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"I just emailed the following to business@moore.edu and registrar@moore.edu
Protected Red Tail Fledgling Hawks..... Hello. I’m a member of special group of people who watch the yearly hatch of the Franklin Institute’s Red Tail Hawks. There is a family of Red Tail Hawks who have fledglings learning to hunt and play in your immediate area. I’m sure you must be familiar with them as they nest on a window ledge at the Franklin Institute. Problem: as of now 1 of the fledglings has died running into one of your windows and just a day ago a second fledgling visited one of your windows and sustained a concussion and is at a rehabber getting better before being brought back to learn more from his parents. We respectfully request that you put up something in the windows (student art maybe) until the fledglings leave to start their own families. We’ve got a couple of weeks to go and I’m sure you wouldn’t want the 2nd fledgling to run into the windows again and certainly not the third one. Please can you help save these two remaining babies into migration and adult hood. This is the 5th year of 3 fledglings being born and the first year of a death and concussion. Did you change something about your windows? Thank you for your consideration in helping to preserve these “protected” raptors." | ||||||||
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4 comments:
Awesome!
That's great! Thanks to Moore.
Moore is such a refreshing contrast to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which is still out there with its boxes of poison, endangering the Central Park hawks through secondary poisoning, instead of dealing with its rat problem by practicing good sanitation.
That's great! Thanks to Moore.
Moore is such a refreshing contrast to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which is still out there with its boxes of poison, endangering the Central Park hawks through secondary poisoning, instead of dealing with its rat problem by practicing good sanitation.
Karen Anne, indeed it is a contrast! Hooray for Moore!
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