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CONTINUING EVENTSback to top |
12:30 - 4:00 pm EVERY SUNDAY"Bostonians For The Overthrow Of King George" weekly vigil
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Harvard's Palestine Solidarity Committee will be holding a vigil for Gaza from 11:45 am to 12:15 pm on the steps of Memorial Church in Harvard Yard. All who care for Palestine are invited to attend. Please wear black and spread the word widely.
Meet briefly at the statue to exchange thoughts,
then walk silently around the Yard and nearby streets,
returning to the statue by 12:30pm.
Southeast corner of Rt 27 and 30 (nearest to Brooks Pharmacy).
Come for all or part. Bring a candle, lantern, or flashlight.
Organizer: Sandy Coy.
This is an invitation to join the Boston Tea Party Conference call,
should you wish to join in. Participant call in: 402-756-9100; Access code: 680903#
Join a Friday fast and/or protest in solidarity with illegally detained, often tortured prisoners at Guantanamo and other post 9/11 gulags around the world. The fast began about a year ago when Nobel Peace Laureates Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Adolpho Esquivel, (Argentina), along with others around the world, chose this method to seek the release of our unjustly detained and tortured brothers and sisters.
Here in Boston, local activists Susan McLucas and Phoebe Knopf have joined the Friday fast and will protest every Friday in front of the JFK Building from noon to one. The action, which is rooted in nonviolence, includes speakers, music, hand-outs and petitions to create public pressure to shut down the gulags and to try those responsible for illegal, brutal treatment of thousands of detainees, most of whom are Arab and Muslim men. Susan and Phoebe will be wearing orange jumpsuits. It would be great if folks would join us. There are four more suits people could wear.
"A cell phone captured video of a 23-year-old student being administered multiple Taser shocks by UCLA police on Tuesday. The UCLA student was hit with the Taser shocks multiple times while he was in the Powell Library Computer Lab. According to the paper, (Mostafa) Tabatabainejad did not show ID to community service officers who were conducting a random check," reports NBC.
Watch the video above and witness as the cops bark at Tabatabainejad to get to his feet as simultaneously shock him over and over until he begins crying and screaming for them to stop.
Police are given extensive training on the use of stun guns and in most cases that training involves taking a taser shot and feeling the effects. Depending on each individual's physiology, it takes at least a minute to be able to even stand after a single Taser shot. Over a hundred deaths have occurred in America as a result of taser shocks and Taser's own manual discourages repeated shocks, yet the history of their use tells us that police simply administer repeated shocks until "compliance is gained." This is a euphemism for torture.
The video and the eyewitness reports describe multiple taser shots as Tabatabainejad begs and pleads while at one point screaming, "Here's your Patriot Act, here's your f---ing abuse of power."
The officers repeatedly order Tabatabainejad to stand even as they administer further shocks - sending 50,000 volts of current that override the nervous system and temporarily paralyze muscles shooting through his system again and again. He can't stand and the cops know it, they just get off on the maniacal ego power trip of torture and this is why Tabatabainejad is hit again and again despite his screaming and the protests of the onlookers.
We need to set a precedent now whereby police who use taser stun guns and any other kind of unreasonable force as implements of torture, simply if an individual refuses to have their 4th amendment right illegally violated, are instantly fired, sued and can never work in any sector of government, policing or security again.
ACTION: Call UCLA and demand an investigation into this
incident.
BE POLITE. 310-825-4321
WHAT: Various Oaxaca-based human rights organizations have asked the Oaxaca Solidarity Network to help increase the international presence here by organizing educational delegations to Oaxaca to observe the current, ongoing government repression in the city, and to develop international solidarity efforts.
October 30 this year marked the arrival of some 4000 federal riot (Federal Preventative Police/PFP) police to break up a non-violent popular movement calling for true participatory democracy and an end to widespread government corruption and grinding poverty. Since the PFP arrived in Oaxaca, there have been 7 murders, more than 100 arbitrary detentions, hundreds of wounded and searches without warrants of homes of many popular leaders. There are documented reports of torture and disappearances.
ITINERARY: During the 5 days in Oaxaca, delegates will have a series of meetings with families of the murdered, detained and disappeared, leaders of the popular movement, government officials, human rights activists, journalists, local grassroots indigenous rights organizations, representatives of the business community, police representatives, and U.S. Consul staff. The itinerary also includes a day-long trip to Tlaxiaco, in the Mixteca Alta region, where we’ll meet with the human rights organization Nu’u Ji Kaandi, and people who recently were arbitrarily detained because of their participation in the non-violent social movement..
WHO: Our trip is being organized and hosted by the Oaxaca Solidarity Network, in collaboration with various human rights organizations, and is sponsored by Rights Action. The Oaxaca Solidarity Network is a collective of concerned U.S. and Mexican citizens working to raise international awareness of the non-violent popular social movement here, and create international pressure to end the widespread human rights violations throughout the city and state of Oaxaca.
We invite ANY interested persons or organization to join our delegation. The Oaxacan Solidarity Network and the Red Oaxaqueña de Derechos Humanos have specifically asked for solidarity and for human rights observers, so we are particularly interested in the participation of activists, journalists, lawyers, professors, students and others who, upon return to the U.S. or Canada, can work effectively to put the current abuses into the international spotlight.
COST: This will be a ‘pay-as-you-go’ delegation. Delegates are responsible for their own travel costs to and from Oaxaca; we are also asking for a $100 fee to be paid to the Oaxaca Solidarity Network, to help pay for our costs in planning, hosting and translating for this delegation. We estimate that room, board and travel will cost $55/ day.
CONTACT: Jacob Muller, Oaxaca Solidarity Network,
info@oaxacasolidarity.org
THE EMERGENCY DELEGATION:
The emergency human rights delegation to Oaxaca is being
offered to promote international awareness and solidarity. Participants will
meet with key players on both sides of the conflict:
Participants in the delegation will gain a detailed, balanced and informed glimpse into Oaxacan civil society today, and the dangerous crisis it is facing.
The goals of the delegation are twofold: to provide an in- depth understanding of the Oaxacan popular movement and the government’s response, and to spread that awareness widely upon the delegates’ return to the U.S. and/or Canada. It is our hope that such knowledge and awareness can aid in the growing movement of international solidarity with the people of Oaxaca.
The pressure of international solidarity can help curb the violence, arbitrary detentions and murders of Oaxacans involved in the movement for true democracy and a politics based on hope, respect and justice.
From Carol Moore, a DC activist
Here are just a few of the many resources that will help us accomplish these goals. Check out the ones that most reflect your interests!
DON'T BOMB IRAN SITES
democracyinaction.org/
stopwaroniran.org/
afterdowningstreet.org/iran
antiwar.com/
groups.yahoo.com/group/stopiranwar
dontattackiran.org/
campaigniran.org/
codepink4peace.org/
peace-action.org/
traprockpeace.org
unitedforpeace.org/
worldcantwait.net
WhyAttackIran.Com
women4peace.org/
worldcantwait.org/
psr.org/documents/psr_doc_0/program_4/iran_attack.pdf
HONEST ELECTIONS SITES
BlueRevolution.us
videothevote.org
reportvotingproblems.org/
honestelections.us/
blackboxvoting.org/
verifiedvoting.org/
votefraud.org/
protectmyvote.rescueourdemocracy.org/
IMPEACHMENT SITES
afterdowningstreet.org
impeachbush.org/
impeachbush.tv/
impeachbushcoalition.blogspot.com/
impeachbush.meetup.com/
impeachpac.org/ -
impeachnow.org/
harpers.org/TheCaseForImpeachment.html
thenation.com/doc/20060130/holtzman
From Steve Iskovitz (Green party member and concerned person who is working in southern Louisiana):
As most of you probably know, I'm down here in southern Louisiana working with Emergency Communities, providing relief to Katrina victims.
If you have any of the following items which you're looking to give away, there are people down here in Plaquemines Parish who can use them:
warm clothes-- it doesn't get as cold down here as it does in Boston, but with the dampness and winds, it can get cold in the winter, toys, sports equipment-- a lot of kids down here whose lives have been disrupted, looking for things to do. Today after dinner I played hockey with a little boy in the dining area, with a broken hockey stick and a plastic disk of some sort that was lying around.
tools: Since virtually all buildings were ruined by the flood, many people are involved in rebuilding. There was talk of setting up a tool-lending operation, but someone pointed out that this could be quite inconvenient, and why not utilize the extra tools people probably have lying around in areas not affected by disaster?
Here are some of the tools people have suggested:
hammers
nails
hack-saw blades
wood files, metal files
screwdrivers-- phillips or flathead
crowbars
drywall tape
drills and bits
nailguns
If you have these items and would like to donate them, you should package them tightly in boxes, label the contents, address them to:
Steve Iskovitz Emergency Communities 36342 Highway 11 Buras, LA 70041
Then contact Terra Friedrichs, who will co-ordinate shipping. Here's her contact info:
Boston area people: We're looking for someone who's willing to help deliver the boxes to a drop-off point in Carlisle, Mass.
A call for all people of conscience
to donate to its Lebanon Palestine Emergency Relief Fund.
All donations will be used to help Palestinian and
Lebanese victims of the latest Israeli aggression.
Tel: 760-685-3243
Fax: 360-933-3568
E-mail link
“Olive Branch” Extra Virgin Olive Oil is raised without pesticides or sprays and First-Cold-Pressed. This year we are importing the oil directly from the Palestinian Agricultural Relief Committee (PARC), a non-governmental, non-profit organization in Ramallah which has been on the forefront of supporting Palestinian agriculture since the 1980’s. PARC buys its olive oil from 85 different small farmer cooperatives in the West Bank. It takes care of testing, quality control, bottling, labeling and marketing. Available in 750ml bottles, by the case (12 bottles), or more. Now more than ever, important to Palestinian farmers.
For ordering and other info, please email us at palestinebostonoliveoil@yahoo.com or call Susie at 781-648-6307.
HIV/AIDS continues to attack communities of color around the globe including right here in the United States. As HIV/AIDS has secretly become a "Black disease" federal and state funds have continued to be cut for services to those living with HIV/AIDS. During this talk we will look at how this epidemic has grown and the lack of resources available to fight back.
Larry, manager of Community Relations at AIDS Action Committee of Massachusetts, has worked extensive in the Human Services field in the Boston area for over 20 years. The last several with a focus on HIV/AIDS. He worked at the Boston Living Center for 3 years prior to coming to AAC in the Fall 04. His dedication the HIV/AIDS community is seen in his many affiliations Larry currently sits as Chair of both the Boston EMA Ryan White Planning Council as well as the Boston Medical Center's Center for HIV/AIDS Care and Research's Consumer Advisory Board.
Dr. KumKum Modwel quit a
promising career at Union Carbide because she recognized the
catastrophic threat that the plant posed to its workers and to
the city of Bhopal. She was exposed to the gas during the
disaster and will talk about her experiences at Union Carbide,
as a survivor, and her return visit to Bhopal 20 years later.
More information at
Sunday is election day in Venezuela. There are several aspects to this. All the polls are putting Chavez at 60% a nearly 2 to1 lead over his nearest competitor. But the forces that are laid bare in the movie, the US Government and the Venezuelan elite most visibly represented by the mass media, are still in place. There is some concern that these forces will try to create an artificial crisis about election fraud. See the article below.
Come and see how an artificial crisis is created and what the antidote is. We will also have a short telephone report from a Boston area election observation delegation. Also come celebrate an election victory that will really make a difference.
“THE REVOLUTION WILL NOT BE TELEVISED” Are you ready for a ride on the Cyclone of history? With cameras rolling? Then this is for you. Donnacha O’Briain and Kim Bartley, two filmmakers from Ireland, happened to be in Venezuela when the president, Hugo Chavez, was ousted in a made-for-TV coup and jailed. For 48 hours, Bartley and O’Briain recorded the dizzying events that followed, ending with an uprising on the streets of Caracas and Chavez’s return to the presidential palace. Bartley and O’Briain made a thriller more gripping than most fictional dramas. So is it a riveting slice of history? Agitprop? Was the CIA there behind the scenes? Judge for yourself -- and then find out what really happened.
The tensions portrayed in the movie between the US government along with most of the the commercial media in Venezuela verses the majority of Venezuelans are still alive today. Get the latest election results and a short update direct from Venezuela from a delegation from Boston.
Come out and hear from union leaders in Iraq about the conditions that they organize under and ways that we can help them build solidarity.
*Metadiplomacy Between Cuba and The United States: Lessons from the Kennedy Years *Rafael M. Hernández, Robert F. Kennedy Visiting Professor (from Cuba) in Latin American Studies.
The presentation will be followed by a reception. For more information contact Sean Reagan at reagan@fas.harvard.edu.
Can't Jail the Spirit exhibits Manning's paintings of political prisoners, freedom fighters, the earth and people struggling against oppression. Forhis actions, Tom Manning became a political prisoner ad has taught himself to paint inside the prison walls.
Can't Jail the Spirit was first displayed at the University of Southern Maine in Portland, Maine.A week after it went up, it was censored after intense pressure by state troopers and the police to shut it down.
Tom's paintings transcend concrete and razor wire, and show that they still can't jail the spirit!
OPENING RECEPTION with:
--Fred Hampton Jr. (former Political prisoner and son
of Fred Hampton/Deputy Chairman Black Panther Party,
murdered by the Police in 1969)
--Luis Rosa (FALN Prisoner of war/Puerto Rican
Independentista)
--Tim Swallow (opening ceremony)
--Voices of Liberation (Revolutionary youth)
--Kazi Toure (Former Political Prisoner)
--Ed Rodman
--PRESENTE! ( Music for the revolution)
--Representative from Six Nations( TBC)
Sponsors include:The Jericho Movement, Haymarket People's Fund, American Friends Service Committee, The New England Committee to Defend Palestine, Councillor Chuck Turner, Councillor Felix Arroyo, Voices of Liberation, episcopal divinity school, and the communitychurch of boston.
Joe Hill, the "man who never died", was the most renowned writer of labor songs the United States has produced. After emigrating from Sweden to the U.S. in 1902, Hill bummed his way around working as a musician, longshoreman, machinist, and lumberjack. In 1910 he joined the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), a revolutionary industrial union, and remained an active and dedicated member until his frame-up and execution in 1915 for a murder he almost certainly did not commit.
Joe Hill was the most prominent of a group of songwriters who transformed the IWW into a singing union as it fought the capitalists and strove to establish industrial democracy. Most of HIil's songs are set to the melodies of religious hymns and popular songs of the early 20th century. Several, including "The Preacher and the Slave", "Casey Jones the Union Scab", and "Mr. Block" still have wide currency.
Bo Widerberg's "Joe Hill" film was produced in Sweden in 1971. It is an above-ground color movie which tells the story of Hill's life and the circumstances of his death. The movie was shown at the Cannes Film Festival in 1971 aand subsequently played in first-run theaters around the world. Since then, it has rarely been seen and the IWW and the Lucy Parson's Center are fortunate to have located this copy. .
The Women's International League for Peace and Freedom and the Cambridge Peace Commission invites you to a screening of the important video describing local concern about Boston University's proposed Biolab.
Here is an excerpt from the Boston, Biological Weapons and the New Arms Race promotional materials:
When Boston University was approved to build a BioSafety Level 4 Laboratory in the Roxbury-South End neighborhood of Boston, MA, local activists and politicians took to the streets in protest, citizens spoke out in community forums and scientists signed petitions voicing their concerns for the safety of the local community and ultimately of the world.
The dangers and concerns exposed in this piece should be understood by everyone before this lab or others like it are completed.
Featured speakers on the video include Chuck Turner (Boston City Councilor), Gloria Fox (MA State Rep), Felix Arroyo (Boston City Councilor), Jonathon King (MIT), Richard H Ebright (Rutgers University), David Ozonoff (BU), Lynn C. Klotz (Center for Arms Control, formerly at Harvard), Edward Hammond (The Sunshine Project).
Contributing sponsors of the video are ACE, Alternatives for Community and Environment, and WILPF, The Women's International League for Peace and Freedom
The event is free and will be followed by extensive discussion. Easy parking nearby.
We will be showing the recently released documentary Sir! No Sir. This prize winning film is the story of the anti war movement among GIs
during the Viet Nam War
Admission is $5 to support these great organizations!
"People and the Land" airdrops viewers into the universe of an occupied people, unreeling images of a new form of apartheid based on ethnicity. Challenging U.S. foreign policy and the conventions of the documentary form itself, this film examines the concrete realities of Israel's conduct in the West Bank and Gaza, the level of U.S. support for that conduct through foreign aid, and the human cost of that aid in Palestine and the U.S.
Created at great personal risk by Tom Hayes and his crew. Read the amazing story of what took place during the filming of this PBX documentary and learn first-hand about censorship in modern day America - a gripping account as told by the film's producer Tom Hayes. Zionists lobbied to prevent PBS from showing the film.
57 minutes
More info: arabfilm.com/item/178/a
Account of the filming:
A hard-hitting, humorous and compelling exploration of a land and its people.
Unveiling Palestine shows at 7 pm on the first Thursday of each month. Free Film! Refreshments and door prizes!
Suggested Donation $5
Translation into Spanish
Today, more and more toilers in China are being drawn out of the countryside and into factories, mines, and mills owned by the state and increasingly also by foreign and domestic capital. As this process unfolds, the breakdown of Stalinist apparatuses that we have seen in Europe and the former USSR will inevitably shake the deformed Chinese workers state as well. Come to a discussion on the current situation in China, the class tensions and conflicts in China's cities and workplaces as well as in the countryside, and the growing resistance by Chinese workers and farmers.
Bikes Not Bombs requests your presence at a celebration on Friday, December Eighth in honor of the opening of the new/* Bikes Not Bombs Hub*/*!* You've helped BNB get this far with your contributions of time and money, and we want you to help celebrate this achievement!
In its 22nd year as a grassroots organization, BNB is moving its bicycle recycling and education facility to Jamaica Plain's Brewery Complex at 284 Amory Street. Please join BNB's teens and their families, bicycle enthusiasts, long-time supporters, and new neighbors as we push workbenches aside to make room for a party! Crafts will be for sale by our Girls In Action youth group, a raffle will entice you, and we're working up the entertainment: salsa dancing, teen spoken word performance, classic Ethiopian music with acoustic brass, saxophones, strings, drums and singers, and a Trinidad-style steel drum group from Dorchester. All performing groups feature Bikes Not Bombs volunteers. Face painting and fun for younger folks too! Laria Foods will generously provide delicious vegetarian Middle Eastern cuisine, and more treats TBA.
We have a lot to celebrate; this long-term home will provide a larger, more energy-efficient base for most of BNB's youth development and community building programs, our offices, and our international development work. The new Hub is the culmination of hundreds of hours of volunteer construction work, and the party is a chance to show appreciation for our dedicated volunteers and supporters who made an extra stretch this year during an epic capital campaign (still not over). This party is open to everyone and there is no charge . . . community members new to Bikes Not Bombs are also encouraged to attend!
On December 8, we could use help setting and cleaning up as well as help with the food and raffle.
TecsChange and the MIT Western Hemisphere Project are sponsoring a showing/presentation by the Chiapas Media Project.
Assembling Peace parties are designed to create a setting in which veteran activists can gather, network and socialize in a fun, relaxed and positive setting while encouraging interested newcomers to learn about and participate in political and social awareness and action. At an Assembling Peace party you can expect to find a variety of activist groups speaking and tabling, musical and theatrical performers, film, books, art, food, beer, wine, coffee, food, dancing, massage and more.
We are especially interested in having organizations set up information tables and providing a speaker on the subjects of the anti-war movement, global justice, class, human rights, racism, sexism, environmental sustainability, labor, trade, capitalism, socialism, etc. We are also seeking musicians, artists, massage therapists, food, volunteers, donations, etc.
Assembling Peace IV is a fundraiser for the Stop the Wars Coalition (STWC). The Stop the Wars Coalition is an anti-war group that formed out of the organizing efforts in the Boston area during 2005 to stage a mass rally against the U.S. wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. After successfully staging a rally and march on October 29, 2005 featuring Cindy Sheehan and 3,000 participants; the October 29^th Coalition evolved into the Greater Boston Stop the Wars Coalition, which has continued to stage anti-war protests, host speakers, hold meetings, stage teach-ins and push the "How Many More" campaign in the Boston area.
Song of Wisdom, Words of Peace offers the message of hope and tolerance in a time of violence and chaos. Voices Rising sings with optimism to confront doubt and combat despair, featuring inspirational pieces such as "Choose Something Like a Star" by Randall Thompson and "Peace Is" by Fred Small.
The concert's primary work, "Song of Wisdom from 'Old Turtle,'" by Joseph M. Martin is based on Douglas Wood's award-winning children's book Old Turtle.
Saturday, December 9, 2006, 8:00 PM Guest Narrator: Rev. Casey Roberts First Church of Boston 66 Marlborough Street, Boston
Sunday, December 10, 2006, 3:30 PM Guest Narrator: Rev. Kim K. Crawford Harvie The Congregational Church of Needham 1154 Great Plain Ave., Needham
For more info. and to order tickets visit
www.voicesrising.org
Priority Seating: $25
General Admission: $20, $15 in advance
Seniors and students: $10
Children under 10: $5
For more information, contact Aimee Michaels
Please join local activists, Jobs With Justice, the children of Tar Heel Plant worker, and the children of the Workmen¿s Circle on December 10th from 1:00-2:30 pm at Johnny's Food Master, 105 Alewife Brook Pkwy, Somerville, MA.
We need this event to be a success, and we need your help to make it happen! We need to call all our members and ask them to come out and support these kids! Can you give an hour or two to help make this happen? Contact Jennifer at jennifer@massjwj.net or (617) 524-8778 and let her know!p>
FREE to the public
Limited Seating
RSVP: Coalition for a Strong United Nations
email: info@strongUN.org
phone: 617-304-6555
This conference is an opportunity to deepen your understanding of international human rights and the role you play in their enforcement on this 58th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Recent reports published by Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, the American Friends Service Committee, the American Civil Liberties Union, and others have demonstrated that the human rights of all Americans are in jeopardy. Panelists at this conference will discuss the human rights of people in prisons through the lens of United Nations human rights treaties.
The panelists will lead workshops demonstrating how we, in Massachusetts, can connect our advocacy to the mechanisms of international law as applied at the United Nations. These actions include: preparation of nongovernmental shadow reports of government actions, working with the Special Rapporteur process, and identifying responsibilities of local and state governments under human rights treaty law.
CONFERENCE PROGRAM
1:00 REGISTRATION (sign up for one of the three workshops)
1:15KEYNOTE: Blanche Wiesen Cook, author, biographies of Eleanor Roosevelt: "Human Rights issues in the U.S. in the context of international law and oversight of UN treaty bodies"
2:00 PANEL: Strategies for Implementing Human Rights
Moderator: Rev. Ed Rodman, Professor of Urban Theology,
Episcopal Theological School
Martha Davis, Northeastern University School of Law: "Obligations of state and local governments under ratified treaties"
Gillian Gilhool, Women's International League for Peace &
Freedom: "Shadow reporting process through the UN system"
Tonya McClary, Director of AFSC's Criminal Justice Program:
"Working with the UN Special Rapporteur process"
2:45 WORKSHOPS by each panelist
4:14 REPORT BACK from workshops with discussions
5:00 CLOSING
Presented by the Coalition for a Strong United Nations in partnership with the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom and the Massachusetts CEDAW Project.
The Newton Dialogues regular meeting will be on Sunday, December 10, at 7:30, at the Eliot Church in Newton Corner. John Tirman, the Executive Director of the MIT center for International Studies, will discuss the HUMAN COST OF THE WAR IN IRAQ. Specifically, his topic will be an analysis of the Johns Hopkins Iraq Mortality Study, showing that our invasion has led to over 600,000 Iraqi deaths. Mr. Tirman is the author and editor of ten books on global issues. Please join us to learn more about the tragic impact of this corrupt war on the Iraqi civilian population.
Mass Global Action is organizing a "welcome back benefit" with Noam Chomsky and several other public intellectuals and activists, "What's Next? Creating another world in a time of war, empire and ecological devastation." He will be joined by an organizer of the upcoming United States Social Forum. Additional speakers have been invited (see Encuentro 5 for updates and to download flyers)
Emmanuel Church is close to the MBTA Green Line's Arlington Street T-stop. Online ticket purchasing will begin on Wednesday, 10/18/06. The regular ticket price is $20 (with low-income/unemployed/student tix available for $10). All proceeds will benefit the new Boston movement-building space and organizing center, encuentro 5. For more information, please send an e-mail to info@encuentro5.org or call 617-482-6300.
Join United Food and Commercial Workers Union Local 791 for A UNION SOLIDARITY MARCH in support of the Kendall Cinema Workers fight for a fair Contract! 5:00 P.M. to 7:00 P.M. KENDALL SQUARE CINEMA, One Kendall Square Cambridge, MA 02139. For Information please call the Local 791 union office at 1-800-535-2752
http://boston911truth.org/teaparty/index.html