I .r'ï'i April 27,1978/4Ol PEACE & FREEDO{\4 IHRUNONVTOLENT ACITON , , Lesso/rs of the Coal Etrike The Coal Strìke Ends: the ttruggte Continues ' - -lsraet GeneratÍng Power for the Peop|e \ Notebook t túe.tÞ It's true Detroit has a lot of ugly parts, .. but it's got a whole lot of good things too. As for housing stock, despite well publicized mismanagement and fraud involving HUD and FHA property, contriiuting to large areas of decay and abandonment, thè quality of housing temains consistently better (and at more reasonable prices) than in most urban areas. Most homes in Detroit and the surrounding area ate detached one and two family dwellings. And there is a lot of remodeling and home improvement work done. Building standards and codes are substantially stronger than most parts ofthe country, particularly \ Catherine Lowe's letter of2l16/78 was, to me at least, a critical questioning of the entire editorial policy of WIN, as well as a quÞstioning of WIN's analysls of social issues. In the 14 months since I've been reading WIN regularly, I don't recall any explanation ofthe policies of WIN on how articles are chosen or solicited, how they are changed (the editing process), and where the responsibility for WIN's political perspective lies. The following are important questions to me. and perhaps to many others; I sincerely hope you can respond to them in your pages: How are articles obtained? Are people asked to write them? Or do most authors voluntarily send in an article? Do you get more articles than you can print? Ifso, ' how do you choose which are printed and which are not? If there are no articles dealing with certain political perspectives, such as sexism as the root cause ofviolence, is that the primary responsibility of the WIN staff, because they control what goes into the paper, or the WIN readership, because they're not sending any articles of that kind in? Or both? What is your editorial policy? Peacemaker, in its February issue, printed at .least part of its basic guidelines, which relate to length, literacy, and prohibition of artiiles advocating violencé. Does IYIN have similar guidelines or additional ones? Ifso, what are they? And what does the WIN editorial board do? If the example of Bill Moyer and Alan Tuttle (Custer's Last Stand") is not isolated, some changes are made in articles withoutthe author's knowledge. WIN is not a current events paper. If significant changes are recommended, can't they be sent back to the author(s)? Time should not be that crucial. Ifthe changes are insignificant, why make them? On the bottom of page three ofeach issue, you say, "Individual writers are responsible for opinions expressed and accuracy of facts given. " Why should writers be held responsible ifyou change their words and meanings? If you feel there áre real "inaccuracies" in the article, you have the freedom to make editorial comments within or at the end ofthe article. , Finally, I see a lot of names reappearing in articles and book reviews. Hõw about an appeal and encouragement for new people to write for WIN?-Then we might get exposure to some of the poli- tical perspectives that haven't bee-n adequately represented in IYIN. _LARRYDA¡TSINGER New¡lort, Me. forth for ¿brlef period. We try to be sensitive to an authorts concerns, but the line between changec in content for grammatic¡il versus elltorlal purposes is sometlmes fine. Authors and editors have different perspectives on this, but few authors eipeci their material to reach publication untouched. gr4ly go back and We do not (nor does any publlcation) always find the perfect balance. Our editorial changes are almost excluslveþ To respond to your questlons: concerned with style; we never edit Some WIN articles are solicited from articles wlth the lntent of ch¡nging the specift c individuals and olganlzatlons, meanings or cohclusions. while'othors arrive unsolicited. We do We continually encourege WIN indeed receive moro articles than we readers tó write and const¡ntly seeknew print. 'Whether an ¿rticle runs or not authors. Many articles that appear are dopends on a number offactors: that we by people whose writing ls new to V[¡IN. feel it is well written, or at least clearly Of course, our regular co'rrespondents written; that the article offers lmportant provide avaluable b¿ckbone of information on a cwrent.event; provides continuity in many ateas. Since many of cogent or insighfful analysis, furthers dia. them aró veteran activlsts in awide arroy logue among activists or offers construcof fiolds , their experience creates e ftrm tive criticism within the movement. We base for their insights which ¡re hlghly could go on, but thore is ectually no list of valued among WINts readeré. -WIN criteria for an articlets acceptance. All articles are discussed at weeklv staff meetings; final declslons ¡re rñade there. To Rodney Robinson (WIN, "Letters" The staff tries to keep abreastof im. 3/30/78), whereveryou maybe: the US portant topics, fill gaps, and expand the Post Office has inform.ed me, viareturn scopeof WINts covèrage. Butbecause of mail, thatyou have "Moved, leftno our limited resources we ate sometimes address. " I wouldvery much like to join not as succéssful as we would like. We you in a "Swords into Plowshares" count on V[rINts activist readers to help demonstration at the United Nations this us where and when this happens, both May, but lack a means of contacting you. I would suggest that interested blackby submitting artlcles or by suggesting where we might seek them. smiths (including friend Robinson) The editori¡l board meets once a contact me, 8s soon es posslble, so as to month to discuss WINts past content and bring this excellent idea into reality at offer suggestlons on gources for fEtûre the UN Special Session on Disarmament. orticles. They also asslst in fundralslng and promotion programs. They do not 1800-ANDYSWIHART ShroyerRd. Apt #4 exerclse any direct control overTÍIN or Dayton, Ohio45419 Its contont. (s13)293-0384 In many articles, some changes are necessary for grammatlcal reasons. Pte. In a review of the film Blue Collar(WIN, cious few wrlters fail to viol¡te the Enc3/16/78) JimPeck said "the filmgives a Iishlanguage in somefashlon, and wð beautiful overall view ofthe Detroit attempt to rectify the situatlon to the scene: the ugliness, the thruways, the best of oür abllltles. When signlficant factories, the pasteboard-looking changes are neceseaty we tr¡r to retu¡¡r workers' homes in the suburbs-no the articles tb-the wdters or, at leq,st, scenic beauty anywherè. coneult wlth them. WINIg a cu¡rent What's so ugly aboutfactories and evente peper oporatlng under a weekly thruways? This statement is a slanderdeadllne, and lf we wlóh to publlsh an ous and grievous insult to all your article qulcHy, our author contact can readers in the mighty motor iity. " New Yotk and the Northeast coast. I don't have time to write about all the ri'onderful and not so wonderful places and people we have. I r¡ean, howrpany cities have the Hoa Hoa Inn (an Appala- chian-Chinese restaurant), Martha Jean the Queen Steinberg, and a thirty-year 'one-cent paint sale? Anyway how can you call a place ugly that has given America Aretha Franklin, Vernors Ginger Ale, Strohs Firebrewed Beer, and the Big Boy? No more knocking the motor city, ok? , _MISIERBEIVEDERE Detmlt'Mlch. It appears that David Albert is a victim of wage slave ideology in his paragraph on food coops in "Do Alternative Businesses Foster Social Change?" (WIN 4 / 13 / 78) He calculates his coop's worth versus time to establish a wage rate is an old capitalist idea that insures good ptofit making and reasonable control ofthe workfotce. An analysis ofa food cooperative via wage compafisons seems out of place, to me, in an article authored by an anticapitalist activist. (This I assume from the biographic r1ote.) Food coops are attempts by people to come together not only for financial savings, buttobuild feelings of self-reliance and to create some spaces to enjoy yourself in this con- sumer-materialist rat-race that is America. Coops aren't work factories that exchange savings for sweat. The labor needed to run a cooperative can be non-oppressive, slower, irore congenial than in the average workplace. A coop can be a fun place to be in whether shopping or helping out with the work. Daiidalbert muit remember a lessoh from capitalism: it's real hard to get loose and have fun if money is always on your mind. I don't know how much David measures his time to be; currently I get around $3.S0/hourfor mine. This wage is an iron ring, and I resent it as a slave symbol of how a capitalist economy controls me. The time I spend at my coop is mytime-I'm there of my ownfree will. Measuring that time at so much an 4. Lessons of the Coal Strike Jennifer Axelrod B. The Coal Strike Ends: The Struggle Continues BillCriffen 11 . " Dirt" / poem by J une Blue Spruce 12. lsrael Notebook Stephen Sulfet 16. Cenerating Power for the People/Marty Jezer hour isjust a silly exercise in capitalist 17. Changes mathematics. If your time is so valuable you can always pay 9SClhour for the neon splendor ofyour local A&P. 20. Review/ Bill Blum _KENKOæERG AlletonrMaes. at 9SClhour. This measuring of money Cover: photo of mineworker from Pacif ic News Service. STAFF Susan Beadle o Robert Ellsberg r Lauri Lowell Murray Rosenblith Patrick llacefield ...AND RIGHT ÆTER I INVOKED TAFÎHARTLEY THE \^/ORKERS AGREED TO RESUME I'IININq ? WHV THAT SURE IS MIGHTY NICE OF ÎHEM, Susan Pines ¡ Atlantic Ave. l5th Brooklyn, NY 11217 503 Floor UNIND¡CTED Í[Ìlril {il|il| tltl[N $lllllt lt¡llh Íil|¡ ; Telephone : (21 2)624-8337, 624-8595 Co-CoNSPIRATORS / ' Sandra Adickes ¡ peg Averill. e J an Barry. Lance Belville o Maris Cakars' ¡ Susan Cakars¡ . Jerry Coffin o Lynne Shatzkin Coffin o Ann Davidon r Ruth Dear ¡ Ralph D¡Cia' . W¡lliêm Douthard . Dwight Ernest . Ruthann Evanoff. Chuck Fager. J im l-orest . Larry Cara. Ed Hedemanir' ¡ Crace Hedemann * o Marty J ezer. Paul Johnson ¡ John Kyper o Elliot Linzer' ¡ Jackson Mac Low. David McReynolds' . Mary Mayo. David Mqrris o Mark r J im Peck. lgal Roodenko' o Vicki Rovere' Wendy Schwartz' . Martha Thomases . Art Waskow. Susan Wilkins o Beverly Woodward *rr¡r ,, I' I' 'Memberof WIN Editorial Board A H] ,i,, Cartoon by Michael Scurato/LNS. 2WlN April27, 1978 April 27, 1978 lY ol. XlV, No. 1 5 WIN is published every Thursday except for the first week in January, the fourth week in March, the second week in J une, the last two weeks in August, the f¡rst two weeks in Septembef and the last week in December by W.l.N. Magazine, lnc. w¡th the support of the War Resisters League. Subscr¡ptions are $15 per year. Second class postage paid at New York, NY 10001 and additional mailing offices. ln.dividual writers are responsible for opinions expressed and accuracy of facts given. Sorry-manuscr¡pts cannot be returned unless accompanied by a self -addressed, stamped envelope. Printed in USA April 27,'1928 WIN 3 , Empty co.1l cars ¡tì Pennsylvania-one month after strikebegan. Photo by Mark ZolalYS. \ . picket it, bri n g i ng the whol e workforce out on stri ke until his safety grievance was satisf ied. Now he would be expected to go on working and hope for the best. (ln practice since1974, the average case has taken 44weeks to resolve. ln West Virginia, 90% of the decisions have gone against the miners, in favor of the companies. ) So wh i I e th e 197 4 contr ad d i d n't exp I i c i tl y f orbid local unauthorized strikes, by introducing an alternative grievance procedure (Arnold Miller's pride and ioy), the contract implied that local strikes were no longer necessary. Since 1974the companies have followed a policyof appealing the decisions which go against them, all f ive steps up the appeal ladder if necessary, meanwhile securing court injunctions against local unofficial strikes.. ln three years the courts have levied $100 m illion in f ines against the union for strikes by UMW members of which its leadership disapproved. A small.percentage of the f ines have been paid. Most are on appeal. t Coal ß I I inally the 1978 coal strike seems to be resolved. Before it begins receding into history, can some logic perhaps be discovered in its alarming course? Can its surprises be madeto seem a little less arbitrarythan they appeared when they hit? Clearly, we'll be hearing from the coal miners again. It wasn't only the newspaper-reading public that was taken by surprise. The coal strike's intractability was equally unforseen by most of its princi- pals. When the earlier negotiated settlement was rejected in February by the membershipof the United Mine Workers of America, the UMW presi4ent, Arnold Miller, was as surprised as everyone by the abyss separating him from his rank and f ile. Back in 1972when he was elected, Arnold Miller J Axelrod Huntington, ViçSinia. Her articlesfrequently appear in Maw, A fr4agazine of Appalachian Women, U4 Huntington, WV 25701. 4WlN April27,1978 Bth issues.- íssues like mine safety, working conditions, hours, etc. Someof the union's WestVirginia activists did get together and start a "Right to Strike Committee" which then published (under the gruff title Contract Stinks) a vilif ication of the contract and of Mi ller as its arch itect. These activists objected to the contract's elaborate new grievance procedure. lf a miner felt endangered and considered his mine to be in violation of the federal Mine Safety Act, his recourse would be to report the violation to the union. lf the un ion couldn't get satisfaction, it could appealto five, successively higher levels of government.. Traditional ly, an endan gered m iner's recourse had always been to getoutrin frontof his mine and Street, had been the rank and file person if ied. Retired by arthritis af¡er more than 20 years in the mines, Miller had helped to lead the suc'cessf ul f ight for a strong federal black lung coçnpensation bill. When Tony Boyle was suspected of complicity in the murder of his rival J ack "Jock,, yablonsky, a groundswell movement within the union called Miners for Democracy swept Boyle out of off ice and Miller in, Then came 1974 andcontract time. One of the planks of the Miners for Democracy had been the right of the rank and file to veto any contract nego- tiated bythe UMW leadership. Verywell: the miners would havethe rightto approveor rejectthe 197 4 contrãct with the Bitu m i nous Coal Operators Association. Arnold Miller's popularity was high in1974 and nottoo many miners were alarmed when they learned that the contract would, by implication, disavow their right to stage local strikes about local Copyright O 19zB Jónnifer Axelrod. And in the 1978 contract negotiations thecompanies have insisted that the new agreement include a clause expl icitly outlawin g stri kes unauthorized by the union's leadership. Th is is essential ly what the conf I ict, and the confusion, has been about. There is one other bone of contention . lt arose . only last summer, when several companies quit paying benef its to retired miners covered under a welfare and retirement f und devised by J ohn L. Lewis in 1946. Thecompanies andthe union, jointly responsible for the f und, had somehow allowed it to go bankrupt, meanwhile lavishly endowing a new welfare and retirement f und establ i shed in 197 4. The timi ng of the 1 946 fund's bankruptcy couldn't have been more fortunate for - thecompanies. When benefits ceasedto manyof theolder ex-miners last summer, wildcat strikes immediately broke out far and wide, accompanied as always by charges and counter-charges within the UMW. Thus the union suffered newfactionalism on the eve of the contract negotiations. But really, why allthese unauthorized wildcat strikes in the coal f ields -that's what the rest of the country wants to know. Certainly mining is dangerous work, but so areotheroccupations whose union contracts have long since incorporated "no-strike" clauses. ls mining that much more dangerous than steelworking or construction ? Or are miners simply an undisciplined lot? I believethe country can only hopeto receive an answer to its query by beginn ing to take an interest in more than just the uninterrupted f lowof electricity to its electric outlets. Mi n i ng ultimately depends on the morale gf the mineis, and not much has been contributingtothat morale lately. Not much has been contributing to that morale, really. since the end of '.Vorld War ll, but automation hastaken upthehuman slack. Untilnow. Coal mining was f irst established in Appalachia in the last two decades of the 19th century under the aegis of hardbitten Scotch and English entre- preneurs, highly skilled operators and engineers .who broughtover from theold country a stern,,' Calvinistic ethic. Their loyalty to their employees, albeit somewhat stingy, was nonetheless unfeign.ed. ln return they demanded loyaltyfrom their men-a loyaltywhich few in thefirstor second generation of Appalachian miners begrudged them. Theywere rough, colorful, competent bosses, not loathe to go down the pit and swing a pick them selves . But the owners were men who wouldntt bend. The Uniteó Mine Workers, for instance, was anathema to'them. For 40 years years they held out against it, notyielding an inch, untiltheir resi stance was broken i n 1 933 . After that they ceased, as it were, to draw life f rom the mines. They contin ued to draw the money, but many of them moved away and left dailyoperations in the hands of qanagers. ln the 1930's the miner's loyalty shifted from his companyto his union. But was it indeed his union ? That's what he's been âsking of late with ever greater insistency, for un ion ization came to Appalach ia from the top down, not from the grassroots up. True, the epic str"uggles of the early 20th centurÌ4 to unionize the Appalachian coal industry are legion. Who has not heard of Mother J ones and her nocternal organizing forays along Cabin Creek, West Virginia underthe shadowof Pinkerton machine gun nests? Who hasn't heard of Harlan County, Kentucky? What isn't so well known is that those decades of brave and bloody confrontation-all those secret union pledges in the woods, paid for later at the butt of a mine guard's gun-actually accomplished nothing toward either ameliorating conditions or April 27, '1978 WIN 5 establishing the union. The lowwages, the child labor, the brutal production quotas, coritinued unchanged. From the 1890's, when the UMW f irst sent organizers to West Virginia (among them Mother Jones), until 1933 when Franklin D. Roosevelt became president, all the will in the world cou dn't break the paternal i stic company-town system brought from.the British lsles by the company founders. Elsewheie in the nation the UMW'made progress aplenty. lts lllinois, lndiana I and Pennsylvanía members secured model contracts. But in West Virginia and Kentucky, which together mine half the country's coal, union members were hunted men. Then in 1933 all that changed overnight. With the passageofthe National RecoveryAct, John L. Lewis saw his chance. lncluded in the NlRAwas a vague and apparently meaningless provision recognizing the right of workers to engage in a'col lèctive bargai i g. n n " Lewi s seized on that provision, publicized it, insisted that it guaranteed federal protection to union organizers and members, and proceeded to commit the entire UMWtreasuryto a driveto organize Appalachia. He sent out a hundred organizers to hold mass meetings and announce, "The President of the United States wants you to join the union. " The UMW "obligation" was recited by massed miners throughoutthe region. Within two weeks southern West Virginia, the sceneof so many agonized failures, was organ ized. Roosevelt signedthe NIRA bill orÍ J une 16, 1933. \ On J une 19th a UMWorganizer named Van Bittner wrotefrom WestVirginiathat Logan County, the bastion of anti-unionism, had been organized. On J une 22nd Van Bittner wrote, "The entire northern (West Virginia)field, as well as the New River, Winding Gulf , Kanawha f ield, Mingo and Logan are all completely organized. We finish up in McDowell, Mercer and Wyoming Counties this week." (Quoted in lrving Bernstein, The Turbulent Years,1971.) Th us was the f abled loyalty of Appalach ian miners removed like a mantle from the shoulders of their bosses to the shoulders of the no less pater. nalistic John L, Lewis. Whatthe miners hadfailed for 40 years to ach ieve for themselves had been visitéd uþon them like a bolt of lightning. The coup was followed in summer 1933 by an Appalachian J oint Agreement that improvedwages ánd conditions. When the Supreme Court struck down the N I RA in 1935, the threat of a strike nonetheless enabled Lewis to get a better contract for his men. The 1937 Appalachian Agreement again raised the daily wage, despite the continuing depression. Not until 1939 was there a UMW strike in southein West Virginia. After a six-week walkout Lewis settled for a union-shop clause and, in view of the 1939 recession, forewent a wage increase that year. ârlVlN April27,1978 After a'one-month strike in -1941, Appalachia's minersfinally achieved wages equal to those of northern miners: $7 a day. Theonly significant mining areato survivethe 1930's un-unionized was Harlan County, Kentucky, a bastion of "captive mines" owned by other than mining companies. What's significant about allthis forthe 1970's is the long shadowof how aftertheir years of f utile self-sacrif ice, Appalach ia's mi ners final ly ach ieved unionization. Before 1933, totakethg union pledge was a iJangerous and, essentially, individuai moral step. To join in 1933 along with eVeryone else carried no danger but also no glory. Realpolitik from the top had accomplished whatthe ultimate in moral commitment from the grassroots had abjectly failed to achieve. The lesson has not been forgotten. When miners feel they've been worsted by the outside world, by the world of realpolitik, any spark is sufficientto setoff local strikes. This has been true since the 30's. Whatls different since the 1974 contract is that those local strikes are no longer being viewed by management as the signalto negotiate. Rather than sitting down to air the grievance and negotiate it, the operators' new policy is to seek a court injunction. And the courts . have been ordering injunctions againstthe local strikes, spurring the aggrieved miners to try to spread their strikes as far af ield as possible in hopes of establishing a position of strength from which to negotiate. This explains the extensive Miners assist an in jured comrade. Photo f rom The ùilitant. ¡n Virginia, arrned trooPers to force miners back to work. Photo from lhe Call. wildcat st¡:ikes of the summ çrsof 1975 and1976, originating in West Virginia but spreading nationwide. fhe197Swildcat, idling S0thousand miners for several weeks, was the eye-opener. The monolithic image of the United Mine Workers evaporated that summer, perhaps neverto be reestablished. Atthe time, I was a printer for Appalachian Movement Press in Huntington, West Virginia. A rumor was circulating that the Right to Strike Committee, the group for which we had printed the Contract Stinks I iteratureìi n 197 4, w as com i n g back together over some sort of local grievance at an Amherst Company mine near Logan, West Virginia. The next evening the phgne rang and I found myself talking to someone with the Right to Strike in Beckley, West Virginia. lt was along toward evening, almost quitting time. The caller asked if we could. work late to print 30,000 copies of a leaf let. He and some others arrived about dark with the copy. They slept out in their car wh ile we typeset the leaf let, which struck a note of stark but eloqgent m ilitance, and ch ur:ned out 30,000 copies. We f inished about'1 am and I went outto wakethe miners. Theypaid in cash-$1, $5and$10bills they said they'd collected earlier in the day at a rally. The next morning another call came. The caller, a woman this time, identif ied herself with the Right to Strike in Charleston, West Virginia. Could we print 20,000 copies for them of the same leaf let? She said the strike activists were working around the clock, driving f rom mine to mine in pairs to picket the shift changes. lncredibly, it was working. Within a few days 30,000of West Virginia's 40,000 miners were on strike and the walkout was spreading to Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Ohio, lndiana and lllinois. Several hundred roving picketers were idling mostof the country's coal production. Pretty soon the railroads announced freight personnel layoffs for lackof coal to haul. A federal court injunction carrying $100,000 a day f ines againstthe UMW was ignored. Mining areas were pervaded by a holiday atmosphere. What was incredibleto myself and others not born and bred in the mountains was that, beyond theoriginalstrikers in Logan County, noneof the thousands involved had a grievance. There was a tradition which said "never cross a.picket line, not even aone-man picket Iine." Againstthe grain of economic self-interest, the tradition was being honored. There was no hope of gains accruing: the contract had two more years to run. Most miners seemed aware that the Right to Strike Committee consisted of radicals, but 1975 proved no exception to thei r h i storic i ndifference to the ideology of thei r organizers. As the strike wore on week after week, and began wearing thin, it began to dawn on the miners thatthe Rightto Strike Committee had no intention of negotiafing with anyone. We printed 30,000 copies of a second leaflet'for the Committee and 20,000 for a th ird, but nary a wh isper did they contain of grounds for compromise. And it soon became obvious that the couñtry/s miners didn't rel i sh goi n g on stri ke on ly to di scover they were following people who didn't believe in exacting concessions from the opposition and then going backto work. The Rightto Strike Committee held out for all or nothing and got nothing. Since 1975 its members have been persona non grata among their fellow miners. The 1976wildcat strike, equally extensive butof shorter duration, somewhat rectif ipd the unpleasant taste left from the previous year. Local and district level UMWoff icials unexpectedly emerged as champions of the right to engage in local, unoff icial strikes. Atthe 1976 UMW national convention in Cincinnati they secured unairimous passage of a resol ution that the next contract should guarantee the local right to strike over unsettled local grievances. ln negotiating with the companies this year, Arnold Miller has ignored that resolution . Many UMW members feel that the union needs to change presidents again. A petition to recall Miller has gathered "tens of thousands" of signatures. Unfortunately, the bridge between the union's leadership and its rank and f ile may not be that easily rebuilt. The historyof coal mining in Appalachia suggests thatthere's not going to be found any passageway back to the verities of an r earlier, simpler day. The UMW, faced with evergrowing competition from non-union Kentucky coal-not to mention the vast ununionized strip mines of the West- is going to be f ighting for its -. I lifethese nextfewyears. lnevitably, the union will have to demand ever greater discipline and pre. dictability from its members if it wants to hold onto its past gains won at the bargaining table. The question is whetherthe Appalachian miner, alienated now not only from the bosses he so fervently admired when mining first entered his April27, 1978WlN 7 ; mountain fastness, but also equally from the union which in the 30's inherited their mantle, will begin looking to some new quarter for a champion worthy of his loyalty-and, if so, to what quarter? Orwill the Appalachian miner f ihally begin waking up to the fact that he really needs no champion beyond the dignity and national importance of his eerie occupation ? Myown belief thatwages notonlytrail adequate and equal benef its and the local right to strike in importance to the m iner, but that al I three together are less crucial than the need for genuine communication between miners andthe restof us! is The cash nexus is inadequate to meet the coal crisis ! Coing down in a dark pit to dig day after day, year after year, requires an unusual level of morale. The loyalty between miner and miner still keeps that morale alive. The choice before the rest of us is to somehow make ourselves participants in that bond of loyalty or to f ind ourselves increasingly its pawns and victims. The UMW has bèen protecting us from the miner's ire, and if the UMW breaks up it's we who'll be exposed to blackmaíl tiythecompanies. Curiously enough, Europe, and particularly England, faced a similar crisis toward the end of the 1920's. Patrick Ceddes made a comment at the timewhich perhaps merits pondering. "We have dared to aff irm that the coal situation is far more than a money squabble," he said. We have treated it as a collapse of the pãleotechnic order of industry, yet with open ing for the neolithic order. " 'Miners \ leaving work in Raleigh Co., West Virginia, on the last shift before the national UMW str¡ke, Dec. 5,1977 .,,Photo by Doug Yarrow,/LNS. The Coal Strike Ends: the Struggte Continues BillCriffen by ' ' Men , if you must die with your boots on, die for your families, your homest your country, butdo not longer consentto die like rats in a trapfor those who have no more interest in you than in the pick digwith." .a- you I he speaker, John Siney, an early union organstood in frontof Pennsylvania's Avondale Mine where 179 coal miners lay dead-victims of a mine explosion. The yearwas 1896. Becausethe mine owners had refusedto spend a comparatiyely few extra dollars from their prof its, an escape exit was never built at the mine. (Boyer and Morais, llizer, Labor's Untold Story, NY, United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America, 1955, p. 45.) The owners ofcoal mines have continued that tradition of prof its overthe safety of the miners ever since. ln the past 30years mine accidents have taken the lives of 15,719 miners, an average of 523 iler year. More than 750,000 have beên in jured in. the mines and over 3,000 miners die from black lung each year. (New YorkTimes,12/4/73 and Wall Street Journal,B/31/74, p. 8.) Whi le it ls true that coal mining rs the most dangerous occupation in the US (the fatality'rate is seven times the averagefor workers in all American industries), industrial work in general is "hazardous to your health." ln 1968there were 14,311industrial deaths in the US; that is the same numberof lives lost in Vietnam thatyear! ln 1969 there were one million newcases of industrial disease. (Work in America, Reportof a Special Task Force to the Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare, M.l.T. Press, 1973, p.26.) It is no wonder the miners, at the top of the hazardous occu.pations list, have fought so hard for the benef its of health care and the right to independently strike against unsafe mine conditions (socalled "wildcat" strikes). ,\ There are important lessons to be learned from the miners' courageous struggle agäinstthose who send them into the mines. Most importaht, B iI I C r if fe n o r ga n i zed ties in Cortland, NY. SWlN April27, 1978 m i n ewo r ke r su ppo rt acti v i- how are we led to perceive th is struggle? How does the media present the issues of the ðtrike to the general public? Listening to the no-nonsense, insightful 15-secoòd-a-shot TV interviews with a fewselected striking miners, one might answer thátthe networks are morethan "f àir" with the miners and their cause. Most of the miners effectively presenttheircaseof being sold short: f irst by the Bituminous Coal Operator's Association's regressive contract offers, and then by their own UMWA leadership, Arnold Miller, et. al. Some of the miners also manage in their few seco¡ds ration of prime-time news to pin-point the larger issue: their f ight to protect the use of the strike-the worker's sole weapon against the entrenched power of the owqers. ln addition to the systemic álliance with mass media, the aff luent owners can call upon an arsenal of weapons: the f inancial assets that accumulate as generation after generation dig that coal out for them, support from political power ranging from the executive to the lower levels of government, andthe managementof publicopinion through slick advertising cam.paigns (union leaders tried borrowing this page from rnanagement's book and put out a hard-sell on contract ratif ication on the 'l st vote, but it f izzled-the rank and f ile are not easily conned). While it istruethatthe miners gettube-timeto plead their case, the TV networks, Timq, Newsweek, the New YorkTimes, and most daily newspapers manage to put the strike (and any other labor struggles for that matter) into a cettain, limited perspective. Therein lies the tremendous power of the media to mystify and render terribly complex what is a basic question: What is a just, de mocr ati c econ o m i c sy ste m ? dents, is feeling the pinch Írom cutbacks in e/ectric power. (US News & World Report, 3/20/78, p. 18.) "Nearly everyone" in the miners'country "is feeling the pinch," but not everyone. Their homes probably tell as much aboutthe differencès among the men who belonþ to the Bituminous CoalOperators' Associatlon as the bottom lines of their companies balance sheets. ln'subur- ban Pittsburgh, topexecutives of US Stee/, which owns tlre sixth largestcoalcompany in the countrY, Iive in elegant mansions. /n Creene County, PA, the owners of small coal mines may own the biggest houses in town, which are usually simple f râme dwellings. ln Pikesville, KY, someownersof mines that suddenly boomed because ol the energy crisis have built French provincial-style houses, known local ly as Ci nderel I a Cast/es. (Time, 3 / 27 / 7 B p. 1 5.) Ilme Magazine goes on to make the point that there exists a class system within the owner's upper class. Butthe all-encompassing class system that always seems to escape Time's editors' attention has produced consistent results in the past 70 years: the richest f ifth of the population takes approx i mat ely 4\o/o of the total i ncome wh i le the poorest f ifth getsonly f ive percentl (Business ,Week,9/12/72.) Along with every symptom of economic inlustice the media cites,,the theme of what the miners' strike is doing to the rest of us is tirelessly hammered away at. Across the broad heart!and of the tJS, the lights began going out. . . Thus, on the outcome of the chaos in the coal f ields hung notonly the pay and benef its of.160,000 Cartoon fronr The Lost Angeles Times, - The mass media appear to be obiective and fair sincethey do describe someof the symptoms of i n j ustice. However, these i n j ustices are treated either casual ly or as ihevitable - part of an i m perfectworld. ln a struggle between coal miners and mineowners, the media assumes the battle to be somewhat even. Our society is supposed to be "pluralistic" with an approximate balanceof power in the socialorder. As US News and World Reportputs it, "ln seekingthe upperhand union, management and governmentall seemed to lack the neededtrump cards. " (3/20/78,p. 14.) Butthe historical reality is that capital has always tfumped labor. Failing to face that f undamental fact, the marketers of news rush on to describe the result5 of the "capital over labor" scenario, a scenario our economicsystem playsout in each generation. Sample: And as coal supplies dwindle, life in Terre Haute, a city ringed by 20 coal mines, becomes more bleak. Nearly everyone, Írom Íactory tofirst-grade stuApril 27, 1978 WIN 9 soft-coal miners, but the f uture course oÍ the economy, the comfort of millions and the reputation of theCarter administration itself . . . . many more f actories will cut backon opera- than î60 billion in cash-almosttriple the amount they had atthe beginning of the 1970's.. . . fhis enormous pile-up of cash has come about partly beòause corporate prof its have climbed by g30 billion since thesta rtof 197S. . . nostcorporations are ignoring their critics and are piling up cash at a handsome clip-to as much as i|o/o of totalassets at sorne fairly large corporations. (Business Wee( 3/13/78 p. 62.) But that $2.35 an hour increasethose miners are to get over the next three years is going to cause an "inflation spirall'! And so it goes-blamethe victim, never the victimizer. ln their struggle against big business, big government, big media and big labor leaders, the coal m iners are delivering a cf ucial message to working women and men everywhere . The miners have drawn a line against fhe rate of exploitation and that is a necessary rnessage'for all workers to put forth. The next step is to draw the line against exploitation itse/f . ln moving toward that second step, the miners' strike has once again reminded us of the obstacles we face. One segment of the working class will be played against other segments with increased frequency while any segment of the workþg class attempting to draw lines against exploitation will be ísolated from the tions and lay off employees. . . ln the meantime, the nation suffers. lt's estimated that if the coal strike /asts until April 1, three million Americans will be thrown out of work due to power éutbacks causedb y shortages of coal. -Quoted from national news weeklies ln the feverish hand-wringing over worsening econom ic conditions, the unmistakable message comes through -the strike and strikers are the causeof it all. Even if the miners settle, the strike has caused serious ecoñomic problems chorus the media. Their "big" pay raise " . . . will givethe inf lation spinal another twist, " boosting the price of electricity and other products that rely on coal. What's more, US News and World Reporttells us, "The pay jump is sure to encourage unions in other industries to seek big increases, too.', (3/20/78, p.12.) The media this time will plug the coal miners' demands into the "increased wages cause inf lation " myth. Next time it will be the auto workers' or \ teachers' or farmers' or con struction workers' increased wages that will cause inflation. Studies using the government's own statistics lead to the opposite conclusion : wage increases area response to inf lation.lnf lation, f ueled by the drive for higher and higher profits clearly precedes and sets in motion the demand for more wages. The caseof the coal miners is not different. And who remains immune from any possible causal blame? Theowners, orthe "over-class," to use the counter-term to the media's lower-class label -the "under-class." lt is theover-class' distorted picture of the coal strike that gets developed and printed; after all, theyown the "cameras, f ilm and processors, " to extend that metaphor. Missing from the mass media picture is a portraitof the over-class itself . Although only four percent of the US adult population is in this class, it own s 360/o of al I the n ation' s total wealth, 27 Yo of all þrivately held real estate,.33%o of cash holdings, 4oo/o of non -corporate bus i n ess as sets, 63%o oi privately held corporate stock, 7Bo/o oÍ state and local bonds (non-taxàble), and99%o of all corporate bonds and notes. (Urban lnstitute at Penn State University study, using IRS figures.) While the right hand of theover-class and their allied media apologists are directing public attention to that "big inflationary" pay increase for the miners, the left hand is concealing what is really going on. The 400 largest US companies together have more 10WlN April27, 1978 entire consuming public in an attemptto discipline militant workers. There are sorne hopeful signs that the divide-and-conquer strategy is losing its effectiveness as other unions and working people réspond with food, money and support for the beseiged m iners. Calls for solidarity are elevated f rom empty phrases to concrete supportive actions. True, much of the support is unorganized, piecemeal and attimes ineffectual; but so were the early protests against the war in Vietnam. One of the breakthroughs in creating a real movement of support for the struggle of the Vietnamese was the development of an analysis of what was really going on -notwhatweweretold was going on. We learned, to paraphrase Walt Kelly's Pogo: "We . have met the enemy and they are some of us.', We thank the miners for dramatizing once again how the system works to benefit the few at the expense of the many. We alsó pauseto recognize the long linethat have marched beforethecoal miners -the ield hands, the texti le workers, the steelworkers, the window washers, the cannery workers and so oh -those who have marched in f strength, dignity and in solidaritytothe same drummer. It is we who plowed the prairies; built the ciries *nå:r"r'!;: I#"r; and buittthe workshops; endless milesof railroad laid. Now we stan d outcast and starving, mid the Th ey h av.e take n u nto I d m iII i on s th"at th ey n ev e r Þiled to earn; Butwithoutour brain and muscle not a single wheel can turn. We can breaktheir haughty power; gain our Íreedom when we learn; Thatthe lJnion makes us strong. Solidarity Forever! Forever" -"solidarityRebe/ Joyce Kornbluh's by Ralph Chaplin from /t Voices: An IWW Anthology To join those marchers and give lifetothe phrase "solidarity Forever!", I urge supportforthe following committed groups. The end of the strike does not mean the end of thestruggle, Miners Support Comm ittee of Southern West Virginia P.O. Box 3182 East Beckley Station Beckley, West Vi rgi n ia 25801 ttt zJ Miners Support Comm ittee c/o Mountain Community Union ' 321 Richmond Avenue Morgantown, West Virginia 26505 ê e o The New York UMW Support Committee 1 56 5th Aven ue SAFETY OR ELSB Room 819 New York, New York 10010 .E ! Ð c ; ô i rt I clean houses for my living. dust the shutters that rich lawyers, urban planners put up to keep the world out. I can't see the dust, the dried up guilt and greed but they can feel it. so they hire me to clean. I vacuum ashes.of burned witches off the f loors in priests' apartmentsvacuum cobwebs out of corners, webs that weave stories of women kiiled by coathangers, women dead in childbirth because abortion violates the rightto life. I scrub toilets for rich doctors and their f am il ies f lush away the "spare parts" ripped from women in surgeryfor no reason- no reason butthe price tag or the color of thei r ski n . I dust the ghosts of Chinese peasants off f ine porcelain -dust the anger and the pain of South Americans who sell their crafts for pennies to survivedust spells from magic dolls now seen as useless objects-dust tiny seals preserved in stone while realones are slaughtered for thei r coats. I make three twenty-f ive an hour. don't you think they should pay more? withoutwomen like me things would be, you know, so messy. -lune Blue Spruce wonders we have made; Butthe Union rnakes us strong. April27, 1978WlN 11 r¡l lsrael Notebook =& by Stephen Suffet with photo by Diana Davies I n manyways I found itdifficulttobelievethat ^[ lsrael is a nation at war, with an undisclosed number of troops carrying out search and destroy missions in southern Lebanon and many more administering territories captured in1967 . Allthe routine signs of homefront mobilization are absent Billboards wh ich could easily be pasted over with rousing patriotic posters are instead adorned with advertisements for popular American movies such as "TheTurning Point" and" ) ulia." Consumer prices are high, but commodities are readily available without shortages or queues. Even gasoline, which costs about 45/. aliter, is plentiful enough not to be rationed. A bitter and sometimes violent strike has closed the port of Haifa for three months, but the government has not yet resorted to f rantic cries of "national security" to force the strikers back to work. On April 1, a radio-TV-newspaper strike began, \ and no one denounced it as th reat to the war effort , "treasonous" or a t The busy streets of downtown J erusalem are crowded every day but Saturday (lsrael's day off) with shoppers who do not seem particularly worried about the prospect of a terrorist bombing, although there have been many over the years. And the Coast Road, the scene of the recent bloody guerrilla raid, is stillheavilytraveled despite its proxim ity to the impossi ble-to-com pletely-secure beaches of the Mediterranean. Palestinian Arabs from Caza and the West Bank journey throughout lsrael taking jobs, buying and selling produce in local markets, and visiting relatives. Everydayvisitors from Jordan, ostensibly an enemy state, arrive across the Allenby Bridge. Arab merchants in the Old City of J erusalem openly peddle articles which one might think would be forbidden: the green, white, and black f lag of Palestine; the red and wh ite embroidered military kafiya (headdress) of the Arab Legion; the stamps, coins, and currencyof even the most hostile nations such as Libya and lraq. Stephen Suffet visited lsrael during late March and early April of this year. '12WlN April27, 1978 Nightcl ubs, bars, and discos throughout the couniry are crowded, and th€re is not even the sl i ghtest tal k'of a blackout or åurfew. The music onã h"u.t i s not national i stic or m i I itary son gs, but current pop tunes from Creat Britain and the United States. Wine, whiskey, and beer flow fieely. Visiting qneof lsrael's night spots, it is hard to imagine that a war is going on. Yet in othèr respects the evidenceof war is inescapable. On a trip to Ein Ceddi, a green oasis amid the J udean Desert not far from the Dead Sea, I observed several groups of school-aged hikers, each of which wus accompanied by one or more rif lecarrying adults. Along the Jordan Valley Road wh ich run s through the occupied West Bank ther:e are a number of military checkpoints where soldiers routinely search vehicles for explosives' Camouf laged transport planes can be spotted on the far tu*ayt of Ben Curion Airport near Tel Aviv, and police caref ully inspect the handbags of unyon" approach ing the Western Wall in Old J erusalem. But by f ar the most noticeable sign of the continuing war is the vast number of people one sees in military uniform. Everywhere ltraveled I saw soldiers-young recruits and old reservists, men and women, imm igrants and native-born sabras ' They f i lled bus terminals, restaurants, and roadside refreshment stands. Theywere in every city, town, village, and settlement lpassed through. Attimes it seemed like half the country was in the service, and in a way it is, for lsraelis are liable for reserve duty through age 55 ' Many reservists were in fact called up for the Lebanon campaign I spoke at length with one reservist who had lust a week on the Lebanese f ront' His reiurned f rom name is Zev, andhe had cometo lsraelfrom the Soviet Union fouryears ago Ngw30years old, Zev was attend¡ n g techn ical school in Haif a and I ivin g in a small village about'15 kilometers away when suddenly summoned to arms a few days after the Coast Road attack. The next day he crossed the border to ioin an ar- it, where he witnessed scenes of absolute destruction . l srael i s enteri n g Moslem vi l lages found that air strikes had forced the local inhabitants to f lee in advance of the attack' Hand grenades were tossed into abandoned buildings to wipe out anyone who might have been hiding tillery un side. Occasionally the soldiers saw a wh ite f lag ly from a house, or spotted elderly residents who hadn't left. ln those cases no grenade would be thrown, but the soldiers would proceed to the next building to continue their operations. in f Sometimes as the lsraelis entered a Christian village, friendly people would turn out in the streets to clreer and f lash victory signs to the troops. Even there, however, Zev reported feeling sorrow and disgust as he saw 13 and 14-year-old 'r boys carrying guns and wearing the uniform of the private Christian militia which f ights alongside the israelis. The Lebanese Moslems and the Pales- tinians also use youngsters in their armies. Southern Lebanon just isn't a placefor achild to be a child these days. Many people told me that morale among the lsraelis in Lebanon is much lowerthan it had been in any previous conflict. Although casualties are relatively low (18 dead as of April 3, including several from 'i non-hostile" causes) and actual t f ace-to-face combat is rare, the overwhelming own its of many made has power of the I sraeli force troops uneasy. Chief of Staff Mordecai Cur recently stated that he would have been surprised and even embarrassed if his soldiers hadn'tfelt any ambivalence. He went on to say that he was sorry for the destruction that was caused to the civilian population, but that it was necessary in order to r¡s'k as few lsraeli lives as possible while still ensuring a maximum dislocation of the Palestinian guerrilla movement. April27, 1978WlN 13 ,, G ,*' "' ,,¡ &.' $. q I L t t officers' letter, Begin reacted angrily to it and áãclared that its éigners represented only a tiny m inoritY of Publ ic oPin ion' ln orderto refute Begin's assessmentof their strength, the reserveofficers called upon allwho supported their letter to demonstrate in Tel Aviv on Saiurday evening April 1. They expected a few thousand people to appear, but to their surprise iive to ten times that many showed up. According io on" BBC reporter, 35,0b0 lsraelis took part in the demonstration. Even the most conserVative place the size of tþe crowd at 25,000' "riit"t. The demonstration was as low-keyed as the roriginal letter, with one featured speaker declari n g : "We are not here to chan ge the government, but to get the governgtent to change its position." Nevertheless, it was the largest peace àemonstration in lsrael's history, and it was allthe ror" ,"rnutkable because it came on the heels of theterrorist attack and the Lebanon invasion' was discussing US politics with several lsraelis one evening whãn thre topic of American I ndians arose. Suddenly somone suggested, "You know I Hasiclim en rr¡ute to the Wailing Wall: \ Zev was glad to be home, but he was so.upset by his experiencethat hetook an additional weekoff from school. Yet, likeevery lsraeli ltalkedwith, he felt that his government's actions, although regrettable, were justif iable. Notone person I met doubted the necessity or the propriety of the Lebanon campaign; they only wished that it were finished quickly. Whilethere is agreement among lsraelis* concerning Lebanon, there are many areas of public policyoverwhich opinion is divided. One such area is the question of how lsrael shal approach peace negotiations with its Arab neighI bors. For strategic reasons, lsrael is committed to retaining'at least a small slice of the Syrian Colan Heights, and for historic reasons lsrael will never voluntarily give up any part of J erusalem. The 14WlN Apr¡127. 1978 government has expressed a willingness to return most or even all of Sinai to Egypt in exchànge for a permanent peace agreement, but at the same time Menachem Begin has adamantly refused to consider a pull-back'from the West Bank region.' Such inflexibility has been a matterof concdrn for many lsraelis, especially since Begin recently began referring to the area as "liberated" rather than 'loccupied. " Most lsraelis feel that their country must maintain sometypeof presence in the West Bank (which lsraelis call Samaria and J udea), but believethat negotiations with Jordan overthe status of that region are possible and desirable. Early in March a group of 300 reserve military off icers, many of whom were combat veterans of elite units such as the paratroopers, published a letter to the Prime Minister in which they ques- those lndians aie going about ¡tthewrong way, pressing their land claims in court. Allthey really 'have to ão is plant a few bombs, h iiack a couple of airplanes, and kill somechildren. Theythey'll be . invited to the United Nations with the whole world applauding them. " The remark was made in iest; but it indicates much of the frustration which lsraelis experience' They are attacked by terrorists and the world is silent; they strike back and they are condemned for it. Untilthis is understood and dealtwith, there is little chance that lsrael will alter its present bar- gaining position. The piimary concern of lsrael is security. lt is a nation of iefugees who landed on its shores for reasons notof ideology, butof survival' lts people came from Europe, and later from Arab countries and then Russia. Many are now airiving from Latin America and South Africa- They have known fear and insecurity in their native coûntries alltoo well, and they seek haven in lsrael forthe simple fact that they have nowhere else to go. lf lsraelis tend to be distrustful, it is because their collective experience has not been one which is èôndusive to developing trust. Vashem, a J ustoutside of J erusalem is Yad which chroniHolocaust of the memorial museum cles in minute detailthe atrocities committed againstthe Jews in the 1930's and40's' As I passed through the exhibits t couldn't failto notice how much emphasis was placed on the fact that the British closed off J ewish immigration to Palestine in 1939, just as the'Nazis were about to launch their exterm i nation qampai gn . The very exi stence of the proposition that , J ewish state is dedicated to the shall never betrayal and deadly a callous such happen again. Now everwhere the lsraelis turn -from the onesided resolutions of the UN to the pressure placed on their government by J immy Carter-they sense that history is repeating itself . I am not saying that they are either rightor wrong in their appraisal of things, but I am saying that despite internal disagreements over such issues as the reserve off icers' letter, lsraeli will not be ready to discuss peace until they feel their security needs have been met. Do lsraelis believe there is a chance for peace? Many do, butthey are notoptimistic' There are simplytoo many "ifs" involved: "lf Sadatcan hold sway. " " lf Hussein would ioin the talks. " " lf the PLO can be defeated. " ''lf the situation in Lebanon can be stabilized." "lf Carter can be persuaded." And evén: "lf Begin can be moreflexible." Somewould add: "lf the Red Seawould again drown ourenemies!" Forafew lsraelisthis last remark is as much awish as it is awitticism. tioned thewisdom of his hard line. ln itthey stated their willingness to fight again if need be, but demanded that their government f irst do all that is poss i ble to avoi d a f uture conf I ict. Despite th'e excepíionally moderate and conciliatory tone of the *Note: / use the word " lsraelis" to mean lsraeli J ews. For the most part I did not speak with members of lsrael's non-Jewish minorities including Arabs, DrLtzes, Circ¿ssians, etc. April27, 1978WlN 15 otD 0 ffiærxætr##gffi# ffiæwær #æY #&æ ffææP#æ hr,, fu6ot ¡'å"r' \ qlrfi $ +ra*lr w í t h d*ri i 6 r: f r ät;ååÌT h*s*${ fìrivate utilities in southern Vermont are fightll¡ng for their existence. At town meetingslhis March, voters in Brattleboro, Vermont and in 13 towns in the West River Valley decided to establish committees to study the feasibility of creating m un icipal utilities with their own public generating plants. Fifteen communities in Vermont, including Burlington,- the largest city- already have municipal power. Springfield, Vermont, with voter approval, is in the process of buying outthe investor-owned utility (lOU that serves its area and bulding its own hydro-electric plant. lf Brattleboro and the West River Basin Energy Committee (WRBEC) join Springfield in creating their own public power projects, the Central Vermont Public Service Company (CVPS)-the largest investor-owned utility in the state-will lose most of its customers in southeastern Vermont. As public power projects promise lower electric rates as well as localcontrol, the idea is sure to snowball. Conceivably, CVPS could be driven out of the state. More than 2,000 communities in the country havetheirown municipal systems. Butveryfew generate their own electricity. Most buy from large federal pro¡ects like the Bonneville Power Authority in the Pacific Northwest and from Tennessee Valley Authority. ln the East, most municipalities purchase wholesale power f rom the investorowned utilities. They can sell to their customers cheaper because they don't have to pay stockholder dividends. The municipal utility in Burlington is an inspirational model for the downstate Vermonters. Burlington recently became the f irst utility in the country to burn wood for electric power. lts own staff converted a fossil-f uel boiler into a woodburn ing facility and brought it on line below budgeted cost. Burlington is also looking into nearby hydro sources and a solid-waste burning plant. Burn ing garbage to produce steam and electricity will also solvethecity's garbage and landfill problem Marty Jezer has been working on public power in Brattleboro for three years and says he never expected to see this much progress. For an in-depth analysis of IOU's and public utilities,see hls article in WlN, 4/14/77. 16WlN April27, 1978 ust as Springf ield, Vermont is goihg to utilize the hydro potential of the Black River which f lows through the middleof town, WRBEC is studying the feasibility of converting two federal f lood control dam s on the West River into hydro projects acquitted by a Columbia CountY jury after hearing defense testimony by expert witnesses on J , And Brattleboro is discussing intervening in the rel icen si ng procedure of the Vernon hydro dam on the Connecticutt River,'which is currently operated by New England Power Company, one of the largest IOU's in New England. Hydro dams on navigable waterways must be I icensed by the federal government every 50 years. The licenseof the Vernon Dam is currently up for renewal. Under federal law, a public utility has licensing priority if itcan provethat itcan operate the dam as well as its originalowner. Obviously Vernon Dam is a long-shot. Despitethe law, no take-over has ever occurred. And Brattleboro would f irst have to organ ize its own utility to competeforthe license, a process that will take a number of years. But the people of Brattleboro have decided that a take-over is an idea worth pursuing. WERBC was initiated by a group called the Middle lncome Consumers Council and the Brattleboro project was initiated by Community Action for Safe Energy (CASE). CASE described its prolect as "A Business Proposition That Makes Sense." Both groups did preliminary research on theirown. As they developed their information they presented it to town off icials and, through public meetings, radio and the press, to the townspeople. Now that the various towns have adopted their proposals, CASE and the Middle lncome Consumers Council have formally withdrawn from the prolects, though members of each group remain active on:the two officialcommittees. Vermont gets a large portion of its electricity from nuclear power plants. Private utilities that dominate the New England power gr.id have continuously ignored hydro and other alternatives in favor of nuclear power. CVPS, for instance, is an investor in the controversial Seabrook nuclear plant. Because of opposition to nuclear power, New Englanders in general, and Vermonters in particular, are knowledgeable about util¡ty problems and aware of the dangers of nuclear power. Butthey have always demanded of nuclear critics that they come up with alternative sources of power. Talking about various alternatives is meaningless unless one has control of capital. Publc power puts investment capital into the hands of the people. lt gives the publicthe authorityto determine how electricity is going to be generated. The battle for public power is going to be intense. The IOU's are f ighting for their very existence. But by the strength of the town meeting victories, th'e initiators of these public power projects have shown that they have earned the respect of the people. 1 i Rumpf , and J ohn F. Kelly, all acquaintances of Truong, by THOUSANDS RALTY IN WASHINGTON TOOPPOSE BAKKE DECISION ir An estimated 20,000 PeoPle converged on the US CaPitol to call on the SuPreme Court to overturn the Bakke case: Allan Bakke, a white student, sued the UniversitY of California because he felt minority admissions quotas had denieühim a place in medical school. His suit l I I I i 1 .l { !,. I J t jr 1! a I $ I t I a ! was upheld in federal district court. Opponents of the decision fearthat such a ruling will destroy the progress of aff irmative actión programs since the civil rights agitation of the early 1960's. . The marchers assembled atthe Éllipse behind the Whité House' They marched down PennsYlvania Ave. to the Capitol, around the Capitol and rallied on the West Lawn. ltwas a sunny sPring daY and the line of march was sPirited with lots of chants and songs' Speakers at the rallY called on the Court to rule against Bakke's claim and preserve affirmative action enrollment programs at colleges, universities and in industry. -Jim i Peck il ì \ t i I f i ACLU SUESATTORNEY GENERAL GRIFFIN BELL AND THREE FBI OFFICIALS Attorney Ceneral Criffin Bell, former FBI Director Clarence M' Kellev. and two other FBI off icials are bé¡ng sued for having violated the statutorY and constitutional rights of four peoPle whose teleohone conversations were overireard on a warrantless wiretaP placed on the telePhone of David Îruong, a former anti-war activist who haé been accused of sPYing for Hanoi. The suit asks for dâ.âges and injunctive relief ' The ðórp[uint*as f íled todaY in the US District Court of the District ot õolumb¡a on behalf of four defendants, J acquelyn M. Chagnon, Bever.ly J . Chagnon, Roger E' American Civil Liberties Union attorneys Mark Lynch and J ohn Shattuck. Attorney Ceneral Criffin Bell authorized the FBI to conduct a warrantless wiretaP on David Truong's telephone f rom MaY 1 1 , 1977 through FebruarY 6, 197 B, ouroortedlv to obtain information beemed essential to the security of the United States and to Protect national securitY information against foreign intelligence activities. The judge presiding over the criminalþrosecution in the case has already determined that a substantial portion of the wiretap was in violation of Truong's rights underthe Fourth Amendment and Title 3 of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968. -ACLU News TROJ AN DECOMMISSIONINC ALLTANCEANNOUNCES NEW CAMPAIGN AGAINST OREGON NUKE Civil disobedience to shut down the Trojan nuclear power plant wil I take place with peoPle arriving at the site on four consecutive days in August, the Trojan Decommissioning Alliance announced APril 12. Declaring that "in allconscience we cannot allowthe continued operation of Trojan," the Alliance said that concerned citizens will arrive at Trojan to nonviolentlY block entrances to the Plant starting every daY August 6 through August 9, as Part of an ongoing effort to shut down the nuclear plant. There were over 200 arrests on trespassing charges atTrojan last year during two Alliance-sPonsored protests, as demonstrators blocked entrance gates at the plant. ln the first mass trial of the Protestors, all 96 defendants were dangers of nuclear power. The Alliance is sponsoring a commun ity edqcation camPai gn throughoutOregon in the coming months, focusing on short-term and long-range health dangers and economic drawbacks of nuclear power at a grassroots level. The anti-nuclear coalition also announced plans for a week-long i nformational trek through communities all over Oregon, culminating in convergenceon Salem the evening of Friday, J une 23, to be fol lowed by a rally at the state capital the next day. On the same day as the Salem rally, demonstrators will be occupying sites of proposed nucleàr plants at Satsop, Washington and Seabrook, New Hampshire. "We are taking action in self-defense, in defense of the people of the Northwest, and for children and grandchildren whó already are burdened by the nuclear wastes being generated by Trojan and other nuclear reactors," the Alliance said. Decommissioning Alliance --Írojan SCRAMMING NUKES IN SCOTLAND Britain's f irst occuPation of a nuclear power plant site will take place May 6. On that daY, SCRAM (The Scottish CamPaign to Resist the Atomic Menace) is co-ordinating a mass march, rallY, and . occupation at Torness in Scotland. According to SCRAM "Torness wou ld on iy be the start. " The South of Scotland Electricity Board (SSEB) has said theYwantto build another ten nuclear stations in the next 20 years, in Scotlancl alone. The SSEB has alreadY at least Z0 percent too much electricitY generating capacity. There is good evidence to suggest that their forecasts of f utureelectricitY " demand are much exaggerated. " l n contrast to other countries, there has never been a large scale man ifestation of publ ic opposition to nuclear power in Britain. lt is time we showed our strength. " Clamshell Alliance News - April27, 1978WlN 17 I.T ance to hold its J anuary meeting in the town and offered housing for free in a motel as well as the com- GAY PAPER IN LONDON SUFFERSCOURT DEFEAT ON ,,BLASPHEMY''CHARGE The London-based newspaper Cay News recently lost an appealof a conviction under Englandf s Blasphemous Libellaw. The paper and its editor were prosecuted under the statute after one of the country's best known anti-gay crusaders, Mary Wh itehouse, filed a suitagainstthe paper. Whitehouse charged that the paper had -{' unlawful ly and wickedly" libeled the Christian religion when it pt¡blished a poem depicting J esus Christ as a homo- -Craig Simpson I WHYPAYYOURS; THEY DON ,lt PAYTHEIRS AstheApril ln addition to upholding the original conviction, the three judges on the British Criminal Courtof ' Appeals also granted court costs to 17 lnternal Revenue Service (lRS) tax form deadline has just passed, remer¡ber that 1 7 US corporations paid absol utely' no federal taxes in 1976 despite combined earnings exceedin e$2.5 -LNS billion. MAJ OR ANTI-N UCTEAR VICTORY IN NEW MEXICO The f.irst major victorv in the antinuclear movement in New Mexico camé April 3rd when Chem-Nuclear of Bellevue, Washington announced its plans to abandon its ' proposed nuctear waste disposal site outside of the scenic town of \ ment. CactusAlliance sexual.' Whitehouse. munity center for meetings. I n a state where the n uclear i ndustry began and has nuclear research, proposed burial and uranium mining this victory in Cimarron is extremely significant for the whole anti-nuclear move- Cimarron. The company named four reasons for dropping its license applí- ln a recently completed survey intothe corporate practices of 108 US corporations, Rep. Charleç Vanik (D-Ohio) disclosed that the companies were today paying half the taxes in proportion to their revenue that they were paying 10 years ago. The congressrnan's investigation conf irms the view that US workers proportionally shoulder the burden of federal taxes while the corporations take cation: 1) projections thatthe state would not approve of the permit application within 15 months while the company hoped for reprocessing to begin within 6 months; 2) the DOE report recommending the fedeial government take over I icensi ng of low-level radioactive wastes; 3) requirements placed on ,the company by the Environmental Protection Agency for additional geohydrologic work costing the company in the neighborhood of , advantage of a plethora of loopholes and get off easy. "The reason pollsters sooften find that the voters in their samples harbor suspicion they are being cheated is, curiously proposed forthe burial refused to renew the contract to allow ChemNuclear to operate on the ProPertY The average fámilyof four with an income of $10,000 paid a higher proportion of taxes than did Mobil Oi I , wh ich settled lor a 4 .5o/o tax on revenues of $3.8 billion. 'o Exxon was prompted to pay the same rate of income taxe s , 8o/o , as a US worker who took home $6000 annual ly. The giant corporation paid 8% in taxes on earnings of $7.5 billion. -Guardian $500,000; 4) the owner of the land ' with an option to buy later. Despite these reasons the local citizenry of Colfax County had or-' ganized to stop the site from being built. ln mid-February the Cimarron Chamber of Commerce voted 32-0 against the site. The town had invited the Cactus Alli. eno-ugh, that we are being cheated, " commented wiiter Murray Kempton recently, in reference to Vanik's f indings. Am'ong the study's revelations: . Unit'ed States Steel paid no taxes in 1976 despite an income of ,BURGER HIGH TEST, ANDA REGULAR FRIES' If your food looks a little greasier than it used to and you can't f igure why, checkthe ingredients label on the side of the package. You may f ind a substance called "Torutein" listed butyou will never f ind an explanation of what that awf ul sounding thing is. Torutein is the newest product from the oil companies, those wonderf ul people who brought you oil spills, DDT and PCBs. lt is the coming thing. . . a petroprotein. Presently, you can find Torutein in convenience meat products, baked goods, frozen foods, some Cerber baby dinners, soups, gràvies, Wise barbequé chips, tortilla chips, Milani salad dress- ings, Prince's máçaroni, French's croutons and LaCtíoy Chinese food products. Even though petroprötein is a hidden product today, tomorrow's future looks like a gusher Amoco Foods (a division of Standard Oilof lndiana) future recipes wil I ínclude what they call "food analogues." Analogues are actual food items that will be created totally from synthetics. "We're working on something we call'The Clam Thing' right now," said Marketing VP J ack Shay. "lt's an extruded plastic- like product. lt hasthetextureof clams, the flavor of clams and it looks like a piece of clam without the shell. " Shay hopes that eventually h'is company will market a whole line on snack foods. And we can say "Fill it uþ" atthe supermarket as well as at the service station . Ah yes, better eating through chernistry. - Harrisburg Monthly News $518 million o BARNWELL, SC- National Mobilization for Survival and Palmetto All iance action against the Barnwell Nuclear Fuel Reprocessing Plànt, April 30-May 1. For more information, contactthe Pal- i metto Alliance, 18 Bluff Rd., Co' lumbia, SC292O1(803) 254-8132. . BOSTON, MA-Helen and Scott Nearing speak on "Continuing the Good Lifel' at the CommunitY Church, Morse Auditorium, 602 Commonweallh Ave., SundäY, April30, 11 am. For information, call (617) 266-6710. Merritt of the Campaign Against the Arms' BROOKLYN, NY- SandY Trade, London; sPeaksonthe ln- ternationalArms Trade at Park Slope Methodist Church, Bth St. and 6th Ave., SundaY, APnjl.3O, 11 am. BUFFALO, NY - "Wannsee, " a play by Eric Bentley, will Premiere April 27 atthe PfeiferTheatre in downtown Buffalo. For more information , call(716) on Thursday, 831-204s. CAMBRIDGE, MA - Andre Cardinal will speak on "Quebec Labor, Nationalism and the Parti Quebecois" on Friday, April28, Bpm at MlT, 105 Massachusetts Ave., Building9, Room150. SPon- formation, contact the Bai I ly Alliance,711 S. Dearborn, Room 548, Chicago, I L 60605 (312) 764-5011. NEW BRUNSITICK, NJ -Debate between Ralph Naderand Shephard Bartnoff , president of J ersey Central Power and Light Co.,'at Rutgers College Cym, Col lege Ave., Friday, April29, 8pm. For information, cal I (201) 932-7 681. . NEW HAVEN : Conference on "Women in the Paid Labor Force" atthe New Haven YWCA, Saturday, April 29.For information, contact J udy Robison, New England Cooperative TraininB lnstir tute, 216 Crown St., room 404, New Haven, CT06510 (203) 776-0451. NEW YORK CITY - New York Democratic Agenda conference on NYC redlining, health care, social Series. services,'etc. with Paul Dubrul, Michael Harrington, Robert Abrams and others on Saturday, Before 1990? The UN Special Session on Disarmament," on Sun- day, April30, 11am, attheThird Unitarian Church, 301 N. MaYf ield. for more information, öall (312,)626-938s. DENVER, CO- National action aga"instthe Rocky Flats WeaPons Facility on April 29-30. Sponsored by the Rocky Flats Action CrouP, AFSC, MfS, WRL, FOR. For more information, contact the RockY Flats Action CrouP, 1428 LafaYette St., Denver, CO 80218 (303) 832-1676. KENT, OH - Annuat commemoration of the Kent State massacre' beginning WednesdaY, MaY 3, 7pm with concert bY Barbara Dane and avigil. Memorial Programf Thursday, Mày4, 11 :30 am at Campus Commons. For more informãtion, contact MaY 4th Task April 29 atthe HunterCollege ' Playhouse. For more information, call (212) 260-3270. N - Mobi ization benef it concert with EW YORK'CITY for Survival j NEW YORK CITY - RatlY at the United Nations for disarmament, May27. Speakers include: Helen Caldicott, John Conyers, J immY Durham, Mdrian StamPs, Dan Ellsberg. For information, contact the Mo6¡l¡zation for Survival, 339 Laf ayette St. (212)47 5-1 1 80. MORRIS, lL- Rally and demonstration against the "Mdrris Operation" nuclear power plants, beginning Sund4y, May7,1pm at Cebhard Woods State Park. For in- sored by the Black Rose Lecture CHICAGO, lL-Dr. Homer J ack will speak on "Human Extinction Worker. Force, 241 Student Centef, KSU, Kent, OH 44242 (216) 6724207 . NORFOLK, VA- Second Tidewater Lesbian/Cay Confêrence will be held atOld Dominion Univer- l sity on May 26-28. For more information contact ODU GaY Al I iance; F.O, Box 11123, Norfolk, VA23517. PHILADELPH¡A, PA-"The Furies of Mother J ones," a Productibn by the Little Flags Theatre, will be presented on Friday, April 28,8pm at International House, 37th St. and Chestnut. For more i nformation, call 47 4-9592. PROV¡DENCE, Rl New England Trai ni n g Center for Commun ity Organizers will hold a training sess ion May 1 5 -24 . For more information, contact Bernadette Brennan, NETCCO, 19 Davis St., Provi-' dence, Rl 02908 (,+01 ) 274-5268. - ROCHESTER, NY- Regional May Day March and Rallyon Saturday, April 29. For more information, contact: May Day Coalition, c/o Creat Cleari n g Bookstore, 144 WebsterAve., Rochester, NY 14ffi. I DanielBerrigan, Rev. F.D. Kirkpatrickand others on Friday, April 28,8pm at Union Theological Seminary, 120th St., artd Broadway. For more information, call (212)673-1808. NEW YORK CITY- Day of Friendsh ip and Solidarity with Vietnam program at Tishman Auditorium, NYU Law School,40 Washington Sq. South, Friday, April28, 7:30pm. $2 donation. For i nformation,' call (212) 586-57 44. NEWYORK CITY-J im Wallis, editor of "Sojourners," wi ll speak on " Prophetic Communities, /' May 5, 8pm at Maryhouse, 55 E. 3rd St. Sponsored by the Catholic SOUTH ORANGE, NJ Energy Conference with Ralph Nader and Amory Lovins on Sunday, April 30, 1-5pm atTemple lsrael,432 Scotland Rd. Admission $2. Sponsored by the SEA Alliance. For more information, call (201 ) 7 44-3263. - UPPER MONTCLA¡R, NJ New J ersey SANE dinner with Margaret Mead on5aturday, April 29, 8pm at the Women's Club, 200 CooperAve. For information, call - (201)744-3263. VOLUNTOWN, CT - Movement for a New Society Northeast Regional Cathering at Community for Nonviolent Action, May 5'7 . For information, call Mary at(617) 623-s326. April 27, 1978WlN 19 l8WlN April27, 1978 REHËEW populist cìimate and they did much to dispel Carter's ;;;;q; u, u påliti.ul outsider' Thev werealldeficient' imporfro*uult, in explaining the Commission's for a new world order in its aftermath. The program Brzezinski, wh ich emphasizes international cooperawasinauguratedonSe.ptember12',lg3g,aiameeting tionandplanningunAru.onnt"sthattheUnited between Hamilton Fish Armstrong, edit'or of Foreign States can no longer policãifre wàiiã aøn". Aff airs, and Assistant secretary.ot stutuêeárg" s. within the corincii .t;;";""1; thãiransnationalists Messersmith as a joint project of the Council and the have the upper hand, as is iuif"ãtà¿ by the two Department of State. programs the Council has turn.Á"J to restore global Out of the study groups came the proposals that equilibrium: the Triláteruf Co,nÅ¡irion and thã less would guide US fbreign policy for decades to come. To çe'lsþ¡ated 1980's p.oju.t. Ài-t'träugÏ tf't" Commission ensure prosperity and securityafterthewar, the us is legallyautonomous (buc"uie ¡irïembership is wouldhavetoorganizeeconomicandpoliticalcontrol international,whileCFRstandingislimitedtoAmeriover what Council planners referred to as the "Crand can citizens), the Council prouìàei leadership for both Area,"asectionoftheglobewhichthenincludedthe groups.ThemajorityofUS,lcommissioners,"are Western Hemisphere, Western Europe, the Dutch CFR members, and 11 Councildirectors, including East lndies, China and J apan. David Rockefeller, siton the Commission. At the war's end, the CrandArea was rechristened Of even greater importance. the basic objectives of the "Free World" and Cor4ncil member Ceorge the two enìárprises iOãnii.uj. According to a1975 "iu Kennan,writingas"Mr.X"ÍotForeignAffairs,was Council¡1e¡nb,thejobofthefgAO,sproject,whose quick to supply the modus operandi for everyday life. strategists incl'ude íhe uU¡quiiãus professor Huntinginabipolaruniverse:thedoctrineofcontainm-"nt:4t. ton,is-toexaminethealt"rnutluãi,,forcoordinatinf thesametime,theCouncil'shandwasfeltinthefield policiesamongtheadvanceãlndustr¡alsocietiesanã of international economic reconstruction with the. ior creating dãsirable . centialiiåã supranational creation of the lnternational Monetary Fund and the institutionãl mechanism.,, tn sim¡Lar fashion, the WorldBank.Andtoaddanoteof legitimacytobig-. TrilateralCommissiondescribes¡iiãtf aragioupof powerimperialism,theCouncilplayedadecisiverole,,privatecitizensofWesternfu.op",lupun"uni in the formation of the Un ited Nations. North America,, whose goal is io r;fori"i.losef coAsthecoldwardeepened,theCouncil'sworkmul-, op"rutionamongtheset-hreeregions,,onproblemsof tiplied to maintain pacewith the growing problemsof common.on."rñ. keeping the world safe for monopqly capitalism. The The transnational design thus appears to be a case studies treated by Shoup and Minter include the " un ited front" of the Western powers aimed at colCuban Missile Crisis, the postwar policy toward lective management of a rejuvenated world China and, most importantly, the policy toward capitalism. To date, the Project and the Comm ission Vietnam. The role of the CFR in policy-making was have issued more than a dozen publications, calling r nowhere more vital than in Southeast Asia. During for such , areforms,, as a trilateial approach io the the period from 1940 to 1973, when the US strugg.led energy crisis (aimed at energy conservation and tokeeplndochinawithintheCrandArea,theauthors re¿uãáadependenceonOpÈô),arenovatedinternaidentify 25 central f igures involved in off icial d"g: . tíonal ronétury system and the creation of a governsion-makingonSoutheastAsia.Ofthese,lS,orT2o/o, ment-sanctionedîrilateralAdvisoryCommiisionto . \ includingHenryKissingerandDeanRusk,were ,yn.f,ion¡r"theeconomicandpoliticalpoliciesofthe. members of the CFR. trilateralregions. But as the Vietnam war.so graph ically illustrated, The ultim;te question, of course, is whether the the world that the CFR helped to create is now in a tran snational deiign wilisucceed. by any ya.dstick, shambles. The liberation movements in the Third capturing the Cartãr administration was a major f irst World,theeconomicrevivalof Western Europeand Japan and international economic instability have devasted the old order and forced the Council back to theglobaldrawingboard.Thefinalandmostabsorbing chapter of the lmperial Brain Trust takes up the step. Butsincetakingoffice, JimmyCarterhas prouen an ineffectivãstandardb"ur"r, his credibility severely tarn ished by the continuing econom ic crisis, indecisiveleadershipandtheembarrassmentofthe Lance and Marston affairs. The trilateral alliance has CFR's plans for the future. also been beset in recent months by internal discord, AccordingtoShoupandMinter,neitherthe highlightedbypersistenttradedisputeswithJapan. capitalist class as a whole nor the Council itself is yet and conf lict with West Cermany over the proper pace united on the appropriate strategy for dealing with of European economic expansion. the world crisis. Since the defeat in Vietnam, a "great As a result of these and other diff iculties, the f uture debate" over foreign policy has been raging. of trilateralism, and of the country as a whole, From that debate have emerged two fundamental remains very much in doubt. Those who would move positions: the conservative "power-realist" concep- the US in a genuinely democratic and progressive tion, represented by Kissinger, which stresses the direction have been offered an invaluable inside look traditional virtues of national sovereignty ( US uber at "the trilateral opposition" by Shoup and Minter's a//es) and balance-of-power diplomacy; and the insightf ul study. The task now is to transform that liberal "transnational" outlook, represented by insight into positive political action. -Bill Blum April 27, 20WtN APril27,1978 1928 WIN 21 ìtoBttlitE pcoples bullêtin board Free if no e,xclìonge ol gllnuolved ond only PUEL]C NOTICE lf you are interested in disarmament, feminism, war tax resistanbe, nonviolence or organ izing a WRL local chapter and you llve in the South, then please contact the new War Res¡sters League Southeast Regional Office, 108 Purefoy Road, Chapel Hill, NC 27514. (919)967-7244. The new Spring/Summer ialendar of Events forthe Resource Center for Nonviolence i s.now available. Allthe information, times, and dates of maior action s, events, study groups, workshops, and training session s in nonviolence offered by the Resource Center are provided in th i s ful I page, color calendar. To find out more and get your copy, writeor call the' Resource Center for Nonviolence: P .O. Bx:.i2324, Santa Cruz, CA 95063{408) 423-1626. SOME OF US DID SURVIVE THE SIXTIES! There are thousands of us in the Fel lowsh ip of Reconciliation who continueto work for a ¡ust and peaceful world. Join usl Wr¡teto: Fellowshipof Reconciliation, Box 271-W, Nyack, NY 10960. SWORDS INTO PLOWSHARES Biennial FOR Conference will be held in New York City May 25-30. For information write Richard Deats, Box 271, Nyack, NY'10960. PUBLICATIONS SOUTHEAST ASIA AND THE HUMAN RIGHÍS ISSUE: Carter's Use of the I ssue, lndonesia's Carrison Showcase, Kampuchea and the World Press, Martial Law and Underdevelopment in the Philippines, Vietnam's Political Reconstruction, Split in theAmerican PeaceMovement, "Thailand'sCatch21"; Southeast,AsiaChronicle, $1.00, Dept. E, P.O. Box 4000-D, Berkeley, CA 94704. Free catalogue of materials on Southeast Asia available. \ DiYugnt Shtimme-Thevoiceof the Jewish Socialist Youth Bund- fZ -Winter 1978. ln this issuei French J ews and the French Left; Women of the Bund; The Futureof Secular Jewishness; and more! Subscriptions: $2.00. 25 East 78 St., NY; NY'10021,' Ð disarmament, and a changeof values and priorities awayfrom war and its preparat¡on to an qmphasison peace, social justice, and people's needs. r Brandywine sponsors educational program s, action campaigns, and public demonstrations in orderto highlight the moral, political, and economic imperativeof disarmament. Additionally, the group is making a pos¡tive statement with ¡ts alternative fund. This fund, comprised of refused war taxes, personal savings, and group deposits, makes interest-free loans to social change and service groups (primarily in Delaware and Chester Counties, Penn.). Conta¿t Brandywine Peace Community and Alternative Fund, 51 Barren Rd., Media, Pa. 19063. LIVINC ALTERNATIVES Croupof art¡sans, artists, academics starting alternative college comm un ity somewhere in New England seeks menibers, Write: Cooperative College Community, 90 Summer, Williamstown, MA01267, t1 weeks paid vacat ion and a ful I health insuränce plan. For more informat¡on, contact Mark Meride, WYSO-FM, Yellow Springs, OH 45387. FOR SURUIITAI! { , ¿ words in iength. Olheruise 82 la¡ every tgn words. WANTED: Managing Ed¡tor forthe Rochester Patriot, a semi-monthly newspaper covering local ¡nvest igative report ing, con sumer news, & non-rhetor¡cal coverage of progressive & commun ¡ty ¡ssues. Duties: Most¡y investigative reporting, some editing, layout, working with volunteers. Subsistance pay, health benef¡ts. Send resume, writing samples to215 Alexander St. Rochester, NY14607. Teacher, certified K-9, looking forteaching position in rural community. Experienced in multi-cultural, individualized instruction. Contact: Malcolm lan MacKenzie, 17 21 College Ave., Des Moines, lowa 50314. HELP! Mobilization for Survival May 27th Disarmament Hodaka: MNS related, activist, fem¡nist, vegötarian house; space forolder womqn, gay man; 4600 Springf ield Ave., Phjla. Pa. 19'143. EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNIT¡ES Work and live in a spiritual/educational commun¡ty as canning & freezing coordinator (5 months), office person (3-6 months), child care coordinator and assistant buildings & grounds person Room & board and small monthly stipend. J ane Bishop (301 ) 486-6262. Koinonia, P.O. Box 5744, Pikesville, Md 212ß. WYSO-FM radio is seeking a Program Director. The person filling th is posit¡on has the primary responsibility for creating and scheduling allof WYSO's culturai programming and for recruiting and superv¡sinà volunteer and staff programmers to produce the sáme. The posit¡on pays 97000 a year with two Rally Project Office New York City urgently needs volunteers for tasks large and small. Work at home or from our office. Your ideas, as well as your work, are more than welcome. Contact Anne Boggan or Susan Blake at 135 West 4th St., New York, NY 1001 2 Tel. (212) 67 3-'1808. Alternative research group cut-off from the world needs readable input and friends abroad. Miguel -1933, Buenos A¡res, ArgenCrinberg, C.C. Central t¡na [1000). lnterested in discussing nonsex¡st & nonviolent child raising with other parents. Write L¡nda We¡meister,2230 E. Fairmount Ave., Balto., Md. ?1231. Fem inist seekin g women's nonviolent self-def ense anecdotes for article suggesting alternat¡ves to mart¡al arts. Write Pam,420 Dean St. Brooklyn 11217. ¿ f" i t' lr , ( \ t.tr The issue is notwhethera maiorwat willtakeplace in the next äSiearsbut withwhat weapons ' it willbe fought! rN PEA.E MAN WILL NOT REPEAT THE SIN \\ SPRING ACTION PROGRAM v The Study Kit for Nonviolent Action, produced by War Resisters League/West contains articles on the thæry and pract ¡ce of nonviolence, both personally and pol it ically as well as accounts of the successes and problems of contemporary nonviolence. Articles and pamphlets by Camus, Candhi, Cene Sharp, Barbara Deming, Mark Morris, Ceorge Lakey and the WIN Double lssueon Seabrook areto be found and much more as well. Send $2.50 per study kit to WRL/West,1360 Howard St., San Francisco, CA 94103. Special ratesareavailableforbulkorders so . Hirosh APRIL 29.30: ROCKY FLATS, COLORADO Direct Action at Rocky Flats Nuclear Site Gontact: Rocky Flats Action Group, (303) 832-1676 ? APRtt 3O-ilAY 1: BARNWELL, SOUTH CAROTINA Direct Action at Nuclear Reprocessing Facility Gontact: Palmetto Alliance, (803) 771-9999 orderthem for your study group, teach-in or classroom. MAY 2l: Rally at Hollywood Bowl, Los Angeles, (21glgg7-O2AO MAY 22: Direct Action at Tr¡dent Base, Bangor, Washington Ihe Cont¡nental Walk Book reduced to $2.50 for lim ited t¡me on ly ! Checks should be made payable to "Continental Walk. " WRL, 339 Lafayette, New York, NY 10012. W SERVICES The Portland Military and Veterans Counseling Center has begun a Pre-Enlistment Education Pro. iect víith a grant from the local CETA Consortium lf you would like a copy of the CETA proposal, letters of support, samples of pre-en ¡istment I iterature, or more information, send $1.00 to cover oostase costs to: Pre-Enlistment Education Project, þvvõC, o¡¡ Sw vontgomery St., Portland, Ore- Call 201-485-5163. The Brandywine Peace Community and Alternative Fund is a nonviolent resistance comm un¡ty (both live-in and extended). We are working for peace, 22ttll{ April27,1978 Japanese Delegation. Contact : Mobilization for Survival 1 35 W 4th St., NyC',t}g',t2-.-(212) 673-1 8Og RALLY & FA|R-U.N. PLAZA, SAN FRANCISCO (415) 628{87ô ZERO NUCLEAR WEAPONS. BAN NUCLEAR POWER STOP THE ARMS RACE. FUND HUMAN NEEDS (503) 231 -001 4 I Moblllzatlon for Survlval ìâAY 25-27: 1213 Raco Slreel [zl Philadelphia, Pa. 19107 (21 5) 563-1 RELIGIOUS CONVOCATION FOR HUMAN SURVIVAL, NYC lnternat¡onal gathering of p€ople from dlverse relig¡ous groups demanding that our planet be saved from impending nuclear holocaust. (21 2) 964-6730 o 0îy {16ü aj!âr. tr ! tr tr JUNE 24: Itâlfte, SEABROOK, NEW HAMPSHIRE Reoccupation of Seabrook Nuclear Constructlon Site. Contact : Clamshell Alliance,' (603) 436-541 4 gon972O1. Expert typing and proofreading. Cheap rates for WlNreaders. Will pickupanddeliverin Manhattan.' MAY 27: UNITED NATIONS, NEW YORK CITY Massive I NTERNATIONAL DEMONSTRATION at Dag Hammarskold Plaza during U.N. SpecialSession on Disarmament. Floating Lantern Ceremony led by c zi L¡lP llt Wm at iCB púA}rfl( Attf.ltE r trÞFLVNrl'Er / rÞtK tt¿7 2 Enclosed is $. . . . . to help implement th€ ection program. Please put me in touch with a local group in my aree. I would like more information. Please send me transportation data for: tl U.N. ACT|ON E Rocky Flats tr Barnwell tr Seabrook N ame Add ress FUNDS ARE URGENTLY NEEDED TO FINANCE THE SPRING ACTION PROGRAM. City Ptease ma¡t ln as much as you can today! At stake ls the surviyalof our planet. 51 t: State 21p.......... Telephone # April27, 1978WlN 23 -t NT49 RAC E A ,¡ tN t 5 LIITE SITI I STOP RT]NIilNG IN THE ARMS RACE SIT-IN ON JUNE 12th ATTHEUNITED STATES'MISSIONTOTHEUN! \ A sit-in may not be legal, and civil-disobedience is never lightly undertaken, but worse than a violatioñof an order to move on is the global blackmail and the potential genocide that the Atom-trusting governments, particularly our own, threaten to inflict on all humanity. We want your help in this nonviolent protest. Return the coupon. SIT.IN FOR SURVIVAL/ 339 LAFAYETTE ST. /NEW YORK/ I am I OO 1 2 (212) 47 5.II8O prepared to participate in the Sit-In. Please contact me. - I'm not prepared to risk arrest, but want to participate. - Let me know how and where. I know it is much needed. I wantto contribute $-. t -* Send me information about the Mobilization For Survival, Disarmament, and the schedule for the United Nations Special Session. N a nìe Address City State/Zip Phone !