RUBY THE ELEPHANT DESERVES RETIREMENT.Byline: BOB BARKER Robert William "Bob" Barker (born December 12 1923) is a nineteen-time Emmy Award-winning former American television game show host. He is best known for hosting CBS's The Price Is Right TIME is running out for Ruby, a 46-year-old African elephant at the Los Angeles Zoo The Los Angeles Zoo founded in 1966, is a large zoo located in Los Angeles, California, USA. The Zoo, located in Los Angeles' Griffith Park, is home to 1,200 animals from around the world. who has spent almost her entire life before the public. Despite popular support and an endorsement from the Board of Zoo Commissioners to move Ruby to a spacious sanctuary in Northern California Northern California, sometimes referred to as NorCal, is the northern portion of the U.S. state of California. The region contains the San Francisco Bay Area, the state capital, Sacramento; as well as the substantial natural beauty of the redwood forests, the northern , the L.A. Zoo management appears bent on Adj. 1. bent on - fixed in your purpose; "bent on going to the theater"; "dead set against intervening"; "out to win every event" bent, dead set, out to sending her to the small confines of yet another zoo. Ruby sparked the kind of widespread media attention that any Hollywood publicist would envy when, in 2003, the L.A. Zoo broke up her 16-year friendship with Asian elephant Asian elephant Elaphus maximus. Gita by shipping Ruby off to a Tennessee zoo. After a year and a half, the zoo had failed to integrate Ruby with its elephants, so then-mayor James Hahn For the Iowa politician, see . James Kenneth "Jim" Hahn (born July 3, 1950) is an American politician from the Democratic Party. He was the Deputy City Attorney (1975-1979), City Controller (1981-1985), City Attorney (1985-2001) and Mayor of Los Angeles, California stepped in and ordered the L.A. Zoo to bring Ruby back. Sadly, Gita has since died, leaving Ruby entirely alone. An African elephant, Ruby has no place in the zoo's planned Asian elephant exhibit and must leave. But it is wrong to send Ruby to yet another zoo. At 46, Ruby doesn't have many years left. Only one African elephant over age 50 exists in a U.S. zoo. The L.A. Zoo's argument that Ruby should be put on public view at another zoo is disingenuous, considering the zoo has kept Ruby off public display since her return to Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. more than two years ago. Other big-city zoos have sent elephants to sanctuaries. Last year, the Philadelphia Zoo announced it would transfer its 44-year-old Asian elephant to a sanctuary in Tennessee. Major zoos, like those in Detroit and San Francisco, have moved elephants to sanctuaries after closing their elephant exhibits. Considering Ruby has been on public display at a circus and in various zoos for more than 40 years, it's time to just let her be an elephant again. At a sanctuary, Ruby will be able to roam and explore more than 70 acres with other African elephants, swim in a pond, climb a hill and nap in tall green grass. And it won't cost taxpayers a penny, since local elephant advocates, including myself, have pledged adequate funds to pay for Ruby's relocation and care. You could indeed say "the price is right." A sanctuary is clearly the best and most compassionate choice for Ruby. If necessary, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, like Hahn before him, should intervene on Ruby's behalf and show once again that the city of Los Angeles
Ruby deserves to spend her remaining years in peace and comfort. Send Ruby to a sanctuary now. CAPTION(S): photo Photo: Ruby, a 46-year-old African elephant at the L.A. Zoo, has spent most of her life on public display. David Sprague/Staff Photographer |
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