| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 
UPDATED NOTICE (maximize email window to full width for best viewing) 
   
 
  
  
    | IN THE AFTERMATH OF 9/11 |  
    | A Public Forum Series |  |
 
  
  
    | ;) | Thursday January 31 2002, 7:00 
PM 
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    | RELIGION, PROTEST, AND HUNGER: FREE TRADE SOLUTIONS AFTER SEPTEMBER 11TH
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    | A Special Evening with the 
      World Trade Organization* |  
    | Herri Baatasuna, LL.D. Agriculture, 
      International Relations, & Public Relations Counselor*
 Percival Fress, M.D. Agriculture, 
      Pharmaceutics, & Public Relations Counselor*
 
 Both WTO* speakers will be in New York City to attend the World 
      Economic Forum, Jan 31- Feb 4. Previously, the WEF has been hosted in 
      Davos, Switzerland. This is the first time it has been held in New York 
      City, and a significant number of anti-globalization protests are 
      expected. Drs. Baatasuna and Fress intend both to explain the relevance of 
      the WTO's post- September 11th global agenda, and to openly address the 
      concerns of faith-based opposition to free trade as manifested in that 
      agenda. A lively though civilized debate from both sides is expected at 
      this first Public Forum of the series.
 Herri Baatasuna has served as a legal 
      counsel to the World Trade Organization* for the past 
      five years, where he has been directing a new program which aims to 
      understand and address faith-based opposition to free trade. He holds an 
      LL.D. from Stanford Law School, and he previously worked for the AS Agency 
      for International Development in Nepal and in Washington, DC.
 Percival Fress is a specialist in the 
      relationship of international trade to human health. He has been with the 
      press office of the World Trade Organization* for the 
      past three years, fulfilling a mandate from the WTO* 
      to address the relationships of social needs to global trade. Dr. Fress 
      has an M.D. from Columbia University, and has held previous posts with 
      Novartis, Cargill-Dow, and 
      Monsanto.
 Following the program, coffee and 
      sandwiches will be served in the Parish Hall.
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    | Planning to attend this event? Please RSVP 
      so we can estimate attendance. 
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    | *Rumors that the speakers are 
      actually members of the renowned international political satire group 
      The YesMen cannot be confirmed or denied at this 
  time.
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    | Additional Forums in this 
    Series
 
 
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    | ;) | U.S.FOREIGN POLICY BEFORE AND 
      AFTER SEPTEMBER 11TH |  
    | Sunday February 10, 2002 1:00 PMPhyllis 
      Bennis
 Author, editor, journalist, and Fellow at the Institute 
      for Policy Studies, Washington, DC..
 Ms. Bennis has covered Middle East and United Nations issues for 25 years. 
      She led the first US congressional staff delegation to Iraq to investigate 
      the impact of US-led sanctions on the civilian population. She has written 
      and and edited numerous books on Palestine, Iraq and the New World Order, 
      The topic of her presentation comes from the title of her new book, due to 
      be published in March or April.
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    | ;) | TERRORISM AND PEACE IN THE 
      MIDDLE EAST |  
    | Sunday February 17, 1:00 PM The Reverend 
      Stephen Goldstein, Executive Secretary for Mission Personnel, General 
      Board of Global Ministries,United Methodist 
      Church.BR>
 Reverend Goldstein is 
      affilated with Americans for Middle East Understanding, a group 
      that has worked for 35 years to create in the United States a deeper 
      appreciation of Middle Eastern culture, history and current events. Rev. 
      Goldstein visited the Middle East in 1992 as part of a Study Tour that 
      visited ecumenically sponsored church projects in Israel/Palestine and in 
      Egypt, and participated in extensive briefings with leadership involved 
      with the current situation in Israel/Palestine and in Egypt. Rev. GolsHe 
      teaches and speaks about the Middle East in local and district church 
      programs, and has returned annually to the Middle East for conferences and 
      research.
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    | ;) | AFGHANISTAN TODAY AND 
      TOMORROW: AN EYE-WITNESS REPORT |  
    | TBA, probably Sunday February 24, 1:00 
      PM Sarah Zaidi, Research Director, or Roger Normand, 
      Director,
 Center for Economic and Social 
      Justice.
 Established in 1993, the Center 
      for Economic and Social Rights is one of the first organizations to 
      challenge economic injustice as a violation of international human rights 
      law. Through its projects abroad and in the United States, CESR has 
      developed an effective strategy that combines research, advocacy, 
      collaboration, and education. CESR believes that economic and social 
      rights -- legally binding on all nations -- can provide a universally 
      accepted framework for strengthening social justice 
      activism.
 Roger Normand and Sarah 
      Zaidi have been visiting Afghanistan firsthand for some time before 
      September 11th. Their first-hand reports are certain to be very 
      informative.
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    | ;) |  PATRIOTISM, PROPHECY, AND 
      PEACE | 
    | Sunday March 3, 2002 1:00 PM 
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    | Rev. Daniel Berrigan Poet, author, 
      activist, beater of swords into plowshares, jailbird for peace and 
      justice.
 In 1968 Rev. Berrigan traveled to 
      Hanoi with professor Howard Zinn of Boston University to assist in 
      obtaining the release of three American pilots. Later that year, with his 
      brother Philip, he destroyed draft registration files in Catonsville, MD. 
      For this act of civil disobedience he was sentenced to three years in 
      prison in 1970. He went underground for several months until federal 
      authorities arrested him on Block Island. After serving 18 months in 
      prison, he was paroled in 1972. But he was not silenced. In 1980 he 
      participated with his brother in the first Plowshares Action (1980), a 
      protest at the General Electric Plant at King of Prussia, PA. Living among 
      Jesuits, writing and conducting retreats, and "speaking truth to power," 
      he has been arrested regularly for his protest actions at weapons 
      manufacturers and other sites. Rev. Berrigan has written over 50 books and 
      appeared in at least four films.
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    | ;) | THE WAR AND THE 
  MEDIA |  
    | Sunday March 10, 1:00 PM Stanley 
      Aronowitz
 Director, Center for Cultural Studies, The 
      Graduate Center, City University of New 
      York.
 A leading American social critic, 
      Professor Aronowitz has for decades focused on the relationships between 
      science, technology, education, labor, art, and culture. Among his books: 
      False Promises (1973); Science as Power (1988); The 
      Politics of Identity (1992); Education Under Siege (1993); 
      Roll Over Beethoven (1993); Dead Artists, Live Theories 
      (1994); The Death and Rebirth of American Radicalism, (1996); 
      (with William DiFazio) The Jobless Future: Sci-Tech and the Dogma of 
      Work (1995); (editor, with Michael Menser and Barbara Martinsons) 
      Technoscience and Cyberculture (1996); The Knowledge Factory 
      (2000.)
 In this presentation Dr. Aronowitz will 
      focus on the relationship between the media and the government and how 
      this has shaped public perception of the War on Terrorism.
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    | ;)  | SAME OLD WORLD ORDER: STARVING 
      MILLIONS |  
    | TBA Oliver Ulich
 Director, United 
      Nations Office of Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
 Mr. Ulich is one of the most knowledgeable 
      sources in the world on humanitarian relief efforts, not only in 
      Afghanistan but across the globe.
 
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