Editorial: “Lion-tamers” versus dull accountants

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 2002:

Michael Palin of the British comedy team Monty Python’s
Flying Circus in 1971 inadvertently sketched how animal charities
really operate. Playing a dull accountant, Palin confessed to a job
counselor that what he really wished to be was a lion tamer. He did
not actually know a lion from an anteater, but he had a lion tamer’s
hat.
Animal protection charities are nearly always founded by
“lion tamers,” or former lion tamers anyway, who work with animals,
love animals, and are not averse to risk–including from the “killer
cats” who stalk great cities, also portrayed by Monty Python.
Among bare-armed “cat ladies,” ANIMAL PEOPLE often notes
that the most evident visual distinction between cat rescuers and the
suicidally depressed may be that self-inflicted scars on wrists are
short, neat, and horizontal, whereas the wounds from feral cats
tend to be jagged and run vertically from elbow to wrist.

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BOOKS: Wild Asia, Africa’s Animal Kingdom, Bear, & The Grizzly Almanac

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 2002:

Wild Asia:
Spirit of a Continent
by Natl. History New Zealand Ltd.
Pelican Publishing (P.O. Box 3110, Gretna, LA 70054), 2000.
192 pages, illust. $49.95 hardback.

Africa’s Animal Kingdom:
A Visual Celebration
by Kit Coppard
Sterling Publishing (387 Park Ave. S.,
New York, NY 10016), 2001.
512 pages, illust. $24.95 paperback.
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BOOKS: Dog Heroes

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 2002:

Dog Heroes: Saving Lives & Protecting America
by Jen Bidner
The Lyons Press (P.O. Box 480, Guilford, CT 06437), 2002.
138 pp., illustrated, hardcover. $16.95.

Do not mistake Dog Heroes, by Jen Bidner, for just another
kitchy souvenir of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. No
doubt the prominent role of search-and-rescue and cadaver-sniffing
dogs in the aftermath of September 11 have helped search-dog trainer
Bidner to find a publisher and bookstore shelf space, but there is a
great deal more to Dog Heroes than just the 187 color photos and the
mostly familiar anecdotes about the dogs who worked at all of the
attack locations to help find and identify victims.

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AWI founder Christine Stevens dies

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 2002:
 
Christine Stevens, 84, died on October 10 in Georgetown,
Maryland. Born in St. Louis, she attended the University of
Michigan. “Her father, Dr. Robert Gesell, headed the physiology
department,” wrote New York Times obituarist Wolfgang Saxon. “Dr.
Gesell was a pioneer in the compassionate treatment of research
animals.”
Christine Gesell married New York real estate magnate and
Broadway play producer Roger Lacey Stevens in 1938. They had a
daughter, Christina Gough, who still lives in New York City.
After Roger Lacey Stevens and associates bought the Empire
State Building in 1951, Christine Stevens founded AWI from a
rent-free office, focusing initially on the use of shelter animals
in laboratories. In 1955 Stevens started the AWI political arm, the
Society for Animal Protective Legislation.

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BOOKS: Vista Nieve

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 2002:

Vista Nieve by Melbourne R. Carriker
Blue Mantle Press (36901 Marshall Hutts Rd., Rio Hondo-Arroyo City,
TX 78583), 2001. 312 pages, paperback. $18.95.

On July 28, 2002, Colombian ornithologists Jorge Velasquez
and Alonso Quevado photographed 14 examples of Fuertes’s parrot among
tall trees in an alpine forest near the summit of a volcano in the
northern Andes. The brightly colored indigo-and-yellow parrot was
previously documented only in 1911, when specimens were among the
5,355 birds of 513 species and subspecies whom Melbourne A. Carriker
Jr. shotgunned out of the foliage of that region and into the
scientific literature.

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Suarez Circus polar bears saved at last

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 2002:

YABUCOA, Puerto Rico–Fifteen months after the Suarez
Brothers Circus of Guadalajara, Mexico, brought seven polar bears
to Puerto Rico, and eight months after confiscating one bear named
Alaska, the USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service on
November 4 took the remaining six bears into custody, charged the
circus with five violations of the Animal Welfare Act, and initiated
seizure proceedings.

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BOOKS: Adopting an Animal Friendly Menu for Your Shelter’s Events

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 2002:

Adopting an Animal Friendly Menu
for your shelter’s events
Animal Place (3448 Laguna Creek Trail, Vacaville, CA 95688), 2002.
<Info@AnimalPlace.org> or <http://AnimalPlace.org>

It would be hard to find a more mainstream group of shelter
directors than the Food for Thought Advisory Committee assembled by
Animal Place founder Kim Sturla.
Among the 10 panelists are former Humane Society of the U.S.
companion animal program director Ken White, at least three longtime
members of the HSUS shelter accreditation team, and New England
Federation of Humane Societies past president Bert Troughton.

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First Freedom of Info ruling since 9/11 favors AV group

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 2002:

WASHINGTON D.C.– U.S. District Court Judge Ricardo M. Urbina
ruled in Washington D.C. on September 3 that the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration failed to prove any legitimate need to withhold
approximately 27,000 records regarding xenotransplantation studies
from Campaign for Respon-sible Transplantation founder Alix Fano.
The ruling, on a Freedom of Information Act request Fano
filed in March 2000, did not end the three-year battle over whether
or not the records should be disclosed. Urbina gave the FDA until
Nov-ember 10 to prepare arguments distinguishing between categories
of records withheld as “trade secrets” and withheld on other claims.
In addition, U.S. District Court verdicts may be appealed to
the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, and then to the Supreme Court.
The case could be many years from ended. The Urbina ruling was
significant, however, as the first major test of federal efforts to
withhold information about animal testing since September 11, 2001.

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Cockfighting not wanted on reservations

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 2002:

CARNAGIE, Okla.–Oklahoma voters are expected to approve an
anti-cockfighting initiative on November 5 by a 2-1 margin, say
recent polls– and Native Americans are not going to help
cockfighting continue, tribal leaders warned in September, after
informants within the Oklahoma Gamefowl Breeders Association told
Kiowa attorney Jon Wyatt that someone was trying to sell members
permits to fight cocks on Native American reservations.
“Someone could try it,” Caddo Tribe chair LaRue Parker told
Ron Jackson of The Oklahoman. “But my God, I sure hope not.
Cockfighting goes against everything that is sacred to Indians. We
are the keepers of the land and protectors of the animals.”
Kiowa Tribe chair Clifford McKenzie pledged that any evidence
he discovered linking the Kiowa to cockfighting would be “turned over
to the proper federal authorities” for prosecution.

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