Animal obituaries

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 2001:

Animal obituaries

 

Sunset Sam, 21, an Atlantic bottlenose dolphin who painted with acrylics and provided therapy to disabled children, died on December 4 at the Clearwater Marine Aquarium, 17 years after he was found beached in Old Tampa Bay and was rescued by a team including Dennis Kellenberger, now the Clearwater Marine Aquarium executive director. Florida dolphin freedom advocate Mary Mosely led an unsuccessful campaign during the late 1980s to return Sunset Sam to
the wild. In response, the aquarium doubled the size of his tank.

 

Abigail, 41, a Sumatran orangutan noted for using lipstick and nail polish, flirting with male visitors, and blowing them
kisses, died in late December at the Toronto Zoo, her home since 1974 when she arrived from the defunct Riverdale Zoo. Captured from the wild in the early 1960s, Abigail was also fond of sitting down with her keepers for hot coffee. She left six children, including son and daughter Sekali and Dinar, who lived with her.

Bjorne, Bolli, and Bomba, “surplus” bear cubs at the Lycksele Zoo in Sweden, were shot on November 8, stuffed, and their meat sold, despite international protest. That they were bred and exhibited in the first place “demonstrates the irresponsible and ruthless treatment of zoo animals,” said Catharina Krongh of Animal Rights Sweden.

Donna Duck, a favorite of Humane Society of Charlotte founder and longtime duck rescuer Patti Lewis, died on November 5 during surgery to replace her lower bill, lost in an entanglement with fishing line. “I felt she was a gift from God to me for all the critters I have saved,” said Lewis.

M’Chawi, 23, the quiet-natured dominant chimp at the Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago since July 2001, died of a sudden heart attack on December 3–like both of his parents, Sam, who died at 19, and Shauri Jet, who died at 21.

Roscoe, 15, among the oldest California sea otters on record, died on November 14 at the Monterey Bay Aquarium, his home since he was rescued in March 1986 as a stranded infant.

Beethoven, 11, a Great Dane who spent six years on death row in Pinellas County, Florida, for injuring a four-year-old girl in 1995, was euthanized by consent of owner Lorraine Blackwood on September 13. Blackwood, who kept Beethoven alive through a series of legal actions, continues to contest an $11,000 bill for shelter boarding.

Obituaries [December 2001]

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 2001:

Human obituaries

Lewis Robert Plumb, 78, died on December 9, 2001, in Sacramento, California. A professor of physics for 26 years at
Chico State University, Plumb and his late wife Charlotte cofounded the Promoting Animal Welfare Society in Paradise, California, during the early 1980s, funding their work with a thrift shop. An avid statistical analyst, Plumb often contributed ideas and data to ANIMAL PEOPLE. Wrote Richard Avanzino, longtime president of the San Francisco SPCA and now executive director of Maddie’s Fund, “Bob and I spent many hours on the phone together hashing over ideas to save lives. Bob was really ahead of the curve in his efforts to design a mathematical formula to evaluate the success of spaying and neutering. I thought the world of him.” Plumb did not just advocate what his data showed; he also put serious money into proving the efficacy of subsidized sterilization and neuter/return. “If I were to run the numbers,” said Emily Jane Williams, the current PAWS president, “I’m sure more than 100,000 cats and dogs were not born into suffering because of his efforts to help Butte County low-income residents to fix their pets. To them, Bob Plumb was Santa Claus.”

Colin Smith, 60, died in September 2001. Starting work with the National Anti-Vivisection Society of the U.K. at age 16, Smith for some years edited the NAVS-U.K. journal, The Animal Defender, and then served 10 years as NAVS-U.K. general secretary. In 1973 Smith founded the Lord Dowding Fund for Humane Research, a division of HAVS-U.K., recalled Australian Association for Humane Research president Elizabeth Ahlston, and in 1984 organized “the first major international conference on ‘Religious Perspectives on the Use of Animals in Science.’ Smith later cofounded the
International Association Against Painful Experiments on Animals, known for helping to fund new antivivisection groups in Africa, Korea, and eastern Europe. Smith had recently visited Pakistan to encourage pro-animal activism there.

Peter Blake, 53, was killed in a shootout with pirates on December 5 as his yacht Seamaster lay at anchor near the mouth of the Amazon. The Seamaster was previously the Cousteau Society research ketch Antarctic Explorer. The captain of New Zealand vessels that twice won the America’s Cup, Blake was formerly head of expeditions for the Cousteau Society and was designated successor to founder Jacques Cousteau, but resigned in favor of Cousteau’s widow, Francine Cousteau. Blake bought the Sea-master from the Society to continue leading private research voyages. Ricardo Tavares Collares, 23, is charged with his murder. Six alleged accomplices were also arrested.

John E. Olson, 49, Jerry Open-shaw, 34, and Roger Small, of Marysvale, Clinton, and Roosevelt, Utah, were killed on December 27 while trying to rescue a moose from thin ice at the Mountain Dell Reservoir near Salt Lake City, when the tail rotor of their helicopter struck a power line. The moose was among a herd of 15-20 whom the men were trying to relocate from deep snow in a box canyon. Pilot Olson and assistant Small worked for Helicopter Capture Services, along with Olson’s son, John Olson Jr., who had just been dropped off to help from below. Olson and John Zolezzi of
San Diego founded the firm in 1996 after working together as spotters for tuna boats. The parents and daughters of Openshaw, a Utah Department of Wildlife Resources biologist since 1998, were also watching the operation from the ground. Openshaw’s brother had been killed in a Coast Guard accident just three weeks earlier.

Joy Belsky, 56, died from breast cancer on December 14 in Portland, Oregon. Belsky studied wildlife in Africa for five years but was driven out by poachers. Back in the U.S., she worked as staff ecologist for first the Oregon Natural Resources Council and later the Oregon Natural Desert Association. “She published more than 45 peer-reviewed papers and book chapters on African and North American grasslands, often blaming livestock for upsetting the
balance of plants and wildlife in the arid interior West,” wrote Michael Milstein of the Portland Oregonian. Belsky also helped lead the ultimately successful fight to keep the management of the Hart Mountain National Antelope Refuge from killing coyotes, instead of curtailing grazing, to stimulate the recovery of pronghorns.

Debbie Prasnicki, 47, was shot dead on December 1 by hunter Mike Berseth, 43, near her home in Stanley, Wisconsin, as she kicked a yellow ball along a public road to amuse her two dogs. “Prasnicki was a nurturing woman whose mothering instincts grew all the more acute during deer season. She hung bells on her pets to protect them from negligent hunters and forbade her two children, Rachel and Seth, from playing in the woods. Her walk with her dogs on December 1 was her first since the regular gun deer season ended on November 25. She was unaware that a special muzzleloader season had begun,” wrote Crocker Stephenson of the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel.

Joe Maniaci, 54, died on October 2, 2001. Maniaci was longtime animal control officer for Macomb County, Michigan, a volunteer firefighter, former mayor of Richmond Township, president of the Michigan Animal Control Officers Association, and vice president of the National Animal Control Association.

David Charlebois, a sustaining guardian of the Washington D.C. Humane Society, was first officer on American Air-lines flight 77, hijacked and crashed into the Pentagon on September 11.

David Arce, 36, a New York City firefighter known for “always bringing home stray cats and dogs,” according to his mother Margaret Arce, was killed at the World Trade Center on September 11.

David L.W. Fodor, 38, a former breeder and exhibitor of Rottweilers, including a national champion, who had turned to
rescuing shelter animals, was killed on September 11 while on duty as a volunteer floor fire warden at #2 World Trade Center.

Sondra Conaty Brace, 60, who with her husband David Brace kept 25 rescued cats at their home in Staten Island, was killed on September 11 at her insurance industry job in the World Trade Center.

Joe Lopes, a flight attendant on American Airlines flight 587, which crashed in the Rockaways on November 12, was honored at Christmas with the “Joe Lopes Celebration of Life Tree” and a horseback caroling expedition led by friend and coworker Gloria Smith to raise funds for the Angel’s Gate Hospice & Rehabilitation Center for Animals, one of his favorite charities.

Joseph Yon, M.D., 65, who lived most of his life in Seattle, died on December 5 while trying to rescue his German
shepherd mix Jake from a freezing canal near a home he and his wife had just rented in Scottsdale, Arizona. Jake survived.

HUMAN OBITUARIES

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 2001:

C.R. Pattabi Raman, 94, chair of the Blue Cross of India since 1987, died on June 19. Captain of the Madras cricket team in his youth, and a cofounder of the Madras Cricket Association and Board of Control For Cricket in India, Raman was eldest son of Sir C.P. Ramaswami Aiyar, who banned hunting on all land under his control and founded the Indian Vegetarian Congress, for which Raman was longtime vice president.

Raman’s granddaughter Nanditha Krishna, a noted author and anthropologist, is a trustee of the Central Zoo Authority. Raman was succeeded as chair of the Blue Cross by his grandson-in-law Chinny Krishna, who is the son of Blue Cross founding chair S.R. Sundaram. Krishna was also recently named to the Animal Welfare Board of India.

Read more

ANIMAL OBITUARIES

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 2001:

Soda, a.k.a. Alice Hanley Castle, the “canine first lady of

Hong Kong” 1992-1997 as pet of last British governor Chris Patten,
died in mid-November after a long illness. Soda and her mate and
cousin Whisky, who survives her, lived at the Patten family
vacation home in France after the Pattens left Hong Kong, to avoid
the six-month quarantine that was then required of all dogs and cats
entering Britain. Patten cited their loyal service in an eventually
successful effort to get the law amended. Only then did they return
to the land of their birth.

Read more

Animal Obituaries

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 2001:

 

Bjossa, 25, the last of a 30-year succession of orcas
displayed at the Vancouver Aquarium, captured near Iceland with her
longtime companion Finna in 1980, died on October 8 at Sea World San
Diego, her home since an April 2001 transfer to be with other orcas.
She had been the only orca in Vancouver since Finna died in November
1997. Already ill when moved, Bjossa took a turn for the worse in
August. She gave birth three times in Vancouver, but none of her
infants survived longer than 97 days. She was the first whale to die
at Sea World San Diego since March 1990.

Read more

Human Obituaries

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 2001:

 

John C. Lilly, 86, died September 30 in Los Angeles. After
researching the physiology of high-altitude flight during World War
II, Lilly did investigations preliminary to space travel, inventing
the isolation tank in 1954 to simulate weightlessness. Seeking to
explore methods of communicating with aliens, Lilly founded the
Communi-cation Research Institute on St. Thomas to study dolphins as
aliens-surrogate, and became a frequent visitor to the Miami
Seaquarium, where he profoundly influenced apprentice trainer Rick
Feldman, known since 1970 as dolphin freedom advocate Ric O’Barry.
A chapter of O’Barry’s 1988 autobiography Behind The Dolphin Smile is
titled “The Lilly Factor.” At first awed by Lilly’s discoveries
about dolphin intelligence, O’Barry later developed deep misgivings
about his use of vivisection. After O’Barry began releasing
dolphins, they went different ways. Lilly wrote 19 books,
including Man and Dolphin and The Mind of the Dolphin, claimed he
could understand dolphin language while on LSD, and promoted the
notion of humans and cetaceans enjoying a spiritual bond. His work
inspired the films The Day of the Dolphin (1973), Altered States
(1980), and Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986).

Read more

Human obituaries

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 2001:

Dorothy Checci-O’Brien, 70, died on August 27 at home in
Plymouth, Massachusetts. A longtime valuable news source for ANIMAL
PEOPLE, Checci-O’Brien stood under five feet tall and weighed less
than 100 pounds, but was fined $405 in October 1985 for allegedly
beating up two hunters she caught trying to shoot waterfowl near her
house despite her “No Hunting” signs. Considered the most effective
pro-animal lobbyist in Massachusetts, working strictly as a
volunteer, Checci-O’Brien earlier led a long and eventually
successful effort to wrest the Ellen Gifford Sheltering Home for Cats
in Brighton from the allegedly self-aggrandizing control of corporate
attorney John G. Kilpatrick Jr., and closely monitored the financial
affairs of the Massachusetts SPCA and the Animal Rescue League of
Boston. New England Anti-Vivisection Society president Theo Capaldo
called Checci-O’Brien “the mother of animal activism in
Massachusetts.” Friends of the Plymouth Pound held a memorial
celebration of her life on September 29.

Read more

Animal obituaries

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 2001:

Ralf, 17, resident porcupine at the Science North center at
the University of Guelph, Ontario, since 1984, except for a stint
at the 1990 World’s Fair in Osaka, Japan, died on August 6. As
many as three million visitors had petted Ralf, including the Prince
and Princess of Wales in 1991.

Haida, 21, the oldest of the five orcas at Sea World San
Antonio, captured from the wild in 1980, died suddenly of an
unknown cause on August 2.

Read more

Animal Obituaries

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, July/August 2001:

Ursa Minor, 35, one of the oldest polar bears on record, died on July 24 at the EcoTarium science museum in Worcester, Massachusetts, where she lived with her daughter Kenda, 17. Ursa Minor came from the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo in 1971, soon after the EcoTarium opened. Her mate, Ursa Major, died at the Stone Zoo in Boston last year at age 33.

Mocha, a brown Labrador, was fatally burned in a thermal pool near the Firehold River in Yellowstone National Park on July 26. His person, Donald E. Hansen, 39, was hospitalized for burn treatment after trying to save him.

Read more

1 24 25 26 27 28 39