Archive - Apr 9, 2009

Headlines for Thursday, April 9, 2009

Thu, 04/09/2009 - 14:24

5:13 minutes (4.77 MB)
  • Indonesia experiences election-related violence
  • Sri Lanken army accused of shelling hospital and firing on civilians in safe zone
  • Mass protests rock several countries
  • British policeman suspended for G20 assult
  • Labor victory for the SEIU

 

Anti-Castro hardliners not giving up

Thu, 04/09/2009 - 13:56

3:50 minutes (3.5 MB)

Days after members of the Congressional Black Caucus returned from Cuba, where they met with Fidel Castro, two conservative lawmakers are crying fowl. Although easing US policy toward Cuba appears imminent, and opposition is shrinking, some anti-Castro hardliners remain vocal. Washington Editor Leigh Ann Caldwell reports.

Obama unveils electronic health records plan for service members

Thu, 04/09/2009 - 13:50

3:59 minutes (3.64 MB)

President Obama announced the Department of Defense and the Department of Veterans Affairs will be creating lifetime electronic health records for service members. The records will contain medical and administrative information from the day someone enlists, to when they pass away. FSRN’s Karen Miller reports from Washington on what the President calls the simple goal of creating one medical record for the men and women that serve in the Armed Forces.

Obama unveils electronic health records plan for service members

Thu, 04/09/2009 - 13:45

3:59 minutes (3.64 MB)

The current economic crisis may have contributed to some high profile suicides: the chairman and CEO of a major real estate auction house in the United States, a German billionaire who Forbes Magazine ranked as the 94th richest person in the world in 2008, and a French businessman who lost nearly a billion and a half dollars investing with Ponzi schemer Bernard Madoff. But plenty of people of ordinary means are also looking at death as the only way out of their financial misery. As more people are losing their jobs and their homes, some are reaching for their phones. FSRN’s Kellia Ramares examines the role of hotlines designed to help people save their own lives.

Under funded suicide prevention hotline ringing off the hook

Thu, 04/09/2009 - 13:40

5:08 minutes (4.71 MB)

The current economic crisis may have contributed to some high profile suicides: the chairman and CEO of a major real estate auction house in the United States, a German billionaire who Forbes Magazine ranked as the 94th richest person in the world in 2008, and a French businessman who lost nearly a billion and a half dollars investing with Ponzi schemer Bernard Madoff. But plenty of people of ordinary means are also looking at death as the only way out of their financial misery. As more people are losing their jobs and their homes, some are reaching for their phones. FSRN’s Kellia Ramares examines the role of hotlines designed to help people save their own lives.

Remembering the event that proceeded the Freedom Rides

Thu, 04/09/2009 - 13:35

4:44 minutes (4.33 MB)

Today marks the anniversary of a remarkable, but relatively unknown, step in challenging Jim Crow laws. It’s a part of Civil Rights history that is often untold and occurred fourteen years before the well-known Freedom Rides of 1961. 62 years ago today, a group of 16 white and black men engaged in nonviolent protest, publicly challenging segregation in the South – and they paid the price. FSRN’s Lynda-Marie Taurasi is in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.