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An Indian, a Peckerwood, and a Higher Power

by: Ryan Bemis - printed on 02-14-2001

“Man on the left!” warns Andy.

I jump at his startling tone.

“Will you stop saying that everytime you see a police car!” I tell him.

The fact is, Andy can’t. He grew up in a small Californian reservation shantytown where cops beat him because he was a hotheaded Indian boy. The sight of a cop begets an impulsive “watch your back” mood.

Today, Andy recovers from the deadly disease of alcoholism.

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Should We Attack Saddam? - Questioning the Question of the Day

by: Jeff Gauthier - printed on 09-25-2002

What should the U.S. do to contain Saddam Hussein? This is the question that the Bush administration has pressed to the forefront of U.S foreign policy, and the one that currently defines the limits of legitimate debate in most of the mainstream media. While the hawks maintain that the only way to stop Saddam from pursuing his evil agenda is to mount a full-scale war against Iraq, the doves call for more weapons inspections and/or the tightening of sanctions against the country.

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Third wave of executions in China

by: Mono Vergara - printed on 10-10-2001

After shooting the prisoners in the back of their heads, the executioners lay the corpses on ground, rapidly removing their organs so they can be used in transplants. Thousands of people witness these mass executions; among these crowds, the prisoners’ families watch the executions and search for answers. The family members have not seen the prisoners since the police took them to interrogate them.

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Breaking stereotypes: A fangirl speaks up

by: Kattie Gardner - printed on 04-24-2002

Growing up, the naive little girl that I was, I used to think that comics were nothing more than a bunch of boys running around in tights, shooting at each other with rays coming out of their fingers. The thought of picking up a comic book and actually reading it seemed silly and childish. I pictured comic readers as being nerdy little fan-boys who lived in their parents? basement and spent hours debating the finer points of D&D.

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Struggles in the European Union - Spain

by: Mono Vergara - printed on 02-20-2002

Spain: Integration and Isolation

One of the Spanish governments biggest concerns is that people in Spain lack interest in their membership in the European Union. The euro was adopted in Spain last January and will be fully adopted at the end of February, and it seems to be one of the only signs and reminders that Spain belongs to the EU. Another important and often ignored fact is that the current president of the EU is Spanish - President Aznar acts as the head of the European government.

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Illness, coverup at Umatilla Chapter one of five: setting the stage-- workers fall ill and questions arise.

by: Jim McCandlish, J.D. - printed on 11-03-2000

Congratulations. You live 175 miles west of where 12% of our nation’s stockpile of chemical weaponry is stored at the Umatilla Chemical Depot near Hermiston in northeastern Oregon.

A deadly nerve gas called "sarin" (injuring 5500 and killing 12 in the 1995 Tokyo subway attack) and a blister agent called "mustard" (popularized by the Germans in WW I) are stored in an area known as "K Block"--89 earth-bermed igloos (also called "bunkers") in a geometric configuration worthy of thegarden at Versailles.

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