Breaking news: Arizona State University (ASU) officials have informed PETA that the school has purchased non-animal teaching tools and will be evaluating them during the upcoming semester as replacements for its classroom physiology laboratories on animals. Take action below to help urge ASU's president to utilize these non-animal methods and end the school's cruel classroom experiments for good.
In addition to this great news, PETA has also learned that ASU has already reduced the number of frogs used in one of its classroom experiments by half, meaning that dozens of animals' lives will be spared every year. In classroom biology experiments at ASU, live frogs are cut open so that students can watch the animals' hearts beating, and pregnant rats are killed so that students can dissect them and experiment on their organs. In other experiments, rabbits have holes cut into their necks, are injected with various drugs, and are then killed.
Many modern non-animal teaching methods are available to replace these cruel and archaic animal experiments, and these methods have repeatedly been shown to teach anatomy and physiology as well as or better than animal-based lessons. The University of Arizona, for example, does not use any live animals in its undergraduate physiology laboratories.
Send an e-mail to Michael Crow, president of ASU, and politely ask him to ensure that ASU's new, humane technology is utilized and that the school's cruel classroom animal experiments are replaced once and for all. Also, make sure that your voice is heard by calling Michael Crow's office at 480-965-8972.
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