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To: SIer formerly known as Joe B. who wrote (2074)12/31/2002 9:18:43 AM
From: AugustWest  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3689
 
(COMTEX) Drinkers Urged To Use Real Corks To Save Cat

Dec 30, 2002 (WENN via COMTEX) -- Drinkers are being urged to sup wine and
champagne from bottles with cork stoppers to help save the world's rarest big
cat. The cork forests of Spain and Portugal - home of the endangered Iberian
lynx - are under threat because of the increasing use of synthetic and screw top
stoppers among wine retailers. Falling demand for cork means that it is often
more profitable to destroy the animals' woodland homes and replace them with
other less environmentally-friendly forms of forestry and agriculture. Latest
figures show that there are just 150 Iberian lynx left, with only 30 breeding
females. Such is the severity of the situation facing the cat that the IUCN (the
World Conservation Union) has upgraded its status to "critically endangered".
Cork forests are home to a rich variety of endangered wildlife, including the
Iberian imperial eagle in Spain and Portugal and the Barbary deer, in Tunisia.
Over 80,000 people depend on the cork industry in the Mediterranean, which helps
support a unique mix of agriculture and forestry, and cork stoppers are the
economic backbone of the entire forest economy. Corks are made from the bark
which is sustainably stripped from the trunks of the trees every nine years.
(CS/WNWCAN/CPT)



(c) 2002 WORLD ENTERTAINMENT NEWS NETWORK. All global rights reserved.
No unauthorised copying or re-distribution permitted.

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*** end of story ***



To: SIer formerly known as Joe B. who wrote (2074)1/13/2003 8:01:42 AM
From: JakeStraw  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3689
 
MEXICAN WOMEN CHASE AWAY BEER TRUCKS
Women in the Mexican village of Teenek have cut off the beer supply to
the mountain town by chasing away delivery trucks. The town's men have
been described as "sad." The women greet the trucks by shouting, "Get
out! Get out!", and have left the town basically dry except for special
ceremonies. The women told a local newspapers they are fed up with
their men stumbling home drunk and even falling over in corn fields. "A
lot of men are not happy with this. They seem sad. But oh, well." said
Marcelina Martinez. "At least now they spend time with their families.
They didn't want to listen to us so we had to get angry."
realbeer.com