Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Soldiers and Civilian Speak Out, Sept 29, Syracuse

Soldiers and Civilian Speak Out, Sept 29, Syracuse

MARCH AND RALLY DEMANDS ARE:

---Immediate, complete, unconditional US withdrawal from Iraq (including private contractors)
---Full health benefits for returning veterans
---Reparations to the Iraqi people
---Money for jobs, education and health-care, not occupation and warfare

The demonstration was initiated by Ft. Drum Chapter of Iraq Veterans Against the War and has been endorsed by at least 55 groups in upstate New York, including the Green Party of New York State.

The speakers program and march will feature the Iraq vets and other vets and military families against the war. There will also be speakers from peace, community, and labor groups, and the Green Party

Who Is Coming from the Greens


I've heard from Greens across the state who are organize to send a contingent: Cattaragaus, Allegheny, Genesee, Steuben, Delaware, and Chenango counties and the towns and cities of Buffalo, Rochester, Albany, New Paltz, Brooklyn, Queens, and Manhattan.

Greens will be playing prominent role in the day's activities. Rebecca Rotzler is speaking at the Green Party slot at the second rally. Jessica Maxwell is introducing rally speakers. Joe Lombardo is moderating the evening panel. Gary Bonaparte may be speaking for Syracuse neighborhoods at the first rally. A number of local Greens are working as volunteers behind the scenes making the events happen. Bob Gumbs, Green candidate for Congress in Harlem and other Green, community, and labor activists will be speaking at Green rally as we gather for the Green feeder march into the first main rally.


Green Party Presidential Candidate Jared Ball will be speaking at the Washington D.C. rally, which will be emceed by GPUS Co-Chair Sarah "Echo" Stiener.

Green Schedule for Sept. 29

Here is the basic schedule for Greens. It's updated from the one I sent last week.

A map is attached, or if it won't go on this elist, go to www.howiehawkins.org.

Friday, September 28


For those coming in early and staying overnight:

7-9 pm: Open house and informal gathering at Greens’ office, 2617 S. Salina St., Syracuse

Saturday, September 29

12:00 noon: Greens Gather and Rally - Gary Bonaparte’s House, 206 Gifford St
.
Where your Green t-shirts and buttons. Bring you local Green banner.
If you want to say a few words to the rally for your local Green group, contact Howie Hawkins.

12:35 pm: Green Feeder March to Rally (10 minute walk)

1:00pm: Rally - Everson Museum Plaza, 401 Harrison Street, Syracuse, New York
Green tabling and leafleting

2:30pm: March to Syracuse University (1 hour; rides for those who can't walk)

3:30pm: Rally at Walnut Park
Green tabling and leafleting. Rebecca Rotzler speaks at 4:45 pm

5:00pm: Greens eat and network at Harry’s Bar, 700 S. Crouse Ave

6:00 pm: Networking Meetings (Green reps to meetings of Veterans, Students, and Regional Organizers)

7:30pm: Panel Discussion at Hendricks Chapel at Syracuse University (Scott Ritter, Dahlia Wasfi, Jimmy Massey)


Housing Friday and Saturday night:

Sleeping bags -- up to 20 at Gary Bonaparte's house. Call Howie Hawkins to reserve a spot.

For motel rooms, Howie can recommend a place.

Parking:

Street parking around Gary's house is free.

It's a 30 minute walk back to the Everson Museum from Syracuse University at the end of the day. There are also public buses. We can also coordinate some walking back to get cars while others wait at Harry's Bar to be picked up.

Food:

Eat a good meal before noon. If you're starving, there's a business district with restaurants near Walnut Park during the second rally. At 5:00 pm when the second rally is over, Greens will head over to Harry's Bar, which has pizza, wings, sandwiches, and salads.

Driving Directions:

To the Greens office Friday night:

Take Exit 17 off Interstate 81. Go straight one block west (the only way you can go) and T into S. Salina St. Turn right north onto S. Salina St. The Greens office will be on your right at 2617 S. Salina St.

To Gary Bonaparte's house, 206 Gifford St. at 12 noon on Saturday.

Take exit off Interstate 690 onto West St. going South (the only way you can go). Take West St. to the end at W. Onondaga St. (You will pass Gifford St., but it's one way going the wrong way to get to Gary's house and you have to go around.) Turn left on to W. Onondaga St. Go past one light and take a 270 degree hard left at the next block right before the railroad overpass on to Gifford St. Gary's house is on the right in the second block. It's the only occupied residence on the block.

Solidarity,

Howie Hawkins

Monday, September 24, 2007

Weekly Email Updates Are Back


Are you experiencing GPoMC email withdrawal? No worries the GPoMC weekly email updates are back! Sign up through Yahoo Groups to receive GPoMC emails, we promise to keep the emails to 1 per week with an occasional important timely announcement, but never more than 7 emails a month.

Sign Up Here!

Friday, September 21, 2007

Green Party Volunteers Needed


We are currently looking for 15-20 people who can devote a chunk of time - perhaps an hour two - in the next couple of days to assist in the concluding days of the Arkansas ballot drive. If people are capable of devoting even more time, that would be even better.

Volunteers will be given a web address with a login and a password, and will be assigned one of a number of 5-page PDF files. Each page contains up to 20 signatures from the Arkansas ballot drive. Volunteers will download the PDFs, look at the cities where the signatures were collected, and then download Microsoft Access files containing portions of the voter rolls for the State of Arkansas, so that they can attempt to verify the signatures.

A signature is verified if you can match three out of four fields to the voter rolls - name, address, city, and date of birth. The voter rolls are broken down so that the 12 largest cities in the state are all separate files, and then the rest of the cities are divided alphabetically into eight other files. The voter rolls break addresses down into street number, street name, and street type. Often the best bet is to sort the list by City, Last Name, First Name, Street Address. For each of the five sheets, the volunteer will simply return the number of signatures on the page (usually 20, sometimes 19, sometimes less), and the number of those signatures which were verified.

We need people who are at least moderately familiar with Microsoft Access. There was no other common software which could be used to pull this off.

I need volunteers to commit to being able to download their PDF and come up with results for each of their sheets within about 24-36 hours of emailing me back. I want to have this project completely knocked out on Saturday.

More information about the Arkansas ballot drive is included below for everyone's reference. Please email me at this address - phil.huckelberry@gmail.com - if you are interested in participating. Let me know how much time you think you can offer, and also let me know if you have extensive database experience such that you think you will be able to work more quickly than most people; then I might assign you 2 PDF files
instead of one.

Our hope is that if this is successful it can turn into a model for how other drives might be assisted by out of state volunteers. By enhancing awareness and activity in ballot drives across the country, hopefully this can in turn lead to greater fundraising for ballot access efforts and also to bringing some creative minds into our vital ballot access work to assist with efforts like this. Our extensive database work in Illinois protected our petitioning effort in 2006. We expect similar attacks from the Democrats in 2008 - and if we can come together like this, we will be ready to fend those attacks off.

Phil Huckelberry
Co-Chair, Green Party of the United States
Co-Chair, GPUS Ballot Access Committee

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Sept 29 Antiwar Demo, Syracuse


Calling All Greens:

It is important to the future of the Green Party in New York and antiwar
politics in New York that the Greens have strong presence at the Sept 29
antiwar demonstration in Syracuse (details below).

The Sept. 29 demonstration promises to be the biggest antiwar demonstration
in upstate New York since the Vietnam War. It is important that the Green
Party follow up its endorsement of the demonstration with wide Green
participation.

Most of the peace movement has relied on the Democrats to stop the war
(Kerry in 2004, Democratic Congress in 2006), but the Democrats have refused
to vote down every war authorization and war supplemental spending bill
since before the war began.

The Democratic leadership in Congress has already capitulated again for FY
2008, making it clear that they won't attempt to vote down the $150-200
billion war supplemental Bush is requesting this month.

The Democrats claim -- and the corporate media dutifully echoes this myth --
that the Dems don't have the two-thirds votes they need to overide a Bush
veto. But all the Dems need is a simple majority to vote down the
supplemental in the next few weeks, which they have in both houses of
Congress.

The leading Democratic presidential candidates (Clinton, Obama, Edwards) all
call for "redeploying" only "combat units" out of Iraq, leaving tens of
thousands of US troops in Iraq to continue the occupation, manning the
massive military bases the US built, training the army and police of the
Iraqi puppet government, and providing the air war, advisors, and special
forces to support the Iraqi government's ground forces.

Aside from slightly longer periods for troop rotations home, the Democratic
"redeployment" will escalate the US military profile throughout the Middle
East -- in Kuwait and Qatar, in a new military surge in Afghanistan, and
possibly expanding on the 3000 US special forces deployed to the Somalia
occupation.

Yet too many in the antiwar movement are counting on the Democratic
President and Congress to end the war after the 2008 election. The
Democratic leadership has made it clear it will implement an Iraqization of
the Iraq war akin to Nixon's Vietnamization of the Vietnam War -- US ground
troops draw down gradually while US air power and military trainers and
advisors and special forces continue the war supporting Iraqi boys on the
ground missions.

The Sept 29 demonstration is the Green Party's chance to show the antiwar
movement in New York that the Greens are a viable political alternative to
supporting the pro-war Democrats as the lesser evil in 2008. The Greens have
an opportunity here to challenge antiwar activists in New York to support
Greens -- and to run as Greens for Congress -- on a clear all-troops-home
platform in the 2008 presidential and congressional elections.

September 29 will also be a chance to show the Ft. Drum Iraq vets who
initiated this demonstration that the Greens support their resistance to
unlawful wars of aggression and colonial occupations, a position the Dems
and GOP will never take.

Armed forces' resistance was a key factor forcing the US government to end
the US occupation of Vietnam. It forced the demobilization after World War
II when US rulers wanted to send US forces to help the British, French, and
Dutch imperialists reclaim their colonies in Asia. It was Portuguese army
that ended colonial rule in Africa and came back to overthrow fascism in
Portugal in 1974. It was the Venezuelan Army that backed Chavez against the
US-backed coup attempt in 2002. We need the rank and file of the armed
forces on our side, for democracy and against imperialism.

Greens will be marching with banners, tabling, leafletting, speaking from
the rally podium, and networking after the march and rally.

Please organize your local Green group to bring everyone they can to join
this demonstration.

If you are coming from farther away, come Friday night. We have floor space
for sleeping and we'll get the final details organized Friday night for the
marching, tabling, leafletting, and networking.

Solidarity,

Howie Hawkins
Green Party Candidate for Syracuse City Council


"Soldiers & Civilians Speak Out"
Anti-War March and Rally
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2007

11 am Greens gather for feeder march (place TBA)
1 pm Rally - Everson Museum Plaza, 401 Harrison Street, Syracuse
2pm March to Syracuse University (through public housing and by the VA
hospital)
4pm Closing Rally at Syracuse University (Green Party Speaker at 4:45-4:40
pm)
5-7 pm Antiwar Networking (Green Party caucus, then report to general meeting)
7:30pm Antiwar Panel at Hendricks Chapel, Syracuse University (Scott
Ritter, Dahlia Wasfi, Jimmy Massey)

THE MARCH AND RALLY DEMANDS ARE:
---Immediate, complete, unconditional US withdrawal from Iraq (including
private contractors)
---Full health benefits for returning veterans
---Reparations to the Iraqi people
---Money for jobs, education and health-care, not occupation and warfare

BUS TO SYRACUSE
ROCHESTER AGAINST WAR has buses. Seats cost $25 ($10 for low income or students)
Meet in back MCC parking lot. Bus leaves at 9am, will arrive back in Rochester approx. 9pm

Reserve your seat with payment at the Antiwar Crisis Center Storefront,
658 Monroe Avenue, 585 – 271-2620 or email events@rochesterAgainstWar.org for more information

ENDORSING GROUPS

Military Families Speak Out-Upstate NY, International Socialist
Organization, Interfaith Peace Network of Western NY, WNY Peace Center,
Rochester Against War, Catholic Worker, Campus Antiwar Network, Peace Action
and Education Task Force of Metro Justice, The Storefront Antiwar Crisis
Center on Monroe, Rochester Declaration of Peace, Syracuse Citizen Action,
Utica Citizen Action, Schenectady Neighbors for Peace, Guilderland Neighbors
for Peace, The Solidarity Committee of the Capital District, NYS Green
Party, Women Against War, Grannies for Peace, Muslim Solidarity Committee,
Bethlehem Neighbors for Peace, Upper Hudson Peace Action, Troy Area Labor
Council, Citizens Environmental Coalition, 8th Step Coffee House, Saratoga
Peace Alliance, Tom Paine Chapter of Veterans for Peace, Pax Christi of WNY,
Vets for Peace, The Social Justice Center of Albany, The Cortland Community
for Peace, Southern Rensselaer Neighbors for Peace, Peacemakers of Schoharie
County, Troy Neighbors for Peace, Northeast Peace and Justice Action
Coalition, UU Peace Advocates of Rochester, Peace Action of CNY, Mohawk
Valley Peace Coalition, Lewis County Citizens for Peace in Iraq, Chatham
Peace Initiative, Berkshire Citizens for Peace, Veterans for Peace Chapter
51, Iraq Veterans Against the War NY, Syracuse Peace Council, SEIU 1199,
Syracuse Cultural Workers.

Initiated by
New York Iraq Veterans Against the War

Hosted by
The Syracuse Peace Council & SEIU-1199

For more information contact:
Syracuse Peace Council 315-472-5478 or spc@peacecouncil.net
or visit www.peacecouncil.net or
www.upstateantiwar.net or
http://www.myspace.com/spcspace

Friends Helping Friends One Year Anniversary

SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 23rd, 10 to 5pm @ 333 Child Street
(Jay & Child).
Friends Helping Friends One Year Anniversary
Fundraiser on the FIRST DAY OF FALL

Contact:
Andrew Stankevich
Friends Helping Friends
fhf2004@hotmail.com
436-5605

A year after purchasing and opening our thrift store
& food cupboard facility... we're still here and
celebrating our first year. We'll be barbecuing and
having a great blow-out fund raising sale! Come
down and pay us a visit. 333 Child Street, near the

Jay & Child intersection... look for the colorful
mural.

”Hollywood Al & the Mix” will be performing live
music & we'll also be featuring a debut performance
from Andrew Stankevich as “Henry the Hobo clown” to
be making balloon animals and painting faces (1:30pm
to 5pm).

If you haven't been down to check out the store...
please do!

Sunday, September 16, 2007

21 Things You Didn't Know You Can Recycle

From Coopamerica.org:

21 Things You Didn't Know You Can Recycle



1. Appliances: Goodwill accepts working appliances, www.goodwill.org, or you can contact the Steel Recycling Institute to recycle them. 800/YES-1-CAN, www.recycle-steel.org.

2. Batteries: Rechargeables and single-use: Battery Solutions, 734/467-9110, www.batteryrecycling.com.

3. Cardboard boxes: cardboard boxContact local nonprofits and women's shelters to see if they can use them. Or, offer them up at your local Freecycle.org listserv or on Craigslist.org. If your workplace collects at least 100 boxes or more each month, UsedCardboardBoxes.com accepts them for resale.

4. CDs/DVDs/Game Disks: Send scratched music or computer CDs, DVDs, and PlayStation or Nintendo video game disks to AuralTech for refinishing, and they'll work like new: 888/454-3223, www.auraltech.com.

5. Clothes: shirtsWearable clothes can go to your local Goodwill outlet or shelter. Donate wearable women's business clothing to Dress for Success, which gives them to low-income women as they search for jobs, 212/532-1922, www.dressforsuccess.org. Offer unwearable clothes and towels to local animal boarding and shelter facilities, which often use them as pet bedding. Consider holding a clothes swap at your office, school, faith congregation or community center. Swap clothes with friends and colleagues, save money on a new fall wardrobe and back-to-school clothes – then donate the rest.

6. Compact fluorescent bulbs: Take them to your local IKEA store for recycling: www.ikea.com.

7. Compostable bio-plastics: You probably won't be able to compost these in your home compost bin or pile. Find a municipal composter to take them to at www.findacomposter.com.

8. Computers and electronics: Find the most responsible recyclers, local and national, at www.ban.org/pledge/Locations.html

9. Exercise videos: Swap them with others at www.videofitness.com.

10. Eyeglasses: glassesYour local Lion's Club or eye care chain may collect these. Lenses are reground and given to people in need.

11. Foam Packing peanuts: Your local pack-and-ship store will likely accept these for reuse. Or, call the Plastic Loose Fill Producers Council to find a drop-off site: 800/828-2214. For places to drop off foam blocks for recycling, contact the Alliance of Foam Packaging Recyclers, 410/451-8340, www.epspackaging.org/info.html

12. Ink/toner cartridges: Recycleplace.com pays $1/each.

13. Miscellaneous: Get your unwanted items into the hands of people who can use them. Offer them up on your local Freecycle.org or Craigslist.org listserv, or try giving them away at Throwplace.com or giving or selling them at iReuse.com. iReuse.com will also help you find a recycler, if possible, when your items have reached the end of their useful lifecycle.

14. Oil: Find Used Motor Oil Hotlines for each state: 202/682-8000, www.recycleoil.org.

15. Phones: cell phoneDonate cell phones: Collective Good will refurbish your phone and sell it to someone in a developing country: 770/856-9021, www.collectivegood.com. Call to Protect reprograms cell phones to dial 911 and gives them to domestic violence victims: www.donateaphone.com. Recycle single-line phones: Reclamere, 814/386-2927, www.reclamere.com.

16. Sports equipment: Resell or trade it at your local Play It Again Sports outlet, 800/476-9249, www.playitagainsports.com.

17. “Technotrash”: Easily recycle all of your CDs, jewel cases, DVDs, audio and video tapes, cell phones, pagers, rechargeable and single-use batteries, PDAs, and ink/toner cartridges with GreenDisk's Technotrash program. For $30, GreenDisk will send you a cardboard box in which you can ship them up to 70 pounds of any of the above. Your fee covers the box as well as shipping and recycling fees. 800/305-GREENDISK, www.greendisk.com.

18. Tennis shoes: Nike's Reuse-a-Shoe program turns old shoes into playground and athletic flooring. www.nikereuseashoe.com. One World Running will send still-wearable shoes to athletes in need in Africa, Latin America, and Haiti. www.oneworldrunning.com.

19. Toothbrushes and razors:toothbrush Buy a recycled plastic toothbrush or razor from Recycline, and the company will take it back to be recycled again into plastic lumber. Recycline products are made from used Stonyfield Farms' yogurt cups. 888/354-7296, www.recycline.com.

20. Tyvek envelopes: Quantities less than 25: Send to Shirley Cimburke, Tyvek Recycling Specialist, 5401 Jefferson Davis Hwy., Spot 197, Room 231, Richmond, VA 23234. Quantities larger than 25, call 866/33-TYVEK.

21. Stuff you just can't recycle: When practical, send such items back to the manufacturer and tell them they need to manufacture products that close the waste loop responsibly.

Friday, September 14, 2007

Jared Ball in '08

Jared Ball for President
www.jaredbforpresident.com

Meet Jared

My name is Jared Ball and I am currently running for the Green Party’s presidential nomination. I have accepted an invitation to do this for several reasons. First among them are the horrendous and entirely unacceptable conditions of a majority of the people of this nation and world. To best address those conditions a new party is needed, a new style of politics is needed and we are developing just that kind of campaign. While looking to bring something new we are also looking to do so on the basis of some old and forgotten (or suppressed) politics. First among them are those of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. whose genuine goals have long been forcibly hidden beneath the frozen and isolated description of a dream. But 2008 being the 40th anniversary of his assassination demands that we run such a campaign on the basis of King’s truly revolutionary positions of calling for radical political organization around an end to systems which reproduce white supremacy, militarism and gross inequalities in wealth and access to society’s benefits. That campaign is here.

I have long been disillusioned with electoral politics and since 1992 only voted for members of the Green Party or those whose unaffiliated status necessitated that I write them onto the ballot. I joined the DC Statehood/Green Party several years ago specifically because it was the only electoral political party overtly, as clear by name, in favor of statehood for those colonized in the nation’s capitol and a broader platform which speaks to the continuing needs of a majority of the nation and world. I am not running to further bolster the mythology of the vote as panacea. I am not running for simple symbolism. I am running because the true majority of women, the poor, Black, Latino and Indigenous people need organization, need a place to cohere and the Green Party is the structure with the expressed platform that can provide just that kind of liberated space and I am the candidate that can properly articulate such a need. The party’s freedom from corporate dominance, its commitment to social justice and redistribution of society’s wealth and service and its call for diversity are far more substantive that those false claims of such made with varying degree by other parties. It is time to build a genuine populist party, one built on the proper politics of those who, like Kwame Ture once made clear, are no longer willing to accept the lesser of evil because, “we will not vote for evil, period.”

To that end we are developing a campaign which seeks to break convention by centering attention and focus on culture, those most oppressed and those who have long since given up on the vote and are looking for a new politics and new organizations. We are working with “the mayor of DC hip-hop” Head-Roc and others to provide a hip-hop and progressive artist tour which will reach out to the Indigenous, Black, Latino and poor communities who will help us develop new bases of support for the Green Party. This style of campaign will be brash and powerful representing the necessarily unorthodox politics we need and which are represented best by the Green Party. We are not targeting Democrats, Republicans or others to “steal” votes. We are not engaged in an effort to upset one or another major party candidacy as we do not see either as being able to legitimately represent the needs of the true majority and, therefore, see no reason to assist in the sabotage or ascendance of one or the other. And while we are not expecting to “win” the presidency we are expecting to help build a party to build community, society and a new world.

We are looking to build the original and genuine Rainbow Coalition of Fred Hampton, a coalition that breaks racial barriers and fosters unity along real material needs as opposed to the empty rhetoric of hate and division. Success in this case will be additional membership for the Green Party from the tens of millions of eligible but dormant voters. Success will be in demonstrating the difference of the party through the radical difference in our presentation and campaign approach. Voting or not voting are actions which by themselves, while equally political, are also equally insufficient for change. Real change can only come from organization on the basis of a truly radical platform such as offered by the Green Party. This is why I am running.

For more information, visit voxunion.com where video of my initial statement of candidacy can be found along with future campaign updates and methods of contact. Thank you for your time and support. Your party and politics are here. As Fred Hampton said, to you I say peace, if you are willing to fight for it.

Jared A. Ball


Brief Biographical Background
I am a member of the DC Statehood/Green Party, an assistant professor of communications studies at Morgan State University in Baltimore, MD., an independent journalist, a radio host with WPFW 89.3 FM in Pacifica Radio Washington, DC, the Editor-at-Large of the Words, Beats and Life Global Journal of Hip-Hop Culture and founder of FreeMix Radio: The Original Mixtape Radio Show – a freely distributed monthly hip-hop mixtape dedicated to the practice of emancipatory journalism. I am a navy veteran who served during Desert Shield/Desert Storm, a graduate of Frostburg State University with a degree in history, a graduate of the Africana Studies and Research Center at Cornell University with a masters degree in Africana Studies and a graduate of the University of Maryland at College Park where I earned a doctorate in journalism and media studies. I have been a bartender, pizza delivery man and a high-school teacher in DC’s public school system before settling in at Morgan State University. I am the son of a European-descended Jewish woman and an African-descended Black man whose politics, class (caste) and commitment to human rights has made me intimately aware of the social forces at play maintaining the kinds of gross inequality and oppression which continues to be the basis of most human interaction and which must be dealt with systemically before we can expect any better a society or world. Most importantly, I am husband to a powerful and dynamic woman from Panama and father to our two children. In short, my background and politics while diverse are unified in a belonging and commitment to Black, Latin, Indigenous and oppressed communities whose justice must be made central if this country is to improve.

Tuesday, September 04, 2007

Labor Day Parade


Jason Nabewaniec, Co-Chair of the Green Party of the United States and Rong Ring, long time Green Party Activist march along East Ave in Rochester's Labor Day Parade.

Monday, September 03, 2007

Wear Your Poltics on Your Sleeve!

The Green Party is pleased offer an array of t-shirts, hats, totebags, buttons, embroidered patches and more. Check out our brand new union made baseball caps and our new Sunflower shirts with the four pillars on the back, en espanol. Get ready for fall campaigns with our brand new campaign kits and tabling kits. Available at http://www.gp.org/shop.

photo: DC Statehood Greens rocking GP Merchandise.
Photographer: T.E. Smith, DC Statehood Green Party

Sunday, September 02, 2007

2007 Fall Labor Film Series


http://www.rochesterlabor.org/filmschedule.html

All films shown at the Eastman House Dryden Theater, 900 East Avenue.

Friday, September 7, 8:00 p.m.
Rochester Premiere
SACCO AND VANZETTI

Friday, September 14, 8:00 p.m.
Sunday, September 16, 4:30 p.m.
Rochester Premiere
THE METHOD (EL MÉTODO)


Friday, September 21, 8:00 p.m.
Sunday, September 23, 7.00 p.m.
THE THREE BURIALS OF MELQUIADES ESTRADA


Friday, September 28, 8:00 p.m.
THE DEVIL AND MISS JONES


Friday, October 5, 8:00 p.m.
Rochester Premieres
WHICH SIDE ARE YOU ON?

&

THE FLICKERING FLAME


Wednesday, October 10, 8:00 p.m.
AN EVENING WITH KEN LOACH

CATHY COME HOME


Friday, October 12, 8:00 p.m.
Ian Ruskin in person! Rochester Premiere
FROM WHARF RATS TO LORDS OF THE DOCKS

&

INDONESIA CALLING


Friday, October 19, 8:00 p.m.
Sunday, October 21, 5:00 p.m.
Rochester Premiere
9 STAR HOTEL (MALON 9 KOCHAVIM)


Friday, October 26, 8:00 p.m.
Sunday, October 28, 4:30 p.m.
Craig Zobel and Pat Healy in person!
Rochester Premiere
GREAT WORLD OF SOUND