The Buffalo News, “A granddaughter’s portrayal of Dorothy Day”
Get ready now for a few paragraphs that detail the complication that describes Dorothy’s life over the next ten years. In 1917, atheism, anarchism, socialism, vegetarianism, women’s rights, free love, free speech, free thought – all were in the air in New York City’s Greenwich Village, our author writes. Continue Reading
Golden Gate Xpress, “Labor archives exhibit closes with a message for current times”
The name of the exhibit was taken from an entry in The Blast, an anarchist newspaper of the time, which criticized those who wanted the U.S. to enter World War I. Continue Reading
Vice, “What It’s Like to Work for Less Than the Minimum Wage”
I’m conscious that I wouldn’t normally be awake for another couple of hours, but I feel grateful to have seen the online advert for this job. I start talking to a Belgian guy called Phillipe who introduces me to a few of the other workers. I get to know most of the early starters fairly […]
Columbia Daily Tribune, “Loaves and Fishes feeds the hungry in Columbia,” April 12, 2015
Loaves and Fishes feeds the hungry in Columbia by Katherine Cummins, Columbia Daily Tribune, April 12, 2015 According to Steve Jacobs, director of the St. Francis Catholic Workers, the Loaves and Fishes Soup Kitchen started at the Newman Center Catholic Church in 1982 to re-enact the Gospel stories of Jesus feeding the multitudes by providing […]