BY CURT HARDER LANCASTER 'There's a fox in the henhouse. His name is Dr. Michael Fox, and he doesn't have the welfare of animals at heart " That’s how John Fidler, manager of techncial services tor Pennfield Corp, summed up the status of the animal rights movement on Monday Michael Fox is the leading spokesman for the animal rights or animal welfare movement, a group of people which says farm animals are not treated properly Fox is, by most accounts, a charming and convincing speaker And he has a number of ordinary as well as powerful people who support his ideas - The animal rights movement “...they will not tolerate any type of animal exploitation...” basically is a group of humans who are .working for better conditions tor animals The humans are deadly serious They’re well tunded and determined to push their cause Dennis White of the Humane Association of the United States describes the animal rights movement as divided into two groups, radical and mildly radical "The radical animal rights activists will not tolerate any type of animal exploitation, ex perimentation, farming, killing or other areas where animals can benefit man, White told a recent meeting sponsored by the American Farm Bureau Federation White says people in that group generally are pure vegetarians. The group is small, he admits, but is highly vocal and has the means and fortitude to bring its views to the general public The mildly radical group also says animals have certain rights but recognizes that animals have been used tor man s benefit tor years Most animal weltare advocates would agree that animal rights include freedom ot movement to get up, lie down, groom normally and stretch their limbs Animal rights activists take exception to modern, large scale tarming practices which confine animals and don t allow them to roam on pasture or range Factory tarming is a key Todd - DO IT AGAIN... Another record-breaking sales year tells us that the Top Performers' are doing their 10b for you We thank you for your support Some varieties of these highly regarded hybrids are still available act now if you want 1981 to be a top performance year for you Call today for discount and delivery information , JVmP HYBRID SALES, INC. ABBOTTSTOWN, PA 17301 Phone: 717-259-9511 SEED CORN • ALFALFA SORGHUMS • SOYBEANS Animal rights: pros and cons phrase heard in animal rights discussion. It is applied to large confinement operations. Animal rights people say such farm practices cause livestock mental anguish and undue hard ship Veterinarian Jerry Appelgate dismisses those charges as an thropomorp'usm,” or attributing to an animal human feelings and ideas Animal rights people want you to think, gee, it 1 were a laying hen, would 1 like this'" he told a group of school teachers at a Pennfield-sponsored conference Monday. The idea is supported by pseudo intellectuals who are always a danger, he said, and by vegetarians. Dr. Appelgate traced the evolution of agriculture from nomads herding animals to the coming of fences the first form of confinement. Economics of scale played a role in further specialization and centralization of agriculture, he continued. All of this helped farmers make better use of land, labor, and capital, Dr. Appelgate maintains, ...animals in Germany are sueing their owners... with the result that America has the best quality food in the world at the lowest price Is the animal rights movement actually going to throw a monkey wrench mto this system ' Some members of the ag com munity believe it is and note steps in that direction already have been taken John Fidler said some animals in Germany are sueing their owners with help from animal rights ac tivists. In Denmark the use ot con finement poultry operations was outlawed until the Danes found they could not compete with the rest of the European Economic Community DAIRY FARMERS BEWARE of KETOSIS! KETOSIS is second only to Mastitis among cattle diseases in the milk loss it causes SIGNS & SYMPTOMS OF KETOSIS ARE: Loss of appetite constipation muscle covered feces depression rapid loss of weight a drop in milk production incoordination and general paralysis CARE & TREATMENT: /®\ KEELENE FOR PREVENTION & TREATMENT OF KETOSIS IN DAIRY CATTLE * . FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 717-354-4001 Distributed by NEW HOLLAND SUPPLY CO. Available from YOUR LOCAL FARM SUPPLY DEALER Confinement housing and animal rights were two houses, five birds to a cage, at Penns topics of discussion when a group of Lancaster Peaceful Meadow Farm, R 3 Mount Joy. County teachers visited the J. Harold Musser Visitors found the Starcross Leghorns in good poultry operation. They saw 120,000 layers in shape and laying at profitable rates. At present, Fidler says, Europeans are talking about legislating the rights and welfare of animals The movement actually began in the United States in the early 1970 s with laws to require better con ditions for laboratory animals Then it spread to tarms in Europe and is coming back to the United States Fuller dismisses arguments that “„.if I were a laying hen , animals eat grain that could best be fed directly to people He says such products as crab meal, leather meal, corn gluten, and even alfalfa hay are not human foodstuffs Besides, he says, when com petition for a particular gram for tood increases its price, feed mills will turn to alternative, less desirable products for animal feed What about the charges that animals deserve a degree of freedom ' John Skinner of the University ot Wisconsm concedes animals in the wild need room to escape predators, find food, and find a mate, but he adds, domesticated animals have all those things provided for them One of the best indicators ot animal well-being that we have in both wild and confined situations is would I like this ...” the reproductive rate,’ Skinner says •We have to remind people that you don’t force production It is an animal’s response to the conditions we provide for it The animal rewards us for what we'give it and responds accordingly, ’ he con cludes Fuller would agree with Skinner Fuller notes that animals in confinement are better ted, are less prone to disease, are sheltered from the weather, and are protected from preditors Are they any worse off than house pets kept in cages'” Fuller asks Fuller leans heavily on the economic argument tor con finement housing Forty years ago, he points out, it took 12 weeks and 12 pounds ot teed to produce a four pound bird tor market Today that same bird can be produced m seven weeks übing just eight pounds teed Fidler questionb whether the consumer is willing to pay the extra money requited to finance animals produced on range He said a dozen eggs would cost triple what they do today it egg Lancaster Farming, Saturday, April 4,1981—A25 “...ore they any worse off than house pets kept in cages?... ” ■J \ 4 J* \ * -'•tr production were taken out of the modern laying house. Dr Appelgate, too, agrees that supply and demand determine what ag products will be used and how they will be produced. Generally, government has come to the rescue of oppressed or minority groups A number of animal rights activists would like to see government step in to help animals, too. Harry Mussman, administrator of the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service of USDA says is not unlikely we will see legislation which would require farm animals to be treated kindly If that takes place, the APHIS administrator said, it would be an enormous job for the governemnt to make sure animals had what he lists as creature comforts, freedom from pain, and the right not to be deprived of natural conditions • As administrator of APHIS, I would have great difficulty sup porting that kind of thing, if for no other reason but budgetary,” he says. Mussman’s alternative to government regulation is self control He says the industry should consider establishing proper guidelines for livestock production and care, and be in a position to defend current production prac tices. Dr Appelgate, an industry representative, maintains there already are strong incentives to do just that An animal under stress won’t reproduce, is prone to sickness, and doesn’t gam weight as rapidly as one which is treated properly, he would point out. But the battle may have gone beyond that Neal Black, president of the Livestock Conservation Institute, an organization active in promotion of livestock production and disease eradication, sa>s the battle has been taken to our next generation, the little children in school Like the Pennfield represen- (Turn to Page A 26) *1 vV" •V: