NATIONAL MORATORIUM TO STOP THE WAR ON IRAQ
Wed, March 5th
No school, no work, no business as usual. There are LOTS of actions including:
*Wear an armband made of silver duct tape.
*PICK UP FLYERS at Community Church, 40 E 35th St (downstairs), btw Park & Madison; & Judson Church, 55 Washington Sq South.
*Morning: NEIGHBORHOOD-BASED ACTIONS & leafletting at subways stops, major intersections & military recruiting stations.
Schedule of events...
*9:30am-5:30pm
DRAWN-IN
Artists Against the War. Gather in the Assyrian gallery at the Metropolitan Museum. Bring drawing paper & pencil.
*Noon:
STUDENT CONVERGENCE & FESTIVAL OF RESISTANCE
At Union Sq Park South Followed by a moving subway speakout & march to Hunter College for a rally at 2:30.
*2pm-8pm
RALLY & REPRESENT
Music & Vibes: Anti-Balas, Hangar 18, Beans, Magus, Dj Rekha, Dj Ras Kush, Dj Ese. Speakers: Maya (Not In Our Name), Amy Goodman (WBAI Democracy Now!), Benita Hussain (Viscera), Michael Ratner (Center for Constitutional Rights), Michael Smith (National Lawyers Guild). Video Screenings by Off Center Productions & Rooftop Films. At Northsix, 66 N 6th St (Wythe & Kent) in Williamsburg, Bkln. L to Bedford Ave. Walk west (towards Manhattan) on North 6th St 3 blks. $ Donation. Info: voiceyours.egenius.com
*5-8pm
TEACH-IN ON THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION, WAR, & HEALTH.
At Hunter College Brookdale Campus (not 68th St), 425 E 25th St at 1st Ave, Auditorium. (M23 bus East-West, M15 North-South on 1st Ave, 6 to 23rd St, shuttle from 68th St Campus on the hour). Info: warandhealth@yahoo.com.
*5:30pm
CANDLELIGHT MARCH FOR PEACE.
Senators Hillary Clinton & Chuck Schumer voted to send our country into war on Iraq. They must be held accountable! Assemble in front of Senator Clinton's office, 780 3rd Ave (47th & 48th St). Then march past Senator Schumer's office (757 3rd Ave) to Washington Sq Pk (arriving about 7pm). Bring candles, signs, drums, noise-makers.
*7:30 pm:
CITYWIDE RESISISTANCE FESTIVAL
(w/music & poetry). At Cathedral of St John the Divine. Info: 212-477-0351, religiousforum@hotmail.com; 626-683-9004, icujp@pacbell.net
*7:30pm
INT'L DAY OF POETRY AGAINST THE WAR.
Open reading for pro-peace poets. At Bkln Ethical Culture 53 Prospect Pk West & 2nd St. Info & Updates: 646 473-8935, 212-969-8058, www.unitedforpeace.org, www.nyspc.net. www.notinourname.net/, www.moratoriumtostopwar.org
*7:30pm
THE COLORS OF THE ANTI-WAR MOVEMENT:
Leading Experiences in Organizing, w/Bhairavi Desai (Taxi Workers Alliance), Larry Hamm (Peoples Organization for Progress) & others TBA. At Brecht Forum, 122 W 27th St, 10 fl. $6/$8/$10 donation. Info: 212-242-4201,
Nice article
Posted by: Steven on November 29, 2003 07:39 AMSince 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: Emanuel on January 18, 2004 10:35 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: Erasmus on January 18, 2004 10:35 PMWhen Batman went home at the end of a night spent fighting crime, he put on a suit and tie and became Bruce Wayne. When Clark Kent saw a news story getting too hot, a phone booth hid his change into Superman. When you're programming, all the variables you juggle around are doing similar tricks as they present one face to you and a totally different one to the machine.
Posted by: Paul on January 18, 2004 10:36 PMThis will allow us to use a few functions we didn't have access to before. These lines are still a mystery for now, but we'll explain them soon. Now we'll start working within the main function, where favoriteNumber is declared and used. The first thing we need to do is change how we declare the variable. Instead of
Posted by: Jasper on January 18, 2004 10:36 PMWhen a variable is finished with it's work, it does not go into retirement, and it is never mentioned again. Variables simply cease to exist, and the thirty-two bits of data that they held is released, so that some other variable may later use them.
Posted by: Matilda on January 18, 2004 10:37 PM