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News-Journal from Mansfield, Ohio • A5

Publication:
News-Journali
Location:
Mansfield, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
A5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

NEWS JOURNAL II 5A Chicago: City suit over sanctuary threat Mayor Rahm Emanuel said Chicago is taking its against President Donald immigration policies to court, becoming one of the cities Monday to sue the government over what many cities argue are illegal bids to withhold public safety grants from so-called sanctuary cities. Emanuel said the city into changing its values. He argued unconstitutional for a city be coerced on a Tulsa, 3 twisters hit state, forecasters say The National Weather Service says three tornadoes struck northeast Oklahoma, including an EF2 twister that caused heavy damage and injured at least 30 people near midtown Tulsa. Meteorologist Bart Haake said Monday that the Tulsa tornado touched down at Sunday. Eight minutes later an EF1 tornado struck the southeast Tulsa suburb of Broken Arrow, and an EF1 tornado then touched down minutes after that near Oologah, about 20 miles northeast of Tulsa.

No injuries were reported from the last two twisters. Bloomington, No cameras at mosque The executive director of a Minnesota mosque that was bombed over the weekend says the building have outside security cameras. Mohamed Omar, of the Dar Al-Farooq Islamic Center in Bloomington, said Monday that his community have the money for security cameras. He also said they receive any threats or claims of responsibility. Nation World Watch From Gannett and wire reports North sanctions ban North Korean exports of coal, iron, iron ore, lead, lead ore and seafood, which are worth about $1billion, or a third of the foreign revenue.

China accounts for an estimated 90percent of that trade. Harry Kazianis, director of defense studies at the Center for the National Interest, said the new sanctions succeed or fail based on what China Since North nuclear test in 2006, the United Nations has imposed ever- tightening sanctions on the rogue regime to force it to halt its weapons programs. Yet none achieved that goal, and the reason is always the same, foreign experts say. government North neighbor, chief political ally and economic lifeline has supported the sanctions in word. But in action it continues to prop up Kim Jong autocratic rule.

pattern has always been the international community gets after nuclear or missile tests, said Jay Lefkowitz, a former U.S. special envoy on human rights in North Korea. makes promises, then they abandon those The latest sanctions, approved unanimously by the U.N. Security Council on Saturday, won vote and verbal support a day later when Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi issued a stern warning to his North Korean counterpart to avoid another missile launch or nuclear test. Even so, China has continued to provide North Korea critical aid even in the wake of weapons tests in violation of U.N.

resolutions because it does not want to cause a collapse of the North Korean regime, which serves as abu er between China and U.S. ally South Korea, where 28,500 American troops are stationed. is the essential Lefkowitz said. is the nation that could turn the lights out once and for all in and he predicts what China does will be more of the same tough on North Korea and yet provide direct and indirect aid to keep (its) economy fears that if they put too much pressure on the Kim regime, it could he said. government leaders have told me on many occasions they fear that they do not want to be the reason millions of starving North Koreans stream toward their borders.

also fears creating a situation where if North Korea were to collapse, there could be acivil war, where rival factions sling atomic or chemical weapons at each other, and millions would likely he said. So far, nine years of loosely enforced sanctions have allowed the North to conduct nuclear tests and dozens of missile launches. Just last month, it tested a missile capable of reaching the U.S. mainland. The North Korean regime has said it is rushing to develop nuclear missiles to deter the U.S.

from an attack. The nation warned in a statement Monday that it will the U.S. pay by a thousand-fold for all the heinous crimes it commits against the state and people of this Latest sanctions on North Korea may be doomed to fail Experts: Punishments never seem to work without action from China John Bacon USA TODAY AHN South Korean army soldiers patrol Monday along the barbed-wire fence in South Paju, near the border with North Korea. Chris Pratt and Anna Faris are separating, the couple announced late Sunday night. In a joint statement posted to their social media accounts, the actors said they hard for a very long and are They have been married for eight years and have one child together, Jack, who is almost 5.

LIFE ANNA FARIS, CHRIS PRATT SPLITTING JESSE IMAGES MONEY INDEXCLOSECHG Dow Jones Industrial Avg.22,118 25.61 Nasdaq composite6383.77 32.21 5002480.91 4.08 T-note, 10-year yield2.26% 0.01 Oil, light sweet 0.23 Gold, oz. 1.50 Euro (dollars per 0.0024 Yen per dollar110.72 0.05 SOURCES USA TODAY RESEARCH, MARKETWATCH.COM MONDAY MARKETS OH-0001183659.

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