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Woman Harvest Weekend pp . 6- 7
Perspectives on Latin America pp. 10-14
Alternative Energy Sources Part 2 :Cuba Chile Nicaragua
Cogeneration pp . 18-19
100. SAnTI WA
vvSTIGE PAPE RCENTRAL NE B
WSLET TFounded In1936 Published Monthly by the Syracuse Peace Council October 1978 SPC748
The song of work becomes one with the solar warmth of the lemon sThe people's programs produce tractors and cherry trees :Everything is done by the love of a people in its battle and its process .
Pablo Neruda (Incitation to Nixoncide)
►eace NewsletterThe PVCE 'NEWSLETTER (PNL) is publish -
- ed monttltl' through the collective
sof SPC workers '& staff . The PNl. tin
1serves 2 functions: that of a paperof n-'news, analysis & services ; and that of th einternal organ of SPC, the traditionalnewsletter role . The pale top dsscril!tlonsare intended to help readers distinguish-:Meinseparate but compl i ntary furic- 1ti'ons ., We welcomes
ons, erticlesd`~!cirlttf al, work & production assistance .
Moveihent groups are enghuxaged tit re -" pant; please give credit. The PNL. s a
memher ' of the
Plriea .e nate(APO, and s
s ig
attptt
s ,Ser+rlbb .?
) The IS, A
VkIla
ion1 microfihli frank 1PS
Wirt
ores $5 orrnore/yeatl f9red or donation to pris
s :end lam incoatl '
rIR ; in }giS~t . 5104 .year lam ci;culet~tdn is,i
1, 000 bydirect Mail 13, 000' .1 t
outlets , in,CNY . 'We leave veriAte able ad rates . '. r
syracus -•P
r co~i ►;ci1The,8yracuse Peace °Cptaoil• {SPC) is e} 14oai ~tofit, ri . We ty
a vidr
ail n b atgan zetion We havean enlist*.ilist*.witc uheClef
6
(CAIJC) .of w
eall kinds
have avisicnt ofa World whefirva , diolen a . aPloftadn
base
d(eao,
art
nomicrraclal:,sext bd:;age ete':~do not exist . Pr~nadry function s. of SPC (which has a E ibl~-' corn
en to~nonviolence) aril tohelppeople wbrk,tix progr#s ie j a.'c ge rid tc bve cgme . oursense of powerlessn
thn,i rrutDal upFort . `
4
trd}World
SAFE RNERGY
,Walla m underlfh 476=37`6 6
-Et l
1tLint P I1er
X7 .715 7iUMAN Riolitp/
$QG,j~1j. : d1TSTIGE
(*olvih' .
475-6851TH
WORLD' .
t.. +,:.1'Alfgtiasl Eeatei"kArook
478x448 4MILITARISM/DISARI AMEN 7
Chris Murray-
472=5478--PUBLICATIONS
Barb Meotter,
472-035 4FINANCE
An us Ma Do{iald
455-249l 'OUILDINGS/EQLCIPMENT
Dik Cool';
A72-547 8
Staff CoHaBctive
472-54781 ) 1 k Cool, Ed Kin r e , Chris 'Murray, Wm ., Sunderlin
Cont~nfs QlA411a11 °`,Cryts
.-r Ma si: .Almee
dadley :Hattanaend, Cindy .Stein.
end.
° :Cindy, iutilstde, Barb I3uge, .Tort,Law, Geoff Ilsard, Gland* Neff:Iris Hunt, $enjie Kio4,. DonnaWer}iock „Deborah Rizao, Dik Cool,Christ Murray, Mimi $hotland ,Viktdr-. Strobel .-Optohptfody~ctiao~~t► p
Cool, , ;Chris luKt' (edi#br), -EdWilliam. Snnderlin, garb Dunne ;Deborah Itis2o 'Karen Kerney ,Mindy Fried : Geoff Heard, Jack ,Manno, Lots LoVitWi, Gary Wein-
Next Mon h>'F .- Editor: William SunderlinCopy Deadline; iO/z(7, £theyProduction : M &. Tu . 2'3' &
- 11pm .on . M , vet it l3tte on Tu 'Mailing Party: Th 9/26, ' :Noon- '8pmstaple &label, mindless Am
We feel'that•.educetion, a¢itat on ants organization lead S osocial clha nge .
SPO: *tejfb rship involves -being, on the mailing Ile t : peiirndthat you're a member . Simple as that . SP'C is supported prig tn. ilythrough members oontrlbutions & month*.. Pledges .and fund iatei eevents . It'e'an unending .. stng
-les . tp false our'.325,000 .annualbud -
ga: SPC'e ma jot work iek
throtuph 4omr ittees and . thie On*,collectives- hat stork Dirt of the SPC office : the program ' staff, theSPC Press, and The Front Room coke ire .
w-PEOPLE'S FUND ,-Chris Murray
4f3..54atoFARM WORKERS. Linda Da8tefa no l X75-0(f6 2Dasvid W@wit
476-2$51WAR'SAX RESISTANCE ,FUND
Margaret Rusk” .- • ' 476-763 5
p t 4
& fly fll.lt~@ 52e'(*) -Dials a a7crfimAtep assn a =
nted ,with b4t,twt`a part of SPC ..Steorhip Commtttalro
INCH WA31,11tcla :DeStefanoirhris Murray .
Teaching the' Wer .
Dik ; GoofBij1 Griffen (
PHII.1FP. IES -Maddaus
475-0162472 .54.7 8
472-547 869$-88"4 -
47'6-296 0
*rSOUTNERN AFRICA LIBERATIO N
ea Ellis
479-778 3
Sett: Moons
476-804 8
MS Dbataleflc:ProgramsECONOMIC I8SIIES
Use JohnsENERGY PAIR
Chris Murra yNUCLEAR POWER
List johnsMargaret Rusk
476-256 0
472-547 8
476-296 0476-763 5
to
3 Community '7 93 l?eople's 'Energy8 Annual' Picnic Report
ob,
ing at Sl'C Freee £jariO,RC~Qh:t
,Al, e`
t,
BPQ .- .+Gk
PNLs16
.Pair ;repcTt17 P . Eany 'S'tra'8y G
erl PlervessttSn RtgkiklYlhiesral9i Bpe er ,
I8,'i`ogen ti{20-Mahe d A21 A VisieWest
k t vatic nai
12 -Cuba .14 Chile
Upcoming Even
15 Ni18 Filets17 Plowshare Craft fair17 Everson Films24 SPC Garage Sale
Regular FeaturesLetters
Reviewits P~jtcp *
'' 23 free Classified s,;24 PNtCa1ehd r
BO
Pao
Wm . Sundet4ln
472-5478De~posifs : '
Ed Berrigan
ne phonePledges:
Corinne lanace
422-1659 `M)1IL1NG LIST
M~tIati S}iotl
. :
475-608 9RP. T?ELI
. .
David Coons
472.9386.-Pik Cool,472-547 8
Ongoing EviNV
B. FILMS
Cool
72-$478Publications 8 ltsisourrssFILMS, TAPES &'SLIT ROW S
Chris Murray,
472-5478
TidE . FRONT ROOM . BOOKSTQDik Cool.barb SobritzLisa Johns 'Lois jevjtan 'Barb Menkik', .
"P£AE NEWS LE7Edthr; Rotates tlinorip.,sNftf, 'PPt gdiicticros Many people
stiffAdvertising :' Chris Murray , 472-547 8
Iris. K,prrnan
:' 472-495 4
Distribution :
Bob Russell
470-01'45 'Dik .Cool 47$4478
Promotion: Dit Cool472-$478tiuke supplerrrerit '{4/77) :
john Madden*. 476-2900 .1970 -"PEOPLE'S HIST6O "sPC's . calendar '
,Dik Cool,, .
472-5478;
Jane .Weiler •
419-597 78P('r PRESS
472-5#8Marilyn Auetin .
4#'?44 7SS6o
847rr478-299 8472 .-035 4
col . . *IM 'borerpease subscribe tb -
dubscribe to the Peace Newsletter and we'l lmaiLit to: you every mptuh . Just $5/year -- hmore if you can afford` it
less if you can't .
So , try to help today. We appreciate l
-Amount enclosed 5i
Address . . . .
City.
Name „
state . .
924 BURNET AVE.
t YR‘AC USE, NY..
., 43203
Zip .
. . . Phone(s) . . .
. l (30) 472.5
Publications from SPC
COMING SOON1110/78 PNL 3
PEOPLE'S ENERGY :A portfolio of original artwork i n6 colors .
Thirteen energy related subjectsexplored visually and verbally .
A national educational, organ-izing and fund raising tool fo rgrassroots groups .
General in scope .Specific in warmth, humor andthe personal .
IConnecting the movements .Coalescing our strength .
Walk lightly on the Earth . . . .$3 .50 retail, $4 by mail .To groups : $2 .10 each on prepaidorders of 8 or more . Promotionalmaterials available .People's Energy/SPC 924 Burne tAve . Syracuse, NY 1320 3(315)472-5478.
May/Seabrook by Bonnie Acker 1sin.brown, blue,'yellow and green .
l
COwsm#079THE /III MU" OIREC' MY
USEFUL HARD-TO-FIND FACTS FOR THE PEOPLE OF ONONDAGA COUNTY 'ss~tr~~~EfNfNS~~~R~~~ n
n
The theme of COMMUNITY '79 Is The Politics ofn
nFood . Here, at SPC, we 're getting quite geared up Afor its production -- a major undertaking in any' n
nn event, bit all the more so because COMMUNITY isnn potentially a big fund-raiser for the Peace Council .
n We hope you can help out, at home or in the office
_
I can research service listings (involves tele-:n
phoning at SPC or at homeI can do some typing
,_
n
I can sell some advertising (ad packets andn.
names of prospective .advertisers provided) — nn
I ' ll help with layout & pasteup (during thewn
period Oct . 15 - Nov . 15) ~0
I can do artwork for ad sn
n_
I'm interested in the theme of COMMUNITY; ni
I can help with editorial tasks . n
Name •nn Phone
0
n Return to SPC, 924 Burnet Ave ., 13203 n
n
or call 472-5478
r
NO-NIKES ls~r ENEt06►Y
1~CA4~HD~I~t .P UBLISHED BY 1K SYRKIKE RACE CAVNCdL
Letters to the Editor
Box 125, Edwards 13635 (315) 562-8235 ; Margaret Weitzmann, 19 Gar-den St ., Potsdam 13676' (315) 265-7358; or Caroline Selleck, Hermon(315) 347-2684 . -
We have changed our mind about
ommendation to honor Queen Farah o fgetting the script of "Jack and the
Iran with an honorary degree from SU .Power Plant" . Please return our
Toni Toveron echeck for $1 .50 .
for the Syracuse Peace Counci lCarol C.alamia
Atomic Industrial Forum, Inc .
[In addition to being a general pain inthe ass, the Atomic Industrial Forum ,a pro-nuke public relations/lobbyin ggroup, has been trying'to obtain , scopy of our puppet show!
PNL staff]
4 PNL 10/78
ren, it should not begin by lendin gLem
international suppbrt to one of themost fascist regimes in the world .
Mr. William Sunderlin
We urge the members of the Univer-Syracuse Peace Council
sity Senate to vote "no" to the rec -
[Please-tum 'to PEACES, p . 22, forthe happy ending to xIl of this .
-- PNL Staff ]
Dear Powerline Opponents :i
The Public Service Commission i sabout to hand down its decision onpetitions to reopen hearings on the765W-line . Both PASNY and UPSET
~hhve petitioned . It's a safe bet th e`PpC will vote to let its decisionstand.
If it does, PASNY .will appeal . Asthings are now, UPSET will mot . Notenough money . That could change ifour friends would . only chip in .
A pledge of $50 from each of younow would enable us to consider thi sstep,-- a step crucial to the future of
`1 06wer'decisi6ns throughout the state .Completion of this line will be thegreen ' light to PASNY and the utilitie sto Proceed As Planned (on to ESPRI i )
with the grid, with the plants ,with the interstate power coalitionthey want so bad they can taste it .
The acne 1 is our 12st chance to• egally stop PASNY and the Ling .
There's no guarantee, of course ,we can win on the appeal . We'llnever win it, however, unless wetry .
We know you're strapped . We allare . We' re resigned to beingstrapped for years ; to come . But ittakes money to fight money . Pleasepledge -- or give -- whatever youcan . Make this a top-priority itemfor the fall . Hold raffles, dinners ,festivals ; auction a pig, sponsor anevening at the disco or skating rink .And become a working partner of the,Line Fight .
It's still not too late . We believeluck and continued pressure couldhalt the Line yet . But only if youhelp us . Now .
Plus they're nearly to Edwards - -and working overtime . Action Com-mittee members plan to block workweekends, up to and includint Octo-ber 9 (the Long Weekend) .
We welcome sup port, especiallyon October 9 . Contact Alice Norman
Melvin Egger sSyracuse University .
Dear Chancellor Eggers :
We of the Syracuse Peace' Councilwish to express our concern regard-ing the awarding of an honorary SUdegree from the College for Huma nDevelopment to Queen Farah of Iran .She is being considered for this de-gree by virtue of her work in the edu-cation of children and the ernancipa-tion of women . We support both thesegoals, but we wish to point out thatthe Queen is part of a repressive re-gime which is detrimental to the well-being of both women and children(as well as men) .
We may wish to separate her from
the Shah and treat her as an individ-ual, but in reality she cannot be sep-arated . She has the interests of theShah's regime at heart . If she didnot she would be in jail along withthe thousands of other political pris -oners in Iran who oppose the Shah .An honorary degree to the Queen is avote of confidence to the Shah and tohis repressive government, and is es-pecially insensitive in light of th eongoing outcry of the Iranian peopl eagainst the Shah .
We' are especially concerned thatthis vote of confidence is being giv-en in the name of the emancipationof women. We feel that this . is a sad .distortion of the goals of feminism .It is true that some of the oppositionto the Shah comes from conservativ eforces who wish to rescind the gain sthat Iranian women have made in th elast decade . We can oppose thes eforces without supporting the Shah .
If the College for Human Develop-ment wants to contribute to the bet-
Latest word: PASNY hopes to fin-ish the Line in January . Their hopesget later and later . Let's keep themtied up till June,1979 and they'llhave to renegotiate their oontract .
Anything you can give or do wil lhelp . Thanks .
Margaret We)tzmannfor UPSET, NCDC and Edward s
Area Citizens _
The proposal for New York State tojoin the nationwide trend set by Prop-osition 13' is under way . The issuehas been hailed by many, for it ad-dresses itself to a long-awaite dneed -- TAX RELIEF .
It is a well known fact that theaverage American is overtaxed . How-ever, the issues involved in Proposi-tion 13 are indeed subtle, deep-seat-ed and troubling . At the heart of theissue is the disregard for or total re -jection of those programs and ser-vices which make us truly "ourbrother's (sic] keeper" .
According to a new Census Bureausampling, the number of the nation' soverall poverty population has de -creased, but the number of black poorhas risen . Black unemployment ,particularly black youth, is at an all -time high of above 14% .
The ramifications of such alarmingincreases in the poverty populatio nare enormous . Such drastic tax cut sas proposed by Proposition 13 wouldabolish health and social program sdesigned for our aged, eliminat eschool personnel responsible forneeded educational programs, anddecrease crime protection while thecrime rate increases at all levels .
As prospective representatives ofthe people,,we support tax relief - -but not a tax decoy which, in realityrobs us of services and a Vane, ap-proach to the reduction of taxes .
Loymon Herrin gCandidate - 119th State Assembly
District
Charles PierceCandidate - 120th State Assembly
DistrictDr. Bessie Noble .
Candidate - 49th State Senate Districtterment of Iranian women and child-
'
w►' Fiat
t T81'Nb 3-' .1~iwtoYgiteic cele
ofYhc'z~►,
conference '
City. .They Parsedc9moottnds derfvec9
aa* creK
;out teens uUng
s t°no
,
N
ats g1totrio Current when sunlight ;
ore »ucieat'p ntia w
be
"Crucren s• is arasr► PNL teatuce wploh'w~l ;`
Pass®B , thru t letAi.
"din the -state a~thg, ho voj osito te r,cam tea►:-oesmec4sta+ma.+a
i~6~ :
Co'ngra~s a$ubc:opamittse ;oh u-
K`7 ► w'OU bq
hst
ir
arty, the Envirc ~ui~egt a
al
The leaflet pqi} tad
'thatboiMf,
~r
r
te8 ces detenairied iri April 1978
taov . Car
0
Enety Qfi'ige`
that $440 .mill.to# in'diub>ylgtp to'
d
tbc," aafg L%UR,6c tt'h
don••'
''
photo-v6 taic da"Jopme6fWbuld
,siete ly tsfiia
sensor br`Bup• '
snake so)br sells carApeEitivit a►ith `
port iegt#lats"l ttakei,au(t scs l ac-
;~ tl1
R
,
r :
m*'hfe ure is J"t
eatricity
tf6A
si L c
4 6
WAZIWY
►ttit8~.
F 1YFor the third time since .l976
ffour A40st of tbfe, sterling nuke . . .
FOX aqd Shq ',t a
~Sed tie ;Fitaipaulctk nth ear pl
at Nina 1 1e
Carey► 'aid ninistratiAn
ssCiriftg i N~l'oint on;Lalce Ontarla hasre orted -releasiag- snore raciioaotivbttter~la .",
the
Atney i '"office i~ito,c ceu~ h ; Aw
o
o .ix the;aii than itsdesi o3tjercr
\ `
~, / verwgstq:theti°hne}
soledtiyls" alIows . .on yuly Z5, 4ho
for" Q9 on 3ep .140yd
{
haAt~thoritY
the State of New yotic
andc~` s
A8N5G) .~ ope lt(W of the phis told
'
' .
s 3' :
C,..
d1
oilnced be use!~ft
l~ha've'?th ' Nucim Regulator/ Commisitati
- _
,MRP) that it had exceeded the ~ 4, .;
(/~
i
11Uh~(4'1~► 1 V9ab9~ C'
~~' 4iK.!~nuC
s a aa limit four t1 a :s goond quarter of
leer rbatl :tq l> wi
legal or~,y~ y .
~~f
`` adsniniisti;ae teeth,
`
. .eve*$ ~ .
ythis
Under V4,P Is unique regulatory sys-!lam ; the
i?eI t have to cis anyth
toyi~r~f~apVv~hsigj
b' e~~ liX~mft
CRiys"vio?
_
~j~~{q ~^ '' _ •~
_ .latest
a .,
Pnd *11
T.
-+x
M'f•v M4V~
r~ ,
~..? .
eT Y mewhat It's diiia , redu>
ce emissicros . ,
ktiitoi gperation is~tl`5 Haire
'
tc~s in the uA `~. hider ., 'i whips plant isceri~
IruNt Ninlir
$.si> bta bu
' ~Yew
they'rese' lt'it, the '"t ice** ob~eotivea val-~
begfts* of lt . Crh *'re in tNo hole.0
Vnue.,*4 4 is J~ a'ta 'determine : health
A study by the Washin¢cus based
£ segeral btWon'&>ij s in fa ►ct .) -aixl eh ffonmeatal ilnpacsks :
1~
l3ea Research Gvijup reveala3 Ac?me
2' hat'a W4i}~ they're doing theirA spokesm fo3 ' MXY says the
pretty st4rtling factB about emoswe
damndesf to sell reactors abrc .,
~
`
of nuclear wbrkerS to
atlon , ~Ifi
There ale s e` 33►► r+ Etonlater amts
"~praHl$m could be
$• of the;nucFaarlapor '
{'he
rirao~het'ilnfS~ . ,causes b y leak Cs .#n •the 'isteam piss °
1976. . 2l .and gas'tr
eht' 'syr ertr ." 2
• I<aWe 3,361 of 61 .151 wo*ers) were
should eonsfder acting to Atop
'•,Wars also 'reaoon for a report of .
e Poae4 to more iiaj~D,Sram, the
!these sales . .0 is thaf~t~e~eexcessive releases lni the ' third and
"-design" Yifnit`of radiaticsn dosage to
sales nay+ {~ a that's k. .~rorkers .
' ' Ib6sq companies aiive4 finai ~yci+ally. ''€ourth, 4uarters of 1%'" .' alon with
-malfunctions in the radit~at a ga :t'
1.4 ."7% of winters at tha Nine Milo,
of the lmthe g~erous as~ Wangstreats t system .
l nucl*ar plant and 0 .4% of workers
Tank j)
ulteineayt
at the Fitzpatriok ,plasJt
in Os-
i~rsotherasoz} f a tpeing.tt ae' .. w)-e
oed tg more than 0 .5
sale is fihat
ate Ynade xAmw
rem In l
e Gina plant in
to son►a of thepost iprejglvr,11sN
•
Rochester was t111rd worst in the pi#-
regimes In the ' world : soutfi 11tfrica ~At a time When solaf' power is be .- '
tion; W 4T.696 of Wcxkers sxpased ' . the l'hilippine8, Brazily and Iron.,, Y
' ginping to be taken `seriously and
to moss thah lo .'s rem.
4 spI#' OP*
to nucle`er :'ornuclear power 4s getting 04 bad
Recent st es '.by Dr. Thom 8 : M&a
PM 1st thes CUntrles ids meanreputation it so richly deserves, it
Guso, 'a. red##won epldemiologiet ;
imprls tct ex death .' Wh o is going.6hould'oome as a surprise to , matiy
. show that cUvv tit ratiifation '-'ataAdWds
0 A" th ► stales if we.don't? 'v that solar research is novi lesa 'weil
expose Workso to an :unduly hlgb
The Campaf~n to $top: Ii'nvi ,,ay ;fended in oompartson to nu bear
risk,of oabor . A growing number of .
Reactors, . : q WASvnOCI& asecdthe n it wa S ,during the la st year of
medi6al authorities are calling for a
Or tgotid a 4ersting out 'vf theFord's administration,
drastic lowsring of the C`s S rem/
Center #aielopmeX Polipy 'isThough the funding _for solar wad
year meal eXposure limit to workers .
060011ASti a 'casit ai to; stogy nuo opraised `from•S3o~~to $;Z3 mil s n f
`fi-LJ" saes 72g"
leer sales ~tad .T, its proportion is the bM bud-
Letter-writing, lobbying 'and d4,igt .197
;gbt dropped frpm W% to 596 . The
action are being considered jap t c -lunding for nuel¢br this fiscal year
Mc,"
F 21 1 A ' 06W A tic8 in the campaign . '
r'is -a wbopping 93 .~'ti'billion.
rorinfgtmation on }low )rod canIn a particularly Promising area
On 3ep><. 20 , members of Friends ;
help, ,w**: Campalgn on `$unawayof solar tesearch, photovoltalos,
of the EArtLr (FOE) Ztnd the Shad Al-
Reactors, Center for DevelopmenC ; •
AiNy
-the government research funds were r
liana southeast NY'ttuclear opp0
Policy, 401 G StreetId .£ ; y+paid-dropped froia,$S8 to $s6 s Ulion .
nessis)•pi
a State Ens 041ce
inyton,
2ap0$
TI.
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v171-
. . b' PNL 10/74Around Il
P
ccV1
hks than :t a a,
w
`
qpt, our kitdiep,
ofaea' the settfrn gw
r y 1'br:ill onssians
t weoking III the
f~ w6r4ift, movement, the _antiwar''
=
'me ►esterlt, and the ateerdant frestra-:.
F ttbn' e
organizing f& ei6cial Ctanoof'.r 7
a I
_
,
;h
" -
1U at t1l
der evxming'at'c
; of thest" .'r }
- SpC/!'Zta1i91DU$ eners . K~rb~l .711~i +
4aly$,- our beloved 'sister and :neigh-9 ;i bar, was 4AVIng, that ire earn ally ,
build a truLy :offectiva~ force for
-ea} o)iange if wd' organize in
4_ i}
a.
, .
cr Wa that a persow,t iiwtialpgtlon i nm
ement ,4ork is' a personaft "e2i.i .
'worn4"st tie a i4end t6ially for women jfjet la organized ®varyVeer-tip
aften' 3 L 14G
tlon t'stuer
wtOiaaH~rose I97e weiv-heid ,a
t1f~l~tiq eXperience fbr het tsctRt) .
Bt►" 'Ory 1tl~uitive bone .
s
tidy
,gtA6t~Wi
as 'I i~ ri
Yt4
' t - .
1
at CSerh WOlEaesP : Mul Site'Lekit, end .wes en)o yed by
'M
C her Leven ooel
ow'.f ` " 20air
*(*1*66
of changes", "benthreo days of the year" . ` l?fiL maiiirizj partie
into~ . . ".
have
to= "3iaik s s*o
to reniwl~(
are alb Ptliases that
been used
Z,daaorliiKa
il;wseket . Ur ow t~ifcowi
~etA ~+s
rs• p
n
~'
tbioy) .
1t : 3~Tely h ► B hap
Yt±Pld,for m6 ofK .
c Rt4r iai
sic~ny 6~ tht~ s}ndu)ar. sarpar#es tee
, ' .Atpeople , I feel,
the samo tither Ipan PoiT4 t
thr
yea is oflfie HIV ~oman Hatve
' cam~x
0 'f .•.
~: - Api'Gte~ a1E ~a~wonderfai ei€ampie t+f,thi8 ~ ,'` type: bf experience .
1 e pqre committee'~#or this Week -e
n
rz abou( eight wotnenrhad of Vg 4ave
pttv~ poi it Ainq
® .first ~feit the a
dp thatparoles
time , and spate tattsily £cdrwomoiz and ; dec„Wed to stage'
ondaRn°s.tF '"`> weeke* liex;6,
~e .helped f~naisle ~~ .fi_vVmau~;ritst hap~II in• j~9TB .
t= ° (AnAoide : °the name "Woman *Aryegt"w,es, the product oi .
}fxeliest,.~
}~ 'most perfectly s1ti~lbt3ai}t-storming
I've `? . .,
r aesei
it pai41uSpatedri 'ia' j1" MAY Af ,us rn►13 haee*ork~
oft .'otiof the 60mift1ttees are
za-
'Not swPosinaty.' ~grdwing up cetl olic^ wax a workshop .kFtemp that aPD
lsd;
to
is baitig
rotatialal ate f women .
Nis~l1~►.of us ate"
a
t numbyt o women .
In fabt the d*cussion
carrieid o qthe
ti close frinds, and all t
us ala;r3rcomoatiblt
Adi',tliesd faotors havet " made for'i oothly-runniirj woman
-zst 'fsomm ties and fortunately
r sobeoacxse planning tl
WeekendIs a ohnnge:
r"Each
ar we ' start'meetingisi,vey`~`early
9, W
the'irequency of':our meetl gs lricteasing as we
ch the ttst weekend aftee Lab" .4 Yk And each year our, first task h
'~ been t)p ; locate anew caeip' . . (It seeti►e,thump=owners are perhaps threw=ened 15y> the positive energy of 200*
# + wrbmen . Anyway, we're nRver invitred. beak .) - Beyopd that, there's .ot- '
r v 9
ing the camp's, facilities,' or~ -g
in
a food foi the weekend(we $o
foodour awn
preparation}N I
}'sr
4 and cooking)
anging for "formed °~atlte tairimstrt ,(t$e' in
citble Ithada
fimrand'Spocs taarhav end affirmMime-Troupe and tWd women bands, . '
6 ~$9111Oidad and "Joan Xa .'PrOV1S10d
'awonder'ful ente totment-lor Us this, . ;
x 'year) ; , choosing forty+ workshop top .
!
~ 'y ~
yak
_k ~'-
t
~ L'{~•~('V
v-'M~F
,'•y~1Xtt''y
+
hR .`
3yr K'^S
}µ~`
=L
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y
t
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• ~
~~
, y
«~ ve
R G~ ~ ' S f ~ ~ ~«, :
'.1 ~ C a .
y~~ . "'~~ ~ ~ ` ~.
4
~~
pendinrtce aad' self-reap , needa{'tlle
r
kind' of u cot, th"aie at the w6ihws~
, ~
-
r .>~y#~'nttti C~3e~c"r,~ offer . `#y,at, .
~
~~'~",, do fcyPTbr,ngl,~ J `#+taybe`
''': .
. err
r
7'st'*Meyt~L. Kty #fret j►earaak.
an
est . F eetetrsES*r' berds*
'id' aA, .
y". w
t#a
:1} lib-
,• ,t
,e
r#gsteef¢. i
$$adF
G .~
tit
o,
Y
. r ►t
r( s84 ,what "tt t4vJc tou# it tagek( i#thii,cunds too good t4'lietrua,- .
ue*$s that's psse, rs~aar
- W3
rh
Ca3apirtg flat had ' aPwaxs been~ .
glex1Presgign'~of' er+dorsi to spe ','And_
hare, f*the fl{'St time in' my I#fe, Y ,°could be tptislly free to l tatuftrthe
ij
and the{LW~nsnD16 atKt tie'
of. . .,
Mwra rlt .;
n' ac~wx •~a
a ► st
make itlo cfla~eti
beagb~t h toy`
le
i was
a"
arvost 9 Year .~fr3ee to bee Ahked`and
thc"vrhr~
~~triiklrtg anf+tTiirttJ . i;t
sousjo&qad
atgresburce'~resitten
' i liabh, a family n60"ix
} <,~
~•'
p
as ~fi1d`aald incr+ediblY, vbsy mutshAi,4
ng fiat all the v
as
tales k1oy who finds, Ms~tself. >e ng m®'
= bi„
"teems",
el every couple of hours . His L?'ad
an 3du]# because lierei,I could
p
F
caught' or"primanded .Being-a
, of a, skillful, respomfi-wobidyb~ willing tri #ee him ~!' one
a freedom to , rayrself eactetsdevllr ,~ bh ► Oginmittee, obse wing tae help,
o the 1 ky ones who has oa
r) 1ar` oeyond ~e eaAylaotning swiwo - ,but Aiis breastzfed 14 ..
as. 'later I oh!5*e whe teir'l wanted tabe, .
thlee VUe4eetsd' the ►onteta at-
,theood 'amfl eatcse a airy to dep. hlat . -m
g Woman arve~t
alone or with 6thets, to ieoM { tborenee. mea, J'm, sure it's haird foe 'som eex±satfrig~ . .1 . $u~gly;an endblill, ex~
were zany wonderlta w&~Abop# , orbut my €eelingi of person- , to ime `a mother ne8-washing tim eapeoo te qo .
Just unwind . " I, Ch 6 pontbinstion4,10,, lutcement go wel3'beyo'4 "t
to heraeif'away from a child, bu t b
that left,ma reiax
renewed . ${
.sosssett ep
s its harder fop a smother to -A the
Byerh~►ps they #low more fry t;tt3 c
the end i
weiketrd 1 was readyt ' 1 3p ' relati
8 belweon,~td
3agitte being away for two xkay~s andto accept mote of .ts~elf and the
us vwcaaer~
coiriatittee s ~:T
two ~$ from 'someone w*1►~ has
r
Pattly~
r' $o Glow and is, at this tllte,
lenges Isdlvi tQlfaCe dust be=very safe a supportive.
k'
taus* I ' am a-vtomatt The ehallengesC
so; dependent upon .her .this springeisatutally from q& per- 1,1
1 I face are because I an a Cadng andsoolrlities ; partly'`thfs is nutured
I fours} myself tOM . Should Misr-
r
x . . ~t
gh sdme.of ,the'procbss wt'e , cpn CC?nVAAie n ce: those mound nbe wttto led cas~sd fret, pet 'had giirw to 1koman Harvest to get'
VOty yep r
. to this'e aptly uee } C3~tairlly, aonflicta , "
*4ketsei that arllows,t~ , to, all my
;some 'frexe space for them elves &Wi !; Q having to turn a*4'Y w~tipnen
~woi 4iv s c46W to m0rhile
~ tfwr `year because of space fimltaTl
who "did not. "want tg worry. or be his
~;
~
VOW proved`tc+ be quite / Liviiiye .for,
ered by ckt1,1dran, or shoald # take the' le
the earpa t the wot'lti'I live ia .advic o of those wh'o wanted-zi6 there
Ali
self-i`efteotitm, makes "tui IVr Us for awhile. . But the "clearness and,
who am" -a little. rnoreb open atx t
bnsre of mast Rairtstakirigiy eultivat
and ;lust der my biOst to see thaX 1hyi
child not be 'a bother? .It took ';rt~ie
as each year .pa;sag.
~. -44d allowed us to deal effectively
I hime but oneol
dad ghat 1$awhile to aogeitt that mothers ate ;:thi$ issue.
r
somethlug that ` utt aK]1 have to,,
4
yes1 ~a~petoplaaom~ Abe m~
make h4oplon "i fleet uturil Men, do
.fWe ve also'lefiurtted to
yseif
hat
se rde$" fpt the 11V'~cend . . we eielibI ;
even if Aldan A a :bother .
you`kxs<~w► w its. e. to toumhf
era iyasrive at the cani}~ a fuU d o
.
Y
S6.1 find myself writing to srsathers'
anger` person, .to-cry, tea, laugh, t oa'heod of the time we roust begin". our , who,, ;put of :cheaice or ;ne ss1t + ; need
~" ' o 1y ld a 9 ers,oy a weeken+work; just tQnourish -ourset"tk,. `
- to' tfg thelroltilclraa .
;, "s •,
a0 fx'om 'aepoi~Y ~vhos~il~raa#ids . `'l`hs ti a of cesate h9 and Lei x9
—e man l' 40 est J Acid to the massy wo= oftisss include b
' ~s imakeA insteadhexga ,rsper$e aexieties adds helps fi
,N
of 'a person?
~
-
fib` Rio car anize Ws ainiival OV61A" ' ;1ts to flow w6b the Woe Gima-
h'i1 ► . :
and,e~ctenei~sl telpiisg hand and wools
Someday, I ho sveryday, :can beta
greater cease.
ti
o~'<eltcc~tsragesrs~ant .to:thmse of us w'h'
i'e#sog Harvest . Nle~lei~, I d like1111 of this is tQ $ay
Chet
a
Aced lt:
u are beautiful . I am re
~► a avem+i#t ,i,+ the ri1
or'WoOOR Hardest goes tab
3~
" . l on . t you ate latetastdde;scalltssitiaed c" couple,of'women 1Y eTha#s of us wha' -,have woiked to ,jing
met "rscen$Sy who ; bould renatiy tise'a
W en~a, ort"atlon ; exitpr ( 315-
Agt6t
t togethsr have been more then enl-
wiekend ltke t x< ma Harvest . ;
47i11~-g631~ 'l I#nd
to att .Qtei,
ttft
rirlhed by the p
es :, Perh" You~ll a mother o six, on welt8~ei'a d un
' Yoo s~W
est + '
piss us oa next year`s oommittee yw
14 sure Hof the best direction for h Life
Then c
Y+Mk Ae If,, y
;ld
so`tl*X„ahq `hight obtain sgrerte trk §-
-+' ?r- 14`
atbai"L
N ~Q
,,gam
tk
A
--qT
, 1~
t
' - . .
'
. .
,. •-
r
M ~i~~
~~-f~
Sr.~ r'i~.33 the ~. ~ ~p,^Y! ~
a~R'~
t ,
.—
K
44 ,
Locol ~
y
IIAc ;al~tt' ..~t Spc PtiQ
r»
rV
;l
t,
`_
Food wos'tLlli a yd ~tbvd
~'
rc
e ,Sh •
- All,
~I ' . i
M t
.1
,}
~iiT9~ '
`IdC® Ill(} .: '
t
x ,
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1t
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.. .x
}}
A'
~ ~
~ '~
'v
i'~xf~Op 1p.Q~ti~~i~'
~ e[It
Df'~}~' four
,,
and tbe folk 1
$J~ 6ba lc~ttoaas
nne'q ' ,
r~+
raus all
efulndition of -"S
smt
*
tit .
pa
et't, " nol4
s, . B
z
A e ml+rter up her strength 'ae'
her!awttoriginals" (iuding
`
Idw, ' sanand one ar two famlliar n4-ke.s+angs . IMexe is ar bne vrhoYhasf t caught
• u tid,tr, 'or . u l l 'ern ploi~rnet
i
d1t+errtat~
v
one of Raiv s enfo tans et' I sue88 You~; ICQ
urrtiC{f
ar• CX
d~
do . ;x,44 prise of the day for most p
a
< . • $Pic
~
Sari
vixn sitig~s beautifully . Don't let r OfOff yv v~'
►
AA
at latoid yqu"b t, h# usedrto sing in ,Jpor . Women and ~+►trtr^~i~=~tte~
Mil • kee i Her"'s ,~dm6 1~n Mci.esp, -.1,09k~ ;
to the ttainbow°
'Try to ~ismeMba'.`, .jM .y . wouldn't you kz*v, that A" u8 'and Bacba~ta Jean
Macllttai would nave talented offspring = Doug . "+
Doug'belted out foot-stom~in',, hand Olippin '
OR r3reat p", b his ovm m lcinq f Karl
JanF
Niel ' Wv d Betty Horel from the'pniversity group
k
,,
thi,tblk danc#ag : I would lik ,to ay'con-r ♦
~
t0i ►'
G11 t~~s' `
"" '
-gratalamins fo ail thosej1mid .pwp-1e whoPe nt
ov mamm
fear of ~pok!,nq k,lutsyths~'
"
•
flt"4W('t^
_
and iQineB fii
<dtSCC tr~ttl'~4~lOt b*'14L C7C1
It' aui?e looked li everyone was having hai l,. ,
~f C1~$~ r` eft 4101"1 , $ex ©1^ 5t ,*Aa
~
Corinne K
cWi#-6t6ti On ,
Corinne is a miiii ber of the Steering Cosudittee ,
LILLIAN V'REWER ~~
"d
turfs convenor,af #~ ►e enteitaitsment esommi#tee
iir+ Co~gt ss;
nd:0istr
far the Annual Pis s (Aa if you could_~nIt tell ,slightly biased, eh? j4
'LYr~t~~ . BuozlNSKi1~~s~►t~t~>~.
- "i n C.emgr'ss% 3? a 1liktitt
E5 3 {E ~. N t~B~,E 4 $tribe` ; ~ient~ac, f44~, of t
sots4 t
CARS "UT7R:,. {ihidSetr~tb~!~
M•xt tor
iie tk+ ► '~ttid
, z
v#1 S 'COTT `
r~`
CORAL SHOP.~r.rt~ : H~At Assam,
I# iNOP .
t~tth ~rSfrict
,
~t~"RRL $~ 1'£~c A~Sg
4]q Wesfi'IN '
Imported—04A
_
4µ71e 2:
: 004 rstic
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)
Df ►7Ct aftl► kQod s~ft'"Ff DtG$Y, A ~ct~bl
r
a
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Local
10/78 PNL 9
CNY Greets Anita by Earl Colvi n
Central New Yorkers turned outin force on two consecutive Sep-tember weekends to proclaim loud-ly and clearly that we, the people ,will not accept the "new right's "
doctrine of "Liberty and Justicefor some" . ,
In Utica, on Saturday, Septem-ber 16, a hastily organized (tw oweeks notice) RALLY FOR HUMANRIGHTS attracted 541 , people t odowntown Hanna Park . Meanwhile ,in the 6000 seat Utica_Memoria lAuditorium, Anita Bryant spoke t oa meagre gathering of 179, i nspite of a $20,000-plus campaig nby the Oneida County Right t oLife Committee to promote theevent . (Figures are an actualhead-count by the Utica news med-ia . )
Organizers of the Bryant eventsaid they would have had mor e
,people if threats of violence fro m"militant homosexuals" had notintimidated "family people" fromattending . Utica police did not
'substantiate these claims . • '
In Rochester, Anita did a littl ebetter on September 23. She at,-tracted approximately 3,00ap6ople, members of a coalition &fundamentalist churches which. ., ~sponsored a CONCERT--RALLY FORMORAL AMERICA . However, withan estimated cost of over $20,000and ticket prices of $4, .$5 and $6,the Concert-Rally was a dismalfinancial failure for its .backers .
Oh-the 'same days crowds ofover 1, 000 people filled the Gene -see -Crossroads Amphitheatre indowntown Rochester for. a RALLYFOR RIGHTS organized by the GayAlliance of the Genesee Valley .Speakers Included Karen DeCrow ,Executive .Committee member ofthe Onondaga County Human Right sCoalition and former president ofthe National Organization for Wo-men, Kate Millett, author of Sg .&C-ual Politics, and former US Air 'Force Sergeant Leonard Matlovich ,who is currently fighting his ca geagainst the Air Force in the -US
charged on the grounds that he ish6mosexual despite a perfect 12year military record . )
The Rally's numbers were swelled-by 19 car-loads of people who trav-eled from Syracuse I,) a CARavanfor Rights sponsored by the Onon- , .Glaga County Human Rights Coali-tion . The CARavan arrived in Roch-ester with banners and streamersflying . Spontaneous applaus egreeted the arrival of the colorfu lsilk banners, designed by Harr yFreeman-Jones for the Metropolita nCommunity Church and Gay Com-munity Ministries of Syracuse .
The message of the two rallie sin Utica and Rochester was clear .The people are not ready to buyAnita Bryant's brand of bigotry .One statement by Kate Millettpretty well sums up the spriit o fboth demonstrations . She said ,'It is inevitable that we will be .the majority . When that timecomes, let us never be the pig s
,that they were I "Court 'f Appeals . '(He was dis-
Q
aWee. 1,1onGOOD 3R
['011RITZ
now available at
tKe SPC PRESS' ,*,a zAwAwePri1* AVP1
HAND LETi'EftING TO THE NQ COMMUNIT Yworkin9 with y6q . .. creatln crkpri sis ,
break~' -8bwr. barriers . .. .r¢oior~.eauGpClOn, COM/M ► Ir~IGntlOr~
50ILDING THE MOVEMENT,BEYOND PROTEST
herd and nov a , day to day productio n
PEOPLES PRICES H79f#76COMM IA AMOVEME N
Nature's Pantry122
Trinity PlaceOpenings at .
the SPC PRESS !If you are interested in:
o '
being a printerlearning how to print
a movement job
subsistence salary (around $70/wk . )a collective working situatio noperating-a printing business ,
then call SPC 472-5478 today !
SPA PRESS944 BU9MT AVENUE, SYRACUSE, N.Y. 13203
The Good Food Store ,Waverly Ave . - su Campus
The Real Food Coo p618 Kensington Road
In the Westcott area, call Barb at 472-612 5for free weekly delivery to your home.
WATCH IT G ROW I
.r
10 PAIL 10178
Book Review
NICARAGUA. . .
Review : Guardians of the Dynasty
Why,there, was such `a contract I '
rarely, if ever, questionin ghad no idea . I didn't know that what
]the uses to which this train -I had entered was a fiefdom virtually
d ing and equipment were put . "owned by one man.
(page 251 )
We all allow ourselves to be selec-tively ignorant; such is the devic eby which we maintain our innocence .
In 1969 I was an innocent abroad .I was then, for a short time, a deck-hand on a marine salvage ship out ofKey West . The captain, -who lovedto reminisce about Havana before th eRevolution, had me pegged as a'liberal' and 'nigger lover' . Baitingme was his daily sport . '
At our first port, Belize (Britis hHonduras), a black woman, after anevening of drinking local rum at myexpense, let loose at me a Venomou stonguelashing . My offense? I wasfrom the US . This was bewilderingbecause as a good liberal I though tthe US a rather nice place to be from ,
After several days in port we head-ed for the island of San Andreas, Co-lumbia . Just before leaving, the cap-tain and crew looted the Belize ship -yard, carrying off every tool andpiece of machinery that wasn't bolteddown. ;
In San Andreas, wanting to put a smuch distance between"me and the .ship as possible, I split . I hadenough money to fly to Costa Rica .From there I would thumb north alongthe Pan American Highway back tothe States .
In San Jose I saw my first ,Yanke eGo Home" painted red across thefrom of a building .
From Costa Rica I crossed into Nic -aragua . The contrast at the borderwas stark . Altho the landscapelush green and fertile - remained thesame, the villages orrthe Nicaraguanside were squalid and desperatelypoor . Even the highway changed fromsmooth pavement to a surface gutted
Columnist Jack Anderson, after-asurvey of heads of state, concludedthat "the world's greediest ruler 3 sAnastasio Somoza of Nicaragua . . . .Through his family and flunkies,, h econtrols every profitable industry ,institution, and service in Nicara-gua ." The Somoza family fortun eis reportedly worth $400-500 million .
In Guardians'of the Dynasty ,Richard Millett, a Harvard .trainedhistorian, methodically document sthe looting and degradation of th eNicaraguan people by the Somoz afamily for over forty years with thebacking of the US .
, The muscle that protects Somoza' sempire is the Guardia Nacional, thesole legitimate military and policeforce in Nicaragua .
"In 1976 Nicaragua was clearl ya nation occupied by its ownarmy. Far from producing -a pro-fessional, nonpolitical force ,United States influence ha dhelped create one of the mosttotally corrupt milita~~( estab-lishments in the world, a forc ethat functions more as th eguardians of the Somoza dyne -sty than 'a s the protectors ofNicaraguan sovereignty andfreedom. Partof the responsi-bility for this situation fall supon the American military ;which created the Guardia an dwhich in subsequent decade shas helped train, equip, and
Professor Millett shows that Som-oza's election in 1974 was fraudu-lent, and that indeed his candidacywas constitutionally prohibited .But such considerations are evident -ly of little concern to the US StateDept . which supports his regime .He is, after all, an avid anti-com-munist and a declared friend of theUS . . . .
Guardians of the Dynasty is atimely and pertinent book . Millettpublishes facts which are notoriou sin Nicaragua, but which Nicaraguan scould publish only at the risk oftheir livers .
How.ever it is a book written forthe specialist . . . or for the very pa-tient . Fact is piled on top of factwith often too little regard for th e
broad_ brush strokes that would pro -vide then! focus .
Fortunately the book is graced bya brief but quite useful introductionby Miguel D'Esdoto, a Maryknol lMissioner, which provides essen-tial background and context for thegeneral reader .
-Ed Kinane
GUARDIANS OF THE DYNASTY : A His-tory of the U .S . Created Guardia Na-tional de Nicaragua and the Somoz aFamily ; by Richard Millett ; Introduc-tion by Miguel D'Escoto, M .M . ; Or-bis Books ; 1977; $6.95 ; .284pp; notes ,
with potholes .
-support tnis torte, wnile
rnuex, pnvtos; narucover
Lafm Amain
n19 Fi011t 800111 N91NS1. We have 8 beautiful new full
International, 1977, $4 .25 .color notecards from the Cen-
Energy at TFR has been very low this summer,5 . The U.S. ~ Chile : Imperial- ,but we're beginning to pull ourselves together..ter for Cuban Studies . Five
ism & the Overthrow-of the
for the fall . Rae Kramer is also joining-our fraz -children's paintings, 2 on Che
Allende Government, James
zled three-person collective of Dik Cool, BarbGuevara, 1 on pollution, 504.
Petras & Morris Morley,
Kobritz and Lois Levitan . We work every Wed-2. Pablo Neruda : A New Decade
Monthly Review, 1975, $4.50 .
nesday from 5-9:30pm or so. Why riot drop by?Poems 1958-1967, Evergreen,
6 . Orlando Letelier and Ronni
We also made a much-needed $300 on Sep-~1969, $5 .95 .
Karpen Moffitt, Transnational
tember's Book Recycling . This money will go to
~'3 . Latin American Rivolutionary
Institute, 1977, $4 . •
unpaid bills . Workers on the sale included Dik
poe , a bilingual anthology
Cool, Lisa Johns, .Rae Kramer, Barb Mecker ,
by Robert Marquez, Monthly
On mail orders please include
Barb Kobritz, Corinne Kinane and Jeff Heard .20% of orders under $5 for post-
Thanks to ECOH for use of their building . WeReview, 1974, $6 .95 . age,& tax; 15% over $5 .
continue to accept donations of used books .1 . An Inside View . . .Allende's
THE FRdNT ROOM 924 Burne tChile Edward Boorstein,
Ave . Syracuse, NY 13203 ►
HOLM : 10-6pm daily; until 9pm Wednesday .
t
~
~+
F '77,
V 4"
At
~,
A.~
I ray
'y
~
°
fA y
'a'!'
y
~Vtfi ~y `T
4 1
IFo~p.°N1crqgut Exile .Tell His ° ory
' ' "W'CS Vofce ~~Itlplied Thr' ' hOr ~t Cier FC I N Y" Nq rs Vou I ,
Wpre$S q" lsuclv)I# this cancctii ecs ses an .
*dz&doo
Early. .In SeptaaglberOr'received a
Reporterg and photographers from
astlfei Peece Counci'i .e
s
phone cell frdip~ Serrta Survil, iiioa-
Crhann 9 T5► ']!Te4l+a 'W ' irWRadio,
with t" concerc:r the knowhow
assn priestt, io work `With the ary=
the'P
and the Daily
jwhe aready energy to pull itknoll order: He h -.heard about us "
:. or
`interOlewed Bernard and
her ..from friends JA We erri` Ny. Be.tmwd `
gave. thelssue positive coverage .
On'several'occe4"ssecentlySP C
said• he would'be'passing thru Syrfi-
T ,ttine set aiasn't,obw for
t . haslcalled-press Conferences . They,
cusd in'two days ,and a*Od if we
i Pauli walker ; the Reraid;fournal
are esseiltial fdr reaching •`many :
could arran#e a press conference for ~
reporter, because-she ha* d,an ear-
Ce4ial New porkers at po ibYe.t
him .
ly `cdpy deadline. $o Paula)and
W le mere' s - to mystique t 6'call -He` was recenUy ex led ft6m Nic
Bernard met earlier that rxiortiirag
in§ a press coiiferei1§e . . it OoeJrn' t
aragua, where he had a parish on,the
at $PC for an explosive--inter oew :
lust happen, automaticallyy and theoutskirts of Managua, the capital:
'leis •resulted in'a 3tympathetic
{
press, may -not respond to just anyone .The only explanation-the authorities
artinie In that 'afternoon's ffVMW .
Each'df our press conferences furChet` ,would give for his sudden deportSiton
'Bernard ;' a native of Clean, NY, -
Confirms SPC, as a•reliable, useful- 'was a terse, -"It's a mtitter'of nation
has m`b-Oritk► the press in several
flows source .al security ."
Cities in the Northeast to tell the
Luckily press conferences canBernard doesn't consider hiirtsAlf a
Amerlcan,public about the Somoza
NO beld ' with a minimum of ex-
4subversive, but he did, in the pulpit
regime . At errery :opportunity he
pense. Fir, that reason they well
and thru his parish newsletter -, Sup- -
urges citikens to write lust five
fit ;aur. shoesiring budget .port his progressive Bishop, who
words to President Carter: 'No
Raisiatg money to cover even '
' sincq has Called for a''transitional
more aid to'Somoza ."-
our day;to day expenses Is ai t~:nregovernme ' $o replace Somoza .
This m"sa' is particularly
crxtsattltnq and anxious strugg)W ,We set time and place for the
tit oly , since Nicaragua is now eras- '
`We cannot 'stress too emphaticstlyconference, and Wends Kohliy our
broiled 1n'civil'war . If Carter hone
that sore rmed .the fullhearted fif
S
Latin America 'specialist', iinmedfy
ors his human rights rhetoric a4- ;
nancial'support of aU of'our rend;
!:F
ately notified the news desks .afail
withdraws US °support, the .-harshly.
are if we'are to carry on,our :the local newspapers and Ty and ,
represstve Somoze dynasty - a pup-
~. •radio stations .
pet of the U8 for 40 years"- will
Bear ,rgsaOgr-.vob4citigwin, wh
4Despite such short ofice, they'
topple •
could well use your generosity
rpress conference was well attended .
tu>w!
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to meet end share ex- rrotoniy the many e~rdnts ttfBkt we
Festival? We Were `aske thelte ", perfences with many .people, as stEendsd orth4 count~ry's~ .poiiticalIquestions'toostantlY by Cubans 'yi nthe streets, in fagrtories, iri hasti-
wgi1. esa~ettd n4oef+aua.cultural ,• 'ar} ;politclal presexorns a0 ex :
climate in, ab
sat. It is•to .express ,,the absolute
egratian~of political#
tals, on tl9e beach; 11t@re3ky °vet hi}i1t~s~
e s Ehef most poputit 'ex ' .liibfts was 2r com trotrmns
e overrtioSY
p
le's j4eisopa i`'ves . ItJs• .ttte"realizatibrrtiiat in
_4 were we went'. "bayou like Cuba? ,view of the aditritlos , of the CIA. C,ubm, . politics a
life,:are one ; ,ah ''D6 you like` the 4estiv;a ft? The
reall
cad"ed ' about our im,-;Cubans Alit oudtr the okb bikfocused on the thsa same ., ;
k
preasio#s of them arfd their country '' itry
rrt of the t`ilA .
tryinq to
. ` kviaranThe Cum people are;veryMo ' open . ?#FeY afire propd: of thei r
Y~ ~abMit us as people a' !N e, y ethere at a very anueival imeArr'
Srow the revolti»s isctba . It ,did .'nat ; overlook Vie- support that the revvlutign and the tr~nsforrnetion .
ch the -entire cou' try'A'reso
Sf,th*
CIA had Oven to e~imnco and rostore they have made, in their country ., ;Pecple never't re of ~orastitig caii-were pooled to Bost
kith Intnational Studont and Youth Festival
f
i ;t rogimes in other ~,etih p mex~- : .tcan countries . Photos arid. :tiocu- , ditions be€ore'("antes") the r®volu -
~t for Ards-Imperialist Solidari~, ~- . `Menu explained°tyre rolo '=ot„theCIA' ti'on with pre.soq conditions ("aho-%,s'w Peace .arid Friendship . In-Viet Nam and Africa . ,Press ; In the ra''l
`Ne diacuesed with rneay~people . 'Each Cuban woAk donated one minds of tbp . Cub3m people Is the, .,
r day's pay toward ' the festival aad recent boir~binq of an kds,Cubana Oo'hardships they suffered beforethooro roktlon: . chrc+ni4• ut~emp]o~ ►- 'many volunteered theirtime to-mAe plane tor .witich CIA, tralped: e)ciles ,
' tit run aimoothly~ Eadh . COhmittee plasm `credit ._" I# which eigbty~ rnerr[, political oppression, hunget, :
for';the Defense of th4 Revfoiuttoly three lives were l6st, 0pxuding'tha segregated and private beeches, to ,• (CbR,'the social and political Ar e . Cuban hdtional , fencing team name, only; a few . And how, single
`, . : .s q
iaation in eac14 block), ttvs gEher exllribits W0,U0hted'the ' iu
,all tha3se thiatgs have" ;the` reva bolo:Federation of Cubain`Women (VT 46) ; 'role of 00aa youth . An bulldiriag urtr#el one radial tihange . Today,
. .usii ~iis, end'almo$t,all social and' socialist tuba : There.v+iars . an a
i= for ,example. .uneanplQyraerrC dr''
"political erganizations 1*1 1p, ^ed for
_ iitiokZ oh Cub6h .sparts 9 the 'Tnsti~ not exist;:'peoplgs .,speal :ar d act ,ireaiy without . fgar, hunger'is `amonths in advance: for the'festival . 'fortutd
Physical Qllture where'r Streets 'and bu1ldings 'wer4~'d46e0ra- tho"a~ds 0 Cubsn'athletei study thtt#gt of the snort; beaches .are .publie,
f3ed ' and, pandstands were":built .
. and develop under strict inedwal '" tineto . gll, among
m1xed . W43asr an_Cuba's ilrsadY strained transpoft and acier+eific inoriit
lnc ; These Spajai. h-'inffluenced culture .c ' system 'was -enhanced to aceommo- athletes hiso take part in the . actual
°portsIn fact it
on one of Cuba'sbeautiful bo
s shat we met Maria .date th~, .20, 000 fotelga visitors- ,expected in the Ha'in.m a area . The
mar ►ufa
~e of tl elY
equip-meThere were-also music arid l=ien and
family;-Whose homet7 g, r ec:a0trozrdc l
e :
A' @arrce evenEa tbrou hoot Havana, on . -, we, then visited eeveraZ times t Ma*many hardships on a country that Is, intern ational iolitical Poster Rxhi- . ria 1lena 'is a''student,- st, (Ay, nq io
oor to begin with ° ; And Cuba, tr yngto r4eet basil. social needs with
bit, song , by
, and the annual six' _dog carnl,r%l ~ '1~ ► e carnivtll parade&,
be $%teacher –Recently she spenta j~ear`teachirtg in Orlome province
L . scar& r 'sources ' ,,has a ahort~e
of vrerti' expanded to include floats from *brine she was born : Like, ~wiari abusses,errrd taxis, izat fio mention' _
many countries that were present at Elen'a' , most students alternate their;.private automobiles. Mai of the .. tho Fest1V
. A hig4uot fofr us was' ac aderhic' and, work 'experience i nSocialisR'countrle , hoaievar, sup_ when moan that l million peoplal order to Integrate political tWeory
'and practice .PortOO•the :festival by sugplylog nowbusies to Ciit}a :Wor$.er$, 'Ehr6' gh
gathered larthe Plaza de la Rev d1'u
6n to #ere ~F1d+tl spe&X at th~a, - '
©st p eOp
belong to their lo=their untor's,' piaYoo a m",1ot
stn 046sing ceremonies of: the Festival, cal C0R a's \ does her family. Theblock sCDR, a }etiorrw3 a system . ofir4akixrg'Ilie Festival i1 sue
ss
of etsparThere we wote able-to
et cse ,,''support that thethe'.overwhel
g, 'associations,• creates a,gohesion*>
example, the many beer standsalong Havana's wide' Ocean-
, Cuban people'have or weir reyolu- ' within eadh neighborhood, acting
e
avenue, the Ma}ec n, were opera-ted
members Ot the, teachers un*ac1
'
; : i
'Aft
the Festtvel wai over, we, .as a' fdcal point for all neighborhood'social and political activities . We
v%b *eft doing volunteer w~'. watched * 4 slow pri t -nq-' out prr~- att+ded • a! CDR, block party in honor!ilia Festival foreign viaitor8 ' and ;of
FThe FAS'flval, ean-throughout blur
first week 1A Cu15as, affording us the 'c691' in H'avana . .To describe ou reence`•rttuba is to express spent Hours talking and drinking
1
k G, ,
i
1"... .:...~f.
.._ir ti.x
`'_`a . ._
S
2,... .X.
`~ ;~RR :.' _
r, ..
\, ,,, fA•
' 'r ',.
.
wH
a., .
1,2 pk j~
, Imi
tmonat
0178 PNI; 13y~ .1
wMSi our sta$ in &, '-we met
collective" is 46mplete vt th ,modernhundr s of young f'ionsers an the
hou rag (whore rent_ is ftea), day 'streets mltr at
iitsfied. ., t
~'~
by
Care neret@r, primary school, pofY` ~
r
F
` theirlred `ti blue s~, red hers ~ "
c>
r bcwole'stqre,
and super-' `
i
recd Wti of "Wd ~..s,r and w
1'
+~
bite
mailcet . 1460atmers intha coun-
p;beer,
oying,the ylivel Cuisan
shirts . ThisVvup to the eooiglf
tryside, hdwewer, choose ta` remain+
`
* Ufe. On a `moft sous kde,
+,p
owhich
a1 citga zat ors for, chi
on their- larxl . 'These people are not
r
&
pre ongoing CDR study circles
prepares members to c
forced'to give 11p` their private lands.' eI " 1
4-~aiel "Z~►3,tines a fitbtnth, in which
bate •t the revolution . We, ai>sia had ± ' Haa ►@ver, they~can only sell what4
' 1he'e tare neighborhood discusses,
lan opportunity to meet with repre- `
they produce t61he state . .Ttieater
,i ect ►te, as 11 s?inore the
:aer►Cati ►es of the Communist Ybuth .
gM- uos and " health w6rkers pay-..vi«- "
. °$c~l~, palitic>tirl is81;1as .
1
mass' orgarzations BucRs'rs
sits to @ducats the Caiapesinos,
f
*Ithin every few bledks ihdre
the red' ation of Cobiprs Wow . .
about the benefits of'llvistg in places
i — 'Is a health care ciWe {polyclinic)
and t'lie GDR, the Gommunfst Youth'
like,libacoa and'ioiningtlie 11 collec-
. i' WbIt' l focuset3 *r pirg venUve Care;
must be chosen by, itseir fellow sou-
tfA but they may decide what ;xheydents And workers to become mem -Q
,•
_mnd .is stated "Y4y pr4fessioarals
pref+ar .tier. Could seo that"
l@ are demo'-
bens.
The Cubans are a proud, waft
aioaily irtvmiveid on mw* ."Is:
In Cuba :almosi everyope does
people . They explain their revolu rin,6
,.. their tl8ight pshggk3 Vied CDR* s, in
volunteer work arid . no one is uneztr
t#on tous bs a dtelectiu&al process,
z ,their workplace via w«kor e4stntels,
Played, as there * many pie4sing
one which. they understand on th'e.:
~d In *air 4006in~eat via the ,
t~lCS to comptete, housing to be
most'sophistic*ted lev6l .'We were
`'x19 "eiectoral"p> ocess ;~
built ; students and, workers to be
gratified w6h they also explainer! , ,r
addition If+tatia Us" aat4 the t8ught, •etc o tfolunteeth work is .not
to us their , 'understanding of North
svorneR in the hAUss are arri- ~' ' forced on the people', they choose'
~imerican people as separate;from
s
P@detaRxeksof
to volunteer their time because of
the V, .S . government
Cuban
,s Tkie ' Cubarsof"flee '
ft*WMC), ,a mass based, aitto>
their convictioti to>3he' growth ar yl
4*phasized`40w we as North Amer µ
haibrndws voomen!s onpanization, e's
prosperity of Cuba Ond their:destit
ictah anti-imperialists, in bur own
-
Rt~ stud irl 144t~to a0vooate. s*,
to be'a pant of building socialism .
sticuggxe-agdtn st the'U.S bloakdder. w aan itthf>is this o ansteA ofAhe re} .
VoLa Leer work is an Sonored task
can affect thelp day to day4i ,es ,Akijut#o "nary► Pil e•
arrtl "f ierxtes acomrtritment to Cuba .
.from the clothes ,they wear and the
repregerrtinq . 81 . 6 cf . dsba~i~" 'Men
A
foo&tbey a"at to the: 'Ab'drUm" of
`
zc ►er 14 .yearsof age,'has pushed,<,ti,
medical suppliesr,buildittg supplies ; .
(W. the, establishmeint of day card
and energy,
s"Oe
, womeri'"creised parti
1t}A P~
The U.S., blockade has-not hih -
tsfp cis In the 2'abar fate ., feit,and
der@1 the pciitiaal'daveibprrient ofequal ,liviirg prisotiaes rind,
gBmT
~ .`'
.y ~axScArf
Cuk~a ; irOact; it has'etre rgthened .
worked far the full and equal
z-
it hy.emphasizing the need for Stomaarltci} anon of women in Cu}
anti-imperialist solidarity . Th@ , tiif® ."1t is al~i thd" poctal org za-
~ "Ilk
blockade ,has alsct hvt weakened°theA ,
on thai twill interven+e'arxt assist
tr1aditional friendship and admirationr
.nee@ssary with family probipra"
A thiltioc wdmen in pwdubtoovi siibs felt by the people of Cuba towarda billion pesos in dre6t9d valwt, LNS
We!"spetntmattsithvurs,with )l,0ria
die vi9#*d a crackerfdl
►
the,~orth American people . Cu4 S
x Elepal b family-, \ taa~l¢ittsg about , life
stAll a poor and develbpiaig country-., ,°
in Cuba and the` U .S ., drinki#ig rum,
oral, the lisysrra Club ruin-df jjUin 2 ybars it has changed dramati cin Santa Crux, At the cgrackeett .faa-»coffee and beer, dancing and, sitsg
caliy, weatheving the harsh, years
tiCory we
with . rewesentatives ofk •
ing . They wanted to know about out
duri ' whioti the,US • tried to strong -le union
health repress for the a
qi skftylt~es as much as we wanted" to. know
le Cdba ecoaorutiically andli#cal
.-about theSrs R " In the near futut4e,
,
ly . Tile shf ft to support ' fr , socsie~ » ' .r
krolk►tlm wh6'also belen to then
}m
merrtbers Of ,her `fancily wilt b@ ,
i st untr ie s wars' not simple acid sw
Elal¢~ ; 0ot*rruniet You ' 'arid Comp ;
r%=` to kamar, a piatttated ;Commt =
Cub % still, suffers from shortages ,,-6ftti ,* Party xepreserita ves t°the~ r it)~' ust east: Havai ar t Ala
ceit n bas raw'matbrials dnd(
}I n
factory, . We learned'
t the deare dal+`care a ties
pro~
„super-
commodities .k
ets,
h
raa blic process in yta,
tc-t
sus facitities,• . earth
We left .Guba'tired, emotionally*n1ci: schools, ..~ : .l~aria,Elena's
ion deoisir~ls are zhlaiie itf'ttai~'.raar= p}rysfoaliy, having -felt- the `1 f
ndS faptory had nc -
t . 'family €s givdta pr ty” mom'
~' •
r,warmth: and togetherli,sss of a peopll e:acs@ they now 11v fh old, vv
apaccident sinf 181, (fin . the '$aslletin bows wend• arrrrtxsr9irenaents
so close to us geogra~phicallysv.'
i .:l{ou'sirsg . y in Cube, . " rtsexlmum rest
1
be no more than 1tM % of a work
fof special training 'courses for wor - explinted by itlrrperlalism hi'storicrilly, ,ker's to learn- new technigraes',atA
acid yet so Courageo and strong,,ee a nietlthly salary ; and mtiph tious-it
either free or#sal w 01A Qf*
equip>nen ,One thieg'that Aspecial-
this a cle 't3 aproduct of s syracu- e
' =
n housit~gE sucstt as Aiarn ! .btrklt
lY struck u>i V0 !hauls workers son's
y .trip to Cpba last dMh : Th ewarmers o tk><m " c ro =ix#gides " ¢
rot fine apedd ofhetr abembly~'
ors : ~tair~ad co~u,or Lundy Fried ,/}irt@ o *"`7
1
DanttY liakial . Ron Schuffler Sandee
`f
twbrtc vvit> oonshm
crews ors
e'vrsited e'coli 3v@ cattle-
Susman . A slide show about t$?a trip
4.F
' ~1NVp 11Q
i~, wt ,
1 l Y• locos
rs 'evailabie to bs'Vh
to` yipups..0 eon crxnpleti
'breeding fam, In Jibacdt'i, one of '
classgs . Call 422-3186,' K? ..
qe• ea
r' *e new rural oomis~ . N*coa
~ ~ '
-14
4
#
' t
~3 d
z
d
+`f
r a, ~'kv
14 PNL tOr/78
ZMe FIv Years Afteuthe Cpl
by Judy Bgtk►
`
r.
1r11Yet'aiiou•Newa°Service
~~~!
[/~
d
a -
31J
FNEW YORK (LNS)-Chat}ges in the .
iCbilean situation this past yeaF leave
5
restructuriag lisw"Which`
,
s .
v tbeen 'significant, but in the tnitin they
seat by the, wholet
„ ,
caphifare quantitative rather thttfi'Q~ `• `
ttecdltadlr•
`
,qualitative. Three already apparent >• ;'
1tl►tiaaestit Itadusirlaliats g Baptstrends have escalated during this fifth
gyp..(
' (T; .
A
• . .
Pln
[that { pt ttte seQor '+byear of ironfisted military rule . lklost
c
`'
(x . . '
beam ttad will be dbpoftd to .dramatic has been the resurgence oP tthhe
A w~E taw KFV An\,I ,,; i
tl* ti**egovernment has
tomass movement in Chile, highlighted
~
it'' ` ct the developmtnt Of, ciasrby public demdnstrations, labor strikes
tx>mtttry” .<" Their pressure has TaiuW '(which remain ill s}, and a 20 duty
in h►inot Carreacy, revaluations and, whungerstrike supported by Chilean tit
cuts, but for the mti o pan tlfr ; )4, wIles around the world .
surplus goes for luxury imports f t .ihc
The other two trends are unfoldin
a
wealthy ;within thr ..boWitois state itself;heightening, the contradictions that
Clgiagcs.
r: : 'have plagued Chile since the coup. The ?
1 '
Towards ' iAut
ttttisu !lefirst is the increasing "success (in
*• .
With political parties offi404
y
-capitalist terms) of the drasti
y
tt;
tied, tt%e'tt *ctors'riced'sonic for mrestructured Chileah economy .
is
cess^ to tm decision making prof
i timprovement raises questions that for
is here thgt the ;Arcnd . kww4rd 4400* 'the first several years were somewhat
i
tionalifation alines into play . . lastacademic: how will the . fruits of the
year PinOIL z+uffc led a timetabV Fo reconomic restructuring, be divided
-
elections atti( civilian particip%40 in famong the competing . sectors .of the
governmenl that would provide l*. abouroMse? (ht is a given of the`thodet
civiNin presidgat by 1990. White Atitself thDttheworking clas'k is norm b!
/
Chet; ha sfncc said that that dptiisa beneficiary oft'heeconotaicgrowth .}
~
"flexible"' Pipochel Iva-. alreadyz
And what will be the arenas in which
&,wed to pressurc,by lncreasitig-xhe
;that struggle is played out?
L
° ••
number of civilian ministries Zit IrisThe growing•relgvance of these ues - Cabinet from '7 to,l L
.. ;R
dons has lent impetus to a third ;tre%4,'have the
The concept of instiiutiooiPlizat nas
demands of Carter's
_was put forth by Q .S . imperialistc
strategy for the r
. This trend is
,towards the institutionillizatign of sir$Texis"tg, and in p inocA . 3
K authoriwian rule aimed at providing
flesyciie' .the most at rat Live incentives
ture W hile~gures tats bf expected to vocabulary hays coma to belcertain minimal openings for sect s of
foreign capital o any country in
jump much higher ` if, f reign, roves – ~aathoretariat4 tlemoeraCY :" H
Pr
tP
Pintxhet would much rathe' rule in #fthe capitalist crass to participate.
Latin America, foreign investors have
ment in the export sector brings new
harsh beenslow to Mum to OhiWdue to the
production 'facilities . and, •advanced
tome a nd to ' p•he he. ~ ac t-
New Economic lIntetwe
h r-intbction . and
tt chnoi
ti
otned, and tiespkt theioitcessiox het ►s
yp4
*0fitability,` •
ogy+ non-trarlitio al experts mask 10 1hC Process ol''inatitettionaltt-
On the economic front, the drastic
The moss notable exception was Ex= have already increased fivefold in' th e
d reduction in public expenditures : and
WW II ptuchase earlier its ytuu- of
pad thrA¢Ye+xsr lnkitigpopioer't Stua a
those in the U .S . and ,lfj whd ireltt+ Fight manetary controls hgve re cet ,c : >[> 1tra•sized copper altina for $ IQ
. oftotal exp0rtsfrom 'ah lusf80percent
cteasin$Fy unc~,mfortable w4h hkinflation from nearly 100A at the end
other
400h $
to-slightly mgr* thtat'36P. iv xnt in •1977.
bloo died image ; this
;Nits fineof 1973 to an expected 40% this year.
currently w4er nagotiatloin, but ho
TtAe rleveibi0iietlt of this•eitpsin sosY-
image'The social cost of this achiev
when, it gottld ; be 'Justified by thebeen very high, however
. ettreat bas
agteeitterita bare been reached . It is glto
tor; : to a iargf eft tent cOmroNed by
"vioisn! ttpbeaval" goWtva in Chile, •. in public expenditures has meant
' y that the mart stabltiAl economic
M0101al groups j*ksd to foreign
and' the i~ 'to "restore gr~er,"it ..
s
4igl ►situation will ~rdosstire potential in-
4p 1 has oceut'reF,t at he expenseanf
t unemployment and a disastrous decline
vectors in- , be coming your: pbtpr~stic d
ticrp
cert . ~ orty percent of . 4, na longer appr°pnpie fot thr
F in,such services' as heakh pare and
pitakgts, tOV. haveftKre~liq' reap ~~An tddusirtkl firing leave alreatly . 'education, Wages ; rather than prices .
p4~ded t t¢tsitttd
profits, doriog these, iaflatidnazy
the withdr ial in.
av dVi"
exterattempts t 0have been held to an absolute
tyEarf through apetn##ativot investmeotts
cetttjle poUpiea and ate deatttttcfiod ofminimum, and over 21)0,000 workers
Me hilt ° intertiatiotW oivate i64attinii tnarkel Protective import _
y
te isueeasing hisp «e
inits
. :
!
The ru
sci
if *n>~yreceive a special minimum compensa, .
tariffs are bft slashed to 40 peretmt,
Oer stamp p~
,~banking, interests havk ,
^ the gap
wag aimed at iiini~n4leh'by Attack of inveli0tient siYftk
ch h ban CutioffS. the lOwM iDAR V
has' Intol that,40TI~w hile
foodstuffs are co
rank to
4QCIt1>udoh of $30 a month=-,in a country
chiding
m
b
pdtt~ bl +7
~M~Wime*
W tlf,~the ,#ttireinent vor I ft.S
red
I
Leo h
d
>r
+
f ~`.
where the pnco : of maxi CnmQditNts, in-
economic
1*hi
support," and tfite ottstet sff , lo
. those in
thet}
tither 7 I
orAfter a negative growth •fate for` c .
Y
~<
Force Iteturals, -consolidated t~e ta iM
Adi►ffit, private, ba t will
was t+►t 41' f~f. 1=several years, .the lum stow claims a
l
greatlr co4trol of the milkiry and .the .7% increase in production.
have lent more than•St.S billion ta.the (,rages! sdiksaad mi6dium prodtt~s, ; .
far last
g0vtrnrtt~it in
hands.,Chilean : military govertuherti by year's
tl
economic actirvidY its the
hi syear. This growth was initiated more
1:bac
Ctiltetitty the U.S. hi content toend. Two thirds of this amount has hands of
and fisrrdr w ft
PIPby foreign loans than by private in-
t
pressit►e Pinochet`for concessions par-been provided by-i,t.S, banks : Chile's ` des
r
~•vestme~Ot—foreign or domestic .,
ttcalaNy!•~ manipulating the I,.eto :Uer
•
;foreign debt has nowa reached 53 :9
It ` is dds,' Oft, ssi4flce of- arnall
~yy
biiGon. -One of the highest in the world', manufatd'rep td)tfroe act facturers .
he tstiytitl. anutes
Onety ie Apri
l such• ces and Pision wa s
t (!tom Butler is a staff, rnetnbet of the
relative to its gYoss 'natignal product .
roduaK in,eltpatthe
UftttlR
nKal, a
axltet s
withheld ogt'eettsent to•kt ie)tforth Ante~t n ConRti~ss on Lunn
DebtsPrcenof Chile's export Ong`
Of
wt3tdn the the ,
Rightsgroup, t iAmerica NACLA). For ;well-
up 42
T
io
whether 4,04 h v .the UT s"researched_ artickv on the,/ political
inga
atyluathat the
Ik*Mes should welt thatlitbnt Pinocl*'s consolfdat "eco»onry' r Latin Antericw write to
neVke 6w prices for copper, be taaad'itp, td
bescfits Of
per .
,NV4CLA, F.O. Bdx 37, Cethedral Sra-
Chile's exhorts have Adcreased. Ihe
' raww" Ild"I t&'
:them#on, New Y
Y, IM225
~Ctk{ on p :rule. N
.)
direct resale of tbaiiew2conomic stivc- Thisdoss tent slutty~ti~+titey ~ oppostt'
•fi
riA , i,.zhr
ti t
c$
8
_ sk .' `-,
\ ~ -.s ..,;~ ., .t;
-1va
1r
hiday October 136ft9:15 "
THE PASSIONS OF A PEOPLE DIVIDED . . .A, N A
"SPECTACULARmo mA MAJOR FILM,"
-Pauline Kael, THE NEW YORKER•
"The major political film of our times . . .
AMAGNIFICENT ACHIEVEMENT"Tom Allen, VILLAGE VOICE
"An Extraordinary historic drama :. .A SPELLBINDING DOCUMENT "
Molly Haskell; NEW YOR K
"MONUMENTAL . . . utterly unique andawesomely sweeping." .Kevin Thomas, LOS ANGELES TIMES
"A LANDMARK in the presentation of ,a livinghistory on film .° -Judy Stone, SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE
"An Epic"Vincent Canby ,
NEW YORK TIMES
Two extras from central casting? !No, this living caricature is all to oreal and deadly . He's General Au-gisto Pinochet current head of th eChilean regime and the leader of thecoup that murdered Salvador Allende.
Edited from 1973 the film is a chilling landmark in person, and Carmen Bueno, an actres s1973-6 this award-winning work reveals the presentation of living history . who had also assisted in the productio rthe gradual escalation of right-wing After the September 11, 1973, fascist 'of the film, were kidnapped by agent sviolence (aided by the CIA) against the coup and the murder of Allende the film of the DINA, the Chilean secret police ,Popular Unity government of socialist was smuggled out of Chile bit-by-bit They have ndt been seen since ; an in -SaIvador Allende . Covering the 7 over a 6 month period . .In November ternational campaign has bagun on theirmonth period from February-Septembel 1974, Jorge Muller, the film's camera- behalf .
WIM M by 080 GUNW, RMReM M tint EORgsTutu Ain IR eMsMtsI I WY ft CON FM swa tR sw CMB wW
A TMCONTMWAL FILM CENTER RELEASE
Friday October- 27 6,810 pmACADEMY AWARD WINNE RBEST DOCUMENTARY FEATUR E
HAR LAN COtJNf'Y U.S.A.Produced aid Directed by sa1b— Kw* Principal Cinsna~opraphy ilwt Pwry [%ncrord Ech" Nongadw Rated PG
This moving 1976 work, directed byBarbara Kopple, won the Academy Award 30's, five men were killed in Harlan a sfor Best Documentary . It chronicles a result of unionizing struggles .the efforts of 180 coal mining families The film has a unique, personal qual -to win a United . Mine Workers (UMW) ity which allows us to she the women o fcontract at the Brookside mine in Mar- Harlan Co ., for the first time, take anIan County, Kentucky . The strike active and militant part in their plight .began in 1974 after the miners voted to And
finally, we come to realize th ejoin the UMW and Duke Power Co . re- strike is only a year out of a lifelongfused to sign a contract . During the struggle .
O
V
'O
4r
_
t .
16 PNL 10178
Upcoming
(continued from p . 141
of' power, and what alternatives, i fany, there are. One ahcrnative bein gsuggested is Army ' General Herma nBrady, Pinochet's second in command .Pinochet has purged all othe rpretenders to .the top spot . Time wil ltell whether this fate awaits Brady . Th ecivilian alternafi%e, Christia nDemocratic leader Eduardo Frei, doesnot seem to stand a chance in the nea rfuture of sharing power with th emilitary .
Re-emergence of Mass ResistanceAs a counterpart, to interna l
bourgeois squabble, the mass move-ment is reemerging in direct confronta-tions with the dictatorship . Stunned b ythe violence of the coup itself, throw nby the outlawing of traditional form sof organization and struggle, and over-whelmed by the effort to merely sta yalive, Chile's working class an dpopular sectors initially succumbed t othe pervasive repression . But little b ylittle it's found new forms of organiza-tions for undertaking legal or serni-lega lwork . The left political parties weredriven underground, and from ther edeveloped clandestine forms o fresistance activities, including a now -extensive clandestine press .
An interesting byproduct of thi speriod has been shifting allegiancesand alliances at thi grassroots leve lwithin Chile. There is a far greatercooperation in resistance activities than
ever between members of the Unida dPopular parties and the more radica lMIR, and a significant number o fbase-level Christian -Democrats havejoined the active resistance movement .as well .
At the leadership level debates con-tinue over conditions of an alliancewith the Frei sector of the Christia nDemocrats, while that group attempts,with less and less success, to impose atactic of controlled resistance action son the mass movement . Increasingl yactions such as the El Tepiente miners 'strike are pushed beyond Christia nDemocratic , goals by the worker sthemselves . The recent hunger strikewas the first event in which join tleadership was exercised between theMIR and the Communist Party, a nevent finally co-opted by the Catholi cChurch in cooperation with ChristianDemocratic leadership.
Public and clandestine actions havegrown in intensity, frequency and at-tendance this year. On Internationa lWomen's Day, March 8, activities wer eheld throughout Santiago in women' scenters, union, student and communityorganizations about the role of womenduring the Allende period and in thecurrent struggle against the dictator -ship .
On May Day. the first major mass ac-tivity was held in Caupolican Theater ,with thousands of workers present A tthe same time; the "Coordinadora Na-cional Sindiqal" was formed, regroup-ing leftist and opposition workers int oa workers' central organization_ ! 'Warn -
AFOR
MW
ing bombs" were also setoff then andon July 26, damaging , property ari dalerting the rightwing, that armedresistance is on the age da .
The Organization of Relatives o fDisappeared prisoners organized it sfirst demonstration . Students too haveorganized to oppose the militar yregime . In early September studentsfrom the Catholic University publiel ydemanded an end to military control o fthe univcrsitites . During the same wee ksome 400 students demonstrated ro ttwo days in solidarity with the strugglein Nicaragua . On both days they wereset upon by rightwing student thugs .
The fastest growing arena fo rpolitical and economic struggle ha sbeen within the unions . Petitions hav ebeen presented to government unions ,and to Pinochet himself, denouncin gthe lack of democratic trade unio nrights and the policy of tri-partite com-missions of labor, employer an dgovernment representatives within the
factories . And despite the five-yea rdenial of the right to strike there havebeen several limited strike activitiesprotesting the super-exploitation o fworkers and demanding wage in -creases, work . and subsistence for theunemployed (officially listed at 22 per -cent but undoubtedly much higher) ,and food for the starving.
The most recent job action wa staken by the workers of Chu-quicamata, the world's largest open pi tcopper, mine . With the support of othe rChilean unions, the workers boycotte dthe common lunch hall for 20 days ,seeing the free lunches as an act o fpaternalism that obscures the real issueof a living wage. The workers demand -ed a 50 percent wage increase to com-pensate in part for the 70 percen tdecline in their purchasing power dur-ing the last five years . The governmen tsent in the Army, arrested 66 and im-posed a state of siege which continuesdespite the suspension of the strike .
Three days later Huachipato stee lcompany workers took tip the same jobaction, with the same demands .
The mass resistance movement is stillin its formative stages and stil loperating defensively . But it ha salready proved that class struggle can -not be stamped out by labelling themovement "external subversion ." TheResistance continues to exist becausethe people of Chile have the will tostruggle and the determination t owin .
p w
In-depth Look at the Middle East -- Judy Bforkman .(What a month for our ME Journalist-to be in .
Europe ! We welcome Judy back next month.
* Gays in Revolutionary Societies -- Jack Manno
* On (Not) Owning a Car -- Ed Kinane
* PNL Evaluation by PNL Reader s* Alternative Energy Sources Part 3 : Wind Power --
William Sunderlin
* Local Iranian Student DI'scusses the Situationin His Country
SCHARPS TRUE-VALUEHARDWAMWeekdays 9-8pm Sat . 9-5pm
Sun. & holidays 1-4pm
*DffAIiePOWER, TOOLS, STEAMERS, RUG SHAMPOOERS,
LAWN & GARDEN TOOLS, PLUMBING TOOLS A ;SNAKES, FLOOR SANDERS & EDGER S
Aohm S Sate" Res'
$~fg
& f. 479-9846
SPC Reaches` Thousand s
at the State Fai t
Our energy booth went to the NYS Fair again thi syear . The night before the Fair started we held a norientation meeting - compleTe with role playing -for SPCers staffing the booth . Some 40 activist sfrom Central New York pitched in to take four-hourshifts .
One of, the main reasons for being at the Fair wa sto tell people about SPC . Many people signed u pto be on our mailing list after getting copies of th elatest Peace Newsletter and our "NuclearPower andits Alternatives" . Hundreds of interested fairgoer spicked up free literature, and many bought books ,auttons, , and bumperstickers from the Front Room dib-play .
Luckily our space, - on the 2nd floor of the Art &Rome Center, was twice as large as last year ,which meant more room for books and leaflets .
Out on the lawn in front of the building, SPC pup-peteers delighted audiences time after time withtheir performances of 'Jack and the Paver Plant' .
U-1
, =
The PromlseOf industriai .Coge.nerat:i:on In
„Conservation, $iid alffOierit-Y 'in, ,
.. moralerouse make eminent
ande4n~mic Sense at a thee' *hen 06 .', .World' ia feelizing
de0efidettCe on .',non-nreaSwable riso4reit''and turning ' ' .to nit9biat poWer.
hear a lot from i the. utilitiesabout lci*a "the consiimett can con'aprVe. Rarely do wehear ebfUtwlat .lieutilifietand hici0try 'aredoing
. . . 'to change ,their wasteful woys .,
.Cogeneration* i'sche chief mean
s foruttlitieta and iridus,ttly" to u*e eri„ ..orgy intern conservatively and effi-ciently . , If the utilities and industry.were really serious about ,conservation,theywituld',he imPleatiriting cogerier.ation with great dispatdh, Per from
", .it, they : have created an unhealth
y trend. ' 1n;1.950 . 17% of USelectri-dify was supplied by , ctogeneration; .tod3y, 4%)f US electricity is sup-Plie4 by 09 .4;ten,
At pteseirit,'the US is wasting vastamounts-of energlibyi'ti,pt ,cogenerat- ,..ing in instances, where4t is practic- ,X4 to. do skm& wherelite ,barriers todoing so axe only institutional .** .
NY indu*try is, a case in pointtlds,waste . In. 1975 ,bet', paper'. chemical, ,. 'petroleum ,cement, glass, and 'primary metals °lndutries in 14Y P- ..Oticed about 6%of their own electricity,, eitherthrough selfrgeterati-pn (with their,"OWn,turbines, but not c eneratirtg )or through cogeneration .
.
.
,
, Oopeirtratiot; ;It die : sinittltaneOus. onneraticittof alecuioityr "
and uieful thermal heat from on egenerat,frv;; source, tar the 'purpose of ixtra'ct-izs).,Lati much useful epertry as possible from 'a unit of fuel . In industry, this mode of '
,power tacductiott'can ornate a 49-31% fuel ., ,swats Over separate systems, lltttlin!:ltlS ettui-valent amounts of electrtcitY and heat
**Otte form of this wage' is the discharge of.. : heated water, from the nperattOtt of centralpower stations . In,
countries, thereis*ridespread use 'of the wisste heat from
.Sur,i:ieOlin
..,
.
.), '2 : :4
attaly shows, that 'tiles,* pattiottiwr ..,industries' c9t.0'.00nr:40.1Sbir h'eve O
ilea& 41%of their. oliccity19i5 .'
, ..:.
.
..
.Xsttaly dote
trOsYDo‘.,phataic4"by. ,195
.halfth ugh dogeste0ation,' ,.'etA.bItepr cess nave Za-5O,billi 'in in*estaiiat, seu`e fuel .
*eienttwo to' three million; 0*relsOf
.and +p kiln* the ... need far
fife y
) Ivatom.
.
.. .teOetit studies Claim that
Dori* study. .mates the potential, 4o t. .'co,
.teia' cleat that Ate Ootoot*
O. saVings fit
:ht. d
Ot
sele9frical'' *tie* goes to Indust y .. .Just how large the energy stiliage,could be "unktfoorwhe0ause .*
. .
.
is r
.,economics of contradai0t) . to coge,
.„
..,..- ;. eretioaa.m .t9..."a oeffaiii. extent
speo4pi.:.
ice ')OfNY
' tls dew Yorkftate poeNy.:'. .cetittal politer stations forthe purpose. of
Researchheal'tw homes hot#titer is channelird' ta
.
are
'. pipes. This tires@
conducting etudiee to.nearby commuNttes
''
forrriofnnertriP use,
alga
L .
, .
. .
, , @, p
0
..
.
tinifolhas been sussetited as an option hit NY by. ,„
'
''
. ''
,the Neotocaserw'Rfs.eatO and Pe"elois.t.".... ...„ ,
'; „,
..
.meat AuotortryitwOpPO
' ,
. .
'
.
..
.„
.7 ~W
lt1?
PN1,
Par from it .
The response of tart rate hitJhAr than they should be .a NY firms surveyed In, the ESRd
d High "detpaxlC} rates" dis$ieade, ;ti-
' U
recently, the task oColleyshows that cogener
on is probablyan economical option now for a
duswry . fro~t turning to cggetieratlol 'Ths ",rates &Vision statf of tt a Pub-`
"tinq ,datso ?tl
y
as#btUtY ofin#us`or number of-large`NY't#x'mj& 71 liq'Service Commi~isibn hes'iiecentlytrial
on vrsa'VXCiu velirin- the hatet~s 'of NY s"private ftatilltleo.
The respon$e9 Oi4the ten,firms also' suggeots -that a "ten to twdnty Per-
said it oppOSes,utility T8t$a dthfClL l1 .disr~ltfiinate
cogenerators,,.a9a#notA~clftpe' #n .tl~e?
ill is
ettvica La*itkodes that-each Oi
s 'sevencent
6isdit f©r-co"ner&Uza wrvestment that is na+w'psrC of the
Pier$i •ak~d state governments . , ..jo
G
`
ptivat~e utilives 4wcatsess+th einflustri
oogener"etion potential it} '?pending national en #i1egislst;en ha
movin
make cogenerationrise ofppe}}anddAthe inevitable
se o`
their oxvhi'serlrice is
to rp
s s.lika
141
willatot as
iincerrtive'~to oveccotnesome',
indu'
's hesitations abbot,emPlq
~a~awIU ~n to, Indcog rlera-t . .
pdote more .ttr clvte t
uatry io{
fa bit
~Po+t$7oFthealbusli tb gliarfl 4ii geese . c~
, t~la near term *
} •
r• ,
' litilitiear doia't ys
! '+doge ieration' . . , N
g
Mateavek
;i s ► ert to i#epu131i6 Service ► halt iissioxl :forecasts
But enthusiasm fad this ehem ` .bonama should be g~ualt~ed`because
..'
for O"'ocrjV%asonsi -In a business that industry *Hliend to ;.abindon ; . isdoubtful tYla'k cogeneration` where the< nauas m!~ the'gamee is to_ 'mwdl6w
"1 ' cf' investors tself-generat#
in .favor cfF_pi
d~
t~vili
a its
refits aCCrue ti5 thtt
k
'hrbua ► ~euedii
of as much.erlomlotty becaeise of p
#ng rttt-tional legi
~sl~►t3orl,id tiuM POTI"POT ,
masses,
l~tilities `evil ► txY to raise`their rates to offset losses of de -cap
il, 4s~or3sible'; ail impinuemeitiion the mss'' aearket #s'a thirst'.
ize i#idustry`a" use at cii exid has •This ls .indaed odclr' .Leiit
tbedr ttlsmend, for. thek service as cogexeere-
-ticlll is 1mPIergeaite 0'i
i` $mom illiCet that,
11lYiyt in ful#illment oftlle F '
a 8e
Law ietipulation .' :wor1jy g
of
s-
vite.`utilitisa, :
Power-Plant :and Industrial ?44 Mt: crf 1978, whIc4i C~lep
4:;Qaf
TweThe d'ogener'tC#gn issue in NY
is , moiie than . a~ X 1ghWhter of ut"Y
Nia
MoDlawk, glad anytteii~g tbin Atfqust . wo~ild. t
A, ao efeeratorS hypooa~lsy . .fit is , a reminder that ~
Y
E,
say about &e p4iontial for roger rremotions from
chores on the futldatmental reri111sits, for build;reg a tG
„ ation in the utiiities ) `ual tepta#0e,
,of oil and gas .
It seems that;;pa4ts~tg'e of this bill wouki .be a
safe and ii sar ti e~aergy futuxf3 is to ! bawraY width utility zriono~olfes .
R,to the Public Service domlltiseiono strong stimulus' for cogeneration : .e.
; ,,j What 1Qiagara Uchawk +had to saysliealts L nitee2ft
rsi
t feast-tle+Cftsding to the ESRG study anti t~e$ate Ertergyr office, fuel ava
b#-+
.
.rpoxrtosEa
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The New York )IatP Enercgy ;
tinq' fudepi
iseaC the;im~aac ifty i5 high on ate list of dams ouia~•a c
Moonstuay* 1: a~eec1, d.-
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ifill>fie ;#irilit+~d'. . . l+e of prbspelcove cogeperat rs . IsveeiKbY F
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' ,'t~dftttlftcF re'6eg6esiettit on ache pe to : 'tilig !`t+eegilftiess ,tlerallY` .p1-; pgt
-Acc9rdi 1g to the-F.S
f 'th esignific2titt obsttlele tt►: c~►e1¢~p• .
2 . "WktitrlaI 60ciene*00 Ip N .w'fade State" -by 1Beeriow, rtitols . :Net~ton s Itaefrun
„ hil~iti#ely costly . F ANA of c
rat ozl is xiot tlee cost Auquat, .IS78 B~
'sea
C?airPluc .
't
1dk lll~te rAason tO ~ielievbOf tFle system, .iN2t f e
t 0 Ta @ . forutility •bagk-tip;iiow@r . Cog/tteera t-
3 . "NijcfW Pawet Pit's' : - QUbgpetimlttee byf,
Enamyjc$mllrnn
and Natuf J, Reat»gee
an8 a,
erasion fame Isitively
y? A rarcellt stoatindustries that' do not ' thS i2 7
Vf3 taot~ Fce - Aprlk l8, 197 8atit
`'theby . 'fi privafe 0IM firm
ties with the utility grid'
a to pay'
A,
t ~1RO~' Lovlt *`- Frlendfi oftH Earth latsraatlonal-' 1977 ..
p .3a" a hig} :'"idemand raE eg in Omer to ber me
Systems ftsoar~ CkcC}$
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can,guaranteed power if their agstesnshvui block - fit .
s it rid
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4
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"
of Mefn.Ppwarb+
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of th e 'New
p
Vol .l •-'1978 - P-.1995FoMPcrt
rl cQtr
m~Tt~B i 1 it Can” Vbe Setf4 .t O
' extint
8, utility, MkIp, t m
ain , 8 . o op.p, ci •
cit ..,,
t+D4sn4 ati~, ltiNewYaleState> ,'p
4:
SaA~uY true`.far"industry In NY . gene
rag and transmiidlorr figili- ibitl • p .21
st ' tiesAhat are, seldome if ever= used
+
9 hasby the'
iltr
But ` ehts . 3taSCtll#Ye9 . "Report of MMn11t~f Electric Spatama of th 9
New Park Power Food" - op . citr- p .269 . .10
ickustrial Co9onerotion ,~ Niw York Steti' IWe~iam ihU !t'i, only fair to a aY thpt iooea, in 'th}a article wareSa 009"eraI product of eon= .v
sttionl with 8fC co-staffer EQ Kinane . , boeh used as q !~ for se ' nfjt :
cit .ebtda .a .32
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IThon►~ :,
or
An'' ,- ,Mh
by Cad Mellor
_
from him. ware
is staxement,thaR
,q anet
On April 28 1 '1969 at awold pftt ' 'Offtoe. buiMiriq 'n Ntitistcn, 'drat '
RSi ; who wait c oirlythe most-
titl ttterd fightbilinAbd w
dr "Was - :
s awnt' made
Band
`33tit~iattanal. headllw : News._
. .
~
:.tee 15-47-42-129i+ffu'sed t6,'istep being'pusita
for hts pe stories defil
ed Alt as
TM ilaiv4 mope}
forward and adoopt indiction IMo
- atettrc~: ' ,gvea"thougli Alt had lei b n9 raanlpuYadted by the black ; lyitfs z-
the US Army; . '.[r *t in' itself iiis q*M,moo grounds for 001641' Who , *i04dersbip, but he wits p.E~rle''to
nothing ur tistiisl ;,thOiasafide of ' 4f
ding'6s 'troo* an
WoOk Musliad spsili okt`th*galatiouship, bate►sawAaterican'men refused the drain m
gt6''arA-the ratsd "allaliCa racist - -at ho6a afal-racism mbioad
N •during the,>9syttias . of his`#,ouisvtllet kaWWdky drag Durinb-1#s reslto•from ehatrtpion-~_Draft®e I5-49-42-127; hom+aver; ' ardr Im was aq! 1tap►9er heavy- ship boute, -on*
portes :asked Aliwas Muhaanme,
]11i, tlse rei weight .chi.' . 84xinst ofti`^ !f 1r6 plenaedto ga to Canat
if hishenvywefEjht phaslspion .of thb vatrrid
' cUU, *hb .oftea
tried on Ootii . , o
►idtion vi►ez ;e upP,eld .a>d'a mmr 'big%" respected in :the fair p'Iay Aibfu$od to respect`All's replied .' "My people aleed swo . "
' I blackcdmmui
tee, of ttre 0nited to due 0 e
. bn direr A1i':s iegal,dsfficiij
es .States . ,Ali as fiction had bo!tti Tht*yesrs later ., the Sine : ,. --wore cleared ewaiy, and his iftcaoptshort-ierm~and long-C"i do ntw Court v'dWOrd AWI. ,convlation end sbarvlk tnov*aeed, he continued to-quences . also ruled that his draft bovd had express conoerrt and aFfed$o fo r
. initially. It derlt .trelnors Aote4 tat
y by not taforniinq `l'lritd WorldPoop,
~la
UB,and,lnttiroti9h the sports vtQtld . A num- hiii why he wasn't exempted from .
vi+t
itatha%r coufttitbp
a 0
' .ber of sOoitsvi tbrs,lied -Orevious -IY criticized Aft- foi 3 Is personal
the drelt . -tn'tho-teantitae, how_ever . 'All's' ablUty to eaen n 11v11kg,
1f9iVe :6f himsa ia~ad to q" fina
i1-iy has made him an lriter*t#vnall~
r . rle and his d
son to pratsioWwa she'lsibmic feith., gut hfa act of
substaAtially roducW" . -At"-'the rataemed ~This-is nat to say Ali is abvvs grit-Iqb$ of his ollreor~ hwwas eAclu -
ti c
tenair,insp UW ii new wave' ~
d~
Champions'hip bout$ and iclsm• . At vedous•times, he hAiR
tof vItvldiC
pits".crsf'
a aiict 'eor~nitlerrtary . . gQAIe 646 corn-
f~to fight medio~*t opponents, fd4oit.lm couskr ds"like Zaire ortlie, -eommentinq oa t. withcxdin at Atatie~ of'e*vtio 1oc4les~ dtlP.ra
ments4ncluded: "h,•tivitgr and an sitlon fropu vators"', *oups atode `the governments of those countries .. f -iri9rate ." 'ei figait~rr .
's a cow- fist promoters reluctant to schedule Toe onete oonsidicl South Korea as asite ft3r one 1i
is fi
s . " Am. Otisc .`
ard," and "tnorq notoilbtis than An I s hdhts In most Amerlcaa cttiiitl .'All' W%aRaid, "I don't have , ad. : pronouncemoots do the 81 aius :o# WOOD;
t'.lack Johnson ;" JdWoti 'wae anearl!$r black
envy l+eight ctiam- `gp.arrel*ith,0tem Viet Co"", a ~~ an have ,been less tteniiphtatais3 ,Hss
t~h Wa#p
'sposit#aa
grip'. p#on vibose prindfpA{'Dvkne_was prefic
:nd'r"rets, howe
81,emardsisi,wflih threegl►hite wom- personals corivlctfons dictated his role slfould bs mod' i+ea~rers ison.
y. prioritie and this made hi& an wku- tsrsaeceptabl® . `
_©n a long-term basis, All 's re- ' 'sual_taah Sri the world of afh*lcs, On balances .however, Ali is
per= X "fusel of the d*#: r4rever alarlfled Thus i Ali 46s the preourso r tb such sc~ti vK~ip cnertts .ourrespect. He ls,onethe ataqu t}!ty pf the state seat, carrttoverssal " athletps as Kareem of the few celebritlas who faced suc-:"spurts and pv2itias dolt misc ." Abdu ;jabbar and Bill W+alteffv vVhose Coss and"its sttbndarO,tdmptso," ,watOd, '
r. After Ali was c%Wictedi4 viola- a9"tas 614o encoApass mdse than 'came aut vrtro3b
,r
tini[~the'Selettv8srvlsse lawsy
t.-and sentenced to five Years In More *portant y, AU eras ors of Cad ts,e )OUmaltst+kIfha 10h9,4404.lrtor^
. .'prison and`-a $10#000 fine, file ; . the first prominent black A
ricans athl®ttot.
,
tie k_;
7 ~14~,
'r '~
1
..
•~ ,
110/78 PNL 2 1
The Face of Nuclear Madnes s
National
A Visit Westietaninn to f:nfma n
g
He cited a Mr . Bassett of the Fed-eral Preparedness Agency whose mal -
what I find so encouraging about the recent
every . nuclear, power plant in this
ignant words epitomize the deathl yanti-nuclear movement is that Its activiues---
country! If we had a justice system
thinking which is, spreading amongstall of you---seem to see the anti-nuclear move-
gment in its larger context, on the cutting edge
in this country instead of a legal
the weaponeers; that there Is an acc-of a far, far bigger movement for Justice through-
System, I doubt if there would be
eptable level of damage and that nu-out the whole human species and toward the other - enough jail . cells to dCCOfiodate thespecies on this planet . It last happens that we
clear war is feasible and that ,are making our contibution to this movement via
deserving members of the atomic
" . .this idea that we're going to bethe nuclear issues .
energy establishment for their crimes
wiped out and that we might as wel lcommitted against humanity. . . "
give up if we have a bombing is justToday, the equinox, is good cause
I visited Berkeley, California in
not right, because we tali regonstit -to look back on, not only the summer
late July and Participated in the East
ute Federal Government . We couldbut al spring also . The anti wad
Bay Anti-Nuclear Group's (EBANG)
have a viable . government . Sure, maybesocial justice movement in this tour-
preparation for their involvement in
we'd ,be living at a lower level of ec-try has sepn a blossoming insanity
the Californi a=wide Abalone Alliance's onomy, but we'd have enough people .and the empowerment of thousands of
occupation of the Diablo Canyon
Maybe we'd have to go back to a 1920.people . .,two vigorous seasons of
Power Plant site on August 6. . With
status of people and numbers andreason .I
the foreknowledge •that last year's
economy, maybe even earlier than that
'appreciate having been witness,
occupiers were, finedup to $SUO eachby virtue of my travels, to the unity
that . . . "of oflr movement from New Hampshire
dred miles to ' travel, -still thousands
madness, I realized . Sanctioning andand with distances of up to five hun-
This is %indeed the face of nuclea Fto Oregon, Kentucky to California . I
converged on-the Diablo site . . . and
°preparing " for the holocaust . This iswitnessed repeatedly the inspirational Gofman spoke .
' ..,
the thinking that Gofman then explainedaffinity group dynamism, the consc-
Simultaneous with the Diablo occ- is a gross aberration of the survivalientious consensus process in decis-,
upation on August 6th was the Trojan
instinct found aberration
ion-making, the persistent interrup-
Decommissi6r4ng Alliance's first of
instinct humans only; a path-tion of sexist, racist,and'agetst opp-
four waves of pccupiers' entering the
ology ression in our work, and the dedica-
sons in every country . These diseasedwhich afflicts a handful of per-
tibn to non-violence as the means of
site of the nation S largest and fault-. people's only sense of security lie slest reactor . Built on ancient ('hinook
in havingredirecting our culture away from a
the capability in their handsdeadly plutonium economy and towards Indian burial grounds,,the Pacific Gas to destroy absolutely everything .
'
:by Gary Weinstein
a life-affirming, solar economy .
and Electric's reactor and surrounding
Whereas other species may existJohn Gofman's voice stood out for.
land stand in violation of treaties
;In hierarchies or even pecking orders ,me during these seasons . Having at-
reached with the U .S . government in
' it is never the case that a species i stained both a Ph .D . In Nuclear Phy-
the 1850s . The Chinook released a
arranged in such a lethal fashion assical Chemistry and an M .D . in In-
statement granting permission to the
to threaten the entire species, letternal Medicine, he is practically
TDA occupiers to enter the land and
alone the entire living world . This lustunique in his claim to this dual ex-
decrying the trepasses of the U .S .
for poweq Gofman claims, is a medicalpertise . His 25 year twin mastery of
'government and PG&E .
disease . The disease by its nature, andthis precise knowledge leads him to
The day preceding the first day of in its current advanced stage, has leadconclude that nuclear energy is in-
Occupation was highlighted by a rally to the, dual threat of nuclear power an dcompatible with human, and all life .
An a waterfront park in downtown
nuclear weapons as its final symptom .His rare endowment is surpassed only
Portland at which Gofman was the key-
"The task of the activists, as I 'by his aware dedication and cdurag-,
.note speaker .
see it, is to learn how to make i teous outspokeness,
impossible for the sickest member sof the human species to control all
Gofman's Trail
the others • "That society has allowed these
_Spring brought the Barnwell Occ-
diseased individuals to reach the pos -upation and Gofman was there . He
itions they have IS appalling . However ;spoke of the "illegality" of civil dis-
q~
as Gofman concludes, he is increasing-obedience in paradoxical contrast to
ly hopeful that true justice is re-emerging 'the legality and (lethality) of UNCI-
and that the past two seasons are ev-VIL OBEDIENCE . This brilliant chall-
idence of this vital re-emergence .enge to the ethical foundations of our .•
To my mind, we must never acceptpolitical system is chilling . It was
thh insanity plea as an excuse againstrepeated at his August 5th speech in
nuclear madness which is responsiblePortland, Oregon where he asked,
for the perpetual threat of incineration"How can YOU be violating the law
which invades our lives . .when you are trying to Ureyent a
Gary Weinstein wants a photovoltaiccrime? . . . name!
the premeditated,
-you
panel on his roof at home as soon a s
Lr%ndom murder which is committed by
,KUnder
N
possible .
22 PNL 10/78
Now Aotwht:'to Viii SOn Thursday, October 26, two youn g
Filipino women will be speaking i nSyracuse. They have been active inresearching and publicizing the role o fmultinationals in the Philippines, es -pecially Del Monte Corp . , This activ-
symoko be YOW BWANSI
ity, needless to say, hasn't mad ethem too popular with Ferdinand Mar- .
r "
Regular Pedaln
.i:7
K
4 • ' aoppreai in hn't Hn - a bon
Syracuse University's latest out-rageous attempt ata lucrative con-nection with Iran recently fell flat eits face . The College for' Human D E
velopment nominated .Queen Fara hDiba, Empress of Iran for an , honora idegree,_ in light of the work she' s
(Seven Days) They can put up metal cos, head of the Filipltio regime, or done on women's rights in Iran . Adetectors to catch people carrying the U.S. State Dept . as indicated by tricky question, we'll admit .
Who 'weapons . They can check credentials • - . a delay in visas being granted . ,Con- going to say that they don't want toto screen out undesirables but how - gressional pressure finally overcame give Someone . p reward for women' swill the governments of the world this obstacle . rights ?protect themselves against banners? The women will also be speaking in However,- certain groups, includ -
This is . undoubtedly a point on the Buffalo, Rochester and Albany . _ Their ing "faculty, the Iranian Students 'agendas of Washington and Moscow tour is sponsored by the Upstate Association, the student coalitio nafter members of the War Resisters Peace Network .
People interested in of the University Senate, SPC andLeague (WRL) pulled off Simultaneous" helping with their visit Should call some feminists in the Social Sci-demonstrations in both capitals on SPC at 472-5478 . ence Program, were quick to point ;September 2 in, support of full disarm- out that the Queen is one of the rul -ament . Kai
~~~ers in a fascist regime which op-
In Washington, 11 WRL ynembers broke" - presses women as well as Ren . All *out of a White House tourist •line ' to (The Poweriine) Utilities in Wiscon- the more outrageous that this awar dunfurl their banner and distribute leaf y bin are under orders to go cold turkey ' be -given in the , name of women' slets on Pennsylvania Ave . . They were on nuclear .
The state's . Public Ser- rights . . After an outcry from the a -quickly apprehended by white House 'vice Commission (PSC), has effective- bove groups, the College for Huma nguards . ly told utility pianners'to forget Dedeiopment withdrew its nomina =
In Moscow, eight of their comrades about developing nuclear plants ` in the tion. , Of course ; they have saidstroll9d into Red Square, unfurled -a `'"forseeable future . 4 And that decision, ` that they plan to resubmit it some -banner in Rusaian (which was upside :say nuclear opponents, is a model time in the future, so'we'll have todown) and tried to give out leaflets that other state 'commis sions may well keep our guard up. ' But for now--before the Soviet police stopped be following in coming months . a small but symbolic victory .them.
Soviet officials were unruf- The 3-0 decision, made public Jul yfled .
After an hour detention, they 6, evolved during a special review o farranged a meeting for the WRL . long-range plans" submitted by themembers with the Soviet Peace state's utilities .
To include nuclea rCouncil (no relation) and then en-' in advance planning, said the PSC, The ,P"* Knowcouraged them to continue their utilities must petition for special . (Guardian) The passage . of Californ-tour .
The pacifists declined . permission.
The catch? Commission- ia's Proposition 13 provides evidenceU.B . officials, however, weren't ers will refuse to grant such per- of widespread discontent with . the pre-
quite as friendly .,
They _held the 11 mission until the resolution of pres- sent tax -system .for 30 hours, and then set an Octo- ent uncertainties in the nuclear fuel But a recent survey indicates tha tber 4 date for them to appear in cycle. "
Listed as uncertainties were this discontent could have been chan-court .
The unlawful entry charge uranium availability, waste disposal, neled against the large monopolie scarries a possible sentence of one reprocessing and plant decommis4on- and the rich, rather than against th eyear in jail or .a $1, 000 fine, ing . poor and working class in the form of
reduced social services .War Rabtere' Leepue memhers unfurl their banner before the Whig Houw . At thesome tin• elyht other.1np the "me In pw square, The survey of 2007 U.S . residents ,
underwritten by H & R Block tax con-- sultants, concluded that there is in -
- creasing support for tax reform plac -ing the heaviest tax burdens on th e
-
NO
~.jC ..EAAAR
QQ~~ rich and big business and easing the
families .pG(H~f(~~
mE(111
R .
xPOWER!
crunch on
g: "A growing majority rity condemns th emajority
co
o income tax system as unfair to mos tT,
a people, " the survey noted .
" Agrowing majority sees middle-in -
CD come families as overtaxed, whil eupper -income people and large bus -
a inesses are seen as undertaxed .
The0 public believes that over half of theE very rich pay no income taxes at all .
44
-
59
!.Z~Nr~., i
,j..'i
_
`'`1, •,T :rD .at+
ny„'"a-1 . ,* 74:t, d Se ;ue
Cteuif
FREE CLASSIFIED SNN they.. . tint donatioxs aren!toallousty r$Jected tPlease type or print your listing and try tol kiMtp it brief . Mail to :P fT. Classifieds. '924 Burnet Ave., Syracuse. NY 13203 .
-Viil.
Iditas is Apse,, Friday, October 20. 1978. -
bpW PeiOOp1~1'e E
5JC 191! afs tie4 ~S2 .10&gloomfor Sbe more to p1 vestbnt group. rotail W'price : $3 .50 . Writs $PC, 33apaasii Ave:13203. '
QMr decent running shape, 6 good' tires (H76 14), : bee few
Sohn pe+s ns, i2 good Pimnted snows also, $50 or $85 w/sites& .eaede tb SPC. call unity at4254603:
on41 ilt a amber of US scieptiete who 'have ho dIr .fundtng cyt
after hiving detected a ookrelation betwee naagitpttl~lla radiation ststrdards" and illness, le seei .ing funds to
,$tartest igdipeudent q4 Ik for research. Send ygurcontributton to:t teensy of Conolrn Lot Public Ftealth;~ 251 East SteBe,ffela. 11'Y 14207
Yagate(~3en ;eml looking for a home in $wecuse . .'CaU 476-3768.
pkyeuhew w}idine eklirtnment? I would. lOv to' rent your, equipm•n% 'or work with you on NY energy **Virig pro*:t Cali Gary 476 64.
rlerge kitchen cooking utensils, pressure cooker, food proces -
knives, .eta, ;To be used in ia. cooking prpgrem with hindicappe dadults.' It you seen blIp, Coated Bob Russell 476*0145 .
ltkthys jpr,ARtmialf l A+ 1illcc s `of ani' tals t ttUrecd, killed yeirlyr'in .labonstories . Educat curse f about the•animei holotaustgoinq. o nand help stop t: Uni d-Action for Animals, 205 2 .42 St. . NYC 1001 7
1'r4 (n Tide Welj publtahbs and dt;ttltwtes pah$phlets which deal with„ion-violence1, feminism and other social cbe 4js topics . For a free
litara#ure list writei 1'to9 In 17ra Wolff BOB 1001, Palo Alto, Ca . 94302
llwaeeroh project ; soaks contidemial' intar y rs , ~eith persons diagnosedmania dcpres . 423,-2137 .
h acid for uu
z `Mock. lass & folk in excellent condition ',.preflrred. Qa1LDeeni Prise* 473-3493i n .
hpttylat/Ottetrt}atr Nelde4: The 1Va4tetn 14Mw York Peace Center seeks•'-person to prayer., 06-ordinate and-Aresent progrisy on riucleerdis -+irmaarent, hungelr, human rightsr R•• ' 1%R-hours May seem inhuata nat times, but they can be a good time .. -if interystod plerise send a
. brie4 to); Western NY Pesos Center*, 440 Leroy Ave ., iBuffaao, NY 14215 .,
, pro-Weekatk
in Organising for NttaviolentActioo -Program includes group ptaqrss
dsmgcratitjfalori-making ,nonviolence theory, direct action camp5igRs . oedimbi#ity o ganisinq .e,dmorrr Nov. ` 4-19. Cost : $90-120 tigo ydlno,roosi & . board) . Write :M, QC: Movement for a New Society, . 4722' Baltimore Ave ., Phila .,PA 19143.
4
SPC's Peooleg' tistory Map of Ntw York 8tptq,now availabls. 19"$225” .3 `eelors Greet'posteri Stop by The . PtOnt Kuehl. 924 Burnett Ave ., Syr.
the Oivmoic Prison bu
stickers and posters' are r available.Slip stop plans to- turn, thud Piaald Olympic site
a federa lpttsorr . 1-10 sticker,' SO$ each ; l0-1OO 35$; iQf a YOC. Stop the .Olympic Prisop. o/c NYSCC, 304911. Genesee St.,,8yieduae 13224.
$SlenCeldlcottC+)esette Tape-a valuable otgatoluinq tool for group sworking against naolear power and weapons . Helen spells out in 30minutes to. horrifying medical impltaatio(rs•of'nuclear power on one41dit`ot the tops. thin deals With the sbsOdity as well ea 'the medicalaiglrtmaraThatwould coma as the .resultof a nucider'bolacaust oh sid elot the tape . $6 Writs Packard Manse Medic Project, Box 450.Stoughton, Mass, 02072 .
Great Haven ltiwateseeks :corses
nos. iG , `rilpport . Collartight, word is bond, will answeiall . letters: raef4
4Finketstsin
Grwii Haven Prison, Stoimviile . N.e. 14107 :
, tree 5O neUort !s(-safi~ ' for nominal Aq.''Good for metingSolar food drier; or'#or 0o1lOtsting reCyclebias. 446-2491 evenings .'
ENQQ .Di `~ ~-May A
vehocan ito lt~ngpr stsritl theli
Party'tifeev' n.
-Ms. t~etrto t who n no fon~per rind the
lbd party seJtiwn.MrsZ
inn who s8y; It's ell right tolive! In 1878,
but1778 Js ton far beck.
,A —Amote *110 ARE
REQ FAND CARE OlUT ; JUSTICE
AWAREALL
,r ,t -
.
imot
11041
7raW t
Pieese drop -your nifty items off at thePeece Council from 16-6pm dally . W
i~
>Qiaat >~°_
E
rpnVick-up fi you can't possibly petr -
. .YSRC. Call .472-547$:
y What .& oheaP and e$sy +Way to support SPC 1
ed for diaafsled pi9p~+ytsspo J~lJlance
n soctri,
utid ]iypeal meet[#~sqet
•Blbi► Uyetsee
r# SPA Garage Bile .
aUM
above`
EQOIS,12-3p3r .
" duapRtn3
:39f6n 1001E
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. X*M until u 9 dcme in AyA*od
7.30*. ' 1l~ 4Yat LC4 ees
e+ ~Zq
r
`Rose"W, 1 :30 .
F i t tti~pd ft" b0lirjr $2~U pop-me**rs ,-
Nuclear oe!et`
COM
S2 ygdmtierai 17) 0 -
Wig= o : w m,la's
:. f FF
pefy tuesdatf WIM
-ft"ti98. at
us40 TO KND
cjk.m Novato" $fetta y • 'rr
-P
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