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The National Congress of American Indians was given the rights to Keep America Beautiful's 1971 "Crying Indian" ad, a recognizable anti-pollution advertisement featuring Iron Eyes Cody.
In Hong Kong, a wild boar was euthanized after assaulting a woman and a 15-year-old boy near a train station, marking the 541st such incident handled by authorities since 2021.
He added that wild boar attacks are “precisely a fallout of humans disrupting the natural balance.” “On one hand, we’ve driven their natural predators, like tigers, to the brink of extinction.
The incident took place on January 29, when a group of villagers ventured into the Borsheti forest area in Manor for a wild boar hunt. The group became separated during the expedition, and later ...
Since its debut in 1971, an anti-pollution ad showing a man in Native American attire shed a single tear at the sight of smokestacks and litter has become an indelible piece of TV pop culture.
FILE - Iron Eyes Cody, the ''Crying Indian'' whose tearful face in 1970s TV commercials became a powerful symbol of the anti-littering campaign, is pictured in this 1986 photo.
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