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  • BAUAW NEWSLETTER
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    Tuesday, June 28, 2005
     

    BAUAW NEWSLETTER-TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2005

    ***********************************************************

    Screening of "Winter Soldier" -a special YBCA
    Independence Day Weekend screening
    (documentary on the atrocities of the Vietnam war)
    By the Winterfilm Collective
    (testimonial by Senator John Kerry)
    Friday, July 1, 7:30 pm
    Yerba Buena Center for the Arts Screening Room
    701 Mission Street @ 3rd, San Francisco, CA 94103
    $8 regular/$5 YBCA members, students, teachers, seniors
    Public Info: www.ybca.org
    or 415.978.ARTS (2787)
    Contact: Adriane Lee at 415.321.1307 or alee@ybca.org
    A rarely screened, devastating
    documentary classic, Winter Soldier, captures
    the testimonies of ex-GIs at the
    1971 Detroit Winter Soldier Investigation
    concerning American atrocities in
    Vietnam. The soldiers, including
    Senator John Kerry, are riveting
    as they provide eye-witness testimony
    to war crimes and atrocities they
    either participated in or witnessed.
    The film evokes all of the sorrow
    and pain that Vietnam has come to represent.

    ***********************************************************

    GET THE MILITARY OUT OF OUR SCHOOLS! MONEY FOR EDUCATION
    NOT FOR WAR! BRING THE TROOPS HOME NOW!

    This week and next marks the final two weeks left in the
    College Not Combat petition campaign. Over the July 4th weekend
    (July 2, 3 & 4) the petition campaign will be stationed at
    Dolores Park starting at 1:00 p.m.

    A table will be set up at
    The Mime Troupe performance of:

    "Doing Good"

    Based loosely on the book, "Confessions
    of an Economic Hit Man", by John Perkins.
    This play is fresh, new, brilliantly performed,
    insightful, full of content, and the music
    is the icing on the cake!

    MUSIC: 1:30 P.M. - SHOW: 2:00 P.M.
    (THEN GATHER SIGNATURES AFTER THE SHOW)

    BAUAW is setting up a COLLEGE NOT COMBAT
    PETITION CAMPAIGN table by invitation
    from the Mime Troupe. THERE WILL BE AN
    ANNOUNCEMENT ABOUT THE TABLE FROM THE STAGE.
    Free antiwar posters and information will be
    available as well as the petitions. We will
    be able to gather signatures before
    and after the performance. After the performance
    we will also fan out over the city to give this
    petition drive a big push over the July 4th weekend!

    COLLEGE NOT COMBAT BALLOT INITIATIVE
    FOR THE SAN FRANCISCO, NOVEMBER 2005, ELECTIONS:

    "The people of San Francisco oppose U.S.
    military recruiters using public
    school, college and university
    facilities to recruit young
    people into the armed forces.
    Furthermore, San Francisco should
    oppose the military's "economic
    draft" by investigating means
    by which to fund and grant
    scholarships for college and job
    training to low-income students
    so they are not economically compelled
    to join the military!"

    FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE!

    ***********************************************************

    This just in:
    Suicides in the Ranks - Something is Seriously Wrong
    By: Jack Dalton
    Sunday, June 19, 2005
    http://jack-dalton.blogspot.com/2005/06/suicides-in-ranks-something-is_19.html

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
    BAUAW NEWSLETTER-TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 2005
    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    1) California National Guard
    Targeted Mother's Day
    Anti-War Action
    by Brendan Coyne ( bio )
    http://newstandardnews.net/content/?action=show_item&itemid=1983

    Jun 27 - A unit within the California National Guard that has
    been given "broad authority" to work on terrorist-related
    intelligence matters put a Mother's Day anti-war rally under
    observation, the San Jose Mercury News reported Sunday.

    Emails obtained by the Mercury News demonstrate that officials
    in the state National Guard's intelligence unit, known as the
    Information Synchronization, Knowledge Management and Intelligence
    Fusion program, were communicating about details of the rally
    after being notified by governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s
    office that it was to occur.

    A spokesperson for the National Guard told the Mercury News
    that no agents from the unit attended the rally -- which
    reportedly had a few dozen participants and was organized
    by Code Pink, the Raging Grannies and the Goldstar Families
    for Peace, among others -- but that such information
    tracking was justified and would likely continue in cases
    where the governor could potentially call out the guard
    for crowd control.

    "It's nothing subversive,'' Lieutenant Stan Zezotarski
    told the paper. "Because who knows who could infiltrate
    that type of group and try to stir something up? After all,
    we live in the age of terrorism, so who knows?"

    The new revelation comes just days after the Mercury News
    reported that the Army Inspector General's office was
    investigating the California National Guard over allegations
    against its former head, Major General Thomas Eres. Eres
    initiated the intelligence unit last year, the paper reported.

    (c) 2005 The NewStandard . See our reprint policy .
    2) Cut all Public School Ties to the Military!
    Speak up and Picket the S.F. Board of Education
    the Fourth Tuesday of Each Month Starting:
    June 28TH, 7:00 P.M.
    555 Franklin St., S.F,
    To get on the speakers list call:
    415-241-6427, 241-6493 or 241-6000

    3) COLLEGE NOT COMBAT PETITION CAMPAIGN
    JULY 2,3 & 4 WEEKEND SCHEDULE
    *SHOW UP TO PETITION:
    SATURDAY, SUNDAY & MONDAY, JULY 2, 3 & 4, 1:00 P.M.
    DOLORES PARK, 18TH AND DOLORES STS, SF
    *SEE THE SAN FRANCISCO MIME TROUPE'S PLAY
    "DOING GOOD"
    A play based loosely on the book, "Confessions
    of an Economic Hit Man", by John Perkins.
    MUSIC: 1:30 P.M. - SHOW: 2:00 P.M.
    (THEN GATHER SIGNATURES AFTER THE SHOW)

    4) HANDS OFF VENEZUELA SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA FILM
    SHOWING: 7:00 PM, FRIDAY JULY 15
    Center for Political Education
    522 Valencia, Third Floor,
    Near 16th Street, SF
    (not wheelchair accessible)
    Close the 16th Street BART
    $5/$3 Students, Seniors, Unemployed

    5) SAN FRANCISCO MIME TROUPE
    PRESENTS: "DOING GOOD"
    A play based loosely on the book, "Confessions
    of an Economic Hit Man", by John Perkins.
    JULY 16, PRECITA PARK
    MUSIC: 1:30 P.M.
    SHOW: 2:00 P.M.
    (This play is fresh, new, brilliantly performed,
    insightful, full of content, and the music is the
    icing on the cake!...BW)
    SPONSORED BY BAY AREA UNITED AGAINST WAR
    Help get the word out about the ballot proposition
    and upcoming antiwar events. Free antiwar posters!

    FREE!

    6) SAVE THE DATES: AUGUST 4, 5 & 6, 2005 FOR
    PRESENTATION OF HOWARD ZINN'S ONE MAN SHOW,
    "MARX IN SOHO" PERFORMED BY JERRY LEVY
    The central theme of Marx in Soho is unique: heaven's
    bureaucracy allows Karl Marx more than a century after
    his death in 1883 to return to Earth to the place where
    he spent most of his adult life, namely London's Soho.
    The bureaucracy makes a mistake, however, and he finds
    himself in New York's Soho and in front of an audience
    to boot.
    The single actor in this one-man play is Jerry Levy,
    who has been teaching sociology at Marlboro College
    and been acting with the Actors' Theater of Brattleboro
    since he moved there from Chicago in 1975. Originally
    directed by Michael Fox Kennedy of the Actors' Theater,
    Levy has been on the road with Zinn's version of Karl
    Marx for a year, performing at benefits, colleges, small
    theaters and other venues around the state. At Middle
    Earth he was sponsored by the Bradford-based Coos Peace
    and Justice Alliance and performed free of charge but
    charged with mighty talent and a bottomless love of the play.
    LOCATION TO BE ANNOUNCED
    TO BENEFIT BAY AREA UNITED AGAINST WAR
    WWW.BAUAW.ORG
    (FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: 415-824-8730)

    7) Tough duty
    Recruiters say long hours, numbers and fewer prospects
    make job harder
    June 27, 2005
    By Joseph R. ChenellyTimes staff writer
    http://www.armytimes.com/story.php?f=0-ARMYPAPER-870997.php

    8) On the Objection Front
    We have a verry stong film this year that will be perfect for
    your organization - On the Objection Front. I am sending the
    flyer to you as an attachemnt and the verbiage in the
    bosy of the e-mail below. Please give me a call if you have
    any questions about the film or the festival. I will be in
    the office till 3PM today.

    9) More Evidence Indicts U.S.
    Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches
    http://dahrjamailiraq.com

    10) STATE NATIONAL GUARD UNIT SET UP
    TO DETER TERRORISM MONITORED ANTI-WAR RALLY
    By Dion Nissenbaum Mercury News Sacramento
    Posted on Sun, Jun. 26, 2005
    http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/local/11989882.htm

    11) solidarity fasts June 28-30 Tue, 28 Jun 2005 01:35:17 -0700
    From: "Barbara Deutsch" View Contact Details

    12) Candlelight Vigil for Samuel
    Sunday July 3, 2005
    6:30 pm - 7:30 pm
    757 N. 12th Street, San Jose
    Shortly after that (around 7ish ) we will
    march up Taylor Street, past the Police department and
    back down Hedding street. Our vigil will be to hold
    Sam's memory alive and to show our community that the
    escalation in excessive force by the police is out of
    control.

    13) The Speech the President Should Give
    By JOHN F. KERRY
    Boston
    June 28, 2005
    "He should also say that the United States will insist that
    the Iraqis establish a truly inclusive political process and
    meet the deadlines for finishing the Constitution and holding
    elections in December. We're doing our part: our huge military
    presence stands between the Iraqi people and chaos, and our
    special forces protect Iraqi leaders. The Iraqis must now do
    theirs."
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/28/opinion/28kerry.html?hp

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    1) California National Guard
    Targeted Mother's Day
    Anti-War Action
    by Brendan Coyne ( bio )
    http://newstandardnews.net/content/?action=show_item&itemid=1983

    Jun 27 - A unit within the California National Guard that has been given "broad
    authority" to work on terrorist-related intelligence matters put a Mother's Day anti-
    war rally under observation, the San Jose Mercury News reported Sunday.

    Emails obtained by the Mercury News demonstrate that officials in the state National
    Guard's intelligence unit, known as the Information Synchronization, Knowledge
    Management and Intelligence Fusion program, were communicating about details of
    the rally after being notified by governor Arnold Schwarzennegger's office that it was
    to occur.

    A spokesperson for the National Guard told the Mercury News that no agents from
    the unit attended the rally -- which reportedly had a few dozen participants and was
    organized by Code Pink, the Raging Grannies and the Goldstar Families for Peace,
    among others -- but that such information tracking was justified and would likely
    continue in cases where the governor could potentially call out the guard for crowd
    control.

    "It's nothing subversive,'' Lieutenant Stan Zezotarski told the paper. "Because who
    knows who could infiltrate that type of group and try to stir something up? After all,
    we live in the age of terrorism, so who knows?"

    The new revelation comes just days after the Mercury News reported that the Army
    Inspector General's office was investigating the California National Guard over
    allegations against its former head, Major General Thomas Eres. Eres initiated the
    intelligence unit last year, the paper reported.

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    2) Cut all Public School Ties to the Military!
    Speak up and Picket the S.F. Board of Education
    the Fourth Tuesday of Each Month Starting:
    June 28TH, 7:00 P.M.
    555 Franklin St., S.F,
    To get on the speakers list call:
    415-241-6427, 241-6493 or 241-6000

    Bay Area United Against War (BAUAW) will be picketing the San
    Francisco Unified School District (SFUSD) Board of Education
    meetings the 4th Tuesday of each month beginning June 28th until
    the district cuts all school ties to the military.

    San Francisco voters passed Proposition N for the immediate
    withdrawal of troops from Iraq by a 63 percent majority last
    November. And this November 2005 we will pass an anti-recruitment
    resolution initiated by College Not Combat, a coalition of groups
    and individuals opposed to the U.S. militaries' school recruitment
    program.

    We are currently gathering the necessary signatures to place
    this counter-recruitment proposition on the ballot. The
    proposition says, "The people of San Francisco oppose U.S.
    military recruiters using public school, college and university
    facilities to recruit young people into the armed forces.
    Furthermore, San Francisco should oppose the military's "economic
    draft" by investigating means by which to fund and grant
    scholarships for college and job training to low-income students
    so they are not economically compelled to join the military!"

    Proposition N, passed last November, already mandates the
    SFUSD to cut all school ties to the military. Yet S.F. children
    are still being actively recruited at schools throughout the
    district by direct military recruitment, and through the Junior
    Reserve Officer Training Corps (JROTC) programs.

    Many students are forced into JROTC in order to get the necessary
    Physical Education credits they need to graduate High School. JROTC
    now fulfills this requirement-and the district actually pays
    a million dollars a year to the Army to support JROTC. (JROTC, by
    the way, is totally managed and controlled by the U.S. Army. The
    Army writes the curriculum and appoints the teachers. The district
    has no say in this program.)

    In fact, the U.S. military maintains a presence in the schools
    at all grade levels from kindergarten on up. And now the Military
    is beginning to set up JROTC "Military Academies" in the Middle
    Schools. At these "academies" children are taught how to obey
    orders and to practice military maneuvers with realistically
    functioning toy guns.

    As a result of the board's open door military policy, many San
    Francisco high school graduates are currently serving in Iraq.
    This must end. Schools must not be used to recruit youngsters to
    kill or be killed in this illegal, immoral war! The following
    resolution was presented to the board several months ago.
    They still have not acted on it!

    CUT ALL SCHOOL TIES TO THE MILITARY!
    Resolution for San Francisco Board of Education

    WHEREAS, the United States military is actively recruiting high
    school students into the military to fight in Iraq; and
    WHEREAS, many young San Francisco high school alumni are
    presently serving in military units fighting in Iraq; and
    WHEREAS, it is San Francisco City policy by virtue of
    Proposition N, to bring all U.S. troops home from Iraq now; and
    WHEREAS, over 1,700 U.S. soldiers and approximately
    100,000 Iraqis have been killed in this war and over
    10,000 U.S. soldiers and unknown thousands of Iraqis have
    been wounded; and
    WHEREAS, the hundreds of billions of dollars spent on the
    war have robbed our children of resources that should be
    spent on education and other human needs; and
    WHEREAS, military presence in our schools legitimizes the
    message that violence is acceptable; THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED THAT:
    It shall be the policy of the San Francisco Board of Education
    to cut all ties with the United States military, including, but
    not limited to: Ending military recruitment on campuses; ending
    the Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps (JROTC); and guaranteeing
    that all students and parents are informed of their right to deny
    military recruiters access to their names, addresses and
    telephone numbers.

    Come to the next planning meeting of
    Bay Area United Against War (BAUAW)
    Saturday, July 9, 11:30 a.m. at 474 Valencia Street
    between 15th & 16th Streets, S.F.

    Bay Area United Against War (BAUAW) • www.bauaw.org
    P.O. Box 318021,
    San Francisco, CA 94131-8021 •
    414-824-8730

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    3) COLLEGE NOT COMBAT PETITION CAMPAIGN
    JULY 2,3 & 4 WEEKEND SCHEDULE
    *SHOW UP TO PETITION:
    SATURDAY, SUNDAY & MONDAY, JULY 2, 3 & 4, 1:00 P.M.
    DOLORES PARK, 18TH AND DOLORES STS, SF
    *SEE THE SAN FRANCISCO MIME TROUPE'S PLAY
    "DOING GOOD"
    Based loosely on the book, "Confessions
    of an Economic Hit Man", by John Perkins.
    This play is fresh, new, brilliantly performed,
    insightful, full of content, and the music
    is the icing on the cake!

    MUSIC: 1:30 P.M. - SHOW: 2:00 P.M.
    (THEN GATHER SIGNATURES AFTER THE SHOW)

    BAUAW is setting up a COLLEGE NOT COMBAT
    PETITION CAMPAIGN table by invitation
    from the Mime Troupe. THERE WILL BE AN
    ANNOUNCEMENT ABOUT THE TABLE FROM THE STAGE.
    Free antiwar posters and information will be
    available as well as the petitions.

    We will be able to gather signatures before
    and after the performance. After the performance
    we will also fan out over the city to give this
    petition drive a big push over the July 4th weekend.

    COME HELP GATHER SIGNATURES FOR THE

    COLLEGE NOT COMBAT BALLOT INITIATIVE

    FOR THE SAN FRANCISCO, NOVEMBER 2005, ELECTIONS:

    "The people of San Francisco oppose U.S.
    military recruiters using public
    school, college and university
    facilities to recruit young
    people into the armed forces.
    Furthermore, San Francisco should
    oppose the military's "economic
    draft" by investigating means
    by which to fund and grant
    scholarships for college and job
    training to low-income students
    so they are not economically compelled
    to join the military!"

    GET THE MILITARY OUT OF OUR SCHOOLS!

    MONEY FOR EDUCATION NOT FOR WAR!

    BRING THE TROOPS HOME NOW!

    FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE! FREE!

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    4) HANDS OFF VENEZUELA SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA FILM
    SHOWING: 7:00 PM, FRIDAY JULY 15
    Center for Political Education
    522 Valencia, Third Floor,
    Near 16th Street, SF
    (not wheelchair accessible)
    Close the 16th Street BART
    $5/$3 Students, Seniors, Unemployed

    With the Poor of the World
    Con los pobres de la Tierra (2003) 56 minutes.
    by Marta Harnecker on Venezuela
    In Spanish with English Subtitles
    This video gives the background and context of the
    current struggles in Venezuela since 1993. Using TV
    news footage and archival video, this film documents
    the rise of Chavez and the Oligarchy's three attempts
    to overthrow him.

    May Day in Caracas
    (2005) 22 minutes.
    by a J. Carlos Flores.
    In Spanish with English Subtitles
    A short documentary about international labor day in
    Venezuela

    Hands off Venezuela will show these films as a benefit
    to bring Stalin Peres Borges, a leader of the National
    Union of Workers of Venezuela (UNT) a dynamic new
    Venezuelan Trade Union federation.

    Call Adam at 415 864 3537 or email sfbay@ushov.org for
    more info or to arrange a speaker to talk about the
    inspiring events in Venezuela and the need to protect
    it from US attack.

    Also Come To The Next Hands Off Venezuela Organizing
    Meeting (all welcome): 7:00 PM, Thursday, June 30,
    Socialist Action Bookstore, corner Valencia and 14th,
    SF

    www.handsoffvenezuela.org

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    5) SAN FRANCISCO MIME TROUPE
    PRESENTS: "DOING GOOD"
    A play based loosely on the book, "Confessions
    of an Economic Hit Man", by John Perkins.
    JULY 16, PRECITA PARK
    MUSIC: 1:30 P.M.
    SHOW: 2:00 P.M.
    (This play is fresh, new, brilliantly performed,
    insightful, full of content, and the music is the
    icing on the cake!...BW)
    SPONSORED BY BAY AREA UNITED AGAINST WAR
    Help get the word out about the ballot proposition
    and upcoming antiwar events. Free antiwar posters!

    FREE!

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    6) SAVE THE DATES: AUGUST 4, 5 & 6, 2005 FOR
    PRESENTATION OF HOWARD ZINN'S ONE MAN SHOW,
    "MARX IN SOHO" PERFORMED BY JERRY LEVY
    The central theme of Marx in Soho is unique: heaven's
    bureaucracy allows Karl Marx more than a century after
    his death in 1883 to return to Earth to the place where
    he spent most of his adult life, namely London's Soho.
    The bureaucracy makes a mistake, however, and he finds
    himself in New York's Soho and in front of an audience
    to boot.
    The single actor in this one-man play is Jerry Levy,
    who has been teaching sociology at Marlboro College
    and been acting with the Actors' Theater of Brattleboro
    since he moved there from Chicago in 1975. Originally
    directed by Michael Fox Kennedy of the Actors' Theater,
    Levy has been on the road with Zinn's version of Karl
    Marx for a year, performing at benefits, colleges, small
    theaters and other venues around the state. At Middle
    Earth he was sponsored by the Bradford-based Coos Peace
    and Justice Alliance and performed free of charge but
    charged with mighty talent and a bottomless love of the play.
    LOCATION TO BE ANNOUNCED
    TO BENEFIT BAY AREA UNITED AGAINST WAR
    WWW.BAUAW.ORG
    (FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: 415-824-8730)
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    7) Tough duty
    Recruiters say long hours, numbers and fewer prospects
    make job harder
    June 27, 2005
    By Joseph R. ChenellyTimes staff writer
    http://www.armytimes.com/story.php?f=0-ARMYPAPER-870997.php

    They aren't in Iraq, but they feel under fire. Their bosses want
    them on the job. Their spouses want them at home.

    And, they are finding, the people whom they desperately need
    just want them to go away.

    Outside combat, recruiting is widely considered the toughest
    job in the Army today. For the 7,500 soldiers serving as
    recruiters, a traditionally challenging job has become
    a relentless pressure cooker. They are being sent into
    a war-wary public to convince unwilling civilians to go
    Army. Four straight months of missing their goals has
    brought merciless media attention to a story of failure.

    So they work harder, endure more rejection.

    "It seems like just about no one wants to join the Army anymore.
    It has changed a lot in the past year and a half," said
    Sgt. 1st Class Jeffery Due, a recruiter who has been beating
    Seattle's streets for two years.

    "If you are doing well, you might be able to see your
    children when they're awake. You might have something
    that resembles a social life. But if you are missing goals,
    you can count on even more hours," he said.

    Even senior leadership recognizes that the singular demands
    of recruiters' jobs are taking a hard toll.

    Major Gen. Michael Rochelle, who commands U.S. Army
    Recruiting, has said his soldiers are working in the
    "toughest recruiting climate in the history of the
    all-volunteer Army."

    Still, the Army is counting on its recruiting force to fill
    the ranks of a service that's expanding, reorganizing,
    fighting wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and performing
    humanitarian and training missions in Kosovo, Bosnia,
    Colombia, the Philippines, West Africa and dozens of
    other countries.

    And now come the make-or-break months.

    Officials at Recruiting Command have placed the weight of
    success directly on the summer months, typically the best
    recruiting season because high schools and colleges let out.

    But three-quarters of the way through the fiscal year that
    ends Sept. 30, the Army Reserve and Army National Guard need
    to recruit more people in the final quarter than they did
    in the first three quarters combined.

    The active-duty Army is in nearly the same predicament.
    Having put 40,964 in the active-duty ranks so far, the Army
    needs another 39,036 people to hit the goal of shipping
    80,000 new soldiers to basic training this year.

    Interviews with recruiters on duty in Nevada, Idaho, Utah
    and Washington state reveal doubts in the ranks as to whether
    the summer will bring Recruiting Command's predicted bounce.

    The recruiters who spoke with Army Times said they hear "no"
    more often and more firmly now than ever before. Doors are
    slammed in their faces, phones aren't answered by parents
    with caller ID, and recruiters are turned away daily by
    potential soldiers who say, "I don't want to die in Iraq."

    But they still have to get the job done.

    even when Recruiting Command realized it was not making
    national goals in March, April and May, commanders did
    not adjust the individual recruiters' personal goals,
    though it cut the command's goal for May by 1,350,
    a 17 percent cut. And the command bumped up the July
    goal to make up the difference rather than lower the
    overall mission for the year.

    "More reasonable, obtainable goals would do a lot
    for morale," said Due, the Seattle recruiter.

    Individual recruiter's goals are set after factoring in
    the population of the area he or she is working. On
    average, each recruiter has a mission of signing up two
    new soldiers per month.

    The contract mission the command assigns to the
    recruiters "is what is necessary to make the accession
    mission that the Army has assigned to us," said Douglas
    Smith, a spokesman for Recruiting Command. "While we
    can't lower their missions, we have gotten additional
    resources - more recruiters, more incentives, more
    advertising dollars, etc., which should help them as
    they strive to achieve their individual missions."

    Due said that, nevertheless, making goal is everything.

    "If you're not producing, you're considered a substandard
    soldier - even if you're doing everything you legally
    can do," he said. "And it reflects back on you in your"
    NCO evaluation report.

    Smith said that a recruiter who misses a monthly goal
    is assessed to determine "if there are training deficiencies."

    "Each recruiter is handled on a case-by-case basis," Smith
    said. "Once a specific training need is identified, it is
    usually addressed with hands-on training to enhance the
    recruiter's capability to accomplish their monthly goal."

    The most common problem in signing up new soldiers, said
    recruiters interviewed for this story, was lack of
    openings in highly skilled military occupational specialties.

    "I get people who come in and score really well on the
    [vocational aptitude test], but the only job opening I may
    have available then, for example, is truck driver," Due
    said. "So the only option I have for him is a job he is way
    overqualified for. Instead he'll say he wants to be a medic.
    But that MOS is closed, so he'll usually leave.

    "The Army just isn't giving people what they want," he said.
    Charting for success

    Despite the many obstacles they face, recruiters continue
    to strategize for success. Staff Sgt. Patrick King, a career
    recruiter in suburban Las Vegas for about four years, tracks
    which schools, parks and shopping areas have been fruitful.
    Once he sees a positive pattern, he'll alter his schedule
    to spend more time in those areas. But he hasn't had much
    success to chart lately.

    His recruiting station, he said, has achieved only about
    50 percent of its year-to-date goal through May.

    King recruits in an upper-class, residential area, where
    young people generally aren't looking for college money –
    or a job, because the unemployment rate is among the
    lowest in the country.

    "Then when I find kids who want to join, their parents
    don't want them to," King said.

    Staff Sgt. Luke Pearson works in the less-affluent area
    of Idaho Falls, Idaho, where he has made mission the past
    three months. The paratrooper-turned-recruiter is at
    the office shortly after 8 each morning planning the
    day and working the phones. About 11 a.m., he typically
    heads out to the city hot spots to try to meet potential
    soldiers. His goal is to get three individuals to agree
    to meet with him later that day.

    In the late afternoon and evening, he's back on the phones,
    calling those who earlier in the day were at school,
    college or work. It's not uncommon for him to work 14 hours a day.

    Every interviewed recruiter with children identified
    juggling family life with work commitments as one of
    his or her biggest challenges.

    "Balancing family life as a recruiter can be the hardest
    job in the world," said Pearson, who has two daughters,
    ages 8 and 4, as well as a 1-year-old boy.

    Pearson tries to break away for lunch with his wife or
    to make it home in time at night to help tuck in his children.

    Staff Sgt. Anthony Harmon, a recruiter in Henderson,
    Nev., isn't having trouble making mission. As of late May,
    he had enlisted about 25 men and women into the active-duty
    Army since the beginning of fiscal 2005. That is among
    the highest in his recruiting battalion. But being
    successful can be very time-consuming.

    He also has three children. He gets little off time
    but makes sure to spend as much of it as possible
    with his kids.

    King is a father of three children between the ages of
    8 and 11. His family has dinner together every night,
    and although the staff sergeant rushes home as soon as
    he can each evening, the family sometimes waits until
    8 p.m. or later to eat together.

    Back on the job, recruiters find themselves talking about
    combat every day, even though advertisements paid for by
    Recruiting Command do not deal much with the wars in Iraq
    or Afghanistan.

    A few recruiters said they think their job would be easier
    if the Army ran ads that showed the positive things
    happening in Iraq.

    "Recruiting was a lot easier before the war," King said.
    "A lot of people joined for college benefits, using the
    Army as a steppingstone. Now they're looking at other
    ways to pay for school that don't involve going to war."

    Unfortunately for the Army, one of those alternatives
    for potential recruits is the Navy. Recruiters for the
    sea service are letting people know that they'd be
    a lot less likely to go into Iraq as a sailor than as
    a soldier, King said. "The Navy is selling that against
    us right now."

    However, war duty is working for some Army recruiters,
    including one in Roy, Utah. Sgt. Patricia Lynn shipped
    23 people to basic training in the past five months.
    As part of the 1st Armored Division, she planned convoys
    in Iraq for a year. She shows potential soldiers photos
    of her deployment as she discusses it with them.

    "I let people know that if I can go over and come back
    without a scratch, then anyone can," she said.
    Staff Sgt. Laszlo Lucas agrees that the year he spent
    in Iraq with 3rd Infantry Division helps as he recruits
    in Las Vegas. But, he added, his time on recruiting
    duty has been more difficult than his combat tour.
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MOOS-BAY/

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    8) On the Objection Front
    We have a verry stong film this year that will be perfect for
    your organization - On the Objection Front. I am sending the
    flyer to you as an attachemnt and the verbiage in the
    bosy of the e-mail below. Please give me a call if you have
    any questions about the film or the festival. I will be in
    the office till 3PM today.

    Check out all of the films on our website: www.sfjff.org

    On the Objection Front

    Castro Theatre: Saturday, July 23rd at 2:30 pm

    Roda Theatre (at Berkeley Repertory): Tuesday,
    August 2nd at 6:45 pm

    Moutain View Century Cinema 16: Thursday, August 4th at 4:00 pm

    Smith Rafael Film Center: Sunday, August 7th at 12:00 pm

    On the Objection Front ˆ Israel, 2004, 63 min., color,
    Hebrew w/Eng. subtitles.
    Director Shiri Tsur

    After years of loyal active duty, six
    Israeli combat soldiers find they can no
    longer countenance serving in the occupied
    territories of the West Bank and Gaza
    Strip. They become "refusniks"--putting
    them at odds with deeply held national
    values and having devastating consequences
    in their own lives. Sponsored by a
    friend of the Festival in honor of
    filmmaker Gail Dolgin. Co-presented by
    Veterans for Peace.

    Box Office: (925) 275-9490. Check out
    our website: www.sfjff.org. For further information
    about group tickets, contact the Community Outreach Coordinator at:
    myra@sfjff.org/outreach@sfjff.org or 415.621.0556 x313

    Myra Feiger
    Community Outreach Coordinator
    25th Annual San Francisco Jewish Film Festival
    myra@feiger.com
    415.621.0556 x313

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    9) More Evidence Indicts U.S.
    Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches
    http://dahrjamailiraq.com

    Inter Press Service
    Dahr Jamail

    ISTANBUL, Jun 27 (IPS) - New evidence on U.S. war crimes and violations
    of international law was presented at the concluding session of the
    World Tribunal on Iraq at hearings in Istanbul Sunday.

    The World Tribunal on Iraq (WTI) is a 'peoples' court' set up by
    academics, human rights campaigners and non-governmental organisations
    to take an independent look at the Iraq record of the United States and
    other occupying powers such as Britain. The tribunal was inspired by the
    Russel Tribunal of the Vietnam war days.

    The three-day tribunal, the 21st in a series of meetings held over the
    last two years, was held against a background of another spurt of
    violence that left 41 people dead in bombings Sunday. The dead included
    four U.S. soldiers, three of them women.

    The tribunal says it derives its legitimacy from the fact that a war of
    aggression was launched on Iraq "despite the opposition of people and
    governments all over the world." It adds: "However, there is no court or
    authority that will judge the acts of the U.S. and its allies. If the
    official authorities fail, then authority derived from universal morals
    and human rights principles can speak for the world."

    The last sitting took place before a 'jury of conscience' that included
    author Arundhati Roy and Francois Houtart who participated in the
    Bertrand Russell War Crimes Tribunal on U.S. Crimes in Vietnam. In all
    54 persons gave testimony on several aspects of the invasion and the
    occupation of Iraq.

    "The assault on Iraq is an assault on all of us: on our dignity, our
    intelligence, and our future," Roy said at the hearings.. "We recognise
    that the judgment of the World Tribunal on Iraq is not binding in
    international law. However, our ambitions far surpass that. The World
    Tribunal on Iraq places its faith in the consciences of millions of
    people across the world who do not wish to stand by and watch while the
    people of Iraq are being slaughtered, subjugated, and humiliated."

    Denis Halliday, former assistant secretary-general of the United Nations
    who resigned in protest against sanctions on Iraq said during his
    testimony that "the UN silently accepted the totally illegal no-fly zone
    bombing by the U.S../UK of Iraq culminating in softening up attacks
    preliminary to the unlawful invasion of 2003."

    Halliday said that "by these various means, the UN has itself destroyed
    the basic human rights of the Iraqi people through the wilful neglect of
    Articles 22-28 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The UN
    failed to protect and safeguard the children and people before and after
    the 2003 invasion."

    Thomas Fasy, associate professor of pathology at the Mount Sinai School
    of Medicine in New York, provided evidence of a seven-fold increase in
    congenital malformations of Iraqi babies from 1990-2001.

    Fasy also testified that childhood cancers and leukemia in children
    below five in the Basra governorate increased 26-fold over 1990-2002.

    Fadhil Al Bedrani, a BBC and Reuters journalist who was in Fallujah
    during the November siege, provided evidence of collective punishment of
    civilians by U.S. forces.

    Iraqi women's rights supporter Hana Ibrahim said women suffer 90 percent
    unemployment, and are often the victims of rape, lawlessness, forced
    prostitution and kidnappings.

    "From the day that the occupation started in Iraq there was a systematic
    violation of women and their rights," she said.

    Herbert Docena, researcher with the group 'Focus on the Global South'
    who has studied Iraq's reconstruction and political transition pointed
    to the economic and political forces behind the invasion and occupation
    of Iraq.

    "As early as February 2003, the U.S. had finished drafting what the Wall
    Street Journal called 'sweeping plans to remake Iraq's economy in the
    US's image'," Docena said. "Just as the U.S. bombed out and physically
    obliterated almost all of Iraq's ministries, the plan entails the repeal
    of almost all of its current laws and the dismantling of its existing
    institutions, except those that already fit in with the U.S. design."

    The jury in its ruling "recognised the right of the Iraqi people to
    resist the illegal occupation of their country."

    It recommended "immediate, unconditional withdrawal of all occupation
    forces" and called on "the governments of the coalition to pay full
    compensation to Iraqis for any and all damages, and that all laws,
    contracts, treaties and institutions created under the occupation that
    Iraqi people deem harmful or un-useful to them be banished."

    Other recommendations included immediate investigation of crimes against
    humanity by U.S. President George W. Bush, British Prime Minister Tony
    Blair, and every other president of countries belonging to the coalition.

    In addition, the jury called for a process of accountability to bring to
    justice journalists and media outlets that lied and promoted the
    violence against Iraq, as well as corporations who have profited from
    the war.

    More writing, photos and commentary at http://dahrjamailiraq.com.

    You can visit http://dahrjamailiraq.com/email_list/ to subscribe or unsubscribe to the
    email list.

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    10) STATE NATIONAL GUARD UNIT SET UP
    TO DETER TERRORISM MONITORED ANTI-WAR RALLY
    By Dion Nissenbaum Mercury News Sacramento
    Posted on Sun, Jun. 26, 2005
    http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/local/11989882.htm

    Program raises spying concern Bureau SACRAMENTO - Three decades
    after aggressive military spying on Americans created
    a national furor, California's National Guard has quietly
    set up a special intelligence unit that has been given
    ``broad authority'' to monitor, analyze and distribute
    information on potential terrorist threats, the Mercury
    News has learned. Known as the Information Synchronization,
    Knowledge Management and Intelligence Fusion program, the
    project is part of an expanding nationwide effort to
    better integrate military intelligence into global
    anti-terrorism initiatives. Although Guard officials
    said the new unit would not collect information on
    American citizens, top National Guard officials have
    already been involved in tracking at least one recent
    Mother's Day anti-war rally organized by families of
    slain American soldiers, according to e-mails obtained
    by the Mercury News. Past abuses recalled Creation of
    California's intelligence unit is already raising
    concerns for civil libertarians who point to a string
    of abuses in the 1960s and 1970s, when the military
    collected information on more than 100,000 Americans,
    infiltrated church youth groups, posed as reporters to
    interview activists, monitored peaceful protests and
    even attended an elementary school Halloween party
    in search of a ``dissident.'' ``The National Guard
    doesn't need to do this,'' said Christopher Pyle,
    a former Army intelligence officer who first exposed
    the military's domestic spying operations in 1970.
    ``Its job is not to investigate individuals, but to
    clear streets, protect facilities and help first
    responders.'' Top Guard officers said they have no
    intentions of breaking long-established rules barring
    the military from gathering information on Americans
    and that the evolving program is meant to help
    California and the nation thwart terrorist attacks.
    ``We do not do any type of surveillance or human
    intelligence or mixing with crowds,'' said Lt. Col.
    Stan Zezotarski. ``The National Guard does not
    operate in that way. We have always had a policy
    where we respect the rights of citizens.'' Generally,
    the National Guard is called upon to help the state
    deal with natural disasters and riots. But the wars
    in Iraq and Afghanistan have put major strains on
    the military, which has started drawing more on
    Guard soldiers to fight overseas. And now Guard
    units are being integrated into anti-terrorism
    efforts in the United States. The intelligence unit
    was quietly established last year by Maj. Gen.
    Thomas Eres, the National Guard leader who was
    forced by the Schwarzenegger administration to
    retire this month amid allegations that he failed
    to prove his shooting skills for a trip to Iraq,
    set up a questionable military flight for
    a Republican friend's political group and improperly
    used money meant to stem the flow of drugs for
    anti-terrorism programs. Right before Eres retired,
    the Guard hired its first director for the
    intelligence unit who has ``broad authority''
    and is expected to ``exercise a high degree of
    independent judgment and discretion,'' according
    to the job description obtained by the Mercury
    News. ``However, highly controversial or precedent
    -setting decisions, directives and policies are
    discussed with the appropriate senior leadership
    prior to implementation,'' the description states.
    A one-stop shop Col. Robert J. O'Neill, a veteran
    intelligence officer who started last week as
    director of the new program, said he envisions
    his team as being a one-stop shop for local,
    state and national law enforcement to share
    information. Intelligence officers will have
    access to sensitive national security information
    that they can analyze and potentially share with
    state and local law enforcement, he said. ``We are
    trying to integrate into their systems and bring
    them information that they don't have,'' O'Neill
    said. He said his unit would not cross any legal
    lines into spying on Americans. But the Guard's
    role in monitoring at least one demonstration has
    already alarmed civil libertarians. Last month,
    a group of anti-war activists, including the parents
    of American soldiers killed in Iraq, held a small
    Mother's Day rally at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial
    near the California Capitol to call for the return
    of all National Guard troops by Labor Day. Three
    days before the rally, as a courtesy to the military,
    an aide in Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's press office
    alerted the Guard to the event, according to e-mails
    obtained by the Mercury News. The information was
    passed up the chain of command directly to Eres and
    other top Guard officials including Col. Jeff Davis,
    who oversees O'Neill's operation. E-mail reveals
    actions ``Sir,'' Guard chief of staff Col. John
    Moorman wrote in the e-mail to Eres that was
    copied to Davis and other top commanders.
    ``Information you wanted on Sunday's demonstration
    at the Capitol.'' In response, Davis indicated that
    Guard intelligence officers were tracking the rally.
    ``Thanks,'' Davis wrote. ``Forwarding same to our
    Intell. folks who continue to monitor.'' That rainy
    Sunday, the protest organized by Gold Star Families
    for Peace, Raging Grannies and CodePink drew about
    three dozen supporters. Guard spokesman Zezotarski
    said the monitoring did not involve anything more than
    keeping tabs on the protest through the media and that
    no one went to observe the demonstration. But he said
    the military would be ``negligent'' in not tracking
    such anti-war rallies in the event that they disintegrate
    into a riot that could prompt the governor to call out
    troops. ``It's nothing subversive,'' Zezotarski said.
    ``Because who knows who could infiltrate that type of
    group and try to stir something up? After all, we live
    in the age of terrorism, so who knows?'' Civil
    libertarians scoffed at such defenses. ``That's ludicrous,''
    said Joseph Onek, a former Carter and Clinton administration
    official who now heads the Liberty and Security Initiative
    for the Constitution Project at Georgetown University.
    ``That's not what the American people expect its military
    to be doing.'' Pyle, the Army officer who exposed the
    abuses in the 1970s and is now a professor at Mount Holyoke
    College in Massachusetts, said that the evolving
    intelligence programs are susceptible to dangerous
    ``mission creep'' that led to overaggressive tactics
    during the Vietnam War. Since the Civil War, the
    United States has tried to create firm barriers
    preventing the military from getting involved in
    domestic issues. The 1878 Posse Comitatus Act prevents
    the U.S. military from taking part in domestic law
    enforcement. Military role expands The Army got involved
    with collecting intelligence on Americans in the 1960s
    when it was called in to deal with civil rights protests
    and riots. Its role expanded as the decade wore on and
    the anti-Vietnam War movement grew more confrontational.
    At the time, according to congressional records, the
    military collected files on more than 100,000 Americans
    and embraced aggressive tactics to try to undermine
    anti-war groups, including attending a Halloween party
    for kids and infiltrating church youth groups.
    In response, Congress and the military set up new
    rules to strictly regulate military spying in the
    United States. But the Sept. 11 attacks raised concerns
    that the controls had gone too far. Since then, the
    FBI and military have been expanding their intelligence
    operations. The notion of creating intelligence
    ``fusion centers'' is slowly gaining momentum.
    Massachusetts is setting one up, but it is housed in
    the state police headquarters, not its National Guard.
    Currently, federal law allows the U.S. military to
    gather information on Americans under exceptionally
    tight restrictions. The intelligence must be essential
    to their mission, publicly available or related to
    national security issues. The Pentagon has created
    a new operation in Colorado known as the Northern
    Command to help protect the nation from terrorist
    attacks. Its leader, Gen. Ralph Eberhart, raised
    some concerns among civil libertarians last year
    after telling a National Guard group that ``we can't
    let culture and the way we've always done it stand
    in the way'' of gathering intelligence. Last year,
    the U.S. military came under fire after it was
    reported that two Army lawyers in civilian clothes
    attended a forum on sexism in Islam and later
    demanded a roster of those in attendance, along
    with a videotape of the conference, after being
    questioned by three Middle Eastern men during the
    event. Army officials said the attorneys had
    ``exceeded their authority'' and ordered a refresher
    course for agents.

    Contact Dion Nissenbaum at
    dnissenbaum@ mercurynews.com or (916) 441-4603.

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    11) solidarity fasts June 28-30 Tue, 28 Jun 2005 01:35:17 -0700
    From: "Barbara Deutsch" View Contact Details

    Subject:
    please augment solidarity fasts June 28-30
    Dear fellow seekers of a release for the people of Iraq -- and
    ourselves as their persecutors -- from long and unimaginably cruel
    deprivation, duress, and massively destructive technological
    violence, now followed by criminally and intentionally disruptive and
    damaging occupation:

    As I write, a fast is in the 13th of 15 days at UN headquarters in
    Geneva. Eight people, who include Kathy Kelly and a young Iraqi
    engineering professor who, growing up during US bombings, used dark
    nights to study the stars, and who was kidnapped together with
    Italian humanitarian workers last year, are there to demand that the
    UN end its imposition of unilateral war reparations against Iraq's
    people, and begin to administer economic justice. An illegally
    constitued UN security council commission has begun three days of
    meetings schedulled to deliberate this matter.

    Kathy Kelly writes that "Geneva is one of the most comfortably
    elegant cities in the world . . . where the future of one of the
    world's most desperate countries will be decided, [whose] people are
    going to bed hungry in deteriorating homes, lacking access to clean
    water, exasperated and frightened by round after round of violence,
    and bearing scorching temperatures that won't let up for another two
    months." http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0623-20.htm There is a solidarity
    fast in Oakland tomorrow in the vicinity of the
    Oakland federal building, (1301 Clay street, easily accessible from
    the 12th street BART station), where participants in the weekly vigil
    organized by Carolyn Scarr and held there faithfully over many years,
    will be able to direct anyone wishing to join it.

    Carol Brouillet is holding a solidarity fast at the weekly "Listening
    for Peace" demonstration in Palo Alto on Wednesday, from 11 - 1 p.m.
    at Lytton Plaza.

    On Thursday, some of those who for over two years have been
    conducting a weekly vigil at the federal building in San Francisco,
    will be fasting in solidarity with those in Geneva.

    Each of these three days, whenever another person can accompany me, I
    will be carrying a banner at appropriate locations and/or through
    streets to be determined by those participating at the time.

    With three participants, we can also ring a bell (in memory of
    earlier witnesses by Voices in the Wilderness, to which a leaflet for
    distribution will refer). Two of us will be meeting tomorrow at 4
    p.m.; if you wish to join us, please respond to this, or phone me, by
    11 a.m.

    I am available throughout Wednesday until 6:00 p.m.

    On Thursday, I am available in the morning until noon when I will
    join the vigil at the San Franciso federal building.

    With appreciative respect for all acts of solidarity on your part,
    Barbara.

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    12) Candlelight Vigil for Samuel
    Sunday July 3, 2005
    6:30 pm - 7:30 pm
    757 N. 12th Street, San Jose
    Shortly after that (around 7ish ) we will
    march up Taylor Street, past the Police department and
    back down Hedding street. Our vigil will be to hold
    Sam's memory alive and to show our community that the
    escalation in excessive force by the police is out of
    control.

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    13) The Speech the President Should Give
    By JOHN F. KERRY
    Boston
    June 28, 2005
    "He should also say that the United States will insist that
    the Iraqis establish a truly inclusive political process and
    meet the deadlines for finishing the Constitution and holding
    elections in December. We're doing our part: our huge military
    presence stands between the Iraqi people and chaos, and our
    special forces protect Iraqi leaders. The Iraqis must now do
    theirs."
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/28/opinion/28kerry.html?hp

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