? ff)Til)NS THII ¡ilIROIIND OOIINTIRW It0Ot(T ßl,flf$ On April 29th, 200 disarmament activists and con-' cerned citizens gathered outside the west gate of the Rocky Flats Nuclear Weapons'glant in a Back on the bus \ - th is time for trial. Photo by Crace Hedemann, who was found not gui lty in the course of defending herself Thursday,12 May )lt's 12:40pm, man and woman from Core told us about a half-hour ago that.we arê being releasedl fhe deal is we will all have mass trials, will get perSonal recognizance pending appeal, this goes for second and third time offenders also; we sacrif ice only our right to make an individual statement. We raised question of people who were convicted already, some w¡th $500 bail, and action will be taken to insure they are handled first before we all skip town. People cir :ulating, doing last-minute stuff , collecting information learning songs, etc. Celebration lunch of fish (finally!), rice-a-roni, cornbread, salad. One final meeting around Core people regarding mechanisms of mass trial. May happen this afternoon, here or in Hampton. PR is what wewanted, and after 12 days,we've got it! Well, we're all packed and ready, the armory has been cleared of cots, blankets, towels; junkthrown out and a huge "lost and found" box is f illed with books, towels, camping gear. People sitting in little groups in the barren concrete gym and Capt. Dupee comes and announces achange in orders. Trials will be tomorrow morning instead. Friday,13 May. We departon two busses at 7:50 am. . . Long wait at Portsmouth armory, familiar faces within; two busses from Dover pull up behind us, we compare notes out of windows; they started with 250, down to50now. . . busses roll irtto Ham pton, smal I wh ite A-f rame di strict cou rt, f i lm crews everywhere, state cops . . . waiting in parking lot. . . f ile into a small room, four rows of chairs, six chairs per row. . . J udge McDermott bids us good morning at 10:30. . .we readour group statement, waive proceedings, state recommending $100 and 15 days with credit for 13 served, paperwork as rehearsed, l'm nodding out. . . we appeal, Manny of Clam our lawyer, we'reon PRtil¡ Rockingham Superior Court date, judge goes through tired paperwork. . . Release! . . .anotherschool busride, th i s time to Sm ith Farm, Ken si n gton, courtesy of Clamshell; peoplesigning in. . .afieldof grass divided among various campgrounds, good food, pot of veggies and rice, one of pea soup, horror stories exchanged of armory food . . . beautif ul blue-sky white-church New England day and we arefree. MarkMarinch MartaDanielsworkswith the AFSC in Voluntown, Connecticut, and was at Concord armory. Robert E I I sbe r g wor ks w i th th e Cathol i c Wor ker, a n d was amember of New YorkCity 339aÍf inity group in Somersworth armory. Marty Jezer was in Concord armory. John Lampertiteaches mathematics at Dartmouth College, is on the board of the ACLU /VT and was in Manchester armory . Mark Mar i nch was a member of theSeagu//s alfin ity group in Somerswo rth. Cathy Wolff is a Clamshell mediaorganizer and was in Somersworth armory. t demonstration of solidarity with occupiers of Seabrook nuclear power construction site. Rocky Flats is the plant where all plutonium triggers for the United States' nuclear bombs are manufactured and periodically reprocessed. The nonviolent action, organized by an ad hoc committee of the Rocky Flats Action Croup, was timed to coincide with the occupatioh of Seabrook by members of the Clamshell Alliance. Demonstrators at Rocky Flats shared the slogan with the Clamshell Alliance members, "Better active today than rad ioactive tomorrow. " Spokesperson for the action, J udy Hurley, Boulder resident and mother of three, stressed, "We emphasize the im portance of havi n g com m un ities reassert control over major decisions affecting their lives, such as whether or not they want a nuclear power plant or a nuclear weapons plant -located nearthem." Thé Rocky Flats Action Croup has been carrying on athree year campaign to educatethe public about Rocky Flats, its "missions" and dangers to the human family, with the goal of closing the plant-a big step toward nuclear disarmament. The April 29th action echoed another of the campaign's themes, calling for conversion of the plaht to civilian production of goods needed for meeting human needs ratherthan the highly inflationary production of m il itary weapons. A professor from the Un iversity of Colorado Theatre Department led the group in an Eskimo chant, reminding participants of the wholeness and sacredness of the earth, The action was blessed with athundering rain storm as demonstrators stayed to leaf let workers leaving the plant for the day. The rain was a double blessing to the drought stricken state, as it dampened the soil so polluted with respirable plutonium dust. . The RFAC has organized two town meetings since the April 29th action. The meetings iñ Arvada and Boulder are the f irst in a series óf meetings for citizens to voice concerns to State and Federal decision makers about Rocky Flats and the human costs paid by Coloradans to the nuclear arms race. J une 4th the RFAG sponsored a peace conversion seminar at a public meeting held bythe Rocky Flats Monitoring Committee, a State appointed "watch- dog" committeefor RockY Flats. The Rocky Flats Action Croup plans to hold monthly vigils or demonstrations from May 1977 to Mayof 1978, untilthe special United Nations Disarmament Conference. The monthly actions will help build a voice in Colorado fôr total and complete disarmament, beginning with the closing of Rocky Flats Nuclear Weapons plant. For more information, the RFAC can be contacted c/o AFSC, 1428 Lafayette St., Denver, COB021B. :pam ***** Rocky Flats was built in the early f ifties without the consent or knowledge of Colorado citizens. Since that time, there have been more than 200 industrial f ires, including the largest industrialfire in United States history in 1969. This fire burned 20 million dollars worth òf plutonium-roughly enough to buildTT atom bombs like the one that incinerated Nagasaki. Congress quickly shelled out 45 million dollars to clean upthe mess, afigurewhich equaled the entire 1969 fiscal budget of the plant. 240 Rocky Flats workers and 60 summertime college students sifted through the charred debris to recover the burned pl uton i um. Several h undred rai I road cars shipped the approximately 330;000 cubic feet of radioactive wastes to the then AEC burial grounds in ldaho. Denvercame verycloseto being a burial ground itself . This one f ire burned at a total cost of more than 50 million dollars. The environmentaf and human costs iriterms of potential cancers and genetic mutations häs never been calculated. Forthe most part, the US Covernment has been cavalier about the risks to radiation workers, families and to residents who are asked to tolerate the intolerable. ln 1969, according to Roger Raþoport writing on Secrecy and Safety at Roèky Flats, some 325 workers had experienced radiation contamination at the plant. "Off icially AEC spokesmen say there have been a mere 21 disabling injuries and one fatality since the plant opened. But they ref use to disclose the number of workers who have received the maximum permissable doseof radiation and been transferred to cold (non-radioactive) sections of the plant. " J 38WlN June16&23, 19ZZ Solo une 16 & 23, 1977 WIN 39 T and reprocessing atthefacility. TheAction Croup . has cailed for a dètailed plan for the conversion and economic rights of Rocky Flats workers and a com- Respirable plutonium dust has been found in the soil aröund the plant, spread by numerou.s f ires and accidents. One of the accidents was the leaking of oil drums stored outside containing plutonium ' Dow Chemical (then managing the plant) solved the accident by covering the contaminated area w¡th asohalt, Íhe fact remains that the asphalt will not last as loírg as the plutonium with a half life of 24,000 years. Îhis respirable plutonium dust will cause plete analysìs of whether the plant site is suitable Ìorother industrial uses. ln calling for economic rights, the RFAG has urged thatthe economic riáhts of local residents whose property has been damaeed be taken into account as well. Th;RFAG claims that the making of nuclear bombs at Rocky Flats poses inevitable health and safety hazards for those of us who live there. These risks are not acceptable to the people of Colorado. Thev will not be acceptableto any community. The ieopardy of local people is a microcosm of the threat ôf nucleârwar to all the human family. This jeopardy only builds on the growing consensus for nuclear disarmament. - Pam Solo and John Wafer .un.ãi. Cancerof the lung is probable, while I \ plutonium cariied in the blood stream to the reproäuctive organs can cause genetic mutations. Bone cancer and-leukemia is also likely. The hazards of olutonium have been widely publicized. Recently änother toxic material has been reported to have leaked into our environment. Radioactive cesium has been found in the soil by a nearby J efferson Countv Public Health off icial. ERDA and Rockwell have bêen quick to deny that the cesium came f rom the plant. Why the quick and vehement den ials ? Becäuse cesium is a f ission product, that is, it is created only from "acriticality event" or.in other words, a nuclear explosion. Rockwell and ERDA claim ihat the cesium levels are not any h igher than background levels f rom nuclear bomb tests of the oastlDr. lohnson who ran thetests forthe Jeffco ilealth Dépt. says the levels could be higher and the distribution patterns, with f urther testing, would demonstrate whether or not it is f rom "normal backgrou nd" sources or f rom a f i ss ion reaction atthe plant itself . The Rocky Flats Action Croup (RFAC) has as one of its goals to close the Rocky Flats as a nuclear weapóns facility and end all plutonium fabrication Rocky Flats. Photo by S. Kosanicki/AFSC' Pam Solo is on the staff of the AFSC, an org,anizer of the RFAC and a member of the Colorado State Mon itor i n g Com m ittee for Rocky F I ats. JohnWafer is on thestaÍf ôf ColoradoClergy an.d Laity Concerned, an organizer of the RFAC and on the stafÍ of the Environmental Action Reprint Service. TDltrtlllN'J ' The Town of Orwell in western Vermont near Lake Champlain has been called the best potential nuclear plant site in the state. Officials from the Central Vermont Public Service Corporation (CVPS) deny any def inite plans to build a plant on a 2,000 acre tract owned by several dairy farmers but have meanwhile.been urging local residents to keep their options open. Orwell citizens have not been wooed, however, and on May 10 voted to oppose nucléar power plant constrqction and the storage and transportation of nuclear wastes through the town. ln an extremelyclosevoteOrwell, located near historic Mount lndependence, joined 36 other Vermont communities which have recently gone on record against nuclear power. On Towh Meeting Day this year the nuclear industry took a beating when all but two of the communities considering a nuclear referendum decided to oppose nuclear development. Voters in Orwell had tabled the item but local citizens collected enough signatures to force a special election. The outcome, occurring about a week after the occupation of the proposed plant site at Seabrook, NH and just four days after Vermont Yankee nuclear plant revealed a new radioactive spill, is another setbackfor pro-nuclear forces in the Creen Mountains. CVPS, chief sponsor of the Vermont Yankee plant in Vernon, personally handled the campaign ägainst the Orwell referendum. Off icials visite{ pérson-to-person with residents and took local Selectmen on atourof the southern Vermont plant' The utility promised clean power if a plantwas ever built-not to fnention tax benefits. According to anti-n uclear organ izers the Seabrook occupation and report of a spill at Yankee counteracted the CVPS publicity campaign and ended in victory by a six-vote margin. Theutilityïas disappointed bytheoutcome, but, spokesman ilussell Avers said that Orwell is still considered a prime si[e. He added th.at a decision will probably not be madeforseveralyears. Ken Snyder, a school bus driver who helped lead the anii-nu-ke campaign, was happy.aboutthe 50 per. cent voter turnouibut said that the closeness of the vote indicated that residents didn't f ully "appreciate the danger and health hazards. " ln spite of this. the exõression of public opinion may be taken a stép further next year by pushing for a town ordinance. Anti-nuclear votes in Orwell and other Vermon+ communities may not be legally bind4g but the anti-nuclear atmosphere is expected to effect decision-making in the Vermont legislature, which must approve the construction of any atomic facility. After the Town Meeting votes Vermont's lone Congressman J ames J effords said that, "The people ofãt least 35 towns have said they have no äoniidence in the way nuclear power is regulated bv the federal eovernment. Thev have challenged the right of theJederal government to make decisionsõn this issuewhich will havean impacton life in their communitiei." Although the State legislature hasn't yet been asked to aþprove a new atomic site it has begun to consider nuclear issues. ln late Aprilthe strongest waste control bill in the country was passed and signed by Republican Covernor Richard Snelling' Hóuse Btll261, which passed the Senate unanimously on a voice vote, requires legislative approval before a nuclear waste storage site or spent iuel reprocessing facility can be built. Criteria for approval includehealth, safety, aesthetic, historic, aiiand water purity, natural environment and economic -ïË factors. i;ãi;iãtur" rnuy have to exercise this new power beiore very lonþ. Vermont Yankee faces 7'interim" fuel storage problems and has begun talking about buildinÈ a regional dumping facility for its nuclearwastes. Plantoff icials have already aiked;the N uclear Regulatory Comm i ss ion ( N RC) to approve a plan tq triple the capacity of its present spentfuel storage pool. Thefederal government, h'owever. has been slowtodecideon the handling of the spónt fuels which can be lethal for hundreds of centuries. Yankee has had a historyof mishaps. The most recent spill, 500 gallons of radioactive water discharged into theConnecticut River on March26, . was ñot reoorted for over a month because off icials considereä the leak "inconsequential." That may be accurate in comparative terms since 83,000 gal lons of I iquid waste contai n i n g.rad ioactive tr¡tium was ipilled in J uly 1976 The problem of spillage has been compounded by improper design of the emergency core cooling system and a constant emission of radioactivity producing high levels in the surrounding area. The cooling system crisis, which could have resulted in a major meltdown, was handled by closing a cost of $2.6 million to To deal with emissions a thick ratepayers. Vermont lconcrete wall was built around the plant's turbine to shield radiation from the sides. The riverside was left exposed. The Vernon plant operation has also been criti- the plant for repairs at cized for carelessness in trucking nuclear wastes over dangerous roads, traveling in the wrong lane and failiñg to tell authorities about shipments in advance. Áccording to research by Harvard student Charles Beigen, shipments traveling through Vermont for Yankee include fresh reactor fuel tiansported on state roads about eight times a year and iolid waste shipments leaving plants at Vernon and Rowe, Mass. morethan 50times annually. There have been accidents, one.in New YorkState for example involving atruck loaded with two tons of spent resins from Yankee. Accidents are likely to continue as shipments increase, concludes Bergen, and spent fuel shipments-if they begin - will be the most ilangerous. Yankee may try to avoid this criticism by storing its wastes on site. The Seabrook occupation and possibility of a plant in Orwell by the1980s have accentuated the äebate about nuclear power in Vermont. The utility has already spent more than $200,000 to create a more positivê public image and, along with some local officials who expect tax benêf its, argues that the anti-nuclear votes will not discourage f uture plans. Officials in Burlington, Vermont's largest , r city, are apparently not as conf ident. Mayor Cordon Paquette recently denied Burlington voters an opportun ity to con sider the nuclear referendum and is beine sued bv Vermonters for Safe Power in a'driveto piace the item on a special election ballot. I n February the n uclear opponents asked Burlington aldermen to place the construction, . transpórtation and storage item on the March ballot. Aïter a ref usal 1 ,724 signeltures were collected to force the issue onto a special election ballot that had been arranged to reconsider a school tax issue. Paquette, who is on record in favor of nuclear power and was sensitive to the statewide signif icance of a Burlington vote, invoked a little-used authority in the city charter to block the referendum. The resulting lawsuit in Superior Court asks Paquette to rescind his exclusionary or' der. J udge Silvio Valente has said he would order a special election later this year if he rules in favor of Vermonters for Safe Power. Working closely with other Vermontorganizations suchãs the Vermont Public lnterest Research Croup as well as the Clamshell Alliance,.the Burliirgton-based anti-nuclear group will have its hands iull this year. Downplaying the anti-nuclear votes CVPS is hoping for a f lexible legislature and the oreference of Vermonters for their own nuclear facii¡ties over purchase of power f rom out-of-state plants at higher prices. ' lf Orwell does become a proposed site or if Yaókee receives legislative approve for a storage facility nuclear opponents rnay be confronted with anether Seabrook-style situation of public opposition versus utility lobbying power. Atthe moment, . - June16&23,1977 WlN4l however, anti-nuclear forces have several signif icant victo.ries to review and some critical legal work ahead. -Greg Guma Creg Cuma works with anti-nuke forces in Vermont. 3 altlt/D The second unit at TMI has not yet received an operating license, and hearings resumed on J une 6 in Harrisburg. Among the issues under consideration at the hearings arè evacuation plans, waste disposal radioactive emissions, which Metropolitan Edison Co., operator of TMI has said willdouble if the second unit is put intooperation. :Steve Kraft ISl,¡lNl) Approxi mately 500 hel i um-f i I led bal loon s were released by a coalition of anti-nuclear groups at the Three Mile lsland nuclear plant (TMl) on the banks of the Susquehanna River at Coldsboro, PA on April 30. Each carried a tag stating that it symbolized radiation-both the low level radiation that is routinely emitted by a nuclear power plant and the radioactive fallout that could result from a major accident-and asked finders to mailthe card bàck so it could be determined how far and in which Stev e K r af t w r i tes for th e H arri s bu rg I n dependent Press, from which this article is adafted. (MaV 6-20 issue.) 'llRll)llN'l' \ RG LADELPI{IA qqrryYlll. BALTIMORE Vlñal¡nd a aN.w lLly ATLANTIC CITY Soñat Balldons symbolizing radiation from the Three Mile lsland nuclear plant were released ai Goldsborã (star) on Apri I 30. Th us fari cards attached to the balloon s have been return'ed from the locaiions shown in small type (there were multiple returns from Wilmington and Vineland)- Harrisburg, Baltimore, PhÌladelphia and ntlanticCity areãlso shown for reference Mapby Steve Kraft/t{arrisburg lndependent Press. 42WlN tune16&23,'1977 cluster of hopef ul tree-planters and their collection of ladders, trowels and potted plants. As the talk and the singing ended, the créwd parted like a curtain and a nearly silent, seesaw drama began. The blankets and sleeping bag pa{s that were thrown onto the high, barbed-wire "'vee" of the fence to permit safe climbing were persistently crossing the street to begin arrests. A group at the gate formed themselves into a seated circle around blood-painted symbols on the sidewalk and were quickly arrested. Then three of us were discovered to be chained to the gates and were taken away, freed by the boltcutters carried by police. Within an hour all 17 of those arrested were released on personal recognizance. They rejoined us atthe nearby rally point, having been charged with third degree crimi nal trespass. From the standpoint of this observor, we had a r,emarkably good reception from many and almost no outright antagonism. I believe that nrinviolence is better understood and appreciated forour having been there. Those who want to relate to the ongoing campaign against the Trident should contact AFSC, RD 1, Box 494, Voluntown, CT06384. :-Tom Mclean' again . Ladders set i nto pos ition were repeated ly Tom McLean, who was a long distance walker on the ContinentalWalk, is a long time peace activist. pushed away. Croton police watched only briefly before 1977. This article is reprinted frorn Peacework, June Demonstrators gather around Treeof Life moments before planting. All six arrested at base were Seabrook graduates. NE I D photo bv Clen Al lvord , The Atlantic Life Community returned as promised to the hometown of the Trident submarine, Croton, CT, on the weekend of May 20 and 21. Some 150 of us, many fresh from Seabrook with colorful ban- ners made in New Hampshire armories, gathered Friday evening at Connecticut College's Harkness Chapel for a rally and teach-in. By Saturday PENNA MD fence warn ing sai lors not to speak with us . At the Electric Boat plant, our approach and rally around the engineering building gate attracted a ¡izeable audience of townsfolk and off-shift emplovees as well as EB security personnel. Much of the security force had its attention on the small heaved back. Replaced, theywere heaved back direction airborne particles would travel. The dozen cards retuined so far indicated a def inite pattern -a band stretching east and southeast from the Harrisburg area. With a slightly diÊ ferent weather páttern, the northern part of the Philadelphia area or even New York could be affected. At a meeting the following Tuesday, several organizers of the action expressed surprise the balloons and radiation traveled so far. There was speculation that many balloons may have been carried out to sea.. " . Most of the individuals mailing back the cards requested further information. They will be sent the results of the prolect and put in contact with an anti-nuclear group in their area. Letters to newspapers and local governments in the area where the balloons were found are also planned. attempted to enrich Armed Forces Day festivities with a symbolic tree planting and were arrested by shore patrol in full riöt squad dress who pushed past the commander's greeting committee. All were released soon afterward without being charged. Other shore patrol guards toured the base morn ing, another 50 or so had arrived to follow our Trident Monster's "homecoming" trail. We spoke our concerns through music, street theatre and remarks by Rev. William Stringfellow atthe Naval Underwater Systems Center, where data gathered from the oceans is used to develop and sophisticate sea-borne weapons systems. Our six-mile walk continued, our homemade Trident Monster puppet attracting attention by its 560 feet in length, its 408 dark pennants signifying the number of nuclear warheads that each Trident submarine will carry. The Navy wants to build 30of them, at a total cost of $BQ billion. The keel-laying ceremony for the second of those 30 Tridents took place without ceremonyon April4 at Electric Boat in Croton. EB is a subsidiaryof Ceneral Dynamics, the nation's seventh largest Pentagon contractor. We crossed the Cold Star Bridge into Croton and stopped at the US Naval Submarine Base, the northern port for the NATO f leet and a stockpile base for nuclear weapons. There, six of us Photo by Bruce Martin ).une16&23,1977 WlN43 Center. CANT has been organizing opposition to both nuclear power 'plants and to the disposal of other plant's nuclearwastes in New Mexico. Thev have planned to join with the Sociäty for a New Earth, which is protesting the construction of the Palo Verde Nuclear Power plant in Arizona, in conferences and future With over 9Oo/o oÍ the J une Z vote co_unted, the referendum to repeal a Dade County \ ordinance .' guaranteeing gay people protection from discrimination in employment, housing and public gçgomodations has been passed by Miami residents, 200,058 to 87,871 , The orig_inal law was passed by the Dade County Commission ov'er tour months ago. The repealeffort gai ned national'attention when singer and te. .vision personalitv Anita Bryant took the lead of the anti-gay rights forces. Bryant, a f undame.ntalis.t Baptist, fôrméd a group called "Save Our Children,, contendìng that the law gave gay people license to recruitãnd molest ch i ldrert. She also stated that homosexualitv was an abom ination agaÍnst Cod. Cay rights groups and civil I ibertarians nationwide supported the efforts to maintain the itaiuiã. The decision is expected to have national.impact on gay peoples, regat rrghts. A number of cities have adopteà similar ordinances in recent yéars; none of those ran into the implacable and hysterical opposition mounted in Miami. 44WlN lune16&23.1977 Bryant told newspeople she was had an information booth. establishing a national committee On Sunday, May 1, a caravan of to fight homosexuality. She ' vans and station wagons left the characterized gay people as emCoalition's off ice, headed for the bracing a "lifestyle that is both Trojan plant. At the plant, an inforpêrverse and dangerous.,, matioñ table was set up to disJ ean O'Leary, executive tribute literature to sightseers. director of the National Cay Task The main point of conðern is the Force, said after the vote:,,The spent-fuel wastes. The Federal defeat for human rights in Dade government does not allow private County is all the evidence anyone companies to dispose of the wdstes could need of the extent and' themselves, but the government virulence.of prejudice agaínst leshas not yet devised a plan for disblans and gay men in our society, posal either, and so the wastes are and of the necessity to redouble' stored at the plant, Under the our efforts to end such prejudice recent revision, more wastes can and the discrimination it be stored,, further increasing the in spi res . " danger of contamination frd Cay rights activists have leakage and exacerbating the pledged to continue struggles for problem of future disposãI. simílar laws elsewhere aðross the Scribe country. -Newsdesk -portland NO NUKES IN NEW MEXICO TROJAN NUKE PROTEST Demonstrators gathered at the Pacific Cas and Electric (pCE) company's building in portland, Oregon on Apríl 30 to protest against the increased spent-fuel allowance at the Trojan nuclear pgwer plant near Portland [see W lN, 6 / 6l andagainsi nuclear plants in genéral. After circling PCE's $42 million com24 /7 plex, the group of about 50 people marched around Saturday Market, where the Coalition for Safe powei April29, the Friday before the occupation at Seabrook, The Citizens Aga.inst Nuclear Threats (CANT) held an anti-nuke demonstration in Albuquerque, NM at a dinner honoring Senator Pete Domenici. Charging that the Senator is a "friend of the nuclear industry,, who has been "ignoring the proliferation of pìutoniüm that would result from the breeder reactor," some 50 persons, manv in dinner clothes, chanted .,Nuclêar waste: No thanks!" as they picketed in front of the Conveñtion EVENTS . AMHERST, MA- Towards Tomorrow Fair at University of Massag Seabrook occuPàtion, Crai SimPchusetts, exhibits of alternative vice WRL and member son. CANT energy, alternative systems. chairperson, said, " if either Power Speakers include: Buckminster r plants or nuclear waste disPosal " Fuller, Murray Bookchin, Barry sites come to New Mexico, we'll Commoner, Ralph Nader, Dick have to do it here too. ' ' For informaWeeklY Gregory, )une24-26. -Seers Rio Grande tion, contact: Towards Tomorrow, 105 Hills North, U Mass, Amherst, THAI J UNTA STARTING TR¡ALS MA. On Oct. 6th,1976 a right-wing BOSTON - Livi ng NewsPaPer juntatook power in Thailand Isee Theatre Collective, Paul Cole and Wl N, 10/21 /7 61, in a bloody coup Turnout perform a Program on which left hundreds dead and "Radical Art" at Community thousands under arrest. PoPular Chu.rch, 565 Boylston St., SundaY, outcry and international pressure J uné 19, 11 am. For information, have forced the junta to release call (617)266-6710. many of these prísoners in'the CHARLESTOWN, WVA-Confollowing months. ' However, spme of the student ference on health care as a tool for social and economic change for and labor leaders and intellectuals people f rom so-uthern West Vi rwho were most active in bringing ginia, Saturday, J une25. For democracy to Thai land in 197 3 or information, contact: Pat MurraY, who have been active sincethen Box 315, Cabin Creek, WV25035. are being brought to trial on a variety of charges, ranging from ENTERPRISE, ONTARIO- Con"communism" to murder and ference of I ntentional Communities treason. They face long prison ion Community, RR 1, Dandel at sentences or death. The first group Canada, KOK 120, Enterprise, of 23 is supposed to go to trial on )une24-26. Workshops in strucJune17. relations, It is possible that Prime Minister tures, interpersonal of ity, distribution equal sexual Thanin Kraivisien will use his For information, economics. labor, power to order summary execution contact: Dandelion, (613) before then. lf he does not, the 358-2304. $22 conference fee. students will face a kangaroo military court, without the r:ight to JAMESPORT, NY- Picnic for a counsel. I nternational groups such nuclear f ree environment, at the as Amnestv lnternational have exbeach near the site of the ProPosed oressed coñcern for the fate of J amesport nuke, SaturdaY, J une these orisoners and thousands 25 , 1 pm . For information, call others like them in Thailand' Charlie and Audrey Raebeck, (516) We urge you to send a telegram 276-6564or write: Suffolkfor Safe immediJtelyto:. Energy, Box2000, Riverhead, NY 11901. Prime Minister Thanin Kraivisien Thai Khu Far Bldg. Los RNcelES-women's Bangkok, THAILAND Cathering on Nonviolence and Feminism, ) ulV 22-24. Fot inforDemand: mation, contact: Nonviolent 1) Do not invoke Article 21 against prisoners; Feminists, 237 Hill St., Santa oolitical )) Op"n thetrials to the public; ad- Mon ica, CA 90402, (213) 469-07 49. $10 registration. mit international observers; demonstrations. Referring to the CAY RIGHTS LAW REPEALED lN MIAMI; DADE COUNTY VOTERS OVERTURN ORDINANCE BY 2 TO 1 MARGIN 3) Observe UN standards for the tieatment of prisoners; allow observers to visit them in the detention centers where they are held; 4) Respect the UN Declaration of Human Rights, which Thailand has signed. - Union of Democratic Thais NEWHAVEN, CT-National Conference on United States' Responsibi I ity to Vietnam. Speakers include: Don Luce, Cora Weiss, Cloria Emersori. Yale Law School, Saturday, J uly9. Sponsored byAFSC, WILPF, P,romoting Enduring Peace. For information contact: Conn. Peace Action Coal ition, 853 Townsend Ave., New Haven, CT06512. $3 registration. NYC- First meeting of NYC anti-' nuke, alternative energY glouP, Monday, J une 13, 7 Pm atthe Free Association,-5 West 20th St', for information , call {212) 673-0663 , 677-0570. Panel on Soviet Dissenters movement at the Free Association, NYC- Friday, June17 ,7:30 Pm. NYC- Bob Palmer speaks on "Anarchism and Maoism in China" at Freespace Alternate U, 339 Lafayette St., Friday, )une17 , B:15 pm. For information, call (212) 225-0322 . 52 contri buti on NYC- Don Luce . speaks on his May trip to Vietnam at the Washington Square Methodist Church, 135 West 4th St., Sunday, J une 19, 5 pm. For information , call(212) 964-6730. NYC- Picket and demonstration against Australian uranium exports at Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser's visit, Waldorf Towers, Park Ave. & 50th St., Wednesday, June22,1 pm. For information, contact Friends of the Earth , (212) 675-5911 SANTA CRU Z, CA-Noñviolent Training Program at the Resource Center for Nonviolence, J une 17-30, includes workwith United Farmworkers, WRL/West, Ecumenical Peace lnstitute. For information, contact the Center at: Box 2324, SantaCruz, CA 95063. WHITE PLAINS, NY- Friends of WBAI meeting at Westchester People's Action Coalition, 100 Mamroneck Ave., Thursday, J une 16, B:15 pm. WHITE PLAINS, NY-Film show, "There Was An Evening; There Was aMorning" on Vietnam's liberation at Wespac, Friday, J une 17 , B:15 pm . Benef it for SOS Vietnam. $2 contribution. June16&23,1977 WIN 45 BULLETIN BOARD PUBLICNOTICE Peacemaker Orientation Piogram in Nonviolence, Birch Valley, Lum, Michigan from August 14-27. Registerwith John Lein¡nger, 1255 Paddock Hills Ave., Cinc¡nnati, OH 45229. 513-242-7980. A Peace Seminar will go to the Soviet Union August 7-28,1977 . Participants w¡ll meet w¡th Peace Committees, Friendsh ip groups, visit collective farms, factor¡es, Young Pioneer Palaces, historic s¡tes and cultural centers. Moscow, Leningrad, Kiev, Odessa. and Volgograd will be visited. People desiring to go shouldcontact Promoting Enduring Peace, POBox 103, Woodmont, CT 06460. lf you are interested in disarmament, feminism, war tax resistance, nonviolence or organizing a WRL local chapter and you live in the South, then please contact the new War Resisters League Southeast Regional Office, 108 Purefoy Road, Chapel Hill, NC 27514.919-967 -7244. PUBLICATIONS FREE Magazine featuririg 450 books- natural health, gardening, occult, other interesting sublects. Provoker Press, Lakeshore Rd., St. Catharines 535, Ontario L2R 7C9. - Letters from Dover Armory- send 141 in stamps to Free Flowing c/o LRBS, 108% SEABROOK Hayward, Ames, lowa 50C10. INTENTIONAL COMMUNITY CU IDEBOOK, 1972, $2.25. THE WORLD'S ECONOMIC PLICHT AND COMMUNITY RESPONSIBILITY, $1.25. Send for list of other books on smal I coñìmun ity. C-ommunity Service, Box 243W, Yellow Springs, OH45387. \ READ THE CUARDIAN-newsweekly gives MARXIST viewpoint on nat¡onal and internat¡onal news. Special 6 week trial sub $1 . (One year sub: $17). Cuardian, Dept. W, 33 W. 17th St., NY, NY 1001 1 . PRODUCTS ,,WE CAN STOP THE NUKES-SEABROOK'77'' Bumperst¡cker avai lable for a donation (pay whatafford- all proceeds go to the Clamshell Alliance, Seabrook, NH). Order from Kate Donnelly, Bax 27 1 -W, Newvernon, NJ.07976. Send 131 stamp for information on nuclear power. ever you can Holly Near, Victor J ara, Margie Adams and about a h undred more womenfs, labor and other pol itical records available through Bread and Rosès Mail OrderCatalogue, 172420th NW, Washington, DC 20009. Most albums $5.50 + .50 postage. Wr¡te us for any pol itical record or for free catalog. The Fatted Sprout is an alternat¡ve food service with aconscience. We can provide lowcost, individuallytailored vegetarian food for organ izations and groups from 25 to 3000. We are a collective within The Movement for a New Society. Contact us if we can help you with food issues or food for your group: 906 S. 49th St., Philadelphia, PA 19141, Q15) 729-5698, EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES WIN's computerized mailing service cooperative needs a respon sible, conscientious, self-motivated new staff person to start by Sept. No techn ical skills ' are needed since we provide train¡ng. The work requiresthe abi I ity to work with others and an organized mind and work hab¡ts. We needs someone with a long term commitment to providing the communications lifeblood of the movement. Reasonable movement salary. Commun¡ty Mailing Service lnc., 3525 Lancaster Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. 19104. Phone 215-EV2-6096. OB OPEN INC in Peace Conversion Program. Ceneral organizing, Research, and Office Skills Needed. lnquire lmmediately: Friends Peace Committee, 1515 Cherry St., Philadelphia, P a. 19102; 215-241-7230. The Schoot of Social Development, Universityof Minnesota, Duluth has three faculty positions for 1977 -7 I in administration, organ izin g, human behavior, and plann¡ng. Minimum qualif ications: fortwo temporary posit¡ons-MSW and three years experience; fortenure-trackposition: Ph.D. andexperience. Send vita by J une 30to: Dr. Nancy Hooyman, Schoolof Social pevelopment, Univers¡ty of Minnesota, Duluth, MN 55812. Work Exchange: Summer position sought as maintenance helper, cook, or assistant, in peaceful summer sett¡ng. I will work in exchange for seminars, classes, community. (Perhaps in a program or institute ¡nvolved in humanistic psychology, health issueo, drama, art, dance, or educational alternatives). Sharon, PO5621, SantaMonica, Cali- 1906.3. (215) 565-0247 . EMPLOYMENT WANTED forn ia 90405. LIVINC ALTERNATIVES Small collective needs working women members to help develop socially progressive aspects of agricultural life. Doorajar, Rt. 1, Alexandria, TN 37012. 6',15-548-8355, Two pæple experienced in communes, groups, the Movement(s), looking for women and men to found a revolutionary community based on cq¡ing ways of doing the fol lowing: broad and deep consciousness, cooperat¡on, spontaneityof thought and action, gror 240oo'gtrt, :rtj,31?:::i:i TNSTEAD OF PRISONS:A HANDBOOK FOR ABOLITIONISTS, an anthology ed¡ted and beautifully designed by Mark Morris and issued by the Prison Research Education Action Project pp. . . . . . . $6.50 Nechayev,48pp S. , ...30É MARTIN LUTHER KING byJonathan Powers. First pamphlet to summarize his whole story. 2opp 0 ..2s1 WOMAN HATING by Andrea Dworkin. The sexual political cond¡tion of women as revealed in fairytales, pronography, Chinese footbinding, the slaughterof women. 217 pp. . $3.95 ANARCHISM by DanielCuerin. An absorbing document of its history and theory. ...... 166pp $2.45 THINKING LIKE AWOMAN by Leah Fritz. Essays on the growth of the Women's Movementfrom the viewpointof one who grewwith it. Sharp and witty thoughts on education, sexuality, separatism and a few satirical surprises. Softcoveredition, 160pp. . . . . ., . . $3.25 f Dreif us "Radical L¡festyles," and address them- : .. .. '..25C IUSTOUT!The Powerof the People, magnifiãent photographic history of nonviolence. Well BAKUNIN ON VIOLENCE, a letter to New Midwest ¡nstitute seeks unself ish, sociallyconscious, non-careerist, MA-PhD MOVEMENT und-raisers. Prefer economists, political-sc¡ent¡sts, etc. Sem i-scholarly studies on war-peace reconversion, etc. Applicants.must READ Cross and Osterman "The New Professionals" pp 33-72, Studs Terkel "Working " pp 525-527, 537-540, Claudia ' Fight Male Chauvinist Piglets! 0r Fed up with little squealers? H¡gh School Women's Liber¡tion is a Pamphlet with'20 articles by and for young women which will help r:aise your conciousness. lt's only $1.25 from Youth Liberation, 2(X)7 Washlen¡w Ave,, Depl. W, Ann Arbor, Mi. "n"rgy AND the latest butto¡ against capital þunishment. lt asks: "WHY do we kill people who kill people to show that killine people is wrong?" of Syracuse, NY, 207 (81/z x11) Position available: Seven yearold alternative high school needs f¡rst rate outreach person to keep going. Job includes: visiting (with others) high school counselors and méntal health clin¡cs seeking students; hass¡ing state programs for student referral and aid; fundra¡sing; etc. Low pay, satisfying community life and work, lots of fringe benefits. Write us why you'd like job and think you'd be good Woolman Hill, Deerfield, MAO1342. will also copy recordings for their Louise Michel Library and for distribution. The Brandywine Alternat¡ve Fund is a group of Delaware and Chester County, Pennsylvania citizens working to reorder priorities away from military programsof war and war production to a greater emphasis on people's needs and social development. Besides sponsoring educational and action programs, the group is making a small yet positive step to reorde; prior¡ties with the "ålternative fund. " Th is fund, bomprised of refused war taxes, personal savings, and group investments, makes interest-free loan s to sqcial change and service groups (primarily working in Chester and Delaware count¡es). For information about Brandywine Alternative Fund loanscontact: The Brandywine Alternat¡ve Fund,302 S. Jackson St., Media, PA l'm looking for information (¡n English) about the split in the J apanese anti.nuclear movement between Censuikin and Censuikyo. Would be interested in hearing from people with first-hand knowledge or with ideas about references. C.ontact lan Lind,1139-9th Ave. #41, Honolulu, Hl 96816. The nation's oldest technic¿l " Know-How" magazine on decentralrzed Nuclear Di sarmament Buttons, 10y' êach, 12 for $1, 100 for $6 wor:h wai:in HELP! Seeking mor'e social change workers (poverty, peace, feminism, ant¡-nukes, etc.) to live/work in Maine. Room and board provided. Write L. Dansinger, RFD 1, Newport, Maine 04953. selves to the contents of th is advertisement. M¡dwest lnstitute, -1206 N.6th st., columbus, oH 43201 SERVlCES openness, direct action and consciousness ra¡5ing, nonviolençe, study and analysis, irttimacy, challenge, Feminist understanding and action, all kinds of th'erapeutic approachgs to changing, spiritual consciousness, playf ulness and celebration, bi/gay sexuality, and health. What do we mean bythese? What would you mean. lt would bà great to f ind peoplewho want to livethis way in community, and who feel that living this way will help us be creative in effecting long-lasting overall changes ¡n this society. lf you'd like to hear more arid talk about your iriterest in th¡s community, write: FSB Project, Route 2, Box ¿105P, Hi Ilsborough, North Carol ina, 27278. (919)732-4069. (We'reopen to moving). J Tapesoftalkson anarchism by Karl Hess, August¡n Souchy and Murray Bookchin available for $4.95 from Our Ceneration, 3934 St. Urba¡n, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Also available, tapeof Utah Phillips sing ing IWW songs ($3.95). Our Ceneration WRLutera¡ttrre production. Fe¿tures on practrc¿l energy prolects, detailed plans, rnlormalion 50urces, equ¡ pmen t ä va¡ l ¿bility, and mdch mofe energy intcr¡¡t ¡nd bad< istr¡ afo avail¡blo to ,compLte Your library of tcchnic¡l "know'hou/'. Publi¡hod qurt.rly d Your publication sounds like what I need in order to roally do the tæk ahead; 1 yr./5.00 l-l sample fl subscriP- U copv |J rion 1.75 please send more info Name Addrass City sta$ Zip Alternat¡ve Sources of Energy Magazine Deþr. A, Rr. 2, Box 90A, Milaca, MN 56353 - - CL'II} WRL T-SHIRTS. Broken rif le with War Resisters League spelled out above. ln ordering, specify size (extra-large, large, medium, small) . . . . $4 and color (blue, yellow, white) To: WAR RESISTERS LEAGUE 339 Lafayette Street New York, NY 10012 I enclose: $"[] i;;iË ¡i"." ! "t'u.løãuãã ehclose: $ as a contr¡bution to the WRL. t name: ¡18104' Address: Zipt 46WlN )une16&23,1977 lune16&23,1977 WlN47 - e^