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Solidarity Series To Tackle Mideast And Housing Crises

Solidarity Series To Tackle Mideast And Housing Crises image
Parent Issue
Month
October
Year
1990
Copyright
Creative Commons (Attribution, Non-Commercial, Share-alike)
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Agenda Publications
OCR Text

The Solidarity Discussion Series will continue its Fall 1990 installment with a talk by Tom Abowd: "The Mideast and the Crisis of Palestine." Abowd is a U-M graduate student in Near Eastern Studies, a founding member of the Ann Arbor chapter of the Palestine Solidarity Committee, and a member of Solidarity. The talk is Oct. 2 at 7:30 pm at Guild House, 802 Monroe and is free.

On Tuesday Oct. 16 David Levin will speak on "The Struggle Against Homelessness: Ann Arbor and Beyond" Levin is a member of the Homeless Action Committee (HAC) and a member of Solidarity. The talk is at 7:30 pm at Guild House and is free.

Solidarity is an organization committed to building a non-sectarian and radically democratic socialist movement in the United States. We are socialist activists who place a high priority on participating in an open and constructive manner in the struggles against racism and sexism, as well as the struggles for lesbian and gay rights and national liberation. In Ann Arbor, our members participate in the Latin America Solidarity Committee, the Feminist Women's Union, the United Coalition Against Racism, the Palestine Solidarity Committee, the Free Southern Africa Coordinating Committee, and Concerned Faculty. We firmly believe that any socialist movement worthy of the name must join in such struggles now rather than perpetuate the illusion that they can either be separated from or take a back seat to the class struggle. We oppose the growing U.S. drive toward war, whether that be in the Middle East or Central America. We support the PLO and the FMLN in their struggles against Israeli and U.S. oppression. We see the need for international solidarity among working people and the oppressed in a period of concessions, deindustrialization, unemployment and the growing debt crisis. We believe in a creative re-thinking of socialism for the '90s in which an open environment and a variety of views is more important than presenting a monolithic face to the world or engaging in pretenses of being "the vanguard."

Solidarity, 4104 Michigan Union, Ann Arbor, Ml 48109; 662-1041 .

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