“Frontier Airlines to let pets travel for $75 - AZCentral.com” plus 3 more |
- Frontier Airlines to let pets travel for $75 - AZCentral.com
- ngmoco Acquires Touch Pets Developer Stumptown Game ... - Gamezebo
- Cat lovers fear town's plan would include pets - State Journal-Register
- AP-Petside.com poll: Where will your next pet come from ... - Chicago Tribune
| Frontier Airlines to let pets travel for $75 - AZCentral.com Posted: 13 May 2010 12:07 AM PDT DENVER—Frontier Airlines says it will let customers carry small pets on board, but it will cost more than some of the fares that Frontier charges its two-legged passengers. The airline said Wednesday it would let passengers bring along their small dogs, cats, rabbits, guinea pigs, hamsters or small birds for $75 each way. That matches the price charged by another low-fare carrier, Southwest Airlines, which began allowing customers to bring small pets on board last year. According to its Web site, Frontier charges less for some tickets for people, including travel between Denver and Albuquerque, N.M., or between Milwaukee and Indianapolis or Kansas City. The pets must fit in a carrier that goes under an airplane seat and must have proper health documentation. Spokeswoman Lindsey Purves said customers should have their vet complete a health form for the animal within 10 days of the trip. The airline lets bigger pets fly as checked baggage for a $150 fee. Purves said the airline removed pets other than service animals from cabins in June 2008, requiring that they fly as cargo. Frontier is a unit of Republic Airways Holdings Inc. Republic's shares rose 4 cents to $6.19 in afternoon trading. Five Filters featured article: The Art of Looking Prime Ministerial - The 2010 UK General Election. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
| ngmoco Acquires Touch Pets Developer Stumptown Game ... - Gamezebo Posted: 12 May 2010 12:33 PM PDT Riding high on the success of last fall's Touch Pets Dogs, ngmoco has just acquired the game's developer Stumptown Game Machine for an undisclosed amount. With several games in development and concerns about adequate resources mounting, Stumptown's Andrew Stern said the acquisition "just made sense." "It gave us the resources to grow more and do even bigger, more exciting, innovative products together," Stern told Gamasutra in an interview today. "The vision that Ngmoco has, and I have, for the project I want to make is very well-aligned, so it just made sense to join forces." While neither Stern nor his Ngmoco counterparts would confirm what games the studio currently has in development, some hints were dropped about the direction things might be going. It was also confirmed that this new collaboration allowed Stern to add Richard Evans, whose previous works include Black & White and The Sims 3, to the Stumptown team. "I see there's a lot of potential for deep, more sophisticated characters and narrative situations combined with social networking," says Stern. "Richard and I and the rest of the Stumptown group are planning big things." This isn't ngmoco's first acquisition in recent months. Back in February the company acquired Freeverse, the developer behind Skee-Ball, Warpgate, and the recent Flick Baseball Pro. Prior to that they had snapped up Epic Pet Wars developer Miraphonic. Now with a third studio added to their increasingly impressive portfolio, we can't help but wonder who'll be next. [via Gamasutra] Five Filters featured article: The Art of Looking Prime Ministerial - The 2010 UK General Election. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
| Cat lovers fear town's plan would include pets - State Journal-Register Posted: 12 May 2010 07:00 PM PDT LACON — Plans in the north-central Illinois town of Lacon to round up stray cats and euthanize the animals have raised the hackles of local cat lovers. Mayor Bob Weber said the city is considering an ordinance that would require that cats who aren't carrying a tag or something else that marks them as a pet to be euthanized. The ordinance comes after complaints from some residents. Council member Les Hattan said at a Monday meeting that he's among those who complain. His wife doesn't like cats getting into her flower beds. But animal lovers like Sherri Coghill fear that some pets will be caught and killed, too. No decision has been made on the ordinance. Lacon is about 30 miles north of Peoria. Five Filters featured article: The Art of Looking Prime Ministerial - The 2010 UK General Election. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
| AP-Petside.com poll: Where will your next pet come from ... - Chicago Tribune Posted: 13 May 2010 05:29 AM PDT LOS ANGELES (AP) — Remember that old song, "How much is that doggie in the window?" For most Americans, it seems it's no sale. More than half of people in an Associated Press-Petside.com poll said they would get their next dog or cat from a shelter, nearly seven times the number who said they would buy their next pet from a store. And more than four in 10 said they thought store pets could have hidden medical or psychological problems. That's significantly more than those who expressed the same concerns about pets from animal shelters or breeders. "I believe they overbreed the pets. I believe they couldn't care less about the pets, they're really in it for the money. I think you are more likely to get a pet at a pet store that is ill or has problems," said Sandra Toro, 62, of Colton, Calif. Just 8 percent of those polled said they would get their next cat or dog at a store, while 13 percent said that's where they got the pet they have now. Fifty-four percent of those polled said they would probably get their next pet from a shelter, while 23 percent went for a breeder. Toro, who has a 14-year-old rescue terrier mix named Dancer, said she doesn't understand how anyone can buy a pet from a store or a breeder. "There are so many wonderful pets out there that will be euthanized," she said. "There's no reason for it." John Knight, 45, of Dallas, got his 3-year-old mutt named Liesl (rhymes with diesel) from an animal shelter that was holding a weekend adoption day at Petsmart. "There are plenty of animals out there that need good homes that don't have them. There's no reason to continue to breed animals when there are so many that have to be put down," he said. When asked where their present pets came from, 26 percent said breeders and 30 percent said shelters — a much smaller number than said they would go to a shelter for their next pet. More than half of those polled said their dogs or cats came from places other than shelters, breeders or stores. They might have been strays, gifts from friends or favors for neighbors. Since some people have more than one pet, the numbers add to more than 100 percent. "I've probably had 50 dogs and all but two came walking up our driveway," said Colleen Campbell, 71, of Fairview, Texas. She and her husband have spent 50 years on their rural farm outside Dallas and it has been a perennial dumping ground for strays. They also take in any other animal that needs a home. Their vet talked them into Frito and Burrito, a pair of donkeys Campbell knew would need special medical attention. The American Pet Products Association said sales from pet stores have declined over the last 10 years. The poll showed that dog owners (35 percent) were likelier to have gotten their current pets from a breeder than cat owners (5 percent). Forty-seven percent of those polled said they were strongly concerned that an animal from a pet store would have medical issues they didn't know about, 38 percent had similar worries about animals from breeders and 32 percent were concerned about shelter pets. As for psychological problems, 44 percent said they had significant worries about pet store animals and 33 percent worried about both breeder and shelter pets. Fitting in with the family was of concern to everyone: 33 percent for stores, 30 percent for shelters and 28 percent for breeders. When Mike Stoutenburg, 36, of Mishawaka, Ind., and his family are ready for their next dog, they will probably go to a breeder, he said, because they want an Australian shepherd. He is sure he could see any health problems in a puppy, but said he would ask his vet and groomer to check the pet out for any mental problems because the dog will be around a very young and active child — and his 3-year-old son "loves to grab things." "Our groomer is extremely knowledgeable about animals. We trust her opinion," Stoutenburg said. Bill Machut, 40, of Rolling Meadows, Ill., got his dog, Sidney, a Siberian Husky, from a pet store when the dog was 8 weeks old. That was 12 years ago. If he were looking for a new pet, "I would buy from a pet store again. And I wouldn't rule out a breeder if I was looking for a certain breed. But I would probably start off at the shelters," he said. He said most people expect things like kennel cough or worms. "There is an assumption there is a good chance there is some sort of health issue, especially being at a shelter. You deal with it. It's not that big of a deal," he said. Several years ago, they got Sidney a playmate from a shelter, knowing before they took her in that she was sick. "She had seizures from the get go. We knew she wasn't going to be a long life dog. We had her six years." People under age 30 (17 percent) were likelier to say they'd get a pet from a pet store than older groups (all were 7 percent or less). The AP-Petside.com Poll was conducted April 7-12, 2010, and involved landline and cell phone interviews with 1,112 pet owners nationwide. It has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.3 percentage points. ___ Associated Press Polling Director Trevor Tompson, AP News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius and AP Writer Alan Fram contributed to this report from Washington. Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Five Filters featured article: The Art of Looking Prime Ministerial - The 2010 UK General Election. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction. |
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