UPenn SDS Statement of Solidarity with NYU Student Occupation

19 02 2009

To the students currently occupying New York University administration buildings, and the Take Back NYU coalition:

University of Pennsylvania SDS pledges solidarity and support for your continuing struggle for democracy and autonomy at NYU. Your occupation along with the student occupations around the world, are an inspiration to us as a new chapter and remind us of the tangible reality that student power can become. Writing from Philadelphia, the birthplace of liberty and independence in this nation, and in the spirit of peoplehood, your struggle reminds us that we are everywhere, and we are winning.

Take Back NYU’s list of demands for the occupation are the following:

  1. Amnesty for all parties involved.
  2. Full compensation for all employees whose jobs were disrupted during the course of the occupation.
  3. Public release of NYU’s annual budget and endowment.
  4. Allow student workers (including T.A.’s) to collectively bargain.
  5. A fair labor contract for all NYU employees at home and abroad.
  6. A Socially Responsible Finance Committee that will immediately investigate war profiteers and the lifting of the Coke ban.
  7. Annual scholarships be provided for thirteen Palestinian students.
  8. That the university donates all excess supplies and materials in an effort to rebuild the University of Gaza.
  9. Tuition stabilization for all students, beginning with the class of 2012. Tuition rates for each successive year will not exceed the rate of inflation. The university shall meet 100% of government-calculated student financial need.
  10. That student groups have priority when reserving space in the buildings owned or leased by New York University, including, and especially, the Kimmel Center.
  11. That the general public have access to Bobst Library.




Where Were You?

1 04 2008

Some clips from our Drop Debt — Not Bombs dance party.

Here is a slideshow:





90 SDS ACTIONS AROUND THE NATION

21 03 2008

FOR THE FIFTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE WAR IN IRAQ

THOUSANDS OF YOUTH DEMAND STUDENT POWER

DREXEL, UPENN, + PHILLY SDS LAUNCH NEW CAMPAIGN

Members of Philly SDS in the Nation's Capital!

This week, over 90 chapters of Students for a Democratic Society took action to end the war in Iraq and hold our universities and elected officials accountable to the student power agenda.

Locally, Philadelphia SDS busted into the Wharton business school, celebrated the Drexel Dragon, and hollered at Penn University President Amy Gutman’s campus mansion with a mobile soundsystem and a 35 student dance party. Singing “Drop Debt, Not Bombs”, alongside booming speakers, Students for a Democratic Society launched their two-campus effort to unite Penn and Drexel students for a university commitment to debt relief.

Check out www.newsds.org/march20/ to see much much more from actions around the nation!





MARCH 21: STUDENT POWER DANCE PARTY : Drop Debt Not Bombs!

7 03 2008

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Meet us on FRIDAY, MARCH 21st:

UPENN MEETUP: 12 noon at the Compass (37th + Locust)

DREXEL MEETUP: 1 pm at MacAlister Hall (33rd + Chestnut)

Join us on facebook: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=10449978635

Check out our article in the Drexel Triangle: http://media.www.thetriangle.org/media/storage/paper689/news/2008/03/14/EdOp/Drexel.Student.Debt.Crisis.May.Be.Near.Unless.The.University.Acts-3269690.shtml

You bring the friends, we bring the funk!

FUNK THE WAR with Philadelphia Students for a Democratic Society on March 21st as we dance through Penn and Drexel Universities to demand an end to war and student debt! We are celebrating the launch of our Drexel and Penn chapters with a sonic boom for the 5th anniversary of the War in Iraq. Across the nation, Students for a Democratic Society is holding walk outs, nonviolent actions for student power, peace, and affordable education.

The $500 billion dollar war in Iraq has been paid for with cuts in education and student aid. A struggling economy, rising tuition, predatory loan companies and expensive textbooks have shouldered more than 2/3 of students with an average of $19,000 in individual debt. Universities should be actively rejecting the Federal cuts to education by funding loan education programs, providing more need based financial aid, freezing tuition, and creating more opportunities for low income students.

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