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Current Topic: Current Events |
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Costly Demonstrations in Downtown Rochester |
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Topic: Current Events |
1:45 am EST, Mar 28, 2003 |
] It's freedom of Speech with a 20-thousand dollar price ] tag. ] ] On one hand to the protesters it's their right but to ] Police Chief Robert Duffy it's expensive. ] ] ] Duffy said, "Can a point be made without compromising ] some of the resorces that we have and creating some of ] the cost just based on the time and location." Costly Demonstrations in Downtown Rochester |
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Anti-war Protests A 'Financial Burden' |
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Topic: Current Events |
1:27 am EST, Mar 28, 2003 |
] Portland Mayor Vera Katz and Police Chief Mark Kroeker ] announced this morning that the recent anti-war protests ] have placed a heavy burden on city finances and law ] enforcement resources. ] ] According to Portland Police estimates, protests over the ] past week have cost the city between $100 %u2013 200 ] thousand a day. ] ] "With these extended shifts and no vacation, no days off ] - 100 thousand to 200 thousand dollars a day," said Chief ] Kroeker. ] ] The protection may be coming from police, but the money ] will have to be coughed up by taxpayers. Anti-war Protests A 'Financial Burden' |
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Newssite shut down over war photos |
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Topic: Current Events |
4:35 pm EST, Mar 27, 2003 |
] As major media struggle over how gruesome and realistic ] war coverage should be, one alternative newssite has been ] shut down for posting "inappropriate graphic content." ] ] Late yesterday, Yellow Times was shut down by its hosting ] company following a controversy that began when the site ] ran photos of Iraqi and American war casualties. Newssite shut down over war photos |
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1st loads of aid supplies reach Iraq |
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Topic: Current Events |
3:02 pm EST, Mar 27, 2003 |
] AMMAN, Jordan -- The first truck convoys of humanitarian ] relief reached Iraq on Wednesday from Kuwait and Jordan, ] while the U.S. Navy flew in two dolphins trained to hunt ] for mines to help clear the port of Umm Qasr. ] ] At sunrise, the relief agency Doctors Without Borders ] dispatched trucks carrying 10 tons of emergency medicine ] and surgical equipment from Amman bound for Baghdad, the ] start of what could become a lifeline to a war-damaged ] country where drinking-water supplies have been ] contaminated, medical stocks are dwindling, and food ] reserves are running low. 1st loads of aid supplies reach Iraq |
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Anti-war school children battle police |
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Topic: Current Events |
3:01 pm EST, Mar 27, 2003 |
] SYDNEY (Reuters) - School children have battled police in ] central Sydney in a passionate protest against the war on ] Iraq, hurling bottles, plastic chairs, fireworks and ] paint-filled eggs. ] ] At least 18 were arrested -- wrestled to the ground by ] riot police, manacled with plastic handcuffs and bundled ] into vans during the five-hour demonstration on Wednesday ] by about 2,000 students. ] ] A police spokeswoman said 11 faced unspecified charges ] and the others warnings. She did not know their ages but ] reporters said they saw children as young as 13 being ] detained. Anti-war school children battle police |
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Bush's war: the hidden agenda |
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Topic: Current Events |
12:48 pm EST, Mar 27, 2003 |
] AN ARTICLE by former National Security Council staffer ] Roger Morris in the New York Times recently described how ] Hussein came to power: in the aftermath of a ] CIA-engineered coup orchestrated exactly 40 years ago by ] then - president Kennedy, which brought Hussein's ] anti-communist Baath Party to power. Later, according to ] Urquhart, the US backed Hussein when he attacked Iran, ] gave him economic aid, helicopters, and licences for ] exports that were crucial to his development of chemical ] weapons (Rumsfeld is said to have personally delivered ] word of arrangements for these.) It looked away when he ] used those weapons against Iran (half-a-million people ] were killed in that US proxy war) and later, when he ] killed 200,000 Kurds with poison gas. "In return," ] Urquhart writes, "Hussein paid off his US loans, gave ] [the US] a one-dollar-per-barrel discount on oil, reined ] in Iraq-based Palestinian groups, and even supported the ] Arab-Israeli peace process..." Bush's war: the hidden agenda |
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Seattle demonstration quiet; police costs put at $1 million |
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Topic: Current Events |
12:13 pm EST, Mar 27, 2003 |
] Seattle Police Chief Gil Kerlikowske yesterday told the ] city council that his department had been warned of ] disruptions downtown. He said the cost of staffing ] protests against the U.S.-led war has cost his department ] $1 million. Seattle demonstration quiet; police costs put at $1 million |
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Peace Activists Refuse To Retreat Because Of Iraqi War |
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Topic: Current Events |
10:55 am EST, Mar 27, 2003 |
] Even though the majority of Americans support President ] George Bush's invasion of Iraq, peace activists reject ] claims that they are unpatriotic and vow to continue ] speaking out, no mater how unpopular it becomes. ] ] "If you are for peace, you speak for peace no matter ] what," says Rev. M. William Howard Jr., pastor of Bethany ] Baptist Church in Newark, N.J., and a member of the Jesse ] Jackson delegation that obtained the release of Navy Lt. ] Robert Goodman from Syria. "Some say when one speaks for ] peace as the troops are deployed shows that you have no ] regard for their lives. I think that is completely crazy. ] I feel especially inspired to speak out even more ] strongly against the war." ] ] Rev. Wendell Anthony, president of the Detroit branch of ] the National Association for the Advancement of Colored ] People, says the war is about more than "shock and awe" ] bombing raids or capturing the capital of Iraq. Peace Activists Refuse To Retreat Because Of Iraqi War |
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Church Saddam built prays for his ouster |
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Topic: Current Events |
9:32 am EST, Mar 27, 2003 |
] Detroit, March 26: Sacred Heart Church on Seven Mile Road ] is the church Saddam Hussein built. ] ] In 1980, Reverend Jacob Yasso flew to Baghdad and met ] with Hussein, who wanted to help Iraqi Christians who had ] come to America. That year, Hussein sent $1.5 million to ] cover the church%u2019s debt and build a social hall and ] day-care centre. ] ] Last Friday, 450 parishioners gathered at Sacred Heart ] for a service. ] ] They prayed for Hussein%u2019s overthrow. They also ] prayed for a miracle %u2014 that loved ones who ] disappeared in Iraq during the dictator%u2019s reign ] would be found alive after the war. Father Yasso says ] more than half of the parish%u2019s 1,200 families have ] missing loved ones in Iraq. ] ] The 70-year-old Iraqi-born priest says he decided Hussein ] was %u2018%u2018evil%u2019%u2019 in the years following ] his meeting with the ruler, as newcomers to his church ] told their stories about the regime. %u2018%u2018I shook ] his hand in 1980,%u2019%u2019 he says. %u2018%u2018Now, ] he is the devil.%u2019%u2019 Church Saddam built prays for his ouster |
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Campus a mix of heated protest and community support |
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Topic: Current Events |
6:08 pm EST, Mar 26, 2003 |
] Protestors rally over history's most publicized war. The ] RU community shows that Oscar nominees are not the only ] people with an opinion. ] ] "Get this moron [George Bush] out of the White House," ] urged Dr. Moira Baker, Friday afternoon at an RU activist ] sponsored anti-war rally. ] ] "Out, out, out!" chanted the crowd of anti-war protestors ] in response to her suggestion. ] ] The anti-war rally attracted a wide variety of people. ] All who attended were assembled in the name of peace to ] protest a war which most thought was unjustified and ] unfair. ] ] "I don't think it's justified at all," said Appalachia ] State alum Jen Mudjeska who happened to be in attendance. ] "There are a lot of civil rights violations going on ] around the world that are far worse than those taking ] place in Iraq, and for us to go and start against ] somebody that did not threaten us, did not threaten ] anybody is not a good reason to alienate allies." Campus a mix of heated protest and community support |
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