from FARM - [email protected]
We are pleased to announce that the tentative program
schedule for the Animal Rights 2001 20th anniversary national conference
is now available at
http://www.animalrights2001.org/schedule.html
Tentative assignments will be sent to speakers next week
and the final program with speaker assignments should be available by
the end of this month. The conference will be held on June 30 - July 4
at the McLean Hilton just outside the nation's capital.
Please remember that the postmark deadline for reduced
registration rate of $140 is Tuesday, May 15. (The deadline for current
fabulous hotel rates is May 31.) You can register with a credit card
on-line at
http://www.animalrights2001.org/registration.html
or by phone (1-888-FARM-USA). You can also mail a
completed registration form from the web site with a check (to AR2001,
10101 Ashburton Lane, Bethesda, MD 20817). For more details, contact
[email protected].
In reviewing the program schedule, note that the daytime
sessions are arranged along four tracks: Issues, Organizing, Remedies,
and 'Raps' or Campaign Reports. Each time slot contains a sequential
session from each of the tracks, listed in the order above. For example,
if you are fairly new to the movement, you would want to catch the
Newcomer Orientation, then the first session in each time slot (to learn
about the issues) or the second (to learn how to become more effective).
Exhibits and videos will be running concurrently, providing a total of
six choices at any one time. The plenary sessions run consecutively,
with no competing events scheduled. Audio tapes of each session (except
for the Raps and Campaign Reports) are available for purchase shortly
after the session.
This conference marks the beginning of the new
millennium and the 20th anniversary of our movement. DON'T MISS THIS
HISTORIC OCCASION!
Go on to They Are Not
Our Property
Return to 13 May 2001 Issue
Return to Newsletters
** Fair Use Notice**
This document may contain copyrighted material, use of which has not been
specifically authorized by the copyright owners. I believe that this
not-for-profit, educational use on the Web constitutes a fair use of the
copyrighted material (as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright
Law). If you wish to use this copyrighted material for purposes of your
own that go beyond fair use, you must obtain permission from the copyright
owner.