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![]() THE AGM IDEAS FAIR What is the Ideas Fair? The Ideas Fair at Amnesty International USA's Annual General Meeting (AGM) is a standing exhibit of displays submitted by AI Local Chapters, Campus Chapters, Co-Groups, Regional Offices, exceptional individual AI activists, specialty Task Forces and Steering Committees, and staff. Do you find yourself on this list? If so, please plan to exhibit at Ideas Fair 2002! The "idea" of the AGM "Ideas" Fair is to engage the viewer with "visuals": posters, photographs, graphs and charts, newspaper clippings, "how-to" recipes for successful events, video or audio tapes. Hundreds of members and AGM visitors take time each year to absorb the beautifully displayed materials, photos, and art work. The Press often uses the Ideas Fair as a rich and meaningful background for photos and interviews. Plan to mount a display celebrating your group's, or your own, note-worthy human rights activities! Ideas Fair exhibits can be interactive: you may post materials to share, or ask viewers to sign-up for later contact. Ideas from your exhibit could be carried home in hundreds of pockets to hundreds of pockets of local human rights activism here in the US and abroad! Think about sharing your group's newsletters or other publications at the AGM Ideas Fair 2002. Highlights from Past AGMs Past AGM Ideas Fairs have featured memorable exhibits: in Nashville in 2001 Myrna Balk displayed artwork of Nepali women caught in the heartless web of trafficking and Josh Bloom shared his human rights Passover and 'Tu B'shvat Actions. Members of Somerville Group 133 created a life-size Human Rights Monopoly at the Providence AGM in 2000. In San Francisco in 1998 AC Martha Ter Matt introduced her group's Prayer Flag Project and dozens, perhaps hundreds of AGM attendees created and displayed prayer flags at the Cathedral Hill Hotel. In 1997, Anna Uremovich, an intern at the AIUSA Archives at the University of Colorado, put together a wonderful display explaining and promoting the archives. In 1996 DC staffer Carlos Salinas and DC area activists put together a breath-taking exhibit documenting human rights abuses in Columbia allegedly under-written with anti-drug funds from the United States. Group 122, Santa Fe's, Children for Children exhibit included a powerful editorial from The New Mexican extolling the virtues of advocacy letter-writing for children. The Urgent Action Program showed-off UA's in French and Spanish and simply-written Children's Edition UA's. Former Guatemala co-group leader Heather Wiley highlighted the Indigenous Peoples' Campaign with large and exquisite photos of endangered villagers. Lisa Berg's "AI Publication Through the Years," was an eye-opener and Lisa gave away hundreds of reproduction copies of AI's first Annual Report! Jack Rendler, former AIUSA Campaigns Director and Scott Harrison, Urgent Action Coordinator, exhibited their photographs of Rwandan children from the UN Refugee Camps in Goma, Zaire. No idea is too modest or too grandiose. Guidelines Displays, audio-visual requirements, and content will be reviewed by the AGM Planning Committee for compliance with Amnesty International's mission and the AGM budget. No valuable, one-of-a-kind materials should be displayed and AIUSA is not liable for damage or loss. Sign up today for Ideas Fair 2002
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