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Events

New York Activist Calendar

April 23, 2005


The NY Activist Calendar (formerly the CREED NY Calendar) is a

weekly listing of events of interest to NYC-area activists. It is

compiled by volunteer labor and published by the Nicaragua

Solidarity Network of Greater NY. Send listings and corrections

to: NSN, 339 Lafayette St, New York, NY 10012, fax 212-674-9139,

email editor@nycalendar.org (plain text only; no attachments,

please). For info, call 212-674-9499 or email wnu@igc.org New or

updated info is marked **. To subscribe, send a blank email to:

nycalendar-subscribe@lists.riseup.net

Archived at: http://nycalendar.org

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CONTENTS

Events: {1} Regular; {2} Ongoing. Selected Resources: {3} Tours

and Delegations; {4} Classes; {5} Calendars & Event Listings; {6}

Books & Videos; {7} Radio & TV; {8} Other Resources.


An anonymous coward writes:

Disobedient May
An Antimilitarist And International Call To Action


Hello chums, greetings from "alternativa antimilitarista-moc" groups. We
are pleased to invite you to a MAY of protest, direct action and civil
disobedience, at all military bases throughout the world. This
international Call to Action becomes open to all activists, groups and
networks interested in the antimilitarist work, and claims for the closing
down of all the military instalations and its devolution to society for a
social an ecological use. Reclaim the Bases: not even an inch for war. We
don’t want to be part of a global war that makes all of us be potential
victims. We must look beyond the wars in the headlines towards an effort
to desmantle the whole military infrastructure in our society.

Protest New York City Rent Guidelines Board

Rally and Press Conference, May 3, 2005

New York City’s Rent Guidelines Board (RGB), appointed by Mayor
Bloomberg, has been consistently biased towards landlords and has
voted for excessive rent increases, which affect more than 2
million rent stabilized tenants throughout New York City. It is
crucial, now more than ever, that tenants come together to demand
an end to unfair rent hikes!

Rally & Press Conference Tuesday, May 3, 2005 — 5pm

RGB Preliminary Vote
Cooper Union Great Hall
7 E. 7th St. @
3rd Ave.

We will be meeting at GOLES’ office (17 Ave B) at 4:30 pm

Next Major Action: New Yorkers demand

Affordable Rents!

Join GOLES for strategizing meetings, rallies and protests of the
RGB from May through June

For More Information on the RGB and how you can participate in
RGB protests, call Shoshana @ GOLES, 212.533.2541 or email
skrieger@goles.org

Hidayat Inayat Khan and Jordan Zinovich Reading
New York City, April 24, 2005


From 4-6 pm on Sunday, April 24th, at the FusionArts Museum, 57 Stanton
Street, Hidayat Inayat Khan will launch his latest title, *Reflections on
Inner Sufi Teachings* in conjunction with the launch of *The Company I
Keep* a new poetry collection by Jordan Zinovich, a Canadian writer
resident in New York. The event is free and refreshments will be
provided.


Hidayat Inayat Khan is the leader of the International Sufi Movement, a
global philosophical organization based in the Netherlands. His father
was one of India's greatest musicians, and his grandfather was known as
the "Beethoven of India." His sister was the well known W.W.II heroine,
Noorunisa Inayat Khan (code name Madeleine), who received both the Croix
de Guerre and the George Cross and is the subject of the recent
biographical novel *The Tiger Claw.* Hidayat is a composer whose
symphonies, string quartets and choral works have been performed by
important European orchestras and are available on disk. His music blends
modern western composition (he studied in Paris under the renowned Nadia
Boulanger) with ancient Indian ragas for a true 'Fusion' of the
traditional and the avant-garde.


*Reflections on Inner Sufi Teachings* is
the latest in a series of books he has written interpreting Sufi teachings
for contemporary readers — all of which are published by Ekstasis
Editions of Victoria, BC under the Mystic Ocean Imprint (see
www.ekstasiseditions.com or www.canadabooks.ca).


Jordan Zinovich is a senior editor with the Autonomedia Collective. He
has authored seven books, was an early associate of The Unbearables,
helped birth the Bindlestiff Family Cirkus, is an active member of the
Amsterdam Balloon Company, and is one of the organizers of the annual
Fiery Tongues Poetry Festival — which takes place every Whitsun weekend
in Amsterdam, Holland. *The Company I Keep* is his first publication with
Ekstasis Editions.


The FusionArts Museum launch is sponsored by FusionArts Museum and
Ekstasis Editions. It is one of a series of April events celebrating
poetry and the International Sufi Movement, including two notable ones: at
7 pm Tuesday, April 19, the Canadian Consulate and Poet's House will host
a reception celebrating Canadian poetry. (Contact Poet's House (212)
431-7920 for further information.) And on Friday, April 22, at 7:30 pm
Hidayat Khan's string quartet "La Monotonia," which is dedicated to his
martyred sister, will be performed as part of an evening of Sufi mystical
music and arts at St. Peter's Church, 619 Lexington Avenue.

(Further
information is available from:
aishah1@iwon.com

Alternatives to Capitalism

Two-Day Participatory Seminar

New York City, April 23–April 24, 2005

Bluestockings and The Institute for Social Ecology present:


A Two-Day Intensive Participatory Seminar on Alternatives to Capitalism Facilitated by Peter Staudenmaier (see bio below)


When: Saturday–Sunday April 23rd–24th @ 4–6pm & 7–9pm (2 two-hour sessions/day)

Where: Meeting at Bluestockings (172 Allen Street NYC)

Price: $40 (scholarships available — no one turned away for lack of $)

Pre-Registration REQUIRED: here.

Must commit to at least 3 of the 4 sessions (no drop-ins)


As discontent with capitalism grows around the globe, those of us involved in struggles for a better world face challenging questions about just what form of society we are working toward. Questions of political economy, in particular, present a series of dilemmas for anti-capitalist activists. This intensive course aims to work through several of these core questions collectively and critically.

If anyone has found interesting new material on the IWW amidst the research prompted by the centenary please submit them!

Flavia Alaya writes:

"One Big Union": The Dream, the Reality, the History
The IWW and a Century of Radical Labor Activism, 1905-2005

A Conference and a Celebration
Saturday, May 7, 2005
Paul Robeson Campus Center
Rutgers University, Newark Campus
350 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd. Newark, NJ

The New Jersey May Day Committee is at it again! Founded last year (when we organized a spirited worker history roundtable and tour in Paterson), we've now taken on a bigger event: a full-day, super-gala conference that will commemorate and celebrate the first hundred years of the Industrial Workers of the World--"the Wobblies"--founded in Chicago in 1905, and attempt to put a century of radical worker activism into historical and activist perspective.

New York City Activist Calendar

April 16–23, 2005


The NY Activist Calendar (formerly the CREED NY Calendar) is a

weekly listing of events of interest to NYC-area activists. It is

compiled by volunteer labor and published by the Nicaragua

Solidarity Network of Greater NY. Send listings and corrections

to: NSN, 339 Lafayette St, New York, NY 10012, fax 212-674-9139,

email editor@nycalendar.org (plain text only; no attachments,

please). For info, call 212-674-9499 or email wnu@igc.org New or

updated info is marked **. To subscribe, send a blank email to:

nycalendar-subscribe@lists.riseup.net

Archived at: http://nycalendar.org

=================================================================

"Anarchism Now" Conference
Santa Cruz, California, Saturday, May 7, 2005

University of California, Santa Cruz
Oakes 105 / 10 AM-5:30 PM

Since the end of the Cold War and the beginning of the open-ended War
on Terror, the dominant ideologies, categories, antagonists, analyses
of power and the modes in which it is exercised have changed.
Accordingly, the theories and practices of resistance are changing as
well.

Among these, anarchism has re-emerged in the last several years as a
prominent element within radical social movements in North America
and Europe, particularly among those which aspire to act in
solidarity with those movements in Asia, Africa and Latin America
that are on the offensive against neoliberalism and U.S. imperialism.

AbolitionNow! writes

On Sunday, May 1, 2005, United for Peace and Justice and Abolition Now! are calling for a massive demonstration for global nuclear disarmament and peace. The demonstration will take place on the day before world leaders and citizens from many countries converge at the UN for a month-long review of the endangered Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. While ignoring their treaty obligations, the nuclear weapon states, led by the US, are hypocritically accusing other nations of seeking nuclear arms.

We will assemble on 1st Ave. from 50th St. north between 11 AM and 12 noon. The march kicks off at 12 noon. The rally will begin at 2 PM at the Heckscher Ballfields in Central Park and conclude by 6 PM.

We urge you to join us and help build the May 1st mobilization for a nuclear weapon free world:
- Endorse the May 1 demonstration for global nuclear disarmament online http://meetups.radicaldesigns.org/modinput4.php?mo din=62
- Get involved in planning and outreach: join the May Day 2005 committee by sending a blank e-mail to MayDay2005-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
- Organize buses, trains and other transportation from your region to the May 1st March and Rally. Parking for out-of-town buses has been arranged near the assembly point. E-mail Fran Geteles fgeteles@igc.org
- Visit www.abolitionnow.org and www.unitedforpeace.org for updates

People can pick up May 1st posters and flyers at the UfPJ office at 322 8th Ave. (entrance is on 26th St.), 9th floor"

Robert Augman writes
"Special Event:Women in the Road Blockades and Self-Managed Enterprises:
A Multi-Media Presentation by Graciela Monteagudo on the Economic Crisis and Social Movements in Argentina

In the mid-90’s, when IMF recipes rendered 26% of Argentina’s population unemployed, women were the first to take over the highways bringing international attention to the desperate situation of masses of families without income nor welfare programs to care for their basic needs. It was women too who started the first self-managed enterprises (bakeries, sewing shops, organic gardens) in neighborhoods all over the country where unemployment rose to 80%.

Women in the Road Blockades is a multi-media presentation that frames these women’s lives in a comprehensive socio-historic background of Argentina’s social movements through the use of puppets, songs, video clips and other media.

Thursday, April 21st 2005, 6-8pm
New School University - 55 W 13th Street, Student Activity Space, Room 101

*This is a free event, presented by the Argentina Autonomista Project, and sponsored by the Eugene Lang Student Union.

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