Tuesday, May 19, 2020

Florida removes data scientist who refused to manipulate COVID-19 numbers to support reopening
Published May 19, 2020 Travis Gettys


The architect and manager of Florida’s coronavirus dashboard says she has been removed from her post because she refused to manipulate data.

The online dashboard has been a valuable resource for researchers, reporters and the public to access and review COVID-19 cases, testing and death data, and had won wide praise for its transparency and accessibility, reported Florida Today.

However, the site has crashed and gone offline in recent weeks, data has disappeared without explanation — and Rebekah Jones, who led a team of Florida Department of Health data scientists and public health officers to set up the site, announced her removal as of May 5.
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“I understand, appreciate, and even share your concern about all the dramatic changes that have occurred and those that are yet to come,” Jones wrote her colleagues in an email.

“As a word of caution, I would not expect the new team to continue the same level of accessibility and transparency that I made central to the process during the first two months,” she added. “After all, my commitment to both is largely (arguably entirely) the reason I am no longer managing it.”

Jones confirmed to WPEC-TV that she was removed because she was ordered to censor some data, but she refused to “manually change data to drum up support for the plan to reopen.”

The state’s Department of Health declined to comment, but researchers blasted the move as an example of government censorship.

“We would not accept this lack of transparency for any other natural disaster, so why are we willing to accept it here?” said Jennifer Larsen, a researcher at the University of Central Florida’s LabX.

Data access has not worsened since Jones was removed, according to researchers, but they worry that the data will become less available.

“They are pretending that public health is what has damaged (the) economy,” said Asal Johnson, an assistant professor of Public Health at Stetson University. “They are getting it wrong; the economy is damaged because we ignored evidence to protect public health.

“They think they can save their own political interest by restricting information,” she added.

The situation was even more dangerous now that Florida has already reopened, researchers said.

“The virus doesn’t really give a damn if you hide its numbers,” said Jennifer Larsen, a researcher at the University of Central Florida’s LabX.
Thousands return to work at more than 50 reopened U.S. auto plants


After workers expressed concern about returning to assembly plants, the union has offered assurance it will keep close watch on conditions. File Photo by Brian Kersey/UPI | License Photo

May 18 (UPI) -- U.S. automakers reopened dozens of plants across the United States Monday for the first time in nearly two months in a major test of how well the American economy can rebound from the coronavirus pandemic.

General Motors, Ford and Fiat Chrysler each resumed production at plants in Detroit; Chicago; Toledo, Ohio; Louisville, Ky.; and Kansas City under an agreement reached with the United Auto Workers

Thousands of workers returned to factories outfitted with new health and safety protocols that have already been implemented at plants in China and Europe.

How well the new measures can prevent the spread of COVID-19 will be closely watched as an indicator of how other sectors of the economy may fare as pandemic restrictions are loosened nationwide.

RELATED Economic downturn expected to disrupt U.S. used car market

After workers expressed concern about returning to assembly plants too soon, the union offered assurance it will keep close watch on conditions.

"The UAW will continue to do everything we can to protect the health and safety of all members as plants reopen," union president Rory Gamble said. "And we will continue to advocate for as much testing as possible and full testing as it becomes available."

The automakers are anxious to restart production as U.S. production of vehicles and parts fell by more than 70 percent in April, according to the U.S. Federal Reserve. The industry has yet to ask Congress for emergency aid, and automakers say they have enough cash reserves and credit lines to avoid bankruptcy.


Automakers help restart US industry as globe reopens further

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United Auto Workers members leave the Fiat Chrysler Automobiles Warren Truck Plant after the first work shift, Monday, May 18, 2020, in Warren, Mich. Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV along with rivals Ford and General Motors Co., restarted the assembly lines on Monday after several week of inactivity due to the corona virus pandemic. (AP Photo/Paul Sancya)

WARREN, Mich. (AP) — More than 130,000 autoworkers returned to factories across the U.S. for the first time in nearly two months Monday in one of the biggest steps yet to restart American industry, while an experimental vaccine against the coronavirus yielded encouraging results in a small and extremely early test.

Stocks rallied on the vaccine news and signs that the worst of the crisis has passed in many countries. The Dow Jones Industrial Average soared about 900 points, or nearly 4%.


In a surprise announcement, President Donald Trump said he’s been taking a malaria drug to protect against the virus even though his own administration has warned it should only be administered in a hospital or research setting because of potentially fatal side effects.

Automakers from Detroit’s Big Three — Fiat Chrysler, General Motors and Ford — to Honda and Toyota put screening procedures in place at the dozens of factories that reopened from the Great Lakes states south to Tennessee and Texas and out west to Tesla’s factory near the San Francisco Bay. Some Detroit automakers started cranking out vehicles Monday, but it will take longer to fully restart other plants. Workers appeared reassured by the precautions.


At a Fiat Chrysler pickup truck assembly plant in Warren, outside Detroit, workers entered a giant white tent with a sign reading, “Let’s restart and keep each other safe.” They had their temperatures checked and answered questions on whether they had COVID-19 symptoms.

“I feel safer than being anywhere at any stores, because they got the screening and everything,” said Ann’alazia Moore, a janitor at the factory. “I feel like that’s amazing. That’s smart. I like that. So, I feel more safe. I won’t get sick.”

Cole Stevenson, who installs steering wheels at a Ford pickup truck plant in Dearborn, Michigan, said, “The parts of the plant where people would be closer together, they’ve put up a lot of partitions. You can tell they’ve taken tape measures to just about any surface two people would need to be near each other.”

Meanwhile, an experimental vaccine by Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Moderna Inc. triggered hoped-for immune responses in eight healthy, middle-aged volunteers. They were found to have antibodies similar to those seen in people who have recovered from COVID-19.

Further studies on the vaccine’s safety, effectiveness and optimal dosage still need to be done. But with people desperate for any sign of progress, the findings caused excitement on Wall Street.


Worldwide, about a dozen vaccine candidates are in the first stages of testing or nearing it. Health officials have said that if all goes well, studies might wrap up late this year or early 2021.

The malaria drug that Trump says he’s been taking daily “for about a week and a half now” has not been shown to combat the coronavirus.

“I started taking it, because I think it’s good,” Trump said. “I’ve heard a lot of good stories.”

Despite warnings from health experts that the virus could make a resurgence, many states have eased lockdowns under pressure from Trump to save businesses and livelihoods. U.S. unemployment surged in April to 14.7%, a level not seen since the Depression.

Health authorities will be watching for a second wave of infections and worry Americans will disregard social distancing over Memorial Day weekend, the unofficial start of summer. There were already large crowds last weekend: Connecticut had to close beaches when they reached capacity under new rules, and people packed the Virginia Beach oceanfront even before restrictions were relaxed.

Deputies north of Orlando, Florida, say they were hit with cups of alcohol, bottles and bar stools after making arrests at a weekend block party with an estimated 3,000 people. Walt Disney World posted a warning about COVID-19 as it prepares to allow some third-party shops and restaurants to reopen this week.

Bars, day cares and zoos were the latest parts of Texas’ economy to reopen with social distancing measures. By June, summer camps and youth sports will be allowed in the second-most-populated state.

One of California’s largest tribal casinos reopened with customers getting their temperatures taken and being ordered to cover their faces, while every other slot machine was turned off to keep people separated. A large turnout meant many were still playing less than 6 feet (2 meters) apart.

Ronda McLauchlan lined up at 7:30 a.m. before going to work as a painting contractor because “it’s all about freedom.”

Europe also has pushed ahead with reopening, allowing people into the Acropolis in Athens, high-fashion boutiques in Italy, museums in Belgium, golf courses in Ireland and beer gardens in Bavaria.

More than 4.7 million people worldwide have tested positive for the virus and over 318,000 deaths have been recorded, including about 90,000 in the U.S. and over 160,000 in Europe, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University. Those figures are believed to understate the true dimensions of the outbreak because of limited testing, differences in counting the dead and concealment by some governments.

In other developments, the World Health Organization bowed to calls to launch an independent investigation into how it responded to the coronavirus. Trump has repeatedly attacked both WHO and China, claiming the U.N. agency helped Beijing conceal the extent of the outbreak in its early stages.

WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the probe will take place “at the earliest appropriate moment.” The announcement at WHO’s annual meeting came after a watchdog body found possible shortcomings in the agency’s warning system.
Full Coverage: Virus Outbreak

Chinese President Xi Jinping defended China’s record, saying it provided all relevant outbreak data to WHO and other countries, including the virus’s genetic sequence, “in a most timely fashion.”

With new infections and deaths slowing considerably in Europe, many countries are preparing to reopen their borders and trying to draw up rules for a highly unusual summer tourist season.

“This vacation this year won’t be like the ones we know from the past,” German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas told ZDF television. “The pandemic is still there, and we must at least have safety precautions for the worst case that the figures get worse again.”

Churches in Italy and at the Vatican resumed public Masses. Guards in hazmat suits took the temperatures of those entering St. Peter’s Basilica, where Pope Francis celebrated a Mass in a side chapel to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the birth of St. John Paul II.

Turkey’s president announced a four-day curfew during the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr. The country has opted to impose short weekend and holiday curfews, instead of full lockdowns, fearing damage to the already troubled economy.

___

Long reported from Washington, Krisher from Detroit. Associated Press writers around the world contributed.

___

This story has been corrected to show that some Detroit automakers began producing vehicles Monday.








Hydroxychloroquine could cause Trump hallucinations — and ‘severe’ mental changes: report

May 18, 2020 By Bob Brigham

President Donald Trump could be experiencing unwanted side-effects from his use of hydroxychloroquine.


CNN’s Bob Ortega warned of the danger following Trump’s admission he has been taking the drug.

Worth noting, perhaps, that the Mayo Clinic lists possible side effects of hydroxychloroquine as including: "feeling, seeing, or hearing things that are not there… severe mood or mental changes… unusual behavior… unusual facial expressions… irritability"
— Bob Ortega (@Bob_Ortega) May 18, 2020

Indeed, the organization does warn of potential mental health impacts


“Feeling that others are watching you or controlling your behavior,” is one potential side effect.
ILLUSTRATION JIM CARRY

“Feeling that others can hear your thoughts,” is another.

“Feeling, seeing, or hearing things that are not there,” is also listed.

“Severe mood or mental changes,” is also listed.

Mayo also warns of “unusual behavior.”



Iowa farm group restoring habitat for bees, fish



The Iowa Soybean Association is restoring oxbows, like the one pictured, as habitat for endangered Topeka shiners. Photo courtesy of the Iowa Soybean Associatio

EVANSVILLE, Ind., May 18 (UPI) -- An Iowa farm group plans to convert several acres of unused agricultural land to habitat for endangered native bees and fish in coming years.

The project, led by the Iowa Soybean Association, involves painstakingly restoring small pieces of unusable agricultural land

"The goal is to improve non-working ground," said Corey McKinney, a conservationist with the association. "We're not taking land out of production. We're going to places like creek bottoms or fallow areas and restoring them."

The project, which began a couple of years ago, received a boost last week when Syngenta, a global seed and pesticide company, agreed to provide tens of thousands of dollars of upcoming work.
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Syngenta funds projects to restore pollinator and other endangered species habitats around the world.

"We work with organizations that are farmer-driven, innovative and connect farm productivity with conservation," Caydee Savinelli, Syngenta's stewardship team and pollinator lead, said in a statement.

"We each bring unique talents to the table. It takes a lot of partners and unique skill sets to make initiatives like this work."
RELATED Grain bin deaths spiked in 2019; expected to remain high this year



For this project, the groups are targeting habitats for two specific endangered species -- the rusty-patched bumble bee and the Topeka shiner, a freshwater fish.

Native to Midwest

The rusty-patched bumble bee is native to the Midwest. Over the last 20 years, its numbers have declined about 87 percent, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
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"The species is likely to be present in only 0.1 percent of its historical range," according to the agency. "There are many potential reasons for the rusty patched bumble bee decline including habitat loss, intensive farming, disease, pesticide use and climate change."

In the last year, the Iowa Soybean Association has restored about 14 acres of habitat for those bees, and it plans to restore 5 more acres this year.

"It sounds small, but we are talking about extensive restoration work," McKinney said. "It takes time."

To survive, the bee requires multiple different types of flowering plants that bloom throughout the spring, summer and fall. The conservationists must carefully plan what kind of plants they will put on each acre, McKinney said.

Waterways aided

The association also plans to restore areas known as oxbows, which are U-shaped, off-channel waterways that flow from rivers, streams or creeks.

Those areas are ideal habitat for the endangered Topeka shiners and other freshwater fish.

Over time, oxbows tend to fill with sediment and disappear, McKinney said.

The association already has restored 23 oxbows across the state and plans to restore another 35 over the next three to five years, he said.

The restored oxbows and wildflower habitats become home to many native species other than rusty-patched bumble bees and Topeka shiners, McKinney added.

"There might not be as much habitat left for native species because of changes in the landscape, but we're trying to look at how to re-create some of the old landscapes," McKinney said.
Uber requires masks for riders and drivers, plans to lay off 3,000 more

"We are encouraging drivers to cancel trips without penalty if they don't feel safe," Uber said.

Uber said artificial intelligence built into its app will enforce the new rule that requires drivers to wear face coverings. 



May 18 (UPI) -- Beginning Monday, ride-sharing giant Uber will require all drivers and riders to wear face coverings as more governments start to lift coronavirus restrictions for businesses.

The company says drivers and riders will be asked to go through a checklist to confirm that they have taken safety measures that now include wearing a face covering as well as sanitizing their hands.

A leader in the ride-hailing business, Uber will use artificial intelligence built into its platform to verify drivers are complying with the new mandate.

Drivers are required to confirm they're wearing a face covering by submitting a selfie to the Uber app and a message will be sent to inform the rider. Riders will also be asked to sit in the back seat and open windows for ventil
"It's important to us that you know what to expect when you take that 'second first trip,'" Uber said in a statement. "Over the last two months, our tech and safety teams have been hard at work building a new product experience that will help protect everyone, every time they use Uber."

"Everyone must take proper precautions not only to protect yourself but also the driver and the next person getting in the car after," added Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshani. "It's about protecting not only yourself but everyone around you."

The new rules apply to all drivers and riders in the United States, Canada, India and most of Europe and Latin Americ

Sachin Kansal, Uber's senior director of product management, said both drivers and riders are asked to notify the company if there are violations, and repeat offenders may be have their accounts terminated.

"We are encouraging drivers to cancel trips without penalty if they don't feel safe, including if the rider isn't wearing a face cover," the company said.

Additionally, Uber said it's allocated $50 million to buy masks, disinfectant spray, wipes, hand sanitizer and gloves for both riders and drivers. The company said it had obtained more than 23 million masks by last week.


"We're also piloting new partnerships with world-class leaders in cleanliness," it added. "Working with Clorox in select cities in North America, we plan to distribute ride-sharing-specific disinfecting tips and work to make more supplies available to drivers and riders in the car."

Lyft, Uber's primary competitor, announced similar guidelines this month that mandates face coverings for its drivers and riders, sanitizing and an educational program.

Later Monday, Uber said in an SEC filing it plans to lay off 3,000 more employees and close 45 offices. That's in addition to the 3,700 jobs it said it would cut two weeks ago. As they're considered contractors, drivers were not counted in the planned layoffs.

Uber has laid off more than a quarter of its workforce since the start of the crisis while business has increased for UberEats delivery service. The company said it saw more than $4.6 billion in gross bookings between January and April, up more than 50 percent from a year ago.
Global trial to assess chloroquine against COVID-19 in health workers


May 18 (UPI) -- More than 50,000 healthcare workers worldwide will be enrolled in a clinical trial to assess chloroquine's potential in protecting against COVID-19, researchers at the Washington University of St. Louis School of Medicine announced Monday.

The U.S. arm of the study, which will begin enrolling participants later this month, is being led by the school. Results are expected in early 2021, researchers said.

"Because of their repeated close contacts with infected patients, frontline healthcare workers in all parts of the world have a higher risk of contracting COVID-19 than most members of the general public," principal investigator Michael S. Avidan, head of the Department of Anesthesiology at WUSTL, said in a press release.

"In some places, more than 10 percent of those who have become infected are healthcare workers. There is an urgent need to identify drugs that are effective at preventing infection or mitigating its severity," he added.



RELATED Expert calls hopes for COVID-19 vaccine within year 'optimistic'


Officials at Rising Pharmaceuticals said Monday the company will be donating supplies of chloroquine, which is currently used to treat malaria, for the U.S. arm of the study. The research is being funded through the COVID-19 Therapeutics Accelerator, a partnership that includes the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Wellcome and Mastercard.

Participants enrolled in the study will receive either 300 milligrams of chloroquine weekly, 300 mg. of the drug twice weekly, 150 mg. daily after being administered an "induction dose" of 1200 mg. chloroquine -- or placebo -- in four divided daily doses. New dosage arms may be added or removed as the trial progresses, according to the study design information filed with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

The goal of the study will be to determine which, if any, of the chloroquine regimens is most effective at decreasing incidence of severe COVID-19 -- the disease caused by the new coronavirus, SARS-CoV-2 -- without unacceptable side effects or safety events.


RELATED HHS whistle-blower says he was demoted for resisting 'toxic' COVID-19 treatment

The hope is that the drug can prevent infection, or reduce the severity of symptoms, researchers said.

"When people have to travel to parts of the world where malaria is a problem, they often take low doses of chloroquine to help prevent infection," said Avidan, who is also a professor of psychiatry and surgery. "We want to learn whether this drug might work in a similar fashion in the case of COVID-19, or at the very least, whether low-dose chloroquine might help prevent the severe and life-threatening complications associated with the illness."

In addition to the United States, the trial will enroll healthcare workers from Canada, Mexico and various countries in Europe, Africa and South America, with a particular focus on lower- and middle-income countries. Because of shortages of healthcare workers in many of these countries, protecting them from severe COVID-19 is particularly important, the researchers said.



Google searches for malaria drug spiked after Trump, Musk endo
Searches for two anti-malarial drugs touted by public officials as treatment for COVID-19 shot up nearly 500 percent and 1,400 percent, researchers report.

rsements

April 29 (UPI) -- Google searches for the anti-malarial drug hydroxychloroquine increased by nearly 1,400 percent after high-profile endorsements of possible benefits in treating COVID-19, an analysis published Wednesday in JAMA Internal Medicine said.

Similar searches for chloroquine, another drug that treats malaria, jumped more than 440 percent, the researchers reported.

The analysis of search traffic from the beginning of February through the end of March covers the period from the start of the outbreak of the disease caused by the new coronavirus in the United States, which through Wednesday has infected more than 1 million Americans.

The two drugs were touted as possible treatments for COVID-19 by President Donald Trump and billionaire businessman Elon Musk in mid-March, despite a lack of evidence to support the claims.

RELATED FDA issues warning on side effects of malaria drug for COVID-19
"We hear a lot of talk about misinformation all the time, but it's very nebulous," study co-author Dr. John W. Ayers, a behavioral scientist at San Diego State University, told UPI on Tuesday night. Researchers at the University of California, Harvard, Johns Hopkins and the University of Oxford worked on the study.

"It's like pornography in the Supreme Court in the 1970s: We don't know it until we see it, and even then you don't agree on it," Ayers said. "But with misinformation during the pandemic, there is an acute danger. The stakes are high. We need to address it before it adds to the public health problem we're already facing."

For the study, researchers reviewed daily Google search data from Feb. 1 to March 29 of this year, comparing it to historic trends. Search terms such as "buy," "order," "Amazon," "eBay" and"Walmart," combined with the names of the drugs, were checked.

RELATED COVID-19 linked to stroke in young, middle-aged patients
Musk endorsed chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine -- drugs used historically to treat autoimmune disorders and malaria -- on Twitter on March 16 and Trump first mentioned them in a press briefing three days later.

The researchers found that the "first and largest" spike in searches for purchasing the drugs corresponded directly with Musk's tweet, with 100,000 additional searches the next day. On March 20, the day after Trump's comments, more than 250,000 additional searches were conducted.

Overall, Google search activity for purchasing chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine increased 442 percent and 1,389 percent, respectively, researchers found. They also noted that even after news reports of a fatal poisoning in Arizona, searches to buy chloroquine or hydroxychloroquine remained 212 percent and 1,167 percent, respectively, above expected levels.

RELATED Cancer may double risk for serious illness, death with COVID-19
Consumers turning to the internet for health information is not a new phenomenon. Research has shown that people frequently research their symptoms online before visiting a healthcare provider for diagnosis and treatment.

A study published last month in PLOS Computational Biology found that, during the Zika pandemic in 2016, Wikipedia page-views increased as much as 10 times, and that the rise corresponded directly with media mentions of the mosquito-borne virus.

"Wikipedia represents an important source of information during the current pandemic and its editors are doing their best to provide the most up-to-date information regarding COVID-19," Michele Tizzoni, lead author on the Zika study and research leader at the ISI Foundation in Torino, Italy, told UPI on Wednesday.

"However, as is stated by Wikipedia itself, Wikipedia or other Web sites cannot substitute for the advice of a medical professional," Tizzoni said.

Tizzoni and her colleagues focused on the role of media, especially television, in shaping public opinion.

She noted that during a pandemic, "the diffusion of accurate and reliable information on TV becomes even more important," as public attention -- and fear -- can be "explained by exposure to online and TV coverage, rather than the magnitude or extent of the epidemic itself."

The researchers behind the JAMA Internal Medicine study suggested that regulatory agencies and companies like Google and Bing need to "actively mitigate the negative consequences" of misinformation.

They specifically pointed to Google's integration of educational information into search results related to the outbreak -- an approach they would like to see expanded to and embraced by other platforms.

They also advised retailers to draft warnings or even withhold products that might be linked to use for COVID-19 treatment, as online retailer eBay did when it removed chloroquine products from its site.

The FDA last Friday also imposed restrictions on prescriptions for chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine for the new coronavirus, after research indicated potential dangers associated with their use.


"We thought if we could identify the outbreak of the misinformation and learn how widespread it was, we could start to learn about ways we can correct it and stop it from spreading," Ayers, co-author of the JAMA Internal Medicine study, said.
Reports: Pompeo under scrutiny over Saudi deal, staffer's errands
May 18 (UPI) -- The Trump administration is under new scrutiny over the firing last week of the State Department's inspector general, as critics say it may have been a move to shield Secretary of State Mike Pompeo from potential political harm.

Trump fired the watchdog, Steven Linick, on Friday and two top congressional Democrats told the White House Monday it's investigating the matter.

CNN, NBC News and USA Today report the issues involving Pompeo include efforts to fast-track a Saudi arms deal and using a staffer for personal business.

Rep. Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., chairman of the House foreign affairs committee, and Sen. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., ranking member of the Senate foreign relations committee, said in a letter to Trump chief of staff Mark Meadows Linick's firing was politically motivate

"Reports indicate that Secretary Pompeo personally made the recommendation to fire Mr. Linick and it is our understanding that he did so because the inspector general had opened an investigation into wrongdoing by Secretary Pompeo himself," the letter states.

"Such an action, transparently designed to protect Secretary Pompeo from personal accountability, would undermine the foundation of our democratic institutions and may be an illegal act of retaliation."

Reports said Linick started investigating claims that Pompeo used a staffer for personal matters, such as walking his dog, picking up dry cleaning and making dinner reservations. Linick had also nearly finished an inquiry into the decision on the Saudi arms deal.

"We don't have the full picture yet, but it's troubling that Secretary Pompeo wanted Mr. Linick pushed out before this work could be completed," Engel told CNN.

"Someone obviously has something to hide that they don't want the [inspector general] to find out about," a senior department official told USA Today.

Stephen J. Akard, a former aide to Vice President Mike Pence while he was governor of Indiana, replaced Linick as State inspector general.

From Quebec to New Orleans; the story of the French in America ... Fort de Chartres
by Schlarman, Joseph H., Bp., 1879-

https://archive.org/details/fromquebectonewo00schl/mode/2up

Publication date 1929

Topics French, Indians of North America, Français, Indiens d'Amérique
Publisher Belleville, Ill., Buechler Pub. Co.
Collection university_of_illinois_urbana-champaign; americana
Digitizing sponsor University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Language English

Frontispiece accompanied by guard sheet with descriptive letter press

Maps on lining-papers

Includes bibliographical references and index

End papers hold news articles about Rt. Rev. Msgr. J. H. Schlarman










The Universal Kinship by Moore, J. Howard (John Howard), b. 1862
https://archive.org/details/theuniversalkinship-jhowardmoore/page/n9/mode/2up

Topics animal rights, speciesism, sentiocentrism, utilitarianism, ethics, philosophy, evolution, Darwin, speciesism, utilitarianism, ethicsCollection opensourceLanguage English


In this work, J. Howard Moore advocates for the recognition of a kinship between humans and nonhuman animals, and a universal application of the Golden Rule as an ethical framework towards the treatment of all sentient beings. The evidence for this kinship is detailed in three sections: the physical, the psychical and the ethical.


Based on this edition of the book, published in 1906 by Charles H. Kerr & Co¸ Chicago (public domain).


Cover art: The Entry of the Animals into Noah's Ark by Jan Brueghel the


ONE OF THE EARLY WORKS ON ANIMAL LIBERATION, LIKE MANY OF TODAY'S ANIMAL RIGHTS ACTIVISTS MOORE WAS AN ACTIVIST VEGETARIAN, TODAY HE WOULD BE VEGAN, LIKE PETA.




Why I Am a Vegetarian: An Address Delivered Before the Chicago Vegetarian Society
by Moore, J. Howard (John Howard), b. 1862
https://archive.org/details/whyiamavegetarian/page/n3/mode/2up
Publication date 1895
Topics vegetarianism, ethics, utilitarianism, animal rights
Publisher Chicago: Frances L. Dusenberry
Collection opensource
Language English


Brochure of an address given by J. Howard Moore to the Chicago Vegetarian Society on the benefits of and reasons for being a vegetarian. 




The Unconscious Holocaust
by Moore, J. Howard (John Howard), b. 1862

https://archive.org/details/theunconsciousholocaust-jhowardmoore/page/n1/mode/2up

Publication date 1897-02-01
Topics ethics, animal rights, vegetarianism
Publisher Western Health Reform Institute
Collection opensource
Language English
Source: Good Health, Vol. 32, Iss. 02


MOORE WAS A SOCIALIST AND ATHEIST
https://archive.org/details/thesourceofreligion/mode/2up









Ethics and education
by Moore, J. Howard (John Howard), b. 1862
https://archive.org/details/cu31924031243318/page/n5/mode/2up
Publication date 1912
Topics Ethics
Publisher London, G. Bell & Sons







































Better world philosophy; a sociological synthesis
by Moore, J. Howard (John Howard), b. 1862
https://archive.org/details/cu31924030226165/page/n9/mode/2up


NO BOOK COVER, BROADSHEET LIKE
 ANTI IMPERIALIST PAMPHLET ON THE PHILIPPINES

America's apostasy
by Moore, J. Howard (John Howard), b. 1862
https://archive.org/details/americasapostasy00moor/mode/2up
Publication date 1899
Topics Imperialism, United States -- Colonial question, Philippines -- History Insurrection, 1898-1901, Philippines -- Politics and government 1898-1935
Publisher Chicago? : Chicago Chronicle
Collection uconn_libraries; blc; americana
Digitizing sponsor University of Connecticut Libraries
Contributor University of Connecticut Libraries

Language English




  




Daughters of Æsculapius; stories
by Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
https://archive.org/details/daughtersofaescu00woma/page/n11/mode/2up
Publication date 1897
Topics Medical fiction, American, Women physicians, Short stories, American, American fiction
Publisher Philadelphia, G. W. Jacobs & Co.
Collection library_of_congress; americana
Digitizing sponsor Kahle/Austin Foundation
Contributor The Library of Congress
Language English
The genius maker. Dr. E. M. Hiestand-Moore.--The domestic and professional life of Ann Preston. Dr. Rebecca Moore.--A maiden effort. Julia Grice.--Mater Dolorosa-Mater Felix. Dr. A. M. Fullerton.--One short hour. B. R. Slaughter.--"The greatest of these is love." Dr. G. A. Walker.--Reminiscences of medical study in Europe. Dr. K. C. (Hurd) Mead.--A psycho-physical study. J. E. Hatton.--Dr. Honora. Dr. H. A. Hewlings.--The home side. Dr. A. M. Seabrook