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The Eastern Echo Saturday, Nov. 30, 2024 | Print Archive
The Eastern Echo

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The Eastern Echo

DREAM Act gets cabinet's praise

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The White House hosted a series of conference calls with reporters last week featuring several university presidents and two members of President Obama’s cabinet to drum up support for the DREAM Act.


The Eastern Echo

Adults return to school to beat poor job market

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Miami — For the new school year, Ramil Anonuevo got a new backpack on wheels. He borrowed books to get a head start. And he found a study buddy: his 11-year-old son, Aaron, who joins him at the dinner table. Anonuevo, 42, just started an accelerated nursing program at Miami-Dade College.



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Pope, on London trip, apologizes for abuse scandal

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LONDON – Pope Benedict XVI on Saturday condemned as “unspeakable crimes” the child sex-abuse scandal in the Roman Catholic Church, as more than 10,000 people demonstrated in London against his official visit to Britain. During a mass celebrated in London, the 83-year-old German-born pontiff also expressed his “deep sorrow” to the victims of abuse by priests, which — for the first time — he classified as crimes. Emotions ran high on the third day of the pope’s state visit to Britain Saturday, with both supporters and opponents of the Roman Catholic Church making their views forcefully known. The pope’s remarks came as critics of the papal visit and victims of child abuse marched through central London, accusing the pontiff of “protecting pedophile priests.” But as the demonstrators — among them victims of abuse, human rights campaigners and gay rights groups — wound their way along Piccadilly, in the center of the British capital, the pope held a surprise private meeting with five victims of clerical sex abuse. A spokeswoman for the Catholic Church said the pope had expressed his “deep sorrow and shame” to the victims in what was described as an “emotional meeting.” Later, thousands lined the tree-lined avenues around Buckingham Palace to catch a glimpse of the pontiff as he rode in his Popemobile to Hyde Park, where 80,000 people gathered for a prayer vigil led by the pope. The pope’s outspoken condemnation of the child abuse scandal, which has rocked the Catholic Church in many European countries, the U.S., Canada and Australia, came during a mass celebrated in London’s Westminster Cathedral, the principal Catholic church of England and Wales. Among the 2,000-strong congregation were a large number of dignitaries from church and public life, among them the former prime minister, Tony Blair, Britain’s most prominent contemporary convert to Catholicism. “Here, too, I think of the immense suffering caused by the abuse of children, especially within the church and by her ministers,” the pope said in his sermon. “Above all, I express my deep sorrow to the innocent victims of these unspeakable crimes, along with my hope that the power of Christ’s grace, his sacrifice of reconciliation, will bring deep healing and peace to their lives.” The pope went on to acknowledge the “shame and humiliation, which all of us have suffered because of these sins,” and expressed his gratitude for the efforts being made to address the problem responsibly. “I ask all of you to show your concern for the victims and solidarity with your priests,” he said. “It was a good apology, he seemed to really mean it, he was genuinely sorry,” said Martin Brown, a 34-year-old Englishman who had come to listen to the pope. But the demonstrators offered a different view. “The pope keeps apologizing for the failings of everyone but himself,” said gay rights campaigner Peter Tatchell, a co-organizer of the protests. Sue Cox, a 63-year-old Briton who said she was herself a victim of clerical sex abuse, also dismissed the apology and warned that the Vatican would “not get away with overlooking clerical sex abuse.” “The days of popes are over.


The Eastern Echo

CBS to run political ad during Super Bowl XLIV

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LOS ANGELES – CBS Corp. defended its decision to run a politically sensitive advertisement during next month’s Super Bowl. The thicket in which CBS finds itself could become increasingly common for TV networks and local stations.


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Trial of pro-choice doctor's killer continues

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WICHITA, Kan. – As the murder trial continues for the man charged with gunning down abortion provider George Tiller, the drama isn’t limited to the courtroom. Supporters of Scott Roeder continued to arrive in town Tuesday and abortion-rights advocates called for federal authorities to step up their investigation into a possible conspiracy of anti-abortion violence. The supporters themselves, and their statements this week, are evidence enough that there’s an extremist network said, said Kathy Spillar, executive vice president of the Feminist Majority Foundation, who is attending the trial. “Many of this extremist network with whom Scott Roeder clearly has been involved are here in the courtroom,” Spillar said.


The Eastern Echo

House panel: U.S. losing dominance in space race

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WASHINGTON- America’s once clear dominance in space is eroding as other nations, including China, Iran and North Korea, step up their activities, a panel of experts told the House subcommittee on Space and Aeronautics Thursday. “Others are catching up fast,” said Marty Hauser, vice president for Washington operations at the Space Foundation, an advocacy organization headquarters in Colorado Springs.


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Scientists help dispel myths of Doomsday

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WASHINGTON – As moviegoers across the nation watched the end of the world with the opening of “2012” last week, news of Earth’s demise spread quickly across the Web.


The Eastern Echo

Senate votes to begin health-care debate

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WASHINGTON- Without a vote to spare, Democrats pushed their health-care overhaul legislation over its first obstacle on the Senate floor Saturday, as the chamber voted to begin formal debate of a sweeping measure to guarantee medical coverage for all Americans. The 60-39 procedural vote, backed by all 58 Democrats and two independents, with Ohio Republican George Voinovich not voting, overcame a Republican-led filibuster designed to block consideration of the bill and kept up momentum behind President Barack Obama’s top legislative priority.



The Eastern Echo

Recent crimes upset sense of safety on campuses

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KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Tuition might not be the most troubling concern for parents sending sons and daughters off to college. A disturbing pattern of violent crime has erupted across the nation’s campuses – from Yale University, where a female graduate student was strangled, to the University of California at Los Angeles, where a chemistry student was stabbed repeatedly in a lab. While saying campuses almost always are safer than their surrounding communities, Jonathan Kassa of Security On Campus Inc. acknowledged the headlines can create the opposite impression. “This has been a very uniquely deadly and brutal first semester, so there is concern,” said Kassa, the executive director of the nonprofit organization, which seeks to reduce campus crime. This month at Sacramento State University in California, a student was beaten to death in his dormitory by a bat-wielding roommate.


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Cascades could hide large magma pool

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WASHINGTON- A vast pool of molten rock in the continental crust that underlies southwestern Washington state could supply magma to three active volcanoes in the Cascade Mountains, Mount St.


The Eastern Echo

Coal-fired power plants face curbs

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WASHINGTON- The Environmental Protection Agency will put controls on the emissions of hazardous pollutants such as mercury from coal-fired power plants for the first time by November 2011, according to an agreement announced Friday to settle a lawsuit against the agency. Many other polluters were forced to reduce emissions of toxic material such as mercury, arsenic and lead after the Clean Air Act was strengthened in 1990.


The Eastern Echo

Some Democrats in Senate hold fate of health care bill

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WASHINGTON – A handful of moderate Senate Democrats will determine the fate of this year’s health care overhaul, and they’re sending strong signals that while they are willing to compromise, they’re wary of a strong public option. “I’ve ruled out a government-funded and a government-operated plan,” said Sen.

World renowned journalist Kathy Gannon sat down with Eastern Michigan University associate professor of journalism Dr. You Li to share her experiences reporting on the COVID-19 pandemic. You can listen to their full unedited conversation at the Eastern Michigan University Archive website. Otherwise check out the edited podcast version below and on Spotify!