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Date: Fri, 28 Apr 1995 15:31:23 -0600 (MDT)
From: SLHKS[at]-remove-cc.usu.edu
Subject: Ben Silcock
	I've became interested in what's been said lately about the song "Ben"
	(off of _...Love Bus_), so I got onto my college's LEXIS/NEXIS database and did
	a little research.  Here's a little summary of my findings:
	
	
	*Ben Silcock, 27, climbed into the Lion House at the London Zoo on New
	Year's Eve 1992 with "oven ready" chickens in an apparent attempt to feed the
	giant cats.
	
	*A number of people looked on and a zoo keeper yelled at Ben to try to
	stop him, but Ben was successful in climbing down to the lion area.  Once he
	made it down an embankment to the lions, he was attacked and maulled by Arfur,
	a giant Asiatic lion.  According to one eye-witness, "It [the lion] had its
	mouth around his waist.  It shook him around like a rag doll.  It was horrible
	and frightening." (Reported in the Daily Mail, Jan. 1, 1993, Pg. 1)
	
	*Ben was seriously injured, and remained unconscious until a paramedic
	arrived.  He was then rushed to a hospital, where he underwent hours of
	emergency and was brought back to a stable condition, surviving the attack.
	
	*Many people speculated on his reasons for entering the lion house. 
	Some said it was a suicide attempt.  Others said that perhaps he was connected
	to an animal rights group, as someone reportedly had heard him yell, "Free
	these animals."  A spokesman for the police stated: "This appears to be
	carefully planned.  You cannot blame the lions for what happened and I see no
	reason why the animal should be destroyed." (source: ibid.)
	
	*It was soon revealed that Ben was schitzophrenic [sp?] (not mentally
	retarded, as someone said, but mentally ill).  Ben's father, Bryan Silcock, a
	London journalist, remarked, "Ben has always felt a deep involement with
	animals, although he's not a member of any animal rights organisation.  I can
	only guess at his motives for climbing into the lions' enclosure.  But the
	illusion that he could establish a some kind of mystical contact with them
	would be consistent with ideas he has expressed in the past."  Neighbors also
	reported that Ben had a special fondness for cats.
	
	*Ben's tragedy was a big news story in England for a time, and sparked
	a debate over mental health care.  Members of Parliament wanted to make sure
	that mental health treatment was manditory and increase security for mental
	hospitals in the London area.  Ben, however, had tried to admit himself just
	before the incident, but had been refused because he had seemed coherent (a
	common situation for schitzophrenics).  This explains the last verse in the
	song. ("Now there rounding up the ones who got away./ From the place they
	wouldn't even let you get in./ Liars and theives with their crap about
	caring/ Are hardly the friends that you need.")
	
	-Greg B (more in a bit...)