You are browsing the archive for 2012 November 19.

Wranglers say ‘Hobbit’ animals died on unsafe farm

6:34 pm in News Hawk by John McGlothlen by Associated Press

People walk by the Embassy Theater where a giant statue of the character Gandalf from the upcoming movie "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey" overlooks the passersby in Wellington, New Zealand, Monday, Nov. 19, 2012. Animal wranglers involved in the making of “The Hobbit” movie trilogy say the production company is responsible for the deaths of up to 27 animals, largely because they were kept at a farm filled with bluffs, sinkholes and other “death traps.” (AP photo/Nick Perry)

NICK PERRY, Associated Press

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — Animal wranglers involved in the making of “The Hobbit” movie trilogy say the production company is responsible for the deaths of up to 27 animals, largely because they were kept at a farm filled with bluffs, sinkholes and other “death traps.”

The American Humane Association, which is overseeing animal welfare on the films, says no animals were harmed during the actual filming. But it also says the wranglers’ complaints highlight shortcomings in its oversight system, which monitors film sets but not the facilities where the animals are housed and trained.

A spokesman for trilogy director Peter Jackson on Monday acknowledged that horses, goats, chickens and one sheep died at the farm near Wellington where about 150 animals were housed for the movies, but he said some of the deaths were from natural causes.

The spokesman, Matt Dravitzki, agreed that the deaths of two horses were avoidable, and said the production company moved quickly to improve conditions after they died.

“The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey,” the first movie in the planned $500 million trilogy, is scheduled to launch with a red-carpet premiere Nov. 28 in Wellington and will open at theaters in the U.S. and around the world in December.

The animal rights group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) says it’s planning protests at the premieres in New Zealand, the U.S. and the U.K.

Kathy Guillermo, a senior vice president at PETA, said whistleblowers on The Hobbit contacted the organization after it had taken an active role in exposing problems on other movie sets. The organization sent a letter to Jackson last week outlining its concerns.

“We want to send a clear message to Hollywood that they need to be very careful when using animals and take all the precautions that need to be taken,” Guillermo said.

The Associated Press spoke to four wranglers who said the farm near Wellington was unsuitable for horses because it was peppered with bluffs, sinkholes and broken-down fencing. They said they repeatedly raised concerns about the farm with their superiors and the production company, owned by Warner Bros., but it continued to be used. They say they want their story aired publicly now to prevent similar deaths in the future.

One wrangler said that over time he buried three horses, as well as about six goats, six sheep and a dozen chickens. The wranglers say two more horses suffered severe injuries but survived.

Wrangler Chris Langridge said he was hired as a horse trainer in November 2010, overseeing 50 or so horses, but immediately became concerned that the farm was full of “death traps.” He said he tried to fill in some of the sinkholes, made by underground streams, and even brought in his own fences to keep the horses away from the most dangerous areas. Ultimately, he said, it was an impossible task.

He said horses run at speeds of up to 30 mph and need to be housed on flat land: “It’s just a no-brainer.”

The first horse to die, he said, was a miniature named Rainbow.

“When I arrived at work in the morning, the pony was still alive but his back was broken. He’d come off a bank at speed and crash-landed,” Langridge said. “He was in a bad state.”

Rainbow, who had been slated for use as a hobbit horse, was euthanized. A week later, a horse named Doofus got caught in some fencing and sliced open its leg. That horse survived, but Langridge said he’d had enough.

He and his wife, Lynn, who was also working as a wrangler, said they quit in February 2011. The following month, they wrote an email to Brigitte Yorke, the Hobbit trilogy’s unit production manager, outlining their concerns.

Chris Langridge said he responded to Yorke’s request for more information but never received a reply after that.

Wrangler Johnny Smythe said that soon after Langridge left, a horse named Claire was found dead, its head submerged in a stream after it fell over a bluff. After that, he said, the horses were put in stables, where a third horse died.

Smythe said no autopsy was performed on the horse, which was named Zeppelin. Veterinary records say the horse died of natural causes, from a burst blood vessel, but Smythe said the horse was bloated and its intestines were full of a yellow liquid; he believes it died of digestive problems caused by new feed.

Smythe said the six goats and six sheep he buried died after falling into sinkholes, contracting worms or getting new feed after the grass was eaten. He said the chickens were often left out of their enclosure and that a dozen were mauled to death by dogs on two separate occasions.

Smythe said he was fired in October 2011 after arguing with his boss about the treatment of the animals.

A fourth wrangler, who didn’t want to be named because she feared it could jeopardize her future employment in the industry, said another horse, Molly, got caught in a fence and ripped her leg open, suffering permanent injuries.

Dravitzki, the spokesman for Peter Jackson, said the production company reacted swiftly after the first two horses died, spending hundreds of thousands of dollars upgrading housing and stable facilities in early 2011.

“We do know those deaths were avoidable and we took steps to make sure it didn’t happen again,” he said.

Dravitzki said Zeppelin died of a burst blood vessel and that he knew only of three goats, one sheep and about eight chickens that had died aside from that. He said two of the goats died in a cold snap but the third, like the sheep, was old and had likely died of natural causes. He said the chicken maulings were the result of careless staff oversight.

The American Humane Association said in its report on “An Unexpected Journey” that it investigated the farm at the production company’s request. Dravitzki said the company contacted the AHA after Smythe alleged mistreatment of animals.

Mark Stubis, an association spokesman, said it investigated the farm in August 2011, months after the first deaths.

“We made safety recommendations to the animals’ living areas. The production company followed our recommendations and upgraded fence and farm housing, among other things,” the group said.

Dravitzki said the company had already made many of the recommended changes by the time the AHA made them.

Stubis said the association acknowledges that what happens off-set remains a blind spot in its oversight.

“We would love to be able to monitor the training of animals and the housing of animals,” Stubis said. “It’s something we are looking into. We want to make sure the animals are treated well all the time.”

Dravitzki questioned the timing of the allegations with the premiere so close but said the producers are investigating all the claims “and are attempting to speak with all parties involved to establish the truth.”

He said the company no longer leases the farm and has no animals left on the property. He said he didn’t know if animals will be needed for future filming in the trilogy, but added that Jackson himself adopted three of the pigs used.

Hollywood has made animal welfare a stated priority for years.

In March, HBO canceled the horse racing series “Luck” after three thoroughbred horses died during production. The network said it canceled the show because it could not guarantee against future accidents.

 

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

Bad reaction may leave lasting impression with jury

6:28 pm in Crime, Law and Justice, Linn County, Public Safety by Trish Mehaffey

CEDAR RAPIDS – There’s no doubt Jerome Power left an impression with the jury Monday after pouring water on his lawyer’s head, but it may not give him the results he’s hoping.

Robert Rigg, Drake Law School professor, said it likely left a “negative” view of Power with the jury.

“Clients will sometimes act out but usually not in front of the jury,” Rigg said. “They usually blurt out things in testimony or will have words with their attorneys during pre-trials. You always tell your clients there is going to be testimony that they won’t like, but tell them not to react in front of the jury. They can get upset outside of the jury.”

Power, 50, charged with first-degree murder in the strangulation death of Doris Bevins, 68, Sept. 19, 2010. Power is accused of strangling Bevins with pajama pants, according to testimony. She died of ligature strangulation. Power was found hiding inside Bevins’ home when police arrived.

Power poured a cup of water on attorney Steve Addington’s head after closing arguments were completed, stunning everyone in the court, including the deputies. The jury was still in the courtroom and witnessed the incident.

Addington didn’t say anything to Power after the incident. Power was taken out by the deputies and Addington just wiped off his head and wet jacket.

Power seemed upset and agitated the entire morning after asking the court to declare a mistrial, citing conflicts with his lawyers, before closing arguments began.

Sixth Judicial District Judge Fae Hoover-Grinde told him his motion was denied. She has denied previous claims of ineffective counsel Conflicts or disagreements with his lawyers aren’t grounds for a mistrial, she said.

Power has accused his lawyers, Addington and Jason Dunn, both with the Iowa Public Defender’s Office – Special Defense Unit in Des Moines, of ineffective counsel because his trial strategy doesn’t gel with theirs. Addington and Dunn are Power’s third set of lawyers.

Rigg said Power’s stunt probably would heighten the attorneys’ defense if Power attempts to claim ineffective counsel on appeal if he’s not cooperating with them. Every lawyer makes mistakes during a trial but to make the case for ineffective counsel, a lawyer would have to make errors so critical that it deprives a defendant of a fair trial, he said.

Earlier in the trial, Power held up a sign incriminating another man of killing Bevins. He flashed it only to the media. The judge, attorneys nor the jury saw the sign.

Rigg said he has had clients who have become explosive but they usually have mental health issues.

“I haven’t had something like this happen to me but I remember one defendant spit on their lawyer but not in front of the jury. Several years ago, there was a defendant  who took a swing at their lawyer. That was also not in front of a  jury.”

Other lawyers talking about the incident Monday said they hadn’t experienced something like that or had seen it happened to another lawyer in the area, at least, not during a trial.

“I really must commend the court appointed public defender,” Mark Brown, Cedar Rapids defense attorney, said. “They accept that which they are assigned and put forth their legal heart and soul on these type of serious cases. At the end of the day a thank you would be nice.”

 

 

Defendant in murder trial pours water on attorney’s head

6:15 pm in Crime, Law and Justice, Linn County, Local News, Public Safety, Public Safety by Trish Mehaffey

CEDAR RAPIDS – Closing arguments were overshadowed today in the murder trial of Jerome Power as he grabbed a cup of water and poured it over his attorney’s head, catching the attorney, the judge and deputies off guard.

Power, 50, of Cedar Rapids, poured water on attorney Steve Addington just as the jurors were being excused to start deliberations in his first-degree murder trial.

“It should have been a mistrial,” Power said after dumping the water on Addington. “You sold me out!”

The deputies quickly responded but reacted too late to prevent Addington, of Des Moines, from getting wet.

Related: Bad reaction may leave lasting impression with jury

The jury started deliberations just after noon Monday and were sent home about 4:30 p.m. They will resume deliberations 8:30 a.m. Tuesday in Linn County District Court.

Power, charged with first-degree murder, is accused of strangling to death Doris Bevins, 68, in her home Sept. 19, 2010. Police found Power hiding inside behind the entry door as they responded to the 911 call from Bevin’s friend who was talking on the phone to her when she was assaulted that night.

Power dumped the water on Addington in front of the jurors who had just stood up to leave and start deliberations. Most of them looked surprised and the ones stepping down from the jury box abruptly stopped to see what was happening.

Power seemed agitated and defiant throughout Linn County Attorney Jerry Vander Sanden’s closing argument, mumbling under his breath and at one time blurting out a comment, but Vander Sanden didn’t miss a beat and just continued his argument.

Vander Sanden said the act of killing Bevins was premeditated, deliberate and willful. Power “squeezed the life from her.” He used pajama pants found at her apartment to strangle her and was likely there to commit a burglary or theft but he was interrupted when police showed up. Police did find Bevins’ cell phone and charger in his pocket.

Vander Sanden said why wouldn’t Power  immediately answer the door if had just found Bevins unconscious, as he testified. Police testified they were pounding on Bevins’ door and shouting for her to answer them for about four minutes. They also were kicking the door, trying to bust in the deadbolt locked door and finally had to break a window to get inside.

“There’s no way he couldn’t have heard police at the door,” Vander Sanden said. “He was inside in a panic. He was just hoping they would go away.”

Vander Sanden said Power’s first instinct was to play the “blame game” and talk himself out of this predicament. He started talking about another black man that was inside who ran out the back door or window. Then he continued to blame someone else when he was questioned by police.

Power said about 100 times during the interview the killer was a white man who had lived in the same apartment house as he and Bevins, Vander Sanden said.

“He said he would testify against him (other man) in court,” Vander Sanden said. “I think that tells you something about Power. He was ready to accuse an innocent man of murder, under oath.”

Jason Dunn, Power’s attorney, said everybody knew Bevins didn’t have any money. Power had more items of value like a computer and printer in his apartment than Bevins owned.

“Is it reasonable to think Mr. Power stole a $5 cell phone?” Dunn said.

Dunn said it doesn’t make sense that Power would kill his neighbor after knowing her for four years. That day in particular doesn’t make sense because things were going well for Power. He had just gotten a new job and was receiving student loan money to continue his education.

Consider the context of the police interview, Dunn said. Power volunteered to talk to police. He was “slightly buzzed” that day but he also was nervous and panicked. He realized it looked bad.

Dunn said there were inconsistencies in Power’s interview and his testimony but he attempted to explain those. There were also inconsistencies in police testimony. They made a “big deal” of Power trying to give the cell phone he had, which belonged to Bevins, to his girlfriend before police took him from the scene but one officer in his deposition only mentioned him Power wanting to give his keys to his girlfriend. And another officer said he didn’t mention the cell.

Dunn also asked the jurors to consider the fact that there was no DNA evidence to incriminate Power. He told them to look at photos of Bevins’ body because she had scratches and open sores on body, so how was there not any blood found on Power.

Vander Sanden in his rebuttal argument said nobody knows why DNA isn’t found at a crime scene. Power in the interview seemed to think police might find some DNA on him. At one point, he spit on his hands and rubbed them through his hair as if to wipe off something and then he also is brushing off his clothes, he said.

 

SWAT team helps with northwest Cedar Rapids arrest

6:13 pm in Crime, Law and Justice, Johnson County, Linn County, Public Safety by Jeff Raasch and Vanessa Miller

Members of the Cedar Rapids Police Department's SWAT team respond to a home on Apache Trail NW Monday morning. (Jeff Raasch/The Gazette)

 

UPDATE: Authorities have arrested two people in connection with a Sunday night shooting in Iowa City that sent one man to the hospital with non-life threatening injuries.

Peter Francis Thullen, 20, of Cedar Rapids, and Andrew David Meyer, 19, also of Cedar Rapids, both face charges of first-degree burglary and going armed with intent, both felonies.

The Iowa City and Cedar Rapids police departments are working together on the investigation. The suspects are waiting to be transported to the Johnson County Jail, where they will be held on $100,000 cash-only bonds.

Additional charges are pending further investigation.

Iowa City police on Monday took two people into custody in connection with a Sunday night shooting on Bloomington Street that sent one man to the hospital with non-life threatening injuries.

Iowa City police were called to Mercy Iowa City at 9:13 p.m. Sunday on a report of an adult male who had been shot, according to a news release. Details surrounding the shooting have not been made public, but police said the man was shot by someone he knew.

The two people taken into custody in connection with the shooting were not immediately arrested or charged, according to Iowa City police Sgt. Denise Brotherton. Police did not release their names Monday, and the incident remains under investigation, Brotherton said.

The victim was transported to the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics for non-life threatening injuries, and officers said they don’t believe there’s a threat to public safety.

Iowa City police on Monday secured the crime scene at 719 E. Bloomington St., and earlier in the day SWAT officers took a man into custody in northwest Cedar Rapids that officials said was connected to the Iowa City case.

Neighbors said the man came out of a white house at 1243 Apache Trail NW around 9:30 a.m. and was handcuffed without incident.

One neighbor said she saw 16 officers dressed in tactical gear near her house. Several of them were carrying assault rifles. She said the man, who she estimated was about 20 years old, came out with his hands up.

“I saw lots of gun barrels,” said the neighbor, who declined to give her name.

Cedar Rapids police didn’t disclose more details about the arrest except to say it was tied to an Iowa City case. Brotherton confirmed it was connected with the Sunday shooting in Iowa City.

A neighbor of the Iowa City shooting said he’s lived in the area for more than 15 years, and he’s concerned about the recent rash of crime.

“This morning I chased a guy off my porch at 3 a.m.,” said Tom Lally, noting that “normally it’s fairly docile.”

The neighborhood on Oct. 30 saw a pair of armed robberies in Black’s Gaslight Village, a residential community at 422 Brown St. In those cases, a suspect approached two victims at separate times and places within a few minutes of each other and demanded their purses at gunpoint.

One of the victims ran into her apartment and got away from the suspect, but the other person gave the suspect her purse, according to police. The suspect – described as a black male, about 5 feet 10 inches tall in his 20s or 30s – fled the scene and hasn’t been arrested.

Lally said he and his wife are concerned and have started taking their laptops with them when they leave home. He said the criminals appear to be after the “low-hanging fruit,” like electronics and purses.

“It’s something that’s happening in the north side that doesn’t normally happen,” Lally said. “It’s definitely something to be mindful of.”

 

Hostess, Bakers Union to enter mediation

6:10 pm in B380, Statewide News by Reuters

Trucks are parked at the closed Hostess plant in Denver November 19, 2012. (REUTERS/Rick Wilking)

UPDATE: Twinkies won’t die that easily after all.

Hostess Brands Inc. and its second largest union will go into mediation to try and resolve their differences, meaning the company won’t go out of business just yet. The news came Monday after Hostess moved to liquidate and sell off its assets in bankruptcy court citing a crippling strike last week.

The bankruptcy judge hearing the case said Monday that the parties haven’t gone through the critical step of mediation and asked the lawyer for the Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers International Union, which has been on strike on Nov. 9, to ask his client, who wasn’t present, if the union would agree to participate. The judge noted that the bakery union went on strike after rejecting the company’s latest contract offer, even though it never filed an objection to it.

“Many people, myself included, have serious questions as to the logic behind this strike,” said Judge Robert Drain, who heard the case in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in the Southern District of New York in White Plains, N.Y. “Not to have gone through that step leaves a huge question mark in this case.”

Hostess and the union are expected to begin the mediation process on Tuesday.

Irving, Texas-based Hostess, weighed down by debt, management turmoil, rising labor costs and the changing tastes of America, decided on Friday that it no longer could make it through a conventional Chapter 11 bankruptcy restructuring. Instead, it’s asked the court for permission to sell assets and go out of business.

It’s a far cry from when the maker of Twinkies, Ding Dongs and Ho Ho’s filed for bankruptcy in January, its second Chapter 11 filing in less than a decade. The company had hoped to emerge with stronger financials. It brought on CEO Gregory Rayburn as a restructuring expert and was working to renegotiate its contract with labor unions.

But Rayburn wasn’t able to reach a deal with the bakery union, which went on strike Nov. 9. Rayburn said that Hostess was already operating on razor thin margins and that the strike was the final blow.

The company’s announcement on Friday that it would move to liquidate prompted people across the country to rush to stores and stock up on their favorite Hostess treats. Many businesses reported selling out of Twinkies within hours and the spongy yellow cakes turned up for sale online for hundreds of dollars.

Even if Hostess goes out of business, its popular brands will likely find a second life after being snapped up by buyers. The company says several potential buyers have expressed interest in the brands. Although Hostess’ sales have been declining in recent years, the company still does about $2.5 billion in business each year. Twinkies along brought in $68 million so far this year.

Notes from HawkeyeReport.com . . .

5:48 pm in On Iowa by Marc Morehouse by Marc Morehouse

Illinois linebacker Reggie Spearman is giving Iowa a look. He's the guy in the light blue here doing the tackling.

Here’s the weekly post from HawkeyeReport.com publisher Tom Kakert. Recruiting is the topic.

Tom got this to me before he left for Cancun and the Moon Palace, but I wanted to give it a little room to breathe because the posts have been fast and furious.

Without further adieu . . .

Iowa fans are probably going to worry a bit in December and January about other schools swooping in and stealing away a prospect or two from the current list of 15 Hawkeye commits. But, it could end up that Kirk Ferentz and his staff does the stealing.

As we mentioned last week, the Hawkeyes hosted Illini commit Reggie Spearman last weekend. Spearman has been committed to Illinois since the summer, however, now the Chicago native is looking around. The 6-foot-2 and 220 pound linebacker was offered by the Hawkeyes earlier in the week and an unofficial visit quickly turned into an official visit.

Before the game we caught Spearman on the Iowa sidelines decked out and black and gold, so that was certainly a good sign. Following his visit to Iowa he said that while he considers himself committed to Illinois, but the Hawkeyes opened his eyes and he’s now giving Iowa a serious look. If he does flip in Iowa’s direction, it could be another recruiting win for freshman cornerback Reese Fleming. The fellow Chicago area product spent time with Spearman and helped to sell him on the iowa program. If you remember last year when Fleming signed with Iowa, he was a key recruit doing recruiting for the Hawkeyes.

The Hawkeyes also hosted several significant prospects last weekend, including standout 2014 prospect Jeff Jones from Minnesota. The 6-foot running back is a member of the recently released Rivals 250 list for 2014 and says he really enjoyed the visit. A key player to watch when it comes to Jones recruitment will be high school teammate Raymonte Maynard. Jones is very open about saying that he would like to play at the same school as Jones. Iowa is also showing interest in Maynard, who projects to the fullback position in college. Certainly something to watch in his recruitment.

Another visitor this past weekend from Minnesota was running back Andre Hunt, who has already graduated from Cretin-Derham High School. Hunt spent this fall at a prep school in Virginia and if a scholarship offer doesn’t come, it’s very possible that he ends up walking on at Iowa. Also in town from Cretin-Derham was wide receiver Connor Keane, who is a senior. He is looking to walk on to a major college program and Iowa and Iowa State are two schools he is considering.

The crop of in-state talent in 2014 is pretty strong by Iowa standards and one emerging prospect is Cole Turner from Cedar Rapids Xavier High School. Turner has a great frame at 6-foot-5 and 270 pounds and has had a strong junior season. Turner doesn’t have an offer from the Hawkeyes yet, but Brian Ferentz has been keeping in close contact and he certainly seems like a player that Iowa will give a long look at this spring.

We mentioned earlier that Hawkeye fans are probably going to be concerned about a committed prospect leaving the fold and there might be a chance of that happening. Right now the only name looking at an official visit elsewhere is four star defensive back Delano Hill. He confirmed to Rivals.com earlier this week that he would be taking an official visit to Pittsburgh. He also said that it would take a lot for him to change his commitment. Hill said he is scheduled to take his official visit to Iowa City in January.

Homegrown: Perennial Protection

5:38 pm in Blogs, Homegrown by Cindy Hadish

Many gardeners use mums to give a festive look as seasons change, but the plants need a little help to make it through an Iowa winter. (Norman Winter/MSU Extension Service/MCT)


Horticulturists Richard Jauron and Willy Klein of Iowa State University Extension provided the following timely tips on preparing perennials for the winter:

Many perennials make it through winter just fine with no special attention. But in Iowa gardens, some perennials require a little attention just before the ground freezes.

How should I prepare mums for winter?

Chrysanthemums are shallow-rooted plants. Repeated freezing and thawing of the soil during the winter months can heave plants out of the ground and cause severe damage or even death. Gardeners can increase the odds of their mums surviving the winter by applying a mulch in fall. Mulching helps eliminate the alternate freezing-thawing cycles that can heave plants out of the soil. Apply the mulch in late fall, typically late November in central Iowa. Do not cut back the plants prior to mulching. Simply cover the plants with several inches of mulch. Suitable mulching materials include clean (weed-free) straw, pine needles and evergreen branches. Leaves are not a good mulch as they tend to mat down and don’t provide adequate protection. The mulch should remain in place until early to mid-April.

How should I prepare my perennial beds for winter?

Perennial plants can be cut back in fall after the foliage has been destroyed by a hard freeze. Compost the plant debris. Most established perennials (those in the ground one or more years) do not require winter protection. However, a few perennials, such as garden mums, can be damaged in winter and should be mulched in fall to prevent injury. Perennials planted in late summer/early fall should also be mulched. Good mulching materials are clean, weed-free straw and pine needles. A 6- to 8-inch-layer of mulch should be adequate for most perennials. Mid- to late November is usually a good time to mulch perennial beds in Iowa.

I have several unplanted perennials in pots. How do I overwinter them?

The best way to overwinter perennials in pots is to dig holes in the ground in a sheltered location. The depth of the holes should be slightly less than the height of the containers. Set the pots in the ground and then place soil around the pots. For additional protection, place several inches of straw or pine needles over the potted perennials. In spring, the perennials can be dug up and planted in their permanent location.

When should I cut back my ornamental grasses?

Many ornamental grasses provide color, sound and movement to the winter landscape. Because of these winter features, cut back ornamental grasses in April in Iowa. Cut back the grasses to within 2 to 4 inches of the ground with hand shears, lopping shears or hedge trimmers.

 

GOP is pro-death on traffic laws

5:36 pm in Letters to the Editor by The Gazette Opinion Staff

 

Several news outlets had enough gumption to report the “increased fatality rates on Iowa interstates after the speed limit increase.” This has always happened on the select highways where speed limits were raised — the crash and fatality rates went up immediately and significantly, even though the rates on other lower-speed highways went down. The heavyfoot lawmakers will only let you hear about the latter, but not the former.

Those past speed limit and fatality increases were initiated and pushed by the Republicans, the last by the Republican-controlled Iowa House in 2005.

It’s the Republicans who claim to be pro-life to the extreme of wanting to defund Planned Parenthood and outlaw morning-after pills, even where rape and incest are involved. But they’re pro-death by voting for faster speed limits, heavier and faster large trucks, and against traffic cameras and against proper laws on texting and phone use while driving.

I won’t vote for any politician or party who sells our souls to big money/big business and ignores common sense and evidence.

Another dastardly but clever thing initiated by Republicans was to make it illegal to video the cruelty to animals in ag-animal facilities. If they’re sure no cruelty was going on, they wouldn’t object to video recording in such places.

Herman Lenz

Sumner

Football outshined by academics at UI

5:35 pm in Letters to the Editor by The Gazette Opinion Staff

I am so pleased to see the University of Iowa putting less emphasis on football, leaving more time for academics. Maybe this is the beginning of a new era. A time when arts, culture and education are more important than millionaire coaches and 70,000 well-meaning Iowans who have been misdirected by the sports-cultured media, who all show up at the same coliseum to watch 30 or so kids injure each other.

We envision a football team that gains untold fame by never winning a game. In a few short years, Iowa would be the envied Educated Culture Capitol of the world, boasting a very newsworthy longest football losing streak that would continue to infinity, while gaining the respect of an admiring world, most of whom would be planning a move to heaven; no, it’s Iowa.

Tony Staab

Cedar Rapids

 

Ferentz should recruit Democrats

5:34 pm in Letters to the Editor by The Gazette Opinion Staff

I recently read that a majority of Democrats are optimists and a majority of Republicans tend to be pessimists.

Several years ago, the Hawkeye football team was able to snatch victory out of the jaws of defeat a number of times in one season. My theory is that the true leaders of that Hawkeye team were Democrats.

Note to Kirk Ferentz: Recruit more Democrats. Another theory: Democrats will be more willing to see the joke.

A final note: After the great tribute to our soldiers at Kinnick Stadium for Veterans Day, a reminder that football is just a game.

Jack Jackson

Cedar Rapids