Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: SUNDAY, September 26, 1993 TAG: 9309260126 SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL PAGE: A-5 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: DATELINE: ANCHORAGE, ALASKA LENGTH: Short
"This is my part to preserve wildlife," said Hovanec, 29, a grocery store worker who held up her sign for passing cars to see outside a hotel owned by Gov. Walter J. Hickel. "The wolves can't talk for themselves."
Giving voice to the message is why Wendy Moe brought her dog Yetta, a part-wolf house pet that howls on command. Protesters also played tape-recorded wolf howls to attract attention.
"I'm here to help save the wolves," said Moe, an Anchorage legal secretary who handed a picket sign to her 3-year-old niece.
Alaska's plan to hunt, snare and trap up to 150 wolves in a 2,000-mile region south of Fairbanks touched off nationwide plans for rallies in 36 cities.
State Game Board-approved wolf control is aimed at improving the numbers of big game available for hunters. A kill could begin as soon as next month.
Protests were held on New York's Fifth Avenue and on the Capitol steps in Washington. Rallies were organized by Connecticut-based Friends of Animals to promote a state tourism boycott. - Associated Press
by CNB