Anti-war tour hits Cleveland on way to D.C.
http://www.cleveland.com/news/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/news/1126258271248011.xml&coll=2Friday, September 09, 2005
A war protest launched in Texas is coming to Cleveland as it spreads across America.
The Bring Them Home Now Campaign will arrive today at the Federal Office Building on East Ninth Street, and fan out Saturday to Akron and Oberlin...
Now they are touring the country in three groups and planning to converge for a rally in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 24...
For more information, call Laurel Hopwood, 216-371-9779, or visit www.nioncleveland.org and click on "Stand w/ Cindy."
Crowd swells at peace show
http://www.cleveland.com/search/index.ssf?/base/cuyahoga/1125999250287340.xml?ncounty_cuyahoga&coll=2Attendance roughly doubles at yearly anti-war program downtown
Tuesday, September 06, 2005
...Whatever the reason, an estimated 1,000 people came to the Peace Show at downtown's Willard Park to hear music, write group poems, chalk peace symbols, give blood to the American Red Cross, race through obstacle courses to peace, make worry dolls to ease children's fears around the world and protest the air show down the hill...
Jim Misak, one of the peace show's organizers, thinks all the bad news of late has awakened people to the cost of war in blood, fuel and dollars. He said a government fixated on Iraq has neglected our real safety and security, running short of cash to fix New Orleans' levees and of Guardsmen to rescue that city's drowning people...
"I don't know any religious tradition that says we should drop bombs on other people because we're scared," said the Rev. Doug Horner of Franklin Community Church...
Promoters said peace is not just idealistic but effective, having overcome injustices from the Berlin Wall to British colonialism.