had a good article too. Good photos, 21 of them:
photos:
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/sfl-inaugurationprotests,1,6066735.photogallery?coll=chi-news-hedarticle: (need to register)
Hundreds decry Bush in Evanston
Sue Laue
Published January 21, 2005
Several hundred Evanston Township High School students walked out of classes Thursday to protest President Bush's policies.
"Bush went to Iraq for no reason. There are no weapons of mass destruction. He lied," said Katlen Castillo, a 16-year-old sophomore.
Miriam Mondragon, a 15-year-old freshman, agreed, noting, "The walkout is important because Bush doesn't control everything in the United States. We have a right to say what we want. He's acting like a dictator, sending too many troops to Iraq and hurting too many families."
Students left the school at 9:45 a.m. but returned by early afternoon. They will be marked absent, school administrators said, and only eight absences are allowed per semester.
more
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/chi-0501210326jan21,1,5923241.story?coll=chi-news-hed Anti-Bush groups demonstrate across nation
By Frank James and Andrew Zajac, Washington Bureau. Stephen J. Hedges, Andrew Martin, Rudolph Bush and William Neikirk in Washington, Michael Martinez and Vincent J. Schodolski in California, and Patr
Published January 21, 2005
WASHINGTON -- The deep divide in the American electorate was on display Thursday as thousands of Americans noisily protested against President Bush at his second inaugural here and at demonstrations across the nation, mainly in opposition to the war in Iraq.
At times the protesters were so boisterous that they managed to distract many in the audience outside the Capitol listening to the president's inauguration speech. Occasionally they got into shouting matches and even fisticuffs with Bush supporters.
<snip>
After clearing security screeners who used metal detectors and pat-downs to check everyone on the parade route, demonstrators unfolded signs with anti-Bush messages, such as "What Would Jesus Bomb?" Others read, "Mandate Schmandate" and "Stop Mad Cowboy Disease."
"We're not giving up. There are a lot more battles to fight," said Ian Meyer, a 19-year-old North Carolina State University student. He and some friends drove more than 260 miles, much of it on icy roads, from Raleigh, N.C., to join the protest.
more...
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0501210322jan21,1,4416135.story?coll=chi-newsnationworld-hed