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         Vegetarianism:     more books (100)
  1. Vegetarianism: A History by Colin Spencer, 2004-02-20
  2. Yoga and Vegetarianism: The Path to Greater Health and Happiness by Sharon Gannon, 2008-11-18
  3. The Inner Art of Vegetarianism : Spiritual Practices for Body by Carol J. Adams, 2000-08
  4. Judaism and Vegetarianism by Richard H. Schwartz, 2001-02
  5. Religious Vegetarianism: From Hesiod to the Dalai Lama
  6. A NEW LOOK AT VEGETARIANISM: Its Positive Effects on Health and Disease Control by Dr. Sukhraj S. Dhillon, 2009-03-26
  7. Vegetarianism:Movement or Moment? by Donna Maurer, 2002-04
  8. Cultural Encyclopedia of Vegetarianism
  9. Ethical Vegetarianism
  10. The Vegetarianism of Jesus Christ: The Pacifism, Communalism and Vegetarianism of Primitive Christianity by Charles P. Vaclavik, 1989-01
  11. The Heretic's Feast: A History of Vegetarianism by Colin. Spencer, 1995-05-15
  12. Transition to Vegetarianism: An Evolutionary Step by Rudolph Ballentine, 1987-01-25
  13. The Inner Art of Vegetarianism Workbook: Spiritual Practices for Body and Soul by Carol J. Adams, 2001-02
  14. Diet For Transcendence: Vegetarianism and the World Religions by Steven Rosen, 1997-01

1. Beyond Vegetarianism
Reports from veterans of vegetarian and rawfood diets, veganism, fruitarianism, and instinctive eating, plus new science from paleolithic diet research and clinical nutrition.
http://www.beyondveg.com/entre.shtml

2. Vegetarianism
The Choice of vegetarianism There are many reasons why children or families may follow a vegetarian diet. Younger vegetarians are
http://kidshealth.org/parent/nutrition_fit/nutrition/vegetarianism.html

KidsHealth
Parents
Vegetarian diets have become more prevalent and popular, and many parents may wonder if kids can safely follow a vegetarian diet and still get all the nutrients necessary for growing up healthy and strong. Most dietary and medical experts agree that a properly structured vegetarian diet is healthy. To ensure adequate nutrient intake, special care must be taken when feeding children a vegetarian diet, especially if the diet does not include dairy and egg products. Before your child or your family switches to a vegetarian diet, it's important to note that all vegetarian diets are not alike. Some of the major vegetarian categories include:
  • Ovo vegetarian - eats eggs; no meat
  • Lacto-ovo vegetarian - eats dairy and egg products; no meat
  • Lacto vegetarian - eats dairy products; no eggs or meat
  • Vegan - eats only food from plant sources
  • Other categories include: Pesco vegetarians - eats fish but no other meat; and Pollo vegetarians - eats poultry but no other meat
The Choice of Vegetarianism
There are many reasons why children or families may follow a vegetarian diet. Younger vegetarians are usually part of a family that eats vegetarian meals for health or religious reasons (for example, many Seventh Day Adventists follow a vegetarian diet). In non-vegetarian families, older children may decide to become vegetarians because of concern for animals, the environment, or their own health. Heidi Kecskemethy, RD, CSP, a board-certified pediatric nutritionist, tells parents not to be alarmed if their children choose vegetarianism. Kecskemethy says that the best way to handle a child's vegetarianism is to "discuss what it means to the child and how they want to implement it." She has met with parents who shudder when their children switch to vegetarian meals. "Make sure the kids make good food choices. If they are going to just eat Cheese Nips, Pop Tarts, and soda, then you have a problem."

3. Beyond Vegetarianism--Raw Food, Vegan, Fruitarian, Paleo Diets
Reports from veterans of vegetarian and rawfood diets, veganism, fruitarianism, and instinctive eating, plus new science from paleolithic diet research and
http://www.beyondveg.com/index.shtml
Reports from veterans of vegetarian and raw-food diets,
veganism, fruitarianism, and instinctive eating, plus new science
from paleolithic diet research and clinical nutrition. What's New on Beyond Veg

Latest upload: ** 27 December 2001 **
F
RANK TALK ABOUT VEGETARIAN, VEGAN
R
ESEARCH-BASED APPRAISALS OF
ALTERNATIVE DIET LORE
P

R
ETHINKING NATURAL HYGIENE
(are the heavens falling?)
W
AKING UP FROM THE FRUITARIAN DREAMTIME B ASIC INSTINCT FOR ANOPSOLOGY (Re-examining instinctive eating / instincto) S PECIAL TOPICS: NUTRITION P SYCHOLOGY OF IDEALISTIC DIETS D IETARY PROBLEMS IN THE REAL WORLD (Bios of vegetarians, ex-vegetarians, and others in search of health, not dogma...) E DIBLE EDITORIALS (on ethics, environment, and other things to make you go "hmmm...") B OOK REVIEWS C (hey, that's you) H L INKS TO OTHER SITES / LISTGROUPS S C ONTACT BEYOND VEG Response and reaction to site material sent to us will be considered as intended for possible posting and further comment from the editors of the site, unless you explicitly state otherwise. Be sure when you write with such commentary that you take care to represent your views as if intended for public consumption. A few abbreviations you will see on the site: SAD denotes "standard American diet" (a sad diet indeed), and its equivalent

4. An Argument For Vegetarianism
A slightly unusual utilitarian argument for vegetarianism.
http://www.utilitarian.org/animals/veggie.html
An argument for vegetarianism
(Incomplete first draft)
Introduction and Purpose
This paper attempts an argument for vegetarianism. Its goal is to maximise utility, by decreasing the number of practicing meat eaters. It is an argument that assumes the reader holds a utilitarian position; if the reader does not, I have no hope of convincing him - or, at least, not solely with this paper. Let that reader look elsewhere. [ Firstly I will say what I believe ought be sufficient for this paper to be successful. I do not, I make quite clear, have to prove that vegetarianism results in maximal utility, all consequences considered. I am not a fortune-teller - I cannot predict what all the consequences of any far-reaching action will be. Fortunately, I do not need to be: utilitarians being, I hope, reasonable people, I have only to show that, for the reader, vegetarianism will likely result in a level of utility higher than the alternative. [ I will also make clear that this paper is not meant as the "last word" on the issue of vegetarianism - by all means, let this issue be discussed. If, at any point, my case seems to lack evidence, I hope the fair-minded reader will inquire as to how much evidence is easily available for alternative conclusions, and wonder if indeed my argument is insufficient against it. And if there exist substantial arguments against my position, which I have not raised here, let them be brought them out into the light of critical examination.
On Content and Structure
This paper parts company with the normal vegetarian promotional literature from the first, by starting with oft-neglected animals - the fishes. Fishing is the most common method of taking animals from the wild for food (in western society), most other animals we eat being domesticated and reared for that purpose. I will say that the case against commercial fishing is, on utilitarian terms, stronger than the case against (e.g.) beef production. It is therefore possible that the reader will be convinced that to continue eating fish is wrong, but that to continue eating beef is not.

5. The Essential Of Vegetarianism
An essay which examines the importance of living a Vegetarian lifestyle, based on the philosophical arguments that defend the rights of animals.
http://www.punkerslut.com/articles/essentialofvegetarianism.html
Main
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The Essential of Vegetarianism
By Punkerslut [Author's Note: First paragraph composed on Saturday March 30, 2002, at 3:45 A.M. in the morning and sleep deprived, right about the time I was becoming slightly delusional. It was finished on Monday, April 1, 2002.] The Essential of Vegetarianism Vegetarianism is as essential as the beauty in Romanticism. It is, itself, like a garden of affection, a plethora of compassion. Civilization defines it as the abstinance from meat. The heart defines it as humaneness in action the epitome of truth and kindness. If every man can be measured against his virtues and vices, then the man who refuses to consume creatures of this Earth will be virtuous by incountable degrees. Any person who has come in contact with an animal, has caressed its scales or fur, will know that it reacts to the world around it, will know that it is a conscious being they will know that it is just as human as they are, just as sensitive, and just as alive in a real sense. The humane man will grant the animals of this world what he grants his fellow men: the right to live and be happy. On the basis of humaneness, on the foundation of sympathy, the humane man will not destroy ancient forests that are homes to millions of animals, nor will he raise an animal to be destroyed to please his senses of vanity or appetite. It is this, Vegetarianism, that is essential. There are those who call Vegetarianism a thing that will bring no change, that it has no hopes of reform. But those men who have a single sense of humanity and dignity will attest to this creed that all animals deserve rights. Like the honey bee that tries to get nector from a dead flower, a bear trying to nurse her sick cub, a child waiting hours for his father to come home, Vegetarianism is as essential as the very force of life that runs through the heart of every living man.

6. Vegetarianism - Peter Singer
vegetarianism. by PETER SINGER. Ira. After that, vegetarianism gains little support from either the Jewish or Christian scriptures, or from Islam.
http://www.petersingerlinks.com/vegetarianism.htm
VEGETARIANISM by PETER SINGER Ira. W. DeCamp Professor of Bioethics, University Center for Human Values Princeton University In Ted Honderich (ed.), The Oxford Companion to Philosophy , Oxford, 1995 www.PeterSingerLinks.com THE OXFORD COMPANION TO PHILOSOPHY edited by Ted Honderich other books The view that we should avoid eating meat or fish has ancient philosophical roots. In the Hindu Upanishads (about 1000 BC ) the doctrine of reincarnation leads to opposition to eating meat. Buddha taught compassion for all sentient creatures. Buddhist monks were not to kill animals , nor to eat meat, unless they knew that the animal had not been killed for their sake. Jains hold to ahimsa , or non-violence toward any living creature, and accordingly do not eat meat. In the Western tradition, Genesis suggests that the first diet of human beings was vegetarian, and permission to eat meat was given only after the Flood. After that, vegetarianism gains little support from either the Jewish or Christian scriptures, or from Islam. Philosophical vegetarianism was stronger in ancient Greece and Rome: it was supported by Pythagoras, Empedocles, Plutarch, Plotinus, Porphyry, and, in some passages, Plato. Pythagoreans abstained from eating animals partly because of their belief that humans and animals share a common soul, and partly because they appear to have considered the diet a healthier one. Plato shared both these views to some extent. Plutarch's essay On Eating Flesh , written in the late first or early second century of the Christian era, is a detailed argument for vegetarianism on grounds of justice and humane treatment of animals.

7. Irish Vegetarian.com - Vegetarianism In Ireland
A guide to vegetarianism in Ireland with restaurants, health food shops, recipes, books and links.
http://www.irishvegetarian.com
Welcome to Irish Vegetarian.com
Menu Home
Health Food Shops

Restaurants

Recipes
...
Contact Us
Welcome Welcome to Irish Vegetarian.com , a resource for vegetarianism in Ireland. Ireland is not exactly reknowned as a vegetarian or vegan haven. Irish meals have traditionally consisted of "meat and two veg" with the emphasis on the meat. This has changed somewhat
but being a vegetarian in Ireland does require a bit more effort, planning and research when food shopping or eating out. Our aim is that this website makes this a bit easier.
We hope you'll find the information on this website useful. Browse our listings of health food shops and vegetarian restaurants , check out our Irish vegetarian recipes click on our links
If you have any feedback on this site, any recipes you'd like to share, any vegetarian experiences in Ireland you'd like to tell us about or anything you think would prove interesting to other vegetarians in Ireland (or elsewhere) we'd love to hear from you. By the way this is our favourite restaurant Regards

8. Vegetarian Pages
Vegetarian logo Pages. Vegetarian Pages. The Vegetarian Pages (incorporating the World Guide to vegetarianism) will be relaunched.
http://www.veg.org/
Vegetarian
Pages
Vegetarian Pages The Vegetarian Pages (incorporating the World Guide to Vegetarianism) will be relaunched . We are hoping the site will regain its value to the vegetarian community: as the premier website for vegetarian information To do this, we will be relying on you and the the rest of the vegetarian community to add information to the site, so we hope that you will keep coming back to add information about vegetarian places worth visiting - both in the World and on the Internet. As you will be aware, the information on this site had not been updated for too long and so a new method of updating the site is nearing completion. This will allow the site to be both easier to navigate and maintain. We hope you'll like it. Please visit: Vegan Society - UK Vegetarian Society - UK International Vegetarian Union Viewable With Any Browser

9. International Vegetarian Union - Religion And Vegetarianism
Religion and vegetarianism. Websites from IVU Members, Supporters and Internet Partners. A Buddhist View of vegetarianism; Buddha (?563483 BC) - vegetarian?
http://www.ivu.org/religion/
International Vegetarian Union (IVU) Religion and Vegetarianism Websites
from IVU Members, Supporters and Internet Partners Articles
from IVU Members, Supporters and Internet Partners Keluarga Vegetarian Maitreya Indonesia
Vegetarian Centre of Thailand
Buddhist - Buddhism

10. Gandhi's Vegetarianism
An essay by Arun Sannuti on Gandhi's belief in vegetarianism.
http://unreasonable.org/ar/Gandhi.html
Animal Rights and Vegetarianism Brought to you by unreasonable.org
Questions? Comments? webmaster at unreasonable.org

11. Vegetarianism In A Nutshell -- The Vegetarian Resource Group
The Vegetarian Resource Group (VRG) is a nonprofit organization dedicated to educating the public on vegetarianism and the interrelated issues of health
http://www.vrg.org/nutshell/nutshell.htm
Skip Navigation VRG Home About VRG Vegetarian Journal ... Links
Vegetarianism in a Nutshell
Help yourself and others. Click here for ways to support this website and The Vegetarian Resource Group. Document Sections:
  • What is a Vegetarian? Making the Change to a Vegetarian Diet Vegetarian Nutrition
    What is a Vegetarian?
    Vegetarians do not eat meat, fish, and poultry. Vegans are vegetarians who abstain from eating or using all animal products, including milk, cheese, other dairy items, eggs, wool, silk, and leather. Among the many reasons for being a vegetarian are health, ecological, and religious concerns, dislike of meat, compassion for animals, belief in non-violence, and economics. The American Dietetic Association has affirmed that a vegetarian diet can meet all known nutrient needs. The key to a healthy vegetarian diet, as with any other diet, is to eat a wide variety of foods, including fruits, vegetables, plenty of leafy greens, whole grain products, nuts, seeds, and legumes. Limit your intake of sweets and fatty foods.
    Making the Change to a Vegetarian Diet
    Many people become vegetarian instantly. They totally give up meat, fish and poultry overnight. Others make the change gradually. Do what works best for you.

12. Vegetarianism Overview
Learn about classification of vegetarians, health benefits, risks, and maintaining optimal health while following the diet.
http://www.byu.edu/dining/nutrition/14vegetarianism.html

13. Vegetarianism
vegetarianism. Vegetarian diets have become more prevalent and popular, and many parents may wonder if kids can safely follow a vegetarian diet and still get
http://kidshealth.org/parent/nutrition_fit/nutrition/vegetarianism_prt.htm
Vegetarianism
Vegetarian diets have become more prevalent and popular, and many parents may wonder if kids can safely follow a vegetarian diet and still get all the nutrients necessary for growing up healthy and strong. Most dietary and medical experts agree that a properly structured vegetarian diet is healthy. To ensure adequate nutrient intake, special care must be taken when feeding children a vegetarian diet, especially if the diet does not include dairy and egg products. Before your child or your family switches to a vegetarian diet, it's important to note that all vegetarian diets are not alike. Some of the major vegetarian categories include:
  • Ovo vegetarian - eats eggs; no meat
  • Lacto-ovo vegetarian - eats dairy and egg products; no meat
  • Lacto vegetarian - eats dairy products; no eggs or meat
  • Vegan - eats only food from plant sources
  • Other categories include: Pesco vegetarians - eats fish but no other meat; and Pollo vegetarians - eats poultry but no other meat
The Choice of Vegetarianism
There are many reasons why children or families may follow a vegetarian diet. Younger vegetarians are usually part of a family that eats vegetarian meals for health or religious reasons (for example, many Seventh Day Adventists follow a vegetarian diet). In non-vegetarian families, older children may decide to become vegetarians because of concern for animals, the environment, or their own health. Heidi Kecskemethy, RD, CSP, a board-certified pediatric nutritionist, tells parents not to be alarmed if their children choose vegetarianism. Kecskemethy says that the best way to handle a child's vegetarianism is to "discuss what it means to the child and how they want to implement it." She has met with parents who shudder when their children switch to vegetarian meals. "Make sure the kids make good food choices. If they are going to just eat Cheese Nips, Pop Tarts, and soda, then you have a problem."

14. C:\A-Web\ARRS\schwartz\template.html
vegetarianism and Investing. Investing in animalbased to live. By contrast, vegetarianism has great potential as an investment. First, let
http://www.jewishveg.com/schwartz/invest.html
Vegetarianism and Investing
Investing in animal-based companies may appear to be a good strategy, but in the long run it could represent a threat to personal finances, and an economy based on such companies may threaten the economy itself. Also, it eventually could lead to a world where few of us would want to live. By contrast, vegetarianism has great potential as an investment. First, let us consider four considerations that are not directly financial: 1. Vegetarianism is a great investment in ourselves, in our health, since animal-centered diets have been directly linked to heart disease, several forms of cancer, strokes, and other degenerative illnesses. No matter how successful one's financial investments, what good are they if one lacks the good health to enjoy them? 2. Vegetarianism is a great investment in a cleaner, more sustainable world, because modern intensive animal agriculture is a significant contributor to soil erosion and depletion, air and water pollution, widespread use of pesticides and other chemicals, the destruction of tropical rain forests and other habitats, and global warming. What is the value of a large house and other assets if one does not have a decent planet on which to enjoy them? 3. Vegetarianism is a great investment in a more peaceful, less violent world, because animal-centered diets, by wasting valuable resources, help to perpetuate the widespread hunger and poverty that eventually lead to instability and war. What is the value of extensive financial assets in a world plagued with war and violence?

15. Beyond Vegetarianism--Raw Food, Vegan, Fruitarian, Paleo Diets
Explores the varieties and psychology of idealistic diets which may lead to orthorexia nervosa, a syndrome of health and behavioral problems arising from rigid adherence to alternative diets.
http://www.beyondveg.com/
Reports from veterans of vegetarian and raw-food diets,
veganism, fruitarianism, and instinctive eating, plus new science
from paleolithic diet research and clinical nutrition. What's New on Beyond Veg

Latest upload: ** 27 December 2001 **
F
RANK TALK ABOUT VEGETARIAN, VEGAN
R
ESEARCH-BASED APPRAISALS OF
ALTERNATIVE DIET LORE
P

R
ETHINKING NATURAL HYGIENE
(are the heavens falling?)
W
AKING UP FROM THE FRUITARIAN DREAMTIME B ASIC INSTINCT FOR ANOPSOLOGY (Re-examining instinctive eating / instincto) S PECIAL TOPICS: NUTRITION P SYCHOLOGY OF IDEALISTIC DIETS D IETARY PROBLEMS IN THE REAL WORLD (Bios of vegetarians, ex-vegetarians, and others in search of health, not dogma...) E DIBLE EDITORIALS (on ethics, environment, and other things to make you go "hmmm...") B OOK REVIEWS C (hey, that's you) H L INKS TO OTHER SITES / LISTGROUPS S C ONTACT BEYOND VEG Response and reaction to site material sent to us will be considered as intended for possible posting and further comment from the editors of the site, unless you explicitly state otherwise. Be sure when you write with such commentary that you take care to represent your views as if intended for public consumption. A few abbreviations you will see on the site: SAD denotes "standard American diet" (a sad diet indeed), and its equivalent

16. MedlinePlus: Vegetarianism
vegetarianism. Printerfriendly version, E-mail this page to a friend. Search MEDLINE for recent research articles on • vegetarianism.
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/vegetarianism.html
@import url(http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/images/advanced.css); Skip navigation
Other health topics: A B C D ... List of All Topics
Vegetarianism
Contents of this page:
General/Overviews

Nutrition

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Search MEDLINE for recent research articles on
Vegetarianism
You may also be interested in these MedlinePlus related pages:
Nutrition

Food, Nutrition and Metabolism

17. Vegetarianism
vegetarianism. The Higher Taste. vegetarianism A Means to a Higher End . The word vegetarian, coined by the founders of the British
http://www.webcom.com/~ara/col/books/VEG/
V E G E T A R I A N I S M
The Higher Taste
Article 1 Article 2 Article 3 Article 4 The word vegetarian, coined by the founders of the British Vegetarian Society in 1842, comes from the Latin word vegetus, meaning "whole, sound, fresh, or lively," as in homo vegetus-a mentally and physically vigorous person. The original meaning of the word implies a balanced philosophical and moral sense of life, a lot more than just a diet of vegetables and fruits. more Once I sighted a bicycle rider speeding along a crowded New Dehli road precariously balancing fifty or so heavy stack lunch containers hanging from different aparatus attached to his bike. "It is tiffin time!" cried my Indian friend Amit, noticing my concern. "This man will deliver a hundred homemade lunches to the office today. All over the city." more India is the home not only of vegetarian cooking, but also of the science of healthful living. The scripture known as the Ayur-veda, is the oldest known work on biology, hygiene, medicine, and nutrition. This branch of the Vedas was revealed thousands of years ago by Sri Bhagavan Danvantari, an incarnation of Krishna. "Old", is not the same as "primitive", however, and some of the instructions of the Ayur-veda will remind today's reader of modern nutritional teachings or just plain common sense. Other instructions may seem less familiar, but they will bear themselves out if given the chance.

18. Lettuce Ladies.com > Recipes For Healthy, Sexy Bodies
Humorous, mildly suggestive site which does have recipes and factual information about vegetarianism.
http://www.lettuceladies.com/recip.html
  • Avoid all animal products. Fish, poultry, and other so-called "lean" meats are sky-high in fat compared to vegan foods.
  • Eat low-fat, high-carbohydrate foods from plant sources. Veggie casseroles, pasta with tomato sauce, and vegetable curries are hearty main courses your whole family will love.
  • Between meals , snack on fruit, bagels, air-popped popcorn, cereal with soy milk, or frozen fruit bars.
  • Keep high-fat vegan foods (vegetable oils, margarine, and fried foods) to a minimum.
  • Stop counting calories: Quantity is not as important as quality.
  • Check out tasty meat substitutes like tofu, tempeh, and wheat gluten.
  • Eat breakfast! Soy bacon, cantaloupe, cream of wheat, oatmeal with cinnamon, fruit, or baked beans on toast will give you energy and reduce your hunger during the morning.
  • Craving pizza? Go ahead and order it piled high with spinach, broccoli, onions, mushrooms, artichokes, peppers, and garlic, but skip the cheese.
  • Scramble tofu instead of eggs.
  • When eating out, ask for what you want, the way you want it
  • Get active!

19. Vegetarianism: A Means To A Higher End
vegetarianism A Means to a Higher End. By Adiraja Dasa. an end in itself. Beyond vegetarianism. Beyond concerns of health, economics
http://www.webcom.com/~ara/col/books/VEG/hkvc1.html
Vegetarianism: A Means to a Higher End
By Adiraja Dasa This is a practical cookbook, designed to help you prepare authentic Indian meals in your own home and to acquaint you with the tradition behind India's great vegetarian cuisine. It explains not only the techniques of Vedic, or classical Indian vegetarian cooking, but also the Vedic art of eating, which nourishes both the soul and the body and mind. The word vegetarian, coined by the founders of the British Vegetarian Society in 1842, comes from the Latin word vegetus, meaning "whole, sound, fresh, or lively," as in homo vegetus -a mentally and physically vigorous person. The original meaning of the word implies a balanced philosophical and moral sense of life, a lot more than just a diet of vegetables and fruits. Most vegetarians are people who have understood that to contribute towards a more peaceful society we must first solve the problem of violence in our own hearts. So it's not surprising that thousands of people from all walks of life have, in their search for truth, become vegetarian. Vegetarianism is an essential step towards a better society, and people who take the time to consider its advantages, will be in the company of such thinkers as Pythagoras, Socrates, Plato, Clement of Alexandria, Plutarch, King Asoka, Leonardo da Vinci, Montaigne, Akbar, John Milton, Sir Isaac Newton, Emanuel Swedenbourg, Voltaire, Benjamin Franklin, Jean Jacques Rousear, Lamartine, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Leo Tolstoy, George Bernard Shaw, Rabindranath Tagore, Mahatma Gandhi, Albert Schweitzer, and Albert Einstein.

20. [ Veggie Life ] Official Fanlisting For Vegetarianism
Hello and welcome to Veggie Life, the official fanlisting for vegetarianism! LATEST UPDATE May 14, 2004. TOTAL MEMBERS 466 members! PENDING 14 members!
http://www.sweet-precious.com/veggie/
Hello and welcome to Veggie Life , the official fanlisting for Vegetarianism!
LATEST UPDATE: May 31, 2004. TOTAL MEMBERS: 487 members! PENDING: 1 member! LAST ADDED: Miranda Sami Thomas Olive and Mela ..PART OF..

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