WHAT: CANDLELIGHT MARCH FOR PEACE
WHEN: Wed., March 5, gather at 5:30PM
WHERE: Assemble at Hillary Clinton's office, 780 Third Ave. (47th & 48th)
BRING: Candles, signs and drums
Sponsored by United for Peace and Justice NYC, NYC Forum of Concerned Religious Leaders, and Not in Our Name
We rallied on February 15 -- and NOW WE WILL MARCH IN PEACE to prevent this war! Our march will be in conjunction with a national day of action, including student actions taking place on over 300 campuses around the country.
Senators Hillary Clinton and Chuck Schumer voted "yes" on the resolution to send our country into war on Iraq. They must be held accountable! Let's show them that New Yorkers say NO to war!
Join us for a legal candlelight march on the sidewalks of OUR city, led by community, religious, political and labor leaders. We will begin outside Hillary Clinton's office (780 Third Ave. @ 47th), proceed downtown past Chuck Schumer's office (757 Third Ave. @ 46th), and march peacefully from there to Washington Square Park for a candlelight vigil.
For more information, contact plaarman@judson.org or Chomsky17@aol.com
For more information on the March 5 student strike, see http://www.unitedforpeace.org/article.php?id=662
For more information on the March 5 national moratorium, contact religiousforum@hotmail.com or see
http://www.notinourname.net/call_for_the_moratorium.html
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Plans are also underway for a big UFPJ NYC anti-war march in a few weeks. If you would like to work on either or both of these two mobilizations, come to
an organizing meeting on Thursday, Feb. 27 at 6:30PM, 330 W. 42nd Street, 8th floor.
To get involved with organizing this and other United for Peace and Justice events in New York City, join our new low-volume organizing announcements
listserve by sending a blank email to: ufpjnyc-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
To volunteer with United for Peace and Justice in NYC, send a blank email to
nycvolunteers-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
To subscribe or unsubscribe from this list, go to
http://www.unitedforpeace.org/email.php
United for Peace and Justice NYC
(646) 473-8935
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Very interesting
Posted by: David on November 29, 2003 07:38 AMThe Stack is just what it sounds like: a tower of things that starts at the bottom and builds upward as it goes. In our case, the things in the stack are called "Stack Frames" or just "frames". We start with one stack frame at the very bottom, and we build up from there.
Posted by: Eleanor on January 18, 2004 07:31 PMThe most basic duality that exists with variables is how the programmer sees them in a totally different way than the computer does. When you're typing away in Project Builder, your variables are normal words smashed together, like software titles from the 80s. You deal with them on this level, moving them around and passing them back and forth.
Posted by: Gervase on January 18, 2004 07:32 PMSince the Heap has no definite rules as to where it will create space for you, there must be some way of figuring out where your new space is. And the answer is, simply enough, addressing. When you create new space in the heap to hold your data, you get back an address that tells you where your new space is, so your bits can move in. This address is called a Pointer, and it's really just a hexadecimal number that points to a location in the heap. Since it's really just a number, it can be stored quite nicely into a variable.
Posted by: Ciriacus on January 18, 2004 07:33 PMBut variables get one benefit people do not
Posted by: Isabella on January 18, 2004 07:34 PMA variable leads a simple life, full of activity but quite short (measured in nanoseconds, usually). It all begins when the program finds a variable declaration, and a variable is born into the world of the executing program. There are two possible places where the variable might live, but we will venture into that a little later.
Posted by: Catherine on January 18, 2004 07:34 PM