paoeS
daily nebraskart
Wednesday, September 17, 1980
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Buffalo hunt off after groups protest
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"The only rights an animal has arc those the owner
rives rum" said Mike Koger of the Lincoln National
Humane Society.
Koger, who started Citizens for Animal Rights, was one
of many people throughout the country who opposed
Rudy Stanko's proposed buffalo hunt in Cordon, Neb.
Stanko is a rancher in his 60's who purchased 100
buffalo from a Colorado ranch. Stanko says he did not in
tend them to be hunted.
He said the animals were in poor shape so he fed them.
Later someone gave him the hunting idea.
For the proposed hunt, Stanko said, he chose 20,000
acres of rough timber and canyon land in Gordon. He said
the proposed hunt would have been difficult. Planes
would have been used, he said, to help spot the herd only
if a hunter hadn't tracked them down in three days.
Koger organized a protest march for Sept. 12 but
canceled when Stanko called off the hunt.
Koger opposed the hunt because he said the buffalo
played an important part in American Heritage.
Koger said the buffalo is much more American than
the bald eagle. Koger also opposes hunting buffalo
because they are domesticated.
The hunting of the domesticated buffalo would ruin
the Good Life' image Nebraska has for its hunting and
fishing."
Stanko said the buffalo were not domesticated.
but
"They may seem calm in a pen," Stanko said,
turned loose, they run like deer or elk."
After opposition from the National Humane Society,
the American Indian Movement and crank calls which
upset his wife, Stanko canceled the hunt.
Stanko said he has not decided what to do with the
buffalo, but he will continue to feed them.
Mrs. Thone says identity searching
can bridge gap in role traditions
By Brad Kuhn
A woman's search for personal identity is one way of
bridging the gap between the new and traditional roles for
women, according to Ruth Thone.
Mrs. Thone spoke Tuesday at the YVVCA as a part of
"Women's Focus" program.
She said womens' identity crisises arose from a differ
ence between today's woman and the woman of 20 years
ago.
"Not in an ultimate sense, but in choices. The differ
ence is therefore not internal, but comes from external in
fluences," she said.
Mrs. Thone said when she was in college. "If vou were
20 years old, a senior and not engaged to be married,
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something was wrong with you."
Much of the material used in her talk was from person
al experience, although she occasionally referred to
books she had read.
Mrs. Thone said she strongly believes the women's
movement is the product of a dire need and not just the
vision of idle minds.
"Women are learning that satisfaction with self is not
to be found from someone else," she said.
Getting married was a decision that she feels she made
because of enforced customs, without enough personal
thought. She warns women not to "live the unexamined
life."
She said she is sorry that in the search for self, women
are losing their nurturing qualities that help a woman de
rive satisfaction from baking and raising children.
"It's a matter of choices," Mrs. Thone said. "A person
al balance is needed. You don't have to be doing some
thing different. One must ask, 'Where is there room for
change in my life? The important thing is to look at what
you're doing."
Thone claims dependence on men is an inherent trait
developed from birth based on physical smallness and a
need for protection.
Paraphrasing Shakespeare she said, "The fault dear
Brutus is not in the stars. It is in our souls."
Thone said her religious background allows her to look
for divine help in striking an identity balance.
"Sometimes I get such tunnel vision. Then the answer
will come from way off in a different direction."
Her point is personal effort in the search.
"God can't do much with a ship on the dock, but once
you're out there, a rudder can guide you." She said if one
"lives in the questions, the answers will come."
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