News (Media Awareness Project) - Correction to: US CA: Technology Reduces Drug Dealers' Street Presence |
Title: | Correction to: US CA: Technology Reduces Drug Dealers' Street Presence |
Published On: | 1998-02-09 |
Source: | The Media Awareness Project |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-07 15:41:58 |
The correct source information is:
"Technology Reduces Drug Dealers' Street Presence"
Source: San Jose Mercury News
Contact: letters@sjmercury.com
Website: http://www.sjmercury.com
----------------------------------------------------
>Source: Los Angeles Times
>Contact: letters@latimes.com
>Pubdate: Mon, 9 Feb 1998
>Author: Bonnie Hayes of the LATimes
>Editor Note: This was published 29 January 1998 in the LATimes under the
>title "Unlikely Freedom From Fear"
>
>TECHNOLOGY REDUCES DRUG DEALERS' STREET PRESENCE
>
>Communities find relief as pushers do business with pagers, cell phones
>
>ANAHEIM -- About a mile from Disneyland, on a narrow street with pitted
>patches of dirt where sidewalks should be, a barefoot girl in a pink sweat
>suit skips rope. She counts aloud in Spanish as a group of laughing
>children dash around her.
>
>Rosario Zamora, 43, smiles at them from her doorway. These are her children
>and those of her neighbors, but this is not the same Dakota Street she has
>known for 20 years. There are no empty shell casings, no splatters of fresh
>blood. She cannot recall the last time the children found tiny bundles of
>crack cocaine on their way home from school.
>
"Technology Reduces Drug Dealers' Street Presence"
Source: San Jose Mercury News
Contact: letters@sjmercury.com
Website: http://www.sjmercury.com
----------------------------------------------------
>Source: Los Angeles Times
>Contact: letters@latimes.com
>Pubdate: Mon, 9 Feb 1998
>Author: Bonnie Hayes of the LATimes
>Editor Note: This was published 29 January 1998 in the LATimes under the
>title "Unlikely Freedom From Fear"
>
>TECHNOLOGY REDUCES DRUG DEALERS' STREET PRESENCE
>
>Communities find relief as pushers do business with pagers, cell phones
>
>ANAHEIM -- About a mile from Disneyland, on a narrow street with pitted
>patches of dirt where sidewalks should be, a barefoot girl in a pink sweat
>suit skips rope. She counts aloud in Spanish as a group of laughing
>children dash around her.
>
>Rosario Zamora, 43, smiles at them from her doorway. These are her children
>and those of her neighbors, but this is not the same Dakota Street she has
>known for 20 years. There are no empty shell casings, no splatters of fresh
>blood. She cannot recall the last time the children found tiny bundles of
>crack cocaine on their way home from school.
>
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