1.What routine, laborious procedure begins each day at the Columbia-Green Humane Society?
2.What does the narrator learn about giving an animal as a "live surprise"?
3.Why does Laura-Ann dislike commuters, or weekenders?
4.What legal requirements must the shelter meet before releasing stray dogs to their rightful owners?
5.Why must owners attempting to find lost pets move quickly?
6.Why is assessing a person's attitude toward an animal a critical piece of Laura-Ann's work?
7.What does the narrator realize that stray dogs and cats are sometimes doing besides running?
8.What is the retriever named Nevada dragging from his neck?
9.Who becomes the shelter mascot?
10.What is the fourth call from a landlord in Catskill about?
11.Why did the Humane Society of the United States make June "Adopt-a-Cat Month"?
12.What would happen if Laura-Ann filled the cat rooms with kittens?
13.What is the cornerstone of Columbia-Green's philosophy on animal welfare?
14.What is Andrea Walker's job?
15.What happened within the first six months of Andrea's employment?
16.How did the shelter get custody of the two goats named Billy and Willy?
17.What is likely to have happened to the missing mother cat?
18.What usually happens to kittens under six weeks old who arrive at the shelter with no mother and are too small to eat on their own?
19.What happens in the PTS rooms?
20.What is unusual about the bodies of Manx cats?
21.What does Laura-Ann remember about every animal she places?
22.Why do Bill and Phillip have to return Bandit to the shelter?
23.Why do purebred cockers come in regularly to Columbia-Green?
24.What does the term "puppy mill" describe?
25.Why are female dogs more popular?
26.What is Laura-Ann doing about the "animal population crisis"?
27.How has Cammisa lightened up about breeders in recent years?