Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Washington Free Press, February 1st 1969 / Quicksilver Times, November 10th 1970

Well...never believe me when I say what's next. I didn't get any post time for Liberty this weekend, and I'm going to instead first post a couple more underground papers. I scanned these last week, and I feel like posting some material that is fresh in my mind for a change. Big thanks to McCoy for great edits on both of these, the Quicksilver was truly trashed. Both of these papers come from the D.C. scene, the Washington Free Press issue marks the counter-inauguration of Nixon, and the Quicksilver Times points to a further radicalization of the press. These are the first D.C. papers I've laid hands on, but I've been curious about the Washington Free Press since reading Raymond Mungo's Famous Long Ago (which you can read here). Mungo's book, written about the time tonight's issues span, describes the rise and fall (from Mungo's point of view) of the Liberation News Service (wiki here), an organization meant to provide news to many of the underground papers across the country. Mungo's book centers around a power struggle within the LNS between the politically-oriented "vulgar marxists" and the original founders of the LNS, Mungo and Marshall Bloom. In August of 1968, the situation at LNS comes to a head with a schism between these groups. You can see the original NYT reportage here though you'll get a much better narrative from Mungo's Book. The schism at the LNS would be repeated at many papers (I'm thinking about papers like the Boson AVATAR, New York Rat, or Berkeley Barb/Tribe) where where the politically-minded sort of "take over" or break away from the original editorship. Years of activism in the peace movement had met with little result in ending the war, and there was a growing sentiment that more extreme tactics were necessary. During this time, LNS shared a house downtown with the Washington Free Press, so Mungo's book includes mention of many staffers from tonight's first paper.


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Get a scan of the entire issue here.

The Washington Free Press began in 1966 and was published as a biweekly. The paper's original founders and editors included Michael Grossman, Arthur Grosman and former State Department employee William Blum (whose name-checking by Bin Laden has apparently hurt his appeal on the university lecture circuit - see wiki. Mungo's book likes to poke fun at the frequent meetings at the Washington Free Community. Perhaps a bit of what he writes about is on display in first couple pages of this issue that lay out the proper mindset.


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A common feature in the underground press, the outing of narcs.


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A chronicling of the events surrounding the counter-inauguration of Nixon with running commentary at the center of the page


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I think this book review might be the most interesting part of this issue, a book review of a supposedly neutral and objective tract from the writers of the Washington Post. Mungo describes the DC riots in his book, and it's interesting to see here how the underground press calls out the inclusiveness and objectivity of the mainstream's reportage. The way The Movement interpreted/was fueled by/appropriated the urban uprisings of the 60s seems pretty complex. Certainly the riots fed the notion you'll see in both of tonight's papers that the revolution has already begun or is right around the corner.


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A two page spread from Jerry Rubin, Emergency Letter to My Brothers and Sisters in the Movement.


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The Centerfold is a funky 2-sided jobber, one-side with a somewhat incomprehensible graphic, very new age, and the other is a set of two visual poems by Allen Ginsberg.


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And the back cover, a concert poster in the Fillmore style. Artists like Victor Moscoso and Rick Griffin took lettering and exploded it. Text as art, some of this stuff would fuel graffiti styles. In Laguna Art Museum's superb recent book on Griffin, Heart and Torch, Chaz Bojorquez credits Griffin as birthing the west coast style of graffiti. Some of the posters in this style are very wild, you have to either concentrate very hard or concentrate not at all to see the words...


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And our second paper tonight comes from the tail end of 1970


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Get a scan of the entire issue here.

This publication is entirely new to me, and I couldn't really find out much about it on the web. It ran from June of 1969 through August of 1972 and was published every 3 weeks. I'd call this a fairly radical paper, but really it's just a reflection of the increasingly political and desperate nature of The Movement. A quick aside on what a quick web search did turn up, this paper, like many others along with the LNS, was a target of government infiltration. One of the less-often told stories of the history of the times is the widespread covert actions the government took to spy upon and sow dissent within various groups. Agents sought discord among groups from the these papers to the Black Panthers to the American Indian Movement and all other manner of leftist organizations (wiki on COINTELPRO acronym for Counter Intelligence Program here). As the movement begain to splinter in this period, the activity and known existence of agents among the organizations of the left led to an atmosphere of intense paranoia that did not foster harmony. Angus Mackenzie's Secrets: The CIA's War at Home has some material on an agent who infiltrated the Quicksilver Times which you can see some of here. Susan Tichy, an author and poet who worked at the Quicksilver Times reflects on the war and expresses surprise that she had dated this agent here.

A little reportage by the paper on a traditional peace march points to the feeling The Movement was changing, becoming more complex and there was a feeling that new approaches were necessary. Headlined:





Many did not want peace per se but revolution, some by any means necessary. I'll be frank and admit that as a pacifist much of this material puts me off, but I also understand that in the face of the horrors of the Vietnam War many were pushed to the extremes. Here we see Norman Spinrad, author of the science fiction classic Bug Jack Barron, writing that indeed the revolution had already begun. I see again and again how many people were certain that revolution was at hand and that a new order was on the way, I guess this is a zeitgeist that it's hard to relate to unless you were there. In any case, Spinrad's chilling article here will no doubt bring up issues that echo our current dialogue on terror, and indeed I think it's very important that we acknowledge that there was a time not so long ago when many people in our very own country felt desperate enough in the face of federal rule to consider violence an option. Fast forward to Oklahoma City and the recent attack on the IRS by plane and consider that terrorism is weapon that has been used and will continue to be used by all manners of desperate souls...


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Wild, man. And the wildness continues, the paper prints this page which tries to tie violence to class struggle and as a preface to pages on weapons making. Chilling stuff, and I admit I am disturbed as a pacifist to scan it, but I put aside these reservations as a scanner, as History ought be preserved in toto, eh? This material is very relevant in my eyes to our current situation regarding fear of government. This fear of fascism and government crackdown has been echoed recently in the conservative media, it's pretty interesting how such wildly different ideologies might share the same feelings of disenfranchisement and fear of the government...


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But not to leave on such a downer note, one last image, from the classifieds in back. These papers ought be taken in context and that includes an appreciation of ads, letter columns, graphics, etc., and I have great fun reading through these little notices pulled out of the time-stream.



I'll be returning to the topic of the underground press on and off in the future, as really it was the main motivator for the creation of this blog, and these papers continue to fascinate me every time I open one. Scan yours today!

Friday, March 5, 2010

Vietnam GI, June 1968

A quick post today of an important underground paper. I've been scanning some of the underground papers again lately and have done a poor job of getting my old scans up, so here's an older post that is nonetheless fresh to my blog. Looking back, I'm not terribly impressed with the appearance of the scan, but this is the nitty gritty after all...


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Get the scan here

I am very fortunate that I came across this paper in a cheap lot of politically-oriented papers because it is most certainly very different from most of the papers I will be scanning. There were about 60 underground GI papers that would publish near or on military bases here and abroad, often covertly. Most were black and white and carried news out of Vietnam outside of normal channels. They covered issues in the life of the soldier and how to survive the army and your stay in Vietnam. Generals and officers were lambasted and demonized, often rightly so, for their treatment of enlisted men. Distribution was problematic, there was little advertising, and soldiers could get in lots of trouble just for having these. Some of the papers were offshoots of the leftist underground press and somewhat propagandistic. Many were authentic, and almost all at least served to some extent to carry the messages of the average GI and the horrors of war.

The man behind Vietnam GI was Jeff Sharlet.



He served a tour of duty and would become involved with the SDS. He was prominent in organizing resistance to the war by Vietnam vets, one group that many believe had the largest impact in eventually swaying public opinion.

A wiki on Sharlet and the Vietnam GI:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeff_Sharlet_and_Vietnam_GI

Linked from that page is an amazing resource, put together by the makers of Sir! No Sir! a 2005 documentary on resistance to the war by solders and veterans. This is a great archive with covers from these papers and searchable text articles. I wholeheartedly applaud the filmmakers for making their research more widely available:

http://www.sirnosir.com/home_reference_library1.html

A recent book on the subject by James Lewes:

Protest and Survive: Underground GI Newspapers During the Vietnam War

Read this issue! An insider's look at the war! The clusterfuck that was Khe Sanh, soldiers as guinea pigs for food irradiation, how an MP feels about the "peace creeps," anti-war letters to the paper from men in the trenches, Westmoreland in Wonderland, candid and uncensored photos, an anti-gun control statement, the VCs wear no bras?, an interview with a woman marine, and the short timers code of conduct.

Of course, I can't post this without a mention of today's war, our war, the war in the middle east. Will we ever leave? What exactly did we learn from the Vietnam war? And what's happened to dissent and protest from within the media and without? Is our modern media even capable of aiding dissent or has it become yet another arm of the corporate-political-military-industrial complex that profits from war in the first place??

Peace,

Darwin

This weekend, Liberty! Leslie Thrasher, Achmed Abdullah, Jack Dempsey, Walter Baumhofer, James M. Cain, and more...