Thursday, November 29, 2007

Novick and Merkley square off in new Street Roots

The new edition of Street Roots hits the streets tomorrow. This issue is jammed packed with great stories, including an in-depth interview with Democratic Senate candidates Steve Novick and Jeff Merkley. Street Roots along with the ACLU of Oregon, Affordable Housing Now!, Jobs With Justice, Oregon Action and the Rural Organizing Project ask important questions on homelessness, affordable housing, labor, immigrant rights, and civil liberties.

Other features include an interview with Cathy Wilkerson who recently wrote a memoir called Flying Close to the Sun: My life and times as a Weatherman. The book is a memoir of a white middle-class girl from the suburbs who became what today many would call a terrorist — a bomb-making member of the Weather Underground — who then came to learn the lessons of the 1960s that other radicals of all stripes seem not to have learned.

Cathy Wilkerson was active in the civil rights movement, Students for a Democratic Society, and the Weather Underground. In 1970, she, along with Kathy Boudin, survived an explosion in the basement of her parents' townhouse that killed three Weathermen, forcing the two underground. For the past twenty years she has worked as an educator teaching teachers in the New York City schools.

Other features include a look at the FCC consolidation, the rising tides of women in prison, and why Berkeley ditched sidewalk-sitting prohibitions.

Most of all this issue includes some great stories and poetry from the streets, including the story of Street Roots vendor Brian Letiecq, a story written by two recently housed vendors, and much more.

You can find all of this and more in the next edition of Street Roots. Don't be a scrooge, buy a copy today, you might be surprised by what you find!

Don't forget! Street Roots has set a goal to raise 25K in our annual Winter Fund Drive. Your donation will go to lowering the costs of the newspaper for vendors from 30 cents to 25 cents, giving people on the streets a 75% profit on each paper sold! It will also go to provide fresh water, coffee and a safe place to gather each and every morning. We can't do it without you!

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