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Life Stories
These are life stories of primates held in U.S. primate laboratories. They are based on documents obtained from the labs.


ORPRC
20213 Rhesus Macaque

CRPRC
23993 Squirrel Monkey
25205 Crab-eating Macaque
25142 Crab-eating Macaque
23954 Rhesus Macaque
24013 Squirrel Monkey
25157 Crab-eating Macaque
24974 Rhesus Macaque
23915 Crab-eating Macaque
27276 Crab-eating Macaque
WRPRC
cj0233 Common Marmoset
cj0453 Common Marmoset
Piotr
R80180 Rhesus Macaque
R90128 Rhesus Macaque
R97041 Rhesus Macaque
R95100 Rhesus Macaque
s93052 Rhesus Macaque
Response from Jordana Lenon, public relations manager for WRPRC.

WaRPRC
A92025 Baboon
J90266 Pig-tailed Macaque
J92476 Pig-tailed Macaque

UCLA
9382 Vervet
1991-016 Vervet

UTAH
MCY 24525 Crab-eating Macaque
MCY 24540 Crab-eating Macaque


The Chimpazees at Fauna Foundation


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The University of Wisconsin and the Concept of Honesty


The Fall 2001 issue of the university alumni magazine, On Wisconsin, arrived in the mail of UW alumni and UW supporters recently. On page 28, readers found the article, "Getting Emotional" by Dian Land.

"Getting Emotional" continues the long and practiced tradition at UW of misleading the public. The article focuses on the work of UW researcher Ned Kalin. Kalin is presented as compassionate, benign and a national leader in emotional health care.

Land's article begins with a deceptive description of what Kalin's research aims: "Picture Kalin's dream. Children entering first grade will undergo physical examinations before their first days at school, just as they do today. But those visits to family physicians will include tests to determine whether the children have emotional propensities that, if left unattended, could later become problems. Physicians will administer discrete questionnaires to tease out, for example, if a child is excessively shy."

Land quotes Kalin: "Maybe we'll be able to just keep an eye on some of the kids at risk, or help make sure their home environments keep them healthy.... For those at highest risk, I fully expect we'll have some kind of therapy that specifically regulates activity in key brain structures to make sure they don't go off course during development."

Land points out that the Dalai Lama has shown an interest in the W.M. Keck Laboratory for Functional Brain Imaging and Behavior. The laboratory houses functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and positron emission tomography PET) machines that allow scientists to observe a living person's brain in action.

The article almost begins discussing the truth: "Kalin learned that in monkeys... some chemical circuits in the brain control responses associated with affection and affiliation."

And, if the reader is naïve, or has forgotten the past bald-faced and repeated public lies by the UW, they might finish the article with a warm feeling in their stomach and think about sending the alumni foundation a nice big donation. But to the informed and critical reader the feeling in their gut will be a bit different.

Land points out that Kalin studies free-ranging monkeys at Cayo Santiago. She fails to note that he has done so for years. This would hardly be a point to bring up but for the fact that Cayo Santiago is part of the Caribbean Primate Research Center in Puerto Rico, a large federally funded primate research center. The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) has found chronic problems at the facility related to animal care. As a visiting scientist familiar with the operation of a primate center, Kalin had a responsibility to report the inadequate hosing of the monkeys there, the lack of an adequate number of veterinarians, the poor sanitation, and general dilapidation of the facility.

Land failed to explain just what Kalin does in his lab when she wrote, "Kalin learned that in monkeys... some chemical circuits in the brain control responses associated with affection and affiliation." She mentions nothing of the endless stream of repeated experimental brain surgeries intended to destroy the emotion centers of monkeys' brains.

For instance:

"Effects of amygdala lesions on sleep in rhesus monkeys." Benca RM, Obermeyer WH, Shelton SE, Droster J, Kalin NH. Department of Psychiatry, University of Wisconsin - Madison, 6001 Research Park Blvd., Madison, WI 53719-1176, USA. Brain Research 2000 Oct 6; 879 (1-2):130-8

"The amygdala is important in processing emotion and in the acquisition and expression of fear and anxiety. It also appears to be involved in the regulation of sleep and wakefulness. The purpose of this study was to assess the effects of, fiber-sparing lesions of the amygdala on sleep in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). We recorded sleep from 18 age-matched male rhesus monkeys, 11 of which had previously received ibotenic acid lesions of the amygdala and seven of which were normal controls. Surface electrodes for sleep recording were attached and the subjects were seated in a restraint chair (to which they had been adapted) for the nocturnal sleep period. Despite adaptation, control animals had sleep patterns characterized by frequent arousals. Sleep was least disrupted in animals with large bilateral lesions of the amygdala. They had more sleep and a higher proportion of rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep than did either animals with smaller lesions or control animals. Based on these results, it seems likely that, in the primate, the amygdala plays a role in sleep regulation and may be important in mediating the effects of emotions/stress on sleep. These findings may also be relevant to understanding sleep disturbances associated with psychopathology."

Land writes enthusiastically regarding the Dalai Lama's interest in the brain imaging capabilities of the UW labs, but fails to mention that the office of His Holiness has admitted that he was unaware of Kalin's history of cruelty.

Tenzin Geyche Tethong, of the Office of His Holiness the Dalai notes, "His Holiness was not aware that Dr. Kalin was involved in conducting tests on animals that were painful and extremely cruel... His Holiness has always been against such tests on animals."

The University of Wisconsin has a long and dark history of lying to the public regarding anything having to do with its experimental use of monkeys:

June 15, 1989

Dr. David Hall
Director, Vilas Park Zoo
702 S. Randall Ave.
Madison, WI 53715

Dear Dr. Hall:

I want to inform you of the Primate Center's policy regarding our monkeys that reside at the Vilas Park Zoo in a building we refer to as the "WRPRC Vilas Park Zoo Facility". This building was constructed with funds provided by the federal government to the Primate Center. Thus, despite its somewhat ambiguous designation, the facility is owned and operated by us and, accordingly, the University of Wisconsin.

More than a few of the monkeys housed at this facility have lived their entire lives there, and animals are removed from their natal groups only to prevent overcrowding. The groups have been established for the principal purpose of studying social organization and social dynamics in stable primate societies.

Accordingly, on those infrequent occasions when animals are removed from a group, the removal is guided by procedures aimed at ensuring the least disruption of the group and at preserving social stability.

The research performed on troops housed at the zoo is purely observational in nature. As a matter of policy, no invasive physiological studies are carried out on these animals. In addition, the Center's policy regarding animals removed from these established groups ensures that they will not be used in studies at our facility involving invasive experimental procedures. Such animals will be assigned to the Center's non-experimental breeding colony, where they are exempt from experimental use.

This policy on the uses of monkeys at the WRPRC Vilas Park Zoo facility has the endorsement of my administrative council as well as the staff veterinarians and animal care supervisors responsible for the care and humane use of all Center animals. As evidence of this, their signatures are also affixed.

Let me take this opportunity to point out that the Center has long taken a leadership role in the humane treatment of research animals. Our housing meets or exceeds all applicable standards. Our 12-person animal care staff has an average length of nearly 20 years of dedicated service to the Center and its animals. In addition, our chief veterinarian is one of just a handful of veterinarians in the state to be certified as a Diplomat of the American College of Laboratory Animal Medicine, and our assistant veterinarian has developed a highly regarded program of pairing caged monkeys to enhance their psychological well-being.

Yours Truly,

[signed]
Robert W. Goy, Director

In the summer of 1997, a whistle blower came forward with documentation that monkeys had been secretly removed from the zoo over a nine-year period -- throughout the time UW was asserting through correspondence with the zoo that the monkeys were off limits for invasive research.

At first the university officials denied the facts, but eventually, as details and documents were made public demonstrating that over 200 monkeys had been secretly taken, they were forced to admit that they had been lying all along.

The instances of lying to the public are far too many to detail here. No observer of the University of Wisconsin can be anything other than skeptical regarding any comment made by the authorities there regarding monkeys or and of its coven of primate researchers, or by those who write the university's propaganda. The University of Wisconsin has lied, and continues to lie and deceive the public. A culture of public deceit flourishes. The Fall 2001 issue of On Wisconsin makes this perfectly clear.

We can only wonder about administrators and researchers there like Ned Kalin, who so obviously, and so profoundly, got off track during their early development. We should look into their dark and sickly brains in an effort to tease out the causes of such callousness, cruelty, and absence of honesty.





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