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Monday, January 5, 2009

CALL FOR PARTICIPATION: Sixth Annual NYC Grassroots Media Conference!

Host: NYC Grassroots Media Coalition
Date:Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Time:7:00pm - 8:00pm
Location:NACLA office
Street:38 Greene Street, 4th floor (corner of Grand Street), SoHo

Come out and help organize the most important media gathering in NYC! Get to know grassroots media makers and social justice organizers from around the city while working to change our city's media landscape. Network, learn about media, and make friends!

We're looking for people to join our core organizing team. Starting in January, you'll work closely with staff and other organizers to make this the most diverse and exciting GMC yet. We particularly need people with event organizing, design, and web skills, but we welcome everyone. So come & learn about the organizing process and meet the rest of the group.
The NYC Grassroots Media Conference organizing committee actively seeks participation from different ethnic and racial backgrounds, sexual orientations, classes, and physical abilities.


Phone: 8023098146
Email: jbatten517@gmail.com

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Wednesday, November 12, 2008

JFREJ RISK TAKER AWARDS in NYC! FUN! You should come!

Please join Jews for Racial and Economic Justice (JFREJ) for the 12th Annual Rabbi Marshall T. Meyer Risk-Taker Awards

Amy Goodman & Juan Gonzalez of Democracy Now! will MC the event and together we will celebrate the recent election victories and risk-takers who have been doing this work for the long haul and chart the course ahead.

This year JFREJ will be honoring:

Ann Cook: Long-time political activist & Co-Director of the Urban Academy in the Julia Richman Educational Complex.

Deborah Meier: Acclaimed educational reformer, writer, and one of the founders of the modern small schools movement.

Mikey Weinstein: a leader in the fight against the growth and spread of Christian evangelicalism in the military, Founder and President of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation.

Families for Freedom: A multi-ethnic grassroots organization run by and for immigrants facing and fighting deportation in the greater New York Area. They are also a leader in the New Sanctuary Movement.

When: Thursday, November 20th, 6-9pm | Reception 6pm| Program 7pm

Where: Congregation B'nai Jeshurun|257 West 88th Street (between Broadway and West End Avenue)

For additional information or to purchase tickets please contact Helena Tubis at helena@jfrej.org or 212.647.8966 x14

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Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Boston Human Rights: Ideas and Action Conference


July 31, 2008
At the Boston Public Library
700 Boylston Street, Boston, MA
9:00-5:30

Program:

Welcome

The Leading Rogue State: Individual Rights?
Jean Lynch (disabled)
Rubén Rumbaut (migrants)
Tanya Golash Boza (migrants)
Dave Brunsma and Dave Overfelt (housing rights)
Brian Gran (youth)
Respondent: Ty de Pass
Presider: Alberto Moncada

The Leading Rogue State: Collective Rights?
John Barnshaw (water)
Mark Frezzo (democracy)
Rodney Coates (culture)
Judith Blau (trade)
Respondent: Grace Ross
Presider: Alberto Moncada

Human Rights Cities
Shula Koenig, PDHRE: The People’s Movement for Human Rights Learning

Roundtable Discussions: Social Identity?
Gender, Youth, Immigration, and Lesbian/Gay/Bisexual/Transsexual identities

Roundtable Discussions: Social Policy?
Health, Environment and Food, Peace and War, Labor, and Housing

Closing Remarks


Register Online:
www.bostonhumanrights.org

Sponsors include: Mass Global Action, Mass-Care, Open Media Boston,
Boston College Department of Sociology, Boston College Center for Human
Rights and International Justice, Sociologists without Borders, Society
for the Study of Social Problems, and Massachusetts Jobs with Justice.

Contact: info@bostonhumanrights.org

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Tuesday, July 8, 2008

The new iPhone & organic gardening?


The Who Farm (The White House Organic Farm Project) is planning on getting a petition going to plant an organic garden on the White House Mall. The launch of the campaign is to coincide with Apple's release of the new iPhone. You can read more about them at Waiting for Apples. This guy is behind the whole thing. There is a short story about them here and in other places.

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Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Venezuela Film Festival


This looks fantastic and quite unique. I can't go, but maybe you can. Also keep an eye on the program for the Tribeca Film Festival, which also promises to be good. I will definitely try to make a few of those:

100% VENEZUELA IS BACK!
NYU-VENEZUELAN FILM FESTIVAL, SECOND EDITION
April 23-27, 2008
at New York University’s King Juan Carlos I of Spain Center
53 Washington Square South (between Sullivan &Thompson Streets)

http://www.nyu.edu/kjc/100_Venezuela/

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UNC Sit-In


Notice regarding a sit-in at UNC-Chapel Hill:


Hi everyone,

It is our fifth day sitting in the administration building... in 10 minutes the building opens (woohoo!) and we can get a little fresh air.

We have set up a wordpress for updates and more information (it's a work in progress, but all the basics are on there): http://dsp4unc.wordpress.com/ Please check there for continuing updates.

Also, our lovely campus newspaper the Daily Tar Heel, printed some ridiculous articles about the sit-in... They're not bad so much as just ridiculous. I like how people who have never organized are advising us on tactics. This is the longest sit-in since the 1993 sit-in for the black cultural center, and seriously, this is what they come up with? Why not ask the thousands of people who support us and actually know what's going on? Sigh. If yall can write letters to the editor, we'd be much obliged.

Also, for local Triangle folk, letters to the editor to any of the local newspapers would be very very helpful for us.

http://media.www.dailytarheel.com/media/storage/paper885/news/2008/04/21/University/SitIn.Protest.Outlasts.Weekend-3337801.shtml

http://www.dailytarheel.com/home/index.cfm?event=displayArticle&ustory_id=cffff17f-9a67-4880-9490-ab718ac69211

Peace and solidarity,
the members of the occupying force

--
Salma Mirza
UNC-CH History, Class of 2008
Cell: (716) 432-1576, E-mail: salma@unc.edu[15] Organizer for Student Action with Workers
224 FPG Carolina Union, C.B. # 5210
http://www.uncsolidarity.org/
http://www.studentsagainstsweatshops.org/

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Sunday, April 13, 2008

Lets' Crash the Party!


So, this post is mostly directed at those in Ohhh-three! Sorry, the rest of you. But there are ways that others can help-- read on!

I have received multiple emails and postcards from Tufts telling me of the 2003 Five-Year Reunion Party to happen on May 17. All of them went in the trash. And then I got another one.

Something similar happened to me a couple of years ago when the University College had an alumni event. I ended up going with a couple of friends and although we had invitations, it felt like we were crashing the party. It was fun (though maybe not for them!). So I thought that I would see if there is interest in crashing the reunion party. Let me tell you what I have in mind:

The Social Justice Fund has funded the Jumbo Janitor Alliance, which is an organization that supports janitors at Tufts as they seek a better contract with One Source. Many people will remember that this struggle has been going on for quite some time. The late Gerald Gill was a strong supporter of the Tufts janitors, even before they were outsourced and were forced to take a drastic pay cut for doing the same work.

The class of '03 is having a fun affair at Vox Populi in Back Bay. Lets show them what the vox populi really sounds like and organize a voice of dissent for a fair contract for the Tufts Janitors. Register for the event an then shoot me an email to let me know that you are coming! Here is a place where the Tufts Progressive Alumni Network can really get to work!

For those of you not in '03, there is a list of other events going on. You can distribute information here or just email the organizers of these events letting them know how you feel.

We can have fun at our reunion. If we do it our way.

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Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Noisemaker Purim Party


!!CALL TO ARTISTS!! !!SAVE THE DATE!!

GRAGGER/NOISEMAKER
The Workmen's Circle First Annual Radical Purim Party

The Workmen's Circle (a secular, progressive Jewish community) is planning GRAGGER/NOISEMAKER, a Purim Party on Saturday, March 22, 2008. Purim is a Jewish holiday that celebrates liberation and invites us to dress up, come out, and spin the world on its head.

Taking the theme of Gender Justice, this event will be a celebration of radical community and culture, centered on a Jewish holiday and open to folks of all backgrounds. We'll be celebrating the work of Keshet and Massachusetts Transgender Political Coalition. The gragger, the Jewish noisemaker, is traditionally used to drown out the name of our foes - on March 22, we'll make some serious noise in a rowdy call for justice and joy.

We want this night to be fun, liberatory, subversive, joyous, and raucous as all heck - and we need your help! We're looking for artists of all genres, backgrounds, and expressions who want to contribute their vision to this event. We are seeking visual and interactive art around the themes of Gender Justice and/or Purim. For more information, contact Marjorie at marjorie@workmenscircleboston.org.

!!!COME BE A NOISEMAKER!!!

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Sunday, November 25, 2007

Gift It Up! is back -- in JP and online!

Dear friends,

It's that time of the year again, when I put in a plug to you all for Conscious Consuming's alternative gift fair, Gift it Up! Please visit our website at http://www.giftitup.org and consider making a donation in a loved one's name.

According to the Consumer's Union, children in our country are sent 30,000 TV ads per year to get their parents to buy them stuff. And yet you know that there also are millions of children around the world who wish every day they had enough food or a safe place to sleep. American's produce 4-5 pounds of trash per person, per day, while children in many parts of the world labor to make us these cheap, "throwaway" goods. Instead of the newest incarnation of something you probably already have, won't you consider giving a gift to change the world?

If you live in the Boston area, come to Gift it Up! Conscious Consuming gathers 14 non-profits on Saturday, December 1, at the River of Life Church in Jamaica Plain. "Shoppers" will get to talk with representatives from each of the nonprofits, browse their programs, choose a gift to fit any budget, and receive a Gift it Up! card announcing the gift. The event is to be held:

Saturday, December 1
12noon - 4pm
River of Life Church
440 Center Street
Jamaica Plain, MA

If you are unable to attend the fair, you can visit the Gift it Up! website at www.giftitup.org to learn more about it, to see the list of participating non-profits, and to purchase gifts securely on line.

Because Conscious Consuming is an all-volunteer non-profit, our PR is grassroots. If you could please send your contacts something as simple as the following, we'd be much obliged!

Thanks! Enjoy the peace and good will of the holiday season,
Cindy

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Thursday, November 1, 2007

RACISM/WAR: MAKING CONNECTIONS FOR PEACE

RACISM/WAR: MAKING CONNECTIONS FOR PEACE



NOVEMBER 19 (MONDAY)
6:30-9:00 p.m.
VIETNAMESE AMERICAN COMMUNITY CENTER
(Behind the Fields Corner T Station, Red Line)
Racism and war (at home and abroad) are parts of a system of
oppression that affects all of us. We must all (including white,
middle-class/privileged peace activists) work together to overcome
the racism that fuels our wars abroad.

Program includes:

EXPERIENCE: testimony from casualties of war abroad and at home: Iraq
vets, CORI victims

DISCUSSION: antiracist dialogue about war abroad and at home

ACTION: antiracist next steps for peace following the leadership of
communities of color.

Guest Speakers include:

City Counselor CHUCK TURNER

PROJECT HIP-HOP

BOSTON WORKERS ALLIANCE

Co-Sponsored by DORCHESTER PEOPLE FOR PEACE and COMMUNITY CHANGE, INC.

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"Beyond the War in Iraq", a talk by Howard Zinn

"Beyond the War in Iraq", a talk by author and radical historian Howard
Zinn.
Tuesday, 6 November
8 pm
Morse Auditorium at Boston University

Sponsored by BU Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and the Boston
Youth and Student Anti-War Network (BAWN).

Morse Auditorium is located at 602 Commonwealth Ave., right at the
Blandford St. T stop on the Green Line (B), a couple of blocks outbound
from Kenmore Square.

Admission is free and the event is open to the public, but reservations
are recommended. To reserve a seat, email sdsbu@bu.edu, and be sure to
include your first and last name.

You can find a flyer for the event at
daschaich.homelinux.net/Zinn-11-06.pdf

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Thursday, September 6, 2007

LGBT Center 15th Anniversary


Please join us in celebrating the 15th Anniversary of the Tufts LGBT Center!

We'll be having an informal cookout for alumni, students, faculty, and staff on Thursday, September 27, from 5-7 p.m. on the lawn outside the LGBT Center, 226 College Ave.

You are also encouraged to email me your favorite LGBT Center story. We welcome all stories -- silly, sad, mischievous, or magnificent! Selected stories will be read aloud at the event, put up on the center's website, and perhaps published in the Tufts Daily. If you would like your story to be anonymous, please indicate that when you email.

Sincerely,

Dona

Dona Yarbrough, Ph.D.
Director, LGBT Center
Lecturer, Women's Studies Program
Tufts University
dona.yarbrough@tufts.edu
617-627-3770
http://ase.tufts.edu/lgbt

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Wednesday, September 5, 2007

Call to Action: Disrupt IMF/WB Meetings in DC: 10/19-21


Call to Action: Dignity, Autonomy, and Solidarity over Greed and Corporate Power!

Disrupt the IMF and the World Bank meetings: Washington DC, October 19-21, 2007

www.octoberrebellion.org

The misery forced on millions by the International Monetary Fund and World Bank is unacceptable and renders them illegitimate. The IMF and World Bank, controlled by the G8 countries* in corrupt complacency with national elites all over the world, claim to lead the fight against poverty but their role as global loan sharks; their cruel imposition of privatization, cuts to social services, and free trade policies; their funding for environmentally disastrous projects; their secrecy and undemocratic decision making processes, make them an enemy of the people worldwide. Today, these two institutions are on the defensive. Venezuela, Bolivia, and Ecuador are in open revolt against the IMF and World Bank. South African shantytown dwellers are fighting water privatization; Korean workers are striking against "free trade" agreements; and thousands of people successfully blockaded the G8 meeting in Germany earlier this year. In the U.S., in the heart of empire, millions are struggling against the oppressive system of capitalism for dignity, autonomy and solidarity. Tens of thousands gathered for the first ever United States Social Forum; millions of immigrants have marched for their rights; and in Washington DC, in the belly of the beast, residents are organizing against the policies of gentrification and displacement. This year social movements from all over the world gathered at the World Social Forum in Nairobi, Kenya to devise the next stage in the assault against the World Bank and IMF. In solidarity with our allies in the Global South, and recognizing the toll corporate capitalism takes on our own lives, Washington DC-based activists are calling for actions at the IMF/World Bank headquarters in Washington DC, during the upcoming annual meetings, October 19-21. Our demands are simple:

* Cancel all impoverished country debt to the World Bank and IMF, using the institutions' own resources.
* End neoliberal structural adjustment policies, which prioritize profit for the few over the lives of the many.
* End the social and environmental devastation caused by oil, gas, mining and big dam projects.

It's time to strike another blow against Global Capitalism. Tear Down the World Bank and IMF. Raise up the resistance. Join us in Washington DC on October 19-21, 2007. *G8 countries: Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia, United Kingdom, United States. Together these countries make up two thirds of the world's wealth. The World Bank and IMF are wreaking havoc on our communities:

* Immigration
* "Free trade" agreements and IMF and World Bank policies have resulted in extreme poverty and marginalization, forcing millions from Mexico, Haiti, and elsewhere in Central America, Asia, and Africa, to flee their countries, risking their lives at sea, only to be treated as criminals, detained and deported once in the U.S. Effects at Home
* The same ideology that fuels the IMF and World Bank destroys communities here in the United States. The privatization of water and electricity services, the closures of public housing, the transformation of homeless shelters into luxury condos, the transition of public schools to Charter schools, and shutdowns of public hospitals show the increased strangle-hold corporate capitalism has over our lives. Global Warming
* The World Bank exacerbates global warming through existing polices, such as funding fossil fuel extraction and deforestation, while promoting false solutions such as carbon trading. Post-Conflict Re-Destruction
Wars waged by the U.S. and its allies open countries to economic takeover. The IMF eliminated Iraq's fuel subsidies, driving up prices of food and other necessities. The World Bank privatized Afghanistan's healthcare, and is helping mining companies rob Congo's resources. The U.S-backed UN MINUSTAH forces are brutally occupying Haiti, repressing people’s resistance against privatization of state-owned flour mills, electricity utilities, telecommunication, public schools, and other essentials. U.S. military intervention and free trade policies have the same goals – ensuring corporations' access to resources, cheap labor, and markets.

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Thursday, August 30, 2007

Gerald Gill Memorial Service Update


A Service of Remembrance Honoring the Life and Contributions of

Gerald R. Gill

November 18, 1948 – July 26, 2007

A scholar of twentieth century African-American history, Gerald R. Gill was one of Tufts University’s most honored and distinguished teachers. He was beloved by his students and by his colleagues alike. Twice he was named the Massachusetts College Professor of the Year by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and the Council for Advancement and Support of Education. His colleagues and former students could tell you exactly why . . . his door was always open, he was passionate and knowledgeable about what he taught, he remembered each student’s name and cared - most deeply - about each individual, academically as well as personally. A member of the Tufts community for over a quarter of a century, Professor Gill taught and mentored thousands of students and was a friend to all. He was a thoughtful and dedicated colleague, active in service to the university and the community. He loved Tufts and Tufts loved him. He will be remembered by all those who were fortunate enough to have been in his presence . . . if only for a season.
Monday, September 24, 2007
12:15 pm, Cohen Auditorium
Address: 40 Talbot Ave. Medford, MA.
A reception will follow the service (details TBA)
To honor a man who gave so much of himself to Tufts University and its students, the university is pleased to announce the establishment of the GERALD R. GILL FUND, a fund intended to honor his
memory and create a permanent legacy to his life, his scholarship, and his commitment and service to Tufts. To support this effort, please send checks made payable to Trustees of Tufts College to:
Brigette A. Bryant, Sr. Director of Development
Tufts University, School of Arts & Sciences
80 George Street—Room 320
Medford, MA 02155
In the memo field, please add “in memory of Gerald Gill” and allocation code “CR007013”. In addition, you may post your thoughts and remembrances to Professor Gill.

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Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Gerald Gill Memorial Service to take place Homecoming Weeekend


The word on the Gerald Gill Memorial Facebook Group is that the Tufts memorial service for Gerald Gill is to take place during Homecoming Weekend on Saturday, October 6. This will be a good time for us to get together and talk about our experiences with Gerald Gill. See you there.

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Monday, June 18, 2007

Party to kick off summer and trip to US Social Forum

Join Mobilize the Bean and the Northeast Freedom Riders for a night of
dancing, community, and celebration to kick off the summer and our
journey to the US Social Forum in Atlanta, Georgia.

Who: YOU and your friends! 21+
What: live dj, discounted sushi bar til 1:00, full bar til 2:00, huge
dance floor, and lots of hot people dancing their asses off
Where: 711 Bistro and Sushi Bar (711 Boylston Street, near the Copley T stop)
When: This Friday June 22nd! 10:30 pm
Why: Because it's the first hot party to kick off the summer and
you'll also be helping to send youth from across Greater Boston to
participate the historic US Social Forum. We're taking 3 buses all
the way down to Atlanta and back!

Cover is $10 and it's tax deductible. If you were gonna go out
anyway, this is the place to be Friday night!

"proper" dress required (no athletic wear i.e. hats, sneakers, etc)
sorry, not our rule!

Please spread the word!

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Saturday, June 9, 2007

Transform/Nation: Contemporary Art of Iran and Its Diaspora


From Tufts Alum, Nikoo Paydar:

Please join IAAB Thursday, June 21 from 6-9PM at Ellipse Arts Center for a free party in celebration of the opening. Come enjoy an evening of art, Persian food, wine, and live music from the very talented Enchanted Strings Ensemble! Artworks are for sale, starting at $200 (% of proceeds goes to IAAB). Exhibiting artists from Iran, Europe and around the US will be present. Please help us get the word out about this!

*WHAT: TRANSFORM/NATION exhibition opening
*WHERE: Ellipse Arts Center (4350 N. Fairfax Dr., Suite 125, Arlington, VA 22203). One block west of Ballston Metro at N. Fairfax and Taylor.
*WHEN: June 21, 6-9pm

For more information on the two exhibitions in Washington, DC and Tehran, as well as the many supplemental events surrounding both exhibitions, please check out the attached postcard and visit: www.iranianalliances.org/art

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Tuesday, April 24, 2007

After years of activism, Tufts' 'Most Progressive Senior' looks to make a difference after college


Like most Tufts seniors winding down their four years in college, Liz Manno is getting ready to jump into the world.

An American studies and child development double major, Manno has just finished her senior thesis and is making plans to move to New York City next year. She will spend the next two weeks bidding farewell to her college career - and, as of last Friday, she has a unique relic to take with her into the future.

Manno is the winner of Tufts' "Most Progressive Senior" award, which is given by the Tufts Progressive Alumni Network (TPAN) to honor "exceptional commitment to social justice, leadership abilities, and potential to be future change agents," according to the TPAN Web site. She received her award at an informal ceremony and alumni reunion last week at Oxfam Café.

Read More...

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Monday, April 23, 2007

Progressive Senior Award 2007


The Progressive Senior Award Ceremony occurred on Friday and it was a fantastic success, in my opinion. Thanks to Liz Monnin-Browder for pulling the event together, to all the members of the Award Selection committee for the hard work they did in selecting a winner, and congratulations again to Liz Manno for her great work in the Boston Chinatown community! TPAN member, Aaron Donovan LA'03, took some great pictures that are now posted on the TPAN website.

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Sunday, April 8, 2007

Those in and around CT: Sustainable Living Fair at UCONN!

Sustainable Living Book Fair & Conference,
UConn Co-op
April 22, 23, 24,
2075 Hillside Road, Storrs, CT. 860-486-5027.

What is it like to live off the grid? Is geothermal heating and cooling
practical for Connecticut residents? How can you eat what's in season
and reduce your reliance on foods that have been transported great
distances? Get the answers to these questions and more at the second
annual Sustainable Living Book Fair and Conference at the UConn Co-op
and on the University of Connecticut campus April 22, 23, and 24.
We all know that we should be living more lightly on the earth so that
there are resources enough for the next generations. We know we should
do our part to ward against global warming. But it is hard to know on a
personal level what you can do and what, with others in your community
you can do together. We've invited experts on a range of topics to speak,
we will be showing films, and we will have displays and lots of books on
everything from solar energy to organic growing to the Local First
Movement. We will be looking at the philosophical and most importantly,
the practical. Attendees will go home with information they can put to
use right away.
Here is a look at what we have scheduled. We have a few more speakers
to confirm, so check back in a few days.

Sunday, April 22, Noon to 6:00 pm.
Earth Day
Noon - FOR KIDS -The Cat In the Hat Visits
Fifty years ago, Dr. Seuss published The Cat in the Hat which has been a
favorite of children ever since. In 1971, Seuss published his most
controversial book, The Lorax that many readers interpreted as his attack
on corporate greed and a strong defense of the environment. The book
has been challenged and banned, loved by children, taught in schools, and
has inspired environmental work and tree planting in the decades since it
first appeared.
Inspired by Dr. Seuss and The Lorax ourselves, we have invited the Cat In
the Hat to appear here in person. We will read The Cat in the Hat and The
Lorax and we'll plant trees that you can take home.
1:00 pm What's Toxic What's Not: Know Your Risk-Safeguard
Your Home
Dr. Gary Ginsberg and Brian Toal, M.S.P.H., authors of What's Toxic What's
Not, will talk about the potentially harmful toxins in our homes and
workplaces. Dr. Gary Ginsberg is the senior toxicologist at the
Connecticut Dept of Public Health. He holds faculty appointments at Yale
and the University of Connecticut Medical Schools. He has published
extensively on children's risks and is a member of several National
Academy of Science panels. He received his Ph.D. in toxicology from the
University of Connecticut and his B.S. in Pharmacy from the University of
Buffalo. Brian Toal, M.S.P.H., supervises the Environmental and
Occupational Health Assessment Program in the Connecticut Department
of Health, where he works closely with the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention in preventing community exposures to toxics. This
is an important topic for all of us.
2:00 pm Andrew Sholdudko, singer, songwriter
UConn student Andrew Sholdudko will perform his lively, take-care-of-the
environment song, "Need Your Help" which he composed for UConn's
Environmental Expressions. In the song, Sholdudko begins, "Can't you all
hear what the siren meant. Gotta start saving the environment. Do a little
bit, every little bit that you can. Cuz we're cutting down on the human
lifespan." Andrew will also perform a few other tunes for us.
3:00 pm Living Off the Grid
Baron Wormser, author of The Road Washes Out in Spring: A Poet's
Memoir of Living Off the Grid, will talk about his life in rural Maine far from
power lines and the accoutrements of modern life that many of us cannot
imagine doing without. For 25 years, Wormser, a poet, and his family lived
without electricity or running water. They produced most of their own
food and made do. His account of these years is insightful and a pleasure
to read. Whether you dream of living off the grid yourself, or love books
about country life, you will enjoy meeting Baron Wormser.

Monday, April 23, 8am - 8pm
UConn Celebrates Earth Day
The Eco Huskies and the Office of Environmental Policy will have free bike
tune-ups, hybrid, electric and grease cars, information on water usage
with pyramids of water, Mt. Sneaker, a piece of green roof and more. Visit
their outdoor displays on Fairfield Way and the surrounding areas.
1:00 pm Serving Up the Harvest
Cookbook author Andrea Chesman offers advice and inspiration to all
who want to enjoy fresh, local, seasonal vegetables with every meal. In
her book, Serving Up the Harvest: Celebrating the Goodness of Fresh
Vegetables, she offers recipes that follow three guidelines: "Simple.
Delicious. Harmonized with the growing season." She believes that
vegetables that ripen together taste good together. Her recipes include
such tasty treats as Warm Mushroom Salad, New Potato Salad, Grilled
Chicken and Asparagus Salad, Soy-Sesame Grilled Eggplant, and Everyday
Tomato-Cucumber Salad. Chesman has written many popular cookbooks
including, The Roasted Vegetable, The Vegetarian Grill, 365 Healthful
Ways to Cook Rice, Beans, and Grains, Pickles and Relishes, and Sun Dried
Tomatoes. The Café Co-op will be offering specials from Chesman's
cookbooks.
2:00 - 4:00 pm Turn Old Paper Into New: The Pleasures of
Hand Made Paper
Stop at our paper making station. We will show you how to make
beautiful paper for cards and letters by recycling newspapers, brown
grocery bags, tissue paper, wrapping paper, junk mail, and what have you.
Bring a bit of dryer lint from home to add color and texture to you
creation. Papermaking is an ancient craft that anyone can do.
6:00 pm. Community Supported Energy
Greg Pahl, author of The Citizen Powered Energy Handbook:
Community Solutions to a Global Crisis will talk about Community
Supported Energy. Pahl has been involved in environmental issues for
more than 20 years. In the 1970s he lived "off the grid" in a home in
Vermont with a wind turbine atop an 80-foot steel tower that provided
for his electrical needs. He is a founding member and co-director of the
Vermont Biofuels Association. He has written about biodiesel, wind power,
wood heat, solar energy, heat pumps, electric cars, sustainable forestry
management, and "green" home building materials.
Pahl is also the author of Biodiesel: Growing a New Energy Economy,
Natural Home Heating: The Complete Guild to Renewable Energy Options,
The Complete Idiot's Guide to Saving the Environment and The Unofficial
Guide to Beating Debt.

Tuesday, April 24
2:00 p.m. Building with Awareness: The Construction of a
Hybrid Home
Screening of the award winning video on building a straw bale solar home.
Learn about straw bale walls, post-and-beam framing, adobe thermal
mass walls, passive solar heating and cooling, rubble trench foundations,
roof-framing and insulation, concrete floors, earth plasters for walls,
electrical wiring, photovoltaic systems, rainwater cisterns and more.
3:00 p.m. Virginia Walton: Town of Mansfield Recycling
Manager
In the summer of 2005, after joining the Connecticut Clean Energy
Communities Program, the Town of Mansfield committed to the goal of
having 20% of the town residents signed up for SmartPower by 2010.
Virginia Walton will talk about what this means for the town, the benefits,
and how people can participate. Residents of other towns that do not
already have such a program will also want to hear how the program is
working for Mansfield.
Books for Sustainable Living and displays on various topics will be
available all three days.

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Friday, March 30, 2007

Humanities or Human Resources?

Humanities or Human Resources?
The Future of Ethnic Studies and Labor
in the Corporate University

FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 2007
9:30AM-5:30PM
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND CULTURAL ANALYSIS
41 EAST 11TH STREET 7TH FLOOR
NEW YORK NY 10003

As corporate models of management and decision-making
take hold of more and more colleges and universities,
a growing number of students, faculty and staff are
facing threats to ethnic studies programs, assaults on the
integrity of academic decision-making, and the casualization of the
university labor force. Through analyses of funding,
diversity, disciplinarity, labor movements, and struggles
over area studies programs, this conference will recast
and address questions of race, gender, sexuality,
ability, nation and class in relation to what
has been termed the corporate university.

KEYNOTE
Dr. George Sanchez,
Director of the Program in American Studies and Ethnicity,
University of Southern California

SPEAKERS INCLUDE
Joe Berry, Adjunct Labor Education Specialist
and Program Developer, Chicago Labor Education Program
at the Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations,
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

Ashley Dawson, Associate Professor of English,
CUNY Graduate Center and the College of Staten Island

Cate Fallon , Adjunct instructor in Photography and Imaging,
Tisch School of the Arts, NYU and Recording Secretary
for ACT-UAW Local 7902

Penny Lewis, Co-chair of the PSC/CUNY's Solidarity Committee
and Adjunct instructor in Social Science,
Borough of Manhattan Community College

Randy Martin, Professor and Director of the Graduate Program
in Arts Politics, Department of Art and Public Policy,
Tisch School of the Arts, NYU

Ali Zaidi, Assistant Professor of Spanish, CUNY

FILM SCREENING, 5:00pm
"I'm on Strike Because..." (21 min) Directed by Steve Fletcher,
PhD student in American Studies

SPONSORED BY
The Program in American Studies, GSCO/UAW Local 2110,
& the Department of Performance Studies at NYU

KINDLY RSVP
Please send an email with your name, affiliation,
and contact information to:
corporate.conference@gmail.com .

For more information, please visit
http://corporateuniversityconference.blogspot.com .

The conference is free and open to the public.

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Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Radical Bay Area Friends

Hey Radical Bay Area Friends,

I'm writing to let you know about a friend of mine, Marina Sitrin, who will be visiting the Bay Area this week. She is an anarchist author who has recently produced an oral history of the autonomous factory worker movement in Argentina called Horizontalism. It was recently reviewed in Left Turn and has gotten a lot of attention in the movement. She'll be speaking at the Modern Times Bookstore at 7pm today and will be at the Anarchist Bookfair on Saturday and Sunday and will also be at New College on Monday and Tuesday.

You can read about her book on the front page of the AK Press website.

Here is a recent article of hers in Left Turn.

Pass on the word and I hope you can make it!

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Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Pride on the Hill at Plexiglass Menagerie

This Friday, March 16th, celebrate the arrival of spring with your friends from Pride on the Hill at Ryan Landry and the Gold Dust Orphans' Plexiglass Menagerie!

One of the greatest plays in American theater, The Glass Menagerie broke through all convention when it premiered in 1944. The Gold Dust Orphans are proud to bring you their slightly twisted version of this undisputed masterpiece, now set in modern day New Orleans against a conflicting backdrop of Southern perseverance and the corruption of urban renewal. The Gold Dust Orphans is a legendary Boston performance company that provokes, challenges and entertains audience with low-budget, high-octane original shows.

The show is at 8PM at Machine in Boston. Tickets go fast, so buy them online now at www.golddustorphans.com! Look for the Tufts table before the event to meet Pride on the Hill's Boston organizing committee and catch up with alumni and friends. We know it's late notice, but we hope you can join us for this informal Pride on the Hill celebration!

Also, look for information coming soon about our Gaypril reception on April 19th at Felt in Boston!

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Wednesday, March 7, 2007

Left Forum Update

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Left Forum 2007
Forging A Radical Political Future
March 9-11

www.leftforum.org
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Dear Friends,

Left Forum 2007 - FORGING A RADICAL POLITICAL FUTURE takes place this weekend, MARCH 9-11, at Cooper Union.

Conference information is on our 98 panels and plenaries is available at www.leftforum.org. We also want to let you know about the other events we have planned.

FILM FESTIVAL: On Friday, March 9, we are hosting an indy film festival at NYU. It is free and open to all - please tell your friends.
WHAT: Film Festival
WHEN: Friday 12 to 5 pm
WHERE: NYU, 721 Broadway, Between Waverly Place and Washington Place, Room 006

COCKTAIL PARTY: Immediately preceding our Opening Plenary, (which begins sharply at 7pm on Friday evening) please join us and your fellow Forum participants at a cocktail party. We ask for a contribution of $5 each to help defray the costs.
WHAT: Cocktail Party
WHEN: Friday, 5 to 6:30 pm
WHERE: Peter Cooper Suite, Cooper Union

SATURDAY EVENING PERFORMANCES AT 8PM:
We're very excited to be offering two cultural performances that are free and open to the public:
1. Karen Finley's "George and Martha"; a solo performance detailing an illicit affair between George Bush Jr. and Martha Stewart.
WHAT: Karen Finley performing "George and Martha"
WHEN: Saturday 8 pm
WHERE: New York University
19 W4th Street between Green and Mercer, Room 101

2. Readings from Howard Zinn's Voices of a People's History of the United States, with Amy Goodman, Anthony Arnove, Staceyanne Chin, Brian Jones, Deepa Fernandes, and Erin Cherry, and others.
WHAT: Voices of a People's History of the United States
WHEN: Saturday 8 pm
WHERE: Cooper Union's Great Hall
7 East 7th Street (at 3rd Ave)

Of course, the focus of the Forum remains our plenaries, panel discussions, and bookfair. Our full program is online at: http://leftforum.org/leftforum2007/program.html

Check it out! We hope to see you March 9-11 at Cooper Union in New York City! Please come early enough to allow for the lines at registration.



Solidarity,

Left Forum

212.817.2003
www.leftforum.org

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Wednesday, February 21, 2007

OAXACA: Taking it to the streets!

En espanol abajo:

OAXACA: Taking it to the streets!
Workshop and discussion about the popular movements of Oaxaca

with Alfonso Pérez
of CIPO - RFM, Oaxaca (Consejo Indígena Popular de Oaxaca - Ricardo Flores Magón)
& Eric Larson
recently returned from Oaxaca

Come and learn about this crucial struggle - and what we can do here!

Facilitator: Daniel Gross, Organizer- IWW Starbucks
Workers Union; www.StarbucksUnion.org

Sunday, February 25
1-3pm
Sixth Street Community Center
638 E. 6th St. between Aves B & C in Manhattan
L train to First Avenue or F train to Second Avenue

Free of Charge, Everyone is Welcome
Espanol y Ingles

Hosted by the IWW Starbucks Workers Union (NYC)
***************************************

OAXACA: ¡Tomando la lucha a las calles!
Un taller y charla sobre los movimientos populares

con Alfonso
Miembro del CIPO - RFM (Consejo Indígena Popular de Oaxaca - Ricardo Flores Magón)
& Eric Larson
recién regresado de Oaxaca

"Este parte de Santa Lucia es tierra de los enemigos. Queda cerca a la Barricada Tres, el ataque por los PRIistas el viernes pasado, y el lugar del asesinato de Brad Will. Además, queda en esta zona la casa de CIPO. Ahora, menos de una semana depués de los ataques, algunos de los mismos PRIistas han acordado a desolojar al CIPO del barrio. Su método, normalmente, es con violencia. Es importante que sepan que sus actos violentos no serán invisibles. Por favor, contacten a los autoridades; digales que si alguien le atacan al CIPO, el responsable es el gobierno Méxicano."
Ven para aprender más de esta lucha imporante, y sobre lo que podemos hacer.

Domingo, 25 feb. 2007

con Daniel Gross, Organizador - IWW Starbucks
www.StarbucksUnion.org

1-3pm
Sixth Street Community Center (Calle Seis Centro de la Comunidad)
638 E. 6th St. entre de Aves B & C en Manhattan
L tren a First Avenue o F tren a Second Avenue

GRATIS

Espanol y Ingles

IWW Starbucks Workers Union (NYC)

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Thursday, February 15, 2007

Youth Solidarity Summer's 2007 Organizing Youth Conference

Dear folk,

This comes to us courtesy of former SAATh board-member Professor Rajini
Srikanth. It does seem very promising.

Warmly,

John

------------
----------------------------------------------
Rad and Desi?
If so, it's Your Space!
Youth Solidarity Summer's
2007 Organizing Youth Conference
the most RADICAL birthday bash!!

WHEN: April 13-15 (Friday evening to Sunday afternoon)

WHERE: New York City (@ the historic Brecht Forum!)

WHAT DO WE PROMISE: Conversations, discussions, some
dreams, a little inspiration and lots of Fun!!

WHAT NEXT: Hold the Dates and Get in Touch!

Youth Solidarity Summer is ten years old. But this is
not our birthday alone - in fact, we are celebrating
a decade of progressive South Asian American youth
activism. When we began in 1996-97, we were part of
a fledgling desi youth culture which included such
efforts as Azad Lounge and Trikone in California,
Basement Bhangra in NYC, Des Pardes in Toronto. . .
Soon after, there was a veritable explosion of all things
Desi from one coast to the other, and sister institutions
to YSS soon emerged: OY! in California, RadDesi
in Texas and similar efforts in Boston, Toronto and D.C.

These early experiments and initiatives have now
translated into a range of South Asian American youth
organizations, and a plethora of individuals - young
film makers and musicians, DJs and Organizers. Desi
youth are taking on the challenge in almost every
struggle for social justice - whether anti-imperialist
or anti-oppression - peppered across North American
cities and campuses.

Clearly, there is much to celebrate. However, alongside
the growth of this progressive (cutting) edge of the
desi youth movement, there has also been a simultaneous
growth of the Desi youth right wing - both economic
and religious. At the end of this decade of radical
desi activism, therefore, we on the South Asian Left
must assess our past and plan for the future. And what
better than a weekend retreat in New York City to share
our experiences, reaffirm our commitment to struggle,
renew our energies and strengthen our solidarity?
Youth Solidarity Summer's 2007 'Organizing Youth
Conference' will be just that - a Radical Desi space
where we can plan the next ten years.

Register Now!! we promise you a birthday bash quite unlike
any other! A limited number of travel stipends are available
for those who don't have the cash to travel to NYC. (We SAID
it was unlike any other party!)

For details please visit www.youthsolidarity.org or Contact
us: yss-info@proxsa.org

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Thursday, February 8, 2007

Several contributors to the book Outsiders Within: Writing on Transracial Adoption are visiting Northeastern University tomorrow to speak about their work. I just reviewed this book for the NeoAmericanist, and it is the best book I've seen about adoption period. The book is very much trying to sort out issues of social, political, and economic justice relating to transracial and transnational adoption. It's very smart and very angry and very readable!

Details here:
http://www.neu.edu/aac/programs/outsiderswithin.htm

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