BOOKS: Sacred Animals of India

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 2008:

Sacred Animals of India
by Nanditha Krishna
C.P.R. Environmental Education Centre
(c/o C.P. Ramaswami Aiyar Foundation,
1 Eldams Road, Alwarpet,
Chennai 600 018, India), 2008.
Order c/o <www.ecoheritage.cpreec.org>.
244 pages, paperback, illustrated. $21.00 U.S.

“Sacred Animals of India was to have been
ready in time for the Asia for Animals conference
held in January 2007 at Chennai,” prefaces
author Nanditha Krishna. “However, when I began
researching the subject, I discovered a wealth
of material that was impossible to ignore. So I
decided not to rush, and to cover the subject in
greater depth.”

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BOOKS: Dogs Gone Wild After Hurricane Katrina

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 2008:

Dogs Gone Wild
After Hurricane Katrina
by Theresa D. Thompson
Tate Publishing (127 E. Trade Center Terrace, Mustang,
OK 73064), 2008. 127 pages, paperback. $14.99.

In the age of “instant” book publishing to commemorate major
events–and cash in while public interest is highest–Dogs Gone Wild
is oddly enough the first book about the Hurricane Katrina animal
rescue effort to reach ANIMAL PEOPLE, arriving nearly three years
after Katrina inundated much of New Orleans and devastated the Gulf
Coast from Alabama to Texas.
It is not the rescue memoir one might anticipate. Author
Theresa Thompson is a retired medical secretary, recently widowed,
who lives in Upper Marlboro, Mary-land. She was not directly
involved in the animal rescue. Neither was her sister, Charlotte
Brown, who sent Dogs Gone Wild to ANIMAL PEOPLE.

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Addenda to Swinging Canadian elections keeps the sealers swinging clubs: Animal Alliance of Canada pursues electoral strategy

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 2008:
Addenda to Swinging Canadian elections keeps the sealers swinging clubs:
Animal Alliance of Canada pursues electoral strategy

Commentary by Merritt Clifton
Long before University of Texas at El Paso philosophy
department chair Steven Best became a popular speaker at animal
rights conferences, noted for fiery defenses of “direct action”
vandalism, film maker Stephen Best of Shelburne, Ontario became
quietly known to animal advocacy insiders–and the political
opposition–as one of the most astute strategists in the cause. When
defenders of the seal hunt produced strategy papers, obtained
eventually by news media, Best was repeatedly identified as one of
the voices most essential to isolate and neutralize, even though few
grassroots activists had ever heard his name.
Grassroots activists knew his work. Best’s 1973 documentary
Seal Song, commissioned by the International Fund for Animal
Welfare, “became part of the long-running British television series
Survival,” he remembers. More than that, Seal Song put the annual
Atlantic Canada seal hunt into living rooms worldwide. Eighteen
years earlier, film maker Harry Lillie brought back the first film
of the seal hunt, inspiring an informed few to revive anti-sealing
campaigns that had previously been waged in the early 1900s, late
1920s, and late 1930s, but it was Seal Song that turned the cause
into a cultural phenomenon.

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Five caretakers & one panda dead

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 2008:

WOLONG NATURE RESERVE– The devastating May 12, 2008
Sichuan earthquake killed five Wolong Panda Reserve staff members and
one giant panda, Mau Mau, a mother of five cubs, whose remains
were found almost a month later. No information was available about
the status of the less closely monitored red pandas who share the
772-square-mile Wolong habitat.
Mau Mau and five other giant pandas were for weeks believed
to have escaped from the heavily damaged Wolong Giant Panda Breeding
Centre–but all the rest were soon found alive and well nearby.
Forty-seven people were killed near the Wolong Panda Reserve,
located 20 miles from the epicenter of the earthquake. Initial
reports relayed by satellite telephone said that all 86 giant pandas
at the reserve were safe, but State Forestry Administration forestry
spokesperson Cao Qingyao soon updated to the state-run Xinhua news
agency that at least three were unaccounted for.

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What did the Sichuan quake zone animals know–and how soon did they know it?

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 2008:

BEIJING–Unusual animal behavior was widely noted before the
May 12, 2008 Sichuan earthquake, but how much of it might have
anticipated the quake is anyone’s guess.
“Three days before the earthquake, thousands of toads roamed
the streets of Mianzhu, a hard-hit city where at least 2,000 people
have been reported killed,” wrote Henry Sanderson of Associated
Press. “Mianzhu residents feared the toads were a sign of an
approaching natural disaster, but a local forestry bureau official
said it was normal, the Huaxi Metropolitan newspaper reported May 10,
two days before the earthquake.

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Texas horse slaughter ban applies to hauling too, says A.G.

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 2008:
AUSTIN–Texas attorney general Greg Abbott during the first
week of May 2008 issued a legal opinion that the state law against
slaughtering horses for human consumption also prohibits transporting
horsemeat from Mexican slaughterhouses to Texas ports for foreign
consumers.
“State representive Warren Chisum (R-Pampa), who supports
horse slaughter, said he requested the attorney general’s opinion
after being approached last year by an attorney for a slaughterhouse
in Mexico,” reported Lisa Sandberg of the San Antonio Express-News.
“Mexico kills horses, whether we like it or not, and people
in France eat them. And sometimes the slaughterhouses like to ship
the meat out of Corpus Christi or Houston,” Chisum told Sandberg.

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Victories over Portuguese-style bullfighting

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 2008:

LISBON–A Lisbon court on May 30, 2008 granted the
Portu-guese organization ANIMAL an injunction prohibiting the
state-owned television station RTP from broadcasting bullfights
“before 10.30 p.m. and without displaying a sign indentifying the
program as violent and capable of negatively influencing the
personality development of children and teen-agers,” e-mailed ANIMAL
president Miguel Moutinho.
Presenting as witnesses two clinical psychologists, a
biologist, and a university professor of ethology, ANIMAL convinced
the court that bullfighting broadcasts in prime time violate
Portuguese law governing what may be aired when young people are
likely to be watching.

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Letters to the Editor

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 2008:

Sofia city sterilization program excludes pets

Two days prior to the Orthodox Easter, the Municipal Council
of Sofia adopted a stray dog population control program for
2008-2011. Municipal animal control director Miroslav Naydenov
stressed in the media that the new national animal protection act
gives the municipalities until January 2011 to shelter all stray dogs.
Unfortunately the Sofia program does not include adequate
solutions for the problem. The situation was already complicated by
the national prohibition of killing animals for population control,
while failing to provide adequately for sterilizing pets. The only
pet population control measures included in the municipal program are
the introduction of dog registration with increased fees for keeping
unsterilized dogs. Read more

Raising funds in hard times

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, June 2008:
Raising money during crises is an area that I have had a
particular interest in since college-not just the impact of the
economy on donations, but also the effects of war, natural
disasters, terrorism and even positive “good feeling” events such
as, for example, the 1969 first human landing on the moon.
Today animal charities are asking, “What impact will the
recession in the United States have on donations?” There is a
prevailing fear that the effects will be considerable. However,
this fear is not well grounded. While recessions have a definite
impact, historically charitable giving, overall, has not declined
during recessions.
Different sectors of donors and potential donors react
differently, and different types of charities are affected
differently.

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