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புகைப்பட அளவு, A → Z
புகைப்பட அளவு, Z → A
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மதிப்பு வரையீடு, குறைவு → அதிகம்
✔ வருகைகள், உயர் → குறைந்த
வருகைகள், குறைந்த → உயர் - புகைப்படங்களின் அளவுகள்சதுரம்
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XS - மிகப் சிறியது
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இல்லம் / ஆல்பங்கள் / Chicago, Spring 1992 51
- ADAPT (714)
Chicago Defender, Vol. LXXXVII [87] No. 7 Wednesday May 13, 1992 (40¢ outside Chicago and suburbs) Editorial Listen to disabled on in-home funds A group of "disabled rights activists, who on Tuesday continued their protest against the federal government's failure to allocate more funds for handicapped individuals, should be taken seriously. They are protesting for the right to remain at home, rather than being warehoused in nursing homes. “Six times the (amount of) money goes to nursing homes and other institutions,” compared to the sums going “to community-based services. We want 25 percent of that nursing home budget to go to home care,” said Diane Coleman, an organizer for the group. There are various reasons why authorities should lend an ear to the protesters’ demands. Some of them are: * Disabled people would rather live at home than in an institutionalized environment, just like anyone else would. Many physically challenged individuals are wheelchair-bound but would have no trouble at home turning on a computer and working on it; going to the refrigerator to get their own food; operating their own TV, radio, or CD player; reading books, teaching younger members of the family, making their own bed and doing countless other constructive things to make them feel useful and relatively independent. * Additional money for home-based and community-based assistance would permit thousands of disabled individuals to receive help from part-time home attendants or nurses. The tab to the taxpayers might, in many instances, be smaller than the current cost for such services. * Many disabled protesters argue that being housed in a nursing home may actually prohibit some physically challenged people from developing into more productive citizens. These pundits stress that some of the disabled individuals being cared for in nursing homes could, if given home-based fund support, live a life with more quality to it and a few of them could even participate in home-based employment or other legal business. The bottom line is that disabled individuals deserve to be treated with as much respect as any other group in society. Other protesters have been given serious consideration by the federal government on various causes. The current cause espoused by many of America’s physically challenged individuals deserves equal attention from government authorities. - ADAPT (705)
Chicago Tribune Photo by Eduardo Contreras: An Asian-American man (Ken Heard) with pulled back hair and large glasses, a white jacket and pale jeans sits in his foot controlled power wheelchair. He blocking part of an escalator, and what he is not blocking, the police officer that is trying to stop him is blocking. The officer's arms are crossed across his chest and Ken has his hands in his pockets. Caption reads: Ken Heard blocks the entrance to an escalator Wednesday in the State of Illinois Center as part of an ADAPT protest. - ADAPT (719)
Sun Times, May 11, 1992 Photo by Brian Jackson: A line of police hold a long metal barricade in front of them. On the other side a row of wheelchair demonstrators with ADAPT are lined up toes to the barricade. A man in a wheelchair (Mark Johnson) is in the forground looking sideways to the camera, beside him to his left is a small woman in a chair (Cassie James). Three people down another protester (Brian from Houston) faces the camera and is wearing numerous buttons. Another police officer stands behind Mark, with his hands on his hips. Caption: Able to protest Police keep demonstrators in wheelchairs from advancing Sunday alter a protest of Health and Human Services Secretary Louis W. Sullivan's commencement address at the University of illinois at Chicago. The disabled activists were protesting "warehousing" people with disabilities in nursing homes and other institutions. Russell Goode, a Louisville, Ky., member of American Disabled tor Attendant Programs Today, said, “What we really want is Sullivan to reallocate 25 percent oi the money they give lor nursing homes to us and Medicaid or attendant programs.“ The money would enable disabled people to hire attendants, he said. - ADAPT (711)
Chicago Tribune, Wednesday Chicagoland PHOTO by Tribune's Val Mazzenga: People in wheelchairs are lined up in the street along a curb, facing into a building with white square columns. People in business attire are on the sidewalk. Beth McDaniel, Sherri and Tim Craven are among those on the line. Behind them in a scooter and tiger strip cap is Walter Hart. Caption reads: Protesters from American Disabled for Attendant Programs Today gather Tuesday outside the American Medical Association headquarters, 535 N. Dearborn St. Several arrests were made. Title: Wheelchair users’ suit seeks access By Rob Karwath Two wheelchair users sued the state Tuesday, alleging that tight security measures at the State of Illinois Center have restricted disabled people’s access to the government office. The U.S. District Court suit, which seeks to be certified as a class action, was filed a day after the state rolled out an unprecedented show of force in anticipation of a raucous protest by a disabled-rights group demanding more govemment funds for home-care programs. The protesters, from American Disabled for Attendant Programs Today (ADAPT) blocked access Monday at 105 W. Adams St., which houses some federal agencies. On Tuesday, building managers ordered the evacuation of more than 1,000 workers at the American Medical Association headquarters, 535 N. Dearbom St., because of a daylong ADAPT demonstration. AMA spokesman Arnold Collins said workers in the building were told to go home, starting at 3:15 pm. The building was evacuated floor by floor, and some workers were escorted out of side doors to avoid the congregation of demonstrators in front of the building. “The building was evacuated so that there wouldn’t be a crunch,” Collins said. “And also because there are people out there who are trying to stop other people from leaving." ADAPT demonstrators had formed a circle around the building’s front door in an attempt to block it. ADAPT spokesman Tari Susan Hartman declined to say where the group would protest Wednesday. But state officials were girding for a demonstration at the 16-floor state building, 100 W. Randolph St. The lawsuit, filed by an ADAPT member and another wheelchair user who is not a group member, contends the tight security from the state Department of Central Management Services allows walking people access to the building but deprives wheelchair users of unrestricted movement. The suit seeks immediate easing of security measures. The suit’s two named plaintiffs contend they experienced difficulty getting around the building Monday, the first day that all workers and patrons had to ride an escalator to the second floor if they wanted to catch an elevator upstairs. One of the plaintiffs, ADAPT member Paulette Patterson, said she had to specially request an elevator ride to the building's basement concourse of restaurants when she wanted to meet her daughter there for breakfast Monday. Patterson also said that when she wanted to return to the first floor, she had to shout to a Central Management Services police officer on the first floor to come down and get her. "They have set up a situation where, if you are not in a wheelchair, you generally have to ask permission to go anywhere in the building," said lawyer Matthew Cohen, who filed the suit. A hearing on the suit is scheduled for Wednesday morning. State officials declined to comment on the suit, but they have said they are trying to be sensitive to the needs of all people using the building. State officials contend the extra security, which includes stationing police officers in all elevators and positioning of dozens of barricades outside, will be needed if ADAPT tries to block access to the building. But in two days of dealing with the extra security, many of the building’s 3,000 workers have accused the state of overreacting. Many also have expressed concern that all wheelchair-using workers and patrons will have to prove to police that they are not protesters before getting upstairs. On Monday, a wheelchair-using worker from the state Department of Rehabilitation Services reportedly had to show three pieces of identification before building police would let her upstairs. Also on Tuesday, Gov. Jim Edgar’s Department of Human Rights sent a memo to Edgar's office reminding the administration that it has a responsibility to keep the building open for all who want to use it. - ADAPT (699)
A group of ADAPT protesters stand and chant in front of an almost life sized portrait of IL Governor Edgar with flags on eithere side of it. All are Chicago ADAPT members. From left to right they are a woman (Julie___) in a Chicago ADAPT "ADAPT or Perish" tshirt, a woman standing, a man in a wheelchair (Rene Luna) holding a poster that reads "nursing home industry owns Edgar." All three have power fists raised in the air. On Rene's right side is a man (Fred Stark) in an ADAPT tshirt with the no steps logo but Free Our People written across the bottom; it was our transition shirt when we were transitioning from American Disabled for Accessible Public Transit to American Disabled for Attendant Programs Today. - ADAPT (740)
Photo by Tom Olin?: A huge crowd of ADAPT folks are gathered on the stree and sidewalk in front of the Regional HHS headquarters, a building with ornate lamps on its front. The crowd faces the building and fills the street. Visible are Jimmi Shrode (in the purple shirt) Claude Holcomb (in the forground, hair in braids, with a black and red jacket over the back of his chair. Gene Rodgers (with his back to the building in a grey cap), Frank McGee (in a black Tshirt and ADAPT headband) Tari Susan Hartman (visible just over Jimmi's left shoulder) and dozens and dozens of other protesters. [If you can identify others please contact us so we can include their names.] - ADAPT (700)
Chicago Tribune, Wednesday May 13, 1992 Chicagoland Three Tribune photos by Charles Osgood and Michael Fryer: 1) Two policew officers hold a double leg amputee (Jerry Eubanks) by his arms as he leans forward in this chair. Jerry has a grimace on his face. Behind them are a swarm of other Chicago police. 2) A woman (Eileen Spitfire Sabel) in a helmet and shirt that reads "I don't get mad I get arrested." She sits cross-legged a top the front hood of a car, her arms outstreched, chanting or yelling. 3) Three policemen look down as an ADAPT protester (Bernard Baker) crawls between them under a police barricade. Caption reads: Protest at the AMA Members of American Disabled for Attendant Programs Today and others stage a demonstration Tuesday at the American Medical Association, 535 N Dearborn St. Eileen Sabel (top right) wanted to get arrested but failed. Story page 3. - ADAPT (709)
Photo by Tom Olin: A woman in a striped suit, (the Regional Director of HHS, Delilah Brummet Flaum) stands by a car at the edge of the sidewalk. She is clutching a cup of coffee in one hand and in the other a briefcase and large envelope. Behind her several men in suits follow closely behind her looking like they might push her forward. At her feet however, a man (Bob Kafka) sits on the ground blocking her. To his right a woman in a scooter (Barbara Bounds) leans forward to block that side of the woman's path, while a policeman tries to wrest the controls of her scooter from her. To the woman's right is a man in a scooter (Larry Biondi?). Bob is leaning against the back of this scooter. - ADAPT (749)
The Disability Rag, July/August 1992 $2.50 Photo by Tom Olin: A policeman us bent forward doubled up, holding a small woman (Spitfire aka Eileen Sabel) from crawling between his legs and under the police barrier behind him. Spitfire wears a white shirt which says in black letters "Never Surrender." Beside them a man (Bernard Baker) is lying on the street under the barrier holding one of its bars. Under his legs is another wooden barrier that has been tipped over and above his head is another barrier of some kind that says "street operations." Title: On the barricades with ADAPT story, photos page 4 [article begins ADAPT 744 and entire text is included there for easier reading.] Boxed inset: Inside: Dying to get out p.12, John Hockenberry - anger and access p.30 - ADAPT (698)
Photo by Tom Olin: A policeman stands in the middle of the street legs braced in a wide stance and arms stretched out. He is holding a man with a cane (Gary Bosworth) with one hand and with the other hand and foot trying to hold back a man (Bob Kafka) in a manual wheelchair who is bent forward pushing. Other police officers are standing in the street, a supervisor is watching, as is a TV cameraman. Other protesters are partially visible at the edges of the scene. Chicago police have a black and white checkered band around their hats that is very distinctive. - ADAPT (737)
This story is a continuation of ADAPT 744 and the entire text of thee story is included there for easier reading. This article appears on 744, 738, 733, 728, 724, 748, 743 and 737. - ADAPT (703)
Chicago Tribune Wednesday May 29, 1992 Stateville: The State of Illinois Center was on lockdown again Tuesday after reports that “visually-impaired” demonstrators were on the way to terrorize the building. This time state troopers were on hand. "And orders were that no one would be allowed up to Jim Edgar’s office, where disabled protesters last week emptied a catheter into a gubernatorial wastebasket. The precautions weren’t needed. No protesters appeared. - ADAPT (730)
Photo by Tom Olin?: A group of Chicago police men are huddled by the door of a car. There is a camera person in the foreground. They appear to be helping someone they are guarding in or out of the vehicle. - ADAPT (733)
This story is a continuation of ADAPT 744 and the entire text of thee story is included there for easier reading. This article appears on 744, 738, 733, 728, 724, 748, 743 and 737. Photo with Bob Kafka - ADAPT (724)
This story is a continuation of ADAPT 744 and the entire text of thee story is included there for easier reading. This article appears on 744, 738, 733, 728, 724, 748, 743 and 737.