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A response to a ''Right to Lifer" [WIN, Re the review of "Cryer and Ford" Gary Mitchell Wandachild ends up trip- tffendy l/29/1612 lWlN, 2 / 5 / 7 6l : If Schwartz's ping on his guilt trips as he tries to As a proponent of abortion I am sure "Jewish [parents] in the East" didn't make the case for feminism [WIN, you view me es a callous, insensitive send her off "to face life with a sense of l/22/761. Throughout his article, we advocate of rnurdet, someone with con- ¿ffirm¿iion" that's a sh¿me. I'm not find the assumption that the left is the fused values about the impottance of life. denying it's a trend-I have some other "male left, " that the fight for socialism; "In the time it takes me tó write these friends with the same problem. But I is a "male-centered'l preoccupation, words, about onç hundred babies will also know lots & lots of other NY Jews and that the left has rio use for the mysteriously, have been killed by abortion. Are they who somehow, escaped- feminist moveinent if it can't control it. of no importance to you who opposed this neeative attitude-including This is sloppy and mðralistic analysis the wars killing çf thousands of myselflNot only did my folks giv=e me a that robs fertrinism ofits rightful place whole lot of good feelings aboút myself at the center ofthe struggle against (and life), but they also read lryIN. Hi, capitalism and its concommitant MomlHi,Dad! patriarchal ideology. If feminists start -VICßIROVEREBeISt¡un Bru¡¡glsr with the defensive view that the ' 28¡ 1976 | Yol. 7 problem iq how to stop the left fróní I've recently been discovering that a controlling the feminist movement, the{r locked second couóin of mine, Asa Wilgus, was they will be led to the politics of isola- jecting Marxism 4. Am I My'Stomach or My because it's ' homes or detention not only the author ofcat stories I knew tion, a politics that allows one to give "Gérman?" Tongue? / Jer.ry Rubin, -DEANPAPPAS were born into a wo¡ld did not him to be, but also a keen obqerver of Baltlnore, Md; 10. Unan.swered about them. In my life I have known these the human condition and, in his day, a r.I Questions children. As Peacè Movemen{ People dedicated radical. I'm wondering if I ndonèsia's Pol iticãl Prisoners rie must take responsibilþ fo; the'm, any WIN teaders might have known him Don Luce At the end of this month we will be not only after their lives have been and if they might shale their recollec- oNE QU|ET AFTERNOON 12 Will Congress Entrench Puerto scarred, but before their lives begin, by tions of him with me for a biography I'm ., .1 leaving the staff of \{IN. Ten years of Rico's Colonilal' Status ? giving their parents an alternative to hoping one day to write. young Campbell's vegetarian: any one thlng are enough. (Eleven if My daughter slurps Arthur Kinoy you include \fIN's precursor, the NY pain Cnd desleration that inevitably Asa Wilgus was an exact con- She sits on a bed next to a window.. they will inflict upon their children. temporary of Hemingway ( 189&1961 ), 14. Bulletin, and the Staten Island Through the window I see the rust red roof of a barn Rhythmí of the Continental These people live in a world of no the son of Grand Central Terminal 'Walk meetings called to discuss the setting tffilgus and green side beyond / DavidPatton of a magazine-tentatively socially acceptabte escapes. By your designer William and the authqr the hill up called: 16. Considering Zionism as Na- Now-that would provide news and unrealistlc moralism you make their of a number of cat stories, including the She pays no attention to me-she is hungry. escape route a little more distorted until novel JustOneCat(1950). Asawaia - tional Liberation AlbertS. anälysis relevant to "peace and free- Sitting very still, I watch her and the scene or!.tlË"r",' / dom through nonviolent action.'f) Our even something as immoral as child veteran of World War I and{róm l93l to Axelrad abuse is their only way to cope with t937 he belonged to the Communist Sierra plan is to find a new set ofhassles, for a 17. Changes change. parenthood. party, running for Governor ofNew We want to thank the many people As I write this my daughter returns Hampshire ôn the Communist ticket in 20. Reviews who have helped in ways both small and from outside with a present for me, a 1933. During the 1950s he was a government witness perjury Cover: Design by Mark Morris. large to make ourjobs easier, bearable, twig of holly. I.truly hope, as I know you in the trials For Ñ4aris and Susan.Cakars, their leaving represents end of of Remington the possible: the authors, artists and do too, that sotned¿y we may all live in a William W. and George Blake Charney. an era. They (and their children Andrea and Janis) will be missed photographers; the fi nancial world where pàrents will want and love I'd appreciate hearing from by those of us remaining on'the staff . lt's going to be hard to find supporters; those who prorrided ideas; their children às I do mine. I love her anyone with even a passing acquaintance people with the skill,.expërience and expertise whiçh Maris those who.provided a shoulder to cry on; because I had the choice. lVe ¿re still with 4nd the staff mêmbers who, over the years,' striving together to create a humane life Asa. Susan brought to WlÑ and developed here over thd years. \ Albuquerquo,IIM-NEALWILGUS moved on to new hassles and thoie who system, but as we do this¡ $re must But we're working on it. We have formed a seârch comm¡ttee, STAFF remain to carry on. provide a way out for those suffering made up of three mémbers of our editorial board plus the remain- Although it isn't yet clear what in- under this system ot u"utnð"rr'NN' pos- I liked Gary lVandachild's article ing stafi, and we are following up on many suggestions and Maris Cakars Susan Cakars sanþ the Cakars' will be involved in [rffIN, male radicals in a patri- sibilities for new staff members. We hope to havq both positions next, we do intend to remain part of the I)unlow, If,. Y¡. l/22/76lon Dwight Ernest Bob Freeston archal society. A few pages further on is goes well. \{IN family; serying on the Editorial filled very soon, if the search Mary Mayo Susan Pines a good example of the problem of male Board, criticizing, cheering, writing a Despite the loss of two crew members at the same time, the sub Fred Rosen Murray Rosenblith people raãicalism. f,obert Patrick and Lance check and sending in an article from Vegetarianism from the thàt continúes to struggle toward home port. We still need additional bet. Bob Belvitle discuss the character of Rona in UNINDICTED time to time. broueht vou chicken soup? You fuel to finally bring it in to pay off last yearls debts. There's only lN, 2 / 5 / 7 61. oñ¡itted Patrick's play. There's no recognition CO.CONSPIRATORS rffhatever the future may bring for us Pinküs tW gó, The best way ygu can help The Jewish Vesetarian, "BetTèva," that all thát participation by women in 9261.74 to and then we'll be home. it seems impossible that it will be as full ,an Bårry Lance Belville JerryCoffin' London, N\ry 1 1 movement activities from the Selma us through this diff icult time of transition is to send a few dollars, of excitement, dumb jokes and sheer 855 Finchley Rõad, , LynneShatzkinCoffinl Ann Davidon DianaDavies his list ofvegetarian march to SDS (and now IYIN) resulted so can worry about staff without having to worry about Ruth Dear' Ralph DiGia' Erian Dôherty creativity (even the thrill of making a bit Eneland from that wã is fÎlled with in the women's movement. The contra- post William Douthard' Karen Durbin' Chuck Fager of history) as working full time and flat iouinals. This ouarterlv where our money will come from for the printer, the office, notices. recipei, apolitical dictions ofbeing involved and caring Seth Foldy J¡rm Forest LarryCara JoanLibbyHawk' out for "the liveliest magazine on the Ëocietv the mailer, salaries, the electric company, etc. Neil Haworth Ed Hedemann Grace Hedemann left.'.' articlés and book reiiews àll delivered and being women in a male Power Hendhik Hertzbeqg' Karla Jay Marty Jezer' in a stvle that combines British hauteur struecle õreated an awarenéss of what it BeckyJohnøn Näncy Johnson Paul Johnson Again, our deepest thanks to every Alison Karpel Craig Karpel ' with a little old lady in tennis sneakers' meaä to be female in a patriarchal John Kyper j one. Elliot Linzer' Jackson Mac Low David McReynolds' -MARIS&SUSANCAKARS societv. sensibilþ. " -WAINEBITKWA David fVorris Mark lvlorris' J im Peck Tad Richards, -rRwrNåfj"Iffiffi Nelmn, BC'Canadr lgal Roodenko' Nancy Rosen Ed Sanders Wendy Schwartz: . Martha Thomases Art Waskow Allen Young Beverly Woodward 26,n 'Memberof WIN Editoriâl Board Box547 / Rifton / New York12471 914-339.4585 66 for the first two weeks tn the lirst week in ¡n August, and the first two mo wÊeks in September by W.l.N. Magazine lnc. with the $5 m0 $35 $45 support of the War Resi'sters League. Subscriptions are 311,ü) per year. Second class postage paid at New York, NY 10001. lndividual writers arè responsible for opinions expressed and accuracyof facts given. Sorry- @@@@ manuscripts cannot be returned unless accompanied by a self-addressed stamped envelope. Printed in USA

2 WIN WIN 3 't ru I {:L-. r{¡'i¡ .T I Í' lti t rô Everytime I move into a yoga position, such as the killers-cancer and heart attack- "social" \ shoulder stand, some part of my unconscious re- dileases. I promised myself not to die that way. calls the image of my mother dying of cancer at But in the '1960's I ignored my body, eating îast fifty-one. For two years, I went to fhe hospital foods, taking drugs, forgetting io sleóp. As Èal : . every day,hnd sat next to her bed, doing my col- J acobs once said, "You guys tried to give your lege homework. body away in the 1960's. Now you are doing To the end shè believed she had hepatitis and everything you can to get it back." Vy body felt would recover, even though she kept getting like a. sack.of potatoesf I weighed 160 þounds and wea-ker and losing weight; pound by pound, death people called my chubby. ate_her up. Her pain was so great thal I found my- In.ex.amining ' my life, I began with my body.. I self praying.for her to die. was killing it with poor food and air. I had been "Why is lífe so mean?" she would say. Then programmed to equate growing old with suffering one-day Dv.Ierry she'sorry." died in my arms. "Bye, Mother," I and disintegration. But lam my body. Everything said. " l'm I do to my body is reflected in how my body ieels. I The next year my father was fighting for breath gm ryhal I eat. I kept a weekly record'of the things in an oxygen tank. He was fo,rty-nine, full of I stuffed myself with: the sweets, rich foodl, anð Rubin energy, spirit, drive; but he had had five heart at- bread that I love. My body.became my teacher. tacks in three years, and now he was dying. The My body moves at its own pace and knows its only treatment his doctor offered him over those limits. I began to listen to all parts of it and to years was pills, and postattack rushes to the exercise. oxygen tank. For a few years I cut out meat, sweets, and t'ft- My father was emotionally upset at the time and carbohydrateS, after conversations with a non- needed some sort of psychiatric help. A healthy medical healer, Jack Soltanoff . I ate fruit, Vege- { society might have saved him by providing a more tables, f ish, and chicken. Slowly, rny r"nóe oí-y supportive environment; instead, he was left to body began to change. I felt in touch with my die. digestive process, I needed to sleep less. I lost To the doctor, my father was just another thirty pounds and looked and felt lean and trim. patient. "Look, Jerry, of course your father needs I entered the world of health food through psychiatric help, but he can't afford it. lf he goes Adelle Davis. She had me eating hamburgLrs for to a psychiatrist, he will kill himself worrying breakfast, followed by thirty vitãmin pills. After about how he is going to get the money tó piy for every meal, l'd take out my pills and begin gulp- it." Money to pay for it! My father is goin! tó die ing them down. I can't really say I felt añy better, because we can't afford to save his life. Western but I trusted Adelle Davis. ihen she died'of can-' Rubin "(lresse(l to kill" for a 1968 medicine had nothing to offer my father. Call it a cer. . . . . I still take daily Ir'rry ap- vitamins, even though ¡rearance bt'fort' the House Un-American A<: heart attack, but he really died of the loneliness, my medical doctor tells me all they do is give me tivititls C(nlìnìittee. Photo by Ceoff Shèro,zLNS isolation, fear, and competitive pressures that expensive urine. marked his environment, and tl.re total absence of I love the juice. thick taste of carrot I feel it hit Alt this was leading mê to preventive medicine: fancied becoming an unlicensed doctor of positive anything that would encourage positive health. my blood stream f at irst swallow. So healthy, like the body as an energy sysdem. The food we feed it health, serving people yoþa and vitamin pills; of- What a backward medical philosophy! drinking Nature itself . day Then one during a is energy. Blocks slow down the eneigy. Tension fering pulse diagnosis and foot massages; Compeiitive life in America creates diseasei and checkup my doctor gaped legs and at my sã¡d, is blocked energy. That tension enabled me to prescribing jogging, meditation, and natural then doctors charge exorbitant fees to cure symp- "You've turned orange-do you drink a lot of car- lead demonstrations against the System in the herbs. For a time I considered opening a'health- tqms tl'rrough surgery and pills. I had spent two rot juice?" I looked, and sure'enough, my legs sixties. Now I want to learn to relax my tension, so food restaurant called " Retired radical and¿ half years visiting my dying parents in hos- were orange. My assured me there )erry's." doctor was no that I can be active in a more relaxed, centered hangs around to discuss radical politics and pitals and was appalled at the impersonal way harm in inter: the condition as long as I didn't mind way-not to avoid tense situations, but to relax my nal juice they were treated by nurses, dociors, and the en- orange health around the bar" legs. Not taking anyihances, I cut out the systematic body tension. tire hospital bureaucracy. I considered their carrot juice. My entire body is a living organism in a con- My love affair with positive health was not I started nutritiônist reading and following J . ' stant process of construction and destruction. without its lighter moments. When the acupunc- fhis is an excerpt from Jerry Rubin's new book Rodale until he died of a heart attack on Dick Disease is breakdown, not an external invasion. ture craze hit America, I was an early adherent, I (Up) at 37 , published in New York by Cavett's national show in the Qrowing television midst of The emphasis in preventive medicine is on heard of a man l'll call Di. Fong in Riverdale, Evqnp and Company ($2.95). f irst WIñ explaining how good guarantees Jerry's nutrition a long breathing, on stimulating acupuncture meridian California, and I called him for an appointment. article appeared in the January 3i, 1968issue. life , points for energy, relaxation, and exercise. I He balanced my body energy ("chi''), by sticking

4WtN WIN 5 ter. I found it hard to take the silence experience little needles in me. I felt great. I convinced my the food corporations? pr.¡t Medical doctors little or One afternoon I friend Rhoda to go for trea-=tments. completely seriously, however. no.emphas.is on nutrition, exercise, and'energy slipped awayfrom the retreatto drive to town, The weird thing about Dr. Fong is that he,s balance. . an They are paid when *e arã sick, not read.a newspaper, eat some chocolate and make alcoholic. He drinks whiskey steaãily durine the when we are well. The irew health conscíousness-- an orgy of phone calls to friends in New York. day and keeps a bottle on his desk to'fori¡ivi¡mlelf of the seventies places the emphas¡s |:: 1 ' on heàjth Then I met Swami Raja-ji. He was a living : before inserting the needles in you. rather than disease. ':I example of the power of yoga, an eighty-year-old He looked into Rhoda's eyes,'felt her pulse, and I t re.ached my.mid-thirties afraid ' man with the body of a fifteên-yearrold: he could - told herthat she had canceiin both breálts. I' of overtaxing: ,t myself physically. Then I met f ifty-vear-old me-n 'I twist himself into an unbelievable pqetzel. Rich Bulped; tears welled in my eyes. Only thirty-four ,! and ,?Oh, who ran eight miles a day. I thoughi about Dick folks met him in Paris and brought him'to an UP:. .. cancer in both breastó! Rhóda .,,i said { sadly. Cregory, who fasts a lot, eats only fruit, and runs T' When t canfided to per West Side apartment in New York to teach But Dr. Fong moved to reåssure f,ur. óon,t { fifteen miles a day. I began joggiñg. yoga. I was invited to meet the little white- ' worry, dear, because I will cure you with T one penetrating eyes, añd acupuncture What funl At t jog { Rennie Davis that l'd 6ããiàed rnun *¡tn tne I . treatrnent.r' I heaved a sieh of relief . first couldn't half a block began doing yoga wittrhim everytay. He looked Rhoda looked at us as if we were Uotn ¡õonv, Uui" without running out of breath and feeling my legs ) Ra;i,i, he , at me with his clear, beautiful eyes and said, as she said.later, " l.knew that I wasn,t go¡nb screaming in pain. But gradually I pushed on unt¡l met swami to "Happy?" t looked back, "YeS, happy,l'' get out of there until both these men salu neËdies I was running three mileq a day. The outpour of .' stuck in me." sweat and rush of blood through rny body kept rny 1 warned me that the . ln'thi's era of gurus, itwas apþropiiate that I f ind my own. When I conf ided to Rennie Dr. Fong insertgd fifteen needtes from her ears energy high all day. 'ivould , , : down to her toes, go.t media might use"it. . Davis thät l'd met Swami Raj-ji, he warned me twisted them around. and . . Jogging n1.e in tòuch with my mind-body abruptly pronounced that the media might use it: "Yippie Leader Finds Rhoda cured of cáncer. We blocks, but I find it very hard to stait. My minä , later lndian Swami, Drõps Outof Politics." lronically, left,.lfeeling contrite, Rhoda shaking her head.- produces a million good reasons why not to take two months ;: two monthsJater Rennie'declared his public - But before we left, Dr. Fong sold me a special that first step. As soon-as I take the Íirst I get step, ¡ Renni e declared his obeisance tô Curu Maharaj J i. supply of 2OO-year-old I icorice-tasti ng ginseng going for a while and my mind retaxes. fheääftär i: ! I didn't like Swami Raj-ji's attitude toryard cubes, which I was to take three timel ã day fõr a short while I come to another . My mind public to politics: meditate and all the world's problems wiH continued energy balance and long tries to tell me I ,rWe I' obeisance life. Acupunc_ thât am tired. lt whispeis, gross ) go away, he said. That struck me as a : ture has its positive points, but after that exþeri_ have important things to do, you've rün long ence I never IÈ' Curu Mahara¡ J i. iimplification. We began arguing. "Meditations returned to the good doctor, even enough. " At f irst I fell for these lines, but then I il I hasn't solved lndi,ir's poverty problems," I said. thoysh know he's a great aðupuncturist. realized that my mind was speaking iñstead of my $ For the next month I riúorked with Swami Raj-li Then there was the day my chiropractor on the legs. When I listened to my iegs, thiey said, ,,yesi ! ù. forty-five minutes every day. Hé quickly saw what West Coast told me I had haidening of Keep going." lf I anticipat'e point, the arteries this'resiitance I I parts led me and hþh pressure. ' I of my body needed loosening and blood The chiroóractor said hà cari recognize it and quickly go beyond it. My I through a series of exercises that left me feeling could cure me throtr.gh regular adjustments, â mind learns that it is not the undisputed czai ot , T stronger, happier, refreshed. I thought to myself: veg,etarian diet,.and metabolic slowdown. I ãgreed my body. l i, li How lucky I am. My own personal lndian swami, and threw myself into hjs health program, t. Jerry, Abbie Hoffman and Rennie Davis (before the Divine Lilht def My mind must have something I to do. As in struck) at a press conference during the Chicago conspiracy tr¡al. Photo one of the hathayoga champs of lndia, and now termined to cure myself . meditation I up a mantra tõ keep t by David Fenton/LNS. Months make mv mind he's all mine! later I discovered that I never had occupied so that my thoughts won,t iriterfere with either hardening of the arteries or high bloód my e.xperience. I repeat the mantra over and over; \ pressure. Was my chíropractor a kook? Or was he my thoughts pass by me, without my getting stUcí< frightening me into positive health? Does ii make on them. any difference? lf I fight thôm, they stick. So.me.people say all emotional problems are the I have to be aware of other tricks result of the mind. of vitamin deficiencies. Others advocate- an Mymind loves to irhpose impossible demandsìn all:grain Health-food people - ' diet. debate th; my.body. "You rnust do more. you are stoooine merits of milk. people, Most however, agree that toosoon. Other people do better than that.i" l - st sugar is bad. How can you believe all thebries of : resist this do-more, do-better propasanda preventive i cam- medicine? Everybody says his thing l paign. Overdoing is a basic châraðtei¡stic of mv will cure everything, from the reflexbloeists wËo psychologicalhrmor. I think t am not enough, jo I see the key to health in the feet, to thosõ who ad- try to do more. I learn to be unattached to vocate the many tìhdse versions of miracle diets. thoughts. When my body says stop, I stop. ! entered the new health area with the same . I also began to look at the world within. One day save-myself, save-the'world fantasies I rode in the I saw.someone doing yoga joined pretty ' polìtical and i.n. movement, looking for a new myth, a ne* soon I was going every day to the yoga institutê. collective way. : Anyone with alluring bait gót me At first.l could. hardly bend. My body was on his hook. tight, blocked. But the yoga attitude towaid change lf everyone would get rolfed the world would be melted my resistance: you begin exactly saved! whäre you are and move from there. No competition, no lf everyone meditated there would be no more straining, no trying, no striving. Every ' war! rnoue counts, every stretch stretches. I felt myself looser ln fact, i've got the answer to alt the world,s and looser. problem s germ : wheat ! I went on a ten-day yoga retreat in irpstate New .Me.dica! doctors strike me as ignorant as to how York. We meditated, did hatha-yoga, ahealthy bodyworks. heard lec- They know howtocontroior tures on calming one's inner desires, and main- repair some diseased bodies, but their medicine is tained absolute silence. The silence experience often worse than the disease, And what about the was a first for me. Most of my life I have directed pressure and competitiveness of pharmaceuti- the my awareness outside of.myself . I felt it wàs time cal industry and the make-profits-quick motives of to go inward and make co.ntact with my lost cen-

6WIN As the exhilaration wore off , I couldn,t help ing for the body. lt stretches the inner organs, noticing some strange things about Swami Räj-ii. something Western calisthenics ignores, and' He wanted me to write a bo-ok with him, to beéome promotes positive health by constant communi- llrrr l.lubin torl.rr [)hr¡tr¡ by Robert Altnran his disciple and promote him. He told me that ,,He,s cation between mind and body. Yoga stimulates Swami Satchdanada was a fraúd. nothing l ,,He blood flow and deep breathin! whiðh postpones back in lndia," Raj-ji said. had to come heie physical degeneration-and disease. lt conditions to be accepted. " the body, mellows the emotions, uplifts the spirit, I couldn't figure out whether he was satirizíng slows down the organism. lt's something l'd like an ego or if he really had one. Was he an lndian to do every day for the rest of my life. master playing the ego game in America, or was When I am depressed, I find just . my way out of my he holding a mirror up to me? As he continued depression by taking caiè of my putting body. When my down aJJ the other gurus, however, I body feels good, I feel good. The food I eat and realized the he really was an egomaniac. He wanted exercises I do determine my mental and emotional followers. guess Well, I thatas the lndian swami state. ln yoga I slow down my breathing, con- dream: come to America, renounce the world, and centrate myself into different postures. get rich. What B.y difference does it make? He is a slowing down my metabolism, I calm my mind. f yoga'teacher. ine Stretching my body automatically relaxes my ' mind. By .l.turned my.friends on to the swami, starting relaxing my body, I attack my emotional with a married couple. He saw the hujband alõne imbalances. A nervous body creates a nervous for a half hour. "You need to be celibate for a mind. After yoga I learned to control my wander- while," Swamitold him. "Too much sex is bad for ing thoughts for the benef it of my entire being. your energy balance." Then Swami staved an As I sit in a yoga position and watch my hour and a half teaching yoga to the wifô. ,,you thoughts pq.ss by, I realize that I am not my need. more se.x, more orgasms, more energy in thoughts. Thoughts, scary, positive, or weird Þ€d," he told her, and offered to see her every ones, pass through my consciousness all day and day. night. I can pick and choose the thoughts thât I Didn't he think they'd compare notes? want to be me; the same is true abouf feelings. Yoga got me in touch with brought another woman to see Swami Raj-ji. . the ',me" beyond my . .l thoughts andfeelíngs by slowing me After telling her to do yoga in the nude, he bófan down enough so that I could watch myself the way an outside - massaging her body. Then he invited her to take a observer might. That impartial ' shower with him. He said, "t will give you divine observer within me isme laughing at orgasms." She said no thank you ãnd excused all my "important,, strug- gles. That objectivity-or freedom from herself . She asked me what the hell did I think I myself is true f reedom; was doing sending her to an eighty-year-old - it is the goal of the lndian sex nut? spiritualpath.'- During the '1960's I had only occasional flashes I discovered that an lndian swami is just as f of this spiritual feeling. Most of the time I was '!l human as you and me. Swami Raj-ji deinonstrated satisf ied. As long as I was getting satisfaction he could control his heartbeat and claimed to be from my attachments, I hað no dõsire to elpe?i- above desires. But he turned out to be as funny ence nonattachment. To get in touch with the yoga and crazy as everyone else. My respect for Swámi of nonattachment, I had to lose what I had. Raj-ji rose after that realization. He,s the best . The "outside witness" feeling rarely stays with yoga teacher l've ever met. He claims he sleeps me; it comes and goes. When it's not there, I be- less than two hours a night. One mornine whiie I come my de¡ire¡. lf my desires are not satisfied, I llad my legs over my heãd in the plough ãnd I am not satisf ied. When I am attached yoga, I thought I was keeping position to í :a the foiarr extra can be unattached to long time-, I looked other things. up and saw Swami Raj-ji the body asleep. I laughed, ' .Through revolution we are discovering and came out of the posé on my a human potential own. we never before imagined. We- can control our nervous system through oirr I wanted to learn from Swami, not become his breathíng. My mind, by tuning out oulside disciple.. One way that people are discovering disträctions and listening to the world within, themselves in can the seventies is by surrenderiñg to a harmonize with my breathing like a machinej guru. gives it the disciple up persónal blocks anä 'can actually hear all the parts of my body function. allows the guru to remoldhirn. The surrender By their lives my parents told me that being sick speeds the transformation by elirninating all is better than being healthy. Our society teacñes resistance. us that prof its are a higher priority than people health. Many get in.a high space and go through Every day now I am choosing to break my parental many changes through suirender. As long as and the societal prohibition people against being healthy; can.go in and out of that space, it,l posi- I am gìving myself permission to be healthy. tíve. We all surrender to something-our work, At the age of thirty-seven I feel lovers, . like tweniy-five, beliefs, creations. A lífe wíihout surrenáer because for the past five years I have eaten is a life without commitment. But l,m too rebel- healthy foods, jogged, done yoga, taken sauna lious; can I surrender for a while, then I rebel. baths, visited chiropractors, gone to acupunctur- I separate the physical exercises of yoga from ists. I am beginning . yoga to make my bocly my best the religio,us connotation. is fantãsfic train- f riencJ.

SWlN .sv : juridical procedures. The lack of ,concern for the and the lndonesian community in the US has been Dutch regime and by Sukarno: He was last ar- rights of these people is ref lected in the letter threatened to prevent their spgaking outtThese rested in 1965 and is in Buru lsland Detention :from the Assistant Secretary of State: orchestrated attempts to prevent protest th:iough Camp. As án internatioinal celebrity, his case has use of McCarthyite tactics and anonymbus received more . . . a total oi about 35,000 are still in detention. the attention than others, compelling Most of them are persons whom the lndonesian threats indicate both the financial stakes involved the authorities to permit him to writê. However, Covernment is co'nvinced were PKI/tndonesian and the deplorable conditions in the,prisons there. his first manuscript written in detentio¡ was UnnNswcncd Commt)nist Party/members implicated in the lndonesia, the fifi"h largest country in th,e world, confiscated when half-finishpd, and a sécond one 1!65 coup attempt but lacks sufficient evidence to has some of the richept oil fields in the world is-now in the hands of the military authorities. a (producing about 1.5 hillion barrels of oil aday). bii¡tg to trial. There is no question that their pro- Sugiyah was a 14-year old schooi when she,* Oil company revenues there for the first half of ' I longed di¿tention without trial has created a was arrested in 1965. She is alleged to have joinêd nbour 1974 totalled about $1,7 billion. President Ford serious humans rights problem. . . group has requested four times as much as in a of students who went tÒ the Lubang:Buáya lndonesia's slow progress in dealing with this asbistance part previous years ($44.5 million'plus million in Training as of a confrontation with Malaysia. situàtion is unfortunate but understandable. As a $12 place lndonesirys military equipment) to Cenerál Suharto's This wai the used by the aËortiVe,coup; d ev e I op,i n g, co u ntr y, I n do n es i a f aces m a n y serious rnilitary regime. leaders, and those who happened to be there at managerial and administrative problems. . . As a the time are automaticaly regarded as'lserious'l ln December, President Ford visited lndonesitr; òonsequênce, the I ndonesi a n ad m i n i str ative, cases. Sugiyah has been held first in Bukit Duri judicial There was no announced agenóla, but Ford's Foliricnl PnisoNGRs investigative and structures are far /ess Vlomen's Prison, then in the Plantungan ' commitment to large-scale aid wa3,þadeapparent Jakarta, eÍficient'than those we are accustomeìl to in the Women's Detention Camp, CentralJava. She has judicialsystern, at a lavish dinner party at the Presidential Þâlace. West. The which has a huge never been tried or charged. backlog for the'handful of trained judges a-vail-' A few hours later, the lndonesian army invaded able, is especially inadequate to dealwith the the tiny country of East Timor using US military Charlotte Salawati is now nearly 70 years old. Her DON LUCE thousands of cases i nvolved. equipment. first"protest act¡ons were when she ob¡ected as a lndonesia has, h.owever, made recent progress Almost all political opposition to the lndonesian young girl to segregation in churcJres in her native lndonesia ís ruled by its military ánd its rulers are in this problem. The lndonesian Covernment an, m.ilitary regime has been forced underground or Snagir Talaud. After being banned as a teacher subsidized by the American taxpayer. lt is one of nounced in thi: fall of 1975 that some 't,300 of the the most repressive governments in the world. detainees were being released. T.ime Magazine (12/17 /65) described those bloody tn tlt tA@@ days in 1965 when the generals took over: The release of.1,3O0 detainees, if it actually J¡vr Scr . ¡ happened, is indeed good news. it should be' I û, Communists, red sympathizers and their families pointed out, however, that it w¡ll take 27 years at a are being massacred by the thousands. Backlands this rate to bring about the release of the 35,000- Glcn army units are reported to have executed thou- if there are no other arrests. Unfortunately, esti- t .rd sands oÍ Communists after interrogation in remete mates by most other sources, such as Amnesty jails. lndlut Armed with vù¡de-bladed kniies called lnternational, indicate that there are closer to % .¡ TIMOR parangs, Moslem b4nds crept at night into the 100,000 lndonesia political prisoners at present. lrornes of Communists, 0ô¡¡n killing entire families and - On December 18,'1975, Carmel Budiardjo, a q burying¡he bodies in s,hallow graves. The murder formgr political prisoner of the Suharto regime, campaign became parts so brazen in of rural East testified about the conditions in lndonesia;s t l¡rrkrnesi,r,. with the islanclof Timor highlight".l. Map by LNS Java, that Moslem bands placed the heads of vic- prisons before the House Subcommittee on lnter- tims on poles and paraded them through villages. national Relations. Bec4use of her two-year put into jail. Who arè the people in the jai ls? under a repiessive Dutch law, phe moved to The killings have been on.such a scalelhatthe . membership in the British Communist Party 30 What's happening to them? Here are the names Makassar and became a prgminent nationalist disposal of the corpses has created a serious sani- years ago, Budiardjo had been the subject of at- and short biographies of four: whíle pursuing a profession a.s a midwife. She be- tation problem in East Java and Northern Sumatra tack in lndonesia; when she arrived at the Con- came lndonesia'.s first woman mayor in the 1950's , Sri is the head of where the humid air bearè the reek of decaying gressional hearings she faced the same sort of Ambar formei the Women's when she was eleçted Mayor of Makassar. She flesh. Department of the All-lndonesia Trade Travelers from those areas telt of sm'all- : recrimination. The first question posed to her by Union later joined the FKI and iti women's organization, rivers and strearns that . , Federation. She was arrested at the end of 1966 have been,literally clogged Congressman Wayne Hayes of Ohio was "Are you moved to J akarta and became a member of Parlia- and accused in with bodies or'have you ever been a member of the Com- of involvement underground ac- ment. She is a devout Christian. At the time of her tivities. She was subjected tò severe toiture in- A million lndonesians Were killed and hundreds munist Party?" When Budiardjo proposed that a arrest in 1965', she was Deputy Chairperson of the cluding deep dagger gashes which required hei PKI's of thousands arrested. Twelve years later many Congressional Mission go to lndonesia "to make women's organization, CERWANI. She has ' of hospitalization, and blows to the head which im- those arrested are still waitinþ for their an independent investigation of the problem of never been charged or tried and is held in Bukit, trials. paired'her hearing. She was forced to watch her ... Robert political imprisonment," Congressman Hayes DuriWomen.'s Prison, Jäkarta; J . McClosky, Assistant Secretary of State daughters being beaten in an attempt to extract for Congressional Relations noted:in a letter replied: "l resent the fact that you are a British , of information from her. One of her daughters has During the Vietnam war, several Vietnamese l:, 14,1976, Communist sitting here in froñt of this com- January that "several hundred thousand since disappeared. \n1975, she was tiied together pol itical pri soners. were released specif ical ly be- wqre arrested qn suspicion of complicity mittee."' in the with three other women for subversion and cau se U S Con gress ional representatives i nvesti- coup" and 1'about State Department reacted by revoking her that 35,000 are still in deten- . .-The sentenced to 15 years. At the time of hef trial she gated particular cases. They asked questions.like: tion. USvisá upon her return to England (althoug-h it " was held at the Bukit Duri Women's Prisbn in "Where is this prisoneî?" "How is Íhe prisoner's The US hadbeen a multiple visa). Budiardjo statedlhat State.Department admits that most of akarta, but it iS not knowrì whether she was re- health?" "Has the prisoner been tried?" "What she had "never, since I J these prisoners have not been tried because of the time was undergoing are the charges?1' much US taxpayers' interrogation - turned to that prison after her trial. Her husband, "How lack of eVidence against them, claiming that it is while in detention in lndonesiã, money is going into the army and police force experienced Tohir, a trade unionist, is also in prison. that "unfortunate but understandable." The adminis- the kind of abuse to which I was'sub- are keeping this person in jail?" jected at the hearing." , tration excuses the repression to less "efficient" Pramoedya Ananta Toer is internationally It ís time for some deeper Congressional in- "This hearing generating is the most attention recognized as lndonesia's best contemporary vestigation on how US money is being spent in D.on Luce served in Vìetnam for'many years with ever at the State Department," one Congressional , writer. His.novels have a strong social and his- lnclonesia. lt is time'to'ask about SriAmbar, the lnternational Volùntary Service. ii lgZO he re- aide commented. Congressional offices ñave re- torical orientation. An outspoken and independent Pramoedya Ananta Toer, Sugivah, and Charlotte i vealed the existence ol the cages to a Con- ceived packets of material condemning Budiardjo, gressional committee. thinker, he was arrested several times during tþe Salawati. : lOWIN p wrNlr I contain a series of complicated verbal maneuvers generates 1/1Oof the profits arising outof US designed tp-create the appearance of â ñ€w¡. capital invested in the rest of- the world . On their juridical ffiition of Puerto Rico's status.. T.. Puerto Rican investments US investors are ob- WILL The gbjective of these maneuvers is very clear. taininghigher-rcturns than in the European Com: I It is a desperate attempt on the part of Secretary, mon Market; four times more than they obtain in Kissinger to stave off the impending sear:cþinþ i ; J apan; 200 times more than in Argentina; and al' . most half of the return obtained throt¡ghout Latin I examinàtion of world public opinion-, through:[he: I process of the United Ñations, into t'hà ioloTiul ' "America. PUERTO RICO'S relationship of Puerto Rico to the United States. This Committee must weigþ carèfully the tull This new "status" would sit beiter w¡tli Mr. K¡s- effect of these policies of econpmic and.political singer's insistence that the question of Puerto äomination before it evdn considers attemptiilg to COLONIAL STATUS? Rico is purely an "internal af:tair"'of the United make permanent such a relationship. The Puêrto States and not subject to world"scrutiny. Tþe Rican people will be the best expert witnesses-to Supreme Court's def inition of Puerto Rico as an these questions. They must be heard bythis Com-* "unincorporated territory which belongs to,.but is mittee, in the same way that when the most questionsof domination and control By Arthur Kino¡r not part of the United States" is, of course, a frank serious white coniession of Puerto Rico's realcolonial status, Puerto Rican were raised in this House by the disenfranchised flag design from The .. Black people of Mississippi.in 1965, over 70,000 following is a condensed version of the tes- thus subjecting Puerto Riéo to i,nternational Caia de las timon.y that Arthur Kinoy gave on February g be- examination under the mandate of the UN charter Arnericas/llNS. pages of testimony were taken from hundreds of people one end Missis3ippi to the tore the House Sub-Committee on Territorial and and the UN resolutions we as a nation are : Black from of lnsular Affairs which is considçri ng a ',Compact,, solemnly committed to honor. tion, madé the startling âdmission that the real other. This House has the resources and creative to redefine the relationship betweãn unemployment rate in Puerto Rico today was abllity to find the ways to listen to the.experlences the united Aside from the dubious contribution of the States and Puerto Rico. He is a member 45o/o. But unemployment in Puerto Rico is nothing and thinking of the people of Pue¡to Rico them- of the Compact to Mr. Kissinger's maneuvers, a careful national board of the Puerto Rican new. lt has been a chronic problem ever since the selves on questions which profoundly affect their Solidarity cgnsideration of its proposed features reveals that Committee (PO Box 319, Cooper Station, New earliest US military and economic intervention. lives. the Compact would continuè in every critical as- York; NY 10003) and a proÍessor The first US investments were made in sugar Moreover,'in meeting its affirmative duty this of Constitutional pect the economic, political, and military domina- Law at Rutgers University in New and a and tobacco. Small farm holdings were gobbled up House has a deep responsibility to take such ac- Jersey tion of Puerto Rico by the United States. Article 7 member of the in a wild land grab and were merged into large tions as is r:equired to guarantee that the will of bar oÍ the Supreme Court of the continues the absolute and unlimited power United States. to plantàtions. The population, which up until that the people of Puerto Rico be exercised in an at- expropriate Puerto Rican land by the United had been agriculturally self-sufnicient, mosphere,free of coercion and restraint. lt is in States for military purposes. þoint Was There was perhaps no concept more fúndame4tal Article B denies the Íorced to import many basic food stuffs, which it this conñection that we suggest that this Com-. "free associated state," the elementary to the structure of the new government created on right of a continues to do today. The lack of local food sup- mittee undertake immediately a full investigation people io organize its own monetary this continent 200 years ago than the solemn com- syitem. ply is aggravated by the US Covernment's occu- into the recent admipsions by the Article 9 continues basically the same mitment to the principle that colonial peoples have trade rela- pation, primarily for military pqrposes, of at least Attorney-Ceneral of 'wholesale illegal activities of , tionships with the United States the inalienable right to self-determination and in- except for a new 1|o/o of the country's most arable soil. the Federal Bureau of lnvestigation in interfering feature creating a lar,ge profit , dependence. Every constitutional structure there- advantage for At the end of Wôrld War.ll a new influx of US with the activities of Puerto Rican organizations United States oil companies. The after built, every grant of governmental power, "common capital started. At this time, únder the name of both in Puerto Rico and in the United States. 1ù rests upon the controlling principle market" provisions continue the economy of subsèribed to "Operation BootS[rap, " the i rid u strial ization of These outrageous efforts to interfere with and Puerto Rico under the permanent in the Declaration of 1776that "these united domination ôf Puerto Rico took on major proportions. The agri- intimidate the free exercise of the right to self. the United States. Article '10 colonies, are, and of Right ought to be Free and ' contihues the final culture was left tò ruin and light r¡anufacturing determination continue daily. United States control over immigration policies. lndependent." The commitment in the Declara- becarne the money-maker of the day. Today, how- Finally, nothing could be more coercive in rè- Article 11 continues, without comiñg tion that colonial peoples have the rightto " as- out in the ever, light industry is no longer a maior feature of straining the free exerciSe of the right of self- ' open and admitting it, the denial sume among the powers of the earth that separate of voting repre- the Pueito Rican economy. More and more in- determiñation than the overwhelmlng presence'of sentation in the House and Senate, which and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and enact vestments are being applied to the development of military bases, including a dangerqui nuclear laws affecting the most fundamental of Nature's Cod entitle them" is a binding rights of the petro-chemical and pharmaceutical industries, arsenai, in Puerto Rico. The extent of this overt '. i Puerto Rican people. Article '12 continues principle upon which our entire siruiturããf .on- the ab- which are currently more piofitab¡e,'but which military occupation of Pugrto Rico and its effect government solute unilateral control of the legislative, stitutional rests. exècu- emþloy very few people and which pose a funda- upon the freè exercise of the right of self-deter- tive and judicial branches of United For this Horr" to pass HR 11200, the "Compact the States mental threat to the island's ecqlogical systems. mination sh¡uld be carefully considered by this over Puerto Rico. of Permanent Union," would be to violate this' As a consequencè of these economic policies, Committee and appropriate measures designed to fundamental commitment and principle upon Thid Compact is sometimes described by its 21/z million Puerto Ricans live in the United States remove this coercive pressure from Fuerto Rico. which our entire structure of government rests. lt proponenfs as a step forward in that it provides because they cannot earn a living in their own The fundamental princi.ples upon which thls is beyond argument that this '.'Compact" does not more "autonomyl'to Puerto Rico. ln truth, the country. Here they suffer racial discrimination Republic rests call upon this l-Touse to exercise the even attempt to set forth the inalienable right of Compact co.difies and attempts to make and are victim to all of it effects: poor housing, courage and integrity which turning points in the people of Puerto Rico to self-deterininalion permanent the ultimate total control of the United schooling and health services; no jobs or the low- history call for. To affirm; in clear, direct words, in '.' and independence. lt wholly States over every fails to express, in essential feature of Puerto Rican est--rhã'¿áËópu paying iobs. a resolution of the House, this nation's commit- the words of our own heritage and traditions, that life. lt is ironic.that theonéconcretê evidence of ation of Puerto Rico has álso taken ment to the inalienable l:ight of the people of the colony of P-ùerto Rico wñich was wrested'by supposed increased "autonomy" is the impact of another drastic form. According to statistics made Puerto Rico to self-deterrnination and inde- force of arms from Spain 70 years ago, Right Sections 17 and 18 which woúld have the immedi- ' "of public by the Commonwealth in the early 197O's, pendence calls for that courage and integrity ought to be Free and tndependent.fY ate and practical consequences of eliminating at least 35?/o of all Puerto Rican women of child- which Edmund Burke showed 200 years ago on What does this "Compact of Permanent Union,, Federal minimum wage staniJards for Puerto 'bearing age have been sterilized. I the floor of the British Parliament when he called do? lt seeks to make "permanent" the continuing Rican working people and Federal envirônmental Foreign investment in Puerto Rico (almost en. upon his felloù members in the House of Com- subordi nate. essential ly dependent, colon ial relal standards for an economy alread'¡a most seriously tirely US capital) reached over $12.9 billion in mons to accept.the right of the people of the North tionship of Puerto Rico to the United States which threatened by the gravest pollution practices of' 1974.This represented an increase of 768ö/o from American colonies to decide their own destiny and has characterized the reality of the status of United States industries. 1960- The profit return on that capital investment assume their place in the world as a free and inde- Puerto Rico from the moment of military annexa- At the f irst hearing of this Committee, Teodoro . came to $1.34 billion, an increase ol1,O620/o from pendent nation. The needs of today, and fulfill- tion to the present. But while the "Compact" does Moscoso, the Administrator of Fomento, the ''1960. The small island of Puerto Ríco is the fifth ment of the promises qf the past, require no less of not alter the substance of this relationship, it does Puerto Rico Economic Development Administra- largest market for US goods in the world and membe¡s of this House in this Uicentgpl t"uï,n,,

12 WtN

i l- l. .**'..

l ,, i.

l marches of countless human tribes in search of on the f loor and held our first evening's meeting' I better life and peace. fach day new'toiôns and Problems: Who would shop for dinner and 'l faces, new encounters and rèjections, ngw scenes breakfast? Who would cook and clean up? Who and places to bed down. would arrange lunch the next day? Where is the I TËe walking itself went on to the steady beat of moleskin? How are we going to cover our day-to- the tai-kos which the monks use for meditation in we_46 a I day walking expenses? How can wglk . . ; with their mantra, Narn mu myo ho ren ge I time gróup raise money to support ourselves? Should kyo. repeated and rppeated day in and day out' the national office be helping us or not? How shall fhe tai-to is a paddle-shaped instrument Iike a we the sale of local andnational buttoç. I handle tq tambourine bui without the metal rattles, beaten and leaflets? How can we get lôcal organizers to I The beginning rally of with a small stick. Each monk walks, the Concord, California rhvthmicallv take care of our lunches, or should they? The ' l feeder march at a naval tàÁlor the tái-ko, intoning the mantra, The sound meeting did not solve all:these issues which con- weapons depot. Photq into the mind as the heartbeat, be- by J.C. Stockwell. setties lV¡lk's tinued to plague us; but immediate steps were # comins the Walk, expressing the inexorable ük;;; ài'i"ãi*uJ rjrãpared and served, the movèrient of the'Walk, stating the urgeney of the rnovies brought bythe Japanese (documeÅting s walkers' message to.America. 'j , Hiroshima's human after effects and the presence ln Lãrkspi¡r, the "diums" becqme the focus of of US nuclear weaþons at Yokuska, in treaty vio- an encountet with t¡e local poliðe{ As we ap= ]ation) were shown to the handful qf local people proached the central shoppi¡e area, we were met who came in about 6:30. by an officer, who stopped ús announcing that we ln the morning the activities came very fast: R of the Continental Walk were in violation of the city's ordinances, having breakfast, packing up the truck with each walker's failed to apply for a permit in the proper mannqr. gear, pic(¡ne the ñohitor for the däy, i;weeping up by David Patton Our Marin orþanizer, Rob Boudwin, explained the Center, setting aside lunch 4nd the other . As the 7}'ContinentalWalkers proceed south how the Policé Departmént's dispatcher had said during-the-day supplies, getti4g someone to be along Highway 101, wepause Íor a lookbackto its Congress know where we stand. We assure them our march would be all right, but the officer dis- the driver for tihe truck; and we set out, the beat of uk¡ah, california. a much explaining and discus- resuming, the leafleters out. starl in writì-ng, personally, thoughtfully does make dif- , allowed this. After the tai-kos Pattón lives in lJkiah where he is an or' eould continue on tþe route David ference.- sion, it was agreed we ln Cloverdale, after we passed through'town, ganizer for lJkiah Neighbors Against Rampant itrÀv ast us about walking, how farrrye've come, we had alreaðy decided on, but that there must be we stopped at the local Catholic Church and were Militarism (UNARM). where we're going, what it's like. We talk about "no drums" or carrying of signs. met by four families whg took us home in.smaller our journey from Ukiah to San Francisco, our A block later, we sat down on the grass in front groups fo-r'di nnèr and housi n g beautif ul, per- t:' - For ten days in J anuary I walked along the,high- plans to go on to Los Angeles, Phoenix, Oklahoma of the police station to decide for ourselves what sonai hospitality. What became clear was that l wavs. bikepaths, and frontage roads of Northern L¡lv, St.iouis, Chicago, Washington, to be in we should do. Sentiment ran toward cooperation, thèse local people represented the many more we for Dis- Caíifórnia, þart of the Continental Walk Wamesa, Kansas ôn the Fourth of J uly' Our visit until someone said, "What do the monks feel would meet as the Walk went on, the logistical, armameni ånd Social .lustice; meeting the drivèrs, to the Jchool becomes a highlieht of our trek down about not beating the tai-kos?" The question was humane, absolutely necessary backbone of'the the gas station ättendants, the homeowners, the Redwood HighwaY. asked of them and a lively d.is'cussion followed in Walk, our less visible but hiehly important col- ch schoäl teachers, pol ice, storekeepers, urch- J apanese. '.'We are allowed to beat our drums leagues. citizens For a small group of us in Ukiah the idea of walk- ä members, the kids on bikes, the senìor even in jail.in Japan. We did so whéh we-were ar- The walking itself was a,major task for those I. and ing began bãck ii¡ September- We respon{ed ánd otheri who are the people of California [o rested ciuring World War ll." lt was a religious like myself who are usually desk-bound. We it is an intense, and thã Naiional Call forthe Walk issued by th-e War polìce, they de- ffi"ri¿;. The walk, beäauie ' issue! Whenlhis was told to the learned to separate the walking from the Walk, to sweeps through lives, Resisters League, The Fellowship of Reconcilia' so'we proceeded roU¡1" human encounter, l murred to the first amendment ride sometimes. affronting, all the kinds of people tion, the Soutñern Christian Leadership Con- the beat of the taikos resounding through. confronting, ian on, . Moleskin became the friend of each of us. there are. iel¿hce d other rad ical pacif i st organ izations. the beat of peace and freedom' We felt i Larkspur, Nearly everyone had blisters and sore muscles. range of people The concept of taking steps literaily, for peace an-d Ás u walker you meet the widest triumphant We save each other foot and back massages to and so you run'into anler andfriendshipi social iustice caushtãur imagination. We argued brought by lulpicioir Anòther beautiful, spiritual addition easelhe strain. The J apanese suffered especially and disinterest. One morn- with VüRL/Westihat the beginning of the Walk ' greeting to.the sun' and warmth, curiosity the monks was thei,r daily because they had come with boots for walking- I ' man should not be in San Francisco-not if vÙie were \ got ing, I say, "Hello," offer a stout a leaf- Each dav we rose,before'sun up, þacked and took one moäk to the store to buy himself a pair of I had my way walkine from Ukiah. They agreed: The bþginning just iãi*t ¡.Éã*plains the Walk. "lf ready'to'go. Each day as the sun rose, the tennis shoes. We finally con\inced the nun and get past graveyard," he was tobe Ukiah which would highlieht th\grass guddhisigroup none of vöu would the took up their chant,with special later one of the mqnks to ride some of the time. growls ánd then tuins òn his heels and goes into roots character of the Walk. the gift and joy of sun- ' additionafchants honoring The last evening, before we crossed over the As the planning developeö our local group each of the four points of the town's bar. rise, ending by facing Colden Cate Bridge, we gathered around a c¿ird- and a fellow walker, talks to a grew, and then as the walking began-it was giving a speciàligreeting to the Marti. mv wife the ôompaJs aird table for a brief but moving coiìmunion. Duringf who needs aft¡ll two ãwellbd again by.20long distance walkers from all night' . bent and wiinkled woman center or home in which they had stayed the the "Kiss of Peace" the hugs and greetings were' cross the boulevard. She over the United Státes. Actually the group was lights and her cane to At first the Walk passed through the pear deep and fond. We's covered the 110 miles with reading-aloud, "Disarma: international; five Japanese-four Mor¡ks and,a sõuints at our signs, orchards, fields and vineyards of Northe¡n Cäli- only two'of us having to drop out due to illness you say? That's what we Nun of the Níchireñ iect of Buddhism-came from ment. Social J ustice fornia, for a full balmy week,.touching sùall towns (they rejoined us in San Francisco). We had met Gãnsuikyo, the J apan Council Against the A and need, all rlghi. You'ie doinga.won-derful th.ing-" only oircé or twice a day-Talmage, Hopland, police 'lRight on!" we H Bombs. one direct challenge frorn the and had by Then'she sürprises us and adds, ''iliää; Cloverdale, Geyserville, Healdsburg, Windsor, persuasion and nonviolenie been to continue. on. emotionallv moving rallv in Ukiah's able laueh-ürrállu and we move 'Methodist potluck Santa Rosa, Cotati, Petaluma and Novato We had field-trained a major portion of the long- are brief, 15 seconds; two Church Hail, a blend of music, the contacts Late the first afternoon out, we reached the distance.walkers who hope to go "all the way." Schqol in San dishes, f ilms and short îalks, we started out with a minutes; but at the Alternative Mendocino County lndian Education Çenter in We had learned skills that would serve us through grass in the morning ' dramatic candlelight walk down Ukiah's State lgnacio We sit down on the Hopland, located in a decrepit, hand-rhe-down the whble eight months ahead. We'd put the students and faculty, Street-a great mõment. We cut the strings to s-un and talk to the iunior former school house. Continental Walk on the road and proved it as a for half an hour.' hðme andioutine to take up a lifestyle that in' and- senior high classes pilgrimages, As the Center's staff removed their boxing ring profound, human witness to America that it is They ask uT what can be done. We talk about ðlrà"¿ ãlements from the medieval forced from the main hallto give us room to sleep, we sat time to tuln its priorities - the stoþ the B-1 Bomber Campaign, about letting the demonstrations of the 60's and the wrNls 14 WIN SV i ,i, a a and positions (as opposed ¡o Zionism) sometimes do nìerit denuñc¡atiòn and opposition. When that . is the case, all of us people of good will and es- ' pecially radical J ews must strive to overturn that policy. For example, we must continue to oppose the building of lsraeli civilian settlements in,con=- AN I ZÍonism as quered land. We mustoppose lsraeli refusalto recognize the right of the Palestinian people to self:-determination and autonomous statehood. '1. NatÍonaI Blatt is right too in strggesting we must oppose "the hysteria of the organized J ewish com- munity," i.e. when it is unreasonable and is. This obviously put contentless as it often will aâu,afiA't? distance between us independent J ewish critics wÉ ,o,imilÞ, tmßunHfi? Mr in lsrael and in the fTI UâIALLV üilr and the Jewish establishment WREO, nat ,tEfrt"" @.. Diasporá. The cause, however, ii right and de- ÆEN-T oænù,Tw! tâU? I I serves our perseverance. I ALBERT S. AXEIRAD But it is a moral outrage to condemn in theory {'racism" in principle the úery Only one spectacle in today's sorry political-social as and to oppose idea of Zionism, of statehood, the very arena rivals the mindless, knee-jerk anti-Zionism Jewish ' ,lsrael a ewish state, which Blatt, of the "third-world" and of the far-left for sick- existence of as J and their mentors do-along with ness.'Such a spectacle is the aberration of the Svoray Jewish likes of ldi Amin, Khaddafi, Assad, the anti-Zionist Jew which WIN's pages have dis- the played and encouraged. The'latest manifestation Palestinian terrorists, and their obedient "third- ls not sickness of such a uto rL{ of this sad spectacle is the recently published world" lackeys. the statement of Martin Blatt and Yair Svoray spectacle self-evident, eveñ granting that the obviously prefer not to self-hatred is indeed apuzzle.lt contributes J ewish anti-Zionists would massacres and b[oodbaths nothi ng. iee the kind of heinous hatred is indeed apuzzle.lt contributes nothing. that turn the others on? DOOÑESBURY SUSPENDED BY THREE PAPERS_ThE COM|C ICCR ANNOUNCES SPRING Zionism ¡s not as Blatt and Svbray a by at least - BL|TZ',ON CORPORAT¡ONS Jewish anti-Zionism appears tocome in two ti.i-t., strip "Doonesbury" was suspended for weäk three ' i' maintain. Rather, it is a successf.ul national newspapers because of the inclusion of a homosexual varieties, religious and political. Jewish religious maior Center on Cor- màvement for libäration, self-deiermination and The lnterchurch anti-Zionism is manifest in the lofty humanism character. porate Responsibility is planning political sovereignty among the'J ewish people. A survey,by United Press lnternational showed the Columbus and pacif ism of David Gil, whose naivete and social responsibi I ity L¡ke all forms of nationalism, including the (Oh¡o) Cleveland Press and the Houston Post all to introduce .quixotic, wishful thinking makes it untenable and Citizeñ-Journal,the proxy resolutions at the annual Palestinian variety, it is also subject to excesses, comic strip, appears in nearly 45O. newspapers in the dual extremes of'fanatic, Hasidic Orthodoxy suspended the .which meetings of 4B maior corPorations corruptions, perversions. These latter must be director of The Globe, said his (e.g. the Satmar Hasidim) on the one hand, and ln Boston, Otto Zausmei, associate this spring. A coalition of 25 oppoied and'overturned, while the conceþtual continue to print the comic strip. 1 the sycophantic American-reform ism of the newspaper would Protestant denominations and shôll deserves acceptance, like forms of self-. t a lot of complaints," Zausmer said. "We register the : American Council for J udaism and its leader, "Wehavä Roman Catholic orders, lCÇR has determination, national liberation and continuity But, if we drop a feature each tirne Rabbi Elmer Berger, on the other. He made the complaints and appreciáte them. increased the number and among all nations and steadily l media recently in his letter of anti-lsraelism to PeoPles. someone complains, we'd have ari'empty newspaper Ot"jKåi$"rU of its resolutions in the five Such an indêpendent course, though, as scope Arab potentates, published with other venom years of"its existence. This year it reflected, in the critiques of LF. Stone for 'i; thanks to their largesse. As Berger's brand of on corporate policies example, is a lonely enterprise. lnasmuch as it is a is focusing anti-Zionism is motivated not by leftist ideals but, and practices in foreign countries. stance reflecting J ewish identification, on the contrary, by the anachronous, obsequious plants (two .. ', it is out of step with cHtEF SAFETY ENGTNEER "The lndian Point Of particular concern to ICCR i' desire to be accepted in American society as self-respect and commitment, : !: lnasmuch as it QUITS NUKES of which are owned by Çonsoli- shareholders is the ektent of pay- nothing more threatening than an "Amqrican of ' the far left and the "th¡rd-world.l' is unàcceptable in dated Edison, the giant New York ments and contributions to foreign Mosaic-persuasion," your pages give him no play. is critical and oppositionist, it which slavishly utility, and the third, operated by governments, and resolutions sick and preposterous, how sated with toad- many conventiónal J ewish circles How . but owned bY the requesting either disclosure of treat lsrael as a "sacred cow." Given more Robert Pollard, chief federal that corporation eating is his approach! have been payments or a cessation of security and self-pride on their part, the Blatts safety engineer, not only for State Power Authority) such What you miss is that the Blatt-Svorayap- Point, and constructed be to ten cor- and Svóravs, who otherwise evince a laudable nuÈlear reactors at lndian badly designed them will Fubmitted proach, representative of J ewish political anti- reactors are suscept¡ble to accidents porations. Additionally, a ,' idealism, might f ind a home here. NY, but also for nuclear and . Zionism is no less sick and preposterous, no less measure oÎ presented ' ordinarily I do not believe in in North and South Carolina and that could cause large-scale loss of resolution will be to sychophantic, that it is conditioned by a dif- One last thought: ' iust public." The world, Texas, quit his 927 ,756 iob on life and other radiation injuries, Ceneral Motors that it ref use the '-'- férent frame of reference, more acceptable to you : "washing dirty laundry in junta and inhospitable to February 9 asserting that he could such as caneer and birth defects." offer of the Chilean to re- than Berger's. Berger wants to make it in Ameri- after all, is esSentially hostile here be- not "in ionscience remain silent Following his resignation, Pol- vamp that country's automotive can society. Blatt añd Svoray want to make it in us Jews. I depart froñr my inclination ' about the perils associated with iard announced he would become program. caúse it is in your pages that this J ewish (atld ' f ar- I eft and "th i rd-world" ci rcles. Obsequ ious- to be strarigely seems to. hit the fan the US nuclear power program." Washington representative of the Among the other issues ness, though, is equally disgusting, whereyer it other) anti-Zíonism are: because it is important He added: "The magnitude of Union of Concerned Scientists (at covered by proxy resolutions aims. with some frequency and in the worlds of the the hazards associated with these. one third less pay). His resigna- equal employment oPPortun ities, What of the issues themselves? ln some ways, for your readeis to k'now that (par- is plants has been suppressed by the tion comes a week after three military production and sale (lsrael J ew¡sh people, where progressive change our Blatt and Svoray and their J ewish mentors Covernment because the release nuclear engineers employed for ticularly the B-1 bomber), agri- policies goal, these Jewish anti-Zionists (and their non- Shahak and Uri Davis) are right. lsraeli such information might cause many years by Ceneral Electric in business, the quality and Pricing Jewísh henchmen), are altogether lacking in of great opposition to their California, quit for the same of drugs, and general disclosure the director of the Hillel credibility and respect. The route to change is a Albert S. Axelrad is :Jim peck of corporate activitY. Foundation at Brandeis lJniversity in Waltham, different one. Very different. operation. reason. Massachusetts. wtN 17 16WlN 'çT list of the resolu- forms of repression whether in serted lead attorney for the A complete PRTSON NOTES tions is available for $1 .50 f rom capitalist, communist or socialist plaintiffs, James D. Montgomery. John Cibbs, a federal prisoner at future incentive time might be countries. forfeited for failing to do an ade- ICCR,475 Riverside Dr., Rm 566, "Repression is not According to Montgomery; the Marion, is chairman and limited to any He co-founder of the National quate job ôr infractions of rules. NYC 10027. Schwartz one society." evidertce willzshow that the FBI Cay -Wendy hopes The two promoters of the idea are to work on the cases of the 5 went,to at least two law enforce- Coalition for Prisoners Rights, es- Puerto prisoners tablished in convinced that it would provide a Rican nationálist ment agenc¡es try¡ng to get them Leavenworth MARTIN SOSTRE Penitentiary years real incentive for'prisoners and and the Wilmington Ten, as well to conduct the raid, giVing them several ago. SPEAKS TO THE PRESS would bnable the state to provide as continuing to support Amriesty false information about the The co-for¡nder öf the orgadization lnternational, a group which worked was murdered in compensafion without putting out On February 1Oth, one day after presence of illegal weapons and a þrison ánd Cibbs \ has reason more funds. Several.New,York of- his official release from the New for his release. diagrarn óf thè apartment with an' to believe that he, too, York State prison systern, Martin When asked where to beþin may be killed. For the past sóverál ficials have commended tlfe' X where Fred Flampton slept. program,, Sostre held a press coriference Martin replíed that "we haüe to years he has been moved from one but Daloia and Randall . at Finally Hanrahan's office strike if it was adopted. According the Church Center for the try to weld a human force prison to another; Since Septem- are asking support from many UN in accepted the job. to the Los Angeles Times, a New York City. Sostre is the Black together," He said that "oúr ber, 1975 he has been in Mation, people so that the plan can be * The first phase of a cover-up spokesman for the guards dis- Puerto Rican activist who was defense comniittees were a loose where he was recently assaulted enacted into law. began the instant the raid was cussed the possibility that a disci- sentenced to 30 years on a voluntary group without much and forcibly removed to a section over, according to Montgomery's plinary transfer might be ovér- Those of us who favor the aboli- t¡umped up narcotics charge money or superstars. We also had of the prison where he felt his life opening statement. The police re- turned by union action and com- tíon o.f prisons are frequently when Buffalo law enforcenlent no hierarchical structure and was in danger. Even though Cì{hbs moved thebodíes of Fred 'mented: "The qùestion is: Who's asked what we would substitute authorities were unable to there were few orders given or was the one attacked, he was thên find Hampton and Mark Clark befo¡'e in control here? Why did society for them. People who raise such any other means of shutting down taken. But we were united in spirit given a prison trial for assault, the coroner could arrive, in viola- send this guy here in the first questions have honèst doubts and his Afro-Asian book store. and that is the hope of the found not guilty, but still deprived tion of the law. No pjctures were place?" He pretty much put his reservationsrwhich to them are At his first public appearance- future. " of 90 days good time. Concerned taken with the bodies present. finger on the heart of the matter, real and valid. The National since Gov. Carey granted him individuali should write C.E. -PaulMayer The second phase oi the since the impact of a genuine Moratoriun¡on Prison executive clemency last Christ- Fenton, Warden, US Prison, PO coúer-up began hours later when prisoners union would most' Construction has attennpted to mas he announced: " lt's a miracle Box 100, Mario4, lllinois 62959, FRED Þ.IAMPTON TRIAT state attorney Hanrahan issued a certainly demolish the abso/ute dealwith sùch concernilin a posi- that l'm here. My release and Lawrence A. Carpenter, Re- was to OPENS IN CHICAGO press statement on the "vicious control of prisoners tion paper entitled "A Compre- have been the year gional Director qf the North Cen- by their 2001.'i' Martin nature of the Black Panther keepers. hensive Framework for a System years years tral District, US Burèau of is now 53 old. He attributêd Six after Black Panther Party." Later hq gave an exclùsive of Alternativés," which discusses his Party leaders ' Prisons,8800112th St. NW, KCI victory "to the combined ef- Fred Hampton and story to the Chicago Tribune and The Reverend Ben Chavis and such alternative policies as de- people Bank Bldg., Kansas City, Mis- forts of all over the world." Mark Clark were murdered on had a "reenactment" of the raid other members of the Wilmington criminalization or elimination of souri asking that He said that his secret and that of December 4, 1969, their fami lies televised on CBS. Much of thè in- 64153, Cibbs'90 Ten convicted of arson and con- pre-trial detention, and conirasfs days be restored prison ' his supporters was persistence 4nd seven former Panther Party for¡ation Hanrahan gave the and that spiracy charges began serving them with such facility'alterna- officials "like the Vietnamese who won members who survived the news media later proved false. cease harassing him. lengthy prison sentences early in tives as Halfway Houses or drug against overwhelming assault are bringing a lawsuit odds. The JLNS Testimony before a nationat com- February, after the US Supreme treatment centers. The position people against FBl, spirit of the will overcome the the Chicago mission by the President the Court refused to review their con- paper, which lists four categories Police Department, of the technology of the repressive former Cook EVENTS Pharmaceutical Man ufacturers victions. The Wilmington Ten are of alternatives prògrams, proce- state. ' ' County State's Attorney Edward - q - NYC-HOMACE TO MICHAEL Associatiqn reveals that85%o ot those chosen as.scapegoats for the dures, policies and Martin announced plans Hanrahan, three former that he BAKUNIN-Centennial Memorial I the initial tests on people to two deaths and $1 million in philosophies is summarized by to open a book store be Hanrahan assistants and - and will William 1876-1976. Speakers include Sam determine the effects of new pre: property damage during an in- S. Brian Willson and Dave Eber- working as a legislative OlNeil, a black FBI informer, assistant Dolgoff, Olga Lang and Paul scription drugs are made on " surrections in that North Carolina hardt in the current issue of to NY State Assemblywoman lnitiatgd in 197O, the $47 million Avrich. Friday, March 5, 7 pm at prisoners who allegedly consent to port city in 1971. Ben Chavis, who Jericho, the newsletter of NMPC. Marie Runyon damage suit trial'has finally who was also the be- Workmen's Circle Ceriter, 369 8th such experimentâtion and are faces a sentence of 29 to 34 years co-chairperson gun. ln order a Now that the draft registration is of the Committee to win settlement Ave. (29th St.), New York City. paid. The concept of voluntarism said, "We are the victims oi rac- Free the plaintiffs definitely cancelled, it is more to Martin Sostre. His special must convince all six is virtually unknown in the ism. We have been persecuted for federal jurors week long demon- urgent than ever Bruce assignment will be community or- court that the NEWARK-A coercive and oppressive environ- political activity, not for criminal that ganizing prison defendants plotted and vigil, 3 Baechler and jailed and work. He and cqnspired stration /1 /76-3 /5 /76, ment of prison, and the ACLU is acts. " The president of the United others for re- plans to assassinate year protest the present course of sisting the draft be released to be a lobbyist for 21 old Fred to attempting by court action to stop Church of Christ said in Washing- from prisoners'rights. Hampton, nation's policies, and demand - prison. One Selective Service çhairman of the lllinois oui the use of prisoners as human ton that church attorneys would he Black Panther Party at disarmament and sociál at official admitted possibly as Bùt seemed to have no il- thetime of iustice guinea pigs. Some prisóners have soon move to begin the process of that his Park, Newark, NJ. CON' many 1.7 young lusions about the lasting value of death. Military objected to the lawsuits, saying again requesting Supreme Court as millioh fnen prison Although TACT: Clenn Poñtier,855 PaPen refúsed'to rçgister i reform. When as-ked about initially filed against that they need the money and like review of the case. durinp the- only Rd., Bridgewater, NJ 08807, years the important cases on prisoners' state and local authorities, doing sémething "useful. " of the Vietnam draft. Thçre rights which he had woh as a jail FBt officials were added to the 526-13Q4 or Al Swenson, 324 David Daloia and William is no longer even the excuse of house lawyer Martin commented suit after previously hidden infor- Bloomfield Ave., Montclair, NJ The California State Departrnent. Randall, prisoners at the state deterreniè to keep:any of the draff .. l prison, that they "had been won on paper maticin in police and FBI files 07042,744-3263. of C¡r¡'i:ctions. is con s idäri n g Stormville, New York, are resisters in prison. President only. ln dealing with 'outlaws'- implicated J ustice Department recognizing the right of prisãn in- proposing that the state Ford, Attorney Ceneral Levi and . - i.e. prison officials-one can not off icials. BOSTON-Sun., Feb, 22 Dr. mates to join a prison union whose legislature pass a law providing members of Congress should be expect that many gains and After five years of legal Barrv Commoner talks on staff members èould enter the for incentive good time which bombarded with appeals for the prison maneuvering pre- and Political Power.'f prison to help inmates would be guaranteed to each release of all victories on reform will be and months of "Sciänce defend "unconðitionalSelective Service put into practicê." trial hearings, oþening statements Sun., Feb. 29 Congres¡m1¡.Mory their rights. As one would expêct, person, the amount to be granted violators and '"My mariir years in prison, with were given by both sides begin- ris Udall speaks on "The Three representatives of tne guãr¿íõò-' accoiding to the importance of the amnesty for all those who had beatings and solitary have radi- ning February 3. 'lThe evidence F's: Energy, the Environment, & pose the very thought of such a- job performed. lncentivg time prison sentences, who'faced calized mè and heightened by will show an intentional effort to the Economyi' at 11 am atMorse inoye. The executive secretarv of would also apply to those better- punishment for desertion or going co¡sciousness,'1 Martin said. He destroy the Black Panther Party, Auditorium, 602 Commonwealth the California Correctional Ofl ing their condition through into exile, or who got less than . ficers Association called it education. Such good time would honorable added that he was opposed to all its leaders and its member," as- Ave. ,,idiotic,'and discharges at any time said guards might be mandatory, and when earned during- the Vietnam *1a:#; '1S could not be taken away, WrN though Gara

wlN 19 tl

which turned out to be false; in a matter of months, he . Not all these songs will lj.ve. ldoubt, for example, varietigs of world order systems, what thg preferred that the Mayaguez song willmake muäh modelwould look like, and, most important, the was being taught how to kill. s"nsàtãn-' the years from now. But not every song to whichãiiîger process of transition to the new world order. "Righf frorn the start," Daly remembers, "all R the enemy R gives voice must be written fdr all Ihe years toconîe. Falkls argument is that we have come to so great a instruðtors kept telling us how horrible Enough that it sings of the here and nów, foi øl[ ãit crisis in the world order system"made up of nation- was in Vietnam, barbarians who tortured all pri n g drawi n gs.¡êpresenti n g; is both a comfort and a weapon, meant to carrv us states, the system prevailing since the Peace of soners. Cruesome-looki po.st and in the OLD DREAMS AND NEW NIGHTMARES through strusste and into u'n éu"hìnititiã*å,íiiñ Westphalia (1.648);that between now and 2000 we 'The Cong' were hanging alLover thq of qhapels had a big sign E Charlie King with Paul Despinosa / Order from CW friends. by candles. lt is meant, too, ãs a ve.y pei- have the oþportunity{o engage in a transformation classrooms. Even one the sonal sharing of consciousness and institutions tóward global on its outside fence-'To Kill A Cong! "' Records, 339 Lafayette St., NYC 10012 /$S.S0 , of those momenis when we arä älone at I ¡ night and wonder where a lost love lies humanism. ' nlt"r gãtiine to v¡utn âm, " l soon ãa-e td ùnder- we take each óther for granted. have, sleeping, l/ 9q-u.times We when we ourselves are The þook's spark, however, is smothered in,its stand thãt almost all the Vietnamese people, wher- I think, taken Charlie King for grañted. With sleepless. Y this Bec.au¡e he finds it good-and perhaps involuted terminology. Why,.for instance, must the ever thev lived. looked on Americans as their v record he establíshes himielf ai a signif icant figure easy-to who didn't resent our write lyrics, I think he overwrites. These values of the preferred world-rninimizing collective enemiesl that the only ones in American folk music and the rÀ.oF¿ ,ilñi; are not governinentf I songs to which we are going to learn all thg violence, maximizing social and economic' being there, aside from the heads of the I SeflOUS revrew. Vietnamese businessmen who verses-they are songs to which we want Ío lísten, well-being, realizing human rights and justice; and or thé army, were the Forthose who may not know Charlie King: he is a had money or property, or who were making : ' I for.they are expressions of Charlie rehabi l itati n g the envi ron ment be absträcted to" owned t Catholic anarchist radical, residing in a com-mune in Kingts ownl - vrstons, h¡s own dreams and nightmares. Y.t,Yt, V1, and Va? I would recorytgnendthat the money on the war. No peasants among that crowd, g slur_n in the Lower East Side of New York City. He . But from F- the first verse of the first song,:ihere is no question reädei beÉin by prjtting a paperclif on páge 345 in that was for sure. " has always been av,ailable for WRL conferences,.for of the waras hbrrible L as to whether the dreams or nightmares w¡li win. Out order fo translate abbreviations such as t6,t1, t2,51 Daly tells of seeing instances dernonstrations, picket lines. ln a recent WlN, as the shooting of an unarmed old f of all our defeats, out of our slr¡ms. out of our Bowãrv or SZlWOlr¿p/USA). Falk's desire to conilerise by brutality, such L- Í12/25/751, the third installment of my unfiniéhed his dying and our skid row, out of our iails, iomes this music '. using abstrusê symbols undermines the book, mak- man,by two US soldiers, who stood over would get for the f.""ili!:liil#li'é do'ubly triumphant because it is iung in the midst of ing it sterile reading. body arguing about who "credit" #,iïi:"i ffiÆn"rnh i p of t t / the rubble. Like a good folk singer, ñe has moved Yet the bsok is especially useful for its diagrams of killing in the body count. ¡l WRL/FOR/WILPF/CALC/CPFtook upfewerthan hours of 1968, was taken l / with us, stood with us, and giveì voice to much more nlorld order systems: those of 1B9O 1920 , 1950, and ln the first few Daly 20 seats on the bus" that went to the labor demon- - - , Having Y'_' Y than our anger: he has Voiceì what the Estabtish- téday; of four world government systems; of several prisoner by the National Liberation Front, stration in Washington last April. l-et it be noted that expected to ment has never understood-our faith, our hope, our others such as the statist concert, mixed actor, heard the off icial US Army stories, Daly of that handfuiwas Ct'ã'tlã k¡ñe. a ¡(\ 9ne rJl, ñáãdil'' love. condominium, small state system, and four anar- be killed, or at least tortuied. lnstóad, what Viet- guítar at the ready, he haicome when"- namese off icer told him soÖn after capture turned out ì 3"",î$:0, This is Charlie King's first record. lt will ñotbe his'- chistic world order sy3tems, in addition to three Y last. CWproducers hãd only enough phases of the preferred model. Such graphic illus- to be true: "You will be educated. You will learn all So¡ry to report, the song I liked least is the first cap¡tåítã:pro- on duce 1000 records. (CW does not trations show the possibilities and implications of the about the'wdr;" the album. lt was written especially for the Con- stand. as I haä thought, for Cathotic Workèr, wide variety of world order models. tinental Walk, titled "Do The Continental Walk,,; it Uiiis uÀãlrnosf ,en Daly's perspectives' gradually changed-so much' symbol for "Collect_ive Way,t, ,,Continental Falk must be applauded for his efforts to induce is not Charlie at his best. The song has too many Walk,,, so that three years later, while saying good-bye to an and, perhaps, also for ',Caiholic Worker,,). serious thinking about the global political system. ." ideas, all of them good, worded too rapidly to be All NLF officer when prisoners were being transferred proceeds go to "people's movements,,, Fle moves between the Scylla of global catastrophe, 'quickly absorbed as a "Walk song,' must.'I do not Darticularlv north to Hanoi, Daly and other POWs spontaneously at the moment the Cóntinental Walk:'How ,an idea of the f uture derived-from projecting present see it becoming a refrain rocking through America. often doãs- decided to sing Phong Mien Nam!, a patriotic Viet- one get a chance to get an artíst,s trends, and the Charybdis of a global fantasyland, Much the same is true of "lalking Whip lnflation first recoidõn th" ' namese song they had learned in NLF prison camps 1 first pressing? For heaven sake get vour$S.iO in---- derived f rom,drearning that we can ignore the Blues," which I enjoy, have hear

20 wtN WIN 21 ln April 1972,U5 B-52s bombed Han:oiandother Sometimes; I guess, it's just not that easy to under- Ifl^or North VietnaTese cities. Eight months later, stand what makes us do the things we do." B-52s were overhead 3gain, dropping bombs on It was only after one of the eight accused antiwar rcPTEs Hanoi. '1As.l irnagined thät city of people being, POWs, Larry Kavanaugh, committed suicide under Crabson c tch, destroyed all aiound me, I knèw foi sui-e I just- the pressure, that the Pentagon dropped charges ilf,TFilN _ couldn't waitfor Godto do away with all wickedness. against the former Peace Committee memberi. And Because what was happening oût-piãñnËJ there was plenty a.month later, in )uly 1973, an Air Force major f iled liccon høad, wicked, was ptent)¿ wi,òng;' uñ¿ r àn charges of treason against the same group; áfter two ?rac Ir nþ:xdi¡m: speaking out against it every chance I Eot.,, months those charges were also dropped. ot af lxvoLwoA'lo Soon after the sighing of peace OILYTOUOIÉ the Ãsreements in J ames Daly then faced the same basic predica- oTl{Eßw¡sc, at EvcRY Onøthinq'siurcto January 1973, the POWs returned to thõ US. For ment as when he enlisted while living in loworÐ ' bedford- Daly the rel ief was 'shoit-lived. Even before the , Stuyvesant in 1967-being a poor blatk person in the Pentagon annbunced charges against him and seven United ltates. Collaborating author Lee-Bergman PRODUCTS knoclc'cm?øad. Peace other Committeè POWs, he was feeting the I says'in a postscript to the book that "assimilãtinS NONCOMPETITIVE GAMES for children and weight of impending accusations. He writes òi at- into a competitive civilian society proved an arduãus, adults. Play together not.aga¡nst each other' Free tending a reception catalog: Family Paitimes, RR 4, Perth, Ontario, at the White Hou¡se for over 500 often disconcerting task for J amej Daly." He workeá Canada K7H 3C6 l9wr The man right in front of him in the line of as a clerk, a department store trainee, ãnd a night- A-200" POWs shaking Nixonls hand told the presidenti q!¡jt fqctory worlSer ai$Z.ZS an hour. Later, ¡n mid- "Sir, why dld you order that bombing in December? 1974, Daly became owner'of a small laundromat,in Eastwind Community- located in Ozarks. Seeking you memÞers. Promoting nonpunishing, nonviolent Did realize how horrible it was?'tDalv recalls New J ersey, aided by the Small Business Adminis- egalitarian society. Growing quickly. Presently 52 that "Nixon looked really shocked, like he couldn,t tration; most_such ventures, however, end up failing. mèmbers. Associated with Twin Oaks in VA. ln- believe anyone terested in us, write or càll - Eãstwind, Tecumseh, could have the nerüe to ask him a It still remains for North Americans to conceptuai- MO 65760, 4't7 -67 9-44ó0. ' question like that." ize, and implement, clear visions of a humane Daly was Central NY State organic farm looking for partners. - .But already worried about what was to future. With the need for anti-Vietnam-War marches Wr¡te Box 106, Willet, NY 13863 or call 617-8ó8- fol.low. "Maybe it was the pressure of knowing that finally gndg{, we are left with the long and impera- 6290. l'd soqn be accused of collaborating with the e-nemy, tive task of vitalizing liberation struggles on tËe con- New M¡dwest Research lnstitute seeks unselfish, and somehow ljust had to prove lrias às much " tinent where socially-conscious, non-careerist, MA-PhD MQVE- a we live. MENT economists, political scientists, etc. MUST total American as anyone. Maybe it was hearing my be able to get grants or raise funds. Semi-scholarly mother say, 'Now don't you go and say anythin! to' studíes on war-peace reconvers¡on, etc. READ get yourself Ron Christenson is a professor of politicalscience Groqs and Osterman "The New Professionals" pp in trouþlel"' Whatever the reâsoni, at 33-77, Studs Terkel "Working" pp525-527, when Nixon shook his hand, "l lied right in his fâce. Custavus Aldolphui College. David McReynolds and 537-5¡lO, Claudia Dreifus "Radical L¡festyles. " Midwest lnstitute, 1206 N 6th St., 43201. I said, 'Sir, it was an honor to serve. lf- I had to do it Norman Sõlomon write frequently for WlN. again, l'd give HELP! (o.-* (l^ my life âny time for my country.,. . . . ño..-¿ nf'rf*tz i.'.,/'. fc'- HOME NEEDED:20 people, mostlyolder,, in NY i,^ot H*l ,f.r"'/ state, w¡thin 70 miles NYC. Wr¡tè Stanley C... É'¿r¿"c¿ nterre(nf< "ThÒUnlt d St itatpmø,ett ttt; . *lrt r r r.¡t.tl r I ril r I I I I I I r r r i t Vishnewski & Peggy Box 33, Tivoli, NY ¿, lvllts5 ct36 Ail gawûw,s pnd.hn m qconAttøaA mc¡ Scherer, L¿4 I e,r r ri R i pol¡t¡cC t t tnterc¡.r¿rrrë t, . by'ûlas¡ng d ry¡wøc,,. lwho w'. l& 12583. "/.. '4.Jtç lott p6ct ut ctpcs¡oß ol b#t and op¡Q¡oi,t @n;, t An Historic Reprint t: t5 ltt 3t'1 ttry tø tha¡r Govñæntt . . ," . i * ,' WHALES NeËOOun HplP! Boycott AllCoods tn;e , +5, fÄ3 e, Hø. Duht Momhs * Of Towering Importance' * From Japan & Russia; Boycott Until They Stop *tte,^¡f^ . U.N. Gümt Asmblt Killing Whales. Help Save Porpoises. . . Boycott.g Nor4.rrù.r 12, lgñ * t Cirlcott Light Meat Tuna. Questions, Donations lo rc L JiiTï/T:l,r* * * WHALES ALIVE, 13 Colunibus Ave., San Fran- * A Vision of War * cisco, CA 94111. Enclose stamp. fl"ff tJ'ti l} * Mrsc , !', q- c1. í e ta ,,!, letl * By Robert G. lngersoll (f 833-1899) *' t-it¿rg * *. The Woolman Flitl Workshop topic for the weekend re lrq,or\ tc'g/*,^e c'.r^ * oÍ Feb/27-29will be "NONVIOLENCE OF DAILY * "As long as nations meet on r c, . Lr'r,l ¿ *' * LlVlNC". Evening Presentation, 8pm Friday with Pcl, flg5 the fields of war, as long as Lowell Rhenheimer of Vinoba Farm. Saturday * t ,,- 7itr., of . Moriring Session,9am vú¡th Dave Delliirger, s".fJ Q,. t they sustain the relations *. followed by panel discussion with all participants. ,:1"f"'v * savages to each other, as t Sunday Àfternoon Sèssion, 2:30pm, open meeting lr ¡5 l-.te-. I lóng as they out the laurel t with Dave Dellinger. Woolman Hill, Deerfield, MA 01342, or call 413-7724453 or773-9O65. Yl^4 i and the oak on the brows of * i ATTENTioN to those oi you who have recently i those who kill, just so long h,;-tt * ' * orderód Posters of Dorothy Day from WIN-orJr -'t ABOUT AIIERICA-S t will citizens resort to vio- * supply has been e xhausted. We are print¡ng more pufe"h"l * ' lence, and the quarrels of now, but your orders will be delayed. Expect them RESTSTENS, Mra Ambaooador? * in threirto six weeks. Sorrv. WlN. ¡y-ôú2- t individuals be settled bY * .L tt dagger and t rn¿r f i '" , : * úrFEnME SUESCATP1IOìIS-*¡r00 * Í Her€'s e wey to insure that you'll * * never again bc bothered by those * ß/ø¡""'at * would-tle-humerous YÍIN renewel * t announcÊmcnts and of the samc tlme * lndependent publications .t t m.ke ¡ subst¿nti¡t committment to * the c¡use ofnonviolent social change : * DEPT. WIN i. it; * * by supporting IVIN Ma,gazine. Such ò PO Box 162 * a alcmonst¡ation of f¡ith in IVIN ¡t t Softcover, 8/z x11 Park Station this time would mean f¡r more than t * yerr year Only $2.95 Ppd. Patterson * after of renewals. Ptcase * consider helping öut in this way. -l ønnlbú¡dr .nM. * Two copies for $5.ü) New 07513 t t Jersey * -wN t.lttttr:¡t tt.trt t.f r + I + * i I t.¡t I t 22 WIN \ryrN 2 r 4 .t, PEACE ) People Call L;TTERÂTIINE

Ð FÛL üR crA,s SEcRET RSLF*L ÐY w¡È ix'i. ANGOLA. a Report by the 2¿32 ËLÂN Center *üq Ð* for ñational Securit'¡r Studies giv- fl L€YË LÁ}Jü HTS ç# 44 ing all the facts and backgrouñd you'd like to know about U.S. ih- volvement. 12pp (Nov/ he even writes for it.) FINNALLY OUT IN PAPER- "engaging (Boston \ _ _This BACK-MORE POWER THAN ' Phoenlx), "influential" KNOW. Dave (Poughkbepele Joutl¡I), "al- 'book.WE Dellinger's ways provocative" (Boeton on movement tacticl, past Globe) magazine is so "highly andfuture.326pp.. : ... $3.95 recommended" : (Akwesesne Notes) because "WIN's special A TIME TO DlE. Tom Wicker's issues have often signalled the book on Attjca-written from beginning of new trends in radi- D-yard. 393 pp . cal and liberal thinking" (Boc; ton ReelPaper). PEACE IN THE MIDDLE EAST: Ifyou take this opportunity to REFLECTTONS ON JUSTTCE 'subscribe to thia "liveliest AND NATIONHOOD. A collection . maga4ine on the left (The Village Volce), we'll send you your.choice of two , of essays fascinating books. on the Middle East by Noam Chomsky. 320 qp . $2.25 ln THE RECANTATION OF GALILEO GALILEI, Eric Bentley po¡travs Galileo --as '' a spoiled darling of the Establishment until he fails in tti. e*órtióõ¿ili"cJñË-- SMALL ls BEAUTIFUL by E. Fl contemporaries of his view of the Universe. Onlù then does he rebel. becomins a Schumacher. A convinciná scientific and social revolutionary. Dan Berrigañcalls it "A brave and skillful f,lay. treatise on the necessity of de- It.shed.s light on the dark spaces of the soul añd the even darker spaces of the õoíld. There in the century centr¿lization and an economic 9t Ça]itgg gr{ our own, ruffians Seelc to extin'guish thà skiliãnã- svstem oría bravery rvhich are only light." This illustrated historical Põblisher's hum¡n ' drama,¡ iist ':å ' Price $3.25, is yours freelith a subscription to WIN. ïi'". ,'Trïl¿r, or, rve'll send you_wINNING HEARîS aIïD MINDS. Edited by Larry Rottman, a paquet,^this WITH THE . ò Jan Barry and Basil r. is "not only a collection of poétry bívieanam-' CONT1NENTAL war veterans, it is also a tèsr of your h-umanity. " (New york rim¿" inil iãrìiw.l It WALK ON THE ROAD,.WIN i¡-" . . .the,most eloquent statenient of what tñe war (was) that I have seen." READERS MIGHT BE . , : (Newsweek') Publisher's List Price is $1.95, but it's yours for free if you súbscribe INTERESTED IN;...... now, you already why not renew now, The . f ^subscrib-e, or send a gift sub to a friend, or WALK buttons j better y.et, lots offriends? For èvery sub ordered; we'il señd you a book, anã'on . . . . 25É apiece, $12 perJ00: _,. every gift, we'll send the recipient ân attractive gift card in yóur name. Such a ãeall The WALK bumper sticker . . . SO{.: ---t---r--rt-lr----rrttr-!r---r-rt-r¡rl-r------¡---r- The WALK poster. 50é Enclosed is $-for-subscriptions to wIN, at $11 per vear. please send me (a) copy (copies) ofr (one for each sub ordered) fheWALKmanual .,.'4O/ nReeantatlon of Galileo Galtlel

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