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United for Peace and Justice NYC
http://www.unitedforpeace.org/nyc 646-473-8935
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On Saturday, March 22, New York is marching to stop the war in Iraq. United for Peace and Justice NYC has applied for a permit, and the Mayor and the NYPD have pledged to respect our right to march. We are negotiating with the City over the route, which will be in Midtown Manhattan.
WHAT: NYC March for Peace and Democracy
WHEN: Noon, Saturday, 3/22
WHERE: Midtown Manhattan
**stickers, posters, & leaflets are now available at the UFPJ office - details below**
We only have two weeks to get the word out. Here's how to plug in:
1) MATERIALS NOW AVAILABLE
Spread the word about the 3/22 Anti-War March at anti-war events, in front of subway stations, outside movie theaters, anywhere people congregate!
A bilingual (English/Spanish) leaflet is available for downloading at: http://www.unitedforpeace.org/nyc
Leaflets, stickers, and posters are now available at the UFPJ office, 330 W. 42nd Street, 8th fl., 646-473-8935; weekdays 9-7, weekends 12-5.
[note: we will be housed in new offices on the 15th floor beginning Monday -- we enormously grateful to SEIU 1199 for continuing to provide us with space]
Leafleting materials are also available at these distribution centers:
MANHATTAN
Cooper Square: 61 E. 4th St.; weekdays 9-5; 212-228-8210
Green Party office: 35 E. 1st St. (betw 1st & 2nd Ave). weekdays 5:30-9:30pm; weekends 11-7; 212-673-1323.
BROOKLYN
House of the Lord Church: 415 Atlantic Ave (materials should arrive by Friday afternoon); Mon-Fri 10-7, Sat 10-4 (call first on Saturdays); 718-596-1991.
More distribution centers will be added soon. If you are interested in leafleting or setting up a distribution center in your neighborhood, contact the street leafleting coordinator, Erich Strom, at erichstrom@mindspring.com or 646-473-8935.
2) VOLUNTEER PIZZA PARTY & MEETING
Come to the Volunteer Pizza Party and Planning Meeting on Friday (March 7th), 6:30pm at the UFPJ office: 330 W 42nd St., betw 8-9th Aves., 8th floor, 646-473-8935. Bring your friends!
If you can't make it to the meeting, drop by the office to pick up materials and join in with our massive leafleting campaigns.
3) OTHER WAYS TO GET INVOLVED
* Organizing listserve (low-volume, announcements only): ufpjnyc-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
* Volunteers listserve (average one email per day, containing specific requests for volunteer assistance) nycvolunteers-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
* Outreach working group: ufpj-nyc-outreach-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
* Musicians, street performers, artists: contact Arts & Culture working group: thomasg@speakeasy.net or greenelent@earthlink.net
IF WAR BEGINS >>>
Converge on Times Square at 5pm on the day the bombing starts (the next day if bombing begins at night)
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I watch big brother
Posted by: Fred on November 29, 2003 07:38 AMThis variable is then used in various lines of code, holding values given it by variable assignments along the way. In the course of its life, a variable can hold any number of variables and be used in any number of different ways. This flexibility is built on the precept we just learned: a variable is really just a block of bits, and those bits can hold whatever data the program needs to remember. They can hold enough data to remember an integer from as low as -2,147,483,647 up to 2,147,483,647 (one less than plus or minus 2^31). They can remember one character of writing. They can keep a decimal number with a huge amount of precision and a giant range. They can hold a time accurate to the second in a range of centuries. A few bits is not to be scoffed at.
Posted by: Archibald on January 18, 2004 08:41 PMBut variables get one benefit people do not
Posted by: Wombell on January 18, 2004 08:41 PMThis variable is then used in various lines of code, holding values given it by variable assignments along the way. In the course of its life, a variable can hold any number of variables and be used in any number of different ways. This flexibility is built on the precept we just learned: a variable is really just a block of bits, and those bits can hold whatever data the program needs to remember. They can hold enough data to remember an integer from as low as -2,147,483,647 up to 2,147,483,647 (one less than plus or minus 2^31). They can remember one character of writing. They can keep a decimal number with a huge amount of precision and a giant range. They can hold a time accurate to the second in a range of centuries. A few bits is not to be scoffed at.
Posted by: Elizabeth on January 18, 2004 08:42 PMNote the new asterisks whenever we reference favoriteNumber, except for that new line right before the return.
Posted by: Nathaniel on January 18, 2004 08:43 PMWhen compared to the Stack, the Heap is a simple thing to understand. All the memory that's left over is "in the Heap" (excepting some special cases and some reserve). There is little structure, but in return for this freedom of movement you must create and destroy any boundaries you need. And it is always possible that the heap might simply not have enough space for you.
Posted by: Griffin on January 18, 2004 08:43 PM