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Everyman is the name of a line of English plays from the 15th century, allegorical plays, moral theatre. They were performed in cemeteries, and the theme is always salvation. The classic is called Everyman, it's from 1485, by an anonymous author. It was right in between the death of Chaucer and the birth of Shakespeare. The moral was always 'Work hard and get into heaven', 'Be a good Christian or go to hell'. Everyman is the main character and he gets a visit from Death. He thinks it's some sort of messenger, but Death says, 'I am Death' and Everyman's answer is the first great line in English drama: 'Oh, Death, thou comest when I had thee least in mind.' When I thought of you least. My new book is about death and about dying. Well, what do you think?

— Phillip Roth, 2005

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«Sunday September 28, 2008»
Start: 3:09 pm
Housing Foreclosures! Rising Gas Prices! Never-ending war! Corporate controlled elections! It is almost time to elect a new president, but the question is, how much can we hope for change? Join us in a discussion of the 2008 presidential elections at our activist meeting Sunday September 28 3:00. We will have a round table discussion asking questions such as: Is Obama enough? Is there a Socialist Alternative? Should we vote Green? How can this election be used as an opportunity to push politics to the left? Everyone is wellcome. We hope to here from a variety of oppinions and points of view on this complicated issue. A. J. Muste Institute 339 Lafayette Street (between Bleecker & Bond), Manhattan, NYC. Hit buzzer #11; come up to the Muste Room on the 3rd Floor. (No elevator, sorry.)