Men Against Power: Antistatism, Grassroots Organizing, and the Vietnam Veterans Against the War by Ryan J. Kirkby a Thesis Pres

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Men Against Power: Antistatism, Grassroots Organizing, and the Vietnam Veterans Against the War by Ryan J. Kirkby a Thesis Pres Men against Power: Antistatism, Grassroots Organizing, and the Vietnam Veterans Against the War by Ryan J. Kirkby A thesis presented to the University of Waterloo in fulfillment of the thesis requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, 2014 © Ryan J. Kirkby 2014 AUTHOR’S DECLARATION I hereby declare that I am the sole author of this thesis. This is a true copy of the thesis, including any required final revisions, as accepted by my examiners. I understand that my thesis may be made electronically available to the public. ii ABSTRACT This dissertation examines the history of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW) from its founding in 1967 through to the early 2000s. Whereas past scholars have interpreted VVAW’s activism as motivated by the therapeutic promises of protest, disenchantment with U.S. foreign policy, and reverence for the peace and justice movements of the 1960s, the present analysis situates VVAW in the context of the larger antistatist movement that emerged during the unraveling of liberalism in the late 1960s and early 1970s. It argues that VVAW’s activism, in addition to its clear antiwar purpose, represented an antistatist response to the top-down, technocratic features of the postwar liberal state. In doing so, it has three aims. First, it seeks to revive scholarly consideration of VVAW, an organization that is well known but has generated surprisingly little attention from historians since the late 1990s and early 2000s. Second, and equally important, it purposes a new perspective for understanding the postwar period, one that reinterprets sixties activism as part of a longstanding dialogue in American history regarding the limits of state power in an increasingly centralized system. Finally, this study projects a view of sixties protest that transcends simplistic categorizations of “liberal” and “radical,” as well as “left” and “right,” in order to draw out the cross-pollinating tendencies that existed between the postwar state’s various critics, not least their mutual appeals for greater community control and decentralized ways of organizing. iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS It goes without saying that a lot of time and energy went into completing this dissertation. Less obvious is the number of people who helped me along the way. My first debt of gratitude goes to my advisor and mentor, Andrew Hunt. From my earliest days in graduate school to the bitter end he has been a steadfast source of inspiration and support. An expert on VVAW, he helped me navigate the challenges of re-telling its history by sharing his insights on the organization and offering me some hard-to-find newspapers and publications from his own personal collection. His guidance, criticism, and feedback sustained me when times were tough and carried me through to the finish. Finding out that we shared a mutual interest in film noir, classic Hollywood cinema, and the works of Howard Hawks, John Ford, and Raoul Walsh brought an added depth to our meetings over the years, helping to cultivate a very real friendship. Needless to say, this project would have suffered in his absence. The other members of my dissertation committee deserve equal thanks. Darren Mulloy has been a fixture of my academic career going back to my days at Wilfrid Laurier University. His keen intellect, perceptive criticism, and thoughtful encouragement improved the quality and scope of my argument at every stage, and made me better a scholar. I am likewise grateful to John Sbardellati and Brian Orend for their discerning questions and feedback at my defense. They have given me much to consider as I prepare this project for publication. A profound thank-you also goes to John McMillian who provided invaluable support and criticism as my external reader. Having him serve on my dissertation committee was a tremendously positive experience, one I won’t soon forget. One of the great pleasures of writing a dissertation is spending time in the archives. I am deeply appreciative of the many librarians and archivists who assisted me at the Wisconsin State iv Historical Society, where the bulk of VVAW’s records are held, and to the good people in charge of the Joseph A. Labadie Collection at the University of Michigan. The generous financial assistance provided by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council, the Ontario Graduate Scholarship program, and the University of Waterloo made such research trips possible, and helped me withstand the lean years of graduate school. I am also indebted to Jan Barry, Barry Romo, Lee Thorn, and Terry DuBose for answering my calls and sharing their stories, and to Robert Sharlet who happily responded to my questions about his brother, Jeff Sharlet, one of the unsung heroes of the antiwar movement. John Lindquist and Annie Bailey were interviewed too late to have their oral testimonies integrated into the dissertation, but I wish to thank them here with the promise that the content of our discussions will be more thoroughly incorporated into the manuscript at a later date. I would also like to acknowledge Richard Stacewicz whose oral history of VVAW remains a largely untapped goldmine for sixties scholars. During the course of writing this dissertation I presented my findings at a number of conferences where I received excellent feedback. My sincerest thanks to Stephen Ortiz and Jennifer Mittelstadt for reaching out to me at the 2014 Organization of American Historians annual meeting in Atlanta, Georgia, and listening to my ideas. Their enthusiasm for my project and astute suggestions gave me added confidence down the homestretch. Thank you as well to Robbie Lieberman and Heather Fryer who edited an article I wrote for Peace & Change: A Journal of Peace Research, much of which found its way into Chapter Two. Their thoughtful commentary and attention to detail proved most helpful, offering sound advice on how to refine my argument and streamline some of my prose. v Many thanks go to all the wonderful students, faculty, and staff who comprise the Tri- University History program. In particular, I wish to single out Matt Roth, Lorene Bridgen, Jill Campbell-Miller, Jonathan Crossen, Mark Sweeney, and Ian Haight for their friendship, laughter, and irreverence. Researching and writing a dissertation can be a lonely, soul-crushing endeavor. Sharing the past six years together with them has been one of the pleasures of my life. Additional appreciation goes to Donna Hayes who on countless occasions guided me through the university’s laborious bureaucracy with patience and aplomb. Her warmth and resourcefulness never went unappreciated. Special thanks are also extended to James Walker, David Monod, and Richard Reid for their interest in my intellectual development and for making the first years of my Ph.D. so rewarding. Finally, I wish to thank my family. To my parents, Terry and Brenda, and my two brothers, Tyler and Brett: I owe you more than you will ever know. We have suffered a great deal together these past few years, often at a cost we would rather not pay. Thank you for your unyielding love and encouragement, and for your assistance through bad times and good. Growing up I was naïve and assumed all children came from such supportive families. I know differently now and no longer take what we have for granted. To my in-laws, Larry, Twyla, Sarah, and Ian: Thank you for accepting me into your world and making me a part of your family. Larry and Sarah deserve special mention. Historians themselves, they never failed to provide advice as I stumbled my way through the often opaque and intimidating world of academia. I also owe an enormous debt to my four grandparents, two of whom passed away in the final months before this dissertation was finished and one before it even began. Not a day goes by that I don’t reflect on their loving kindness. vi My deepest debt of gratitude goes to my wife Rachel. Words cannot express how much you mean to me. You are the single greatest source of happiness in my life. Thank you for believing in me and my ability to complete this project, and for tolerating all my inadequacies. Thank you for accompanying me on my trips to Madison, for the late nights watching TCM, for our quiet breakfasts together, and most of all for the many moments of laughter spread throughout the years. I will never be able to repay you for the love and emotional support you have given me, but I plan to keep trying. vii For Rachel, Who suffered with me and paid her dues viii TABLE OF CONTENTS AUTHOR’S DECLARATION ....................................................................................................... ii ABSTRACT ................................................................................................................................... iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ........................................................................................................... iv DEDICATION ............................................................................................................................. viii TABLE OF CONTENTS ............................................................................................................... ix EPIGRAPH ......................................................................................................................................x INTRODUCTION: The Antistatist Context ....................................................................................1 CHAPTER ONE: Unlikely Rebels ................................................................................................20
Recommended publications
  • Soldiers and Veterans Against the War
    Vietnam Generation Volume 2 Number 1 GI Resistance: Soldiers and Veterans Article 1 Against the War 1-1990 GI Resistance: Soldiers and Veterans Against the War Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.lasalle.edu/vietnamgeneration Part of the American Studies Commons Recommended Citation (1990) "GI Resistance: Soldiers and Veterans Against the War," Vietnam Generation: Vol. 2 : No. 1 , Article 1. Available at: http://digitalcommons.lasalle.edu/vietnamgeneration/vol2/iss1/1 This Complete Volume is brought to you for free and open access by La Salle University Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Vietnam Generation by an authorized editor of La Salle University Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. GI RESISTANCE: S o l d ie r s a n d V e t e r a n s AGAINST THE WAR Victim am Generation Vietnam Generation was founded in 1988 to promote and encourage interdisciplinary study of the Vietnam War era and the Vietnam War generation. The journal is published by Vietnam Generation, Inc., a nonprofit corporation devoted to promoting scholarship on recent history and contemporary issues. ViETNAM G en eratio n , In c . ViCE-pRESidENT PRESidENT SECRETARY, TREASURER Herman Beavers Kali Tal Cindy Fuchs Vietnam G eneration Te c HnIc a I A s s is t a n c e EdiTOR: Kali Tal Lawrence E. Hunter AdvisoRy BoARd NANCY ANISFIELD MICHAEL KLEIN RUTH ROSEN Champlain College University of Ulster UC Davis KEVIN BOWEN GABRIEL KOLKO WILLIAM J. SEARLE William Joiner Center York University Eastern Illinois University University of Massachusetts JACQUELINE LAWSON JAMES C.
    [Show full text]
  • Uva-DARE (Digital Academic Repository)
    UvA-DARE (Digital Academic Repository) ‘Whose Vietnam?’ - ‘Lessons learned’ and the dynamics of memory in American foreign policy after the Vietnam War Beukenhorst, H.B. Publication date 2012 Link to publication Citation for published version (APA): Beukenhorst, H. B. (2012). ‘Whose Vietnam?’ - ‘Lessons learned’ and the dynamics of memory in American foreign policy after the Vietnam War. General rights It is not permitted to download or to forward/distribute the text or part of it without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), other than for strictly personal, individual use, unless the work is under an open content license (like Creative Commons). Disclaimer/Complaints regulations If you believe that digital publication of certain material infringes any of your rights or (privacy) interests, please let the Library know, stating your reasons. In case of a legitimate complaint, the Library will make the material inaccessible and/or remove it from the website. Please Ask the Library: https://uba.uva.nl/en/contact, or a letter to: Library of the University of Amsterdam, Secretariat, Singel 425, 1012 WP Amsterdam, The Netherlands. You will be contacted as soon as possible. UvA-DARE is a service provided by the library of the University of Amsterdam (https://dare.uva.nl) Download date:02 Oct 2021 Bibliography Primary sources cited (Archival material, government publications, reports, surveys, etc.) ___________________________________________________________ Ronald Reagan Presidential Library (RRPL), Simi Valley, California NSC 1, February 6, 1981: Executive Secretariat, NSC: folder NSC 1, NSC Meeting Files, Ronald Reagan Presidential Library (RRPL). ‘News clippings’, Folder: ‘Central American Speech April 27, 1983 – May 21, 1983’, Box 2: Central American Speech – Exercise reports, Clark, William P.: Files, Ronald Reagan Presidential Library (RRPL).
    [Show full text]
  • Men Against Power: Antistatism, Grassroots Organizing, and the Vietnam Veterans Against the War by Ryan J. Kirkby a Thesis Pres
    Men against Power: Antistatism, Grassroots Organizing, and the Vietnam Veterans Against the War by Ryan J. Kirkby A thesis presented to the University of Waterloo in fulfillment of the thesis requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, 2014 © Ryan J. Kirkby 2014 AUTHOR’S DECLARATION I hereby declare that I am the sole author of this thesis. This is a true copy of the thesis, including any required final revisions, as accepted by my examiners. I understand that my thesis may be made electronically available to the public. ii ABSTRACT This dissertation examines the history of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW) from its founding in 1967 through to the early 2000s. Whereas past scholars have interpreted VVAW’s activism as motivated by the therapeutic promises of protest, disenchantment with U.S. foreign policy, and reverence for the peace and justice movements of the 1960s, the present analysis situates VVAW in the context of the larger antistatist movement that emerged during the unraveling of liberalism in the late 1960s and early 1970s. It argues that VVAW’s activism, in addition to its clear antiwar purpose, represented an antistatist response to the top-down, technocratic features of the postwar liberal state. In doing so, it has three aims. First, it seeks to revive scholarly consideration of VVAW, an organization that is well known but has generated surprisingly little attention from historians since the late 1990s and early 2000s. Second, and equally important, it purposes a new perspective for understanding the postwar period, one that reinterprets sixties activism as part of a longstanding dialogue in American history regarding the limits of state power in an increasingly centralized system.
    [Show full text]
  • 100Fires Books PO Box 27 Arcata, CA 95518 180-Movement for Democracy and Education PO Box 251701 Little Rock
    100Fires Books PO Box 27 Arcata, CA 95518 www.100fires.com 180Movement for Democracy and Education PO Box 251701 Little Rock, AR 72225 USA Phone: (501) 2442439 Fax: (501) 3743935 [email protected] www.corporations.org/democracy/ 1990 Trust Suite 12 Winchester House 9 Cranmer Road London SW9 6EJ UK Phone: 020 7582 1990 Fax: 0870 127 7657 www.blink.org.uk [email protected] 20/20 Vision Jim Wyerman, Executive Director 1828 Jefferson Place NW Washington, DC 20036 Phone: (202) 8332020 Fax: (202) 8335307 www.2020vision.org [email protected] 2030 Center 1025 Connecticut Avenue NW Suite 205 Washington, DC 20036 Phone: (877) 2030ORG Fax: (202) 9555606 www.2030.org [email protected] 21st Century Democrats 1311 L Street, NW Suite 300 Washington, DC 20005 Phone: (202) 6265620 Fax: (202) 3470956 www.21stDems.org [email protected] 4H 7100 Connecticut Avenue Chevy Chase, MD 20815 Phone: (301) 9612983 Fax: (301) 9612894 www.fourhcouncil.edu 50 Years is Not Enough 3628 12th Street NE Washington, DC 20017 Phone: 202IMFBANK www.50years.org [email protected] 911 Media Arts Center Fidelma McGinn, Executive Director 117 Yale Avenue N. Seattle, WA 98109 Phone: (206) 6826552 Fax: (206) 6827422 www.911media.org [email protected] AInfos Radio Project www.radio4all.net AZone 2129 N. Milwaukee Avenuue Chicago, IL 60647 Phone: (312) 4943455 www.azone.org [email protected] A.J. Muste Memorial Institite 339 Lafayette Street New York, NY 10012 Phone: (212) 5334335 www.ajmuste.org [email protected] ABC No Rio 156 Rivington Street New York, NY 100022411 Phone:
    [Show full text]
  • H 2228 Trials
    Trials H 2228 BACKGROUND: The free-floating subdivision BTrials, litigation, etc. is used under names of individual persons, families, corporate bodies, or jurisdictions for the proceedings of civil or criminal actions to which they are parties, or for works about such proceedings, as described below. As a general rule, the same practices are followed in assigning subject headings to the actual proceedings of a trial as to works about a trial. The procedures described below therefore apply to both categories of material. 1. General collections of trials. Assign the heading Trials (May Subd Geog) to non-topical collections of proceedings of trials, or to general works describing various trials. Examples: Title: Trials that made headlines. 650 #0 $a Trials. Title: Great American courtroom battles. 650 #0 $a Trials $z United States. 2. Collections of particular types of trials. Assign headings of the type Trials ([topic]) (May Subd Geog) to collections of proceedings of particular types of civil or criminal trials, or to works describing several trials of a specific type. Example: Title: Witchcraft trials of Connecticut. 650 #0 $a Trials (Witchcraft) $z Connecticut. Subject Headings Manual H 2228 Page 1 June 2013 H 2228 Trials 3. Individual criminal trials. Assign as the first heading the name of the defendant with the subdivision BTrials, litigation, etc., or, if the trial has been established as a subject heading, the heading for the name of the trial. Assign one or more additional headings of the type Trials ([topic])B[place], as appropriate, and any other topical headings required for the work in hand.
    [Show full text]
  • UUAA Veterans for Peace Annual Report 2020-2021 Group Leader: Michael Muha
    UUAA Veterans for Peace Annual Report 2020-2021 Group Leader: Michael Muha UUAA Veterans for Peace is part of a larger organization, Veterans for Peace, which is a global organization of Military Veterans and allies whose collective efforts are to build a culture of peace by using our experiences and lifting our voices. We inform the public of the true causes of war and the enormous costs of wars (including physical, psychological, emotional, environmental), with an obligation to heal the wounds of wars. Our network is comprised of over 140 chapters worldwide whose work includes: educating the public, advocating for a dismantling of the war economy, providing services that assist veterans and victims of war, and most significantly, working to end all wars. We didn’t do what we anticipated because of not having the usual social contact. Along with our parent organization, Veterans for Peace Chapter 93, accomplished the following: • Martin Luther King Day presentations EMU, UM, and Ann Arbor Public Library, with the theme “Beyond Militarism: Where Do We Go From Here?” (https://aadl.org/node/575155) • Ann Arbor’s Veterans Park on Veterans Day, and Detroit’s Grand Circus Park on July 4, erected a memorial for military members from Michigan killed in Iraq and Afghanistan - to remind people of the costs of war • Awarded scholarships to student who will pursue studies in a Peace Studies program or other program that actively promotes the study of global conflict resolution or issues of peace and justice. • To fund our scholarships, hosted a virtual John Lennon Birthday Concert with local musicians, and created a CD: https://www.vfp93.org/john-lennon-concert-cd We definitely relate to the Sixth Principle: The goal of world community with peace, liberty, and justice for all, as well as the First Principle: The inherent worth and dignity of every person, and the Seventh Principle: Respect for the interdependent web of all existence of which we are a part.
    [Show full text]
  • VVAW's December 2005 Letter
    VIETNAM VETERANS AGAINST THE WAR, INC PO Box 408594, Chicago, IL 60640 - (773) 276-4189 www.vvaw.org [email protected] Dear Friend of Vietnam Veterans Against the War, What a difference a year makes! Not only have the American people turned against the war, but Vietnam Veterans Against the War has been able to make a bigger contribution to changing people’s minds about the war than ever before. At our late October National Meeting, the best attended in many, many years, we resolved to further deepen our participation in the national anti-war movement. We heard local representatives talk about their speaking to high school classes, raising funds for the My Lai Peace Park in Vietnam, representing veterans at local anti-war demonstrations, offering personal support to returning Iraq vets, attending local vigils on the night of the 2000th U.S military death in the Iraq war, and engaging in civil disobedience at the White House. Ray Parrish, our military counselor, regularly makes a real difference in the lives of individual veter- ans and GI’s. Ray tells me that some vets who call him want to deal with their Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder symptoms in a political rather than a clinical setting. One vet he talked to had done two tours in Iraq. After the first tour, John didn’t really want to go back, but he didn’t talk to anyone in the GI counsel- ing movement because he was hearing from military commanders that people who opposed the war didn’t support the troops. He told Ray that, between tours, “he and Johnny Walker became best friends.” John got out of the military after his second tour.
    [Show full text]
  • Malooly, Coury- Honors Project
    WE GAVE THIS COUNTRY OUR ALL, AND WE RECEIVED LIES, BETRAYAL, AND NEGLECT! VIETNAM VETERANS AGAINST THE WAR IN THE ANTI-VIETNAM WAR MOVEMENT by Coury Malooly Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for Departmental Honors in the Department of History Texas Christian University Fort Worth, Texas May 4, 2020 1 WE GAVE THIS COUNTRY OUR ALL, AND WE RECEIVED LIES, BETRAYAL, AND NEGLECT! VIETNAM VETERANS AGAINST THE WAR IN THE ANTI-VIETNAM WAR MOVEMENT Project Approved: Supervising Professor: Kara Vuic, PhD, Department of History Peter Worthing, PhD, Department of History Brad Lucas, PhD, Department of English 2 ABSTRACT The Vietnam War is arguably the most controversial war in American history. The motives, rationale, and methods used to fight the war stir great controversy within the U.S. public. To some, the United States would have won the Vietnam War if it had not “been fighting with one hand behind its back” due to the anti-war movement, but to others, the United States could never achieve victory in the Vietnam War because of the determination of the North Vietnamese state and the Viet Cong. This debate sparked hostility against Vietnam veterans in America during the war as well. American popular culture and myth commonly portray Vietnam veterans as brash, impulsive, and sometimes even violent people received with hostility by the leftist anti-war protestors like the hippies and draft card burners. However, veterans who fought in the war made up one significant part of the anti-war movement, many of whom enlisted. Though the common view is that the military is largely conservative, Vietnam veterans received hostility from conservatives as well because they were considered ineffective fighters and losers in some cases.
    [Show full text]
  • The Final Cover-Up Scott Camil Last Week When Richard Nixon Finally
    The Final Cover-Up Scott Camil Last week when Richard Nixon finally died, my 14-year old daughter Laurel who is an International Baccalaureate student at Eastside High School here in Gainesville asked me, "Why is Nixon being honored?" She wanted to know what kind of message society was sending to the youth of America by paying so much tribute and honor to a person who was so totally without honor. In seeking to come up with a good answer for her, I read all of the articles I could in the days following Nixon's death to see if I could figure out this total distortion of history which could honor the most dishonorable President we have ever had. So let's take a look at the record. Nixon's 1946 "political career began as it ended, with deliberate duplicity designed for one purpose: to win."(sk/v 557) "He once confided to a friend, 'If you can't lie you'll never go anywhere'".(sk/v 557) In his first political race, he won by smearing his opponent, Congressman Jerry Voorhis, as a communist sympathizer. This was done with advertising, speeches and an anonymous telephone campaign where people were called on the phone and told, "This is a friend of yours, I just want you to know that Jerry Voorhis is a communist." (tfan/wc 55) The person would then hang up. As a freshman congressman, Nixon was assigned to the House Un-American Activities Committee. His most infamous success on the committee was the attack on Alger Hiss, a state department official who was convicted of perjury and sent to prison.
    [Show full text]
  • Resume Di Nino Full 2020 (Pdf) Download
    lynndinino.com 2313 N 29th St .Tacoma Wa 98403 . (253) 396 0774 . [email protected] Born: Roswell, N.M. 1945 A freelance artist since 1974, I’m self-taught and completely self-supporting through private commissions, shows and galleries. My sculptural work stems from ideas or phrases, usually involving social or political observation. The excitement comes in selecting the right materials to fit the idea: maybe concrete, household objects, plastic, shredded newspaper, coffee beans – whatever will express my story in a clever way. I often use animal shapes. I sometimes combine a sober idea with humor for impact. I also have a long history of working in five dimensions: the usual three plus working with large groups of artists and presenting performance in real time, involving ideas, costumes, props, music, lights, and spoken word. GROUP SHOWS: VISUAL ART 2021 ERA Living: Sheltering in the Studio curated by June Sekiguchi, Culver House Broadview, Seattle WA 2020 note: due to COVID, many shows online only NWCraft20, juried online exhibition benefiting the Bellevue Arts Museum, Bellevue WA https://www.nwdesignercraftsmen.org/ ERA Living: Beloveds: Artist Couples curated by June Sekiguchi, Lakeshore Residence, Seattle WA https://madmimi.com/p/782c711 Icon 2020, Lynn Hanson Gallery, (also years 2017, 2018, 2019) Seattle WA http://www.lynnhansongallery.com/icon-2020.html MIND + BODY juried invitational, Port Angeles Fine Arts Center, Port Angeles, WA http://www.pafac.org/wellbeing.html 2020 SOUTHWEST JURIED EXHIBITION, Leonor Fuller Gallery, South Puget Sound College https://spscc.edu/gallery/exhibition/southwest-juried-show-2020 RECYCLED ARTS SHOW curated by Debbie Palmer, Fogue Art Gallery, Georgetown Seattle WA https://www.seattlerecycledarts.com/fogue-gallery-show REFLECTIONS Kirkland Arts Center, invitational by Donna Lindeman Porter, Kirkland WA https://my.matterport.com/show/?m=bazM3TMYvBo CURRENTS 2020, NWDC* juried membership, Schack Art Center, Everett WA.
    [Show full text]
  • Resist Newsletter, Nov. 20, 1968
    Trinity College Trinity College Digital Repository Resist Newsletters Resist Collection 11-20-1968 Resist Newsletter, Nov. 20, 1968 Resist Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/resistnewsletter Recommended Citation Resist, "Resist Newsletter, Nov. 20, 1968" (1968). Resist Newsletters. 10. https://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/resistnewsletter/10 THE BUILDZNG OF -COMMUNITIES cont'd ••• D!lAFT TO DOUBLE IN 1969 cont'd ••• domestic colonialism. If we can stand may go a good deal higher. For the together we can build a society that last few years the Army has always offers a meaningful life to all of underestimated its needs, and in its ' citizens. February or Ma~ch we can expect an announcement from General Hershey However, we should realize that we that the calls for the rest of the need personally relevant reasons for spring will be even higher than unity. , We should not let phony emo­ anticipated. tionalism perpetuate our organization­ al hang-ups. We must understand the Meanwhile, to keep the manpower people we hope to recruit, where pipeline filled, the Pentagon has they're at and how to activate them, resorted to a variety of maneuvers. and must discourage those who would Reserves called up during the Pueblo use the movement as a psychological crisis have been kept for Vietnam, balm for past hurts and injustices. and other Reserve and National Guard units have been activated and shipped There has not been enough debate out. Regulations governing attendance on the issue of "where do we go from of individual Reservists at drill have here and how?" Bluntly put, the been tightened, and a significant num­ movement can succeed only if we ber of men have been called to active develop continuity through community.
    [Show full text]
  • Newsletter/Fall 2006
    new york university The Center for Religion and Media 726 Broadway, Suite 554 New York, New York 10003 fa culty of arts and science tisch school of the arts new york university the center for religion and media newsletter/fall 2006 www.nyu.edu/fas/center/religionandmedia Mission Statement The Center for Religion and Media seeks to develop interdisciplinary, cross-cultural knowledge of how religious ideas and practices are shaped and spread through a variety of media. The Center, funded by The Pew Charitable Trusts, is a collaborative project of the Religious Studies Program; the Center for Media, Culture and History; and the Department of Journalism, providing a space for scholarly endeavor, a stage for public educational events, and an electronic interface with media specialists and the public through its innovative web magazine, The Revealer: A Daily Review of Religion and the Press (www.therevealer.org). Staff Advisory Board Birgit Meyer, Faye Ginsburg, Co-Director Lila Abu-Lughod, Free University, Amsterdam Angela Zito, Co-Director Columbia University Daniel Miller, Barbara Abrash, Arjun Appadurai, University College, London Associate Director New School University Michael Renov, University Laura Terruso, Orlando Bagwell, of Southern California Program Coordinator Ford Foundation Patricia Spyer, Elizabeth Castelli, Leiden University Nam June Paik, TV Buddha, 1974, Omri Elisha, collection of Stedelijk Museum, Newsletter Editor Barnard College of Diane Winston, University Columbia University Amsterdam Jeff Sharlet, of Southern California Editor, The Revealer Stewart M. Hoover, University of Colorado/Boulder Janet R. Jakobsen, Barnard College Purnima Mankekar, Stanford University faculty of arts and science tisch school of the arts new york university the center for religion and media newsletter/fall 2007 interest in the uses of new media with an historical perspective on how a Jewish diaspora, over two millennia, has used media From the Directors like the book, rabbinical correspondence, etc.
    [Show full text]