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Tribune News Service on MSN10hOpinion
Commentary: PETA at 45 — We’re just getting startedPETA is celebrating a milestone this month: 45 years of pushing, persuading and provoking for animal liberation. I’ve been ...
Tribune News Service on MSN1dOpinion
Commentary: Dogs are drafted into police work, and they are dying on the jobOn a sweltering day in Georgia last month, a police K9 named for the state she worked in died on the job. A deputy reportedly ...
The nonprofit, focused on ending animal abuse and exploitation and promoting animal rights, named a new president.
Animal rights organization PETA announced Friday that it is appointing a Georgia-born executive staff member as president, a ...
After a video about mascot Buoy's close call with a bear went viral, PETA sent the team a letter that was critical of fishing ...
Ingrid Newkirk has no plans to retire. Having just turned 74, the president of the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, which she co-founded in 1980 with fellow activist Alex Pacheco, has ...
PETA President, Ingrid Newkirk. To drive home this message after her death, Newkirk plans to have her skin peeled off and used to make leather goods, such as a belt and purse, according to her will.
PETA President Ingrid Newkirk said her will reflected wishes to donate her human flesh for a post-mortem barbecue to raise awareness about animal rights.
President Ingrid Newkirk made the offer to Carlos Abrams-Rivera, Executive Vice President and President of The Kraft Heinz Company – North America Zone, in a letter sent Thursday.
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