Fur

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1992:

Fur Free Friday is November
27—the day after Thanksgiving, the tradi-
tional start of the peak fur sales season. Get
details on demonstrations in your region
from either Friends of Animals at 212-247-
8120, or Animal Rights Mobilization at
303-388-7120.
The Fur Council of Canada
announced a $1 million publicity blitz on
October 20, aimed at reviving the strug-
gling Canadian retail fur market––one of
the last markets left to the Canadian fur
industry, following the collapse of fur sales
in Europe and the U.S. The campaign
argues that furs are reuseable and
biodegradable, and that the fur trade is an
essential part of controlling animal popula-
tions––which contradicts earlier industry
claims that the majority of animals killed
for fur are ranched especially for the pur-
pose.

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Bred and abandoned–– but now there’s hope for potbellied pigs! (and they even have mud to root in)

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1992:

The headlines tell the story:
October 1, 1991, St. Louis Post-Dispatch––
‘Super Pig’ Credited With Saving
Banking Executive, Wife In Fire
October 30, 1991, The Daily Oklahoman––
Council Advised To Keep Pig Law
December 4, 1991, Detroit Free Press––
Pet Pig Prompts Court Confrontation
June 7, 1992, The New York Times––
This Little Pig’s Market Plunged
June 30, 1992, Los Angeles Times––
Pet Potbellied Pig Craze Goes Belly Up

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Dogs And Cats

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1992:

Starting in January and incorporated just
last July under the name Every Creature Counts, Lisa
Booker, Pat Peluso, and Joy Skow of Lyons, Colorado,
had rescued an estimated 400 cats among them by the end
of September, picking up strays and ferals from Loveland
to Denver. They practice a combination of neuter/release
and pick-up-for-adoption,
Eighteen of 38 cats whose pictures are on cat-
food boxes or cans in the supermarket closest to ANI-
MAL PEOPLE are orange toms.

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Hunting––

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1992:

The Michigan Public Broadcast-
ing System on September 24 aired the final
episode of Michigan Outdoors, a weekly
hook-and-bullet show that had an audience
of 200,000. The show died after host Fred
Trost said in a product review that Buck Stop
Lure Co. used cow urine in a deer scent, lost
a $4 million defamation suit the firm filed
against him, and declared bankruptcy. Trost
was also forced to suspend a magazine he
published, Michigan Outdoor Digest, circu-
lation 40,000. The latter had also been in
trouble, having been sued for copyright
infringement at one point by the Michigan
United Conservation Clubs, whose in-house
magazine is called Michigan Out-of-Doors.
Buck Stop said Trost’s attack on its product
caused sales to drop 65%. Trost, mean-
while, pledged to regroup, find backers,
and get back on the air.

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OBITUARIES

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1992:

Phyllis Wright, 65, Humane
Society of the U.S. vice president for com-
panion animals 1983-1991, died of cancer
October 3. Wright had worked for HSUS
since 1969, and though officially retired,
continued to head the organization’s “Until
there are None, Adopt One” campaign to
promote pet adoptions from animal shelters.
Wright became professionally involved with
animals as chief of the U.S. Army War
Dogs Receiving and Holding Station during
the Korean War. Leaving the military in
1954, Wright ran a boarding kennel in
Washington D.C. until 1960, when she
became manager of the Washington Animal
Rescue League shelter. She simultaneously
served, first as a staffer and then as a board
member, with the D.C. Tail Waggers

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CRIME & PUNISHMENT

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1992:

Crimes Against Animals
Alleged pet thieves David Harold
Stephens, Tracy Lynn Stephens, and Brenda
Arlene Linville were scheduled for trial
November 2 in Eugene, Oregon, on charges
that they obtained dogs and cats by promising
to find them good homes and then sold them
for use in biomedical research. Customers
included Oregon Health Sciences University,
Oregon State University, the University of
Nevada at Reno, and the Cedars-Sinai
Medical Center in Los Angeles, California.
Originally charged under state legislation, the
trio were recharged under the Animal Welfare
Act after sheriff’s deputies and state and fed-
eral agents raided their kennels. Their
activites were brought to the attention of the
various authorities via detective work by
Bobbie Michaels of Committed to Animal
Protection, Education, and Rescue, a
Portland-based activist group.

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Animal Health

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1992:

The Centers for Disease
Control revealed October 8 that a 31-
year-old man from Tucson, Arizona, had
become the first human plague fatality in
the U.S. since 1987. The man, who was
not further identified, became infected
when he breathed the same air as a dis-
eased cat he rescued from a crawl space
under a house in Chaffee County,
Colorado, on August 19. He fell ill on
August 21, was hospitalized August 25,
and died August 26, still undiagnosed.
The cat, who also died, apparently got
the plague from a flea-infested chipmunk.

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Performing Animals

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1992:

Wild Willie, the bull who was castrated
in front of the Mississippi State University foot-
ball team in early September, has been saved
from the slaughterhouse by Frank Truitt, a steak-
eating Army Reserve recruiter, and insurance
salesman Billy Walker, a hunter, Truitt and
Walker paid $2,000 apiece for Wild Willie, but
hope to recoup their money by using him in com-
mercial promotions.

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Diet & Health

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1992:

Medical evidence is growing
that iron-rich red meat contributes at
much to heart disease as cholesterol.
“Avoiding meat may be prudent,”
Newsweek medical reporters Geoffrey
Cowley and Mary Hager concluded after
reviewing recent studies on the topic in the
September 21 issue.
Trans-fatty acids that increase
the harmful effects of cholesterol com-
monly result from cooking with solid or
semi-solid margarines and shortenings,
suggests a new USDA study whose pre-
liminary findings were made public
October 7. Avoiding cholesterol is still a
good idea, but so is avoiding partially
hydrogenated vegetable oils if you are in a
high-risk bracket for heart disease. Use
whole oils instead––”The softer, the bet-
ter,” as Marian Burros puts it.

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