New facility will help end veteran homelessness in RI


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2015-11-09 Veterans for Tomorrow 013The Rhode Island Coalition for the Homeless (RICH) is on track to satisfy their goal, outlined in Zero: 2016, of eliminating veteran homelessness by the end of the year. Since January, RICH has housed 163 homeless veterans and today they cut the ribbon on a new building, Veterans for Tomorrow, located at 1115 Douglas Ave in Providence.

Governor Gina Raimondo, as well as Senators Jack Reed and Sheldon Whitehouse and Representatives Jim Langevin and David Cicilline were on hand for the ribbon cutting ceremony, as were many other politicians. Well over 150 people turned out for the event, to the surprise of many of the speakers.

The best speaker at the ceremony was Larry Crudup, a homeless veteran who served ten years in the Army and ten additional years in the Army Reserves. who finally has a safe and private home to sleep in. “When I first saw the room,” says Crudup, “I fell in love with it.”

The rooms are spacious and come with a small living, dining area, a separate bedroom and a separate bathroom. Also, the facility comes with a community area and a classroom. “It’s better than being by yourself,” said Crudup.

Several of the political speakers made the point that no one who served our country in the military should have to suffer from homelessness. It is hoped that Rhode Island can be the first state to eliminate veteran homelessness this year.

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PVD CityArts pays tribute to Rosanne Somerson with paper rose garden


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On Friday, November 6th, students from Providence CityArts for Youth visited the Rhode Island School of Design “beach” on Benefit Street where they installed a paper Rose Garden created by CityArts youth and RISD students. This installation was a tribute to Rosanne Somerson’s inauguration, and a collaboration between RISD’s Teaching + Learning Program and CityArts. It was also a celebration of RISD’s new partnership with CityArts. This partnership aims to create a community “studio” where youth, artists, and educators join together and engage diverse communities through service and art-making. Continuing the long history of collaboration between the two entities, this new partnership includes sharing spaces, creating opportunities for RISD students to work and volunteer at CityArts, and promoting a greater footprint for CityArts on the RISD campus.

For more information about partnership and ways to get involved, please visit RISD Serves.

cityarts2Providence CityArts for Youth is a nonprofit youth arts agency, with a mission based on the ideal that all children should have access to arts learning as an essential part of childhood and youth development regardless of socio-economic background. Over 900 youth enroll in CityArts multidisciplinary arts classes at our South Side arts center on Broad Street, Boys and Girls Club in Fox Point, and in Providence public and charter schools.

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Why you should see THE PEANUTS MOVIE


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PEANUTSThe new animated film of THE PEANUTS MOVIE (dir. Steve Martino, 2015) is a true gem. A loving tribute to the late Charles Schultz, it succeeds where so many other attempts to revive classic animated characters have failed and delivers in a way that is satisfying to both children and adults.

CLICK HERE TO BUY TICKETS!

This year is the 50th anniversary of the broadcast of the dearly beloved A Charlie Brown Christmas, the classic animated gem that was decades ahead of its time when it took on the crass consumer blasphemy of Christ’s birth with the story of a little boy looking for the perfect holiday tree and a cool jazz soundtrack that still strikes the right notes. Every frame of this new film is a loving homage to that special and the multiple other Charlie Brown pictures that followed. As irony would have it, the picture was preceded by a trailer for another wretched live action-CGI hybrid film featuring Alvin and the Chipmunks. Those films, which ‘update’ the classic characters for a new generation, are instruction manuals for what not to do when producing a film.

This film, by contrast, is the complete opposite. Charlie Brown does not have a cell phone, Lucy is not cribbing her psychiatric insights from Dr. Phil, Snoopy has yet to buy an iPod (in fact he is still clicking away at the typewriter on top of his doghouse with Woodstock), Schroeder does not play Beethoven on a key-tar, and the kids are spending their free time outside playing games instead of staring at the video game console. Some animated films use the third dimension created by computer graphical dynamics to make the picture into merely a parade of gimmicks at the expense of the script. Here we have a genuine script that uses the extra dimension to give the characters some breathing room.

The plot is pretty simple, Charlie Brown runs through the pratfalls associated with a little boy’s first crush on the Little Red-Haired Girl while Snoopy engages in a fantastic battle against his age-old enemy the Red Baron. Yet that is not doing real justice to the story. The plot is just a skeleton on which the film makers hang a series of re-stagings of classic Peanuts bits that we all loved. Lucy doles out her psychiatric advice from her sidewalk booth, still for a nickel. Charlie Brown cannot get that kite to fly. Sally is still trying to get her hands on Linus, who remains tied to his security blanket. Peppermint Patty is still dependent on Marcie for vital moments of grace. The adults are still talking with voices of warbling trombones. When they have a big dance, all the kids are still dancing in that classic fashion we all loved. The Kite-Eating Tree makes an appearance, as does a chorus of carolers singing a familiar Christmas song.

When Charles Schultz died within hours of the final publication of his comic strip fifteen years ago, I for one was left feeling a little empty and sad to see the end of an epoch. After a decade and a half, we get a fitting climax that is not playing for stupidity. Rather, it reaches out for every fan of the cartoons and comic strips, gives you a great big hug, and treats you like an old friend you have not seen in years. And as a fitting tribute to how Schultz rebelled against the commercialization of the holidays, this film is a little more subtle but includes as a major plot point a stinging rebuke of standardized testing and the neoliberal commercialization of education.

On a weekend where I had the option to see either Snoopy or James Bond, I chose this film and was not disappointed. Whether or not Daniel Craig can again successfully update a story about Cold War espionage remains to be seen. Yet the film makers have created a film here that does not try to update a timeless set of characters. If this is not at least nominated for Best Animated Film come Oscar time, that body will have finally proven themselves useless. See this movie with a child, see this movie on a date, see this movie on your own, it does not matter, you will be left smiling for hours.

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Erik Loomis on his new anti-globalization book ‘Out of Sight’


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out_of_sightThe so-called middle class was largely created by labor unions and government regulations during a brief 40-year window during the 20th Century, explains popular progressive author and University of Rhode Island history professor Erik Loomis.

“From the beginning of the 1930’s with the successful unionization of the American workforce and the New Deal continuing through the 1970’s,” he explains, “was a period where American workers were getting a bigger slice of the pie, where workers were dying on the job less and less, where workers themselves were demanding safer workplaces and promoting the creation of OSHA and the EPA and other agencies that are going to ensure that Americans lead decent lives…”

Loomis’ latest book is about what happened next.

“And then corporations figured out how to escape this,” he said during a sit down interview at his URI office in Kingston. “And they do this by moving jobs overseas.”

Aptly called Out of Sight, it’s about how big corporations abandoned the American middle class to bring bad working conditions and environmental degradation to third world nations.

loomis“This is an intentional move by corporations,” Loomis says, “in order to get away from union contracts, to get away from environmental regulations, move it overseas. They can recreate the bad old days, undermine the middle class here, increase their profits and force the burden of global production onto the world’s poorest workers.”

He will be discussing his new book at AS220 on Wednesday, November 18 from 5:30 to 7:30. The event is sponsored by RI Future. An evocative author and speaker of national prominence, Loomis is the Rhode Island’s top scholar on globalization. His book was featured on C-SPAN’s Book TV, as well as in Truthout, Counterpunch, In These Times and Dissent, among others. He’s a regular contributor to the Lawyers, Guns and Money blog.

Few understand the Trans Pacific Partnership as well as Erik Loomis and he’ll be discussing and answering questions about it at the event, as well. We discussed this at length in our interview – including a potential upside for workers and progressives. Tune in tomorrow for the second part of the interview in which Loomis discusses the TPP. Wednesday, we talk about who he’s backing for president, and why.