.î. December 25, 1975 I 30d * DAVID MCREYNOLDS

ON REVOLUTION; i PE4CE & U NONWALENTACTION FOR A SMAS}il RETIJRN ENG MBNT: THE AN{A \ryIN II\TDBX ': illlllllll?lllllll I ? a a a...a . a a. a a...: a . a . a - a lÕ T. '{ FOR

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a't' , gf! I' T++r þ.Èü S JH {Jï'JV-I lrtËT } uû à**ijí\¡v-tt aç:ã2. Åû-tí]* -T I i! ï ** ¡J{J lflj S e! T -1.¿ ( ) p,P F.._ \J'. ã .n I am writing to inform your readers that I nearly went aground over question of Seeds will.not send my work to your magazine groups or individuals with an axe to grind ¡ anymore. Barbara Deming, Leah Frità, seeking priority for specific cause. Walk out Jane Gapen, KarlaJay, and myselfhave for ' -HUGH McVEIGH the last six months tried, in a serious and Brooklyn, NY to hand a leaflet of nonacceptance principled way,. to address issues of of p¡in to the wal king rainbow Copy of a Lette¡'to Hugh Carey, . misogyny, sexism, and anti-feminism as Gov. State Capitol, Albany,, NY: they apply to the magazine itselfand as to iross through r. I they have been I write in behalf manifested in personal in- of a man who wants the lalaxy of consciousness terchanges between ou¡selves and the desperately not to lose his soul. WIN & to c'bmmunicate aI last staffand edito¡iai board. I can no longer Martin Sostre, a black man, worked for tolerate the bad faith, malice, and manipu- the poor of Buffalo. After being convicted with a fresh tide lations of those who determine WIN's by an all-white jury on the basii of dis- of frenzY policy and morality. credited, now recanted têstimony, he was woven of Flovúers I also cancel my subscription and want sentenced to 30 years on a drug charge. my m oney ¡efu n ded. - AN During eight years in prison he has sufrered To speak to all4he brains of the world. "* fil_"}V"",å TJï beatings, withstood the indignity of..rectal To be prepared to suffer the'barbs óf gnosis' searches," and stood up for prisoners' To feel the pain, , rights. This one man has endured four years in We also fepl that we have acted in a serious, to feel a deathetchei solitary confinement. And all because principled and humane way in our discus- he pain of toðthnerves refuses to lose hold of his sions with Andrea, Kørla Jøy, Leøh Fritz, sanity, his dignity, his commitment to justicd-his pulled through the December 25,1975 Vol. Xl, No. 44 It pisses me & many other Veis off to see Barbara Deming and lane Gapen ùtring the soul. / Allow him that right and holes of a window page 7 of the l2l4l75 WIN wasted. last six months. Thøtsh there has beena that f¡eedom. - Out of respect for his innocence and cour- Scott Camil continues to USE the good great deal ol misunderstanding, we have screen, 4. Revolutiop: The Polilics.of the lmpos- age, in the healing spirit of Christmas, name of WAW to grab headlineis ove¡ such never acted with "bad faith, malice or I urge sible I David McReynolds you to release Martin beg for the mafia to pour heroin things as a dope bust. While thousands of manipulation," nor have we turned down Sostre as of December 25. 12. Changes vets are stnrggling tooth & nail to bring any artícles by Andrea. kte are sorry into the blood-anything, oh end it! Fifteen days before, on December forth to the American people why the war Andrea perceives things thís way and we 10,, 15. Reviews we observed Wo¡ld Human Rights Day. Since warlords in Vietnam was right to ¡esist in any form & teget that she will nolonger be sharíngher beg for the experiment that time I abstained f¡om solid food 16. lndex for 1975 I John Lomþerti how it was fouglit for the ¡ich to get richer. work with WIN's readers. and rain down the lead upon the pain to end- -WIN fæted fo¡ 24 hours in order to comtemplate Vets & especially VVAW nationwide is in Cover: Drawing by VickY Reeves from these words, as I hope you will conside¡ And,then many more meaningful stn¡ggles: for jobs Jan Cotalogue, Barry [Letters, WIN, l2111/75] draws their meaning: "Bring out the prisoners from the 1974 Alternotive .Christmos or income now, end all disability cutbacks, attention the for the Pain to fact that "feet of clay" can the dungeon, from the prison those who sit & to stop the zuper powers from unleashing be gender. to easc of any The WIN staff plus urr in darkness." (Isaiah 42:7) "Arise to birth another war on all of mankind at the ex- indicted coconspirators includes which with me, my brother. Give me your hand somehow, pense of working people,world wide. The, Editorial board plus consultation with WRL out of the depths sewn by you¡ sorrows... . Gainewille Comspiracy Trial is ove¡ and it Executive by the pity Committee if needed should be And tell me everything, tell chain by chain, STAFF was a victory for the Vets struggle and all of the Vastness people. able to set the course of WIN mag after re- and link by link." (P. Ne¡uda). -WALLY KaIM view ofletters to Ed. WIN people should _L.M. JENDRZEJCZYK Mrrls C¡k¡rc . Sr¡san Cak¿rs Milwaukee, Wisc. study recent hìstory of WBAI-FM which & e'en to rock-itierf *'*'" . - Nyack, NY j?î:l:;läï:t, Dw¡üt Erncst. Mary Mayo Susan Pincs tà F.nd-Roscn . Munay Rosenblith NOTES & ERRATA and to reap UNINDICTED ln the last issue we incorrectly.reported that the to Moscow Walk averaged three miles a day. The cor- the wheat @CONSPIRATORS rect figure is an energetic 23 miles a day. of Pleasu re The submarine coitinues to slosh aliead although it now seems almost impossible that it will reach ¡ts goal by the ' Jrn 31rry. Lanc. talvlll. 'Tom Bruckar end.of the year. But we have.faith that enough rea¿ers will make a New Yeai's resolutio; to send in somJsub- 'neath Godlight Jatry Cotlln.. Lynna thatzkln Cof[nr marine fuel to make ¡t ffash into "WlN is pu-blished weekly except for the. . .', Ann Orvldon. Olan. D¡YLt' Ruth E¡rü Speaking 'neath Peacelight RrlDh D¡Olar. ltlan Ooharty. Wlllllm Oouthatdt of which, alert.readers of paragraph will notice ihat it go..es on o -that'1975. to say "first two weeks in January.', l(.ran Or¡rbln.. Chuck.Fa¡ar Scth Foltly That-. means that this is the last issue of During the break from deidlines we indená to iätir1 up on aú of rhá Jlm For.st. L¡rry O¡r¡. JOah Llbþy H.wk & ahh,. to see the wiggly vision N.|| Hrworth . Ed Had.mantt things tlrat get put off while we're putting out an issue ond stort 1976 with our ¿esps cieaiàlfii at ieast almost of the possibility of eternity Or.c. Hadamam. Handtlk l{arü¡bargr cleared). K¡rlrJ¡y. MarW Jarart. !æky John¡on We wish that we could send each of you a personal thanks for your n¡nèy J-otrn¡on i Prl¡l Jolrn¡on ' Allrolì K¡rDal .greetingand support, criticism, financial con- & ohh, there, in the dist4nce, the Lamb Cfll¡-K¡rp.lr Jolrn Kt/9.rr Elllot Lllúarr tributions, articles, poems, graph¡cs, ideas and everything else,that you do that goes iniå Mac D¡rld Mctl.Ynoldrr rJkìns a míeatlne tiñir- the la'mb is licking the warm eye J¡cþon Low. weekwe port¡cularly also want tothank John Lamperti ior hís valiant efforr in õompiling oriuñnuiiä¿ái). Ãt tnt Þ¡llrl Moril¡. Mrtk Mortlrt . Jlm Prack '-. same time we could make of rhe wolf Tad Rlch.r(¡ r f g|ll Rood.nkort Nancy Rglan our apologies for the numerous typographical errors, mistakes"in judlement, poliîical 96 3.¡6rri l{rñd9 Schwtrur. M.rtha Thornrrü deviations and the issue we dated May 1,1976, Ãtawtd(dr. ¡l¡oñ vcii¡nc. B.y¡rly Woo

2 WIN WIN 3 i ever Marxists know the trade union movement exists seriously wrong if we won the first election. Our iob tain day and the workers should assemble in Union and they do have-illusions about it. r ' would be to present our program in the soundest, most Square. As I recall the story (l ttrint< ii was in Lincoln attractive,least sectarian way possible-but if that Labor is supposed to.be revolutionary and.yet it a Steffens' Autobiography) when the appointed day program was truly radical we can assume our candi' behaves in a reactionary way on many issues. Let it came, of course only the organizers and the police datã would be deîeated, despite all her personal charm, o be noted tþat, all its faults, which. included showed up. One can forgive aliens who had no sense for unt¡l the electorate had been educated toward our general support of , the tratle union of America for such optimism. But \i,hat in the world the position and the electoral tide would at last turn. lt is i rfióvement hap wage.d the good for medical care, are we to make of native'born Americans in the year fight in this sense that one expects to lose the,first election, old age pensions, unemployment insurance, public 1975 who speak, think, and write in terms of an and the second, and the third,etc.,, lnltiolly usingthe housing, increased aid to education, etc. At its most The Politics impending revolution? One of the problems that has electoral process þrimorily as an ëducationol,fçrun7 reaction.ary it remains a far more progressive force always haunted revolutionary movemènts is the "left- The temptation is always to trim our sails to piok than, let's say, the National Association of Manufac- Leftists." They occasioned some of Lenin's most up support and gain power. "lf only we had powet', turers. But it is nof revolutionary. lt does not think pointed outbursts as he found himself forced to wage then we could make the changes that are neededr," is of itself as "left." ln fact for the most part is doesn't the political war not only against the Czar but also the siren song. "For God sake don't tell the voters of as class" but as middle against the extreme Left and the terrorist move even think of itself "working you want the marijuana laws changed. . .do you have class. Often the Left has tended to deal witH'this ' ments. to admit in public that you are homosgxual?. . . rçality by the simple process of ,denying it. "George We cannot "leap over ourselves" nor can a move' couldn't you go a little softer on women's libera' Meany? Well, he doesn't reolly speak for labbr." The' ment leap over social reality. Let us suppose-to take tion?. . .let's call you'something other than 'qdcialist' problem is he does. George Meany elected/ a concrete example-that all the WIN readers in is.the - because so many people are turned off by that word. . ."' selected leader the main body of tlre American , Chicago were to gather at the tallest building in that of I wrote earlier that we needed to come to terms wíth union and the UFW are not city. Let us augment their forces by adding all the trade movement. Chavez the question of power, to take up that question trade union movement, only a small segment of it. readers ín the Greater Chicago area not only of WlN, the seriously, to recognize that power, who has it, and for matter, most of labor is not even part of' but of all the various Communist Maoisq Trotskyist, And, that how itis distributed, is the key question. Am I now but remains unorganized. SocialisÇ and Anarchist publications. And let us give the trade union movement contradicting myself? No. this assembled group the task of taking down that This would not matter except that labor is crucial , But we need to look carefully at the question of tallest building. Even assuming the police did not ar- to social change. lt is an essential part of any mass power. Even Lenin was not completely exemþt from rive, the best our "radical collect¡vity" could do, as movement for change that might be built, Even as thinking matters could be^changed by a kind of magic suming they acted in concert and didn't argue fine pacifists slowly come to realize that there /s a labor and heñ'êld certain illusidhs about the State (see his points of theory, would be to break windows and set movement, we must see ¡t without illusíon. I do not Stote and Revolutionl. Let us go back in time to I917. a few fires-"smudge the facade." We would h¿ve want to discourage people, but I do want us to realize Russia was on the point of collapse. The 1:905 Revolu' enough sense to know that if we wanted the building how truly diffcult it is going to be to change the struc- tion had nearly succeeded, lt was a nation that had down it would require battalianS of construction ture. Our little sects provide us with such comfort that been wracKed foi decades by profound agitation workers, crews of carpenters, fleets of trucks, hun- it can be a Þhilling experience to venture out beyond arlohg its intellectuals. By the beginning of 191 7 the patience i dreds of men to assemble scaffolding and the our own ranks into what can be called the real world. ' troops on the front were quite literally fighting with- to wäit for months while, floor by flôor, beam by That real world is filled with American l-egion posts in out ammunition and suffeiing terrible losses. That A- beam, girder by girder, we dismantled the build¡ng. every town, with reserve officer's associations, profes- pril a number of events climaxed in the totally unex- \ Revolution is that tæk writ large. ¡t ¡s the d¡s- si onal assoc iati ons, Ch am bers of' Com mercg, frate rnal 'pected collapse of the government-the Russian' mantling of the whole polìtical/economic/cultural/ organizations ranging from thè Masons thr,ough the Revolution. Lenin and Trotsky hardly expected it- tN sexu al /social/rel i giou s/m i I i tary | racial stru ctu re as i t Oddfellows to thé Kn¡ghts of Columbus-each with a Lenjntwas in Switzerland, Trotsky in exile on Man- presently exists. And that existing structure is power- , woman's "auxiliary.'l We have Boy Scouts¡ Girl hattan's Lower East Side (not, I suspec! too many ful. ltisn'tjust Ford, the ClA, and the local police ' Scouts, Cub Scouts, Jr. ROTC, and the real-if un- blocks from where I now sit writing this). The system ís supported by the vast majority of organizedlinstitution of racism. We face the media, The exiles began their return, Lenin moving across religíous leaders. Do not make the mistake of thinking controlled by the establishment. As a dash of spice, Germany in a sealed railroad car to Finland where, in that or Dan Berrigan or Paul Mayer we also have the KKK and the . a dramatic action defying hí's own central committee, mean the is on our side, or that the And, at the official level, we have the FBl, the ClA, he crossed the border and took personal charge ofthe good Protestant preachers who were iailed witlt us iO the NSA, the local police, the various brarÍches of the ' Bolsheviks, at that time a small but tightly disciplined Civil Rights and Peace actions speak for their people. military (each with an intelligence network of its owir), revolutionary party. ln October, as the Kerensky Cardinals like Cooke hold in their hands the væt and the courts. government foundered in its fruitless effort to con- power Catholic Church and Billy temporal of the Fortunately, that is only part of the picture. This iolidate a democratic revolution and also continue to Graham, who was Nixon's dear and close friend until Photo collagê from thê Peoples Vo¡cê/LNS. structure is powerful-but it hæ cracks. lt is riddled wage war, Lenin struck in the çoup of October, the proved politic golf Ford, speaks from it more to with with conflicts and contradictions. Clearly, if iniustice event which is known ai the "October Revolution." lt the center of American Protestantísm. Nor should you and polerty and corruption and hurt did not exist as was one of the great events in human history and if I think that simply because the are not Christians Jews daily facts for a great many people, whal we say would , refer to it as a "coup" it,is not to denigrate iL I am a BY David lvlcReynolds the rabbis are on our side. fall on deaf ears. .Reyolution is not iust the dssertion critic of Lenin, but also one ôf hii.admirers. The façt- I would say our illusions are most serious in the of mordl values-it must also be seen by people to remains it was a coup, the revolution itself having oc- ;', area labor, but the problem is that pacifists hardly lf we seek a social revolution, it is necessary to know of represent their interests. ln the early period of the cured months earlíer. Lenin immediately sêized State know the trade union movement exists. (This past before we begin how weak we are, how enormous Vietnam War we were susta¡ned and driven by moral power and, in his terms, sought to use the State to April when tens of thousands of workers gathered in the job. lt has been said that politics is the art of the outrage-but we reached out and shook the govern- smash the St¿te-i.e., if only he could lay his hands Washington to demand jobs-a great many of them possible-revolutionary politics is the art of the im- ment only as the contradictions of that war became on the instruments of power, the levers by which the black or Puerto Rican-the peace contingent from the possible, the willingness to accept a series of defeats apparent in the lives of the people, in the death lists, machinery operated, he could transform things. entire New York membership of WRL/FOR/WILPF/ in ord.er to win a war. in the inflation, in the massive res¡stance to the draft. Of course Lenin did not think the Russian events CALC/CPF took up fewer than 20 seats on the bus There is a funny, and terribly painful story of a Our moral outrage was essential-but not enough. would occur in isolation-he was convinced the aç- just that went down from Manhattan. As Rick Boardman group of revolutionaries in New Yor,k City after When I say we are dealing with the politics of the tions in Petrograd would set off and be part of a. of CALC observed to me as our handful marched the Russian Revolution. They were foreign-born, impossible I don't mean that literally, but as an ad- general world revolution and the thing only made along with the thousands and thousands of workers, barely able to get ôut a leaflet in English. Convinced monition. Certainly it is not our obiective to see how sense if seen from that standpoint-Russia did not ,and barely enough of us to keep our banner raised, that Lenin's seizure of power made world revolution often we can be defeated-only necessary to accept have a working class of any s¡ze, it lacked the indu's- "Dave, I think our turnout says something abotlt the an immediately impending event, they issued a leaflet defeat as â part of the process. lf, for example, a trial base Márxists fel.t was needed for a socialist class base of the ." Boy did it!* How- announcing that the revolution would begin on a cer- broad socialistparty was formed and ran candidates, revolution. Lenin promised the peasants and the *Pac¡f¡sts may find of sóecial ¡ntêrest and value two artlcles our gravest error would be to assume that the impor- troops "Bread, Land, and Peace" and took power This ls the thlrd instollment of Dovld McReynolds' on the tabor movement ¡n the last ¡ssue of NEW POLITICS- the dld an ex- tant thing was to win the first election in which we from Kerensky. There were several problems. One, journey of politicol speculotion, Be sure to wotch Sid Lens and S¡d Peck werè authors and they beilent job. Send $l to NEW POLlTlcsr 507 F¡fth Avè., ran a'candidate. On the conl'i-rary, something would be the world revolution did not occur and Russia was this spoce for further developments. New Vork City lO0l7,

WIN 5 4 WIN left in- isolation. Two, the British (not really the oeople. One reason the Establishment does fear us, false asumptions that (a) the wealthy hav.e actually Americans, in mostcæes I who are too heavily blämed foi their fairly ãveñ ¡n their strength and our weakness, is because al- ' produced the wealth they have, when innocent actions at that time) ârmed and financed thé Suppose...ãgood ;hilgh *. it" utri interested in power, it Ís n¡¡t iir they inherited it and have added.to ¡t not by the¡r \fllrite Russian armies and Lenin found himself deep in 63hid" þrml of assuming that power for ours.elves but dis. owñ labor, but by interest and profit on the labor of I a Civil War. The revolution , (U) is truly an individual. I of April and the coup óf revolutiohary his ¡t to the people. Thereföre we cannot be others and ttre individual l tributing October had both been nearly bloodless. The Civ¡l coopted, and when any individual or group çannot be Each of us is, of couræ, an individual physically War.was not. lt ravaged the new Soviet Union. Third, position. . .in order to dealt wiih, absorbed, or bought off, that individual or separate from anyone else, brlt we are by n-ature social Lenin.very early showed his dísdain for moving at a group becômes a problem. lt is particularly disturbing animals, inheriting as part of the process of our'child' pace t}te people ge4es" ,a would accept by dissolving the [o hàve a sroup emerge which suggests to people that' hood education all the "social that were . I Constituent Assembly in which the Bolsheviks had a win (an election) in since the game of politics as it is now played is a lousy þroduced by the whole of society and which we each, minority, and then outlawing his oppositidn. cine which dooms most of the players to be losers, we individually, inherit free of charge. We do not nqg¡Ì to . He had promised bread, land, and peace. He got order to use a position stop trying to win this game an{ invent a new one al- invent language-it is given to us. We do not need to the- peace tlrrough a bitter treaty with Germany,-in together. And revolution is that new game. invent the whêel or how to make fire. All of this is ttvic- -This which the Soviet Union ceded huge chunks of ter- of power. a brings us to a discussion that could frighten socially acquired information. But, asl said, these are ritory. His regime had never really intended to give the . .such some by seemingalmost theological. lt is a discussion, not seiibus'positions bu t p rimari ly defensive i deol ogìes justi- land to the peasants, but to collectivize it. And, in about iisues particularly closo to pacifisß=bu-t which' thrown up 6y a clæs under attack and trying to order to build the necessary industrial bæe, thé bread tor'l would last only ur. also bother many serious Marxists. lt,is the effort to fv' their illesitimate hold on capital. i had to be brought in to the factory workeri before ièiólve t¡re qu.riion whether we shðrid savo society But the ãebate about personal versus social'change there was put Marxist side of any real way to pay the peasants for it The the next election. . through perional change or save individuals through is a serious one. Bertolt Brecht the incompetence of Kerensky; the crilis of the war, and til . perhaps the the argument so well that I want to quote it in full l j socidthange. Revolution isso diffcult, the organizational poem me by nising ques. ability of Lenin brought him State The risks are a little different between the "path of best one can do is "be,goodr" change the world in our hqre-it is a which bothers I poìver; but he found that, since he was unable tióhs I canft answer, and providing answers I can't ac' to meet coup" and the "path of election" but both involve ì own backyards, in our own hearþ and let tJre new - the demands of the people (demands he had helped ,l until goodness cept-and which clearly bothered Brecht I serious risks. ln the "path of coup" we always sup society flow from that inner revolution generate in the course of seizing power), he was'forced pfess.a Are nqt the few freedoms "for the momentr" planning to leaps llke fire from one heart to another, THREE ELEGIES I to suppress the people. Kronstadt, ofcourse, stands as give them back as soon as possible-only to find t-ha! Marxists wrong to place so little emphasis on personal the symbolic i I ûrrning point in th¡ revolution. æ Marat proclaimed in MaratlSode, the more enemies change? Wouldn't our problems be solved if we just all 1 I have was in t live! risked this summary of-eve¡ts in Russia be we kill, the more appear and the "iew" suppressions ï became good Jews or Christians or whatever These are, indeed, dark times in which cause what I guileless Lenin and the Bolsheviks did was to take ye pale become the many in which we are [rapped. { vogue at the moment? To say a thing is foolish. I power ln place of the people. ln the absence of a work ln the "pqth of election," which is no less irãg¡ö, ttr¡s I ln one sense the debate is false. No revolutionary A smooth brow bespeak insensitivity. fr ing class, Party the subst¡tuted itself for the workers, nation is filled with failed men who hold high offce ¡ movement can work w¡thout "saved souls" at its,cen- Tci laugh is-to be someone'who I and then as the leadership of the Party substituted ii- a¡d wq3.t to hold higher office and postponð the day I religious movement can long survive if it Hæ not yet received the I ter, and no self even for the Party as.a whole, deiision-making fell they will do gopd unt¡l they have enough power to ão toially ignores ihe physical needs of its followers. But Frightful news. r into fewer pnd fewer hands, and instead of all Rulsianr the.grea!9st-good. ln running for Assembly, they hide in anóthér sense the debate is not false, butvery real 'l - Times in which conversatlon about trees is almost a being involved in a revoluri;tit their radical sentiments, conÍding in us ovér a b'eer answer.'Before tackling tñ;;r, iri" r."oir:', and may not even have a final crime å tion wæ to a great extent lmposed on thèm. There that they are really one'of us and""just wait unii i get ¡ssues should be quickly settled and laid it, two iide Because it includps silence concerning atrocities, was.a.terrible p-rice paid foi this, a price suffciently into the Assembly." Once there, Cóngress beckons æide. First, for reasons having*to do with how the ' What t¡mes these are ! terrible it should warn all revolutionisis awav from ' and the sail is trimmed until.they stand on the I ecohomy works, it would not matter in the q I i iust capitalist That man there, êalmly crossing th9 the notion that if "only we had power" *e floor of the House. But once there, the sail is not un- leãst whether or not every American became a devout ltreetl óbul¿ ls he perhaþ3 beyond the reach of friends.in desperate make great changes. One of the many reasons that the " furled, for theie is always the Senaie. And the ! I Catholic, there would stiil be recession and inflations ^ I need? revolutions in China and Vietnam have Presidency. Did Johnson and Nixon plan, as very not of individual.evil but of the followed a dif- i which are the result ferent co¡rse from that in Russia was that in neither 99ung men, to be evil, corrupt, and violent? Hardly. of the free market (or that pärt of it which True, I still earn a living but case was They simply got lost somewhere passage. "órmng personal me. l revolution achieved in a coup. ln China and in Saddeit is free). The business cycle does not relate to That's an accident, believe Vietnam there was prolonged polificá and military of all, perhaps, was Kennedy, who had told friends monlity but to calculations of market demand and to Nothing I do gives me the right to eat my fill. struggf e against great odds and the whole people had that if he could only win a second term he would per- th¡nk dópressions result from individual evil is not I have been spared by chance. j to volunlarily give their support, since for a lòng form lovely miracles. Life is so short, bullets so fait, simply bad ; it is even bad economics from a lf my luck gives out I am lost. period of time neither Mao nor Ho could coercãthe¡r and death so very long. capitalist point of view. Example: lf the farmen Eat and drink, they tell me, be glad you have it! sup.p^ort. By the time the Chinese Communist party have not tried preach ,'impos- they could sell 100 million bushels'of wheatat I to a doctrine of foirnd But how can I eat and drink when I had-State power it had also empowered the peopli. sibilism," of utter a profit year, they will each, as individual Christian inflexibility, or the glory of defeat læt I take what I eat from someone who's hungry and when Havìng partic¡pated in theír own liberation, ñaving ac- but a doctrine capitalists, plant more wheat to increase their profit * of reality. Back in the eãrly 1960's Someone who's thi¡sty goes without my glass of water?' tively helped make a revolution, they next year. lf the were'much our analysis of Vietnam held that not only was and meet the market demand Yet I do eat and drink. more inclined to continue in their support of iL America's presence there a moral wrong but t}at : weather is good and the crop is massive, the market Where the democratic process I l were wise!' is in operation as in ultimately it would'fail. When othþrs toid us that the I will be glutted, the price will fall out of the bottom, How I wish most western countries, and there is the illusion that demand for "unconditional withdrawal', was not and the farmer, far from realizing a profiq will very It's in old books what wise inéaniì State power goes to those who win elections, the pres. realistic_,._we (This is one of the To keep out of the world's strife, argued that while, in the short run, it I possibly be driven into bankruptcy. sure is enormous beyond words to follow the course was an_ problems without To pass the short space without fear, "impossible demand," in the long it was. I moral capitalists have to face-that suggested ¡q1 , I earlier-to trim the sails in order to steer ¡n- the only way the Vietnamese conflict could be social planning of production it may prove harmful to To suruive w¡thout resort to violence, power. ¡ ' to Power seems to lie there waiting to be resolved. We did not take this position of unilateral farmeis to producð all the food they can. During our To re'turn good for evil, picked ,,moral up by the electoral victor. But so lóng as the withdrawal. because it gave us satisfaction,', I Depression Roosevelt sought to he¡p the farmers by Not to fulfill one's wishes but forget them: electoral process remains open, which meaniso long (though I think it was rhe moral position) but be I destroying excess food-this at a time when people This is what wrbe means. as the ' revolution has to be validated continuallv at lhe cause we also believed the liberal solutións of negoti- were starving.) All of which l cannot do. ballot I box, those who "cheat" to gain power w¡ll find atio-ns, ceasefire, etc., were not truly answers. The other side issue is the intellectually frivolous These are, indeed, dark times in which I live. they can, at best, hold power only until the next eleo Political science (which I in'defense by , _ is not a icience) is the art posítion thrown up of wealth-i.e., il tion. Example: suppose i in the Jim Crow South of of gaining holding and administering power Wlthin a what right do socialists propose to tax away the 1950 a good white révolutionaiy ,'hid" his position glven I came to the cities in a time of disorder on soclal structure. lt assumes'the structure will re j r money of the wealthy, or by what right are childless race in order to win in order then to use a position of main and only the ruling elite will change. Revolu- ì : corples taxed for the education of the ch¡ldren others When hunger reigned there. power to break the Jim Crow structure-such a,,vic- tionqry politics is the art of chøngtng that structure have produced. ln short, isn't an individual ent¡tled to I came among men in a time of revolt tor" would last only until the next election, if the out- itself; lt is not our job to assume power, but to the full cqntrol over what he or she has earned and And I roæ up with the others. raged voters didn't lynch him first. generate social movements which empower the isn't taxation itself a form of theft. This rests on the So passed the time that was given me on earth.

.6 WIN wlN 7 t'.J

the legal structure of ¡n England and along the coast of Europe, for they Christianity threw out . I ate my food between battles. Yet this we knew: and substituted the concep!-of p.ersonal ã¡¿. ui first through rape and eventually through mar' f udaism t'grace" I lay down to sleep among mûrderers. Even hatred of bæeness distorti the features. by the or "love" of riaee, add to the genetic pool. And that was all. ln áalvation-of salvation I made love without enthusiasm . Even anger at in¡ustíce makes the voice hoarse. assume most WIN readers to En-eland you can still trace the outlines of theold God. Agnostic though I And looked upon Nature with impatience. We, dæ, as Resisters Leagrre is, a main Ro-man roads.'Of the Norsemen and Vikings all you be and lecular the'War So passed the tirne that was given.me on earth. Who.wished to prepare the ground for kindness the oacifist movement-and of Western can see is blond hair. Some time after'the Christian root of Could not ourselves be kind. radicalism)ii found in the Chriitian teachþg that the The roads in my time led into the swamp. m¡ssionaries began their slow and often suic'¡dal work individualis worth something that love is a reality, Speech betrayed me to the butcher. Birt you, in Scanda¡avla the cUlture tempéred and chàhged. A and that the individual can bè changed tþrough I could do little. But without me When things have reached the point where thousand years passed: The vikings are gone and in i'salva place: Scandanavia. tion." Rulers would have felt more securer or so I hoped. Man is no wolf to man, their civilized ' l-iîr Jesus of the Gospels was nèver fully tiidildnf So passed the time that was given me on earth. Remember us with never bedn very happy with the fact' Marxists have by the rise of Christianity and he remains a unique r' Forbearance' bæis why someone like that there is no clear for figure in history. Clearly feeling he had come to "ful- One's powers were sligþt. The goal (tronstoted oy rric øe, why preached Gospels t Buddha emerged, or for Jesus fiiÍ the law" and not overturn i! the gospels he Lay in the far,far distance. and place. We do in advance of-the society of hivtime oreached were hieh etlrical ludaism although perhaps It was clearly visible if, also, for,me, Brecht looks back wistfully to the "old books," ad- these altru¡stic religions-emerged not really know why ireretical; certå¡nl-y revolution.ary; but Iudaic. Hardly to be re¿ched mits that what they cont¿in is wisdom, and regrets he prepared them. Wh.l into a history which hardly seemed for young came to and asked what he So passed the time that was given me on earth. cannot follow that path. The times are ioo urgent, too the rich men Jesus And we do have to concede that these movernents, so did not respond that he had demanding. Yet we know that ideologies which did must do to bJsaved Jesus ill intensely personal and mystic, did cjn¿nge history' Christ'as his personal savior not set out to change society, which laid stress -to acceot the Loid lesus Yet Breótri, drawn as he is to these Êùvements, have to give awáy all You, primarily on individual morality, did change society. u"iüiñ.t ttt"i the man would laments the dark tirne into which he wæ börn and to d9. You who be borne up by the flood profoundly Western history. Buddha's his money-something the man wa¡nl!prepled. will f esus changed turns to Marxism with all its risks of violence-and profoundly histgry. Consider lesus' challenge of the elitist priesthood ln which we teachings changed Asian distortion of the person, as the only viable choice. Went down, Until the Christian God displaced the older tribal of:hii time by washing the feet of his disçiples and look at the concept of revolution, itself, a last and the servan-t Remember, toq ' theology Scandanavia, accepted today as one of the Let's warning that the first would be were palace patri' ' When you speak of our weaknesses most civilized areas on the planet, it had one of the fairly new notion. Historically d4ere would 6ecome the mæter. He threatened the contenders for a The dark time most brutal culû¡res the'West had known. The coups, civil wars waged,by oppo3inb ar¿hal nature of Judaism by including a number of ' doomed rebel' You have escaped: dreaded Norsemen and Vikings had no redeeming throne, religious wars, and the tragic, women among his close associates and coworkers. peasants. possibility the How, sociál values. At least the Greeks and Romans left lionsrof slaves and The tìat And he scandÍized the good liberals of his day by intervene in his' Oranging our country more often than our shoes, behind temples, buildings, statues. Where the fierce people could, in their collective self, recruiting IRS agents, Green Berets, and others into , is a recent concepl How We walked through the wars of the classes Northerners went they left nothing Buildings were tory in any conscious way his following, alõng with illiterate fishermen. lt ¡s th¡s when was advanced ' Despairing burned, temples torn down, books destroyed. The strange thir concept first seemed it lesus who is-â considerable embarrassment to the people the capacity not When we saw injustice and no rebellion. only trace remaining of these barbárians is blond haír æ anideology-thatthe had ôhurch. Whht in God's nanie would this man from simply to rebel, but to carry through a revolution Nazareth have thought of the jewels of the Papal govern to against the old order and themselves, or' " Palace? How in the world does Billy Graham deal with gãnize themselves in their own name, to-establish ' thi3 primitive pacifist except by very careful selection íheir own structures, and to retain for themselves the from his teachings? was one power to change those social structures; That It was this iesus, not thb mythic Christ that the TEETH reason the American revoiution was, fqr all its defects, , Church created, that has continued to appeal to FI,ICRINQ a revolutlon, Marxist inællectuals. It is the reason that Marxists, in -1 justified IN IIJ t ,That sucli a coniept is possible is rooted in two the,inidst of scathing and generally attåcks developments in Western history-two "failed on èstablished religion have almost always exempted proohéciês" which, even in fheir failure, empowered thp figrre of Jesus. Sometime¡ as lgnazio Silone sug i¡s. bnr of these dévelopments was'Christianity wh¡ch gests in Breod and lillne, there is even the belief that began as a continuation of Judaism but quickly þerhaps the Marxists have béen sent to do the work deüeloped along very different lines, gaining its power called for in the Gospels and abandoned by the from its failure. Gospel Christianity was a develop- Church. { ment entirely within the Jewish community. lt was a But the main thing is that f esus did not return. safely lodged up kind of Jewish heresy for the Gospel church main- The Church did survive. Christ was tained the Messiah had actually come in the person of . in heaven and the Pope left in charge of the treasury. esus. A reading of the Gospels will show that the Yet an odd and revolutionary thing happened on the J ' early follciwers bçlieved that the charismatic figure of way to "establishing" this dangerous set of teachings. prophecy" the Second Jesus, the Messiah, the Saviour of lsrãel, would return ln the context ofthe "failed of at any instañt, ushering in the Kingdom of God. The Coming the Church had to offer something and if the T'HF end of the old order was at hand and the great power Kingdom of God was not abo'ut tocome riding down * L RUI¡I and courage of the early Christians derived from the on a cloud thþn it yas suggested that the Kingdom of certainty that the Lord would return tomorrow or God was wÌthln. The teachings of Jøus were taken to 3tr{åiïÏr' next week or in a month to gather in the iaved and refer not to transform¡ng soc¡ety, but to tmnsformlng gave valid iudge the wicked. ourselves. lt was this which Christianity a Christianity died within the Jewish community power for ovér the centuries the C1¡urch has taught and, as decade followed decade w¡thout the return of that it was possible for us to cho¡gs ounelves: No mat- a mess lesus, the prophesy which had empowered the early ter what crime we had committed, what our Cht¡rch clearly had failed and a new.theology had to lives had been we had worth and we could be re . be developed. Unlike Judaism and the early Gospel deemed, changed, become now men andwomen. Church, the new theology was intensely individual. Where únder tne ôl¿ Law the transgressor was cast Y.b Where ludaism had a congregation gathered around a ou[ and stoned to death, now the transgressor could

WIN 9 t wrN It is easy to mock religions and note the obvious impulses. By locating that motor force and naming it paganism that carries over today in both Jewish and he helped set ít in motion. t) Christian (what js worship in Freud's name one to say The Marxist prophecy failed. Between 1848 ahd a of Christian service where one is handed a wafer 1975 is an abyss of tragedy that is beyond compre in wine and rold rhe {ipped it is body and blood of hension or written statement. A "victory" such as Christ and we are to eat and drink iti) but we mock that of the Soviet Union produced a State which religions.at peril I a certain if we do not see that'they refused to wither away and instead withered millions sustain themselves not simply with fear and.supersii- who stood in its way. The mæs insanity of fasçism tion and heresy trials, but also because they transmit made it clear that was not inevitable-social very powerful,.positive values. Almost, but not quite, madness was an alternative possibility. buried within these religions are central truths that Marxism is not a science. The power of science are héld out people to and in Christianity the central rests in its ability to predict with precision and this truth is that individual.s can change and that love plays Marxism cannot do. There are'a thousánd Marxists, a part in that change. (lt is here, 6y the way, that including myself, who can explain convincingly and Brecht traps himself in a paradox. For if the world is in, detail to anyone willing ro listen just yhy the truly as hopelessly dog-eat-dog and man-kill-rnan as Black Revolution broke out in the Deep South in he tells.u-! is then i! why doeshe bother ro try ro 1955. We can trace the origins of that explosion, sug- change it? Why take on the burden of the revolution- gest th.e class bæe from which it came, the social ist at all? Life would certainly be easier for most sjtuations that .revolutionist: triggered it and the economic develop- if they stop resisting and drifted:) ñents which made it inevitable. The only probler¡ is Marxism is also a failed prophecy, thoulh certainly that there was not one Morxist onywhere in the wortd Photo from Ch-¡na Features/LNS. not an equivalent one. Marx, like Fi-óud, eñrerged in á in November of 1955 who could name December of ì century be attâ"ck by the legal system of this country. Her silence committed to a mechanistic view of tÈe 1955 as the date and Montgomery as the place where It would be more than a m¡stake-it would risk' world. Science physics forgot either súggesß lhe accõpts repression as the norm was coming into its own. that revolution in racial attitudes would begin. lt may ing our own future-if the þolitical i ln doing soshe has turned didn't have any random pãrticles. The atom didn't be that was directed to take the ,,wrong thã political prisoners now ¡n Soviet iails or the Soviet foiã "socialist" sooiety. even have be back on hopes that socialism can be seen by any electrons. Things had a causeeffect seat" by the hand of history, but lthink it was her- history under Stalin. lt was a period which might her relationship look people as a liberating force.) r and could be predicted. lnevitably, Marx consciousness and conscience-and the fact that she called the "great terror" and it makes Brezhnev 'i ; ' of the termed his brand of socialism as being,,scientific.t' was like a flower child. And Brezhnev is not a flower Brecht's poem imÞlicitly accepts the horrors h tired. When one can predict inevitabilities after (Edmund Wílson's To the Finlqn¿ is a repressive bureaucrat who on well Soviet perioä as necessary. The poem*and the- soÖial Stãt¡ãn is'i most the event, that isn't science. *! child. He lot helpful summary of-socialist because the two had so much in common. realitiei-pose a problem pacifists need to confront as I history for those who Oddly, Marxism has emerged more pôwerful today ì with Nixon I ¡ deal truthfully the the world. may think it all began with Marx.) than when it promised the immediate collapse of we seek to With 1848 Having said this, however, I reject absolutely the Democratic MarxiSts may debate how necessary or I ln with the Communist Manifesto Marx and . capitalism. Why? Because what does ¿ suwive of and fascism, terming governments Engels predicted the swift and total collapse of Marxism is the I tendency to equate communism inevitable authoritarian communist N realization that history is the record t g capitalism communism simply "red fascism." There was a point were. but certainlv we do not want to duplicate them and the inevitable triumph of iocialism. of decisions people make, people i of actions take. was used to lnjustice would pass : at which the two systems were virtually identical in here. We also know that great violence away, workers would take con- There is mucþ that is not in our control, but wars and trol of their factories and the State operation but they still had a major difference between consolidate those regimea. But one thing we must ad' ü itself. The op- p-ovgfy and unemployment we now know, thanks to I pressors wou[d be the, oppressed and the dialectic them. At the height of Hitler's powerthere was no mit-today both China and lndia have authqfitarian Karl Marx, are not "natural" events like storms. We il å would bring fascist movement in opposition that accused him of regimes, bi.¡t there is starvation in lndia and none in to birth the New Heaven and the New are not destined to suffer through them. They result t T{ , Earth. This is heresy and denounced his regime as a brutal perver- China. We know in standing in iudgement on the much more simplistic thari Marx him- from our actions or inactions. Paradoxically, whefe Çhat self, but the early r sion. The woild of fascism was a world of madness in violence used by the Chinese leadership against their Marxists were simplistic. They lived Marxism has ended today is by teaching us'ilrat tf,e in an age which brutality, death, the destruction of the indi' own people we must also judge the fact that the ' where things were scientific and could'be future is nof inevitable. Socialism mav ñot come. ln predicted and .l vidual, were central values. But at the'height of Stalin, Chinóse now have medical care and education and Marx had scientifically predicted the fact,itcan come at all only with greai struggle. But early end of capitalism. and despite the slavish support he received from com- clothing and food. Thus the enormous power of where nothing is inevitable, everything is poisibte, Marxism, power munist parties around the world, there were not only I arn-impatient with those purists who sarcastically a so great it survived the secret Marx meant it when he said that befoie h'im philos- l very Maxist- such achievements with the comment that police. The Church could excommunicate but could ophers had sought to explain non-Leninist Marxists but orthodox dismiss the world while he people. is a- not exorcise it. The Revolution was Leninists such as the Trotskyists who rejected Stalin prisons also feed and house lt invariably d inevitable. Science sought to change it. as an appalling corruption of everything Marx or point made by people who have had enough to eat for had come to the aid of the opþressed, God was dead, Fôr the Marxist the future is open territory. yes, Lenin had stóod for. all of their lives. I fear that most of us, confronted but History was alive, moving and inexorable. We the Soviet experiment was in many ways a diiaster could align ourselves with that force with the reality of starvation, of open sores without I of the material and things turned out vastly different from what (l made nasty remarks dialectic which have, throughout this article, salves, of naked and shivering bodies without cloth¡ng, would, in its own scientific and precise Lenin had in mind and it hæ been used to warn and judgement about mass executions in the Soviet Union heat, or shelter might well choose prison if it meant way, stand,in upon all the brutality and humanity of the dangers of'trying to control our own political repression there. There are somg readers who food', warmth and mediôal care. suffering of the world. destiny. But Marxists know that God did not visit will view these comments as "anti-Communist" in recognize , I often wonder why Marxists not consider Pacifists, in striving for honesty, must _do it Stalin on us for our having tampered with the natural spiri! a hold-over from the Cold War period. But if we gains more than a little curious that Karl Marx both how much blood was spíllèil'do win those ., made a orde¡. No, the human errors of Lenin and Trotsky- to deal with the past we may, God help us, re "scientific" study which led to the ,,inevitable" refuse and also recognize how real those gains are. As we con- combined with the world situation when the Bolj peat it. For Marxists, the torture5 that occur in Chile clusion that the society which would emerge reject violencé, so we are called on,to find alternative would sheviks took power-brought Stalin to the top. As be denounced-and also expected. What can we be where the hungry are to môthods of social change. A "revolutionary " 9ng would be fed, thðpoor in- Shakespeare suggested, the fault is in not the stars, expect of a fascist military st¿le but such inhumanity? which can pick all the proper nits with Russia or' herit the earth and the sorrowíng find comfort. What but in us. Of course we protest, but without any sense of as- but cannot change American society is neither an odd coincidence that the science of Marxism would People China keep waiting for Cuba, Vietnam and China tonishment. Yet the fact that tortures or political ar' must be ruthlessly lead humanity forward to the fulfillment of the high- revolutionary nor trulypacifist. We tc become like Russia, to produce a new Stalin. We rests should occur in socialist and communist states, est ethical goals ever stated in either the Bible honest in seeing both the good and evil that has been or tñe keep waiting in fact, for a new Stalin to emerge in Ruy to be expected and our protest should be One thínks powerful that is not done and pray v/e can find some new ways.by which Çgspels. ofthe prophecy ofthe sia..They do not realize Stalinism is somelhing justice that coupled with astonishment and bitter outrage. at last we can avoid the plight of Brecht's revolu' Biþle that would roli down lílie tËe wjrers and 'which no other Communist movement wants to bùild. Political repression in a socialist society violates every his plea to posterity: here is old Karl putting ít into scientific terms. I sug- I haVe quarrels tionary who cried out in many with Marxism-Leninísm and revolutionary value. Torture is obscene whqrever it gest that Marxism is not a scíence and Marx was a regret that many WIN readers may not realize there is occurs and for it to occur in a so-called socialist But you genius possessed not only ofan acute ability to a,non-Leninist var¡ety of Marxism, but I know that societv is a betrayal of the revolution. l4)hen thìngs hove reached the point where analyze the drift of events, but also of deep moral Marxist-Leninists do not have Stal'inism as their goal, must iaise her voice in defense of political prisoners in Mon is no wolf to man impulses, that he correctly located the moior force that they view it as a p.erversion and something õ bé Czechoslovak prisons. lronically some of them even Remember us with within society tJrat could help realize those moral avoided. signed statements defending her when she was under Forbeoronce.

IO WIN tv wtN 1l t t ,t,

su'spects as hostages aginst The idea of withholding taxes o,f the officers pulled a blackjack MLN his pocket. He called Galle future actions by the Revolutionary in lapan is sPreading saYs Mr. Oh' fibm bastard" and a Tupãmaro organization. All 16 AN ES no. inhabitants of JagoYa are way a "Black "nig Ch "Th" ger," and blackjack. individuals have been removed from now refusing to PaY taxes for an ex- hit him w¡th the jails upon military orders w"Y through the c¡ty." Galloway was,handcuffed and civilian WIN WRITER VICTIM : Their prosecution drew wortdwide fþ6 terach-in was sponsored by the oræt in subhuman isola-. ..HOMING" OF '- d-efense tax refusers have so placed in the back of the car and and reconfined DEVTCE protests. Before the trial started, recently formed Coalition to Stop Th" | Am- $1, been sent reminders from hit several times again. He later re tion cells located in military ín- , AND nesty lnternational urged a Boston-bæed group composed far only parts OTHER ODDITIES that the äf tt¡ç amount is ceived hospital treatment for stallationl in various ofthe case s&¡dents and the authorities. "lf be dropped, asserting that the other activ¡st¡. Greetinp tiny nafion heavily in financial debt 7. On Saturday, December 13, Stew small. the Governmerit might iust bruises on his face, neck and chest. Al. lncitement Disaffectioñ y.ep sgql to rhe garhering ' :Á , to Act violates from a . At the meeting substantial agree to the United,States.' '" bert and Judy Gumbo discovered a United Electrical-Workerl let itio." said Mr. Ohno. But article 9 and t0 of the Europãâ;ô;:- Union IUEì th demands. Warnings have been issued b9'the battery powered radio that was COM¡'T'¡s readY for battle should ment was reached on ree emit- vention of Human Righrs. A local and signatures were gathered ãn' military that the 16 hostages wìU Ue tinga "low band,' FM eroupôf the authorities take them to court. Mayor Cahill expressed his concern signal atached 40 prom¡nent'peisons petitions : ín the US called calling for defeal of rhe bilt. that Black youths not be mistreated shot if any future Political or to the underside of their car. ,,drop , The grouP now has over 200 lts resu. upon the British attorney to tåe ln , hundreds at- revolutionary actions are traced to lar beeping was keeping someone members, including two legal *'' by the police and his w-illingness to , iñ- case immediately." peck tended a rally at Foley Square spon origins. Sources rePort that formed of their wherealbouts. -Jim oerts. Mr. Ohno is cautiouslY oP tafie "appropriate action" should the MLN lored by the New York Coalition to the political hostages are being Albert is a cofounder of the yio- i¡m¡stic about the movement's suc' charges against the two officen be I4P4NESE AND AMERtcANS Defeat Senate Bill gl. Guardian subiected to the usual confinement pies who now writes for WIN and ' -Thê cess and isn't anticiPating a raPid súbstantiated in a court trial. He ex- ,orN HANDS TO BAN BOMB- of the Uruguayan m¡l¡tary' other publiqations. Gumbo visited chanse in public oPinion. ¡ í plained that he could not suspend them methods political isolatióh without North Víetnam with a women's dele For the second consecutive year, take 100 years," he laughedf uhtìl charges were filed and that they machine; "lill benefit of medical-legal advice, gatíon in 1971 and currentfy teaches Japlne¡g and Arnericans joiñed Éands then said soberlY, "Even though were entitled to a fair trial, as were the .examination or treatment; massive sociology. at the "Swords- lntoplouþshares most peoPle hate war, theY still' Black youths After plaq.11e, opposire the WE'RE NOT,PAYING! sexual abuses: torture by the US discovering the device which Unitãd Narions, don't believe in Pacifism." The Mayor said he rúbuld welcome is now in in a demo to ban nuclear Do manu factured elecïric'prods sh ipped their lawyers possession; thev weapons. This year a group of l2 -Yes, But What Can I additional minority group members drove through This year the Japaneie into Uruguay v.ia US embassy mails the streets of ManÉat- . Japanese detågaüon, citizens are refusing to pay any taxes on the police force, but that the hiríng tan with soveral cars following wh¡ch came to lobby at the UN, was and therefore not subiecü to inspec' their towards defense. The Japanese govem. policy of the County restricted their random route. 3O-double the size tion by customs; physical tprture of After their hoùr and a of tast yeart. Last ment spends 6.4% of its budget-on its choice of candidates to those already half drive a friend year's took place on Pearl children including sexual abuses calling the apart- Harbor dav: military-so the group have Ènocked on the Civil Service lists, all of whom ment that they this year's on Human Rights WINS while witnessed bY Parents; and fre were staying at was Day. Bud that amount off their latest tax bill. BLACK PROTEST are white. The lawyer for the grouP connected the slogans, shouted quent immersion or "head dunking" to a voice reciting the num. alteinâælv.' were Th e gr.or p-Consc¡e ntious VICTORY IN BEACON out a mèchan¡sm the ,,No Objec- suggested working in large'buckets of water black ber that she was calling froñ. Later same: ".lllo More Hiroshimæ!'i tors to Mllitary Tax-was to started by An event never before seen on the with the Civil Service Commission human .excrement collected that evening as they ate in a local More Pearl Harbors.,, The demo was year ' from M old Mennonite pastor Mich¡o streets of Beacon, NY, occurred on permit the consideration of qualified restaurantr two women entered organized by WRL. peck Ohno.-An "absolute paóifist,', he liled Friday, December 12, when a grouP minority group candidates. The Mayor from prison guards. The same photographed them and left abiuptly. .-fim a-pet¡tion at his local tax office iri ofabort 50 peoPlg including Pete agreed to this. sourcô reporß that these criminal Although tho motive for these' Machioji S.1 DEMONSTRATIONS to wíthhold defense t"i' puy- Seeger, the folk singer, marched The Mayor also agreed to set uP a confinement methods are not re Kafkaesque events is unclear, Albert ment. BEGIN TO MOUNT lt was rejected. Undaunted he alons the main street singing free' Citizen's Advisory Panel to work with ierve¿ exc¡usivelY for the 16 hos' and Gumbo are planning to iue then the þrinted 1,000 leaflets-,,your dom-songs. At the Municipal.Build' the c¡ty's existing Juvenile Relations tases but in fact are standard text- government. . _MC Slowly but steadily, protests against Taxes-For What?"-and sent them ing they presented their demands Bureau ¡n setting up police procedures bök methods æ taught bY the Of' the repressive $1 legislation before out to concerned groups youths and q throughout for an end tp Police brutalitY at a on the handling of Pin' fice of Public Safetv (OPS) division Congress are beginning to mount. Japln. point potential trouble sPots. . t meeting with the MaYor. of AID in Wæhington, DC. The ì Two took place on the East Coast "We are the ones pay Beacon pro'. _ who tixes. We The protest wæ a iesult of an The significance ofthe sraduates daily employ theii newly' ACQUTTTALS tN Deç. 3, in Boston aqd New york City. obligation people þave. 1n. to obs'erve the ways incideni which occurred November 'i test is that'lgrass roots" have ãcouired US taueht "skills" against BRITISH 14 CASE ln Boston, over 500 people turnéá in which t}tey are used,,, and acted for the read the leai 30 when two Black teen-agers were taken the initiative all irersons suspected of any political fol a reach-in at rhe Univers¡ty of let. brought The case of the British ld who faced 9yt arrested and one of them, 1S'Year- first time in a waY that hæ re ooóosition views. Howerer, this is Massachusetts. am not a maximum life imprisonment under "l saying I will not pay old Edward GallowaY, was beaten sults. -Ann f ohnson ttló first political hostaga sin¡ation at the gathering wæ taxes," said Mr. ,,lf the. lncitement to Disaffection Acq . -Main_speaker Ohno. they áre by police. Galloway and Allen created tiy the Uruguayan military. Jeffrey Segal of the Cen-ler for õon- not for military purposes, ended Dec. 10 with the acquittal of theri l-am al- Cofer, also arrested, were PlaYing Letters of suPPort.are needed stitutional Rights, who discussed how ways willing pay." 12.Two who had pleaded to baskeiball in a schoolyard when and do assis! much more than !uilty the S-1 bill signifies a step toward Mr. Ohno's action received fines equivalent t;gl0'0 a.nd wæ inspired, he two police officers drove uP and realized. SupPort letters will be "legal" fascism in the US. The $l bill by a report that peacÈtax $200.respectively. The trial, before a laytr a new told them to leave. When the two, forwarded to UruguaYan militarY is a thorough "reform" of federal legíslation going URUGUAY MILITARY ju.ry, lasted 70 days. Specifilally, the wæ to be introduced who have played basketball there leaders and select US Senate mem' criminal laws that willitrike a direct in the US House HOLDING SIXTEEN t4 \ryere accused of possessing of Representat¡ves. for several years, asked whY, the of' bers. and can be sent to: leaflets blow at civil liberties and greatly en- HOSTAGE addressed to,sol The bill would allow taxpayers to telling TUPAMAROS CarlostVilson diers regardinig service hance the governmeñt's power to ficers said because they were -Maior in Northern lreland. choose whether their money went to a he was hierarchY of PO Box"l55 imprison political dissidents. them. Galloway says Pushed The ruling military World Peace Fund or to the.military. back against a brick wall and one Uruguay is presentlY holding 16 San Pablo, CA 94806

I hro w{ã"f,Ã mvt' tn /^l,n f \l\ aeÁ=(,:. Þó<À nw*:,n --(\^) 6.2:\4 A't L rfrn Tò- n s ç Y ? DRAWING BY PAUL PALNIK

12 WIN wtN 13 I nu al school district screenin g programs which' use lu dicrous questionnaires to d¡vide all students into thiee categories, eith er "oedipal ly confl icted," "developmental ly arrested" or BOOKS "ego disturbed"; school dossigrs used as weapons of control THE MYTH OF THE HYPERACTIVE CHILD adainst students; arbitrary assessments of children as "learn- ilri Dl;"ktand Peter Schrag / Pantheon |\';' 285 pp' I ing disabled," "predelinquent" or any oneof hundreds of lgist$1o.oo ; other labels. The authors describe such instances as typical rather than unusual: estimates 3s to prescribed amphetamine the Hypeiâctive Child.attacks a powerful of' 7' The Myth of children at any one tlme now hover arqünd one . ' subiecting millions of young children druggings of iåìál iíurun"t''e now aramâticuttyirót tl't" e"tly '70t; pl"thoru of prescribed pills, diagnostic screenings, per' rillffi;;t þdis¡stênt iã'i screening labeling and de facto tracking programs, rout¡ne inäccessible dossíers and other variations of ;;i1i;ãtt, being bolstered by large federal"grants passivity and minimd deviance in publiðschools,lre N-ow that the "socialist" government getting those little green checks. Ray- Room 820, Chicagq lL ;ñ; th;'tt of'obedience, from the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration and of Portugal ' ?^uqlÞ?rl, Diane Divoky and !'treatment" has closed down eight mond Avrutis lays it all out in this 60603) features "books releüaát to irom inttitutionalized'inq¡¡5.".Authors other.agencies; tlie praqtice of using terms like newspapers document the frightening extent'rof mass con- and begun a systematic book, outlining who is covered, how conducting international confl ict with- Þetãr. ictrrllg to desciibe disciplinary and coercive institutional measures purge of leftists under the gtrise óf medical diagnosis and edu- from the media, can you gÞt the money, and how they out war.".lt sells, through the mail, trol opttitiñg has hit the schoòiing iñdustry with full force, and may yet we expect warn that unless citizens learn to a mæsive outcr.y from the compüte how much you get. lt's avail- books and pamphlets on arms c¡rntrol ;;iidi evaliation-and prove to be the harbinger of still more ominous develop' press t es" of wi dely-estee r4ed p rofessional s who in this country about the lack of able for $1.25 from Schocken Books, and disarmamen! World law, non- iJriü ir't medi .ments. "freedom press" " exuberance and indepeñcþnce as problems to of the there? Can we 200lVladison Avenue, New York, Ny viôlence and human rights. ïhey'll sãe voutnfut". Divoky and Schrag,emphasize that it is far more diffcult expect the liberals to write letters drrgg.¿ and labeled and regimentg{ acqu¡escenc.e, we to 10016. . . . ."Reclaimingthe language- along a for the asking . . . 6. into for citizens to contest administrative þrograms when policies the editors of publications Tnd _catalog a nation of people whose lifelong somnambulism t'oompensatory about the The same way we are reólaiming oui People and Energy is u n"w montñly *ìritiäit. are touted as 'rtreatment" or "therap'f" or lack of liberties" pos onty accentuate authoritarianism and unquest¡oning "civil there? bodies for ourselves-and our minds." newsletter that concentrates on eetíins cán ed(ication." This fact goes to the heart of the immediate s!bly-1 Time magazine cover " to entrenched pqwef. . story on Thatts how the H/omen's Press Collec- out information about how citizËni subservíence problem. "As the techniques of control become more com- the "Capitalist takeover in portuäa1,, The dangers are manifold. Professional pronouncements tìve (5251Broadway, Oakland, CA can influence national ãnd local energy 'scientific' and 'humane'-andqs they be-come less overt- (a la their notorious "Red Takeoier that lohnnl or Mary is suffering from "minimal brain þlex, in 94618) describes what it is rrying to issues. The most recent issue containí' iv oúnitive-res¡stance will become much morè difficult. . . Portugal" of recent vintage)? or "hyperactivityt' or "dyslex.ia" are far more We all do. Title's published since the prèsses an article on Westinghouse Corpora- ãvitúnct¡on" Tîä rationale of therapy, education and rehabilitation al' l know, ofcourse, what tolipect. ititìri¿ut¡ns than if ihe professions were calling the child inception in 1970 include, Woman / tion's plans to construct a ftooiing ùost inevitably clouds due process and individual liberties." More crapola in the press about "ãisruptive" or a "troublemaker'" Divoky and Carued of Sur by Ann Gordon, Chitd nuclear power plant off the shorei of ':;i;;;;;r Underlying ideologies of conformity and repressive social "responsible elements" (cap italists) irtlr.g show that pseudemedical ja-rgon is.being used to as- of Myself by Pat Parker and A-H)oman New Jersey. Scheduled date ofcorn j ard finding in the facade of medical-sounding serting.control aru¡ trary recom men dation frôm teach ers, pri ncipals, control over',i rresponsi ble' ele- ìl Tolking to Deoth by Grahn. pletion i¡ ominously 'lgg4. lf you,d iusti fí path least resistance. ments" (the Judy , physicians and.psychologists-and not surprising' terminology a perfect vehiqle for the of revolutionary social ísts). Concentrating on publishing prose and like to check out an issue, äãïní.Loo, write the n g Ri tal i n, Cyl ert Divoky anlschrag: "lf one were to invent a means whereby What the American press-rarely, 'poetry, the Women's public lv-.itãt Jt't åtmaceu ti cal c

t4 wrN wtN 15 i the next Vietnam?" Claiþorne, Sybil "What is total freedom?" Durbiru Karen: "Ha¡d times in Chelse4" Bliss, Shepherd: "Panama; (Heads and Tales), 10/23, 16 't 13t,7 I 9l2s, to starts new session with Clark, Michele: "The politics of guilt," 5/8, Þ{am, NC: "State of siege, city of siege" by Mark Pinskv,6/19, 10 å'i*Jiil;';Ï¡iä:? ; "The ñrrther progress 10 e/r, to Maris Cakars: Dworkin, Andrea: " Remembering the witches," I õfs-t," Coffn, Lynne Shatzkin and I'FBI 6126, 5| Redef4ing Bookchin, MurraY: "The.sPirit of terlo¡ is busts Pat Swinton in Vermont, " 413,4 2120,4; "4 letter toM.," 7/17, 9 ¡ÀÀ-" SltS, 5;"Notes ori the death of Cohtr¡ Esther: "A sampling of women's ¡e- ," riãnôo," r2ll8, ll sources," 2120, L8 Ecolosv: "(hsanophosohorus: oesticide or (sùggestions homiõide" by Robert Aldridç, 21L3, 13; Books: "SPring reading" from Cold war "Operation Ohio: mass murder by s122,9 "Is the world coníîng to a beginning?" by lots of PeoPle), US intelligence agëncies" by Maris Cakars tall tâleaboúltrees" 9118,4 Blackbird, 3120, lO;"4 ,Borman, Nancy: "There's no turning us back and Barton Osborr¡ ui Ñô'iü" Soiómo'n, o/tl, 14; "rheben ' noulr" 21201 8 Colhoun, Jack "The Vietnam crisis gets hot" Franklin brigade" by'tlre Philadelphiá Borsodi: "América's decent¡alist dean," by u23,4 bicycle coalition,7 l17, 12 Mildred'Loomis, 5i l5' 15 Commune: "Louise Michel: 'angel' of the Economics: "A ñ¡rther note on inflation Borton, Lady: "An interview with Hoang !*it Çommune" by Marian Leighton, 5/15, and the military budgef' by Edward S. Her'¿ äic,"'øltz,4 e man,216, 12;" .t report from the coalition Ann Carol: "The collap se of America's Conservation; see Ecolory on the economic c¡isis meetingì'by Brightman, Davidon, 3120,4; "Credit where credit is Indochina empue, " slr, 11 Continental walk "Call" to the walk I2lts, due" by Esther Rome, 3120, 151. "Inflation 4; "Organizing the walk" Ed Hedemann BromleYs: "IR S takes action against the r 'li þy and unèmployment" by Jerry Voorhis, 4/10, Pèacemakers" by Mark Rewe, 4/3,' 14 l2118;5 pork Continental walk: see also Disarmament 8¡ "The empty barrel" by Marion Brown, Rita Mae: "Next month at a glance," Andersor¡. 5/8' 4; "tilages' for housework" COPRED: "Peace rese¿¡chets meet at Har- by I0; "Tle people l 7110,6 Jackie-Greenl.eaf,713, vard" by Chuck Fager, ILl6, 16 fór ælÊmanasement conference" by Henry Brownrigg, Leslie Ann: !'Joffre Stewart: i times fo¡ whom?" by áctivist from the Windy City," Cornell, Tom: "The collapse ói America's Bass. 7/3, l?I"Har¿ nonviolent Indochina empire,"' 5/1, 14 'Fred Rosen, 7131,4;"Hañ times in Chelsea' 61t9,4 de- Comwoman, Betsy and Randy Kehlec by Karen Durbin, T/31,7;"Politics' Buddhism: "Transforming inner energy piession and inflatiòn" by Robert J. Ross, I ìrtúest" "Nuclear opposition in Europe, " 9l2S, tr Tibetan Bu ddhism comes to the üv illt, tZ:. "The AFLCIo and the new de Well, herè Blackbi¡d,'l 13,4 Cortright David: "Unionization and pression" by Emest Lendler, 81L4, 14; it is at last: the. in-dex yo.u've been waiting f9r f9r so long. A few changes å since last year: We,ve used the democracy in the military,?' 1U20, 14 peace con- , dates of the issues instead.of Bunch, Ron; "The dâigers of RU," 8/7, 17 '"Taking apart the war machine: A thg'iï.r. number; sincã the ¿ãtrlr á"-ir'rr co.veç this ought to make thíngs easier to find. Cottle, Thomæ J "Ain't no mama going to versioña¡ìd the F1 bomber" by-Geo¡ge "Heads and rales" and "sittin' tn" have been ihcludeà Cakars, Maris: "Cover story," 4lL'7,I Americans fe.el'l by- wiiñ irtã ãir.'Ëiurt¡.hí rÀis ri;î Ã;u'iîà ,"t.gories and cross- ^ school," 21t3, t0 Lak.çy,lÙl2,4; "What I references have probablv changêd t-o.o, il anrnsystematic Cikars, Maris and Lynne Shatzkin Cofûn: Ie¡emÍ Rifkin and Ted Howard, LOll6, 12 ¿l anJ unfiar*;;;y:'ó;ä'irri'rïrrili'Å"tds: tast year,s is due" surance that there would as- Pat Swinton in Ve¡mont," 4/3, 4 Credit unions: "Credit where c¡edit be some misiakes, incohsisranr¡.r ãñ¡riioìr. nóoloii.; i; ;j;;;;; "FBI'busts -by Ester R. Rome 3120, ts Economics: see also Unions, Working Clæs Books, films and music reviewed plus.póetry are "nJ Cakars, Maris and Barton Osborn: "Opera- see Schools I listed ádãitñr räir body of the index. once agaín, chonges and Courts: see Law Education: letters haven't been indexed. Too tion Ohio: mass murder by US intelligence g uá¿-dere were lors i.;;;.;ir;'it,iner rhere too, urì ïime an¿ Egypt: see Middle East Hope all this space are lacking. agencies," 9/18,4 Davidon, Ann Morrissett: "A rePort from I helps sbmebody find something they need."i the on economic crisis meeting?' patriarchs," Caldwell, Pat: "Women worke¡s-summe¡ coalition the Carol: "The reluctant 1 3120,4; "WRI Triennial rcport," 9125, 16 t¡ 19',1s," 713r,6 ll.t]tfin, Davies, open letter to Shoshana," politics: other convention in Califomia: see Farmworkers Diana: "An Electoral "The by Bob Mayer, 13¡ "With I 7124,16 Ci-ty" U16, Cambodia: "The Mayaguez affair" by David Davis, Uri and Israel Shahak: "An open let- the people at Reagan's opening" by lohn tÖZS: WIN Speciat lssues McReynolds, 5129, L5; "The view from Middle East," 316,4 Lamperti, 12118,22 AlperÍ "To fea¡ Jane Alpertis to fea¡ our- Bareano, phil and sam salkin: ..Handle¡¡Trs¡v ter to the WRL on the 1 p^emins.5/22, withw¡ur Phnom Perth" by' leng 9ary,9125, 7 Energr: "Towards ælf-sufficiency in I 2l2A Women:1975 ::tl:1'j,qy,Bgqara +:.;oiwn . Dear, Ruth: "The lot of radical women in _food "-q;¿lfd;'iõ Camil: "Justice department st¡ikes out in 2120,20 and ñiel" by Randy Kehler, ?/31, 14 . 5lI The collapse of America's Indochina .'.ä-'ii:','"ii::i the raw into ou¡ own Spain," 3i,:T:pf,Hm* lß¿i,Î' Gainewille (again)" by Neil Fullagar, 1214,'î t, see also Ñuclear Power empire ing,7llO, l7 ,t*f.r,,,X;raking Defense (US department of): see Militarism Energ¡: I Campbell, Duane: "Farmworkers stnrggle by Joe 5/15 "The collapse of America's England: "Repression in Britain" some intema' thru California union elections 10123, I Deming Barbara: 6126 Lesbian Culture i'å'"'å':,"9,"ï"'Tiälii"*' Indochina empire," 5/ 1, 8; "To fear Jane Al' Gerson, l2l4,6 #Jå1î'ïîil*,j:'::il::,',i'ilîi?iffi,, parent an child" bY l 'll3l Child¡en: "Single of "'only pert "On the Enstgn, Tod and Michael Uhll "Portugat re .i Hard Times I 5129^, 14; "The people for self-manaqemänt Barry, Jan: int¡oduction to "Kim Chi Ha's is to fear ourselves," 5122,4; .a ..An John Thomdike, 1.21r1,8 17 form 7/17,4 8/14 Hard Times II Henry Bass, 7 17 declar¿tion of c onscience," l0/ 16, iubject of trust,'\7/10, o¡ revolution?" ".conference" þV 13, i 4; 9ll8 Operation Ohio: mæs murder by US l oward an altemative health care system" open Ietter to American GI's in Sóuth Ko¡ea Childien: see also Schools Etzkowitz, Henry: '1The search for an agent ,..:Ji i d Clqiqe -. Deming Barba¡a and Brad Lyttle:, "To crack t'' Intelligence agencies ..b¡t Dorrglas and Jim Scott, 8/7, l4l añd the Philippines," l\l4, lS China: "Bob Nich (part 10/30, 4 of social change," 2127,4 ïi "Practicing the,legal revolution ..Sittin' our single selves II)," l0/2 Taking apart the war machine: peace n'ow!'; by' Ba$s, He-nry: i',,, 2l2j,lS, 3/6, Europe: "Draft resistance in Europe" by ls Economics I conve¡sion and the B1 bomber ,'i"iiËiïi'r:lí{,f Tientsin," Depression: see Joseph Gerson, 4/24, 6; "Nuclear opposition i?,ff ;,iöiiü.ö3il#;*?üt.ig;p,"1,.,:+í,Ái'ät:,;L;ï;; 7124, 8:IY , a and Randy l0/9 India las and Jim,Scott,'1214,8: "Aliernative - :'"1" ' Desai, Narayan: "The new Gandhians: in Eúrope'l by Betsy Comwoman 10/30 To crack our single selves, part - Beda¡d-Parker, Christmas: "Altemative Santas," ruzo, 19 struggle for reform in Bihar," 4/3, 10 Kehler, g/25, 11 II Santas," 1U20, 19 -Rachel and Susanne Gowen: I l/13 Dealing with oúr post-wai responsi r" back agun" 2113,4 whodoneit thrills Madison" by van Deurs, Kay: "Open letter to Shoshana," Europe: see also England, Germany, Imperial- Anarchism: The s/l5 special iszue has CtA: "CIA bilities' arti"l"* -we 1-2: "Pcrtuqal: number I on Pqrtugal, Spain by , I\ìla¡ian Leiehton- tseechy, Atlee: "Learning the lessons of Jan Faile¡. 4/10. 7n4, n ism, ireland, Craìs aid the clA hit parade" Gyood' 4/ lu' i Ledfo¡d and Mild¡ed Loomis; intioductiòn'" in Vietnam," lUl3, l5 ' Disarmame¡ti "T"F^4g apar.t the war machine" F"eerÌ chu"k "R\¿tt¡¡ntine au ortio¡."-'t1,24, INDEX a special if;oo#i,lt . byJvlurray Ro-senblith;"Notes on the ..playing l4;"Dom-lnt:, iakev, io'17,'+-;"p"ople are suffe¡' tsi"Íie woríd vegetarian-cons¡ess," l0/16, death Belville,,Lance: away the G.c. jit- Sanders, 316, t4:41i," r3i4124, 14; r2118,24; gv_c;;È; Aborti^on_:^"Abo¡tion on trial," by Connie ofFranco by Murray Bookchin, l2lI8, ll te¡s,,, 3'16, 12 -OperationOhio,,tyM;ìt'é;ü;'-r*.í '"''-'in€b".aús"*eñávenoidisarme-d"bySteve 16i"Peaceresearcñe¡smeetatHaward," Puge, .-,. 31 13,4; "An open letter to-Chuck Marion: "The empty pork barrel," Berrigan, Fager" by $1de-r9on' ..on Dan: "Nameless ode." 3/20. l2: Leah F¡itz, 6112, l3t..Rerhinkinu s/8, 14 tñe rrridAi" Eñ;; abortion" by Chuck Fager,7l24, lB õ;¡lühiíijiñíl n ififfliJ'ïåffiåxiil1*'i''[1*ï*'* Arab: see Middle East perrigan, phil: ..The iililþ".^whodonei"hr'rstuoa¡'on"lrl Susan: "Pine Ridge under siege," collapse of America,s-- ;ç$$*':;.-i;;;;*, \'lValk åþtg*.c | Disarmamenf see also Continental Famine: see Hunger 9125,4 Armed Forces: see Militarism Indochina empire," 5/1, i ¿il,-,,.*;;,-,,Ain,t no mama soins to school,, . ;;fl'ã'lãìîãi DiSpold-o, Nick: "How to be a jailhouse *organophospl-onrs: p^es_ticide or Abzug: "An interview.with Bella Abzus" Atomic: see Nuclear qicycles: "The Beri F¡anklin brieade." Phila- üfü;ffi ¡. ôîtili,,-zil i,'lõ; Farming delphia ' ñ"ottü Joãnn Littlei'by Michael lawyer,"'1 ll0, 14 homiciãe" bfRodert Aldridge, 2/13, 13; bv Martha Thomæes and Susan pinesãf f, 8 Averill, Peç Heads and Tales, ll16, 16 Bicvcle Coalitioq 7ll7,i2 cäiótinuvs nlÅi,l¡î1, 17; "Abortion on trøi';uy Cón- and Jim Scott:. "Toward an l:A decentr4ís-t approacl.to tñe world food Kur¿: Douglas, Claire ;" ** ?#i,ilï6,Bliie "rhe roots nie Þäiæ, iltl, ;"rq\iqe the-law inio our Ít-"tiutíur health ca¡e system," 817,14; crisis"-bv øat'z-at-!lJ!, 8;"America's de- ôËÍ":t'?L"ï,",fÎl,'ic4,Liberia, ,,*,,"*, f;,tX"e?"Í;ä1,"¿ii'f ""nt."'|iÌiå'iq¡ ñ; ñ;iä;l tl sieve tsark]an, l1/6, 4;"Re- .:'R';*l;nies to an altemãtive rrê¡ih'ðareìv* centralisi dean" by'Mildred Loomis,-5l!!' Aid to vietnam; see ..Report vietnam Bach, rohn: r¡om M.c.c.,,, t2ttt, pi.T-i.¡ i" Brítain" bv J oe Gerson,' 1214, 6 i;,Y'"iTi.i,'8 14 bitd,8l7 12 Albert' Stew: "watchins the also Feminism, Native alony Abbie show," Baez. Joah.: "The collapse of Ame¡ica's Indo- ïi'b-"i"""âíäd;ismäli;ipt¡Ërlöi?i,?lÍfffiifrråîårX.#ïo, Civil Riehts: see Dreifus, Claudia: "The çontinuing of ' 6/19' l5r "A tail aboutÑew vorliJiïõfi'o, comes to the west,,, ?/3, piisons, Repression Northein lreland," Farming: see also Farmworkèis, Food, Húnger r¿ .-Ëüä empir",'; s/i,-iõ'" ¿;.öä"ln";îîy gardening Ãìlårill"f 5129,4 Aldridge' rcport,,,817, t2 turnout ever for the Robert: "oreanooltosphorus: pe* Bane Michael:. "Tqe. Clifford, Carol and Brewster Rhoads: "Wash- Fæmworkers: "Larsest of """"North carolina Blatt, Marty and yai¡ svoray: Heads and ' ticide or homicide, " illì,'tS ur. jã"nn fittle,; -slatg i";i;;;h;t--- hà'u" h"v eve¡ done for us?i;-'- Duff, Peggy: "Korea's golden opportunitiês," ÙFti¡'tv Carol MarYsh, 3/20, 17; "Farr¡¡ )lü-,'i;' Tales, I tlZ\, t6 '-- - --' elec' I t7 I j; ii. I | 16, S workers struggle thru Califo¡nia union

16 WIN wtN 17 .t û tions" by Duane Campbell, IOl23,8 Ge¡son, J.o_seph: "NATO's role in imperialism," "Paname the next Vietnam?"'by Shepherd the Phillppines" by Jan Barry, 1214, 15 ltql_ü-.¿ç, Karen:-'.'The-ch,a,nging shape of -- Movement: "The search for an agent of der Vasto: Gandhian 4t2a' political theater," 6112, lO " by. Henry Etzkowltz, 2127,4; åiå? iiiô:'åanza 3{1.I"'d;Ríå*'fìiìTäl"i'Pt"zoltet' B',li'l"i/ri3¿i,hiiffiå:1tî*,ii'ó:t'* Krassne¡ Paul: review of "Shampoo" (and lggial çttt"g"-" almost eúerythingclse), s/8, It Mariorr, ll.: "rnside the waus and minds at Fæcism: "rhe advent of Fascism in Giles, Ken: "Translatingludaism into .äiåT'l?råT:iål3rïirlÌ:i3:rtirff';iåffå" rndia" politics," .ffiil îfitôi,q.ff.Yåâ",T'l¿i:13;" Kuz, Demie and Bnrce Birchard: "The Marion," 10123, 12 ti oã"ià M;ftE ió7i, 4124,12. "'- roots ..Largest 8- ;añäi";J;;rd; lôiõ-í"'*'-." :'"*' Marsh,.carol: turnout ever ror urw," Fascism: see also Repressior¡ S.p,ain. blli*rliáthfu'rf"äilt i'ri,-ri.'."ð"1}ff* Labor: see Economics, Farmworkers, unions, 3120, l'1 liustã Institutii;ü; tiïtíäy$iî'å'ä,i ìrVorking.Class Mayáguez: "The Mayaguez affai¡" by David lIl20, 131, "Building our movemen-t" by o liËffåjïi1töT"å!'4iii':ö;J,"ffi ïiï;l:ä:H'¿"ïåîå". Ladd, Steve and roanne cove¡ed" from LNS, 3/6, f *mt*rm ;:rr:,;rry,To1fluo**, ;,;".;,* H'åiî?'ff,''lii;li¡"i':;rtî are sufferine because we 'T:',*h¿ å,l;;Ïi".,,,-.- - r"* üä'{"'#ii"#:lf,: i:j3J"'"iå*:1t., Tåå''.ïri3til;r*¿:Ë'lli5:1"õÉjöt Fåi#'.1ü,:ïJ;#ì1"äåil.rålp,",iï. '¡'ïi"i.#ä:.ilËî'",iiÏ i"it ü.3.rT' 1it:r.,'î"' " May_ea !9!i,..Jh_e_othe¡conventioninKair- i¿tft,tSLlf;fltt#cot*ission'Ndri- i' r"íi"!t,n_g"i; ..wages Lakey, George: "Taking apart the war sas City," 1116, 13 fi;iËil;''ièpìã"-'- cr"""1""r, Jackie: fo, r,our.*orr.,,, Moyer, william and Pam.elallaines: sion"'6l12' lrllloi.#i"'lii,å::tü,*i:r.¿riüiOtr*, machine: peace conversion and the Þl ' Maver. paul: "The stranse case of Martin "flow lîi,ïo 'The we cause worlo nunger'' r advent offascism in India" bv David bomber,"'10/2, Soitre," 1130,4;"The cóllapse of America's r/JU' r FBI: see also Repressior¡ spving M-orris, 4 Grosberg: "carol Grosberg on lesbian 8;tt"-d;;t6;;ä iriÏnã¿;- ..And Indochina empiie," Muhammad: "The " by ^10/9, Lamperti, Claudia: they were 51r,6 å Feminism: Heads and Tales by P9g Averill, theater"-(an intewiew) bfkaila Jay, 6t26, 15 lU6, l0 -'- - - bh¡d' Julius Lester' 4/10' 4 1.6; chan-gi,ng ..Anothe¡ inìiìãrl,-'¿ii?l l¿ McAléster prison: '.Big Mac bums" by Vl6, "T-he qolig.Tt Grossman, Stwe: Indians see Native Americans theater" by {af;.qf stirmirl in ttre ..who stitt, l2lli, 12 "no.* Multicultural community High school: "A Karen Malpedr stnrggle for amnesty," 3120, t6 'Indochine Lamperti, John: were the Luddites? saxe,s statemerrt ut ,"nt"r,h,lJ-lllr'ru¿-ìi,-* "In4ochina poems" by Carol ..*'' arternative "ff4"filrl'F]ãfHi,i;ilriil"Riî:'i#îí; "Decra¡ation orconscience"' .tråffití:r;i".:ru*:iqgJ;"|l|tjji,,, f;,*l'åj:lJ,äl$,'"?'""*:î0,îå:*, 5lïåii"',äl",""iiÍis',iäii,i" rfi,tiï"n" and growfþ: ii'"",r.'iïti1óiii{ffii"ëi'"ì.ifilr, 22 r¡ McReynolds, David: "The tight ar the end titment an inter' pamela ..How the end of the war), 511,4; "^of Y:.:i::fgf bv susanne-Gowan, f*rl.l"y,-d-.ñl;liì";ã''-'i¿ih'I,ïlvsvulciaiìb_om",;;il;;;;áñ,s;;,;i7îö,ïi'' lb/*,-i0;'?what is total frei Haines, and wi!þm Moyer *. .3Li?0"f,"ï "Latlzadet vasto: Gandhían guru" by pat tiì" ñhn"i,;;'47i2, 6; -o ' "Th;;ã6:"";i""- Xt""Yi*l.lltttv.Near"2/20' l6;'Lesbian music.tSkes bv hei4er,/r.r5:P:,i:$'JJ$:Î,Îqåi"n,"_ r"ìtãÃî¡0, America's Indochina emoire." sli]ü"rrte of' i'p*""'""¿ Lvnne D' shapirq 6126' 12 I the parestini äiìrúå'r'ffioä; ðribäååîîîr';¡i", Latin America: see individual counrries Mäg"sd;iääü-Tt'izT'íi'trrri"i;;ì;';;d 4¡ù' r/ ¡ ,' rv ii;ii['t"ií Institute Boine" ifliilþ!qô"llg-g'i,iiä'fl'$"T,å',ïsues "Women: L975" (2120') and "L-esbian m,*Ui#í¿' y;ï,iilfË:'iç;f,Muste (interview): see !ry, ïï",rr"^ri*r*Ir**il'^nr._.li"iv-¡ri"r #i';t'iîi;|ll';liiir;l!;tsour"mou'' C\¡lture' (6/26). Hawpetoss, Neal "The occuprù. ,Indochina: also Ainnesty,- - Cambodia, tion bf the'Menoriinee Noiitiat e," 4l 17: lr vietnam, Peace Movement ïÌTili"lJ,{jsg'li,;,3}'üå,iXi]ä/'å:?, ü.ä",,", ,".'""il ¿;"'- l.¡",*..oi"i."",:..Lire in Ganienkeh,,(an Feminism: see also Alpert, shoshan4 sex ' ..The Kaküiirakeron),.-U16' l0; roles "ptã"ti.Ïùlirät.;i d;;irii;ió*l;rïv Men and Mæculinity: reluctant .i.r¡lervi,el.with nõreiiZ.iu-n'ei, r?0, s-'- --" 'ry¡.liiffilïi,t:T;1?ìi3Jl;";;*f"'Tf n' Richard ;;t'iäiii;;;;îy-cilí'er'iú'.i,îà, i" fem3nge1, {intervffio,{,etnam: Lazar,)d: decent¡alist t¡avels in the peace zone," lïf,ilï:å:'r',,,t ".A approach tq the Menominee: "The, ocç-upation of rhe . - ú{. tü;;;;ü;'nãøtiätrt;l"n iniä¡ui"îwittr **iiå,,'åiï,f:i+"i""Fiiü;i,ll,}',"ru' wo¡ld food c¡isis," 4/24, 8 Menominee novitiate," àn interview wirh ñä iüü;ã;rii liii-i r;;qç;-ú,d;i;s Hction: y9¡e blue" by Claudia yta['11121,'te a ptéät'; uv n. International women's ..A l'4t19-thçy ;.-'çgqpi"g yean tetter from Ledford, craig: ..rhe sns, t2 t*"* Irampç¡li, 4/17, "Next month at a Dtrori¡ua uóore, tzlii, i5 ygg-r-sister in B.;lñ;; úi ö;'büfi-H;;r;, r* -'l:::. glance" -14; - . il:î,Tåiä,":ii lJikl åt'$:il",få3Ë,åæ i*BÍ:gl,r";lii*:å by futa Mae Brown, 7/10, 6 il¡ü:i{ læft factions: "The dansers of RU" by ..An glaI,4 ' Health care: "Toward an altemative health Ron Middle East: open lette¡ to the WRL on ÃUrãms, Fine, Iim: "The olive branch defined," 518, 12 c_4r_e sy.stem" by Clair Douglas and ' Bunch' 8/?' 17 Jim Scot! Ireland: "The continuing asony of Northern üre rvriaole. Eastll uy'ÙilDavis-ãna lsraer .NATo: seê Imperiatism \ "Firestone: American n¡bber in Liberia" 817, 14; "Responses," 1214, I Ireland" by Claudia Oreätr[ S129, + Leighton, Marian: "Louise Michel: 'angel' Shahak, 3/6, 4; "A-response" by .:".,nr"rtment by - of ¡l¡¿¡ Ñ""r, and growth: an inter_ - Edward Honnold, l2l ll, 4 the Paris Commung" 5/15, 9 Solomonow. 3i6. 8: "Þeace and t Ma¡t Rewe, 4/3' 14 Lendrer., Er.lqs!, and the Foldy, Seth: "schools for sale: universities. HedemanrL Ed: "Organizing the walk," 12/tg, r'fhe rriåro new - 't depression,i' 8/14, 7 it.:Sa*ítxn"*r*r-Ë*'1"" studènts and the Shah of Iran," 6lL2: 11 Islam: "The Nation of Islam" by Julius Les ii:ï;*,*,.:rïï:"1ïï,::î- ..Towa¡ds tet 4110,4 Lesbian: "å,pg*$¡ Lesbian odyssey,' Food: ælÊsufficiencv foo¿ Henze,.La!¡ra J.,."_{¡e-ed9m: 'it ts prohibited' by. il!"låh #r"#r3 froþåf;fftjl lnarv st2s, Karen Durbin, 7ll¡t, 7;..A tait about New- ii ana KarlaJay,,2l2O. 12;special iszue on yo¡kby -- tu;rtby R;ndtk;hiü?iåî;i4iR;:-ü"-¡; in south Korea," 1/ló, 4 Israel: see Middle East "Iesbian l0;..Schools fo¡ sale:.universiiies, sitrjâenis Stew ei¡eit, iOilø,-1C gggplant cwry,..8114..22;."The world vege Herman, Edward S.: "A fu¡ther note on_ irr I.W.W.: "The IWril rolls on" by Craig Læô congreis'' 6y Chuck Fager, flation and the budeet,', 216, sex .taäàn f 0/!6,i6; military t2 ibii- i7rs,'iZ iïiiï J:i;. Rores îTî.rß::l:$-:,!lålî';{ä.ù:di"i."åfJ''Jf' ffiTl}"i::; ;i}ì:î,"itv;1""iä1, ä "Formula for underdeveloomentt' by Deboáh Heru, ..Hiroshima/Nagasaki/30 ræster., Ju,ius:.'rheNarion Debo,¡$:-"A leiter f-- you, sister in Japan: yearg,,g/?, 4 or:',liü:::r", Huntingtor¡ 1214, L4 B pride in themselves, love fc : eän,, lll2l,l4 tr.^ t täitf;ir,.s.'J,ül;€ro,'l*,.,:*ü," Food: see arso Farming, Hunger ..!hg,ço{apse ihdtf+itÍi{,{,ldii:#ili;- Hertzberg, Hendrik of Ameri- ii;ri#i"r!"ff:',i#rf*iffiutr,ïif" ..rhe Fo¡d:_"An even_ir.rg_with Jerry Ford" by Nor- ca's Indoõhina empire," 511,7 ;i;:itilè,,-]i:t;C;;;l ði i.uãreãîi¡öiii lilï,i, Denise: corapse orAmerica,s i:'11""*l"ttlot#3t, Ll",Ttii;l:;ä"" illl"ü'iiil,trl"å"".ï i/"tti"tf,'l¿å',il; man Solomon, 9/25, I ..Hi¡ostrima/Nagasaki/ g/7, ttr"ätËr;;("n'in1e¡yi9-ry),6/26, Indochina empire"' slt' e 30 yearq" 4 l6;..Refi¡sing -' . Mlitarism:-"rne aerensg^aep3rtme¡tlg.rrot i¡lüil?.'tfi3i[Tt#'#;;* :"-1å?ä?"i", F-orest,. Jim: "The collapse ..A to be a victim," l0l23, Lex¡ngton, Ky.: "People Le4ington. get of America's Indo ¡¡¡r.r¡, Fred: meeting in Mexico City," l0 in;; -a 100" by Leon Reed, 1123, i.ll, e cnrna emprre.'- J/l' lJ hard i-esson ol r"preiåion 6iiz,7i--' "-' d; inflatio_n *ã *'" .{,fff# 1214, i2 " leze¡ Marty: "The collapse of AmericC In- "óä ?äii;;3t",Y¡it":ir3;fl'olLl3: Franco: "Notes on the death of Francq" by ..The dochina empire," 5/1, 5 'l¡i"ry'üTåi"i' History: spi¡it of terro¡ is bom,, bv ..NATo, Murav Bookchin" 12118, ll ü*ri'ñlõfifi;iils,iiY¡råriä'ir¿iäi"r Jones, peter D.: south Africa'and LIB:',ä';iËåïtîfiffi,i iäiii:f [fü{t{'?¡ff,ifi3!?!f i;I?Ët;* iïå1l#î,'l'¿]i';*tr1a'rf,iir, !.'ri F_riendsh-ip-ment: "People to people aid to i4ngel' of the Paris commune" by Marian the USA," lUzO, I Li*q "rhe state orNorrh,caro,ii,avsroann ..Translating ;*.**nx$1¡¡¡luru;;æ17*t Vietnam"-by Cora W-eiss, llh3,4;"Friend- .Lgiehtg$ 5/_15, 9; "The ¡9ed fo¡ a.Lesbian Judaism: Judaism into politics,,, Little" by Michae! Bane,2l shipment," ..America,s ü.i:åt.3Ëifli.fr:J#,|'dffffi*nt" Beisv cornwodrän án¿ nan¿iÎi¡t"i'"slzs, l!l3, 12 history" by June Rook, 6/26, l8; "Who 4tl4--ïï Loomiq,Mitdred I.: decentratist rurope,, by Mark E. schæiber, tlältÏ "4n open,etter to chuck Fager," in dean," 5/15, 15 "Hiro:shimiNagasaki/30 yea$ot' Bl'1,'4i' :,'__ , , Eifi:ß*, *Is ii-i$"ik"if'ti::Ålö.';lË,:ååB:i'i,å/"11' tlläl*:rilit:"ïä.*,,r.Lire r'eo¡rev*.$.a1fi the us waging weather ïî$:'T/ïjft**mu*, åiiEîir¿ Fufþee¡, Neit."rustice dIi/.i?, u** show,,by orAmerica,s wârfare?" lU2O,4 Hifa r#Tt*?rs,Ïf:'i:,#TÏ:îJi'i out in Gainwille (again)," l äig.i;,r";ïrffl,T,ll^00," mg*",:g;f.,r;iff¡" Gandhi' lndira: see India selr'sufrciencv ,, Honnold, Edqqd, "Firestone: American in :'":l:.:*:enkeh," p,ay: ,he "' n¡b f""i*îtilÊ,îií; ;Äî1tf Lovejov:l",ti'o:::ltt-' "rilho were the Luddites? andí1üiT'i¡",ftrþi.x,iH"ji{0,*n*."" üró'usÀ" Íry Þeter D. iones, il:iïiï'J:i*iäs* Ganienkeh: "Life in Ganienkeh" (an inter: È";il'iiterir,'îlZttt,'ï"""-' An ooen ll/39¿ti.,, iräiöääàoes,,' 3/13, t0;..Nuciear op view with Kakwi¡ake¡on and Lo¡raine)' 1/16' lettei to Sam Lovejov" bv John Lamperii, "unionization and democracy h ,l: Hook, Hook" bv stephen ..i,"J1,:ïiä?Jät"ït"rr:îîy3äî'r, 11li,lE" öritiäi ii'"Eirop"" by Betsy cornwoman 1ç¡r,çrt*r"r 8114, L7 by David Corrrigh! I l/20, 14; "An oren let- ääiää;i;iï"; ;irí,-ä Don: "Preparing for peace "shoqhana speaks in wood- rlce, in vietnam," war: ..HiroshimdNagasaki/30 years,,: $ålïr'þ,i?å?, rooking at you, kid!,, 41 17, 4 hlt[$#:rffr1l,i*.å',"ttl¡["ir, fy-cle¡r !¡fflj?3;]:Here,s [:l1iËi:ir.,*j,[,.-t*ir;lhííii:;,"", ..wlroJgry 'ö:#le"å''iri$&1:åiå'#rT?l#""""' Presidio 15 : the Luddites?" ..áJ"r.",", Gay liberation: "A personal Lesbian odyssey" ;^----1,," 27," lU6' naop. by ohio: mass murder by us in- qi^rãtrii.v, ä and reremv Rirkin: "lilhat : j Jóhn Lamperti, 8ll4' 17 tio,\-iiriî^lt;;-ñ;;i'h;" T:llld'redAmericans feel," 10/16, xi¿r, ,., ciil¿r"n str."üitr t2l-lsj "Th;di;"tmlt"ent con- t.rïigãr"é'åe.tt-i..;îv rriãiir õ¡i"tiãnã ci.c. 12 , nection" by Rick Malishchak, iiiæiJrbíË;;b"ililí;;'Zteizi'" :'l': :":.":'f"1": Paul, Shannon:..^----. "The..- blooS Lynd, Staugþton, ::T!9 of America's l2ll8;9 Bariôn Osbã¡rL 9/18,'4 speçiä iJsu" õi ;Ëlii* öttí;¿ (bf Hunger: "How we cause world hunger" ^ empire," 5/1'",olapry l5; by Snieh! Í"|!I "19 I tí¿oót¡¡na "ìühy Labo¡?;; Milk "-pSynuþ for r¡nd^erde{,elopment" by opp-enheimer, Joel: ..celeb¡ating the peace,,, Gay Liberation: 'l see arso sex Rores .ry'å'å##,?t:i:li,-.åä"iîI|f:i'å,1á,r?"tJ, south, 81t4,4 D"ú.'h-rfi;tññ;;;'ìiiî-if f ffi;'s*""" ;:iiä1,ff1åi.,,i-"i,i'bited,in are the ressons Çermar¡¡': "A tail aboÌtNew York" by crisis" by EdLnàr,4/24, 8;"Formula for Korea" by LauraJ. Hepáe, l/16, 4: "Ko¡ea;s' '.i or a prea?" *o Maris cakars: "operation Stew Albe-r! 10/[.14;-"Ope¡ation Ohio: underdevelopment" by Deborah Huntíngton, golden opportunitiesl' by Peggy D'u[ l/16, , :, lJ.'#h?19åiiöl:,rwhat ür..:n *J{;#iî;;îî:ffg &oo;il¡7ft:ï ..Declaration ,1 Jnagmyr{e-r by US,intelligence agenc-ies" 1214, 14 g: of consciencõt' by Kim Chi ¡ bv Maris Cakars and Barton o¡t_rn-.911-8, Imperialism: "NATo's role in imperialism" û îõii?];'lih" Kórein wa¡ ¿anãei;'-uv I H":i'ä,'¡i1lå'"'.åti"ri';'tr""iiitÏlo,I' ü?.'tr3"îJ:;;':îi*ff1"#iïåli,"fú/;/åo *:åiru:::,.Jii"#î,y"i,1,3#::iå." Sil!"tt.tfromyour.sisterinBertin"by by-iosephGersoy,2lti,T:.tri;i,t;tas";, iji'ni"i'li.-ö.T¡rmãi i_OlrO, rOf.;Ánþ"n disarmament con- Mo¡ris, ..David Movemen! "Sittinl In" Deborah He¡Þ,, 1U27, 14 Uai¡nc$þ"|j:k^"ft" Mark: Morris's recipe for egg--. atrair" 6y David McReynolds, 5/29, isi letter to American GI's in South Ko¡ea and , nectior}" t¿l tÓ,t. plantcurry," 8114,22 PaigeConnie: "Abortionon trial," 3/13,4

IE WIN WIN 19 1

Palestine: see Middle,East "The (latest) trial of Martin Sostre" by Joel Saxe, Susan: "statement at sentencing,;' the regar Paley, Grace: "Peace movement meets with Ray, 3/13, 9; "Life inside the D.C. jail" by 71t0, t2 3t13, r6;and by Dave *""L o/30:tg., the shah of lran" bv Seth Mitch Snyder, 5129, l2;"A true concentra- '.î,.f"l!åÅii-:' ff¿ffiilx"ffiti,;'lï?å:ti* PRG in Paris," 4/24, 4 Scarborough, Jay and John McAuliff: "Wit- Snyder, Mitch: "Life inside the D.C. jail,";. ' tion camp" by Eddie Sanchez, 5129, 13:' -' --' :-"'"" :' ,,^ world vegetarian con- "Panama: the nextVietnam?" by Shepherd jailhouse nessing for aid to Vietnam ," 1214, 4 5ií1,-1T Vegetarianism: "The g/25, "How to be a lawyer" by Nick Di- greis" by Chuck Fager' 10/i6' 16 Bliss, 10 Spoldo, 7lL0, 14; "Inside the walls ànd Scheehter, Danny: "How we won in Indo. Social change: see Movement i Peacemakers: "IRS takes action against the minds at Marion," lOl23, l2;1'Remembe¡- china, or the fall of Washington," 7124,4 y*;"¿3ru;fl¿tr*:i,"igâî'r^î peacemakers" ing the Presidio 27" by (r¡""d,bf"11h:s"]iÏ"'i}t'lo"'"* by Mark Reeve, 4/3, 14 R. Scott Kennedy, Schirmer, Daniel ts.: "The Korean war dán- åil3liä.[",üt;;åJil,'fl"î,îT:lo'ï"'" theses) 1U6, 15; "Big Mac Burns" by Chuck Stotts, *iu.' óãiiÞìäiuã;.tv c1q'.s.s"1pson' l/23' ger," l0/16, l0 st2s,8 ? Peace Movement: "We'¡e back again" by I2llI, l2;"Report from M.C.C." by John ' Schools: "A lettr'r to Paul Goodman Ailan:.'A response," t!?t, cIAn Susanne Gowan and Rachel Bedard-Parke¡ Bach, l2l lI, 14 from soromonow, 3/6,6 J3'ì;;ilÏ#"ðlå"t'¿,1,.t;1i?{4:?lfirr, ÈP,;;iilËy.,\tiå'fit-!*ScomPan!.:-. 2113,4; "Peace movement meets with PRG an alternative school in Milwaukee," 5/29, --'" Sostre:"ThestfangecaseofMartinSost¡e" .!1;"Coverstory"byMarisCaka¡s'4lll,Li is to be undonø in Paris" by Grace Paley, 4124,4; "Draft Public Opinion: "What Americans feel" by 14; "Schools for sale: unive¡sities, students paul (latest) "pr"p#åg'rä't-på*ã'in üi"inur;'-du boá Albert, Michael; I'tthat by Mayer, U30, 4;..The trial (Terry M' Pe¡tin\ 2l13-20 resistance in Europe" by Joseph Gerson, Jeremy Rifkin and Ted Howard, l0l16, 12 and the Shah of lran" by Seth l;oldy,6l12, Marrin Sostre" by Joel Ray, 3/ 13,9 r-u"., ?iiuz,T;"""fr; iichd;i'ìl; dá or tn. I4 of 41 24, 6i "'Disperse, ye rebels'-Concord, Ray, Joel: "The (latest) trial of Martin American Friends or'razit see Indi'en4, 1975" by Tom Reeves, 5/8, la; "The first Sostre," 3/13,9 Schreibe¡, Mark E.: "The first woman CO in ffJ$st-tr'rJåi?,,3;:Í,îi';3le"' + woman CO in Europe" by Mark E. Schreiber, Europe," 5/22, 8 Hl,*idt:fäl,!*:å,""'ü,?fii3fit'; Arørat (Leon Rayman, Paula: "From a kibbutz on the Is- south Korea: see or Ameùc.a's 5122,8;"R.|.P. Charley Hook" by Stephen Schwartz, Korea Indochinacmpit"-'i!ïiiäfi' î:'¿il'"HÏii #'rt¡¡ËiYf6to rael-Lebanon border," S 120, 10;"The Sinai Wendy: "Getting the Muste In- 15. 4i-" l.ne pollucs Suffet, 5/22, l8; "Hiroshima/Nagasaki/30 South Vietnam: see Vietnam by anti-war people, 5/l' disengagement," 1 I 16 stitute going," lll20, 13 Balaban, J ohn (trans' ): vietnamese Fotk years," 8/7, 4; "WRI Triennial report" by I 20, ..The ãi l-Ol 'rCero Soain: lot of radical ,lin.,.n in spain,, e''i'i;'üiå;JË^ö1;tfi ¡78_, Ann Morrissett Davidon, 9/25, l6; "Well, we Reagan: "With the people at Reagan's open- Scott, Jim and Claire Douglas: "Toward an went to Kansas City. . .," 9125, l7; "Taking ing " by John Lamperti, l2l 18, 22 altemative health care system," 817,14; tíïi;,r'isï,2it0îäôïfr'r'ii"i,ìi.i :ia:ln,q;lfut't';'g,'lr'li{,Hil* y,,t,rl apart the war machine" by George Lakey, "Responses," l2l4,8 ;îii,jli,''#Til'iiq;'*q Reeve, Mark: "lRS takes action against .fi:i:3sr;3äliTf'år",""iiåïi,,'"ffiiÍ" 1012,4; "Getting the Muste Institute going" Seeger, Pete: " Peacemake¡s" 413, 14 "The collapse of America's: Bookchirt 12/18, I l; "Spain and resistance iisi+ll,l$lu,"llær¡;ul?",#i 'f:;åan;if:,#Tf^1:T**î,:,ïf1#-, by Wendy SchwarE, 11120, 13 lndochina empire," 5/1, . '¡iÍ^ ¡tooã¡rtt'mvth lives oí;' b Reeves, Tom: "'Disperse, ye rebels'-Con- l3 . Peace Movement see also Continental Walk cord, 1975," 5/8, 14 Self-management: "The poople for self- Disarmament, Vietnam (especially the l1/13 mânagement R9!d, Lgon: "The Defènse Department's conference" by Henry Bass, *:--#ürïlî,$iååîi'ï¡¡;jïäry ffiTîå'üff'r":î;;:¿i;ni'H'tå^"^ issue on reconstruction aid) hot 113, r7 ïÉ,*g:üii;ffi,,î::**t'îrirå;r'""# r00," u23, 17 ittrctiin"ttô"'; bv Ed Sanders. 316, 14:413, 13; shipment: peoþle to people aid to Vietnam" Berkman: see Goldman "Peace researchers meet at Harvard" by 4124,i4; l2l18, z{i"Operation Ohio'' by by Cora Weiss, t-U 13, 4.; "Travels in.the Bemstein. Ca¡l and Bob Woodüard: l// Chuck Fager, lU6, 16 Rerigion: see Buddhism, rsram, Judaism . . l;ll'åfo"|::iy,r;iåi"1å1f,'""5:'ì:r,f e/18' 4 Peck, Jim: collapse Repression: "Senate starts new session with ô^--¿ "The of America's Inde "senate stafts new session with re- l'#,f"läî1iïïîros:om' china empire," 5/1, I i ,"p'¡ãriiãf by rtiù Bh;;4ii0, i,1"#i;" !:l-l!:' ïif,i:'::dí,,i#lhiürïffi"'1?lr r:;::r;;:;"::x:t;;::1,:,i:,;:^^ P.: on the edge," Rhoads, 11/13, R. James) 7124-21 '"'."o;3ä,3,1'.iË-T. Stanley, Julia "Notes and Brester 11;"Leaming People: see Abzug Alpert, Borsodi, Ford, gri ff 3,1 9¡í,illi,¡,, the lessols of aid Vietnam" by Atlee 5122,9 Ð,i:.;1.¿m]';,,t h:* b, ff 6126,8 -in Books; see also "spring rcadin5" Grosberg, Hawpetoss, Hoffman, Lanza del "1'g V; ..Joffre 11/13. l5j "Witnessing for aid to ..rhe Stewart: Stewa¡Í nonviolent activist _B,gechy, Vasto, Michel, Muhammad, Nea¡ Prasad, reructanr.p.atriarchs,,by Sco'uo¡oueh-anäiä;" t1",;Y,'i::;;;i:iiki!:ä'Y?Ïntfiií*, Reagan, 3il'r|iäiYJ;,tÍ';;!îiii.t",i,îfi'"iì"*"- 1J. l*t"-, from the-windy city" by iJiilääüïl y¡1'ã'!;ï¡',iav Saxe, Shoshan4 Sostre, Stewart, New york,, bv Stew,ql6"ir ìb7-ià. ì¿, Carol Ehrlich, 2/6, 8;..Middle age and -'' McAulifr' 1214, 4 -.-' Tung motherhood, at l¿st I've found you" by ¡ll,'eîlg','l'-' Defense (rra-nliin ¿d;;;1;iil,-it "Justice depariment strikes'out'in Gainäs- ,.Toward voorhis, Jerry: "lnflation and unemploy- (again)" Sandra.Adickes,2120, 14:' "Toward gender stoltenberg, John; gender justice," The tlnderground woman People's Bicentennial Commission: " Dis- ville by Neil Fullaga ¡, 1214, 7 --"- ment," 4/10, soit., ruy, "-'*" perse, ye áito:6--'- 8 (wen¿v scnriili'iîrf-,"r,;'" rebels'-Conco¡d, 1975" by Tom Rep:es-sion: see arso E"cr1].,d,'FBl,c.,'onr, .¡iilä: Reeves, 5/8, 14; "What H,i"l"1"tJiiî"T'Ë;il,1o;,Li rnu Americans feel" by Native Americans, Police, Prisons, ;W"r; Stotts, Chuckr "Big Mac bums," l2llt, 12 War: see Korea, Middle East, Militarism Burroushq William S,: The Last Iltords of Jeremy Rifkin and Ted Howard, l0l16, 12; !ndi4 nãiäi"ã, ,illO, i-0; r;iîus"wo.k" ..An l'iuclear War, Spain, spain, Strasser. Fred: interview with an Armed Vietnam Durch Schluttz (Arthur Wnfield Knight) "With the people at Reagan's opening" by spving by Jacki'e c¡"rjnl"át :ilí,101.,i; crack ou¡ member," l1/20, l9 Was.l5ow, Arthur: "Crlebration and moum- 'lll'l-19 John Lamperti, I2l 18, 22 "Moving towa¡d revolution" by single selves (part II)" by Barbara Deming nóiðõiãir"mUly \ev9!qt!o¡: ..R.1,p. 5/8,- l1;."lrFpotence and energy the David McReynolds, 8114, 9; "Building our and B¡ad Lyttle, 10/30, 4; "4 letter from Sulfet, Stephen: Charlie Hook," Carawan, Guy and Candie: from People's Republic: see China ¡ier-,t"tflin Israel," 10/23, 4 (David,Mo¡¡is) -Voíces '4 movement" by David McReynolds, lI/27, your sister in Berlin" by Deborah Hertz, alr;,-\g"' Mountains 6ll2-2i Pesticides: "Organophosphorus: pesticide or 4, and 12125,4 lll27,l!"Single par-enl of an onþ chld" s"oråv, v"it and'Marty Blatt: "Heails and weather: 'jt-s us waging,weather war' Caro, Robe¡t A.= The Power Broker! Robert by lne. homicide" by Robert Aldridge, 2113, 13 Revolution: see also Porhrgal John Thorndike, I2lll' 8 l^lét; ittil, tS rare?" by Mark Loonev, l1l2o,4 Moses anQ The-fall olNew York (David Philippines: "An open letter to American people Gu¡in) Revolutionary Union: "The danger of RU" Sex Roles: s.ee al.s-g Abortion'.Feminism, Swinton, pat: see Shoshana ¡i Weiss, Cora: "Friendsh¡pp-e,qq to U16-20 " GI's in South Ko¡ea and the Philippines" Gay Liberation,-Women, and issues on ..The people aid to Vietnam," llll3,4 Lu-c-e, eds.: o-f by non Buncir, Sli, ll Tamkoc, Guneli: power of negative c^hpngn, Jacqui-and Don by Jan Barry, 1214, l5 1975 (2120) and Lesbian culture Vietnam (Ian ärrÀ"¿r, nr"lrt., c-" critro¡d: .,wash_ tä¡näìns';21)0, ro West Germany: see Germany *!r_r.Sgf:"sS: Poems from Phnom Penh: "The view from Phnom Penh" ä/o*ît Ba:ry) 316-19 tittli.lt have "råthey ever done fo¡ us?" ..playing jitters" Wesl Mark: birthday" (heads by Ieng Sary,9l25,7 Israer Theater: away the G.C. by -"4-fateful : tin" ò;"h.-, and uri Davis: "An open let- u"¿ Judv: rhrangh the Ftower Mv iä"iàî"r"ìù"i ãIe; iti';iiii;;åïi"ä,r'ãö. i¿äj,'elir:\6'-' çhicag.o, (Karla "Pine Ridgc under siege" by Susan Abrams, ..what witches:- ;'Remembering the witches" t:#f{:f; woman Artist Jav) R;iki;,;;,"'",.*qqr"-d Howard: $i:li,S#"ii.eÄ"1i:liJl9lïtHb..l,{f ti. ;ü;iiti.;l!iåu!,,!'ï¡, rãrrt Mul;"d;, bv " ...;:, :. 912s,4 .., 10; "Carol Grosberg on Andrea Dworkin, 2120, 4 , Americans fee\" 10116, 12 past..'.," lul3, lB 6/ i2, Lesbian , i ; Pines, Susan and Martha iú""i"i';i"nintewiew)uíránalav'e126,ts Thomaseq "An in- Rome, Esther R.: "Credit where credit is Shannon, Paul and Kathy Knisht: "The worn.',"Ain'tno-mam-a^goilcg::l,i:L- terview with Bella Abzug" 4ll'1, I World: "Hard times: some international by Thomas J. Cottle, 13, 10; s *?ri:*:"h!:i'î;{;::'";ià'*:,Y:Íl::rf^t'' due," 3/20, 15 bloodbath myth lives oi,". lll, I Third ?i (Pãu.la Ravman)' ll3o-20 Pinksy, Mark: "State of siege, aspects" by David Barett, 8114, L4 "Women:. l9'75," 2120;rp..i¡ irfiri:i-åì"tån city of siege," Rook, June: "The need for a Lesbian history," Shantidas: see Lanza del Vasto 6119, t0 6126, lg .¡r rhird see a,so rmperia,ism eL--i-^ r..--.. D':n. "Lesbian^^Li^- music*..^ ' Police: "Here's looking you, .,Hard takes dividual'Ìilor,d: countries and/or t ":l'* at kid!" by Ted Rosen, Frect times for whom?,, lh:räilu?ü" F#;*Ífi1*,JtîfiËd-Hnftr,Tf WiiZil*i.lïihrÎå",{#iì"if#"7,ù Howard, 2113, 16: "State of siege, city of Thomases, Martha and susan,Pine^s: "An ln- 1 l3l' 4 rl"tiri tl127, 14 cottle, Thomas J... Family Album: polrtmíts siege" by Mark Pinsky, 6119, l0 Sheehan, Joanne and Steve Ladd: "people teniew with Bella Abzug"' 4lt7 I i Rosenblith, Murray:. Introduction are suffering because we have not disa¡¡ired," ' women: see also Aborrion, civil Rights, åiäiíriìty"àiï Ë¡äiliiiiåï¿rï"¡ai"kåö'" Police: to ^ ' ' see also FBI, Repression, Spying Anarchism issue, 5/15, 4 l2ll8,7 Tho4$i.þ,-Jph^n: "Single parent of an only Èerninism, Lesbian, Sex Roles ílt-Zn ' : Pollution: see Ecology child"' 12l I I' Ross, J. Rgbert¡ "Politics, depression and in- Sherman, Susan: "Down the rabbit hole," Wood, Dave: "sittin' in," 4124, 16 Damon, Gene, Jan Watson and Robin J or' . , . Tunpr "An intewiew with Hsang Tung" by ..The a biblíogrøphy- . Porter, Pat: "Why Indians are homeless in flation," 7131, 12 7 13, 14 working class: search fbr an agent of d.a-n:.The Lesbiøn in Literature: their homeland" 216,4; Ladl Borton,6lr2,4 . "The housing Rubenstein, Carol: "Indochina poems," 1/23, Shoshana: "The collápse of America's Indo- I change,, by Henry Et kr,;;,r;7Tä: irä¡ã i"vl ati-zl plight of the Eastern tribes," 6119,8 12 china empire," 5/1, 12 Tyson,Sam:"Truthatthecenter," 7l17,15 ìl'ìlluo..;rorkers-summerl975"byPat deCamp,L.Spraguc Lov-ecraft:abiography Portugal; "Porhrgal: number on the CIA and Tod Cãldwell, 7131,6:"Why labor?" bv (Donalci Newlove) 5ll-20 I Sanchez, Eddie: "A true concentration Shoshana: "FBI busts Pat Swinton in Ver- Uhl, Michael Ensign: "Portugal: hit parade" by Thomas 4i 10, 14; revolution?" Staughton Lynd, Goo{ camp," 5129, 13 mont" by Ma¡is Cakars ând Lynne Shatzkiñ r"tótm ot 7/ú, 4 8/14,4 Delinge¡ Davez More Power Than We Know: "Portugal: reform or revolution?" by Michael Farm- People.ß Moven ent Toward Democracy Sanders, Ed: 4; "Shoshalq-speaks in Wood- UnemploymenÍ see Economics Working class: see also Economics, \he Uhl and Todd Ensign, 7 ll7 4; "An inter- "Dom-Int: a column on Ço{1tr J/3., and, separately, Allen , ..The l.ril,w. *oik".í unionr $endy-schwartz view with an Armed Forces Assembly mem- t/s,_1+: qtt,.*; Unions: -u, oni]uu Craig Led- Young) 10130-21 ber" by F'red Strasser, lU2O, l0 i,tf,,t Uilg "l;";, üî,:T;,?j,r.Jå i:!iïr,!,î;lß;iïi,:,:u0"" ford. 5/15, 9; "The AFL-CIO and the new "WRI Triennial report" by Ann Mo¡rissett phnom penh,,, K.ay van Deurc' 7124' 16 ä!"*iriái'úy arneslt-."åt";,'Ul4:î; Davidon, itzs,tà Pickens, Robert:Thoreøu: TheComplete Poverty: see Economics, Native Americans sary, Ieng: "The view from or It- 9tíS',7 " $mp¡on, Craig:,*A shortjnterview with on the Prasad: "4 short interview with Devi Prasad" Uß**Ui$tllru;:'rui*'*:t,ry ilåii" å*,s,';" f,ï"J^iïJm',RL 'Ë!|'#,'liii;,Ti'iil?,i:;ítiß-yfk by Craig Simpson, U23, lO iåï1ff;;;fiilfi.î:ï ijüî,:ä;åîio,'å"," 3'"1'"""ïå*;'lßj;"L}';''iåiiå,"f'* in Mexico City" by Fred Hirsch, t214, t2 iì;;Ë;"k. i/¿. 4i,.ñ.ñ*in;î|t"ÞJðitiniunr" Divoky, Diane and Peter Schrag: The Myth PRG: see Vietnam ---- Uy E' amuna'Hánauer, "Well, of the Hyperactive Child (Norman Solomon) by Ñormón Sol'omón, 6i 19, 14,;'*_--t Sinai: "The-Sinai dìsengagement" by Paula U.S. Covernme¡t: "Washington: what have 4117,10; we done for us?" went to Kansas 9125, 17 12125-17 Prisons: (and prisoners): "The strange case nionttr ãiì gtanc";' uv Éità'tulu.i ¡ì.*n, Ravmond, Lll20' 16 thev ever by earol Clifford and City. . .," of Martin . ilre'¡yster Rhoads, 1l/13, i I youth: ,,An Elsø's ltousebook (Mernll Sostre" by Paul Mayer, 1130, 4: 7110,6 Sittin'in; By Henry tsass,2127,15, 3/6, l3; evening with Jerry Ford" by -?o.tJTl"),^Plsa',,. Universities: "schools for sale: universities, Norman Soio.non, í/ZS, ¡ Küþ') ll30-21 20 wtN WIN 21 Mind in the (Donaldllclntyre-,-Joan Waters---' - rutius #à,,",,, Newlove) 4/24_21 .of vrooder (Richa¡d ii#!;r?y:þi*:ffi#ï;t:,iffi #åi#íIÊ:i( sLes" sample 75d,. vegelailanf lmes' clo for Worship. contact! rhe (Paul -pö I r' 606e0' Lyti Snider, lOO4 8i{;:,rry*rt"' Bankers salsrrom) wÑ, õä''Àitóãi cnic,"go' Buchannan Btvd,, Durham, Nc 277o5, gl9- :iy,iäiåÊ"t{,Ëîåi!åi'ri;{:ieporitics Í^*3'ft p PEOPLES 286-2374- psy åIl:t !'"*iJ;Îiî f¡,ys VIET NAM: THE PEOPLE'5 RE.SISTANCE. Jutiet: choanaly sis an d nearts " le76 wall G e $tcþeJt, and Minds (Jan rhã öviääüi"'peaceããuncit printing n e ra t io n o P e a c e (I Barry) 4lZ4_20 Gay collect¡ve needs others to share EYYrhì|¡ r an a n d w ome n cilãnååi. Ããe"-ioã ot trc""ttful vietnamese teaching ì"- ; ¡! ¿{#roi Lovejoyk Nuclear zultETIN Containsr non-com mercial m ovèment prlnting. iff:W ¡l;YYoto'"' War (Henry BasÐ g/14_21 a emãtiian ltìusgle In retrospect' Experi mental/9raph beautiful artr ic env¡ ronment-ex-l: o o'o o in Is m (Donald tr¡stoiv oi'ine wJñ 30 pages of perl€nce g nnecessary-workin "rtiåiîï;åilãï,["-t " et Y:ffi*" Monkemd) 713_22 poet"i, 150 ¡mportant glnvlng. ZiZ- 6 Milestones ótroios c'ó,Jr"àtion; 675-3043. (Lance Belville) ltlø, tg BOIRD dates; ii,,'x t7i. 6 co.tors. 93.25 (¡ncludes d: erD post. iJ¡. tuoel; 3 or more $3 each; El;i;;:,i'iîi,?i!gi,"yf ft -o run tæ (D av id Open Season (Richard Wagner) FR€E IF f{O EXC}IAI{CE -i¡liltJ lf Iî:;f il:Hiiït?$ry o,h 216_21. outt< rateiavá¡¡áolõ. rtomt sPc. 9-24 -Bujnet HELP!. OF ¡¡ INVOLVEO AilO, e""., (3t5t 472-5478 a mørriase (Tom Mullaney) C'IILY 20 UUORO$ ' ËiäläËlÑV isz-os ' F:i!,"t¿il"'d,i'k{lil,'.'1rf ìÏÊY;{"^ Got some skiils in tayout, darkroo¡n, type, !{%rs,o,t,'o"a QTHEßWISE 32 €VERY Sol¡dar¡tv free list of presswork?. Shawoo (paul ¡o wonDs collect¡ve has a settingt, We need 'em! Llst your ii,?#iiþ'ir"?,kuií#.:;!&f":::; Krassner) S/g_ l9 libertaria; soc¡atlst and anarch¡st literaturo qual¡ñcat¡ons and plan to vis¡t Community for sale. envelope to The Towenng Inferno (Bob Lamm) 212.1_20 Please send a stamped Associates Pr¡nting Coilecilvè, a part of Ütê Fiìlyr;rår,wïi#å:ïtïif,#{;.#, 8;t;iå?,î' c ri s Í s o r th e PRODUCTS : , Soliclaritv coilect¡ve. Rwc 3 soulh, Rm. Movement for a New Soc¡èty, Ai2Z eaftL J,îïii'rßí 3f ", e nc e (r om 3+0, er¡sió¡, Rhode istand 02809. mor€ Ave., Phltad€tph¡a, Pa. 19143. Or cà[ People.'s frlrf#:$TffiY " 215-SA+1E88 Coilect. Know 1,î,'¡ h,i *,t t Bicentennial Commission: Zo¡bes ^n' Fr¡endship cards.-Vietnam at peace. Set of of otheri? ;í ifi1\g¡u of the 12 w/envelopes Sprèad the word. ""o',Kf,,iîy":: Am_erican Revolution and- Comriãi--""''-1' $3.25. Friends of lndo .OPPORTUNITIES t of con*ot (stephen Sense II (JanBarry)9125 20 MUSIC ch¡na Organiz¡n9 Committee, ¡.20 Marytand , fiåll:ir"/åô:fr Ave.; NE, Washington, Nêw Midw€st seeks un. Revolutlonary actor/wr¡ter seoks revolu- DC 2OOO2, ResÕarch lnst¡tute tlonary frlm.work, Atso: ttZr,:.?ffi' sel f¡sh, soc¡al n on-career¡st, Anybody know¡n9 Goldbeck, s a n d Ru s t (wen dv ly-c on rci or¡ s, Nikki and David: The Suoer- il2i.rìif,ö{'Ê#,iäff NEw!! MArL oRDER MA'-Ph D polltlcal the whereabouts of revotuflótary fltm iËil,ïî.f :*' fr15l aotoroo* oF'I MoVEMENT economists, Costa pleasè marke t Handbook .(Dick ï sc¡ent¡sts, get grants director Garvls contact Môrt< l¡lu:.r¡r,l¡¡Tt1Z_ Z t WOMENIS, LABOR, FOLK AN D OTHER etc, MUST Þe able to performlng POLITICAL RECOROS. or ra¡se McHenry c/o Arts Ha[, Uni- P.orche, r rh u n d e r Send stamp: Bread funds, Seml-scholatly stud¡es on Verandah: The Body,s Symmetry å?illtåî 3i 1" p and Roses, 1724 20th St. war-peace READ Gross vèrslty of Akron, Akron Oh¡o 44325. (Mary Mayo) ?,iï']îîi W NW, DC 2OOO9. reconvers¡on, etc. 2lZ7-t9 Eric and Osterman ,.Th€ New P(ofess¡onals" pp. Bentley in Concert (John Kyper) rS YOUR 33-77, ..WorÉihg" Anyone ¡nterested or acilve in alternailve ,frfiffiW*näí:tä";:ï;*åBe,kman: Rækin, Jonah: Out of the ltthale: ll23_Zl IHIS COUNTRY, OON'T LET Studs Terxel pp, 52$ Growins THE BIG MEN TAKE IT AWAY FROM 527, 537-540. Ctaud¡a Dre¡fui Radical AMATEUR RADIO? 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