EVENTS: “URINETOWN,” LATTE ART THROWDOWN 19 URBAN JOURNAL: THE TROUBLE(S) IN ROCHESTER
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RESTAURANT REVIEW: TIMOTHY PATRICK’S IRISH PUB 11 FILM: “IRON LADY,” “A DANGEROUS METHOD” 22 CROSSWORD, NEWS OF THE WEIRD 32
julia n un es • bryan adams • actio n bronso n • homiside djs • itzhak perlman • enter the haggis • an d more music , page 12
JANUARY 18-24, 2012 Free
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Greater Rochester’s Alternative Newsweekly
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Vol 41 No 19
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News. Music. Life.
Music is an international language.” CLASSICAL, PAGE 16
Getting schooled on climate change. NEWS, PAGE 6
Group to focus on cycling issues. NEWS, PAGE 4
Winn confident on MCC deal. NEWS, PAGE 5
REVIEW: Geva’s “Perfect Wedding.” THEATER, PAGE 18
COVER STORY | BY TIM LOUIS MACALUSO | PAGE 8 | illustration by max seifert
Drones close to home Judy Bello says that despite her April 22, 2011, arrest, she considers herself a good citizen and a patriot. Bello, 61, of Webster, served three days in a jail outside Syracuse: one of 31 people convicted after participating in a protest against US drone attacks. The protests, Bello says, were to condemn the US deployment of the MQ-9 Reaper drone. The 174th Fighter Wing of the Hancock Field Air National Guard Base has been remotely flying the drones over Afghanistan from the Syracuse base since 2009.
Drone activity has increased under the Obama administration. Proponents see drones as transforming modern warfare: prized for the ability to remotely carry out dangerous missions, including surveillance and missile attacks. But these unmanned devices have also raised grave questions about this country’s foreign policy; the weapons are responsible for killing innocent civilians in countries that are not officially at war with the US. As the debate over drones continues, new technology is likely to create more uses for drones abroad and at home.