The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, May 04, 1999, Image 10

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February
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March
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April
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Sterling C. Evans library (Rm U9)
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10-.00 pm - 2-.00 am
Complimentary Starbucks® Coffee
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Food Service locations open late Thursday, May 6
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Page 10 • Tuesday,May 4, 1999
N
ATION
: Battali
Clinton encourages
Milosevic to accept
NATO peace demands
CLINTON
WASHINGTON (AP) — Encouraging Russian
peacemaking efforts. President Clinton said
Monday “we could have a bombing pause” in
Yugoslavia if Slobodan Milosevic accepts NATO’s
demands for the withdrawal of his troops, the re
turn of refugees and the deployment of an inter
national security force.
Clinton said “there’s plenty to talk about”
within the terms set by NATO, which require “at
least the beginning of withdrawal of Serb forces.”
After a news conference, Clinton conferred
with Russian envoy Viktor Chernomyrdin who reported on his
talks with Milosevic last Friday. U.S. officials said before the meet
ing they had not heard anything from Milosevic that merits seri
ous consideration.
The president also was seeing the Rev. Jesse Jackson, home
from a triumphant mission to Belgrade that won the release of
three American servicemen held by Milosevic for more than a
month. Jackson criticized NATO for continuing its attacks after the
soldiers’ release. “1 read NATO’s response as the idolatry of might.
I read it in some sense as the arrogance of power,” he said on ABC’s
“Good Morning America.”
Clinton spoke at a news conference with visiting Japanese
Prime Minister Keizo Obuchi, whose country has contributed $200
million in assistance for Kosovo refugees. Obuchi said it was im
portant for the international community to act in concert to find a
political solution.
Administration leaders hastened to say Clinton was not soft
ening the conditions for ending the airstrikes against Yugoslavia,
which in 41 days have failed to break Milosevic’s will.
The light at the end
Ei
SALLIE TURNER tt
Naoko Wada, a freshman environmental design major, works on her'
project due Wednesday. Wada has worked on the project for two week: |
Ste
der
Supreme Court to decide cas
on police pursuit of suspect
Rage against the bean
Residents protest Starbucks opening
PORTLAND, Maine (AP)
— Some people are really
steamed at Starbucks for
opening a coffee shop in
Portland’s harborfront neigh
borhood of old brick build
ings.
The huge custom win
dows at the Starbucks in the
city’s Old Port section have
been smashed four times in
five weeks in what may be a
protest against the corporate
giant and its coast-to-coast
uniformity.
Now the windows are
boarded up and surveillance
cameras have been installed
inside and out.
“It looks like a war zone,”
says Police Chief Michael
Chitwood. “I can’t remem
ber any time in recent histo
ry where one location re
ceived so much aggravated
criminal vandalism.”
Never before has the cof
fee giant been treated so bad
ly, not even when a grand
opening was greeted by pro
testers in Madison, Wis., and
a petition drive was launched
to shut down a shop in
Larchmont, N.Y.
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
Supreme Court will try to decide
whether people who run away after
seeing a police officer can be chased,
stopped and questioned.
The justices agreed Monday to use
a case from a Chicago high-crime
neighborhood to clarify on-the-street
police powers vs. individual rights.
While many Americans might as
sume police have the power to chase
and question someone who flees at
the sight of them, lower courts have
been deeply divided on the issue.
The justices’ decision, expected
sometime in 2000, could resolve that
split.
At the heart of the dispute is the
Fourth Amendment protection against
unreasonable searches and seizures.
Courts long have interpreted that pro
tection to mean police without court
warrants cannot stop and question
LIT!
2-yea i
someone without a ‘Teasonal Kionda
picion'’ of wrongdoing. ftie Col
State courts in Alaska, Cal!km en w
Colorado, Maryland, Michiga'Bun, or
braska, Nevada, New Jersey anip^jr ra
have said police generally
make investigative stops after;!
ing someone who flees after:
them.
State courts in Connecticut
ana. Louisiana, Minnesota,NottlJ
olina, Ohio ami Wisconsin have;
that fleeing from police can crrl
reasonable suspicion of criminal
duct and justify a police stop, ing of
Federal courts also have disAat let
on the issue. J I “He
The Illinois Supreme Court i opened,’
Chicago case to bar police mos:T
from making such investigativea
In appealing that ruling, staq
editors said a definitive ruling is;
ed.
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