BOOKS: A View to a Death in the Morning: Hunting and Nature Through History

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1993:

A View to a Death in the Morning:
Hunting and Nature Through History, by
Matt Cartmill. Harvard University Press (79 Garden
St., Cambridge, MA 02138-1499), 1993. 331 pages,
hardcover. $29.95.
A traditional fox-hunting song, “D’ye ken John
Peel,” gave Matt Cartmill his title; it appears in a stanza in
which the hunters follow their dogs “from a find to a check,
from a check to a view, from a view to a death in the morn-
ing.” Despite the title, Cartmill spends little time on fox-
hunting, boar-hunting, bear-hunting, wolf-hunting, bad-
ger-hunting, coon-hunting, fishing, fowling, and falconry.
The theory, practice, myths, and effects on its practition-
ers of deer hunting are the focus of his chapters about hunt-
ing, from the ancient Greeks to Bambi . Those chapters
which concentrate on nature are more diffuse.

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Religion & Animals

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1993:

Islamic scholar Kanan Makiya
asks fellow Moslems to completely reject
all forms of cruelty, including to animals,
in War, Tyranny, Uprising, and the Arab
World, a history of the Sadaam Hussein
regime in Iraq. (W.W. Norton., New York,
367 pp., $22.95 hardcover.)
Makiya scores fellow Middle
Eastern intellectuals for not condemning
massacre, rape, torture, and censorship.
“It’s not that people haven’t spoken out,”
he told New York Times writer Joseph
Cincotti. “But when the choice is a priority
of struggle against the West or Israel, cru-
elty isn’t even an issue. I want to make it
one. People can change. I insist on it.”
Makiya’s book focuses on state-
sponsored cruelty in Iraq, especially to dis-
sident Kurds, Shiites, and their children.

BOOKS: The New Complete Guide To Environmental Careers

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1993:

The New Complete Guide To Environmental Careers, by the
Environmental Careers Organization. Island Press (1718 Connecticut Ave.
NW, Suite 300, Washington DC 20009), 1993, 364 pages, paper $15.95. [ISBN 1-
55963-178-3]
Aside from health care, environ-
mental concern will create more employ-
ment opportunities in the near future than
any other service sector of the economy,
according to many career counselors. This
guide––completely updated–– offers an
introduction to the myriad possibilities.

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BOOKS: Getting Down To Earth: A Call to Environmental Action

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1993:

Getting Down To Earth: A Call to Environmental Action, by John
Heidtke. Paulist Press (997 Macarthur Blvd., Mahwah, NJ 07430), 1993, 179
pages, paper $9.95. [ISBN 0-8091-9571-2]
This book is definitely not your
run-of-the-mill environmental textbook for
young adults. John Heidtke is more ambi-
tious and, ultimately, more basic in his
goal. Urging his readers to discover and
define their own moral values, he combines
the emerging personal awareness of adoles-
cence with environmental ethics, and there-
by encourages the development of an inte-
grated ecological conscience.

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Agriculture

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1993:

Twenty-two percent of New York’s 11,800 dairy farms now milk
their cows three times a day, up from 15% in 1991, according to the Cornell
University Department of Animal Science. The New York dairy cow population
is down to 749,000, from 928,000 a decade ago, and the number of dairy farms is
down from 18,000, but the remainder produced a record 11.6 billion pounds of
milk. Largely because of thrice daily milkings, average milk production per cow
is up 20%, to 15,463 pounds (roughly equal to the national average). Because
thrice daily milkings wear cows out faster, farmers who have gone to that sched-
ule cull their herds more often. Dairy farming accounts for $1.5 billion of New
York’s $2.9 billion-a-year agricultural industry.

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Books for children who love animals

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1993:

A Place for Grace, by Jean Davies Okimoto, illustrated by Doug
Keith. Sasquatch Books (1931 2nd Ave., Seattle, WA 98101), 1993, 36 pages,
hardcover $14.95.
The amazing Grace of this story is a small stray dog on the streets of San
Francisco, who aspires to become a guide dog, fails the height requirement, and becomes a
hearing dog instead with the aid of Charlie, an astute human. Children, who are always
finding themselves too small to do things, will readily identify with Grace and will love
Doug Keith’s gently funny illustrations. But A Place for Grace isn’t just a good dog story.
It’s also a quick introduction to the duties, requirements, and training of hearing dogs, who
usually are clever mongrels, and, somewhat as an afterthought, to the world of the deaf.
If A Place for Grace has a fault, it’s that it presumes too much prior knowledge of deaf cul-
ture on the part of the very young readers. “Signing” pops up with no explanation of what it
is, although the sign alphabet appears on the cover liner, and there is relatively little discus-
sion of the difficulties of functioning in mechanized society without hearing. Fortunately,
many children will infer the essentials from the art. A must for school libraries!

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4-H, FFA seek to clean up image

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1993:

4-H and Future Farmers of America
chapters in Ohio, Oregon, and Washington are
developing a criteria and curriculum for medal
competition in the areas of animal well-being,
quality control, and show animal ethics, under-
written with $95,000 from the USDA.
“It’s important for the livestock indus-
try to show the public that we care about the
well-being of meat animals,” says Ohio 4-H
extension agent Sherry Nickles, who adds that
the new medal categories will “open up another
opportunity for members who aren’t going to be
the grand or reserve champion.”

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Advice from a dog

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1993:

DALTON, Georgia––”Living on the buckle of
the Bible Belt, where every harsh, cruel thing done to ani-
mals seems to have so-called divine justification, is at
times intolerable,” says Linda McClure-Woodham. “I can
count the number of animal activists in Dalton on the fin-
gers of one hand. But I keep writing my column in the
hope that maybe, just maybe, it is reaching those who
would never read ANIMAL PEOPLE or any other publi-
cation like it.”
For just over three years, McClure-Woodham
has ghostwritten two installments a month of a pet advice
column called Gizzmo for the Dalton Advertiser, a twice-
a-week newspaper with a circulation of 34,000. The osten-
sible author is her Chihuahua mix, Gizzmo, whom she
adopted from the local pound five years ago, at age six
months, as the dog was headed for the gas chamber.
Gizzmo answers fictitious letters sent in from other ani-
mals––some actually submitted by human readers on
behalf of their animals, some invented to illustrate other
issues McClure-Woodham wants to address.

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Dogs & Cats

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1993:

Petsmart Inc., a Phoenix-based national
chain of pet supply stores, maintains adoption
boutiques for local animal shelters instead of buying
and selling animals from breeders. The 38 “Luv-A-
Pet” boutiques placed 4,000 animals in the first 12
months they were open––and when Petsmart stock
went public in July, the price surged from $18 per
share to $25 the first day before leveling off even
higher. Investment analysts are recommending
Petsmart at any price up to $30 a share.
A growing number of communities are
discovering a need for a group similar to the Pet
Owners With Aids Resource Service of New York
City and the Pets Are Wonderful Support network of
Los Angeles, which help hundreds of AIDS patients
to keep their pets as long as possible and seek new
homes for the animals when their people die.
Pending formation of such a group in New Orleans,
Legislation In Support of Animals is pinch-hitting.

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