Shakeup coming at NAVS?

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1992:

CHICAGO, Ill. Independent auditor William Foy assumed administration of the
National Anti-Vivisection Society on August 1 for an indefinite period, replacing president
Mary Margaret Cunniff, who took a paid maternity leave. .
The NAVS board of directors hired Foy to perform an internal audit shortly after an
expose by ANIMAL PEOPLE editor Merritt Clifton revealed that over a fourth of the NAVS
stock portfolio was invested with firms who perform or commission vivisection and/or have
become notorious for environmental abuses—including U.S. Surgical, whose sales demonstra-
tions on live dogs Cunniff denounced in print in May 1991, only days before purchasing
$46,745 worth of U.S. Surgical shares. The stock had nearly doubled in value when sold.
Earlier exposes traced the extensive use of NAVS funds to benefit members of Cunniff’s family,
including her husband, attorney Kenneth Cunniff; her sister, Catherine Curran; her father,
George Trapp, who preceded her in the presidency; her brother-in-law, Patrick Rocks; and her
uncles, Robert Mahoney and Al Lamier. Cunniff and her husband alone received an estimated
$172,000 in salaries and benefits during 1991. During their administration, according to well-
placed staffers, NAVS membership has fallen from 53,000 to 11,000; following the exposes,
the organization was believed to be losing from $25,000 to $50,000 a month.

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No time for monkey business at Primarily Primates

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1992:

SAN ANTONIO, Tex. Primarily Primates
has survived an attempted putsch, at least for
now, but the future of the showplace sanctuary
could yet be jeopardized by animal rights move-
ment politics.
Founded over a decade ago by former
zookeeper Wally Swett to house primates res-
cued from laboratories, roadside zoos, and
abusive exotic petkeepers, Primarily Primates
has expanded to accommodate nearly 400 ani-
mals. As Swett admits, there have been grow-
ing pains. Animals have often arrived at a
faster rate than funds to feed and shelter them.
Sometimes Swett and his volunteer staff have
been obliged to handle species they’ve never
seen before. Frequently they receive non-pri-
mates for temporary housing until other situa-
tions can be found—which can be difficult. A

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What’s going on at The Animals’ Agenda?

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1992:

MONROE, Conn. Five months after the
Animals’ Agenda board of directors sacked
most of the staff and forced editor Kim
Bartlett’s eventual resignation, the publication
is in “dire financial peril,” according to a late-
September appeal issued by board president
Wayne Pacelle..
Under pressure from numerous national
organizations who were irate over exposes of
group financial practices, among them PETA,
the National Anti-Vivisection Society, the
Doris Day Animal League, In Defense of
Animals, and the American SPCA, the board
abruptly fired news editor Merritt Clifton,
now editor of ANIMAL PEOPLE, last May
1. Simultaneously, the board terminated use
of otherwise vacant space at the magazine
offices by Bartlett’s feral cat rescue project.

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Shelter bashing wasn’t planned

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1992:

A late summer wave of shelter-bashing by
animal rights groups took humane workers by
surprise, including some of the most outspo-
ken critics of shelter administrations. Protests
outside numerous shelters on Homeless
Animals Day, August 22, coincided with
campaigns against the management of the
Primarily Primates shelter in San Antonio,
Texas, and the Defenders of Animal Rights
shelter in Phoenix, Maryland. (See separate
items.)

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Hunting news

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1992:

Arizonans will vote November 3
on a referendum measure to ban
trapping, portrayed by the National Rifle
Assn. and National Trappers Assn. as an
attempt to ban all hunting and fishing as
well. The initiative is sponsored, however,
by Arizonans for Safety and Humanity on
Public Lands, whose initial board of direc-
tors included a hunter and a gun dealer. The
group declined funding from the Humane
Society of the U.S. to avoid confusing the
issues.

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Guest Column: Violence and hatred won’t stop the pigeon shoot by Marjorie Spiegel

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1992:

The string is pulled. The lid of the box opens,
and a bird flutters a few feet up into the air and is imme-
diately shot once, twice. If it is a clean shot, the bird
lies motionless. The crowd cheers. “That one’s dust,”
says a spectator. If the shooter is less accurate, we see
one wing, perhaps, twitching in the air, or a bird strug-
gling on the field. Boys in yellow shirts run to the birds,
throw a body in the bag, twist a neck, then into the same
bag. Sometimes a commotion: someone has made it
onto the field. She is pursued, yet reaches the string
lines or the boxes. The lids open, and eight or so pigeons
fly off to freedom, the most beautiful sight on a day
filled with much to be sorry for.
That is the essence of the Labor Day pigeon
shoot in Hegins, Pennsylvania: some people wish to use
these pigeons for target practice, and others wish to see
this ended and to let the pigeons go free.

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KKK defends pigeon shoot; 2,000 protest Labor Day bird massacre but 5,000 support it. Time for new tactics?

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1992:
HEGINS, PENNSYLVANIA A pigeon hit point-blank by a shotgun blast looks
like a spreadeagled angel for just a split second, until the pellets tear her white breast and wings
to pieces and she flaps to the ground, awaiting the trapper boys who will wring her head off.
Wounded angels to some, doves of peace to others, and flying rats according to the
human participants, 5,000 to 7,000 pigeons are shotgunned each Labor Day at the Fred Coleman
Memorial Pigeon Shoot in Hegins, Pennsylvania. Held annually since 1934, the shoot was
reputedly dying of disinterest a half century later; but no more. Two thousand protesters turned
out this year, nearly double last year’s then-record number. Lured by the chance to heckle, be
on TV, and maybe see someone get killed dashing in front of the guns to save pigeons, the
crowd of shoot supporters doubled as well, to an estimated 5,000. Among them were several
motorcycle gangs and two robed and hooded Ku Klux Klan members from Ephrata, Penn., who
explained that they saw the event as a good chance to recruit.

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Hurricane Andrew: Noah was there! Disaster spotlights preparation

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1992:

MIAMI, FLORIDA Thousands of
animals drowned, were swept to their deaths
by winds reaching 200 miles an hour, or were
crushed by falling trees and collapsing build-
ings. Fragile habitat was harmed from southern
Florida to coastal Louisiana. But while
Hurricane Andrew hit too suddenly for anyone
to build an ark, thousands more animals were
saved from the August 24 disaster through the
prompt efforts of volunteer rescuers. As the
human relief response came under critical
scrutiny from victims and the media, observers
had only praise for the contributions of animal
control and humane workers.

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Why They Can Hunt On Your Land–and what you can do about it!

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1992:

Posted your land yet?
If you’re among the 56 million Americans who
live in a nonmetropolitan area, chances are that you
have, long since. If you didn’t, but value your safety
and security, you’d better hop to it, because if you
don’t, your chances of getting the law to respond to
reports of armed intruders may be mighty slim from the
end of summer until after Christmas. Fall, according to
state and federal wildlife agencies, is hunting season, or
rather a succession of hunting seasons: small game,
dove, waterfowl, turkey, grouse and pheasant, archery,
muzzleloader, deer, bear, and a variety of others
depending upon what’s left alive in your neck of the
woods. Anyone with a rifle or shotgun, especially if
carrying a big knife as well and dressed in camouflage,
is presumed to be hunting legally until there are dead
human bodies–unless the land is posted.

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