denver, for his touching song "You Say the Battle Is Over."

In a related musical note, Prince won a Special Achievement Award last year for his liner notes on "Rave Un2 the Joy Fantastic" in which he decries the suffering of sheep to produce wool clothing. To the delight of the 1,100 audience members, he accepted the award in person.

The submitted song must be of general interest to the public and present animals in a positive light, or present issues central to animal-protection advocacy. Songs must be aired or released for the first time between Jan. 1, 2000, and Dec. 31, 2000. Songs aired or released prior to December 2000 must be received by Dec. 8, 2000. Songs aired or released in December must be received by Dec. 29.

The Genesis Awards honors outstanding individuals in the major news and entertainment industry who have spotlighted animal issues in their works with courage, creativity and integrity. The Fourteenth Annual Genesis Awards was hosted by Wendie Malick ("Just Shoot Me") and David Hyde Pierce ("Frasier"). An edited version of the gala was aired as a television special on Animal Planet in June, its 10th year on television!

The star-studded, taped-for-television Fifteenth Annual Genesis Awards is scheduled at The Beverly Hilton hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif., on Saturday, March 10, 2001.

Submit your Doris Day Music Award entry on CD or tape to:
The Ark Trust
Genesis Awards Submissions
5551 Balboa Blvd.
Encino, CA 91316.

There is no entry fee.

  For more information, call (818) 501-2275 or visit The Ark Trust Web site at: www.arktrust.org

Phillip Nawroth
  Public Information Manager
  The Ark Trust, Inc.

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World Farm Animals Day Website Launched
From: FARM
<farm@farmusa.org>

The website for World Farm Animals Day (October 2, 2000) has just been revised to reflect this year's tie-in with the general elections and is ready for action. The theme is "Putting Animals In Politics" & "Elect for Farm Animals."

Click on   http://www.farmusa.org/wfad/wfad-index.html   for information or an Action Kit.

The key recommended activities are:

1) Sending questionnaires to Congressional, state, and local candidates for public office requesting their position on mistreatment of farm animals, subsidies for agribusiness, environmental and public health threats by factory farms, and availability of vegan food in schools

2) Arranging vigils in front of state capitols and other government and political buildings to raise the awareness of public officials and their constituents to the tragedy of farmed animals.

Be sure to register your action(s), even if your plans are incomplete. This will enable us to publicize your event(s) to local activists and the media and to send you additional information, banners, posters, photos, and other useful items for your event(s). You can do it on our web site at:

http://www.farmusa.org/wfad/wfad-index.html

by e-mail at:   wfad@farmusa.org
or by phone at:  1-888-FARM-USA

Last Thursday, we sent out 1,250 Action Kits explaining all this in great details and providing sample questionnaires, petition sign-up sheets, media letters, and handouts. We are recruiting hundreds more activists in all 50 states and a dozen foreign countries, launching a national media and advertising blitz, soliciting proclamations from governors and mayors, and sending a questionnaire to candidates for national public office. We are looking to the greatest observance ever!

World Farm Animals Day is the one day a year when every person cursed with a conscience and awareness is honor-bound to express his/her outrage at the tragedy of farmed animals and demand drastic reforms.

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JAWS
by WantNoMeat@aol.com

Silently a trap lies in wait
camouflage is it's surprising trait
Scented to lure victims near
his final step knew no fear

The trap triggers mercilessly
he struggles in vain to be free
These awful jaws prove too strong
and his misery will be long

Bones broken in the snap
by a man-made brutal trap
Tighter and deeper it grips
as tendon painfully rips

Blood warms the cold steel
as layers of skin begin to peel
Secured in this leghold he stays
hunger, agony and passing days

The trapper appears at the sight
this victim just too weak to fight
Ruthlessly, this life is lost
some fashions come at a shameful cost

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Quote to Remember

"For all children everywhere.  May you drench your interactions with our animal kin with respect, compassion, spirit, humility, and love.  Keep hope even when things seem grim.  Don't let go of your dreams. There are many better tomorrows......"

                                                 ~ Marc Beckoff <bekoffm@spot.Colorado.EDU>
                                                           from the dedication in his new book ~
                                                                  
Strolling With Our Kin

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