Newsletter

Society and Animals Forum

Newsletter / December 1996

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Letter from the President

Having served as a member of the Board for nine years, I am fortunate to have been elected President of PSYETA. Our Board most recently met at the June '96 March for the Animals in Washington, DC, at which time I was welcomed to office and our past President and Cofounder, Manny Bernstein, was honored. Manny has made important and significant contributions to the animal rights movement and tour profession. In the early '80s, he showed the insight and commitment to realize the need for an organization of psychologists to work on the concerns being raised about humans' treatment of other animals. I hope to build on his compassionate leadership.

Lorin Lindner has been elected Vice President, having served on the Board since 1992. She brings to her new office a clear understanding of our organization as well as a long history of effective animal and environmental work. I am thrilled to have the opportunity to work with someone with such highly qualified "activist" credentials. Lorin and I have already begun to network to increase our visibility and membership, to outline a clear and expanded organizational structure, and to develop new and exciting campaigns and programs by which to accomplish our goals. Sensitive to the needs of an organization with a 16-year history, we want to build on what is already in place as we creatively reach into new areas.

Susie Burt is PSYETA's part-time Director of Development. She is responsible for building and maintaining liaisons with other organizations, leaders and donors who desire to help via financial support. Her role is critical to insuring the future of PSYETA. Her professionalism and enthusiasm are proving to be two of our greatest assets. To best do her job, Susie needs the support of every single one of us. Raising funds to do our work is a difficult task indeed. Yet, as we reach out, the interest which so many are showing in our projects and goals makes our efforts quite rewarding.

And finally, the hard work of Executive Director, Ken Shapiro, and Office Manager, Margaret Carpenter, continues and remains a key to our strong foundation. From the merging of what is old and true with what is possible and needed, we promise to show you, our members, why your supports is one of the most effective ways in which you can contribute to ending violence toward, and the suffering of, animals.

I, and all of us at PSYETA, promise to work diligently to move PSYETA into being all that we can be. Exciting and important new programs and campaigns are ready to go. Your participation and continued support is needed. I look forward to serving PSYETA and the animals we are all dedicated to helping.

Sincerely yours,

Theo Capaldo


Message from the Development Director

This past September, I met with a group of enthusiastic PSYETA members in California who expressed desire to play a more active role in our Culture of Violence campaign. They were particularly excited by our plans to make a video, which is one of the campaign's core elements.

We know that you share our sorrow and anger when you hear about incidents of animal abuse, domestic violence, child molestation, and other violence in our society. What can we do to make a difference? PSYETA believes the video is a place to start. Our psychologists are well qualified to communicate knowledge about violent behavior. We can also suggest intervention strategies and treatment programs.

We encourage you to be a part of the creation of this significant educational tool. We are currently working with a production team to design and develop the content of the video and its intended audience and distribution. We welcome your ideas, expertise, energy and participation.

We have still not raised the funds we need to make the video a reality! Please join our West Coast members who, after hearing about the video, are reaching out to their friends, families, and associates and asking them to contribute as well. If you would be willing to raise the funds on our behalf, please contact me. I will work with you to develop appropriate materials.

Finally, we would like to thank all our members for their support over the years. Our very special thanks to the following for their generosity during 1996:

  • Michael Tobias, director and producer, for offering post-production services for the video.

  • Carol Holub and Frank Bruno for helping to sponsor our Social Hour at the March for the Animals

  • Jean Bayard for funding a successful mailing to recruit new members

  • Rachel Rosenthal, acclaimed performance artist, for offering to donate her talent to raise funds for the video

  • Charlote Cucean for her time, ideas and enthusiasm

  • Nedra Lasley, and Peter and Leigh Norton, for their long-standing support of PSYETA

Susie Burt


PSYETA Announces New Board Members

Marjorie Cramer is a plastic surgeon. She has written and spoken extensively on the subjects of ecofeminism and the negative human health implications of animal experimentation.

Susan Curtiss is a clinical psychologist in private practice. She specializes in crisis intervention and is interested in vicarious traumatization in the animal rights activist community. She is also a trainer/consultant in peak performance development and individual growth.

Barbara Orlans is a Senior Research Fellow at the Kennedy Institute of Ethics at Georgetown University. She has written numerous books and articles on pain classification and the use of animals in research.

Mary Lou Randour is a clinical psychologist in private practice. She has written widely on psychoanalysis and women's issues, and is currently writing a book on spirituality and the treatment of animals.


Animal Testing Advances in Europe

Cat ImageA newly opened pharmaceutical company in central England is the first to test drugs exclusively inhuman tissue. Pharmagene, based in Royston, opened in October, 1996, and relies heavily on the samples from Europe's first human tissue bank, which opened earlier this year. Donors can offer tissue to the bank after death in the same way that they donate organs.

On a similar note, the Karl-Frazens University in Graz intends to become the first animal-free educational institution in Austria, according to a report in ALTEX. The University will actively seek to develop new non-animal methods of research, in accordance with Austrian law which obliges thepromotion of such methods.


Moor-Jankowski Files Suit Against NYU

Internationally renowned scientist and former New York University (NYU) researcher Jan Moor-Jankowski, M.D., filed suit in U.S. District Court in New York against NYU. The lawsuit alleges that NYU covered up "scientific misconduct and fraud" and retaliated against Moor-Jankowski in violation of federal whistle-blower protection laws.

As reported in the February '96 PSYETA Newsletter, Moor-Jankowski was fired as director of NYU's Laboratory of Experimental Medicine and Surgery in Primates (LEMSIP) after blowing the whistle on former NYU primate addiction researcher Ron Wood. With respect to Wood's "junkie monkey" experiments, NYU was charged by the USDA with hundreds of violations of the Animal Welfare Act and assessed a record $450,000 fine.

The USDA recently cleared NYU of illegal retribution against Moor-Jankowski, even though its investigative arm reported the NYU had clearly retaliated against him in violation of federal law. Hence, the USDA is also named in the lawsuit for abuse of process and failure to uphold federal law.

The unprecedented lawsuit was filed on behalf of Moor-Jankowski and also Louis Dinetz, former Assistant Director of LEMSIP and a decorated Vietnam veteran, and seeks over $20 million compensation for the plaintiffs. Moor-Jankowski, a member of the prestigious French Academy of Medicine, said that he sued to set an important precedent: "If I, an internationally recognized scientist, could not secure the protection offered under federal law, how can anyone -- not to mention younger, lesser-known scientists -- dare to expose scientific misconduct and the misdeeds of corrupt administrations?"

SUNY Ordered to Release Records

Citizens for Alternatives to Animal Labs, Inc. (CAAL), a Brooklyn, New York-based organization, won a significant victory in New York State Supreme Court, against the State University of New York (SUNY) in May '96. Justice Joseph J. Dowd ruled that certification records identifying the sources of dogs and cats used for medical research at SUNY's Health Science Center in Brooklyn are available to the public under the state's Freedom of Information Law (FOIL).

Section 2158 of the Animal Welfare Act, passed in 1990 in response to public concern over pet theft, requires dealers who supply random sources of dogs and cats to research institutions to provide the institutions with certifications stating the name of the persons or pounds from which the dealer acquired the animals. In response to the disappearance of dogs in the Brooklyn area, CAAL had requested SUNY's certification records under FOIL, a request with which SUNY refused to comply.

Despite the passage of Section 2158, public concern over the fraudulent sale of pets to research laboratories has become stronger in years. In response to this concern, two bills were introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives in may to again amend the Animal Welfare Act. The Family For Protection Act (H.R. 3393), introduced by Representatives Jon Fox (R., PA), and Tom Lantos (D., CA), and the Pet Safety and Protection Act (H.R. 3398), introduced by Representatives Charles Canady (R.,FL) and George Brown (D.,CA) prohibit Class-B "random source" dealers from providing animals to research institutions. Class A dealers, who breed animals specifically for research, are not affected by either bill.


We've Been Busy!

The following summary of 1996 events of which members of our staff/Board of Directors made presentations or participated.

March

APA Committee on Animal Research and Ethics
Environmental Law Conference -- University of Oregon Summit for the Animals
Detroit Health Department Conference on Violence
Press Conference on "Pets in Housing" Legislation

April

Pain/Distress Classification Group

June

March for the Animals Steering Committee
PSYETA Social Hour -- March for the Animals

October

National Association of Biology Teachers
Congress on Alternative and Animal Use in the Life Sciences
Students for the Ethical Treatment of Animals -- University of Toronto
New England Psychological Association Convention
Culture of Violence featured topic on Mouth of the Merrimack television program, Northern Massachusetts
 

Regular Participants

International Foundation for Ethical Research Science Advisory Board
Alternative Research and Development Foundation Science Advisory Board
Toxicity Testing Standardization Committee
The Animals' Agenda, Board of Directors
Political Action Working Group

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