Posts Tagged ‘Austin’

[Austin Festivál at City Hall for Peace & Justice is POSTPONED]

Wednesday, March 9th, 2011
POSTPONED!  DUE TO UNAVOIDABLE CANCELLATION OF SOME MUSICIANS (E.G., ILLNESS) THIS EVENT IS CANCELLED AND WILL BE RESCHEDULED AT A LATER DATE.
 
Festivál at City Hall for Peace & Justice 

http://www.austinpeacecenter.org/

What: Festivál por la Paz y la Justicia en City Hall / Festivál at City Hall for Peace & Justice 

When: Saturday, March 19, 2011 @ Noon until 3:00 p.m.

Where: City Hall Plaza, 301 W. 2nd St. (Cesar Chavez side)

WHO: Coalition of community organizations – listed at bottom

(Austin, Texas) Festivál at City Hall for Peace & Justice, slated for Saturday March 19 in the heart of downtown Austin, will be the city’s first multicultural gathering of its kind. Festivál at City Hall will bring together many of the city’s musicians, activists and organizations in an effort to unite the city’s swelling ethnic communities in a musical celebration.

Acknowledging that changing city demographics is leading to swift redefining of the cultural landscape, the free event embodies the growing cultural and political integration occurring in contemporary Austin.
 
Festivál at City Hall represents this new Austin-style celebration with notable artists and activists joining around music and dance in a fun, family-oriented environment, catering to the rich tapestry that makes up our diverse community. 
The concert and rally will examine many issues represented by a wide array of community activist organizations, signaling the waning of a tradition of segregation in our city. Festivál at City Hall’s goal is to use cultural and political sectors of the community to break down barriers including the self-segregation of ethnic communities so often found in Austin, a city that is now a majority-minority city.   
 The festival is sponsored by multiple organizations who are coordinating the event, including the Austin Center for Peace and Justice, Austin Immigrant Rights Coalition, PODER (People Organized in Defense of Earth and Her Resources), LULAC-District 12, NAACP-Austin, Southwest Key Programs, Reform Immigration for Texas Alliance, The University of Texas Project on Conflict Resolution & the U.T. Willie Nelson Center Students for Peace, Texas Hemp Campaign, Texans for Peace, Texas Labor Against the War, Cannabis Action Network, Humanitarians Engaged in the Arts for Respectful Dialogue, Austin Permanent Peace Protest, Iraq Veterans Against the War-Austin, Sustainable Options for Youth, The Dallas Peace Center, CodePink – Austin, Under the Hood Cafe, Texas Civil Rights Project and others.

TxLAW note:  We are listed above as a sponsor of this event.  We are not aware of having been asked to be a sponsor.  While we support any actions opposing the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and many other social justice issues, we are not promoting one action over another on March 19, 2011, when there are 2 worthwhile events occurring in Austin, TX, at the same hour. 

Austin: Global day of action on military spending, planning meeting

Wednesday, March 9th, 2011
Dear Friends In the Austin Community,

Recently my friend Kath Stone, a chaplain at the Church Center for the United Nations in New York, informed me that the Global Day of Action on Military Spending is coming up on April 12th.  Kath told me about her vision to wield the chapel’s prominent location just across from the UN on 1st Ave in order to make a statement against military spending.

I was inspired upon hearing this, but disappointed to learn that out of the dozens of events planned all around the world on April 12th, not one is set in Texas.  I PROPOSE THAT WE FORM A COALITION AND PLAN A DEMONSTRATION IN AUSTIN ON APRIL 12TH, 2011.

I assert that no matter what you work for and are passionate about, your cause is wrapped up in this issue: the out-of-control military spending of the US government, which will be between 1.06 and 1.5 TRILLION DOLLARS in 2011.  It will account for 40% OF THE WORLD’S SPENDING ON DEFENSE.  UNACCEPTABLE!  It is embarrassing that our government makes acts of violence abroad its number one spending priority while it slashes funding to provide education, heath care, and community services to its people at home.  I am convinced that if we continue on this path there will nothing left to ‘defend’ before long.

Please consider three things:

1) COME TO A PLANNING PARTY ON MONDAY, MARCH 14TH AT CASA MARIANELLA.  At 7pm, we can brainstorm ways to make the demonstration creative, effective, visible, audible, peaceful, fun, etc.
     At 5:30pm there will be a screening of Why We Fight, a 2005 film which opens with President Eisenhower’s farewell speech from office, and then documents the unmatched strength of the US military industrial complex in today’s world.  
     If you want to contribute to the planning but want to skip the film, please come at 7pm.  Casa Marianella is located at 821 Gunter St.  Here is a map.  Food will be provided.  No alcohol please.  

2) COME TO THE DEMONSTRATION ON APRIL 12TH.  Location, time, and theme are to be determined by the coalition. 

3) DISTRIBUTE THIS FAR AND WIDE. 

In solidarity,

Christopher Newton

(201)-486-3669

note from TxLAW:  also see on Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=100733129991763#!/group.php?gid=100733129991763

Austin: Save Our Schools! Money for Education, Not for War!

Wednesday, March 9th, 2011

 March & Rally to Save Texas Schools:
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Texas State Capitol Complex in Austin, TX.

March: 11:00 am – 12:00 pm
starting from 12th & Trinity (1 block from Capitol)

Rally: 12:00 – 2:00 pm on the South Steps

Click here for more information!

Save Texas Schools – Fund Public Education Now!

Our Schools, Our Kids, Our Future

 Texas students are tough, but they’ve never faced a crisis like this. In every school district across the Lone Star State, the same grim headlines repeat: campus closures, teacher layoffs, drastic cuts to core academic programs.

The culprit is a $27 billion state budget hole, which some say could have been avoided. But casting blame now doesn’t help. The challenge is to keep our schools open for all students.

There is help for Texas students if our leaders have the courage to use it.

Tell your elected officials to:

  • Keep Texas smart – make education a top priority!
  • Use the $9.3 Billion Texas “Rainy Day” Fund to support schools
  • Sign the paperwork for $830 Million in federal aid for teachers
  • Fix school funding laws to be fair to all districts and to our growing student population.

These tools can save our schools. Call, write or email today!

Find your elected representatives here: http://www.fyi.legis.state.tx.us/

Contact Governor Rick Perry here: http://www.governor.state.tx.us/contact/

In hard times, we must invest in Texas students…our future depends on it!

website:  http://savetxschools.org/

facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=181240711911593&ref=ts

Austin: Spirited Pro-Choice and Pro-Union Rallies | Alice Embree | The Rag Blog

Saturday, March 5th, 2011

Our TSEU union sister and CodePink member, Alice Embree, celebrates the intersection of rallies on two crucial issues. And why does an anti-war website publish this stuff? Well, readers no doubt have no trouble figuring that out: another intersection, war, U.S. imperialism, repression of unions and workers and women and children in Iraq and Afghanistan, money spent on war, not on jobs and education; and sending our working class young people to kill and be killed.

http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2011/02/alice-embree-spirited-austin-rally-is.html

Hundreds of pro-choice demonstrators marched down Congress Ave. in Austin Saturday, Feb. 26 (above), and then joined with supporters of Wisconsin workers for an enthusiastic rally on the steps of the Texas state Capitol. Photos by Terry DuBose / The Rag Blog.
Rallies at Texas state Capitol:
Pro-choice demonstrators join
supporters of Wisconsin workers

See more photos below.

By Alice Embree / The Rag Blog / February 28, 2011

AUSTIN — Two spirited demonstrations took place in front of Austin’s state Capitol on Saturday, February 26th. The Austin American-Statesman failed to cover the pro-choice rally and carried two paragraphs on the second Austin rally in a larger AP story on nationwide events supporting Wisconsin workers.

Hundreds of demonstrators showed up at noon at the south steps of the Capitol to defend women’s reproductive rights and later marched down Congress Ave. Speakers from Planned Parenthood, Whole Women’s Health, National Abortion Rights Action League (NARAL) Texas, the Lilith Fund and CodePink addressed the crowd. Pink was prominent and bright pink placards read: “I Stand with Planned Parenthood,” “Don’t take away my birth control,” “Don’t take away my breast exams.” Four of CodePink’s Pink Police led the march decked out with their crime prevention badges.

The crowd was mostly young and mostly female. Chanting: “Women’s rights under attack. What do you do? Stand up, fight back!” and “Not the church, not the state, we’re the ones who ovulate.” Placards were both informative and inflammatory. A homemade sign read: “Keep your Boehner out of my uterus.” One woman had lettered: “Get your laws off my body” on her exposed belly. Another woman had constructed a box around her lower body that read: “Think outside my box.”

Marchers split off from the south steps of the Capitol and went down the sidewalks on both the east and west side of Congress, trading sides at Sixth Street as the two lines returned. Passers-by honked and returned peace signs and fists. It was an impressive turnout, organized primarily with word spread through Facebook and listserves.

In some ways, just as impressive was the decision by the pro-choice demonstrators to march up the sidewalk to the Capitol steps and join a 2 p.m. rally organized by MoveOn.org in support of Wisconsin workers. DPS troopers attempted to block the newcomers, but union advocates welcomed them.

A crowd of about 1,000 listened to music led by Bill Oliver and friends. Texas Democratic Congressman Lloyd Doggett addressed the crowd, as did former Texas Agricultural Commissioner and populist pundit, Jim Hightower. Austin’s demonstration was one of many throughout the country and coincided with the largest turnout in Madison to date. More than 70,000 demonstrators gathered in Madison despite freezing temperatures.

Hightower said: “You are the Koch brothers’ worst nightmare.” The reference is to conservative donors Charles and David Koch who made huge contributions to conservative candidates in the last midterm elections and who, according to Reuters, “are playing an influential role in the drive to strip public employee unions of their rights to bargain in several U.S. states.”

Wisconsin’s newly elected Governor Walker returned the funding favors with over $100 million in tax breaks to corporations in January before he named teachers and public workers in his state as the cause of Wisconsin deficits.

This was the second mobilization by Austin union supporters in one week. A demonstration organized by the AFL-CIO attracted hundreds to the south steps of the Capitol on Monday night.

Austin’s teachers’ union, Education Austin, is calling for a large turnout at the AISD School Board meeting on Monday evening, February 28, where layoffs and school closures are on the agenda. It seems that the aggressive actions of conservatives who feel empowered by midterm elections are prompting nationwide mobilizations to defend rights ranging from the right to collective bargaining to family planning.

On a related front, the Workers Defense Project is convening a march and rally to commemorate the 138 workers who lost their lives while working at Texas construction sites. The March 2 event, a “Day of the Fallen,” begins at 3:30 p.m. at the federal building and ends at the Capitol.

[Alice Embree is a long-time Austin activist and organizer, a former staff member of The Rag in Austin and RAT in New York, and a veteran of SDS and the women's liberation movement. She is active with CodePink Austin and Under the Hood Café. Embree is a contributing editor to The Rag Blog and is treasurer of the New Journalism Project.]

Photo by Alice Embree / The Rag Blog.
Photo by Terry DuBose / The Rag Blog.
Photo by Terry DuBose / The Rag Blog.
Photo by Alice Embree / The Rag Blog.
Photo by Alice Embree / The Rag Blog.
Photo by Terry DuBose /The Rag Blog.

Austin: Support revolts in Iraq and other Arab nations

Thursday, February 24th, 2011

Friday, February 25, 6:00 PM
SUPPORT THE CALL FOR REVOLT IN IRAQ AND PALESTINE
Support the ongoing revolt in 17 Arab and Iranian nations united for social justice. Demand a basic services return to the infrastructure in Iraq withered by decades of military invasion and consequent destabilisation. Support the call for the Day of Rage demonstrations February 25 in Iraq and in Palestine. Stand in solidarity with the people’s movements in countries like Libya, Bahrain, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, where protesters have been gunned down in cold blood while marching in the streets. We plan on playing music (please bring instruments) then marching to the beat of a doumbek/darbuka/tabul.
Location: gather in front of the Texas Capitol (Congress and 11th)

Austin: Labor writer Dan LaBotz speaks on “Defending Our Public Sector”

Wednesday, January 19th, 2011

http://thirdcoastactivist.org/events.html#jan22

Saturday, January 22, 6 pm

Dan La Botz speaking on “Defending Our Public Sector”

Labor activist and historian Dan La Botz will speak about responses to the attacks on public-sector services and unions that have intensified during the economic crisis. In parts of Europe and across the world, people are meeting such cuts with resistance, but in the United States such organizing is just beginning. La Botz, a co-founder of Teamsters for a Democratic Union, has been instrumental in creating Defend Ohio, an organization of union members and social-movement activists who have begun organizing around public sector attacks in their state. He is the author of several books on organizing, including A Troublemakers’ Handbook: How to Fight Back Where You Work and Win!

For more information about this event, which is sponsored by Solidarity, contact Giselda Rendon, [email protected].

Location: 5604 Manor, 5604 Manor Road, Austin, 78723 – 5604manor.org

Martin Luther King Day events around Texas

Saturday, January 15th, 2011

Here are just a few of the events going on in various cities around Texas for the Martin Luther King, Jr., holiday.  San Antonio boasts one of the largest–if not the largest–MLK Day parades in the U.S.

AUSTIN:  March and Festival

 The 17th Annual Community March celebrates Dr. Martin Luther King’s legacy while uplifting diversity and multi-culturalism in our city. The MLK Community March kicks off on Monday, January 17, 2011 at 9 a.m. with a short program at the MLK Statue on the University of Texas campus. We will then march to the historic Huston-Tillotson University, where exciting activities are planned.

In previous years, the march has drawn up to an estimated 15,000 people and we are anticipating even more individuals to unite for this special occasion in January 2011. All businesses, non-profit organizations and individuals are invited to march with us and celebrate Dr. King’s legacy.

Important Note: The march will not pass by State Capitol ground. Capitol grounds will be closed on MLK Day due to preparations for the gubernatorial inauguration on the following day.

J.J. SEABROOK BRIDGE RENAMING DEDICATION

As part of this year’s celebration, we’ll be dedicating the renaming of the MLK IH-35 Overpass as the J.J. Seabrook Bridge. J.J. Seabrook was very instrumental in the effort to rename 19th street as Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd. In addition to marching over his namesake bridge, we’ll also hear from the community leaders responsible for getting the overpass renamed in his honor.

MLK COMMUNITY FESTIVAL

The MLK Community Festival kicks off as soon the march arrives on location and will last until 4 p.m.; it will include all types of vendors and local musical artists to make this year’s celebration the best ever! A vendor application can be downloaded for those interested in purchasing booth space. For questions and information, please contact Carol Wright by email or by telephone at (512) 323-6773 ext. 102.  

http://www.mlkcelebration.com/celebration-events/march-and-festival/

DALLAS/FORT WORTH area:

The “I Have a Dream” speech is one of the most unforgettable speeches in American history. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s legacy is celebrated with parades, art, music and culture throughout DFW.

1. 25th Annual Elite News MLK Parade and Festival

What: The 25th annual Elite News MLK Day at Fair Park will feature 200 entries such as floats, marching bands, color guards, drill teams, clowns, vehicles, walkers and more. The festival in Fair Park’s Tower Building will feature a health fair, a gospel concert, poetry and story telling performances, a fashion show, children’s activities, vendor booths and more.

When: January 17, 2011 at 10 a.m.

Where: Fair Park, 1300 Robert B. Cullum Blvd., Dallas

2. Plano MLK Day

What: 2011 Plano Unity Walk

When: Saturday, January 15, 2011

Line up: 9:30 a.m. at the DART Parker Road Transit Center, 2600 Archerwood St., Lot North, Plano, TX

Parade: Begins at 10:30 a.m. after the Unity Walk

Awards: At the end of the parade there will be a recognition and awards ceremony.

Info: Brenda Dailey at 972-422-0012

3. A Tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

What: 28th Annual Black Music and the Civil Rights Movement Concert. This moving tribute reflects on Dr. King and the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s and celebrates a new nationwide spirit of continuance change with potent film footage, narration, music and dance. The concert features Grammy winners, and special guest artists Chrisette Michele and Ledisi.

Where: Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center, Downtown Dallas Arts District, 2501 Flora Street

Tickets: $35, $25, $20

4. MLK Parade Carrollton

What: Parade. Celebrate Martin Luther King, Jr. Day by watching a parade through Carrollton.

When: January 15, 2011 at 10 am.

Where: The parade will start on Jamestown Street (behind Carrollton City Hall) and proceed west to Josey Lane; south on Josey to Keller Springs; east on Keller Springs to Kelly Boulevard; south on Kelly Boulevard to end at Ted Polk Middle School at 2001 Kelly Boulevard.

5. Arlington’s “Sharing the Dream” Celebration 2011

The Martin Luther King Jr. “Sharing the Dream” Awards Banquet is January 14, 2011, featuring the Rev. Samuel Billy Kyles, a history maker, humanitarian, and eyewitness to the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on April 4, 1968. He shared the last hour of Dr. King’s life with him on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis.

Jan 15:

  • 11:30 a.m.: MLK Step Competition at Bowie High School Auditorium
  • 3:30 p.m.: “Sharing the Dream” Multi-cultural festival – free admission
  • 7:30 p.m.: An Evening of Spoken Word Slam Poetry

Jan 16:

  • 6 p.m.: Sharing the Dream – Hubert Moss Memorial Ecumenical Service

Jan 17:

  • 9 a.m. to noon:  Day of Service. “Make it a Day On; not a day off.”
  • 6:30 p.m.: Youth Extravaganza

Details on all events.

6. Fort Worth MLK Parade

What: The annual Martin Luther King Jr. Birthday Celebration Parade/March/Rally will commemorate the legacy of Dr. King and feature marching bands, floats and decorated vehicles. 

When: Monday, January 17, 2011 at 11 a.m.

Where: Fort Worth. The Parade will be staged on Commerce and Calhoun streets between 12th and 16th streets and will step off at Commerce and 12th St., head north on Commerce to 9th St., west on 9th St. to Main St., north on Main St. to 2nd St., west on 2nd St. to Houston, south on Houston to 13th St. and end at the Fort Worth Convention Center Water Gardens Plaza.

For more information on the parade, please contact Andrea Johnson with the Greater Fort Worth Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday Committee, Inc. at 817-657-6519.

http://dallas.about.com/od/festivalsparades/tp/Martin-Luther-King-Day-Celebrations-In-Dfw.htm

HOUSTON:

MLK Youth Parade
This parade starts noon Saturday at Minute Maid Park, proceeds west down Texas to Caroline, then south on Caroline to Walker, west on Walker to San Jacinto and, finally, north on San Jacinto to Prairie.

MLK Grande Parade
Kick off MLK Day and get downtown early for a chance to preview the floats and bands from 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Monday. The parade starts at 2 p.m. at Allen Parkway and Sabine. The route runs east to Dallas, down Dallas to Bagby, Bagby to Lamar, then Lamar back to Allen Parkway where it ends at Taft.

Black Heritage Society Parade
The 33rd Annual “Original” Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day Parade starts 10 a.m. Monday at Minute Maid Park. The route proceeds west down Texas to Caroline, then south on Caroline to Polk, west on Polk to San Jacinto and north on San Jacinto to Prairie.

MLK Day Peace Rally
State Representative Garnet Coleman and Gardere Oratory Speech Winner will speak to kick off the Children’s Museum of Houston peace rally on Monday at 12 p.m. Kids can then march through museum in celebration of freedom of speech. Exhibits on Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s life will be open.

Battle of the Bands
More than 20 high school bands battle it out beginning at 4 p.m. Saturday at Joe Kelly Butler Stadium, 13755 S. Main.

http://blogs.chron.com/momhouston/2011/01/where_to_find_a_martin_luther_1.html

SAN ANTONIO:

Each year, a variety of educational, inspirational and celebratory events honor one of the nation’s most revered civil rights leaders. The signature event, the annual Martin Luther King, Jr. March, is scheduled for Monday, January 17, 2011. The march will begin at 10 a.m. at the MLK Academy located in the 3500 block of MLK Drive and end at Pittman-Sullivan Park, 1101 Iowa (click this link for march route and info). Once again, it is expected to draw more than 100,000 adults and children. San Antonio hosts one of the largest marches in the United States.

The MLK Commission organizes the march and leads the community effort of various events paying tribute to Dr. King. The wide variety of educational, inspirational and celebratory events, take place at locations across the city.

Dr. King’s Dream: For One, For All

Will be the focus of the 2011 MLK Commemoration. Improving the quality of our youth’s education is very important to the MLK Commission.

If you would like to support the MLK March, annual MLK scholarships, or any of events that will take place, the MLK Commission welcomes the partnership of local and national businesses. Please contact the City of San Antonio MLK Commission staff by email.

http://www.sanantonio.gov/mlk/

Austin: Million Musician March for Peace

Tuesday, January 4th, 2011

2010 Million Musician March

Every year on the anniversary of the U.S. invasion of Iraq, Austin’s Instruments for Peace sponsors the Million Musician March for Peace.  The South By Southwest music festival occurs at the same time, and the anti-war event attracts musicians and attendees from SXSW.

“Everyone can be an instrument for peace!”

http://www.instrumentsforpeace.org/

…here’s the latest on…
THE MILLION MUSICIANS MARCH FOR PEACE 2011
Remembering the costs of endless war. Seeking solutions to the mass
misinformation that sustains it.

MUSICIANS LEAD AUSTIN’S ANNUAL PARADE FOR PEACE…AGAIN.
A network of Austin musicians and friends is once again inviting
everyone to join Austin’s annual Million Musicians March for Peace.

March 19th, Austin, Texas: The 8th anniversary of the Invasion of Iraq.

Noon-3PM: STATE CAPITOL…MUSIC, POETS, SPEAKERS!

3 PM:  PARADE THROUGH DOWNTOWN…
bring you instrument, sign, flag…
EVERYONE WELCOME!
[End parade playing "Down By The Riverside" with the musicians at the
Folk Alliance event at Threadgills on Riverside.]

MUSICIANS: Sara Hickman, Eliza Gilkyson, Guy Forsyth, Carolyn
Wonderland, David Garza, Barbara K, Michael Fracasso, Will T. Massey,
Bill Oliver, Leeann Atherton, Kris Gruen, Atash, Jericho Brass Band,
…and many more!

POETS: Thom O Peace…and more!

SPEAKERS: Iraq veteran Hart Viges…and more!

Organized by Instruments For Peace…
…Working with a wide variety of groups and individuals standing for
peace, liberty, justice, sustainability…and truth…
including       Artists for Media Diversity,      Under The Hood,
Vote Rescue, Texans For Peace, Veterans For Peace, Waco Friends Of
Peace, Instruments of Freedom for Justice,       Iraq Veterans Against
War-Austin, Code Pink-Austin, Monkey Wrench Books…

…Using all available means…
music, poets, speakers… jugglers, signs, banners…a parade!
…this Austin-style remembrance  will spotlight the terrible financial
and human costs of the wars we are engaged in,
and point to mass misinformation as the primary cause.

The Instruments for Peace organizers say the solution to unending war
is a mass movement for peace.
They think this can only happen when millions more Americans understand
the real costs.

They encourage everyone to help promote news sources that serve the
public, spreading information that supports our most important needs.

Non-musicians and musicians are welcome!
“Everybody can be an instrument for peace.”

www.instrumentsforpeace.org
millionmusiciansmarch.org
Million Musicians March for Peace is on Facebook!
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Million-Musicians-March-for-Peace/269900991727

Help Support the Million Musicians March for Peace!
Order T-Shirts and Posters here:
https://sparrowswheel.com/catalog/mmm2011/

 

 

Austin: David Rovics appears at MonkeyWrench Books

Saturday, November 20th, 2010

Fresh off his concert in Houston, David Rovics graces Austin with his moving calls for resistance against the Empire.  Texas Labor Against the War calls Rovics “the greatest since Phil Ochs.”

MonkeyWrench is happy to host this evening of music and politics with David Rovics. Described by Amy Goodman as the “musical version of Democracy Now!,” Rovics is an internationally celebrated political folks musician. David has traveled the world as a professional flat-picking rabble-rouser, and regularly tours on four continents, playing for audiences large and small at cafes, pubs, universities, churches, union halls and protest rallies. He has shared the stage with a veritable of who’s who of the left in two dozen countries, and has had his music featured on Democracy Now!, BBC, Al-Jazeera and other networks. His essays are published regularly on CounterPunch elsewhere, and the 200+ songs he makes available for free on the web have been downloaded more than a million times. Most importantly, he’s really good. He will make you laugh, he will make you cry, he will make the revolution irresistible. The show will cost $10 for those with a paying job, and $5 for students and the unemployed. A portion of the proceeds go to MonkeyWrench Books.   http://www.monkeywrenchbooks.org/events/monkeywrench-presents-evening-music-david-rovics

On Facebook:  http://www.facebook.com/?sk=events#!/event.php?eid=165936730093904

http://www.davidrovics.com/

Killeen: Under the Hood Update, November, 2010

Thursday, November 11th, 2010
 
November 2010
James Branum and Eric Jasinski
 
Under the Hood couldn’t make a difference for soldiers without people like James M. Branum, Attorney at Law.  And who better to tell you how important James’ work has been than the first soldier he ever defended at Under the Hood, Victor Agosto?  Victor explains, ”After I decided to refuse deployment, it became clear that I would need professional legal counsel to ensure the lightest punishment possible for myself.  But that wasn’t all I needed – it was very important to me to have an attorney who shared my commitment to the cause of peace, someone who truly understood that I wanted my case to be about more than just my personal struggle.”  Agosto goes on to say, “James has helped countless other soldiers wade through the murky waters of the military justice system, while asking for very little in return. I have met few people who can match his capacity for self-sacrifice. I am proud to call James M. Branum, attorney at law, my friend.”
 
The mother of a soldier who was recently helped by James had this to say: “He provided legal counsel and expert advice and was also empathetic to my son’s circumstances.   He helped us through a very difficult process.  I am so thankful for James; his understanding of military law and his moral integrity made all the difference in the world.” 
 
James provides legal services on a sliding scale.  While most lawyers in military law charge high rates, he believes that everyone should have a right to good legal counsel.  Although James receives some financial support from Courage to Resist, the Oklahoma Center for Conscience, peace churches, and other fundraising, his philosophy makes James the poorest, most hard-working attorney you are likely to ever meet.  He explains that while he was a student, he worked one summer for his father, a small-town attorney in Oklahoma.  During that summer, he met people who had been denied justice simply because of poverty.  Although seeking a religious degree, he realized that he had a calling to help people in a different way, and began to pursue a legal career. 
 
Because of limited resources available to help soldiers, James explains that there is often more work than he can do.  Legal help is usually a last resort for many soldiers, but James points out that the GI rights hotline is also a great resource for soldiers seeking advice and help. 
 
James is often found visiting Under the Hood with his dog and long-time friend, Sandy.  The next time you see him, you’ll also get to meet the newest member of his family, his new dog, Gypsy! 
 
Under the Hood appreciates James’ outstanding contributions to help soldiers in need. 
 
 
Hoodstock Flashback logo
Join us for
HOODSTOCK FLASHBACK!
a great evening of music, this Sunday, November 14, 2010 at Jovita’s, 1617 South 1st Street, Austin, Texas. 
For a mere $10 admission fee, you will hear from over a dozen local artists, including Barbara K, Karen Abrahams,Sugar Bayou, Will T. Massey, Richard Bowden and many more!  Doors open at 6 p.m. and the fun keeps going until 11 p.m.  Join us for a great evening of music, food, camaraderie, important information, and a silent auction.
   
Your continued support of Under the Hood will allow us to continue our important work in Killeen. Whether you are making a one-time donation or want to sign up as a sustainer, it’s easy to contribute through PayPal.  
 
The Fort Hood Support Network (FHSN) operates Under the Hood Café and Outreach Center.  FHSN is a Texas non-profit corporation with 501(c)(3) tax exempt status.  Donations may be treated as tax-deductible.   
 
UTH poster
Interested in sharing some of your time and talents with Under the Hood?   We are always happy for support in any form.  Along with monetary support to keep our doors open, we can always use other forms of assistance.  If you believe that you can provide support in some way, please feel free to contact us.  We’d be happy to put you to work!
 
 
 
Check out the  ResiStore!   Now you can purchase great items and support Under the Hood at the same time. Check it out here.
  
 Under the Hood Update is on Facebook.  Become a fan!  You can find archived issues and connect with other fans of Under the Hood.  Visit our Facebook page by clicking here.
 
Past issues of Under the Hood Update are now on the Under the Hood website!  If you’ve missed any of our past issues, or if you just want to re-read past articles, please click here
 
 
 
P.O. Box 16174 | Austin, TX 78761-6174 US