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Strategies & Market Trends : Sharck Soup -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Sharck who wrote (25516)5/30/2001 7:02:07 PM
From: besttrader  Respond to of 37746
 
Yeh, I will see you in da room soon, thanks. :)



To: Sharck who wrote (25516)5/30/2001 7:12:43 PM
From: 2MAR$  Respond to of 37746
 
Seattle WTO riots -- are you game? It's a riot !

In Seattle story headlined "Seattle WTO riots -- are you
game?" please read in 3rd paragraph: "Rockstar's Web site,
rockstargames.com..." instead of "Rockstar's Web
site, rockstar.com..." (Corrects web site address)
A corrected story follows.

SEATTLE, May 30 (Reuters) - If you missed out on the tear
gas, rubber-pellet fire and window-smashing fun of Seattle's
1999 anti-World Trade Organization riots, cheer up, you can
still play the video game.
Thanks to Rockstar Games, a unit of New York-based Take-Two
Interactive Software Inc. <TTWO.O>, would-be hooligans can vent
their anti-corporate venom by punching out riot cops and
looting storefronts from the comfort of their own sofas.
Rockstar's Web site, rockstargames.com, urges
players of the game "State of Emergency" to "smash up
everything and everyone in order to destabilize the ATO," the
oppressive American Trade Organization and its riot troop
henchmen.

Using any item available -- "pipes, bricks and benches,
even dismembered body parts" -- players are exhorted to keep
the riot going as long as possible.

<ggg>

Preview images show one rioter cowering on the pavement as
helmeted cops pummel him, buildings in flames and leggy,
skimpily dressed young women striking martial arts poses.
Dick Lilly, a spokesman for Seattle Mayor Paul Schell, said
such a game sends a bad message to children and distorts the
message of peaceful protesters.
"It demeans the valid concerns of the people, almost all of
whom demonstrated peacefully during the WTO event, and it
glorifies the violence of those who behaved unlawfully," Lilly
said. "Free speech should not be equated with law breaking. A
game like this may wrongfully make that connection."
A spokesman for Rockstar denied the forthcoming game was in
any way linked to Seattle or the WTO.
"As with any fictional work, any similarity to real world
events is purely coincidental and unintentional. In fact, the
game has been in development since September 1998, so it
predates the demonstrations against the World Trade
Organization," the statement said.
Seattle police arrested more than 500 people after
thousands of protesters, claiming free trade hurts workers and
the environment, shut down WTO meetings in the fall of 1999 by
blocking city streets.
On the fringes of the protests, vandals wrecked cars and
windows, lit bonfires and threw rocks and bottles back at the
hundreds of heavily armored police officers who responded by
spraying noxious gas and rubber pellets into the crowds.
((Seattle bureau, chris.stetkiewicz@reuters.com,
206-386-5339))