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Monday,
February 2, 2004
Oxford Eagle
Pageant
Headquarters Defaced Night of Murder
By KELLY SHACKLETON
Staff Writer
As if to add
insult to the injury of murder, during the same night Ms. Barbara
Dubois was killed, vandals spray-painted the Yoknapatawpha County
Literature Festival Pageant office and hung pictures of maimed
animals in the stage room, both located at the Yoknapatawpha
County Convention Center.
"Nothing
like this has ever happened here before," says Bob Niwachee,
manager of the convention center. "It's important for people
to remember, however, that the attack was aimed not at the YCCC
but at the pageant itself. No guest rooms were in any way disturbed."
The pageant
has been under sharp criticism from both those who would rather
not see a beauty pageant aligned with the literary festival and
those who fault the planners for allowing Lamar Cosmetics to
sponsor the event.
Lamar Cosmetics,
owned by Allie Lamar, has been accused by animal rights activists
of conducting unnecessary product tests. The pictures hung in
the stage room were captioned as evidence of this type of animal
abuse.
According to
a paper on domestic terrorism presented by the Federal Bureau
of Investigation in February 2002, the animal rights groups Earth
Liberation Front and the Animal Liberation Front have been responsible
for more than six hundred similar crimes causing more than $43
million in damages since 1996. Neither organization has claimed
credit for this recent attack.
As yet, the
police have no suspects in custody, but promise that they are
investigating the vandalism.
YCCC lounge
bartender Nick Avanuthar noticed nothing out of the ordinary
last night. "The mood was festive and the tips good. As
best as I can recall, I didn't serve anybody wearing a ski mask."
Pictures of
the pageant office reveal that at least three spray cans were
used since swirls of black, green, and red paint cover bulletin
boards, computer equipment, and papers spread across the desk.
Norm Resol, custodial engineer at the YCCC, said that no paint
supplies were missing from the maintenance room. "And I
didn't see nuthin'," Resol said.
Lamar said
that the show will go on. "We can not allow violence to
dictate our actions. We must bring the pageant to its conclusion,
if only to honor the memory of Barbara Dubois."
Police refuse
to speculate whether the vandalism is linked to the murder of
Barbara Dubois, the pageant finalist whose body was discovered
at the Yoknapatawpha County Convention Center early Saturday
morning.
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