Laboratory animal shorts

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1995:

The European Patent Office on November 24 postponed an expected ruling on a
petition from Compassion in World Farming and 16 other animal welfare and religious groups,
asking it to reverse its 1992 decision that Harvard University and DuPont could be allowed to
patent Oncamouse, a strain of mouse genetically modified to be more vulnerable to human
forms of cancer.
The Food and Drug Administration is reportedly soon to release two reports
indicating that as result of overfeeding and lack of excercise, many laboratory rodents are
in such poor physical condition that toxicity tests involving them could yield seriously misleading
results. One strain of rat has doubled its average weight since 1970, according to
National Center for Toxicological Research scientist William Allaben, who calls them “Just
blobs of fat with legs.” Commenting on the survival rate of experimental control animals,
which at Merck Research Laboratories fell from 58% to 24% over the past 20 years, Merck
veterinary pathologist Kevin Keenan suggests that, “The most toxic substance we’ve tested in
our laboratory is the food.”

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Chimp traffic & AIDS rumors

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1995:

SUMMERVILLE, S.C. – – An
early-November rumor reaching International
Primate Protection League president Shirley
McGreal indicates that for the first time a
chimpanzee has developed HIV, the human
form of AIDS, 10 years after experimental
infection at the Yerkes Regional Primate
Center in Atlanta. Previously, chimps have
only developed SIV, or simian AIDS.
“The chimp to date is not yet sick,”
McGreal said. “The possible finding at Yerkes
may explain some recent movement of chimps:
lots of possible drug contracts. Most chimps
used for AIDS research in the U.S. are captiveborn,
but we may see foreign drug companies
or nonprofits set up to serve U.S. firms, which
would get them access to chimps barred from
commercial trade byConvention on
International Trade in Endangered Species.”

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Ethical investing conflict

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1995:

Brad Pappas of the Denver-based Rocky Mountain
Humane Investing Corporation disputes the San Franciscobased
Working Assets Capital Management claim that “We
do not invest in companies that use animals to test personal
care products or otherwise treat animals in an inhumane manner.”
Pappas argues that nine firms approved by Working
Assets should fail a humane screen because they use large
numbers of animals in testing: Alza Corp., Biomet, Church
& Dwight, Cincinnati Milacron, Idexx Labs, Melville
Corp., Merck, Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing, and
Pitney Bowes. Pappas also objects to Working Assets’ okay
of American Express, which sells fur by mail-order.
Counters Working Assets social research department
manager Ben Corson, “We consider the type of product
for which testing is performed.” If a company doesn’t test
personal care products, “Working Assets considers the treatment
of the animals used in testing. We look for violations of
the Animal Welfare Act or other well-documented cases of
inhumane treatment.” As to American Express, he said, fur
sales “represent a miniscule amount of its overall revenues.”

Laboratories

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1995:

Oklahoma superintendent of education
Sandy Garrett and Muskogee County district attorney
David Lutton are reportedly probing the October 3
attempted razorblade vivisection of a poorly anesthetized
cat by Braggs high school teacher Mickey Duncan,
described in this month’s ANIMAL PEOPLE editorial.
“I am outraged,” said Garrett in a prepared statement.
“While we view this as an isolated incident, we are forg
ing a partnership with the Oklahoma Veterinary Medical
Association to draft advisory guidelines for scientific projects.
We will provide this information to all local school
board members and high school principals. I have contacted
local school officials to express my grave concern,”
Garrett added. “As Oklahoma is a local control
state, authority for any action which might be taken
against the teacher lies with the Braggs Board of
Education.” Said Bill Dollinger of Friends of Animals,
“I informed her that we are not interested in codifying
animal experiments in high schools, and that her department
should look into allegations that students are being
intimidated into covering up for Duncan by other teachers.

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MORE MONKEY BUSINESS

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1995:

ACE Hardware monkeys
A spider monkey, a crab-eating macaque,
and three capuchins who for many years were kept in
solitary confinement as mascots of the five Buikema’s
Ace Hardware stores in Chicago’s western suburbs
were delivered to Wildlife Rescue and Rehabilitation
on September 2 as result of a year-long campaign led
by Deb Leahy and Joe Taksel of Illinois Animal
Action, with final negotiations handled by Bill
Dollinger of Friends of Animals. The effort gained
momentum after one monkey developed an ear infection
and eventually tore part of the ear off, leading to
USDA citations of the franchise owner for failing to
provide adequate veterinary care. A mix-up between
IAA and FoA resulted in IAA arranging to send the
monkeys to WRR while FoA, unaware of that deal,
asked Wally Swett of Primarily Primates to take them.

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Seven chimps safe, maybe more

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1995:

STIRLING FOREST, N.Y.––Up in the air for
more than a year, the fate of seven chimpanzees formerly
used in biomedical research by the U.S. Army was apparently
settled on the eve of a September 15 deadline when former
New York University primatologist James Mahoney reportedly
flew to California and personally approved Wildlife
Waystation as their retirement destination.
The chimps were mustered out of the Army into the
custody of the NYU-affiliated Laboratory for Experimental
Medicine and Surgery In Primates, which subcontracted with
the Buckshire Corporation, of Perkasie, Pennsylvania, for
their temporary care while permanent facilities were built in
Texas. Both LEMPSIP founder Jan Moor-Jankowski and
Mahoney were close to retirement, and anticipated retiring
their entire 225-member chimp colony, if possible.
It never happened. In August 1994, MoorJankowski
and Mahoney resigned from the NYU Institutional
Animal Care and Use Committee in protest over what MoorJankowski
called “highly reprehensible” conduct that “must
be stopped” on the part of fellow NYU primate researcher
Robert Wood, who since 1986 had conducted controversial
drug addiction experiments on chimps and squirrel monkeys
at a separate facility.

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NO MONKEY-HUNTING

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1995:

DILLEY, Texas––On condition of
anonymity, a prominent Texas attorney has
agreed to guarantee the payment of $75,000
due in October to secure the new home of the
South Texas Primate Observatory, a 183-acre
tract near the town of Millet. The Texas
Parks and Wildlife Department meanwhile
denies reports that it authorized hunters to
shoot any snow monkeys who might escape
from the old site at Dilley.
STPO houses a unique free-roaming
troop of snow monkeys whose families have
been studied since 1954. The colony began at
the long-defunct Arashiyama Sanctuary in the
monkeys’ native habitat outside Kyoto,
Japan. But young male snow monkeys tend
to escape from virtually any enclosure to seek
females each spring, and by 1972, residents
of Kyoto were fed up. Slated to be killed,
about 150 of the monkeys were instead airlifted
through an international rescue effort to
their present 58-acre enclosure within the
sprawling Burns Ranch, 60 miles south of
San Antonio.

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New York didn’t reinstitute pound seizure

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 1995:

ALBANY, N.Y––Frantic online postings from vari-
ous activists who wanted New York governor George Pataki to
veto state bills A8002 and S3869B, together with a follow-up
posting by James Corrigan of Animal Rights America, “con-
gratulating” the American SPCA on their passage, produced a
fast-spreading rumor in mid-August that New York, at instiga-
tion of the ASPCA, had backhandedly repealed a 1977 ban on
the sale of shelter animals to biomedical research.
The rumor struck a nerve, especially among antivivi-
sectionists old enough to remember that the ASPCA supported
the institution of pound seizure, the mandatory sale of animals
to research, in the 1940s, and fought the 1977 law. A8002
pertained to the use of animals in endotracheal intubation train-
ing, further alarming those who recalled that the ASPCA
allowed cats who were anesthetized for neutering to be used in
such training until 1990, when executives and the board were
advised by counsel that this could constitute a violation of the
1977 law. Subsequently, in 1992, the ASPCA sought retroac-
tive legalization of the intubation training.

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LABORATORY ANIMALS

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 1995:

NYU sells LEMSIP chimps to Coulston
STERLING FOREST, N.Y.––The New York University
Medical Center on August 9 transferred ownership of the Laboratory
for Experimental Medicine and Surgery in Primates to the Coulston
Foundation, headed by Frederick Coulston, 81.
A primate researcher since 1936, Coulston is accused of
multiple violations of the Animal Welfare Act in pending cases,
which allegedly caused the deaths of five chimps from thirst and heat
stress in two separate incidents at other primate facilities he runs in
New Mexico. Coulston claims three of those deaths were due to
malfunctioning equipment inherited when he took over one of the
facilities from the University of New Mexico two months earlier.
Activist groups are meanwhile demanding reinvestigation of eight
other recent chimp deaths at Coulston facilities, which also may
have involved alleged negligence.

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