CBS News YORBA LINDA, Calif. - This weekend, nearly 200 former prisoners of war gathered in California for a double celebration. They marked 40 years since their release from North Vietnamese prisons, and the heroes welcome they received at the White House.It may have been the last large reunion of American POWs from the Vietnam War. <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.com.de>stanley thermoskannen</a> Everett Alvarez <a href=https://www.cup-stanley.us>stanley water bottle</a> CBS News In many ways it s going to be a final salute to the guys because we are losing them, said Everett Alvarez, who was the first American shot down in Vietnam. He was beaten and tortured in captivity. <I>was in captivity] a total of eight and a half years, Alvarez said. We had a code: It was return with honor. Our dignity, our character that brought us through. When Alvarez and 590 other POWs finally came home in 1973, it was a moment a war-weary nation could celebrate. Those are the last known prisoners of war, Walter Cronkite said at the time. That part of the Vietnam tragedy is over. Family members reunion with POWs in 1973. CBS News On Me <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.ca>stanley quencher</a> morial Day, Obama reminds Americans of service members sacrificeMemorial Day: An evolved observance of America s fallen heroesWoman finds diary of boyfriend killed in WWII in museumNavy Captain Jerry Coffee had been Qzrk Starving Girl, 14, Escapes Bathroom Prison
The Black Lives Matter movement cannot be sued, a federal judge ruled Thursday, dismissing a case against the group and an activist brought by a police officer injured during protests after the July 2016fatal shooting of Alton Sterlingin Baton Rouge, Louisiana.Black Lives Matter is not an entity, but a social movement, Louisian <a href=https://www.nikeair.fr>air max plus</a> a Middle District Judge Brian A. Jackson wrote. Therefore, all claims against Black Lives Matter must be dismissed because social movements lack the capacity to be sued. The suing Baton Rouge police officer, who remained unnamed in the lawsuit, said he was hit by concrete or rock-like objects while responding to a demonstration led by DeRay Mckesson for Black Lives Matter and had several serious injuries, according to court documents.Protests, vigils and memorials sprang up nationwideafter the shooting of Sterling by police outside a Baton Rouge convenience store. In a graphic cellphone video that was widely shared on social media, police officers can be seen on top of the African-American man before shots were fired.The injured officer said Mckesson and Black Lives Matter wer <a href=https://www.adidas-samba-adidas.it>adidas samba</a> e liable for his injuries because they were negligent and should have known the protests would turn to riots and become violent.Mckesson was exercising his constitutional right to demonstrate, the judge ruled, and he canno <a href=https://www.reebokclassic.com.de>reebok sneaker</a> t be held liable for the conduct of other protesters. All of this highlights the need for deep, deep changes in the city of Baton Rouge. Mckesson told CNN.