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Headlines Package - August 29, 2008


5:08 minutes (4.71 MB)
  • Anti-Government Protests Intensify in Thailand
  • Evo Morales Sets a Date for Constitutional Referendum
  • Georgia Severs Diplomatic Ties with Russia
  • German Coalition Takes Bayer to Court Over Bee Deaths
  • California Jury Acquits Former Marine of Detainee Deaths in Fallujah
  • Free Gaza Boats Land in Cyprus

Dial-Up Friday, August 29, 2008


29:00 minutes (6.64 MB)

Gulf Coast Braces for Gustav


1:19 minutes (1.22 MB)

Delegates from Louisiana also weighed in on the third year anniversary
of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita – while tropical storm Gustav  appears
to be gaining power as it makes its way through warm waters. Gustav has
already pounded the Caribbean with winds up to 65  miles per hour… If
it continues to move rapidly and becomes a Hurricane by the weekend,
Republicans say they could postpone their  convention, which is set to
begin Monday in Saint Paul, Minnesota. Meanwhile, FEMA insists that
this time the agency is ready to  assist with food and water if Gustav
strikes the Gulf. Back at the DNC last night, where Obama accepted his
party's nomination, Lynn Bankston was one of many delegates who wanted
to hear more about the recovery effort in the South.


McCain Picks Alaska Governor Sarah Palin as Running Mate


4:32 minutes (4.16 MB)

Just hours after Barack Obama made history, becoming the first Black
man to accept the presidential nomination of any major party, John
McCain named Alaska Governor Sarah Palin as his running mate –
successfully dragging attention from Obama's feat. Mccain pulled off
the biggest surprise of his campaign yet, as he announced his vice
presidential pick amid wild speculation – and it wasn't who anyone was
expecting. Sarah Palin will be McCain's running mate, and even her
critics say that should make the Democrats very nervous. Tanya Snyder
reports from Washington.


Remembering Reverend Joseph Armstrong DeLaine


4:30 minutes (4.12 MB)

As the Democratic Party nominates an African-American, Barack Obama, to run for president for the United States, a community in South Carolina is marking the tireless work and efforts of a man who some say helped to make this victory possible. Rev Joseph Armstrong DeLaine isn't written about in most history books, but he was a trail blazer and civil right pioneer who fought to end a system of segregation in public schools in South Carolina. His fight resulted in the Briggs vs Elliot case which was later combined with the landmark desegregation case, Brown vs Board of Education, 1954.  FSRN reporter, Christine Lewis who has been covering this story from Summerton, South Carolina brings us this report.


Obama Accepts Democratic Nomination and Hits the Campaign Trail


3:46 minutes (3.45 MB)

Barack Obama and his running mate, Senator Joe Biden, also hit the campaign trail. Their first stop: Pennsylvania – one day after Obama accepts the Democratic nomination, concluding the Democrats convention. Washington Editor Leigh Ann Caldwell has the story.


NOLA Residents Remember Hurricane Katrina and its Aftermath


4:07 minutes (3.77 MB)

People around the Gulf, the nation and the world remember Hurricane Katrina's landfall over New Orleans three years ago today, and  the ensuing failure of the Federal Levee System which left most of the city underwater.  With tropical storm Gustav currently spinning over the Caribbean and into the Gulf Coast, already claiming the lives of 59 people in Haiti, this anniversary comes amid heightened emotions and an upheaval of painful memories. To mark this 3rd Anniversary, FSRN presents an exclusive edition of Street Beat. New Orleans resident Eve Abrams spoke with students and teachers at Lafayette Charter Academy about their lives since the flood.