Difference between revisions of "Antonio Rodriguez"

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At the conference, [[Antonio Rodriguez]] of [[CASA]] was selected to go on the National Steering Committee.<ref>[http://www.historicalvoices.org/pbuilder/pbfiles/Project39/Scheme361/african_activist_archive-a0a7j3-b_12419.pdf Letter to all persons who attended the Angola Support Conference, July 8, 1976]</ref>
 
At the conference, [[Antonio Rodriguez]] of [[CASA]] was selected to go on the National Steering Committee.<ref>[http://www.historicalvoices.org/pbuilder/pbfiles/Project39/Scheme361/african_activist_archive-a0a7j3-b_12419.pdf Letter to all persons who attended the Angola Support Conference, July 8, 1976]</ref>
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The [[Angola Support Conference]] came into existence to organize a conference to support the MPLA held in Chicago, May 28-30, 1976. The Conference supported the MPLA and opposed U.S. and South African intervention in Angola. The sponsors were organizations supporting the MPLA from around the country. After the Chicago conference, the organization continued its activities with [[Prexy Nesbitt]] serving as national coordinator. Sponsors were;
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*[[Barbara Barnes]], [[MPLA Solidarity Committee]]
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*[[Marjorie Boehm|Marjorie M. Boehm]], [[Women's International League for Peace and Freedom]]
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*[[James Bristol|James E. Bristol]], [[American Friends Service Committee]]
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*[[Robert S. Browne]], [[Black Economic Research Center]]
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*[[Robert Chrisman]]; [[Black Scholar]]
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*[[Johnnetta B. Cole]]; National Committee of the [[Venceremos Brigade]]
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*[[Henry Foner]], Amalgamated Meatcutters and Butcherworkmen of North America;
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*[[Larry Holmes]]; [[Youth Against War and Fascism]]
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*[[George Houser|George M. Houser]], [[American Committee on Africa]]
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*[[Lee Johnson|A. Lee Johnson]], [[Coalition of Black Trade Unionists]]
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*[[Brenda J. Jones]], [[Freedomways Magazine]]
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*[[Edgar Lockwood]], [[Washington Office on Africa]];
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*[[Willis Logan]], Africa Office, [[National Council of Churches]]
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*[[Anthony Monteiro]], [[National Anti-Imperialist Movement in Solidarity with African Liberation]]
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*[[Patricia Murray]], [[National Council of Black Lawyers]]
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*[[Prexy Nesbitt]], [[US Out of Angola Committee]] and [[Chicago Committee for the Liberation of Angola, Mozambique and Guinea]]
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*[[Moses Newsom]], [[Afro-American Newspapers]]
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*[[Lance Pustin]], [[Prairie Fire Organizing Committee]]
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*[[Antonio Rodriguez|Anthony H. Rodrigues]], CSAS-General Brotherhood of Workers
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*[[Michael Simmons]], [[Third World Coalition]]/[[Southwest Workers Federation]]
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*[[Jose Velazquez|Jose E. Velazquez]], [[Partide Socialista Pertorriquena]]
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*[[Joe Walker]], [[Bilalian News]]. .<ref>http://africanactivist.msu.edu/organization.php?name=Angola+Support+Conference Angola Support Conference Wisconsin State Historical Society]</ref>
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[[Category:Angola Support Conference]]
  
 
==Chicano movement==
 
==Chicano movement==

Revision as of 09:57, 14 February 2011

Antonio Rodriguez

Hard Times Conference

In 1976 Antonio Rodrigue, Secretary General CASA attended the Weather Underground and Prairie Fire Organizing Committee organized Hard Times Conference Jan 30 - Feb 1 at the University of Chicago.[1]

Cuba trip

According to Portia Sieglebaum, writing in the Communist Party USA's Daily World, Wednesday March 3, 1976 page 4, in late February, the Marxist-Leninist Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola and Angola government officials led a two-dav seminar in Havana to acquaint a large United States delegation with the struggle of the Angolan people.

A day and a half presentation by three Angolan leaders: Commandante Dibala, a member of the MPLA central committee and political commissar of the Eastern Front; Olga Lima, director of political affairs in the Ministry of Foreign Relations; and Pedro Zinga Baptista, a member of the Foreign relations department of the MPLA, was followed by a question and answer period. The MPLA spokesmen affirmed that MPLA doesn't believe that revolutions can be exported, but that it does believe that examples are followed.

Attending the seminar were 26 North Americans representing a wide range of organizations as well as several journalists.

Among the representatives were Marjorie Boehm from Women's International League for Peace and Freedom; James Bristol of the American Friends Service Committee; Robert Chrisman of the magazine Black Scholar: Henry Foner of the Fur and Leather Workers Joint Board; George Houser of the American Committee on Africa; Lee Johnson of the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists; Brenda Jones of Freedomways Magazine: Willis Logan of the Africa Office, National Council of Churches; Anthony Monteiro of National Anti-Imperialist Movement in Solidarity with African Liberation ; Patricia Murray of National Conference of Black Lawyers; Antonio Rodriguez of Centra de Accion Social Autonomo (acasa), a Chicano organization and Jose Velazquez of the Puerto Rican Socialist Party.

A telegram sent to the gathering by Rep.Charles Diggs (D-Mich) expressed regret that he could not attend and offered his hope for a frank and fruitful meeting.

North Americans in Support of Angola

Angola conference.JPG

The Angola Support Conference ran from May 28 - 30, 1976 in Chicago. The event was sponsored by the U.S. Out of Angola Committee and the National Conference of Black Lawyers.

At the conference, Antonio Rodriguez of CASA was selected to go on the National Steering Committee.[2]

The Angola Support Conference came into existence to organize a conference to support the MPLA held in Chicago, May 28-30, 1976. The Conference supported the MPLA and opposed U.S. and South African intervention in Angola. The sponsors were organizations supporting the MPLA from around the country. After the Chicago conference, the organization continued its activities with Prexy Nesbitt serving as national coordinator. Sponsors were;

Chicano movement

The 40th Anniversary Commemoration Committee of the Chicano Moratoriums was formed in the summer 2009 by the Chair of the National Chicano Moratorium Committee of August 29, 1970 along with two independent Chicano Movement historians whom although not of the baby boomer generation, have become inspired by the Movimiento. The organization posted a list of significant “Chicano movement” activists on its website which included Antonio Rodriguez.[4]

References

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