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Αρχική / Λευκώματα / Ετικέτα police 81
Εμφάνιση:
Μηνιαία λίστα
Ημερομηνία δημιουργίας / 2013 / Ιούλιος
- ADAPT (773)
Oakland Tribune, Monday October 19, 1992 Photo by the Associated Press: A Woman in a manual wheelchair (Julie Farrar) is surrounded by three police officers in helmets. She holds her hands over her head and a poster on her knees reads "...services NOW." Caption title: Wheelchair protest Julia Farrer of the American Disabled Attendant program in San Diego is carried off by police officers yesterday as she tried to block an American Health Care Association meeting in San Francisco. - ADAPT (359)
Photo: Three uniformed police officers stand in a row in front blocking an entrance. A sign over the door says City Hall. Their star shaped badges stand out against their dark uniforms. All three look grim; the one in the middle wears mirror shades. - 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 (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 (373)
A policeman in a dark uniform and cap, face in shadow, grabs the push handles of a motorized wheelchair. He wears dark glasses and on his shoulder a police patch. An Asian American man (Ken Heard) in an ADAPT t-shirt looks down his face pressed in a look of determination sits, turned slightly, in the chair. He wears glasses and a headband with a Chinese dragon on it. the armrest of his powerchair has a box taped to it (a decoy control box) and a cup holder and on the lower section of the armrest you can see the first part of a proud and disabled bumper sticker. Above his head in the background you can see an African American man (Bernard Baker) sitting on the ground against a police barricade; he is yelling. Beside him is another power-wheelchair with a "proud and disabled" bumper sticker across the back. - ADAPT (340)
PHOTO (Tom Olin?): A Row on police and other AB men stand with their backs to the camera. Through them you can see a line of people in wheelchairs blocking a San Francisco cable car. On one side a very large crowd is visible on the sidewalk. - ADAPT (363)
A man in a blue cap and jacket looks off the right. He is wearing a button with a picture of two hands making the American Sign Language word for equal over the numbers 504. Behind him two police officers are standing on either side of a police barricade talking to each other. - ADAPT (657)
A group of police stand between two police cars. They stare straight ahead, not looking down, with lips pursed, hands on hips. In the background more police are standing around by the HHS building. At the feet of the group in the front ADAPT protesters are crawling around the police officers' legs. One woman is on her side partially beneath a police car, a single above the knee amputee [Julie Nolan] is squeezing between two of the officers, the legs of another person are laid before them, and in the back a fourth person is between two other officers. - ADAPT (371)
Fingerlakes Times, Geneva NY 9-29-87 PHOTO : Claude Holcomb, wearing a no-steps ADAPT logo T-shirt, sits strapped into his chair. He is looking down and pointing at his wooden letterboard. Uniformed police stand on either side and one is bent forward behind him pushing him. Behind them in a line is Greg Buchannan with another policeman holding his chair. Caption reads: Wheeled away. Thirty people, many in wheelchairs, were arrested yesterday during a demonstration in San Francisco by a coalition of `groups` seeking improved access to public transportation. (UPI) - ADAPT (428)
Montreal 10/4/88 Photo by Dave Sidaway/Gazette: An older skinny man (Frank McColm) in an old manual wheelchair sits looking over his shoulder right hand out to his side palm up. He is smiling a mischievous smile. In front of him are police barricades and on the other side five Montreal police officers smile as they look at him. Caption: Protester is going nowhere Frank McColm in his wheelchair found himself outnumbered by Montreal Urban Community police at Mount Royal chalet yesterday as he joined about 35 other handicapped protesters demonstrating outside a luncheon of the American Public Transit Association. Ten were arrested. The activists are pushing for full access to transit systems for the disabled. - ADAPT (615)
Two uniformed police officers drag a disabled man (Randy Horton) across a parking lot. The have his shoulders at about the level of their waists. The disabled man has his arms extended in front of him and his body is twisted so his head faces front while his legs and feet are sideways; his shirt is being lifted up so part of his stomach is exposed. One of the policemen looks almost removed and amused, while the other is struggling more, his feet apart in mid-step. A couple of cars are behind the trio and no wheelchair is in sight. The disabled man has a odd expression on his face, part smile, part grimace. - ADAPT (683)
Photo by Tom Olin: Five police men in helmets, with guns and other accoutrements on their belts and on their legs, hold up a folding table as a barrier to the ADAPT folks. A horse's head is in the foreground. A woman (Anita Cameron) is laid out on the ground by two other police men who appear to be arresting her. One of the policemen is holding her arms above her head, possibly handcuffed. Two other police walk by through the foliage in the background. - ADAPT (768)
San Francisco Examiner TITLE: Disabled protest for more funds for home attendants Subheading: Entrances to downtown Marriott are blocked By Wylie Wong of the Examiner Staff, October 19, 1992 About 300 demonstrators in wheelchairs blocked the entrances to the San Francisco Marriott, calling for more funds to allow the disabled to live outside of nursing homes. Sunday's protest was designed to drew attention to the 16 million disabled people who have no choice but to live in nursing homes, said the Rev. Wade Blank, a co-founder Americans Disabled for Attendant Programs Today (ADAPT). The protesters targeted the American Health Care Association, a nursing-home trade group whose members are staying at the Marriott on Fourth and Minion streets while attending a convention at nearby Moscone Center. ADAPT wants 25 percent of the $27 billion paid to nursing home operators under the Medicaid program to be used to help disabled people pay for personal attendants. But the Bush administration and the health care association, which represents about 10,000 nursing homes, oppose the plan. Only $600 million of that money currently is used for in-home attendant care, said ADAPT co-founder Michael Auberger. Police escorted the protesters on the eight-block trip from their Market Street hotel, and watched as they barricaded themselves at the Marriott's entrances. The protesters chanted. "Down with nursing homes, up with attendant care.” Police were able to keep some entrances open for hotel guests. No arrests were made. Kimberly Horton, who lived in a nursing home from age 6 to 21, described her experience as “living in a prison." "They take away your personal dignity," she said. "You had to eat what they put in front of you. They'd get angry at me for wetting my bed, but wouldn't help when I had to go.” Protester Blane Beckwith, a Berkeley resident, has a personal attendant who takes care of his everyday needs, from taking a bath to preparing food. But state budget cuts have slashed eight hours of care per month. As a result, he has only half an hour per week for grocery shopping with his attendant. "No one can shop for groceries in half an hour, My mother helps me, but she's 62 and can't do it forever." he said. Horton, who wants to take writing classes and become a free-lance writer, fear that more budget cutsar will force him to live in a nursing home. "A nursing home is stifling," he said, "You have no social life. You can't work." Conventioneers who walked past the protesters were unimpressed. "I have no argument with wanting more attendant care,” said John Jarrett, who runs a 79-bed nursing home in New York. "But they shouldn't take it from the elderly,” who would be hurt if ADAPT funding plan were implemented, he said. The demonstrators plan to protest the convention through Friday. A police commander said 90 police officers were on hand. “They haven’t been violent,” he said. “They’ve been very cooperative.“ Last week, officers took two hour classes at the Police Academy to learn how to arrest and search disabled people without harming them. PHOTO by Michael Macor, Examiner: The front of the ADAPT group marching down a downtown street and in the background the line of marchers goes out of sight. Paulette Patterson, Julie Nolan, Carla Laws, Brooke Boston? and Bob Kafka among those leading the march. Photo caption: Disabled people from the group ADAPT make their way down Mission Street to the Marriott Hotel. - ADAPT (288)
This story is a continuation of the first article in ADAPT 296. The text of the article is included there for easier reading. PHOTO: The dark figures of 3 Detroit police officers loom into the frame from all sides. Through a small hole between their arms you can see the face and chest of a man (Ken Heard) they are surrounding. Below their arms you can see the wheels and frame Ken's wheelchair. Caption reads: Detroit police had their hands full when they placed Ken Heard under arrest. - ADAPT (649)
On the plaza in front of HHS Headquarters on Independence Ave in Washington DC, a row of police cars is lined up in front of the building. Empty wheelchairs are littered in front of the police cars, and on the ground by the cars, ADAPT activists lie and sit. A large man sits on the hood of one of the police vehicles. Police and security guards stnd by the cars and near the front door. On one of the empty wheelchairs closest to the camera is a poster that reads "Louis, Louis shame shame shame."