Diet & Health

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, Jan/Feb 1994:

Three new health studies rein-
force the arguments for vegetarianism
––especially for men who hope to remain
sexually active after the age of 40. A study
of Hawaiians of Japanese ancestry whose diet
consists mainly of tofu and rice, published in
the November edition of the British medical
journal The Lancet, suggested that tofu may
contain an ingredient that combats prostate
cancer. The study confirmed the findings of
an earlier study of U.S. Seventh Day
Adventists (more than half of whom are ethi-
cal vegetarians), which found that men who
eat a lot of legumes and fruits have a conspic-
uously low death rate from prostate cancer.
Prostate trouble is a leading cause of sexual
impotence––and the January 1994 issue of
The Journal of Urology includes the results of
the largest study of impotence ever. High
cholesterol consumption, heart disease, and
high blood pressure were confirmed as factors
frequently correlating with impotence; all are
closely associated with meat-eating.

Read more

PERFORMING WILDLIFE

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, Jan/Feb 1994:

Elephant trainers Robert
“Smokey” Jones, Scott Riddle, and Heidi
Riddle raised eyebrows on December 22 by
announcing “A hands-on course in the humane
training and handling of captive elephants,” to
be taught at Riddle’s Elephant Breeding Farm
and Wildlife Sanctuary near Greenbriar,
Arkansas. A string of unusual elephant deaths
under Scott Riddle’s supervision over the past
15 years have brought repeated allegations of
mishandling, including two deaths resulting
from conflicts between elephants at the Los
Angeles Zoo in the early 1980s and one
ascribed to a stress-induced heart attack in
1986 at the Garden City Zoo in Garden City,
Kansas. Zoo officials in the latter case asked
the Kansas state police and the USDA to inves-
tigate the possibility that the heart attack was
brought on by an overdose of electric shock, as
at age 23 the elephant was still young, and had
been believed to be healthy. Riddle was
attempting to buy her for transport to a breed-
ing colony he wanted to start in Florida.

Read more

Dog sledding

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, Jan/Feb 1994:

The United Coalition of Animal
Rights Volunteers is asking animal protec-
tion groups to endorse “Six Humane
Treatment Rules” for the annual Iditarod
dog sled race from Anchorage to Nome pro-
posed by UCARV founder John Suter, who ran
poodle teams in the Iditarod until they were
barred in 1992, following incidents that caused
death or injury to poodles in three consecutive
years. Suter’s proposed “humane rules” include
an “Equal Run/Equal Rest” rule that would
penalize racers who drive their dogs at a slower
pace by obliging them to take longer breaks,
and a “Drop a Dog, Rest the Team” rule that
would penalize drivers who leave injured dogs
at checkpoints rather than forcing them to con-
tinue in harness. Despite the likelihood that
Suter’s rules would cause more harm to dogs
rather than less, they are already backed by the
International Fund for Animal Welfare.

Read more

Sea life

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, Jan/Feb 1994:

Foiled when a crew from the Shedd Aquarium in
Chicago caught three Pacific whitesided dolphins on
November 27, protesters who hoped to disrupt the capture
effort instead spent the next month keeping the dolphins’ hold-
ing pen at the Kettenburg Marine wharf in San Diego under
around-the-clock surveillance. Steve Hindi of the Chicago
Animal Rights Coalition took video that he claimed shows dol-
phins swimming “in a bathtub ring of their own excrement,”
which a Shedd spokesperson claimed was salt added to the
water to simulate the chemistry of the ocean. The video also
showed “frenzied Shedd officials erecting a barrier to obscure
the traumatized dolphins from view,” Hindi said, and enabled
members of the Whale Rescue Team to identify “a steady
stream of visitors,” including Tim Hauser, who reputedly cap-
tures marine mammals for many aquariums, and a number of
Navy personnel, whose presence was unexplained. The Navy
has applied, however, to do underwater weapons testing in one
area where the dolphins might have been caught, the Outer-Sea
Test Range. Designated in 1946, the range lies seaward of the
Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary. The proposed test-
ing will involve “incidental” deaths and injuries to any marine
mammals who happen to be near test explosions, and is
opposed by many of the same groups that opposed the dolphin
captures, as well as the usually conservative National Audubon
Society. As Christmas approached, the Shedd team was hold-
ing daily “desensitizing drills,” preparing the dolphins for trans-
port by raising and lowering them in a cargo sling.

Read more

COURT CALENDAR

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, Jan/Feb 1994:

Activism
“The Animal Liberation Front planted nine incen-
diary devices in four Chicago department stores which sell
fur,” media were told in a November 28 fax communique.
“The incendiaries were designed to start a small fire which
would in turn set off the stores’ sprinkler systems and cause
water damage. This action signals the start of a new, more
intense campaign of economic sabotage.” Five of the fire-
bombs went off November 28 and 29, doing minor damage at
Marshall Field, Carson and Saks. Three more were removed
by police and FBI agents. The ninth apparently never turned
up. Copies of a British ALF manual describing how to make
firebombs arrived in the mailboxes of numerous animal protec-
tion groups during the next few days, postmarked Palatine,
Illinois––a Chicago suburb. The incident gave furriers a con-
siderable volume of media time in which to denounce the anti-
fur movement generally.

Read more

Birds

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, Jan/Feb 1994:

The November issue of ANIMAL
PEOPLE summarized reports that several
endangered songbirds in California are in
trouble because immigrant cowbirds lay
their eggs in the songbirds’ nests. The fast-
hatching cowbirds destroy the unhatched
songbird eggs. That theory was sunk, how-
ever, at a recent conference on cowbird
ecology held in Austin, Texas. Wrote Bob
Holmes in Science magazine: “Cowbirds
feed in open grassy areas but dump many of
their eggs in songbird nests in woodlands.

Read more

Hunting

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, Jan/Feb 1994:

Among the 1993 hunting victims
werePansy Gordon, 55, of Alexander, West
Virginia, shot by her husband Jule on
November 27 as she drove a deer toward him;
Brandon Smith, age six, who was killed in
the family kitchen November 28 when his 12-
year-old brother shot him point-blank while
practicing quickly loading and aiming his sin-
gle-shot rifle, using Brandon as a target;
Travis Philips, 16, of Metairie, Louisiana,
who was hunting squirrels from a flatboat in
the Bogue Chitto National Wildlife Refuge on
November 29 when Daniel Thompson, 23, of
Bogalusa mistook him for a black hog; an
unidentified 39-year-old woman in Fayette
County, Pennsylvania, on November 29; an
11-year-old girl in Walton County, Georgia,

Read more

Wildlife

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, Jan/Feb 1994:

Maine wildlife officials have
confirmed that wounds on the carcass of a
bobcat who was killed in a fight with a much
larger cat may have been made by an eastern
cougar. The fight was witnessed by hunter
Anthony Fuscaldo. Officially extinct in
Maine since 1938, and in the rest of New
England and eastern Canada much earlier,
the eastern cougar was restored to the list of
living species last year when tracks and scat
were found in New Brunswick, shortly after
a farmer shot one in western Quebec.
Sightings continued throughout the decades
of supposed extinction, but most turned out
to involve bobcats, lynxes, the occasional
extra-large housecat, and some tame exotic
cats who were released by their keepers after
growing too big to handle safely.

Read more

Animal Control & Rescue

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, Jan/Feb 1994:

The value of publicity was
underscored in Cleveland, Ohio,
after county humane officer Tony
Brand rescued a pair of starving dogs
from a rooftop on December 11.
Notice of the rescue in the Cleveland
Plain Dealer brought nearly 100 calls
to the Cuyahoga County Kennel from
would-be adopters, of whom more
than 20 took dogs––five times the
usual adoption rate. Adoptions also
rose at other local shelters.

Read more

1 2 3 4 5