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DFA Unity Action - Write Postcards for Obama
Written by Michael Minn   
Tuesday, 17 June 2008

Saturday, June 21, 2008, 3-5PM
Wycoff Bennett Homestead
1669 East 22nd Street
Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn, NY

RSVP and info: annettemont (at) optonline.net

Sheepshead Bay Linkup host Annette Mont will be hosting a DFA Unity Action Event to write postcards to Democratic voters in support of presumptive Democratic Presidential Nominee Barack Obama. With the difficult primary process finally over and a little over four months until the election, now is the time to start building the unity that will be needed to put Barack in the White House. Hand-written letters and postcards get more attention than machine-created form letters...plus it's a great opportunity to make some new friends in the NYC progressive community.

Last Updated ( Monday, 23 June 2008 )
 
Eminent Domain: The American Dream on Sale
Written by Heather Woodfield   
Friday, 13 June 2008

Wednesday, June 18, 2008, 7:00 PM
NYPL South Court Auditorium
Fifth Avenue & 42nd Street / Enter at Fifth Avenue

$15 general admission; $10 library donors, seniors and students with vaid identification. Tickets available online...

Marshall Berman, Professor of Political Science, City College and the Graduate Center; Mindy Fullilove, Professor of Clinical Psychiatry and Public Health at Columbia University; Tom Angotti, Professor of Urban Affairs & Planning at Hunter College; and Brian Berger, photographer/blogger, will discuss the use of eminent domain and how urban renewal is changing the cityscape of New York City. Filmmaker Michael Galinsky will moderate.

After a summary of how the use of eminent domain is shaping our City, an open discussion with the audience will address what all of this means for the future of NYC.


What is the American Dream? Does it mean having a "better life" by creating a home and a community, living together for generations, building and tending relationships to one another and to a place? Or do we create a "better life" by moving up, moving out, removing the old, replacing with the new?

Between 1949 and 1973 urban renewal, a program of the U.S. government, bulldozed 2,500 neighborhoods in 993 American cities and dispossessed one million people. Roots got cut, neighbors and families became separated, languages and cultures were destroyed, and social bonds were broken.

The current exhibition at The New York Public Library, Eminent Domain: Contemporary Photography and the City (through August 29), features the work of five contemporary New York–based photographers - homas Holton, Bettina Johae, Reiner Leist, Zoe Leonard, and Ethan Levitas - whose works intersect and resonate with current concerns about the reorganization of urban space, and its public use, in New York City. Artist Glenn Ligon offers the literal narrative of his own housing in the city. In addition to proposed regulations that threaten First Amendment rights to photograph in public places thus becoming a form of privatization of public space, questions also arise with the current private/public arrangements that characterize much of modern urban development, particularly the legal power of eminent domain, or the taking of private property for public use.

The Atlantic Yards, a hotly contested developer driven project in Brooklyn, will serve as a focus through which the evening will begin. A short trailer from the film *Battle of Brooklyn*, directed by Michael Galinsky and Suki Hawley, will portray the arguments of some of the main players in this current eminent domain debate.

 
Saigon Grill Delivery Workers Awarded $4.6 Million
Written by Bernadette Evangelist   
Thursday, 12 June 2008

Saigon Grill delivery workers courageously protesting unfair and unlawful working conditions, have had a victory.  A U.S. District Court judgment of $4.6 million was awarded to 36 employees of Saigon Grill Restaurant for labor law violations.  For two years, delivery works with the support of Justice Will Be Served!, Democracy for NYC and other community groups, have been picketing Saigon Grill Restaurants on the Upper West Side and University Place.

These workers were fired in March 2007 in retaliation for planning to bring a lawsuit against the owners Simon and Michelle Nget. The workers were represented by Davis Polk & Wardwell in conjunction with the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund and organized by Chinese Staff & Workers' Association and 318 Restaurant Workers Union.

Picketing and boycotting of targeted restaurants will continue.  Contact Justice Will Be Served!   for details.

Last Updated ( Friday, 24 October 2008 )
 
Drinking Liberally
Written by Justin Krebs / Drinking Liberally   
Tuesday, 10 June 2008

Thursday, July 31, 2008 (and every Thursday)
7:30pm onward
Rudy's - 9th btw 44th & 45th
Free! People come and go throughout the night.
[out in the backyard, weather permitting]
www.thetanknyc.org
www.drinkingliberally.org

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 10 June 2008 )
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Drinking Liberally
Written by Justin Krebs / Drinking Liberally   
Tuesday, 10 June 2008

Thursday, July 24, 2008 (and every Thursday)
7:30pm onward
Rudy's - 9th btw 44th & 45th
[out in the backyard, weather permitting]
Free! People come and go throughout the night.
www.thetanknyc.org
www.drinkingliberally.org

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 10 June 2008 )
Read more...
 
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