This article appeared in the July 19, 2018 edition of the Monitor Daily.

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Monitor Daily Intro for July 19, 2018

Noelle Swan
Weekly Editor

Jane Goodall probably isn’t the first person you’d expect to apply to shoot a Yellowstone grizzly. The famed anthropologist is one of thousands who have applied for one of the first grizzly bear hunting permits issued in Wyoming in 44 years. But if awarded one of the 22 permits being issued by the Wyoming Game and Fish Department, Dr. Goodall won’t be heading into Yellowstone National Park in search of a trophy. She’ll be on a quest for a photograph.

Goodall is perhaps the most prominent member of an impromptu movement to “Shoot ’em with a camera, not a gun.” The movement was hatched by a small cadre of 19 concerned citizens, 16 of them women, Todd Wilkinson reports for National Geographic. Frustrated by the unanimous decision in May to open up grizzly bears to limited hunting, these wildlife enthusiasts crafted a plan to use the system to protect the park’s beloved (from a safe distance) bears.

“We want to show that the worth of an animal is not measured by how much you can collect from killing it,” Jackson Hole conservationist Lisa Robertson told Mr. Wilkinson.

Wilkinson, a seasoned environmental journalist, has previously chronicled the saga of the Yellowstone grizzly, including the now iconic mama bear known as “399,” for the Monitor.

“These bears have alighted imaginations,” he wrote, “debunked anachronistic myths, charmed their way into our own sense of place, and given us a better perspective on the value of rare species in a crowded human world.”

Now onto our five stories for today, exploring the loyalty of US veterans, the welcoming spirit of Israel's kibbutzniks, and the sense of fulfillment that comes from volunteering for science.


This article appeared in the July 19, 2018 edition of the Monitor Daily.

Read 07/19 edition
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