S.C. man accused of sex with horse — again
A South Carolina man has been charged a second time with having sex with the same horse, according to news reports from the Palmetto State. Police say Rodell Vereen, 50, was charged with buggery. He'll...
View ArticleJohn Malkovich Joins Secretariat
Dylan Walsh and Scott Glenn also board the horse feature.read more
View ArticleS.C. man gets 3 years for sex with horse
A man caught having sex with a horse in a South Carolina stable is sentenced to three years in prison.read more
View ArticleStartled carriage horses bolt during Iowa July Fourth parade, killing 1 and...
Sandie Crilly was helping her 8-year-old son, 12-year-old niece and 2-year-old granddaughter pick up Tootsie Rolls from the ground during Bellevue's annual Fourth of July parade when someone yelled to...
View ArticleArabian 'unicorn' thrives again in wild
An environmental group says an animal widely believed to be the source of the unicorn legend is back from the brink of extinction after a successful breeding program.
View ArticleHorse bolts into ocean, swims 2 miles
It was a sea rescue made for Hollywood: A horse in a photo shoot on a Southern California beach gets spooked and runs into the water, only to be rescued after swimming more than two miles off...
View ArticleBurger King drops supplier linked to horsemeat
Burger King says it has stopped buying beef from an Irish supplier whose patties in Britain and Ireland were found to contain traces of horsemeat.
View ArticleSuppliers, grocers turning to DNA testing on meat
Horsemeat might not be bad for you to eat, but it's definitely bad for sales of products labeled as beef. But Ireland's surprise discovery of horsemeat traces in many factory-produced burgers is...
View ArticleHorse a hidden ingredient in many European foods
So hungry you could eat a horse? Chances are, if you've regularly consumed processed-meat products in Europe, you already have. Since Ireland published surprise DNA results on Jan. 15 showing that a...
View ArticleWhy we don't eat horse meat: It's economics
A new study from researchers at Oxford University says the roots of the taboo on horse meat are in the spread of Christianity in Anglo-Saxon England. But the real reason may be simple economics.
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