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-
they wanted to, as feet kicked and billy clubs and
rifle butts were smashed into people's heads.
It was terrifying to watch people who were only
sitting there being beaten badly.and carried out
' with concussions and broken
bones. Many of the
people sitting got up and ran. Those standing
threw things: Those of us sitting bunched closer
together, and sang softly, We shallovercome, We
shall live in peace, We are not afraid, Soldiers are
ourfriends, Kumbaya, my Lord, Kumbaya. . .
We talked with the soldiers in front of us, looking
at them pleadingly: "You don't.want to hurt us,
.
will ybu do that, will you have to, please don't hurt
us, arrest us, but don't hurt us, we mean no harm
toyou...."
i
l
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
\
*..r
,
ln the middle people were slowly being beaten
and removed from the line to paddy wagons. The
scene was terrifying; many ran. Everyone was
shouting, "Cet the girls outof there," but we
stayed, afraid but wanting to stay, to stay with and
support our men, to eliminate the violence, not to
run and excuse ourselves from a dangerous position, to show the soldiers we were sure they would
not hurt us, to make our position clear, about the
war, to fight it here.
The police wedge broke through the middle.
People ran, Those we thought most con'rmitted to
staying ran in the face of brutality. We were surrounded. ln keeping with the pacif istic approach
of our small section, we realized ther.e was no.
point in keeping our arms linked, we couldn't stop
the advance of the trooþs and would only get hurt .
ourselves, and cause oihers to have to huit us. We
let go and covered our heads. A boy behind me
put his hands on my head to protect me. The
marshal lifted us out of the line carefully, one by
one. Thê violence was gone. lt was over for us.
'
The last few hours of the demonstration were the
most agonizing¡ traumatic, and the most
beautiful. By then the'150,000 had been reduced
to a few hundred who had been through a lot
together. They had faced the cold nigñt, tear gas,
beatings, indecision. And they camethrougfrìt ail
with a new respect for themselves, a real (not just
slogan-level) sympathy for the troops, and the beginnings of an understanding of what was needed
in a confrontation with the American government.
They found that linked arms, missileiand violent
charg.es gained thertr no ground against the army,
'
th.at they resulted only in bloodied heads. Maríy'
who had started out years ago as pacifists, then
abandoned nonviolence for the rhetoric of Che and
Giap, saw once again that a violent struggle gains
nothing. Self-protection and-even more imþortant-communicating with the troops we were
facing-turned the whole group to a nonviolent
stance. This was not something that the pacif ists
in the crowd imposed. J erry Rubin and Stewart
Albert, no pacifists in anyone's book, were the
most eloquent in pleading for nonviolence. SteW
even called for any of the soldiers who intended to
. use violence to raise their hands (one did).
The Mobilization's permit expired at midnight
Sunday. ln the last few minutes, as the demon-
.
r,
'i
:l
'
strators sang "We Shall Overcqme" and "America the Beautiful," several hundied more soldiers
emerged from inside the Pentagon and took up
positions in front of the demonstrâtors. Then a
voice from within the buildine announced over
a_nd over that the permit was abbut to expire, that
those who remained would be airested, thaf those
who wished to leave could take þuses supplied by
the governmgnt. No more than fwo dozen left,
most choosing to walk. About two,hundred stayed
and were gently arrested. I ,
Cai
-Maris
The actions then turn into a blun of images in my
mind, held in a matrix of terror and warmth and
pily and confusion and somethirlg akin to a feeling
of exultatiojr. The clouds of tear gas and a chokin[
sensation. ïroops forming at the side of the
Pentagon and marching down with bavonets
pointed directly at us. A dialogue in feãr between
them and the demonstrators who instinctively sat
down in their path. The twitching of the soldiãrs,
jaws on their otherwise immobile faces when
needless taunts came at them from thecrowd. An
imþulseto turn and run away, r¡iied with-the urgó
to bravely act the way the books on the theory ofnonviolent power suggest. Trying to see,
somewhere, that tiny nugget of humanity underneath in those guards who beat and dragged
defenseless demonstrators. A girl walking from
soldier to soldier at bayonet point, offerinþ each
one a f lower-and then the image of that f lower,
lying in the dust at their feet. Of five men
guarding one of'the little ernbankments, two who
had the decency not to put on their gas masks
when the toxic fumes drifted over, standing with
the same tears in their eyes thatrwe had in'oqr
own. People wandering ihrough :the.crowdsf
passing out water and apples and ilamp wash
rags. The beautiful sight of hundreds sitting close
together in front of the doors to the massive
fortress. The sound of singing. The glow of bonf ires in the dark. And the Sunday brþht sun,
shining on the tired, courageous'peoõle wno had
stayed throughout the night and were still sitting
there, waiting their turn to be arrested-and whó
had won the battle of the PentaEon-Dorothy
Lane
Dear Paul & Everyone Else,
Let this letter stand as notes for me to refer to
when I get out of here (Occoquan). There's a lot I
want to write about the Saturday night confrontation on the Pentagon Mall; about the incredible
brutality of the US marshals; about all of us who
refused to fight back, and those asses in the rear
who wouldn't join us on the front lines, but from
their safe. positions tossed things at the troops,
causing them to hit the beautiful kids at their feet;
'
about 36 of us enclosed in a truck,. airless, for an
hour and a half like J ews-waiting to be
processed; about so much !
,
We spent the f irst day in a dorm having a ball.
This morning (October 23) we were downto a few
kids who chose to do time rather than pay out.
People at.the s¡t-¡n wait through the long Saturday night. photo D¡ana
Davies.
Then-commotion at the door. ln walked Cary
Rader, Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin, Bob
Àfu¡Oh.y-200 more who.were busted Sunday
n!sh1. Now we're in small, single cells; l,ve got
Keith Lampe on one side, Peter Bates'la frofü at
Cornell) on the other. Peter's the kid who stood up
to the tr.oops for hours, sta¡ed right at them, until'
they pulled him out of the line. He eot fiv;
days.-for assault! All the kids with-bandãged
heads were getting charged with assault.-'
They've b.rough!_in Fed prison guãiãiirom all
over to handle us. They've been sõ si"ut. j
cou ldn't noncooperate 1 why make lhem'work
'harder? We are relating to each othðräs
individuals, as humans.
About half the kids here are into the hippie bag;
there isn't a Trot in thehouse Liiú;üit"iå;itáiÈ;'
the word is love; the unifying fu.toi¡i oåI."
What.happened the pa.st.two davs L'tiä tu rn i n g
poi nt. The Penta,89l^';l^!l¡.t¡ ng.. lt,s crumbl i n g.
And despite all the talK aga¡nst N-V, it was non_
violence that did it. The brothers and thr: sisters
are beautiful.
We ShallOvercome
.
Love, Peace,
M.arty Jezer
station was jammed on Sunday
]1.9
wrth Çt"vl'round
hundreds who hadn,t been able to find thäir
chartered buses. Behind me in line, there was the
very modelof an ivy league frat brother. I didn,t
1?.Í
Y|tut school, but his friend was a Benninlton
grrl..lt
was the first demonstration for both, ãnd
d.loved it. They spent the whole night on ihe
Itl:y,
11'; fo* they effuseð about how greaieveryone
coats, blankets, lood. His
ll1b""l,,qharing
olazer
still looked straight from the cleaners, but
ner lroned brown hair was a trifle snarled. ,,'She.
card up there,,, he told us proudPltl^"9¡y,¿raft
ty, as she blushed and the}r sqúeezed each
other,s
hand.
paul Johnson
l
38
WIN
10th Anniv
1oth
Anniv. WIN 39
CONTRIBUTORS
Don Auclair /ives on a farm''in
Arkansas.
Dorothy Lane is writing a nov.el & working on
vacant lotcammunity vegetable gardens in New
York City.,She .is planning t? ryou: lgon
women's tarming commun¡ty in Calitornia.
,
Henry Bass is now working on an animated ilm on:
the hidden taxes Americans pay.. He ¡s ãlsõ ,ïåïtin!
ì';:"' ;
a counselling business for people who
t9a
f
waniiuî
change jobs.
'
Don Baty is currentty enioyins a suiet,
ymous life in northwestern
ano)n,
Montana'
to be pubtished
fl#:if,Ïr',Í,iiÆä¿ru
bv
i
'
.
After nearly two decades of exile.in the Bronx,
Maris Cakars, after a ton{ stintas WN editor.¡, '
Jackson MaçLow has moved backto Manhattan
, '. iWashincton Market-below Soho), where he
'
no* preiarinþ to reenier"tné'tuilreai;;;iå:'
v.
'",
i
Feminist, anárchist, lesbian DianaDavies is
startäng ío take pict'ures againl r'ritiig ,ji*iå Up
"a
¡nå jewelry fór fun, to, tËiÉäù å',ì a
music
^at sñól¡uei ín lneîointriãiräiis"i,ålä
ioãivTiiuã.
in the city & iust turned up the garden '
ities, & to rarse hischildren, (& lrgm which h.e . ..
go"-.9 to do f reque.nt rejdings/performances in NY
.&
el.sewhere in the US, Canada, England, &c), as
wett as to hetp se/ect poetrv for wtñ.
'
Margoris, after severar yearsin New
üexico now live.s in New York-City, works for a
Dìavid
.'
Dave Dellinger's most recent bookis À4or"
Power than We fnow (Doub tedaÐ.'neiiivorkinc, , .
on seven Days' the fledeling
radical'newsweek!í'
- -a
of
-'
.
Barbara Deming now puts her deepest hopes Íor
Àonviotent worid in the feminist revolut¡õã. &
t
WlÑ wil/ shíre thqt
Ratph DiGia is sti// at it as
Wa? Resiste
rs
.
vision:
a staÍf member of
League & as treasure,r aitná
Atten Cinsberg's rnost reëent bookis Fir.st
from Full Court Press, New York City.
.rl
the .
e,.l.
Blues ;
for
iú;;i;iri;;:
Movement photographer John Coodwin works
|né ui¡|"¿äõtiãai'f'b"o;r-dg¡él;b;i
travelling &
photographing'
Nei!Haworrh /ives in New
yorkcity.
wiiliamsburg,
Massachusetts.
Dan Hemenway rives in
Abbie Horrman is
,
David Mckeynolds stilt liveson East Fourthstreet
with.his two Siamese cats, where lrc writes, casts
candles, cooks, & experiments with pot pourris
and Í.ragrance. His.p.olitics, whi.le firmly pacif ist,
cont¡nue a gentle dritt to the left.
undersroúnd.
Marty
in
agri-
Jezer lives in an agricultural commune
vermont' where he's working to politicize
culture & make politics more
organic'
'
Mqrk Yqfri:keeps inte.r,rupting four y.ears ot
yleldid isolation on a West Vir.ginia.Íarm to work
b¡ief stints'atWlN,,ed,itthe WIN anthologv,
design a prison anthology þ{dþook, & do
drawings tor a how-to-build-it book'
who dieó Febru4r,y 11, 1967,
to be one.of the guiding spirits behind
|?lt'!:es
the American pacirist movement and wtN Masazine.
A.
J . .Muste,
tinishing
as
2iïYol"":,3!o'3'::!,!fi::li':ift!':!lf:,iå':bes
'"i,''
"pretty Sood' in factexciting'"
Donald Newlove lives in the viltage &
is
ååfi,å:'r!,{,i'!;^iLt"r:;Å::^î[:nil'#i,:':ii#,3
--
'i¡ii--
l.
patsy Richardson-now patsy Harman-sun-is '
living in west virginia on a farm
'iii^'rl'..'.il-11:i'-"::'-i'í'i:^::"i:';.ï::.":';l^
withseven
Johnson ra.,sss rabbits, tgmatges &
Je.rusalem artichoke.s somewhere in New
when ne's not travel ling around the
i?:',#i,t:'yriliå,
.,^-.,-^ '[¿;!!fr,\#;ff[låt;,ilJ
Mexico,
ørì¡iA irl"iíå:r, b;;:g*ä-;6;ir;;,-io;;;,¡;i;;ä,
country
;ãrñioi¡,,; p""ã":
hr,tiià-tíx,
building houses & barns'for people.
revo,tii¡orà,ii:^;¡ló¿älAi¡nitori
^ii¿*¡iá,'õåi,'A iaie funí
¿lO
WIN
10th Anniv.
:
lo.hn Philtips now lives in Rui.dosa, New Mexico,
where he is a member of the /ocal assern bly of
pau!
Susan Kent, akaSusan Cakars, used toworkfor
WTN. Nowshe raises children.
Pete Seeger writes:
Keith Lam pe- I ater Ro-Non-So- Te, now
Pine-is working on the Bio-centennial
project out of the San Franðisco Eco)logy Center.
The proiect includes a new radio network & new
record label. He also plays rnusic Wednesday
nights at the Holy City Zoo in San Francisco.
on NewA/ternatives in the Middle East.
Ponderosa
',
,
uiti"-U"^or¡ai-iãiì,tnute.
tE.
rare books auction house.
"Am stillsinging, it more
hoar.sely. Am travelling /ess,. concentrating, on
work in the Hudson Valley."
Allen Solomonow worksfor CONAM E, Committee
Steve. Suffet now teaches Bth grade science and
socia/ studies in the New Yor[City publicschools
,.'|:
CELEBRATION
!
t
hey!
to happy helttoday
with all hard politics
peddle the revolution tomorrow
the correct line this hour
is joy
Fine Weather
The wheel of nature turns without pause
After the rain, good weather
ln the wink of an eye
the universe throws off its muddy clothes
stick a flower in your mimeo machine
or give it to the cop
.
smoke it up
!é.
/ drink it up /
and
For ten thousand miles
the landscape spreads out like a beautiful brocade
damn it
Light breezes
we earned it
ten years of marchings/beatings/jai I ings
trapped in lails/armies/all night rúreetings
laugh
!
.q
Smiling flowers
High in the trees
amidst sparkl ing leaves
all the birds sing at once
and for god sake don't worry
about being serious!
we've a lifetime ahead
Rocky tumbles along,
Peôple and animals rise up reborn
What could be more natural?
After sorrow, comes joy
-HoChi Minh
ûb
Photo Òiai Phong/LNS
Fords to cross,
Kissinger goodby,
armies to disarm,
banks to throw open,
jails to tear down.
tomorrow is time enough
we've a good life of work
standing right ahead.
but take this day off
miss the cell meeting tonight
skip the speaker who will explain it all
and take a friend to bed
instead
April j0, 1976 marks the f irst
anniversary of the end of the
Vietnam war.
this was the end of the beginning
tonight is party time all over town
-David
McReynolds
PhOtO LNS
42
WtN
10th Anniv.
10th Annir¡ WIN 43
SAN
FRANCISCO
INTERNATIONAL
FILM FESTIVAL
1975
CHICAGO
INTERNATIONAL
FILM FESTIVAL
1975'
SILVER HUôO
"Lovejoy's Nuclear War is a thoroughty absorbing
documentary naive enough to seek answers to
fltnd amental guestions{ amely, the apptication ot
civil disobedience to something as complex as ff,e
'nuclear poweilssue.
Iáe viewer is confronted with
the kinds oî knotty pubtic probtems that rarety, if
ever, get intelligent airing inside a fitm
.
Thinking Like A Woman
by Leah Fritz
\r/ith an afteru/ord
Barbara Den¡ng
theatre."-Variety
BEST POLITICAL FILM
it f,as a pure, stunning instinct for asking the
'
I
0
/nos I fu n d am e n tat an d d is tu r b i ng q u e s tio ng
þossiö/e
I
abaut the intersection between private iives-and
politics. --H ar pel S W eekty
In compilins her essavs from the mid-'60's to the present, Leah Fritz has
é*poË the prosress toward feminism of her own intrepid soul. Even
dared
when th'at iournev vlound through false consciousness (as in the earlier
pieces, wh¡éh are iulnerablytand courageously-included), her own humor
Tnd humanity were irrepressible. And the later essays, on women and
þblence, and on feminism vs. socia/ism, are a triumph of consêiousness,
endurance, love and plain good writing.
"Lovejoy's Nuelea¡ War is just what we need in this
Bicentennialyear to remind those who haveforgotten
what it means to be an American. tt's a titm to wake
up the country."-Ðr. George Watd., Nobet Laureate
Ïhis. . .collection of 10 years' worthof essays extends from peace marchtes to
the sexua/ revolution to some of the brilliant and sensible analyses of
patriarchy l've ever read.... Leah Fritz is one of the most important thinkers
to come out of the women's movemen| and, hence, out of the entire
revolutionary struggle.
-Karen Lindsey, BoSton Phoenix
"A good fitm."--4L Ernst, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission
Distributed by WIN Books and Free Life Edltions
"Whether you agree witå Sam's factlcs or not, the
new film'on the situation is very wetl done and rarses
cèntratrssues. tt is a moving tiim about one man's
determination to stop a nuke . ) "--Sodale's
Order from:
Published by
.
E
.rÉ4
nv iron
ment Actio n Butteti n
" . . .,an inspired document of an individual's Se/f/ess
desfe to bring about a world of peace ând hdrmony
. . . the film is an honest and forthright handling of
major issues-nuch too important to be
..t,
overlooked.l'
lilm
News
Paperback, 160 pages, $3.25
WIN
winboCl
503 Atlantic Ave. (5th fl,.)
Brooklyn, NY 11217
We'll Give You the Sh¡rt
.9
õ@
Off Our Backs
for Four Bucks.
't
6
ô
t
ö
o
o-
c
o
I
z
r
=
{
o
z
"Seeing the film, I suddenly knew for sure in my heart
how I really felt about the power plant issue, and I
knew that if I had to pay for it and carry it around
myself , I wanted other people like me to see that
movie . . . lt would be a catalyst, because this movie
ls alive."--P aul W ill iams, Crawdaddy
"Lovejoy's Nuclçar War is not only a warmly human
chronicle of a confrontation with the nuclear-industriat
establishment; itis an effective toolfor educating
citizens . . . "lriends of the Earth (Not Man Apart)
"Lovejoy's' Nuclear War is an excellent introduction to
the pr¿ç¡¡"" of civil disobedience and to the nuctear
power controversy."
I N M agazi ne
-W
.:\
Green Mountain Post Films
Box 177 - Montague, Mass. 01351
413-863-4754
"Supported b;y a,good use of lilmlechnique, the
movie is excellent tor public library lilm programs...
and for uqe in senior high schooland cottegá sociat
sfødies, éunent eyenfs, and political science
c/asses. "American Library Association's BOOKLIST
New! T-Shirts from WIN!
Available only in Yellow, with Btue sitk-screened
design, in Adult sizes Extra Large, Large, Medium
and Small, Childs' sizes Medium (B-10 years old) and
Small (6-7 years old.).
I Yest t want a WIN T-shirt on my back! I have
. enclosed $4 for each one. Total enclosed: $
I Please send me: (mark quantity desired)
I
|I
|t- -AdultxL
Name
I
-Adults
,
AdultL
childs
-AdultM
-childM
Address
¡
I
I
----
r
Zto:
---
WIN / 503 Atlantic Ave. [Sth Fl.l
Brooklyn;.NY 11217
10th.Anniú. WIN 45
OPPORTUNITIES
FouR BEDRooM couNTRy
SOCIALIST APPROACH
TO GRADUATE STUDIES
ñ
The Latin American Project is an ongoing' inter-cultural collective of North
& Lati¡ Americans
working together
Position Available- Media workshop in eastern
Kentucky producing films,'records, änd a magãzine
seeks an experienèed business.maríager./genõral
manager. Duties include accounting, bookkeepins.
staff and proiect management. Salary is lowto
moderate depending upon experience and need.
Please send regirme to Appalshop lnc., Elox 743,
Whitesburg, Kentucky
Eoand
& Puerto Rico.
EVERY tO WoRD5.
interest have been Chile, Cuba, Panama
1976-77 applications are
being accepted through August. Join,
"
BrilLtio
oTlrERwts¡
4'1858.
..
Established rural community of 70 w¡th côoperat¡Ve
nonsexist nonracist'goals seéks members. Twin
Oaks-WN, Louisa, Va. 23093.
lF ilO Ere$t¡ls¿
0F
tNvoLyt,o ÀND
oNLY eo WoRÞs.
FREE
$l
Posilion Available- Business manager for WASHI NCTON WATCH
- pol¡tical.newsletter-act*vé
citizens-ded¡cated, intelligent, hard-working þersons-rewarding work. Apply Box 208, Okemos,
te
Ml
us.
PUBL¡CATIONS
\IIIE WILI REBUILD OT]R COI]NTRY
TEN TIMES MORE BEATJ"TIFT]L.
Multi-colored 17" x 22" poster celebrating the victories of the Indo=
chinese peoples includes the above
quote from Ho Chi Minh.
Prices: l-5 copies, $2 each; 6-49 copies,
$l
each.
I
Shepherd Éliss
Goddard-Cambridge School
of Social Change
5 Upland Road
Cambridge, Mass. 02140
(617 491-0157
Order from: WIN
503 Atlantic Ave.
Sth Floor
Brooklyn, NY 11217
€-!t
Littlc crabs and littlc
licc atenot cxactly thrillini
Alittl e Fç200,Þôlrðnd
you'll havc mad¿ a lcillinl
A-200.
REPORTS of lnternational Conference of Peace
Researchers and Peace Act¡vists held last summer
in Holland. Eight workshop Reports on,
"Application of nonviolence research,"
"L¡beration movements: v¡olent and nonviolent,"
€tc. $1 per set for first three sets. Reduced rates fcir
largerorders. Write: ICOPRAPA, 148 N St., South
Boston, MA 02127.
RFD- quarterly iournal
by & for rural gay menl
New ¡ssue conta¡ns self-interview with Butterworth
Farm (about gayness, community, couples),
gardening with the fa¡ries (companion planting,
moon s¡gns, nature sp¡r¡ts), lots of letterspl us poems, graphics, more..$1 /copy or $4/ye4r
RFD, 4525 Lower Woif ireek Road, Wolf Creek
oR97497.
GUIDES to mountain trails and wilderness waterways in eastern North America. Other guides and
books; Western. cycling, nomad, wildlife, lald
stewardship-For catalog send $ .25 or stamps to
TRAILS, Box 94S, Collegeville, PA19426.
READ THE SOCIALIST TRIBUNE $3/yr and support Frank Zeidler and Quinn Brisben, America's
democratic socialists for pres¡dent and vice president in 1976. Write Socialist Party 840 N Third,
Milwaukee, Wl 53203 for a sample Tribune copy.
Vegetar¡an family seeks foster children under'16.
Live on large ranch. finäncially stable. Rock Creek
Ranch, Box 16O, Lacrande, Oregon.
.
OPERATTON
NAMIBIA
Cretr Wanted
nonviolent direct action voyage to
Namibia, carrying books banned by the South
Atrican government dir¿rctly to freedom organizatioins. The project is supported by
groups
Europe, USA, Australia, and
in
Namibia, and was launched
at the
War
Res¡sters Triennial Conference in Holland in
1975.
We want to recruit a minimum crew of
four, women and men, African and non-
African. Applicants should be free this Spring i
for training and prepar¡ng the boat for depar-
ture from Portsmouth, England in
Summer. Previous experience
with
early
non-.
viólent act¡on5, or in Africa, is as valuable as
sailing skills.
lf interested, please write for details to:
OPERATION NAMIBIA-CREW
1
PRODUCTS
Eumpersl¡ckers- "STOÞ S-1"; "TAXATION
WITHOUÏ REPRESENTATION IS TYRANNY!";
,,DEFEND
YOUR RICHTS OR LOSE THEM!" 5OC
each $2/5. (Custom printed, tool details & l¡st of
others free!) Kate Donnelly, Box 271-W, Newvernon, NJ 07976.
NONCOMPETITIVE GAMES for children and
adults. Play together not against each cjther. Free
catälog: Family Pastimeô, RR 4, Perth, Ontario,
Canada KZH 3C6.
VIEI NAM: THE PEOPLE'S RESISTANCE.
Syracuse Peace Council 1976Wall Calendar now
REDUCED. The calendar, an excellent resource for
end-of-war anniversary activities, portrays the
decade of successful Vietnamesç and American
struggle in retrospect. Containsr historyof thewar,
beautiful art and poetry, 150 important dates, 11" x
'17 "
,5 colors,2 weeks,/page. REDUCED PRICES
ARE: $1 .75 ($2.25 for mail orders), 3 or more $J.50
each ($2 ea: mail). BULK RATES: $1 ea. plus
postage. lmmed¡ate ma¡l¡ng.
46WlN
48864.
New Midwest Research lnstitute seeks uns.elfish,
socially-conscious, non-careerist, MA-PhD
MOVEMENT economists, political scient¡sts, etc.
MUST be able to get grants or ra¡se funds. Semischolarly studies on war-peace reconversion, etc.
READ Gross and Osterman "The New Professionals" pp 33-77, Studs Terkel lWorking" pp
525-527 ,537-5&, Claud¡a Dre¡fus "Radical Lifestyles." Midwest lnstitute, 1206 N 6th st., 43201.
for
.
NEW!! MAIL ORDER CATALOGUE OF
WOMEN'S, LABOR, FOLK AND OTHER
POLITICAL RECORDS. Send 251: Bread & Roses,
1724 20th St. NW, DC 20009.
,l
Housr ron àexr.
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Situated on 50 lovely acres in the Hudson Vallw
miles north of NYC. Washer, dryer included.
$365/mo. House with fewerbut bigger rooms
(former barn) also available. Rent negotlable.
Cakars, Rifton, NY 12471. (914)339-4585.
Penpie's
since 197{. Each member réceivls an
accredited MA degree for 12 months of
academic/activist work combining research/action and theoty / practice. We
do power structure reseärôh, solidarity
work, and "concientizacion'; in a non"competitive, supportive, disciplined atmosphere. The countries of our main
Mlsc'
Need yegetarian cæk, helpers to work on large
ranch. Room & board, positiveenergies. Rock
Creek Ranch, Box 16O, LaCrande, Oregon.
Nonviolent Action This Summer. July 13-16: Nonv¡olent training in Denver, Colo, w¡th action at
Rocky Flats plutonium plant. Limit to no. of
participants. August: UFW Work Proiect at La Paz.
Calif. Volunteers over age 17 and group sponsois
now being sought. Write FOR Youth Action, Box
271, Nyack, NY 10960..
HELP!
Rebecca Reed, Portland, Oregon; George Holland.
Univ. of Arkansas: Where are you nowiYour
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;'addressee unknown." Please send your
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AS oF MAY 1, 1976, ptease address all manuscriots. correspondence, address
chanses, love letters, etc., to: WlN,5O3 Atlantic
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wtN ts MovtNc.
SECOND NATTONAL MEN'S CONFERENCE:
Men 5upporling Men. To explore and init¡ate ways
for meniä suoõrt other men in personal and
ml¡tical struååles. in hurt and joy, in accomplishments and aioìrations of brotherhood. Variety of
workshops and plãyshops. At J Orv¡s Keller Bldg
for Cont, Educ. . Peirn Siate Univ , State College,
P¡. For iñfo coátact: Bob Lewis, Academic Coord.,
S-22 Human Devel. Bldg., Penn State Univ., Univ.
Park, PA 16802,
FILMS: To the Peoole of the World, report on Chile
after the coup; Whä lnvited Us?, US imperialism in
Latin Amer¡ii. Sat.. Aoril 24,7:3O& l0pm Free
Association, 5 W 2oth, NYC. Donation. Benefit for
ComelUnity Press.
sÙMMER CONFERENCE ON FEMINIST NON.
VIOLENCE, to integrate nonviolence with feminist
consciousness, J unã 2z - ) uly't'1, l9Z6, Heathcote
Center, Freeland, Maryland. An exper¡ence in
community. sharing work and.play, ideas, feelings
Discussions and workshops where the resources are
Y(JU and other participants. Simple facilit¡es and
diet, low cost shared according to ability. For information and brochure, contact: Ellen witkowsky,
2416 Salutaris, Apt. 2, Cincinnati , OH 4522O, ph.
(s1317s1-O6O7.
RELIGION-Any life after death ¡s betterthan
nothing-even this one. Send $1 to HERE-
BEFORES, Box 2138, Youngstown, OH 44504.
Margo Lee Sherman's (formerly with Bread &
Puppet Theatre) one-woman show "lf The
Prophets" Theatre For The New City, 113 Jane
Street (691-2220) Friday and Saturd ay, April 23,24
at 10:30 pm, Sunday matinee April 25 a¡ 2 pm.
Contribution $250, TDF.
Vietnamese dinner to benefit recónstruction in
V¡etnam. New AFSC slide show on postwàr V¡etqgm. Aprif 29, 6:30 pm, Old C¿mbridge Baptist
Church, Cambridee. $2.50.
Celebrate the end of the war, Friday, April 30 with
Tom Paxton at Washington lrving High School,
NYC. $3 donation to go to Friendsh¡pment
to help iri the aid of the reconstruct¡on of Vietnam.
Benefit for the United farm Workers-Melanie in
concert at the Felt Forum, NYC, ThurS., April 29.
EVENlS
BROOKLYN-The lVomen's Center of
Brooklyn College is sponsoring their
second annual Health Fiesta, Wed. and
Thurs., Mav 12 & 13 at the Student
Union Building of Brooklyn College on
Campus Road and East2Tth St. For
further info contact: Women's Center of
B.C.,24l6James Hall, Bedford Ave &
Ave. H, Brooklyn, NY I1210
(2r2)780-s777 (8).
NYC-May 8, "Terrorism & Propaganda of ttie Deed," Samuel H. Ériedman, former Norman Thomas running
mate, with Merrill Moss, IWW, labor*
history writer. IW\{ Forum, St. Marks
Church, 2nd Ave. & 10th St., 8pm.
BOSTON. Public Commemoration of the
anniversafy of the end of the war in
Vietnam. Call for reconstruction aid by
the US Governmenì. 12 noon to 12 pm,
JFK Federal Bldg, Government Ceiter,
.
April30.
For information on established country community
of 70 embracing cooperative, nonsexist, nonrac¡st
principles, write Tw¡n Oaks, Louisa, Va. 23093.
BOSTON to WASHINGTON WALK for DISARMAMENT AND SOCIAL JUST! CE. Organizing
for this summer's walk through New England now
under way. Contact Boston-Washington Walk,48
lnman Street, Cambridge, MA 02'139 for information on planning group closest to you.
National Organization for Women, New York City
Chapter, is dirculating a comprehensive,
anonymous, informal questionaire on MALE
SEXUALITY to break down male sexual stereotypes. The results will be published and made
available to the gereral public. All men are urged
to wr¡te for a copy of the questionaire if intereited:
Shere Hite, Feminist Sexuality Project, NOW New
York,47 East 19 St., NYC 10003.
Philadelphia Movement for a New Society (MNS) is
conduct¡ng a series of Orientation Weekends at the
Life Center for people: who want to understand the
MNS and the Life Center; who are seeking a way of
combining political struggle with personal growth;
who are interested ¡n putt¡ng MNS approaches to
work back home. The Program includes: Nonviolence Training, Maûoanalysis Workshops,
Sessions on MNS and the Life Center, Films and
Discussions on Direct Action Campaigns, VisionSharing, Croup Process Skills, and a Party. Upcom¡ng Dates: May 8-1o, J une 4-6, Friday supper
to Sunãay lunch. Cost: $15, sliding scaleio Si ior
low income people. LIMITED SP,ACE AVATLABLE:
Confirm your space before planning to come.
CONTACT; OWCC, MNS,4722 Balt¡more Ave.,
Phila., PA 19143, or call (215) 5A4-1464.
BOSTON-Desegregate thè Schools-
Natiqnal March on Boston Apfil24.
Assemble at Franklin Park, 10 am.
March-Blue Hill Ave, 12 noon. RallyGov't Center 3 pm. For more info the
Coalition for the April 24th March on
Boston, 15304 Tremont, Roxbury, Ma
02t2t. (617)44s-0791.
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Win Magazine Volume 12 Number 15-16
1976-04-19 - 1976-05-06