[ti:Police Clear Protest Camps at Several US Colleges]
[by:www.21voa.com]
[00:00.00]更多听力请访问21VOA.COM
[00:00.04]American college officials
[00:01.64]in New York City and Los Angeles
[00:03.84]have asked police to remove protesters
[00:07.08]occupying college buildings and grounds
[00:09.96]over the past few weeks.
[00:12.28]Overnight, University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)
[00:18.28]officials asked police to step in
[00:22.28]after several hours of clashes between demonstrators.
[00:26.04]Pro-Palestinian protesters
[00:28.68]and those who supported Israel
[00:30.68]began fighting each other.
[00:33.52]The clashes intensified as supporters of Israel
[00:36.64]tried to tear down a
[00:37.96]pro-Palestinian tent encampment.
[00:41.52]The Associated Press (AP) reported that people
[00:45.80]threw chairs and other objects.
[00:49.36]Video showed fireworks exploding
[00:51.44]over and in the encampment.
[00:53.88]At one point, several people kicked
[00:56.60]and beat a person on the ground with sticks.
[00:59.64]Police wearing helmets and face shields
[01:02.28]formed lines and separated the groups ending the violence.
[01:07.20]The Los Angeles Police Department said
[01:10.00]on the social media service X
[01:12.16]that UCLA officials asked for help.
[01:15.36]The request came after "acts of violence"
[01:18.52]took place within the large encampment on the campus.
[01:22.44]Hours earlier in New York City,
[01:24.60]police officers used a ladder
[01:26.80]to climb through a window
[01:28.80]to arrest pro-Palestinian protesters
[01:31.80]at Columbia University.
[01:33.80]The group had taken over the building
[01:36.36]after leaving a tent encampment on Tuesday.
[01:40.72]Columbia University officials
[01:42.96]said they "were left with no choice"
[01:45.56]after learning that "Hamilton Hall had been occupied,
[01:49.12]vandalized, and blockaded."
[01:51.84]They added that the decision to ask police for help
[01:55.40]"was in response to the actions of the protesters,
[01:58.48]not the cause they are championing."
[02:03.00]The nationwide campus protests
[02:05.64]spread from Columbia University in New York City.
[02:08.64]Protesters say they are against Israel's
[02:11.76]offensive in the Palestinian territory of Gaza,
[02:14.60]which started in late October 2023.
[02:18.96]Israel started the war in reaction to
[02:21.40]a terrorist attack by Hamas
[02:23.44]that killed about 1,200 people in southern Israel
[02:28.00]and took 250 hostages on October 7.
[02:33.08]The war has destroyed much
[02:34.56]of the Palestinian territory of Gaza.
[02:36.52]Gaza's health ministry, which is run by Hamas,
[02:40.44]says nearly 35,000 Palestinians have been killed.
[02:45.28]Protesters in the U.S.
[02:46.68]have since called on American universities
[02:49.08]to stop doing business with Israel
[02:50.92]or companies that support its military.
[02:54.56]Tensions increased when police
[02:56.96]first arrested more than 100 demonstrators
[02:59.80]at Columbia University on April 22.
[03:03.60]The protests spread to college campuses
[03:07.16]in many places across the United States.
[03:11.96]New York City Mayor Eric Adams
[03:14.84]said about 300 protesters were arrested overnight
[03:18.16]at Columbia and nearby City College of New York.
[03:22.76]Fabien Lugo, a first-year student at Columbia,
[03:26.48]said he was not involved in the protests.
[03:29.60]Lugo said he opposed
[03:31.56]the university's decision to call in the police.
[03:34.96]"This is too intense," he said.
[03:37.28]"It feels like more of an
[03:39.20]escalation than a de-escalation."
[03:43.28]Like Columbia, Brown University
[03:46.36]in the state of Rhode Island
[03:47.88]is a member of the Ivy League
[03:49.88]group of costly, private schools.
[03:52.76]Brown reached an agreement Tuesday
[03:55.40]with protesters to close their encampment
[03:58.56]in exchange for officials taking a vote
[04:01.48]to consider divestment from Israel in October.
[04:06.00]At Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff,
[04:09.60]riot police closed an encampment late Tuesday
[04:14.00]and arrested about 20 people.
[04:16.32]They were charged with trespassing.
[04:18.88]University officials had warned
[04:21.72]that students would face criminal charges
[04:24.00]if they did not leave.
[04:26.60]First-year student Brayden Lang watched the events.
[04:30.24]"I still know very little about this conflict," he said,
[04:34.16]"But the deaths of thousands
[04:36.76]is something I cannot stand for."
[04:39.60]Police also reportedly cleared encampments
[04:43.76]at Tulane University in New Orleans, Louisiana,
[04:46.68]and at the University of Wisconsin in Madison.
[04:50.04]I'm Dan Friedell. 更多听力请访问21VOA.COM
END OF TRACK. "END OF TRACK." The two men bowed. "Whoever was that person you were talking to?" she enquired, as soon as they stood together. The took of triumph faded from her eyes, she had grown worn and weary. The roses were wilting on the walls, the lights were mostly down now. Hetty, looking in to see if anything was wanted, found herself driven away almost fiercely. I only saw Master Jervie once when he called at tea time, The year 1747 was opened by measures of restriction. The House of Lords, offended at the publication of the proceedings of the trial of Lord Lovat, summoned the parties to their bar, committed them to prison, and refused to liberate them till they had pledged themselves not to repeat the offence, and had paid very heavy fees. The consequence of this was that the transactions of the Peers were almost entirely suppressed for nearly thirty years from this time, and we draw our knowledge of them chiefly from notes taken by Horace Walpole and Lord Chancellor Hardwicke. What is still more remarkable, the reports of the House of Commons, being taken by stealth, and on the merest sufferance, are of the most meagre kind, sometimes altogether wanting, and the speeches are given uniformly under fictitious names; for to have attributed to Pitt or Pelham their[112] speeches by name would have brought down on the printers the summary vengeance of the House. Many of the members complained bitterly of this breach of the privileges of Parliament, and of "being put into print by low fellows"; but Pelham had the sense to tolerate them, saying, "Let them alone; they make better speeches for us than we can make for ourselves." Altogether, the House of Commons exhibited the most deplorable aspect that can be conceived. The Ministry had pursued Walpole's system of buying up opponents by place, or pension, or secret service money, till there was no life left in the House. Ministers passed their measures without troubling themselves to say much in their behalf; and the opposition dwindled to Sir John Hinde Cotton, now dismissed from office, and a feeble remnant of Jacobites raised but miserable resistance. In vain the Prince of Wales and the secret instigations of Bolingbroke and Doddington stimulated the spirit of discontent; both Houses had degenerated into most silent and insignificant arenas of very commonplace business. "It certainly will be. Miss Widgeon," answered Maria, with strictly "company manners." "One who has never had a brother exposed to the constant dangers of army life can hardly understand how glad we all feel to have Si snatched from the very jaws of death and brung back to us." "Just plug at 'em as you would at a crow, and then go on your way whistlin'?" persisted Harry. "Hurroo!" echoed Hennessey; "that's the ticket." "Come forward, keeper," continued the baron, "and state how these arrows came into your hands!" "Yes." HoMEJULIA京香2018下载
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