AltWeeklies Wire

What Will Be the Fate of the Mustang?new

Advocates worry about the future of America’s iconic wild horses following a recent roundup.
Chico News & Review  |  Melissa Daugherty  |  04-22-2011  |  Animal Issues

Jump! Horses, Kids, Water and Ditches: What Could Go Wrong?new

I couldn’t help but wonder if this was a good idea: Jumping 1,200 pounds of horse at a gallop over logs, walls, ditches and various and sundry large solid objects seemed a bit suicidal. “Just keep your eyes up and go!” trainer and Olympic hopeful Karen O’Neal told me perkily as I got ready for my round. “Don’t look down. You’ll be fine.”
Eugene Weekly  |  Camilla Mortensen  |  05-20-2010  |  Sports

An Equine Abuse Case Shocked Tennessee and Legislation is Meeting Resistancenew

The colt could barely stand, was too weak to walk and likely hadn’t eaten since birth. His malnourished mother had no milk to feed him. The starving colt was among 84 horses rescued from a farm in Cannon County last November.
Nashville Scene  |  Christine Kreyling  |  03-12-2010  |  Animal Issues

They Save Horses, Don't They? Equines and the Economynew

The downturn in the economy is not only hitting families; it's hitting the animals those families own and love. Equines are among the most expensive of pets, and horse owners are starting to feel the brunt of high prices and lost jobs.
Eugene Weekly  |  Camilla Mortensen  |  12-18-2008  |  Animal Issues

Deanne Stillman Explains What Happened to the West's Horsesnew

Mustang: The Saga of the Wild Horse in the American West provides a detailed history of the horse and our treatment of the animal -- from its evolution on the North American continent to its scant existence today.
Tucson Weekly  |  Irene Messina  |  06-11-2008  |  Author Profiles & Interviews

The Dark Side of Horse Racing is Finally Being Revealednew

This year, a horse called Big Brown won the Kentucky Derby. But Big Brown's win was overshadowed by the No. 2 horse breaking both ankles after the finish. Eight Belles was humanely euthanized at the track.
Tucson Weekly  |  Catherine O'Sullivan  |  05-29-2008  |  Sports

Rodeo Royals: Yoncalla's Cowgirl Queensnew

Picture a tiara-wearing beauty queen greeting a screaming crowd. She's smiling and waving without a hair out of place. Now put that queen on the back of a horse galloping full tilt, replace her high heels with a pair of cowgirl boots and stick that tiara on top of a cowgirl hat, and you're starting to get an idea of what a rodeo queen looks like.
Eugene Weekly  |  Camilla Mortensen  |  03-27-2008  |  Culture

All the Pretty Horsesnew

With a passion for horses, one woman is helping a tiny auction ring make a comeback.
Style Weekly  |  melissa Scott Sinclair  |  05-10-2007  |  Culture

Cookie-Cutter Prosenew

The senator's first novel uses language as poetic and moving as a Capitol Hill memo.
SF Weekly  |  Matt Palmquist  |  12-06-2005  |  Fiction

Jockey Phenomenon Bounces Back From Bad Breaknew

Seventeen-year-old Kyle Kaenel, who broke his neck in Phoenix, Ariz., is back on the track and winning.
Illinois Times  |  Bruce Rushton  |  10-14-2005  |  Sports

The Mud, the Blood and the Poopnew

A rodeo insider takes you behind the chutes of America's cowboy sport.
Colorado Springs Independent  |  Gavin Ehringer  |  10-07-2004  |  Sports

Remain the Same, or Reinventnew

Most artists survive by reinventing themselves. But rock star Patti Smith, like God and Edith Piaf, is eternal. Also reviewed is "Uh Huh Her" by PJ Harvey, who is in some ways Smith's heir and in others her opposite.
Illinois Times  |  René Spencer Saller  |  07-02-2004  |  Reviews

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