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    Friday, November 12, 2004
     

    BAUAW NEWSLETTER-FRIDAY, NOV.12, 2004-EMERGENCY MEETING MONDAY, NOV. 15



    Open letter to Bay Area Activists from Bay Area
    United Against War (BAUAW):

    Dear friends who organized, participated, and/or spoke in the demonstrations
    sponsored by Not in Our Name and ANSWER on Nov. 3 and Nov. 9.

    At the concluding rally of the emergency demonstration ANSWER called to
    protest the U.S. assault on Fallujah, Jahahara, of AFSC and N'COBRA, issued
    a kind of challenge to all the major antiwar organizations to make a unified
    response to the U.S. government's war against Iraq. He called on the
    national organizations, of which we are all affiliated to one or
    more-ANSWER, UFPJ, NION-to unify in building a massive antiwar movement.

    This call is so timely because the war and occupation continue unabated, the
    consequences for the Iraqis are devastating (over 100,000 civilians killed
    by U.S. actions) and over 1,110 U.S. troops are dead and tens of thousands
    injured.

    Those of us who are old enough to have participated in the movement against
    the U.S. war on Vietnam know that the most effective mass actions against
    that war that called for bringing all U.S. troops home now [Out Now!] were
    unified actions where people of different ideologies were able to come
    together for
    Out Now despite their divergent opinions on other topics. The mass movement
    that was built on the streets of the U.S. created a supportive environment
    for
    U.S. soldiers to resist the war in multiple ways eventually becoming an
    unreliable fighting force for U.S. imperialism.

    Now, it is very clear from all who spoke at the last two demonstrations,
    including you, that we have wide areas of agreement. We all spoke about the
    need for the movement to get back into the streets to protest the war in
    massive demonstrations. We all spoke about the need for unity. We all spoke
    about the way to bring peace and end the war was for the U.S. government to
    get out of
    Iraq.

    The next step is for all our organizations to meet together and concretely
    plan how this unity will be carried out.

    Bay Area United Against War is willing to host such a meeting, or
    participate in such a meeting called by others. Let's make it happen.

    Bring the Troops Home Now!
    Carole Seligman, Bay Area United Against War (BAUAW)

    COME TO THE NEXT BAUAW MEETING AND BRING YOUR IDEAS ON HOW TO
    ACHIEVE UNITY IN THE MOVEMENT:

    MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15TH, 7:00 p.m.
    1380 Valencia Street
    (Between 24th & 25th Streets, SF)
    BAUAW: 415-824-8730

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    Special point of personal privilege from Bonnie Weinstein:

    I received the following Email message today
    addressed to me:

    --- "xx.xx" wrote:

    > Judenrat

    The brave sole did not leave his or her name.

    Of course, this is not the first time I have had an anti-Semitic slur
    thrown at me.

    In the neighborhood I grew up in during the McCarthey erea, our
    family was routinely referred to as, "those dirty, commie,
    Jew bastards."

    Not only was I a "Jew," but my parents were "commies" also.
    It was a time when the picture of Krushchev that appeared in the
    "Catholic Monitor" was kept hidden from the eyes of the children.
    Good Catholic parents were advised that it wasn't safe for their
    children to look upon this "face of Satan." It was hidden
    under the couch cushion at my childhood friend's house.
    I dared to take a peek! My friend thought I would for sure
    go to hell.

    And when a Black couple and their two children, friends
    of our family, tried to visit us, they were stopped outside of our
    building by the local cop on the beat. The cop demanded to know
    where they thought they were going. They said they were
    visiting us, so the cop went up to our door and asked if, indeed, these
    "n---ers" were invited.

    My father had to go downstairs and escort them into our apartment.
    Rumors abounded for weeks after in our little apartment building.
    "A white family just didn't sit at the same table with Blacks!"
    This horrified our neighbors.

    Even though my immediate family was not religious at all, we were
    atheists, our name was enough to categorize us and place that
    star on our chests. Anti-Semitism is a dead-wrong racist philosophy
    that can't be tolerated. Just as the theft of Palestinian land and the
    systematic extermination of the people of Palestine cannot
    be tolerated in a free and democratic society. This "Jew" supports
    the unconditional right of return of the Palestinian people. And
    this "Jew" demands that all U.S. aid to Israel be stopped
    immediately--NOT ONE MORE DIME! And this "Jew" says
    BRING ALL THE TROOPS HOME NOW! U.S. OUT OF THE MIDDLE EAST!

    Racism is about "divide and concur." It's purpose is to deflect us from
    our common interests to live in a free and democratic society with
    equal opportunity for all. Where all human needs are rights that
    belong to all people--the equal right to life, liberty and the pursuit of
    happiness, free healthcare, food, clothing, housing, education, happy
    and productive work--all the things necessary to make everyone "the best
    they can be" from birth to the grave.

    These are the inalienable rights of all of us on Earth.

    And, what is most important of all to recognize, is that our needs stand
    diametrically opposed to the needs of the wealthiest 1% of humanity.

    Racism and bigotry ultimately benefits the tiny minority in control
    of wealth of the world. It is their most powerful tool for the
    imprisonment of the mind that makes ordinary, good people blame
    their brother for their plight in life while the rich get richer and throw
    an occasional bare bone to the ravenous masses--the old "trickle
    down" theory.

    The only thing that can plow asunder racism and bigotry is human
    solidarity for freedom, justice and equality for all.

    It is a world only the masses acting in unity and solidarity can create.


    When do we start?

    Bonnie Weinstein

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    1) ALL OUT IN SUPPORT OF THE LOCAL 2 HOTEL WORKERS!
    SOLIDARITY RALLY
    Saturday, November 20 at 11 a.m.
    Union Square, Downtown San Francisco

    2) Iraqi Insurgents Shoot Down U.S. Army Helicopter
    By ROBERT F. WORTH and JAMES GLANZ
    FALLUJA, Iraq, Nov. 12
    http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/12/international/middleeast/12cnd-iraq.html?h
    p&ex=1100322000&en=82063e5b6cd40c73&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    3) Falluja a 'Big Disaster,' Aid Needed - Red Crescent
    By Omar Anwar
    BAGHDAD (Reuters)
    Fri Nov 12, 2004 07:37 AM ET
    http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=6798438&src=eD
    ialog/GetContent§ion=news

    4) Falluja Battle Erupts, Unrest Spreads Elsewhere
    By Michael Georgy and Fadel al-Badrani
    FALLUJA (Reuters)
    Fri Nov 12, 2004 09:34 AM ET
    http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=6799628&src=eD
    ialog/GetContent§ion=news

    5) Subject: Mordechai released again!
    From: Jeanie Shaterian
    Date: Thu, 11 Nov 2004 17:42:10 -0800

    6) Bush and Blair Meet to Discuss Mideast Peace
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Filed at 12:41 p.m. ET
    November 12, 2004
    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/national/AP-Bush-Blair.html?hp&ex=1100322000
    &en=a8a52044c77f3a90&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    7) Subject: In Memory of Yasser Arafat
    From: "fpa-news"
    Date: Thu, 11 Nov 2004 19:45:58 -0500
    To: fpa-newslist@freepalestinealliance.org
    Resent-From: fpa-newslist@freepalestinealliance.org
    Resent-Date: Thu, 11 Nov 2004 20:11:50 -0500

    8) Ever Upward: At Nearly 1.5 Million,
    US Prison Population at New High
    11/12/04
    http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/362/upward.shtml

    9) New College of California
    Center for Education and Social Action (CESA)
    Listing of Peace and Social Justice Events, November 12 - 15, 2004

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    1) ALL OUT IN SUPPORT OF THE LOCAL 2 HOTEL WORKERS!
    SOLIDARITY RALLY
    Saturday, November 20 at 11 a.m.
    Union Square, Downtown San Francisco

    Initiated by: Million Worker March Committee
    Co-sponsored by:
    San Francisco Labor Council
    UNITE-HERE Local 2
    ILWU Local 10 Executive Board

    Four thousand San Francisco hotel workers have been locked out for
    more than a month. The hotel owners -- representing Hilton, Hyatt,
    Holiday Inn, Sheraton and the other major chains -- have flown in
    hundreds of strikebreakers from around the country to smash the
    San Francisco hotel workers and their union. It is a defining struggle
    that will set the stage for broader attacks on wages, pensions,
    full-time work and the very existence of health coverage for
    working Americans.

    The global multinationals that own the major hotels and other
    industries, make profits in the billions, but 61% of U.S. corporations
    and 71% of corporations that have offices overseas pay no taxes
    at all while their profits soar. The bosses are demanding that hotel
    workers pay the escalating cost of healthcare. They seek to prevent
    workers from having a unified expiration date on contracts precisely
    to prevent workers from carrying out a united defense of their
    interests and, by fragmenting workers, to undermine the union.

    We call on workers everywhere to unite and to support the locked-out
    hotel workers on their picket lines. Their fight is our fight. As the
    motto of the International Longshore and Warehouse Workers
    proclaims: "An Injury to One Is An Injury to All."

    Join us at this "Stand By The Hotel Workers and Their Pickets" rally
    in Union Square in San Francisco, followed by a March to join the
    pickets at key hotels.

    ALSO:

    SOLIDARITY NEEDED WITH UFCW GROCERY WORKERS

    UFCW Grocery Workers are mobilzing on Nov. 19 at Oakland,
    San Francisco, Berkeley and San Jose grocery stores and
    supermarkets.

    For information about the UFCW actions and the Locked-Out Local 2
    Hotel Workers solidarity actions, contact these web sites:

    * www.millionworkermarch.org

    * www.unitehere.org

    * www.bayareacoaliton.org

    Million Worker March Committee,
    c/o ILWU Local 10,
    400 North Point St., San Francisco, CA 94133
    Tel. 415-771-2028

    Solidarity Statement from the Million Worker March Committee
    with the Local 2 Locked-Out Hotel Workers

    Four thousand San Francisco hotel workers have been locked out for
    more than a month. Hotel workers in Los Angeles and Washington D.C.
    are fighting as well for a contract with a common expiration date.
    These are workers who do the most difficult jobs from room cleaners
    to cooks to front desk staff. The low wages they receive are designed
    to keep them in permanent poverty.

    Most of these workers -- many of whom are African-American as
    well as Latino and Asian immigrants -- work two jobs to survive
    and provide for their families. They are fighting to protect their
    health care, pensions, wages and the right to contracts that expire
    at the same time as do other hotel contracts around the country so
    the bosses cannot fragment the struggle for decent working conditions.

    They need our support and the support of workers across America.
    By targeting the most vulnerable of workers, the hotel owners are
    setting the stage for a generalized assault upon for the healthcare
    benefits of all workers in the United States, union and non-union.
    Millions of other workers are threatened with contracts that deprive
    them of their health care -- from airline to grocery workers.

    This is a coordinated corporate offensive. Let there be no mistake
    about it. The Hotel owners, representing Hilton, Hyatt, Holiday Inn
    and Sheraton and the other major chains, have flown in hundreds
    of strikebreakers from around the country to smash the San Francisco
    hotel workers and their union. This is a class war on behalf of
    corporate and banking America.

    The global multinationals, that own the major hotels and other
    industries, make profits in the billions, but 61% of U.S. corporations
    and 71% of corporations that have offices overseas pay no taxes
    at all while their profits soar. These are the stakes.

    The Million Worker March Organizing Committee and the Million
    Worker Movement (contact www.millionworkermarch.org) call upon
    workers to forge their own agenda and to unite in exposing and
    resisting the national epidemic of union busting and the all out
    attacks on our healthcare, wages, pensions, social services and the
    vital infrastructure of our society.

    We call on workers everywhere to unite and to support the locked-out
    hotel workers on their picket lines. Their fight is our fight. As the
    motto of the International Longshore and Warehouse Workers Union
    proclaims: "An Injury to One Is An Injury to All."

    The defense of the locked-out hotel workers today is a fight to alert
    and mobilize workers in America who face give-back contracts that
    jeopardize decent healthcare. We call upon rank and file workers
    to urge your union to stand with our brothers and sisters:

    * Adopt a hotel and join in informational picketing.

    * Join us November 20, 2004 at 11:00 a.m. for a "Stand By The
    Hotel Workers and Their Pickets" rally in Union Square in San
    Francisco followed by a March to join the pickets at key hotels.

    * Organize a telephone campaign flooding hotel chain owners with
    calls demanding that the bosses pay for healthcare benefits and
    open the books on their billion dollar profits.

    Keep the struggle alive: defend the right of hotel workers to healthcare,
    decent wages and full benefits. In San Francisco the hotels that have
    locked out workers include:

    Crown Plaza, San Francisco Hilton, Grand Hyatt, Holiday Inn/Civic
    Center Holiday Inn/Express @ Wharf, Holiday Inn/Fisherman's
    Wharf, Hyatt Regency, OMNI, Palace Hotel, St. Francis Hotel,
    Mark Hopkins.

    * Toll-free phone numbers for these hotels are:

    (866) 655-4669 Holiday Inns

    (888) 625-4988 Starwood-St. Francis

    (800) 228-3360 Hyatt Hotels

    (800) 445-8667 HILTON Hotels

    (800) 819-5053 Four Seasons

    (800) 465-4329 Intercontinental Hotels-Mark Hopkins

    (800) 843-6664 Omni Hotels

    * * *


    ERS

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    2) Iraqi Insurgents Shoot Down U.S. Army Helicopter
    By ROBERT F. WORTH and JAMES GLANZ
    FALLUJA, Iraq, Nov. 12
    http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/12/international/middleeast/12cnd-iraq.html?h
    p&ex=1100322000&en=82063e5b6cd40c73&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    FALLUJA, Iraq, Nov. 12 - Insurgents shot down an Army helicopter
    north of Baghdad today, wounding its three crew members, military
    officials in Baghdad said.

    Earlier today, insurgents attacked an American patrol in southern
    Baghdad, killing one American and wounding three others, the
    miiltary said.

    The UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter was hit by anti-aircraft fire in
    Taji, 12 miles north of the capital, the military said. The crew
    members injured in the attack were rescued and are expected
    to recover. The helicopter was recovered.

    This was the third time an American helicopter was shot down
    this week. On Thursday, in separate incidents to the north and
    southeast of Falluja, two Super Cobra helicopters were brought
    down after being fired on from the ground, military officials said.
    Both Marine pilots and their two-man crews escaped after being
    picked up by American troops in the area, and one of the pilots
    was injured, officials said.

    In Falluja, on the fifth day of an American campaign against
    insurgents, a battle erupted near a mosque in northwest part
    of the city today just hours after the Marines said insurgents were
    now trapped in the south of the city, Reuters reported.

    "They can't go north because that's where we are,'' Master Sgt. Roy
    Meek told Reuters. "They can't go west because of the Euphrates
    River and they can't go east because we have a huge presence there.
    So they are cornered in the south." The news agency reported that
    relief agencies were calling on the interim Iraqi government and
    American forces to grant relief workers and medics access to the
    city, saying more than a hundred families were in desperate need
    of help and describing the situation as a "big disaster."

    A military spokeswoman, Capt. Angela Bowman, told Reuters that
    Mosul was calm overnight, after insurgents appeared to have opened
    up a second front in the fighting by overruning police stations and
    laying siege on the provincial headquarters there.

    The insurgents in Mosul stormed a half-dozen police stations and
    looted the buildings of weapons, ammunition and body armor,
    police officials and witnesses said. By the afternoon, they had
    seized five bridges running across the Tigris River, which splits
    the city in half.

    The American military said it had mounted a major counteroffensive
    in Mosul hoping to control the violence before guerrillas could seize
    the government center. But at nightfall, carloads of guerrillas
    continued to roam the streets freely, melting away at the approach
    of American troops.

    "It's very fluid," Lt. Col. Paul Hastings, an Army spokesman, said in
    a telephone interview near midnight. "It's been going on for much
    of the day, and it's still going on."

    Brig. Gen. Carter Ham, the commander of American forces in
    northern Iraq, said in an e-mail message early today from his
    headquarters in Mosul that there had been "some tough fighting"
    on Thursday, but that the city was "quite calm" at the moment.
    "I do expect more attacks on Friday," General Ham said, adding that
    it was "hard to say if the enemy includes some who may have left
    Falluja, but clearly they are responding to operations there."

    Violence surged throughout the Sunni triangle west of Baghdad, with
    ambushes, bombings and mortar attacks jolting Tikrit, Kirkuk,
    Hawija, Samarra and the provincial capital of Ramadi, just 30 miles
    west of Falluja. Iraqi officials have imposed curfews on Baghdad,
    Mosul, Baiji, Ramadi and Falluja. A curfew has been in place in
    Samarra since last month.

    American military officials have said in recent days that insurgent
    leaders probably fled Falluja before the assault on the city began
    and could be organizing the counter offensive now unfolding
    across the country.

    The invasion of Falluja, now in its fifth day, is seen by military
    planners as a way to smash the largest safe haven for the insurgency
    in Iraq. Since the assault began on Monday, about 600 rebels have
    been killed, along with at least 19 American and 5 Iraqi soldiers,
    military officials said.

    American marines and soldiers seem to be carrying out a pincer
    movement in Falluja, pressing insurgents ever farther south in intense
    fighting. But the military has been forced to detach an armored
    battalion from its cordon operation around Falluja to help quell
    violence in Mosul, about 200 miles to the north, siphoning off about
    a third of the forces that had been put in place to catch insurgents
    attempting to flee the fighting here.

    In downtown Baghdad, a powerful suicide car bomb exploded on
    a busy commercial street Thursday morning, killing at least 17 people
    and wounding at least 30 others. In the evening, explosions rattled
    across the capital with a frequency not seen here since August, when
    American soldiers fought a Shiite uprising in the south.

    In Falluja, the Second Battalion of the Seventh Cavalry pressed south
    and east from Highway 10, which runs across the middle of the city,
    sparking heavy fighting in the neighborhoods of Resala, Nazal and
    Jebail. Another unit, the Second Battalion of the Second Infantry,
    swung south and west through an industrial area, seemingly
    trapping the insurgents in a pincer.

    But in the center of the movement, heading due south, a Marine
    battalion ran into ambushes, stiff counterattacks and at least one
    booby-trapped house, all of which slowed their advance. This
    advance moved through Sinai, a neighborhood known both for
    car garages and hidden weapons caches, and Shuhada, a relatively
    modern residential area at Falluja's southernmost edge.

    "They're all over the place," a Marine officer, Lt. Christopher Wilkens,
    said. "They're very well trained."

    Still, some insurgents have tried to escape across the Euphrates
    River to the south and west of the city by boat or swimming. On
    Thursday, Apache gunship helicopters destroyed five rowboats and
    a motorboat as insurgents prepared to board them.

    Insurgents in the towns and rural areas to the north of Falluja have
    become more sophisticated in their bomb and mortar attacks,
    military officials said. In one apparently coordinated attack on
    Thursday near Karma, one group fired mortars at an American
    position. As an armored vehicle began moving on the only road
    leading to the mortar's point of origin, another group detonated
    a roadside bomb and began firing mortars at the vehicle. No one
    was injured in the attack.

    Military commanders had hoped to take time in the next few days
    to clear out insurgents thought to be congregating in Karma, north
    of Falluja, and Amariya, to the south. But with the armored battalion,
    called a Stryker group, headed up to Mosul, that operation could
    become much more difficult.

    Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, arriving Thursday in El Salvador
    at the start of official visits across Central and South America, said
    the American and Iraqi offensive in Falluja was going well and that
    hundreds of adversary fighters had already been killed.

    "They are well along in that task and they'll finish it successfully,"
    Mr. Rumsfeld said. "It will end, and it will end successfully, and it
    will no longer be a safe haven for terrorists or extremists."

    Mr. Rumsfeld acknowledged that an unknown number of insurgent
    leaders and fighters had fled Falluja before the offensive began.
    "I have no doubt but that some people did leave before it started,"
    he said. "We also know that there are a number of hundreds that
    didn't and have been killed. Others have been captured."

    As American forces continued their advance through Falluja, support
    troops were filtering into more secure parts of the city to begin what
    officials called an ambitious relief and reconstruction effort. "The
    marines and Iraqis are working to bring humanitarian assistance
    right behind tactical units once areas are clear and secure," one
    senior American officer in Iraq said in an e-mail message.
    "There is, for example, already food and water going in to
    certain areas, and Iraqi medical assistance/supplies going
    into the hospital."

    One of the Super Cobra helicopters came down just west of Falluja
    after being struck by a shoulder-fired missile. The pilot and crew
    were rescued by the Third Light Armored Regiment, which is posted
    nearby. The other helicopter was struck by a rocket-propelled grenade
    10 miles north of the city. The pilot was rescued but the burning
    helicopter was destroyed.

    On Thursday afternoon, the Muslim Scholars Association, a powerful
    group of Sunni clerics that says it represents 3,000 mosques, held
    a news conference in Baghdad at which it condemned the offensive
    in Falluja and renewed its call for a boycott of elections scheduled
    for January. The clerics have been uncompromising in their stand
    against the Americans and the interim Iraqi government, and it is
    unclear how much impact their protest will have on the elections.
    A spokesman for the group said American-led forces conducted
    dawn raids on the homes of Harith al-Dhari, the group's director,
    and Abdul Salam al-Kubaisi, a senior official, in the capital.

    If a widespread Sunni boycott of the elections were to ensue, it could
    jeopardize the legitimacy of the vote. Sunnis make up a fifth of Iraq
    and are still embittered after having been ousted from power during
    the initial American invasion.

    American and Iraqi officials have also said they need to dampen the
    insurgency in Ramadi. The Marines still control the government center
    and police headquarters, and maintain bases on the edge of downtown,
    but are fending off daily assaults.

    In the northern oil city of Kirkuk, a car bomb aimed at a convoy
    carrying the Kurdish provincial governor, Abdul-Rahman Mustafa,
    exploded in the city center, wounding 16 people, news agencies
    reported. In Baquba, about 30 men attacked an Iraqi National Guard
    post at dawn, killing one guardsman and injuring three others.
    A mortar attack on a national guard compound in Hawija wounded
    eight people, and a car bomb at a petrol station in Hilla injured four.

    No word emerged of the fate of three relatives of the Iraqi prime
    minister, Ayad Allawi , who were kidnapped on Tuesday night.
    A group called Ansar al-Jihad posted an Internet message on
    Wednesday saying it would behead the hostages within 48 hours
    unless Dr. Allawi halted the invasion of Falluja and released all
    prisoners in Iraq. Those kidnapped were Ghazi Majeed Allawi,
    a 75-year-old first cousin, his wife and their daughter-in-law.

    A Lebanese satellite channel broadcast a tape showing weeping
    relatives of one of the women begging for her release, Reuters
    reported. The relatives said the captive, Wasnaa Muhammad Jaafar
    Husseini, was nine months pregnant. "She's pregnant, and she can't
    hold up to this," said a sobbing woman who identified herself as
    Ms. Husseini's sister.

    Robert Worth reported from Falluja and James Glanz from Baghdad.

    Ed Wong and Khalid al-Ansary contributed reporting from Baghdad,
    Dexter Filkins from Falluja, an Iraqi employee of The New York
    Times from Mosul, Eric Schmitt from Washington, Thom Shanker
    from El Salvador and Maria Newman from New York.

    Copyright 2004 The New York Times

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    3) Falluja a 'Big Disaster,' Aid Needed - Red Crescent
    By Omar Anwar
    BAGHDAD (Reuters)
    Fri Nov 12, 2004 07:37 AM ET
    http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=6798438&src=eD
    ialog/GetContent§ion=news

    BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Aid agencies called on U.S. forces and the Iraqi
    government to allow them to deliver food, medicine and water
    to Falluja on Friday and said four days of intense fighting had turned
    the city into a "big disaster."

    The Iraqi Red Crescent Society, which receives support from foreign
    agencies including the Red Cross and UNICEF, said it had asked
    U.S. forces and Iraq's interim government to let them deliver relief
    goods to Falluja and establish medics there.

    But it said it had received no reply.

    "We call on the Iraqi government and U.S. forces to allow us to do
    our humanitarian duty to the innocent people," said Firdoos al-Ubadi,
    Red Crescent spokeswoman.

    "This is their responsibility," she said, adding that judging by reports
    received from refugees and pictures broadcast on television, Falluja
    was a "big disaster."

    A U.S. military spokesman said the Red Crescent had permission
    to help refugees in towns around Falluja, but could not say if it had
    been granted access to the city itself.

    The Red Crescent has seven teams of doctors and relief workers,
    backed by trucks of food and other aid ready to go into each
    of Falluja's districts when the word is given.

    About 10,000 U.S. soldiers and Marines, backed by heavy artillery
    and war planes, surged into Falluja from several directions on
    Monday night, launching an offensive on rebels.

    The U.S. military estimates that 600 militants have been killed in
    four days of street fighting.

    Scores of buildings in Falluja have been completely destroyed, with
    TV footage showing some districts all but leveled. There has been
    no water and electricity for days and food shops have been closed,
    residents say. The stench of dead bodies is hanging over some areas
    of the city, the say.

    HIT BY SHRAPNEL

    U.S. commanders say civilian casualties have been low, but residents
    dispute that, describing incidents in which non-combatants, including
    women and children, have been killed by shrapnel or hit by bombs.

    In one case earlier this week, a 9-year-old boy died after being hit
    in the stomach by shrapnel. Unable to reach a hospital, he died hours
    later of blood loss.

    "Anyone who gets injured is likely to die because there's no medicine
    and they can't get to doctors," said Abdul-Hameed Salim, a volunteer
    with the Iraqi Red Crescent. "There are snipers everywhere. Go outside
    and you're going to get shot."

    Rasoul Ibrahim, a father of three, fled Falluja on Thursday morning and
    arrived with his wife and children in Habbaniya, about 12 miles to the
    west, on Thursday night.

    He said families left in the city were in desperate need.

    "There's no water. People are drinking dirty water. Children are dying.
    People are eating flour because there's no proper food," he told aid
    workers in Habbaniya, which has become a refugee camp, with around 2,000
    families sheltering there.

    Ubadi said many families taking refuge in Habbaniya and other villages
    nearby were suffering from diarrhea and malnutrition and needed medicine as
    well as basic necessities such as lentils, sugar, bread, tea and candles.

    An aid convoy reached Habbinya on Thursday to help hundreds of families
    living in schools, shops and tents on the streets, but the biggest concern
    is now Falluja, where the Red Crescent has identified at least 150 families
    in desperate need.

    She said a convoy of aid, including drinking water, food and medicine, was
    ready to leave for Falluja from Amiriya, a town to the south, but needed
    permission from U.S. forces.

    (c) Copyright Reuters 2004.

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    4) Falluja Battle Erupts, Unrest Spreads Elsewhere
    By Michael Georgy and Fadel al-Badrani
    FALLUJA (Reuters)
    Fri Nov 12, 2004 09:34 AM ET
    http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=6799628&src=eD
    ialog/GetContent§ion=news

    FALLUJA (Reuters) - A battle erupted near a mosque in northwest Falluja
    Friday just hours after U.S. Marines said insurgents were now trapped in
    the south of the city.

    Insurgents determined to show they are undeterred by the four-day-old
    offensive in Iraq's most rebellious city have hit back hard with attacks
    and bombings elsewhere, causing two days of bloody chaos in the northern
    city of Mosul.

    Iraqi authorities struggling to contain the unrest roiling Sunni Muslim
    cities have imposed curfews on Baghdad, Mosul, Baiji, Ramadi and Falluja
    this week. A curfew has been in force in Samarra since U.S.-led forces
    stormed it last month.

    U.S. Captain Angela Bowman described Mosul as calm overnight, with its
    three million residents under a dusk-to-dawn curfew, after Thursday's
    attacks on nine police stations.

    An American soldier was killed in the Mosul fighting, the military said,
    and Bowman said U.S. planes staged air strikes on Thursday as U.S. and
    Iraqi forces sought to restore order.

    "Iraqi National Guard and multinational forces are restoring security to
    those areas of the city where terrorists are attacking from, primarily in
    the southwestern area," she said.

    Machinegun fire and grenade blasts echoed across northern Baghdad's Sunni
    Adhamiya district Friday as rebels fought national guards, witnesses said.
    The clashes subsided later.

    Heavy fighting resumed in Falluja's northwestern Jolan district, where
    resistance had dwindled in the previous 24 hours, a Reuters correspondent
    with Marines in the area said.

    Gunmen emerged on a rooftop beside a mosque as Marine tanks headed for the
    area. Troops evacuated two U.S. casualties.

    Smoke rose from an ice factory on the edge of Jolan after rebels fired
    three rockets at U.S. forces there, residents said. A huge explosion shook
    Jolan later, but its cause was not clear.

    The U.S. military acknowledges that insurgent leaders and foreign militants
    may have fled Falluja before the attack began Monday night, but says those
    who remain are bottled up.

    "They can't go north because that's where we are. They can't go west
    because of the Euphrates river and they can't go east because we have a
    huge presence there. So they are cornered in the south," Marine Master
    Sergeant Roy Meek told Reuters.

    "BIG DISASTER"

    Tank crews said they had driven rebels through a "ghost town" to a southern
    area the Americans say is a stronghold for foreign militants led by al
    Qaeda ally Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.

    The U.S. military says 18 U.S. and at least 5 Iraqi troops have been killed
    and 178 American soldiers wounded in Falluja.

    The Iraqi Red Crescent Society urged U.S. forces and the Iraqi government
    to let it deliver food, medicine and water to Falluja, describing
    conditions there as a "big disaster."

    "We call on the Iraqi government and U.S. forces to allow us to do our
    humanitarian duty to the innocent people," said Red Crescent spokeswoman
    Firdoos al-Ubadi.

    A U.S. military spokesman said the Red Crescent had permission to help the
    many civilians who have fled Falluja, but could not say if it had been
    granted access to the city itself.

    Rasoul Ibrahim, a father of three, fled Falluja on foot on Thursday morning
    and arrived with his wife and children in Habbaniya, about 12 miles to the
    west, at night.

    He said families left in the city were in desperate need.

    "There's no water. People are drinking dirty water. Children are dying.
    People are eating flour because there's no proper food," he told aid
    workers in Habbaniya, which has become a refugee camp, with around 2,000
    families sheltering there.

    Interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi, writing in Britain's Sun newspaper,
    said the Falluja offensive would improve security across Iraq and pave the
    way for elections due in January.

    Violence in Falluja and elsewhere in Iraq has taken a toll on U.S. forces.
    Two planes ferried 102 seriously wounded soldiers from Iraq to the main
    U.S. military hospital in Germany Thursday, joining 125 who arrived earlier
    in the week.

    Marie Shaw, spokeswoman at Landstuhl hospital, said 11 more soldiers
    wounded in combat were due to arrive Friday.

    U.S. spokesman Lieutenant-Colonel Steve Boylan said in Baghdad an estimated
    600 rebels had died in Falluja so far.

    Insurgents have kidnapped Dean Sadek, an American of Lebanese origin who
    works at Baghdad airport, Al Jazeera television said. It showed Sadek and
    his identity papers in a video issued by a group called the 1920 Revolution
    Brigades. (Additional reporting by Omar Anwar, Luke Baker and Lin
    Noueihed in Baghdad, Sabah al-Bazee in Samarra and Dubai bureau)

    (c) Copyright Reuters 2004.

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    5) Subject: Mordechai released again!
    From: Jeanie Shaterian
    Date: Thu, 11 Nov 2004 17:42:10 -0800


    Mordechai is released and back at St. George's, his things returned.
    Ha'aretz said the release was to discourage him from speaking to the press.
    He said this afternoon on Israeli TV in English, "One, two, three times, how
    many times do they need to arrest me for the same thing?" He is under house
    arrest, the conditions to be announced. He is exhausted but otherwise okay.

    The Presiding Bishop made a strong statement to Israeli and US authorities.

    Hope you are well!

    Jeanie
    "Your imagination is your preview of life's coming attractions." - Albert
    Einstein
    Jacqueline Cabasso, Executive Director
    Western States Legal Foundation
    1504 Franklin Street, Suite #202
    Oakland, California USA 94612
    Tel: (510) 839-5877 Fax: (510) 839-5397
    E-mail: wslf@earthlink.net
    Web site: www.wslfweb.org
    part of the Abolition 2000 Global Network to
    Eliminate Nuclear Weapons

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    6) Bush and Blair Meet to Discuss Mideast Peace
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Filed at 12:41 p.m. ET
    November 12, 2004
    http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/national/AP-Bush-Blair.html?hp&ex=1100322000
    &en=a8a52044c77f3a90&ei=5094&partner=homepage

    WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Bush said Friday the death of Yasser Arafat
    provides ``a great chance to establish a Palestinian state'' and a broader
    Middle East peace.

    At a joint White House news conference, Bush and British Prime Minister Tony
    Blair pledged their support for a fresh stab at peace. The president said it
    was up to Palestinians to elect a democratic government and Arafat's
    successors to allow freedoms to take root.

    ``We'll hold their feet to the fire to make sure that democracy prevails,''
    he said.

    Bush, whose policy in Iraq frayed relations with France, Germany and other
    traditional allies, also said he intends to travel to Europe as soon as
    possible after his second inaugural, on Jan. 20.

    He said he looked forward to using the ``combined strength of Europe and
    America'' to advance freedom.

    The leaders spoke from the stately East Room shortly after the Palestinian
    leader was laid to rest in a chaotic scene in Ramallah. The Bush and Blair
    governments hope a change in Palestinian leadership might open new avenues
    toward peace.

    There was fresh news, too, in Iraq, a chilling reminder of the perilous life
    of the Middle East: Insurgents downed a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter
    north of Baghdad, wounding three crew members. In their two days of
    meetings, Blair had hoped to shift Bush's attention from Iraq to the stalled
    Mideast peace process.

    While the president coupled his call for a Palestinian state with his
    unwavering support of Israeli security, Blair stressed the need to bolster
    Palestinians.

    ``If we want a viable Palestinian state, we want to make sure the political,
    the economic and the security infrastructure of that state is shaped and
    comes into being,'' the British prime minister said.

    ``We've got the chance over the next few months, with the election of a new
    Palestinian president, to put the first marker down,'' Blair said.

    Bush didn't commit to a Mideast conference or sending a U.S. envoy to the
    region -- two items sought by Europeans. But he did talk more optimistically
    than usual about the prospects for a Palestinian state.

    ``I intend to use the next four years to spend the capital of the United
    States on such a state,'' Bush said. ``I believe it is in the interests of
    the world that such a truly free state develop. I know it is in the interest
    of the Palestinian people.''

    He said there was a ``new opportunity'' for resolving the decades-old
    stalemate and put the onus on the new Palestinian leadership.

    The United States is ``looking forward to working with Palestinian leaders
    who are committed to fighting terrorism and committed to democratic
    reform,'' Bush said.

    Arafat was viewed as a hero by Palestinians, a terrorist by Israel. Bush
    refused to deal with the Palestinian leader in his final years.

    The president sounded cool about the prospects of attending an international
    conference on Middle East peace. ``I'm all for conferences,'' he said,
    ``just as long as a conference produces something.''

    Blair lost political ground at home for being Bush's steadfast comrade in
    the U.S.-led war in Iraq that was unpopular in Europe.

    Bush dismissed critics of Blair who call the British prime minister a lackey
    of the United States. ``He's plenty capable of making up his own mind'' on
    Iraq and other issues, Bush said. ``When times get tough, he doesn't wilt.''

    Bush and Blair said the prime minister's motives are pure -- protecting the
    British people.

    ``We are not fighting the war against terrorism because we are an ally of
    the United States,'' Blair said. ``We are an ally of the United States
    because we believe in fighting this war on terrorism. ... We share the same
    objectives, we share the same values.''

    Bush opened the news conference by calling Blair ``a statesman and a
    friend'' and said U.S.-British relations have never been stronger. He listed
    accomplishments by the nations' forces in Afghanistan and Iraq.

    He warned that with upcoming Iraqi elections, ``the desperation of the
    killers will grow and the violence could escalate.'' But he said victory in
    Iraq would be a blow to terrorists everywhere.

    Bush and Blair both said they oppose any attempt by Iran to develop nuclear
    weapons. ``There's an agreement in the international community'' on that,
    said the British leader.

    Copyright 2004 The Associated Press

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    7) Subject: In Memory of Yasser Arafat
    From: "fpa-news"
    Date: Thu, 11 Nov 2004 19:45:58 -0500
    To: fpa-newslist@freepalestinealliance.org
    Resent-From: fpa-newslist@freepalestinealliance.org
    Resent-Date: Thu, 11 Nov 2004 20:11:50 -0500

    In Memory of a Fallen Leader

    In honor and remembrance of the passing of the Chairman of the Executive
    Committee of the Palestine Liberation Organization and President of the
    Palestine National Authority, Yasser Arafat, the Free Palestine Alliance -
    USA, joins our people in Palestine and throughout exile in calling on the
    Palestinian and Arab community and all peace and justice loving people in
    the United States to observe 3 full days of national mourning, remembrance,
    and a steadfast of reciprocal solidarity and unity.

    We call on all to display on their homes, institutions and property
    Palestinian flags, scarfs, or other symbols of the Palestinian national
    movement for liberation and justice.

    The life and passing of Abu Ammar embodies the very struggle of our people
    in their totality, in all of its opposing complexities, critical junctures,
    endless pain, and stubborn victories. Like him, many have passed before,
    either as a result of curfews, confinement, and imprisonment, or by rockets,
    bullets, tanks and fighter planes. In all, the target has always been
    Palestine, yet the victor will always be Palestine. With every fallen
    leader, we inch forward in our journey home - be it in a coffin through
    France and Egypt, or on the shoulders of our embattled youth, we are
    destined to go home free and liberated of Israeli Apartheid and colonial
    bigotry.

    The legacy of Yasser Arafat is inextricable from that of the entirety of not
    only the Palestinian people, but all those struggling for freedom. Through
    the confinement of Yasser Arafat during the assault on Janin Camp, the
    attempt was to imprison Palestine. Today, and during the assault on Falluja
    and the people of Iraq, the Arab people bid farewell to a sea of victims
    from the hills of Palestine to the banks of the Tigris and the Euphrates, as
    the attempt to imprison Iraq intensifies.

    As we hold our tears back for those who have fallen in the camps of exile
    and Palestine and the streets of Iraq, and as we salute in struggle convoys
    of passing leadership, we know too well that ours is inevitably the future.

    Let every flag and kuffiyya fly high in honor of all those who have passed -
    from Falluja to Rafah and from Baghdad to Jerusalem.

    The Free Palestine Alliance - USA
    November 11, 2004

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    8) Ever Upward: At Nearly 1.5 Million,
    US Prison Population at New High
    11/12/04
    http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/362/upward.shtml

    The number of people in prison in the United States increased again last
    year, according to a report released Sunday by the Justice Department's
    Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS). According to the annual report,
    American prisons held 1,470,045 inmates as of December 31, 2003, an increase
    of 2.1% over the previous year. (For those wondering about the oft-cited
    figure of 2.2 million prisoners in the US, the discrepancy lies in the fact
    that Sunday's report does not count people imprisoned in jails.)

    Southern Correctional Institution, Troy, NC
    The drug war continues to play a significant role in the expansion of the
    prison population. According to BJS, 20% of all prison inmates are serving
    time for drug charges. "Drug-related" crimes, such as property theft by
    addicts or violent conflict-resolution in unregulated drug markets, and to a
    much lesser degree, drug-induced violence, create an unknown number of
    additional drug war-related inmates.

    Despite sentencing reforms that began taking hold in various states
    beginning in the late 1990s, the number of state prisoners continues to
    increase, rising by 1.6% last year. In California, for instance, where
    voters passed the "treatment not prison" Proposition 36 in 2002, the state
    prison population increased by more than 3,000 people last year. Similarly,
    in Texas, where authorities have moved to ease parole revocations in a move
    to keep inmate numbers down, the inmate population actually increased by
    nearly 5,000.

    But once again, the federal prison system and the federal war on drugs are
    the prime factor pushing the numbers higher. The federal prison population
    grew by 5.8%, nearly four times the rate of growth in the states. While
    only slightly more than one-tenth the size of the combined state prison
    systems, federal prisons accounted for fully one-third of the growth in
    prisoners, accounting for 9,500 of the nearly 30,000-prisoner increase in
    the overall prison population last year. With drug offenders making up 55%
    of all federal prisoners (only 13% are doing time for violent crimes), the
    federal drug war is the driving force not only in the increase in federal
    prisoners but in the overall increase in prisoners nationwide.

    Given the long-term decrease in overall crime rates since 1991, BJS noted
    that the government's version of "sentencing reform," as the report called
    it, had actually increased both prison admissions and average sentence
    length in the period since 1995, with annual admissions jumping from 522,000
    that year to 615,000 in 2003. Similar, sentence lengths increased from an
    average of 23 months to 30 months during the same period.

    "This increase is largely due to policy changes that have increased the
    amount of time offenders are serving in prison," said the sentencing reform
    group The Sentencing Project in a statement greeting the BJS report. "These
    include such measures as 'three-strikes,' mandatory sentencing, and 'truth
    in sentencing,'" the group noted.

    In one landmark, again largely a function of the drug war, the number of
    women prison inmates has passed the 100,000 mark for the first time. As The
    Sentencing Project noted, "The rapid growth in the rate of women's
    incarceration -- at nearly double the rate for men over the past two decades
    -- is disproportionately due to the war on drugs. Women in prison are more
    likely than men (30% vs. 20%) to be serving a sentence for a drug charge."

    The US also retains its status as the world's greatest jailer nation. With
    an imprisonment rate of 714 per 100,000 population, the US easily outpaced
    second-place Russia with its rate of 584 per 100,000. The US imprisonment
    rate is nearly four times that of neighboring Mexico (169) and more than
    five times that of Great Britain (141).

    As a result of the imprisonment binge, American prisons are stuffed past
    capacity, with all that implies for the quality of life behind bars.
    According to BJS, state prisons were operating at as much as 116% of
    capacity, while the federal prison system is operating at 39% above
    capacity.

    Last but not least, blacks continued to be the largest group of prisoners,
    making up 44% of all inmates, compared to 35% white and 19% Hispanic, with
    2% "other." These proportions have gone almost unchanged in the past
    decade, BJS noted.

    Read the BJS report, "Prisoners in 2003," at
    http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/p03.htm online.

    -- END --

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    Issue #362, 11/12/04 Editorial: The Spirit of Lawfulness |Ever Upward: At
    Nearly 1.5 Million, US Prison Population at New High |In an Hour of
    Conservative Ascendancy: Prospects for Drug Reform at the Federal Level
    During the Next Four Years |Syracuse Reconsiders Drug Policy |Newsbrief:
    Congressional Drug Warrior Threatens Canada Over Marijuana Legislation
    |Newsbrief: In New Twist in Thai Drug War, Police Detain and Drug Test Club
    Goers |Newsbrief: Ann Arbor Officials to Ignore Voters' Will on Medical
    Marijuana |Newsbrief: Georgia Supreme Court Says Wife Can't Consent to
    Search of Home Against Husband's Will |Newsbrief: Austin, Texas, Cop Killed
    Enforcing Marijuana Possession Law |Newsbrief: Supreme Court to Look at Drug
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    9) New College of California
    Center for Education and Social Action (CESA)
    Listing of Peace and Social Justice Events, November 12 - 15, 2004


    Nov 12 at New College - Yael Berda: Defending Political Dissent in Israel
    and Palestine

    Nov 13 at Castro Theater; Nov 14 at Roxie Cinema - 3rdI's Second Annual
    International South Asian Film Festival

    Nov 15 at New College - Media Technology and Democracy Post-Election 2004:
    Where Do We Go from Here?

    Yael Berda:
    Defending Political Dissent in Israel and Palestine

    Friday, November 12th; 5:30 pm: reception; 7:00 pm: Yael Berda will speak
    New College Cultural Center, 766 Valencia Street, San Francisco

    Visiting Israeli human rights attorney and community organizer, Yael Berda
    will speak on the current struggle to defend political dissent in both
    Israel and occupied Palestine. Drawing on her experience as both a community
    organizer and a defense attorney for various political prisoners, Yael Berda
    will give an overview of the state of dissent within Israel and the rising
    voices to bring an end to social, economic and cultural oppression, as well
    as the occupation. She will address how people both inside Israel and in the
    United States can act as solidarity allies to Israelis and Palestinians in
    building solutions through a non-violent struggle.

    Please join us in an evening of discussion and organizing to protect
    democratic dissent and the fight for social justice!

    Donations of $5-20 accepted at the door. Proceeds to go towards the
    International Solidarity Movement, the NLG and legal aid projects in
    Palestine and Israel. No one turned away for lack of funds.

    Sponsored by Northern California Support Group of the International
    Solidarity Movement, Bay Area Chapter of the National Lawyers Guild and New
    College Center for Education and Social Action. For more information about
    this event, please contact jon@newcollege.edu or call 415-437-3425.

    New College's Women's Spirituality Program and the Activism and Social
    Change Emphases are co-sponsoring some of the films at
    3rd I's Second Annual South Asian film Festival

    Saturday, November 13 at the The Castro Theater, S.F.
    Sunday, November 14 at the Roxie Cinema, S.F.

    3rdI's Second Annual International South Asian Film Festival will be held
    Saturday, November 13 at the Castro Theater and Sunday, November 14 at the
    Roxie Cinema. This is a great opportunity to see films showcasing diverse
    images of Indians and other South Asians through art house classics to
    documentary films, from innovative and experimental visions to classic
    Bollywood.

    We will be screening Ritwak Ghatak's film, "Jukti Takko Aar Gappo" (Reason,
    Argument & Story) -- this is a choice opportunity to see this rarely
    screened gem. "Second Generation" about second generation South Asian youth
    living their lives in sync with the pulse of their London, on Saturday
    11/13 at the Castro with actress Parminder Nagra from Bend it Llike Beckham
    and ER (Nagra will be here for a Q&A post screening) . Naturally we have a
    tribute to Bollywood with Shah Rukh Khan's latest "Main Hoon Na" (8:00pm
    11/13) at the Castro which isn't all campy fun and frivolity -- it does
    attempt to address the conflict with India & Pakistan -- and works for the
    whole family as well.

    Sunday's schedule includes a film in Marathi "Eternity" (Anahaat) adapted
    from the original play in Hindi by Surendra Verma "Surya Ki Antim Kiran Se
    Pehli Kiran Tak.'; the documentary "Starkiss: Circus Girls in India" about
    the Great Rayman Circus and the harrowing life the Nepalese girls who are
    recruited for the circus go through
    (http://www.thirdi.org/festival/film/starkiss.htm); and"Laatoo", a
    documentary about the Pakistani dance world. We have two great shorts
    programs: a selection of South Asian women's short films (from the Bay Area
    to Bangladesh) with the award winning A Certain Liberation
    http://www.thirdi.org/festival/film/womenshorts.htm; and lastly a collection
    of South Asian British shorts.

    Last year most shows soled out so we suggest you purchase your tickets
    online in advance. For film program and to purchase tickets in advance,
    please visit: http://www.thirdi.org/festival/index.htm or call 415
    835.4781.

    Media Technology and Democracy Post-Election 2004:
    Where Do We Go from Here?

    Monday, November 15th, 7- 9 pm
    New College Cultural Center, 766 Valencia Street, San Francisco

    What are the lessons of the 2004 elections regarding media, new technology
    and politics? What is on the horizon for the media democracy and media
    justice movements? Media technology has the capacity for both liberation and
    oppression; it can enlighten and obfuscate; serve the interests of progress
    or reaction. From the perspective of the recent elections, an outstanding
    panel talks about the future of media technology and democracy.

    Panelists:

    Dan Coughlin, Executive Director of Pacifica Radio. He was appointed the
    Executive Director of Pacifica Radio in January 2002. Under his stewardship,
    the network pulled itself back from the brink of bankruptcy following a
    debilitating 2-year internal struggle. Pacifica has since undergone the
    largest financial and audience expansion in the network's 55-year history
    while transforming itself into a membership organization with national
    elections for its board of directors. Coughlin previously served as the
    network's news director and as a producer of Democracy Now! He came to
    Pacifica from Inter Press Service (IPS) Third World News Agency, a wire
    service specializing in the Global South, where he worked as a senior editor

    Jan Frel, Political Editor of AlterNet - the highly acclaimed Internet
    information source that provides readers with crucial facts and passionate
    opinions. He recently worked on the Dean for America campaign in Vermont,
    and before that he worked for the public interest journal TomPaine.com. Jan
    graduated from St. Andrews University Scotland with a degree in Geography.
    He says he could have been a better student.

    Art McGee, communications, media, and technology consultant with Online
    Policy Group. Art McGee has over 15 years of experience in the corporate and
    non-profit arenas. He has worked with organizations such as Project Change
    (AntiRacismNet), Media Alliance (San Francisco), TAO Communications (now
    known as the Organization for Autonomous Communications), the Center for
    Third World Organizing (CTWO), the Black Radical Congress (BRC), and the
    Institute for Global Communications (The World's First Non-Profit Internet
    Service Provider), among many others.

    Thenmozhi Soundararjan, Co-founder and Executive Director, Third World
    Majority. She is a filmmaker, singer, and grassroots media activist. As a
    second generation Tamil Untouchable woman, she strives to connect grassroots
    organizers in developing countries with media resources that can widen their
    base of resistance. She was the director and founder of the Center for
    Digital Storytelling's national community programs in which she developed
    the framework for community based digital storytelling. In that capacity she
    has worked with over 200 communities around the country developing grounded
    new media practices for their work. Further she is in residence at the MIT
    Center for Reflective Community Practice writing about her experiences with
    community based digital storytelling. She is also a 2001-2002 Eureka
    foundation fellow.

    Donation: $5 - 10 (sliding scale; no one turned away for lack of funds)

    This event is sponsored by New College Center for Education and Social
    Action. For more information about this event, please contact
    jon@newcollege.edu or call 415-437-3425.

    New College Center for Education & Social Action (CESA)
    Listing of peace and social justice events emailed weekly.
    To subscribe or unsubscribe: jon@newcollege.edu
    For information: Jon Garfield: (415) 437-3425.
    New College CESA: http://www.newcollege.edu/cesa
    New College of California: http://www.newcollege.edu

    [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

    PEACE!

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    WHEN SPIDERS UNITE, THEY CAN TIE DOWN A LION -- Ethiopian Proverb

    NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material is
    distributed without profit or payment to those who have expressed a prior
    interest in receiving this information for non-profit research and
    educational purposes only. For more information go to:
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