64 Downing St
New York City, New York 10014

--MICHELLE GOLDBERG of Salon on the religious right

--GARY BASS, Princeton Prof and mucho published
journalist on war crimes tribunals (okay, Gary is
reading from his first book, he claims)

--And direct from Russia: MARK AMES of the New York
Press, et al. on America?s rage murder phenomenon

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Tuesday, November 8, 7:30 pm
JUNNO?s in the West Village
64 Downing Street
between Bedford & Varick, just north of W. Houston
Free. For directions and information, call: 212 627
7995

Hosted by Julian Rubinstein

READER BIOS:

Michelle Goldberg is a senior writer for Salon.com.
She has reported from India, Iraq, Jordan, Egypt and
Israel, and for the past year she has been immersed in
the equally foreign world of the American religious
right. Her book "Kingdom Coming: The Rise of Christian
Nationalism" will be published next spring by W.W.
Norton.

Gary Bass is an associate professor of politics and
international affairs at Princeton. He is the author
of Stay the Hand of Vengeance: The Politics of War
Crimes Tribunals, and is writing a new book on
humanitarian intervention and the origins of the
modern human rights movement. He is a former
Washington reporter and West Coast correspondent for
The Economist, and has also written for The New York
Times, The New Yorker, The Washington Post, The Los
Angeles Times, The Boston Globe, The New Republic,
Foreign Affairs, and other publications.

Mark Ames is the founding editor of "The eXile," a
Moscow-based English-language newspaper and web
magazine, co-author of the book "The eXile: Sex, Drugs
and Libel in the New Russia" with Matt Taibbi, and
author of "V Rossiu s Lubovyu," a collection of
translated columns published in Russia. His newest
book, ?Going Postal,? follows 1 1/2 years of research
in Kentucky, Santee and San Jose investigating rage
murders and the culture that produced them. He is a
regular contributor to The New York Press and has been
published in the Nation, Playboy, The San Jose Mercury
News, Metro Silicon Valley and several Russian
newspapers including Kommersant and Limonka. He has
lived in Russia for most of the last ten years.

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Added by ipcar on October 31, 2005