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  • BAUAW NEWSLETTER
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    Wednesday, June 22, 2005
     

    BAUAW NEWSLETTER-WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 2005

    WINTER SOLDIER (1972, 96 min)
    Yerba Buena Center for the Arts presents
    Friday, July 1, 7:30 pm

    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.

    Tickets:  $8 regular; $5 YBCA members, students, seniors

    Tickets can be purchased online at www.YBCA.org,
    by telephone at 415.978.ARTS, or in person at the box office.

    Screening location:
    YERBA BUENA CENTER FOR THE ARTS
    701 Mission Street (at Third)
    San Francisco, CA, 94103-3138
    P: 415.321.1323
    F: 415.978.9635
    www.YBCA.org
    Imagine a whole new way to see.
    LIFE AMPLIFIED

    ************************************************************
    TAKE ACTION:
    ************************************************************

    1) 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

    2) COLLEGE NOT COMBAT PETITION CAMPAIGN
    16TH & MISSION STREET
    SATURDAY JUNE 25, 12:30 P.M.
    TUESDAY JUNE 28 AND THURSDAY JUNE 30, 5 & 7 P.M.

    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"
    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
    LOCATION TO BE ANNOUNCED
    TO BENEFIT BAY AREA UNITED AGAINST WAR
    WWW.BAUAW.ORG
    (FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: 415-824-8730)

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

    1) 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

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

    2) COLLEGE NOT COMBAT PETITION CAMPAIGN
    16TH & MISSION STREET
    SATURDAY JUNE 25, 12:30 P.M.
    TUESDAY JUNE 28 AND THURSDAY JUNE 30, 5 & 7 P.M.

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

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

    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!

    SPONSORED BY BAY AREA UNITED AGAINST WAR (BAUAW)

    BAUAW is setting up a COLLEGE NOT COMBAT
    PETITION CAMPAIGN table by invitation
    from the Mime Troupe. THERE WILL BE AN
    ANNOUNCEMENT FROM THE STAGE.

    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!"


    LOOK FOR OUR TABLE TO PICK UP PETITIONS.

    FREE ANTIWAR POSTERS!

    WE ONLY HAVE A FEW WEEKS TO GO!

    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

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

    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
    LOCATION TO BE ANNOUNCED
    TO BENEFIT BAY AREA UNITED AGAINST WAR
    WWW.BAUAW.ORG
    (FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL: 415-824-8730)

    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*
    BAUAW NEWSLETTER – JUNE 22, 2005
    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    1) Picture-perfect killers
    Military weapons are often technological
    marvels but always instruments of death
    Norman Solomon
    Sunday, June 19, 2005


    2) Holocaust Survivor Says He's Leaving The US
    by Joey Picador
    http://www.justicefornone.com

    3) "by slow degrees we learn the full extent . . . "
    From: "Barbara Deutsch"

    4) Iraqi Hospitals Ailing Under Occupation
    http://www.dahrjamailiraq.com/reports/HealthcareUnderOccupationDahrJamail.pdf

    5) HIP HOP SHOW AND RALLY TO CLOSE CYA YOUTH PRISONS
    Saturday, July 16, noon-2pm
    Frank Ogawa Plaza, 14th St. and Broadway (Downtown Oakland)
    4th Annual "Not Down with the Lockdown" Hip Hop Show and Rally
    to Close the CYA Youth Prisons
    FREE! All ages!

    6) National Council of Churches urges grassroots campaign
    To call on Congress to pass bi-partisan 'end the war' resolution
    New York, June 16, 2005 - The National Council of Churches USA has welcomed bi-
    partisan legislation introduced in Congress today urging President Bush "to announce
    a plan for the withdrawal of all U.S. forces from Iraq by the end of the year."
    Rep. Walter Jones (R-N.C.) and Rep. Neil Abercrombie (D-Hawaii) introduced the
    legislation.
    http://www.ncccusa.org/news/050617BipartisanResolution.html

    7) A VICTORY FOR SHEILA DETOY

    8) A.M.A. to Study Effect
    of Marketing Drugs to Consumers
    By STEPHANIE SAUL
    Published: June 22, 2005
    "The American Medical Association, the nation's largest
    organization of physicians, agreed yesterday to study
    whether consumer drug advertising leads to unnecessary
    prescriptions, potentially harming patients and driving
    up health costs....Many critics say advertising fueled
    the widespread use of cox-2 painkillers, recently linked
    to serious cardiovascular problems. Vioxx, the cox-2 drug
    that Merck withdrew from the market in September, was widely
    advertised to consumers. Studies later indicated that,
    for many patients, it was no more effective than other,
    safer pain killers."
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/22/business/media/22adco.html

    9) Tales of the Poor, Working
    to Survive in America
    By JEANNETTE CATSOULIS
    June 22, 2005
    http://movies2.nytimes.com/2005/06/22/movies/22wagi.html

    10) Iraqi Rebels Refine Bomb Skills,
    Pushing Toll of G.I.'s Higher
    By DAVID S. CLOUD
    Published: June 22, 2005
    "WASHINGTON, June 21 - American casualties from bomb attacks
    in Iraq have reached new heights in the last two months as
    insurgents have begun to deploy devices that leave armored
    vehicles increasingly vulnerable, according to military records."
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/22/international/middleeast/
    22bomb.html?hp&ex=1119499200&en=4de3c8b99cb57c82&ei=5094&partner=hom
    epage

    11) Social Security Opened Its Files for 9/11 Inquiry
    By ERIC LICHTBLAU
    Published: June 22, 2005
    "WASHINGTON, June 21 -The Social Security Administration has
    relaxed its privacy restrictions and searched thousands of
    its files at the request of the F.B.I. as part of terrorism
    investigations since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, newly
    disclosed records and interviews show."
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/22/politics/
    22terror.html?hp&ex=1119499200&en=f4bb907c3b74271d&ei=5094&partner=hom
    epage

    12) Muni drivers threaten
    walkout at month's end
    By Marisa Lagos
    Staff Writer
    Published: Thursday, June 16, 2005 10:57 PM PDT
    Some rank and file members of Muni's drivers union are
    threatening to walk off the job June 30, saying union
    leadership has not held strong opposing layoffs and service
    cuts as its membership asked.
    http://sfexaminer.com/articles/2005/06/17/news/20050617_ne11_muni.txt

    13) NYT Editorial
    Abu Ghraib, Rewarded
    Published: June 22, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/22/opinion/22wed1.html

    14) Posts Considered for Commanders
    After Abuse Case
    By ERIC SCHMITT and THOM SHANKER
    Published: June 20, 2005
    WASHINGTON, June 19 - Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld
    is considering new top command assignments that would possibly
    include promoting Lt. Gen. Ricardo S. Sanchez, the former
    American commander in Iraq during the Abu Ghraib prison
    abuse scandal, Pentagon and military officials say.
    Such a move, which has been urged by senior Army officers
    and civilian officials now that an Army inquiry has cleared
    General Sanchez of wrongdoing, seems to reflect a growing
    confidence that the military has put the abuse scandal behind it.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/20/politics/20military.html

    15) Extending Democracy to Ex-Offenders
    Published: June 22, 2005
    "The laws that strip ex-offenders of the right to vote across
    the United States are the shame of the democratic world. Of an
    estimated five million Americans who were barred from voting
    in the last presidential election, a majority would have been
    able to vote if they had been citizens of countries like
    Britain, France, Germany or Australia. Many nations take
    the franchise so seriously that they arrange for people to
    cast ballots while being held in prison. In the United States,
    by contrast, inmates can vote only in two states, Maine
    and Vermont.
    This distinctly American bias - which extends to jobs, housing
    and education - keeps even law- abiding ex-offenders confined
    to the margins of society, where they have a notoriously
    difficult time building successful lives. A few states,
    at least, are beginning to grasp this point. Some are
    reconsidering postprison sanctions, including laws that
    bar ex-offenders from the polls."
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/22/opinion/22wed3.html

    16) The crisis in United Russia
    By Misha Steklov in Moscow
    http://www.marxist.com/Russia/crisis-united-russia220605.html

    17) Russia after the war in Iraq
    By Alan Woods
    http://www.marxist.com/Russia/after_war_in_iraq.html

    18) The crisis in United Russia
    By Misha Steklov in Moscow
    http://www.marxist.com/Russia/crisis-united-russia220605.html

    19) Insurgents killed in Afghan fighting
    5 U.S. soldiers wounded in gunbattle in south of country
    The Associated Press
    Updated: 1:09 p.m. ET June 22, 2005
    "KABUL, Afghanistan - American warplanes pounded a suspected
    Taliban safe haven in the mountains of southern Afghanistan
    during an assault that killed up to 76 insurgents and 12
    security forces, officials said Wednesday. Five American
    soldiers were wounded.
    The bodies of those killed in Tuesday's fighting littered
    a rugged Afghan mountainside. The surge in violence has
    raised fears that an Iraq-style quagmire is developing
    here, just months ahead of key legislative elections."
    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8197613/

    20) Current, former Walgreen
    workers file suit
    Drugstore chain accused of discriminating against
    black employees
    The Associated Press
    Updated: 6:51 p.m. ET June 21, 2005
    "ST. LOUIS - Eleven black current and former Walgreen Co.
    workers in Michigan and six other states sued the nation's
    top-selling drugstore chain Monday, accusing it of having
    a policy of discriminating against black employees.
    The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in East St. Louis,
    Ill., says the company has a "pervasive policy" of steering
    black employees to work in stores in areas that have mostly
    black or poorer customers, using an internal system to
    categorize stores based on race and income."
    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8307598/

    21) Marines win Iraq desert battle, war far from over
    By Peter Graff
    Tue Jun 21, 2005 08:08 AM ET
    KARABILA, Iraq (Reuters) - U.S. Marines claimed success on
    Tuesday in another battle against insurgents in the Iraqi
    desert but acknowledged that the war was far from over and that
    guerrillas would soon recover lost ground.
    http://www.reuters.com/
    newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=8850204&src=eDialog/GetContent

    22) The Washington Post and the Downing Street memo
    http://www.wsws.org/articles/2005/jun2005/post-j22.shtml

    23) From Marti Hiken of the Military Law Task Force (MLTF)
    of the National Lawyers' Guild
    Two MLTF members in the Bay Area have formed the Berkeley Draft
    Information Project and have published a booklet for [school]
    counselors, parents and young people: "FAST FAXTS about
    "Military Recruitment, The Potential for a Draft and
    Related Issues."
    Their address is: Berkeley Draft Information Project,
    2124 Kittredge St., #66, Berkeley, CA 94704.?
    info@berkeleydraftinformationproject.org
    www.berkeleydraftinformationproject.org

    24) Vote on this online poll to help protect student's privacy!
    Hi Everyone,
    I received a note saying that New York State School
    Boards Association is considering supporting changing
    federal law to not send student contact information to
    military recruiters without their consent. All you
    have to do is vote on their online poll:
    http://www.nyssba.org/ScriptContent/Index.cfm

    25) Mass Mobilizing Meeting
    Wednesday, July 6 at 7 PM
    Global Exchange: 2017 Mission St. #303, San Francisco
    (across the street from the 16th St. BART station)


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

    1) Picture-perfect killers
    Military weapons are often technological
    marvels but always instruments of death
    Norman Solomon
    Sunday, June 19, 2005
    http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2005/06/19/INGK0D963N1.DTL

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

    2) Holocaust Survivor Says He's Leaving The US
    by Joey Picador
    http://www.justicefornone.com

    One of our neighbors is moving. I've been in this neighborhood for
    about six years now, but didn't really know them very well at all -
    just waves and nods, mostly.

    So I heard the moving van pull up this morning. When I got home this
    evening I happened to spy my neighbor (he's like 85 years old - I
    don't know exactly, but he's old, talks and moves very slowly)
    standing on the sidewalk next to the van. I walked over and shook his
    hand, and we started talking. I asked him where he was moving, and he
    said, "Back to Germany."

    I had been stationed in Germany for two years while in the military,
    so I lit up, and commented about how beautiful the country was, and
    inquired if he was going back because he missed it.
    "No," he answered me. "I'm going back because I've seen this before."
    He then commenced to explain that when he was a kid, he watched with
    his family in fear as Hitler's government committed atrocity after
    atrocity, and no one was willing to say anything. He said the news
    refused to question the government, and the ones who did were not in
    the newspaper business much longer. He said good neighbors, people he
    had known all his life, turned against his family and other Jews,
    grabbing on to the hate and superiority "as if they were starved for
    it" (his words).

    He said he was too old to see it happen right in front of his eyes
    again, and too old to do anything about it, so he was taking his
    family back to Europe on Thursday where they would be safe from George
    W. Bush and his neocons. He seemed resolute, but troubled,
    nonetheless, as if being too young on one end and too old on the other
    to fight what he saw happening was wearing on him.

    I gotta tell you - it was chilling. I let him talk, and the whole
    time, my gut was churning, like I had mutated butterflies in my
    stomach. When he was finished, he shook my hand, gripping it really
    hard, until his knuckles turned white and he was shaking. He looked me
    in the eyes, hard, and said, "I will pray for your family and your
    country." He let go of my hand and hobbled away.

    I have related this event to you in the hopes it will serve as a
    cautionary anecdote about the state of our Union, and to illustrate
    the path we Americans are being led down by a group of fanatics bent
    on global economic and military dominion. When a man who survived the
    fruits of fascism decides its time to leave THIS country because he's
    seeing the same patterns that led to the Holocaust and other Nazi
    horrors beginning to form here, it is time for us to recognize the
    underlying evil inherent in the actions of those who claim they work
    for all Americans, and for all mankind. And it is incumbent upon all
    Americans, Red and Blue, Republican and Democrat, to stop them.

    http://www.justicefornone.com/handbills/leaving1.htm

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

    3) "by slow degrees we learn the full extent . . . "
    From: "Barbara Deutsch"
    :

    My source adds the following as preface to the
    INDEPENDENT story

    George Weller was the first
    Western journalist in Nagasaki
    after we dropped the plutonium bomb.

    [General Douglas] Macarthur [who
    was in charge of US occupation of Japan,
    a country which had never before
    known military defeat, and who, according to
    Stephen Bezruchka –
    www.alternativeradio.org/programs/BEZS001.shtml
    -- by prescribing for Japan
    a demilitarized, democratic, decentralized society
    with universal education, strong
    collective rights and protections for workers,
    and restrictions on private wealth
    and power, caused a rather mediocre life
    expectancy rate, even without any appreciable
    change in health care or delivery
    (and even despite effects of bombs
    and the contamination from them)
    to become the highest in the world]

    censored Weller's reports, but
    Weller's son just discovered the
    original stories in cartons.

    The NYT coverage of this story
    omitted this information:

    William Laurance, a science
    reporter with The New York Times and - it
    later emerged - someone also paid
    by the White House as a "consultant,"
    was among a group of reporters taken
    to the atomic testing site in New Mexico
    to demonstrate there was no lingering
    radiation. Laurance's subsequent story
    said: "This historic ground in
    New Mexico, scene of the first atomic explosion
    on earth and a cradle of a new era
    in civilisation, gave the most effective
    answer today to Japanese propaganda
    that [radiation was] responsible for
    deaths even after the day of the explosion . . . .
    Awestruck, we watched
    it shoot upward like a meteor coming from
    the earth instead of from outer
    space, becoming ever more alive as it climbed
    skyward through the white clouds . . . .
    it was a living thing, a new
    species of being, born right
    before our incredulous eyes."

    For which reporting Laurance
    won the Pulitzer prize.

    The article below, unlike the
    NYT coverage, quotes Gregg Mitchell,
    co-author of Hiroshima in America:
    A Half Century of Denial , and
    explains the theme of his book:
    [it] details the official suppression
    of the effect of the atomic weapons
    and the controversy surrounding
    America's decision to use them . . . .

    http://news.independent.co.uk/world/americas/story.jsp?story=648484


    Nagasaki: Wasteland of war, by the
    first Western reporter to witness it
    The American journalist George Weller
    was the first Allied observer to see
    the devastation wreaked by the atomic
    bomb on the Japanese city of Nagasaki.
    But his account was censored at the
    command of General MacArthur, and only now,
    three years after his death, have his
    astonishing reports finally been published.


    Independent (London) 21 June 2005
    By Andrew Buncombe

    The scenes that confronted the
    reporter George Weller would fill his
    dispatches with horror and stay
    with him for life. The first Western
    reporter into the bombed and
    off-limits city of Nagasaki in September
    1945, Weller encountered sickness
    and suffering of a kind never seen
    before. He described the cityscape
    though which he passed as a "wasteland
    of war".

    But his unflinching reports written
    a month after the atomic bomb had
    dropped caught the eye of General
    Douglas MacArthur's US military censors.
    Concerned at the effect Weller's
    reporting would have on worldwide opinion
    as well as his subsequent political
    ambitions, the general ensured that
    none of the reportage he filed from
    Nagasaki would be published.

    Until now. Three years after Weller's
    death at the age of 95, and 60 years
    after the US dropped atomic bombs on
    Hiroshima and Nagasaki killing more
    than 200,000 people and ushering the
    world into the nuclear era, some of
    those first-hand dispatches have been
    published in a Japanese newspaper.

    They provide a raw and unique insight
    into the bomb's devastation and the
    horrifying effect of radiation poisoning,
    known to the author of the
    reports and the bewildered doctors
    he spoke to simply as "Disease X."

    In a report filed from Nagasaki on
    8 September 1945, Weller wrote: "In
    swaybacked or flattened skeletons of
    the Mitsubishi arms plants is
    revealed what the atomic bomb can do
    to steel and stone, but what the
    riven atom can do against human
    flesh and bone lies hidden in two
    hospitals of downtown Nagasaki. Look
    at the pushed-in faÁade of the
    American consulate, three miles from
    the blast's centre, or the face of
    the Catholic cathedral, one mile in
    the other direction, torn down like
    gingerbread, and you can tell that
    the liberated atom spares nothing in
    the way." Weller's remarkable dispatches
    might not have been discovered
    but for his son Anthony, also a writer
    and journalist, who was dealing
    with his father's belongings after his
    death in 2002. At his father's home
    in San Felice Circeo, Italy, Mr Weller
    was working his way through a box
    of papers when he came across 75 typed
    pages of carbon-paper copies
    containing reports from the war in the
    Pacific, which his father had
    believed lost. The reports ran to
    about 25,000 words.

    Speaking yesterday by telephone
    from his father's home, Mr Weller, 47,
    told The Independent: "My father
    had spoken of these reports many times
    over the years and it was a source
    of great frustration to him [to be
    censored]. It was one of the biggest
    stories of his life.

    "It was very poignant to find his
    carbons no more than 20 ft. from where he
    was sitting. One of the rooms in
    his house was overflowing with papers
    from his more than 65 years as
    a foreign correspondent. There were boxes
    and crates with these papers
    jammed into them. I spent some time going
    through a crate full of mildewed
    papers from the Pacific war and there
    they were. The crate was a few
    feet from the chair in which he used to
    sit. He did not know they were there."

    The story of Weller's suppressed
    dispatches from the southern coastal city
    of Nagasaki - devastated by the
    4.5-ton "Fatman" nuclear device that was
    exploded at a height of 1,500ft
    at 11.02am on 9 August - are made all the
    more remarkable for the effort it
    took him to get into the city. With the
    city and much of southern Japan
    placed off-limits by MacArthur, commander
    of the US forces, Weller, already
    a Pulitzer Prize winner with the now
    defunct Chicago Daily News, made
    his way to the distant island of Kyushu.
    There, with official permission,
    he visited what had been a Japanese
    kamikaze base. But he also noticed
    that the town on the mainland - just a
    few hundred yards from the island
    - was connected to Nagasaki by railroad.
    Using a combination of boat, train
    and a bravura performance in which he
    impersonated a senior US officer and
    commandeered two military cars, he
    was able to get into Nagasaki several
    days before any other Western
    reporters. Weller, who had earlier
    been among the very last journalists to
    leave Singapore and then Indonesia
    in the face of the Japanese advance,
    was not at the time particularly
    opposed to the atomic bomb. "I think the
    Japanese military had cleared any
    sense of remorse out of him," said his
    son, who usually lives in Annisquam,
    Massachusetts. And his initial
    reports from Nagasaki suggested
    that he believed the atomic weapon, while
    clearly deadly, had worked with
    a rare degree of precision.

    He started one early dispatch by
    writing: "The atomic bomb may be
    classified as a weapon capable of
    being used indiscriminately, but its use
    in Nagasaki was selective and proper
    and as merciful as such a gigantic
    force could be expected to be. The
    following conclusions were made by the
    writer - as the first visitor to
    inspect the ruins - after an exhaustive,
    though still incomplete study of
    this wasteland of war." He suggested that
    the death toll stood at no more
    than 24,000 and that this number
    (later
    shown to be more than 75,000, with
    another 75,000 injured and countless
    more left to die later from radiation
    sickness) was largely the result of
    poorly designed civilian air shelters
    and a refusal by the local
    authorities to take air-raid warnings
    seriously. He later added in his
    report: "Nobody here in Nagasaki
    has yet been able to show that the bomb
    is different than any other,
    except in a broader extent flash and a more
    powerful knock-out." But as he
    travelled more around Nagasaki, visiting
    hospitals filled with sick and
    dying people, witnessing the flattened city
    and talking to the baffled Japanese
    doctors unable to help so many of the
    sick, Weller became aware that
    something was terribly wrong. Many of those
    brought into the hospitals were
    not responding to treatment.

    He witnessed children with red
    blotches on their skin, people who had lost
    their hair, patients with blackened
    tongues, patients with lock-jaw.
    Doctors at one hospital told him
    that a month after the explosion, people
    were dying at a rate of 10 a day.

    He noted that the doctors had
    performed precise assessments of the
    patients brought to them. Their
    hair had fallen out, they had skin
    haemorrhages, lip sores, diarrhoea,
    swelling of the throat. There had been
    a fall in the number of their red
    blood cells and there was an almost
    absence of white blood cells.

    He wrote in another dispatch: "The
    atomic bomb's peculiar 'disease',
    uncured because it is untreated and
    untreated because it is not diagnosed,
    is still snatching away lives here.
    Men, women and children with no
    outward marks of injury are dying
    daily in hospitals, some after having
    walked around for three or four
    weeks thinking they have escaped. The
    doctors here have every modern
    medicament, but candidly confessed in
    talking to the writer - the first
    Allied observer to Nagasaki since the
    surrender - that the answer to the
    malady is beyond them. Their patients,
    though their skin is whole, are all
    passing away under their eyes."

    After his achievement of entering
    Nagasaki and acting as an eye-witness to
    the destruction, Weller's mistake
    was to send his reports back to Tokyo by
    hand, to be approved by the military
    censor. Concerned about their
    potential effect on public opinion,
    MacArthur ordered that that they be
    destroyed.

    Weller's son said his father later
    believed he had lost the carbon copies
    and would go to his grave summarising
    his experience with the censors
    simply as "They won." Indeed, at the
    same time as it was suppressing
    Weller's reports and denying similar
    reports filed from Hiroshima by the
    Australian reporter Wilfred Burchett
    and published by the Daily Express in
    London, the Pentagon was actively
    going to great lengths to persuade its
    own citizens that there was no
    danger of radiation poisoning from the
    atomic bombs.

    William Laurance, a science reporter
    with The New York Times and - it
    later emerged - someone also paid by
    the White House as a "consultant",
    was among a group of reporters taken
    to the atomic testing site in New
    Mexico to demonstrate there was no
    lingering radiation. Laurance's
    subsequent story said: "This historic
    ground in New Mexico, scene of the
    first atomic explosion on earth and
    a cradle of a new era in civilisation,
    gave the most effective answer today
    to Japanese propaganda that
    [radiation was] responsible for
    deaths even after the day of the
    explosion."

    Laurance was so liked by the
    military that he was even taken in the
    squadron of planes accompanying
    the B-29 bomber from Tinian Island near
    Guam, which dropped the Nagasaki
    bomb. In contrast to Weller's reports of
    suffering and sickness, Laurance
    described the bomb's explosion thus:
    "Awestruck, we watched it shoot
    upward like a meteor coming from
    the earth
    instead of from outer space,
    becoming ever more alive as it climbed
    skyward through the white clouds
    ... It was a living thing, a new species
    of being, born right before our
    incredulous eyes." Ironically, such
    reporting won Laurance himself a Pulitzer prize.

    Gregg Mitchell, co-author of
    Hiroshima in America: A Half Century of
    Denial and editor of the magazine
    Editor and Publisher, said the story of
    Weller's suppressed and then lost
    dispatches was one of journalism's more
    considerable mysteries.

    "It's different to Deep Throat,
    but in nuclear history and journalism
    history, [it is important]," said
    Mr Mitchell, whose book details the
    official suppression of the effect
    of the atomic weapons and the
    controversy surrounding America's
    decision to use them when many in the
    West believed Japan was already ready
    to surrender. "It is one of the
    great mysteries. People have always
    wondered what was in those reports.
    For them to emerge intact solves it."

    Weller's son, who has also discovered
    a cache of his father's photographs,
    said his father had believed his reports
    from Nagasaki would not be
    censored. He believed that during the
    three weeks he spent in Nagasaki he
    was there "as a witness".

    "He had been fighting the censors for
    four years," he said. "[The censors]
    did not want the US people to get a bad
    impression of the bombs, and that
    it was not MacArthur who had won the
    war but a bunch of scientists in New
    Mexico."

    Indeed, the conclusion to one of his
    father's most moving dispatches
    relates to some of those very scientists,
    the effect of whose labours he
    had just witnessed, and who were about
    to arrive in the city to measure
    the radiation. "Twenty-five Americans
    are due to arrive September 11 to
    study the Nagasaki bombsite.
    Japanese hope they will bring a solution for
    Disease X."

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

    4) Iraqi Hospitals Ailing Under Occupation
    http://www.dahrjamailiraq.com/reports/HealthcareUnderOccupationDahrJamail.pdf


    ** Dahr Jamail's Iraq Dispatches **
    ** http://dahrjamailiraq.com **

    Iraqi Hospitals Ailing Under Occupation
    http://www.dahrjamailiraq.com/reports/HealthcareUnderOccupationDahrJamail.pdf

    Or visit:

    www.dahrjamailiraq.com and click on the 'reports' section.

    Dahr Jamail reports on the struggling health care situation in Iraq.
    The report surveys 13 Iraqi Hospitals, examines the actions taken by
    US military against hospitals and care workers that constitute war
    crimes as defined by the Geneva conventions, discusses and documents
    cases of US medical personnel complicit in torture through failures
    to document the visible signs of torture on their patients, and much
    more.

    This report is endorsed by the B/Russell/s Tribunal, El Taller
    International, Asian Women's Human Rights Council, Association of
    Humanitarian Lawyers, SOS Iraq, and Medical Aid for the Third World,
    a.o. I'd also like to thank 11.11.11 (a consortium of NGO's.), who
    offered their facilities for the presentation of this report to the
    press.

    /** This report is submitted as evidence to the Jury of conscience
    during the culminating session of the World Tribunal on Iraq
    , *//*Istanbul*//* 23-27 June*/**

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

    You are subscribed to the Dahr Jamail's email Iraq Dispatches because you requested
    a subscription at some point.

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

    5) HIP HOP SHOW AND RALLY TO CLOSE CYA YOUTH PRISONS
    Saturday, July 16, noon-2pm
    Frank Ogawa Plaza, 14th St. and Broadway (Downtown Oakland)
    4th Annual "Not Down with the Lockdown" Hip Hop Show and Rally
    to Close the CYA Youth Prisons
    FREE! All ages!

    Join us as we bring the community together with amazing Bay Area
    talent to speak out against the California Youth Authority
    and the prison industrial complex!

    Sponsored by Books Not Bars and Let's Get Free ( http://www.booksnotbars.org )

    Contact Books Not Bars:
    e-mail: bnb@ellabakercenter.org
    phone: 510.428.3939

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

    6) National Council of Churches urges grassroots campaign
    To call on Congress to pass bi-partisan 'end the war' resolution
    New York, June 16, 2005 - The National Council of Churches USA has welcomed bi-
    partisan legislation introduced in Congress today urging President Bush "to announce
    a plan for the withdrawal of all U.S. forces from Iraq by the end of the year."
    Rep. Walter Jones (R-N.C.) and Rep. Neil Abercrombie (D-Hawaii) introduced the
    legislation.
    http://www.ncccusa.org/news/050617BipartisanResolution.html

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

    7) A VICTORY FOR SHEILA DETOY

    Yesterday a San Francisco Superior Court Judge ruled on the
    side of the people. The judge threw out the argument presented
    by the Police Officers Union that it was too late to discipline
    the officers that killed this seventeen year-old child.
    The charges against Gregory Breslin and his cronies will
    not be dismissed!!!!

    This victory is a step towards discipline for the officers
    that not only committed murder, but then covered it up.
    Discipline of these officers will be a step towards peaceful
    streets in San Francisco free from abusive cops like Gregory
    Breslin.

    The fight is not over, now we must demand that the San Francisco
    Police Commission remove Gregory Breslin from the San Francisco
    Police Department IMMEDIATELY!!!

    SIX YEARS - NO JUSTICE FOR SHEILA DETOY

    * May 13, 1998: San Francisco police officers shot up a car
    full of unarmed teenagers and killed 17-year-old Sheila
    Detoy. SFPD then blamed her friends for her death.

    * The Office of Citizen Complaints found that Officer
    Gregory Breslin is responsible for her death. The OCC
    also sustained complaints against the other officers
    involved in Sheila's killing.

    In 2003 the San Francisco Police Commission decided
    they wanted to file charges against the officers,
    but the Police Officers Association tried to block
    discipline, but they failed.

    FOR MORE INFORMATION ON THIS CASE AND OTHER ISSUES
    RELATED TO POLICE BRUTALITY IN THE BAY AREA PLEASE
    CONTACT BAY AREA POLICEWATCH AT
    malaika@ellabakercenter.org
    or (510)428-3939 x. 224

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

    8) A.M.A. to Study Effect
    of Marketing Drugs to Consumers
    By STEPHANIE SAUL
    Published: June 22, 2005
    "The American Medical Association, the nation's largest
    organization of physicians, agreed yesterday to study
    whether consumer drug advertising leads to unnecessary
    prescriptions, potentially harming patients and driving
    up health costs....Many critics say advertising fueled
    the widespread use of cox-2 painkillers, recently linked
    to serious cardiovascular problems. Vioxx, the cox-2 drug
    that Merck withdrew from the market in September, was widely
    advertised to consumers. Studies later indicated that,
    for many patients, it was no more effective than other,
    safer pain killers."
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/22/business/media/22adco.html

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

    9) Tales of the Poor, Working
    to Survive in America
    By JEANNETTE CATSOULIS
    June 22, 2005
    http://movies2.nytimes.com/2005/06/22/movies/22wagi.html

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

    10) Iraqi Rebels Refine Bomb Skills,
    Pushing Toll of G.I.'s Higher
    By DAVID S. CLOUD
    Published: June 22, 2005
    "WASHINGTON, June 21 - American casualties from bomb attacks
    in Iraq have reached new heights in the last two months as
    insurgents have begun to deploy devices that leave armored
    vehicles increasingly vulnerable, according to military records."
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/22/international/middleeast/
    22bomb.html?hp&ex=1119499200&en=4de3c8b99cb57c82&ei=5094&partner=hom
    epage

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

    11) Social Security Opened Its Files for 9/11 Inquiry
    By ERIC LICHTBLAU
    Published: June 22, 2005
    "WASHINGTON, June 21 -The Social Security Administration has
    relaxed its privacy restrictions and searched thousands of
    its files at the request of the F.B.I. as part of terrorism
    investigations since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, newly
    disclosed records and interviews show."
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/22/politics/
    22terror.html?hp&ex=1119499200&en=f4bb907c3b74271d&ei=5094&partner=hom
    epage

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

    12) Muni drivers threaten
    walkout at month's end
    By Marisa Lagos
    Staff Writer
    Published: Thursday, June 16, 2005 10:57 PM PDT
    Some rank and file members of Muni's drivers union are
    threatening to walk off the job June 30, saying union
    leadership has not held strong opposing layoffs and service
    cuts as its membership asked.
    http://sfexaminer.com/articles/2005/06/17/news/20050617_ne11_muni.txt

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

    13) NYT Editorial
    Abu Ghraib, Rewarded
    Published: June 22, 2005
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/22/opinion/22wed1.html

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

    14) Posts Considered for Commanders
    After Abuse Case
    By ERIC SCHMITT and THOM SHANKER
    Published: June 20, 2005
    WASHINGTON, June 19 - Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld
    is considering new top command assignments that would possibly
    include promoting Lt. Gen. Ricardo S. Sanchez, the former
    American commander in Iraq during the Abu Ghraib prison
    abuse scandal, Pentagon and military officials say.
    Such a move, which has been urged by senior Army officers
    and civilian officials now that an Army inquiry has cleared
    General Sanchez of wrongdoing, seems to reflect a growing
    confidence that the military has put the abuse scandal behind it.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/20/politics/20military.html

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

    15) Extending Democracy to Ex-Offenders
    Published: June 22, 2005
    "The laws that strip ex-offenders of the right to vote across
    the United States are the shame of the democratic world. Of an
    estimated five million Americans who were barred from voting
    in the last presidential election, a majority would have been
    able to vote if they had been citizens of countries like
    Britain, France, Germany or Australia. Many nations take
    the franchise so seriously that they arrange for people to
    cast ballots while being held in prison. In the United States,
    by contrast, inmates can vote only in two states, Maine
    and Vermont.
    This distinctly American bias - which extends to jobs, housing
    and education - keeps even law- abiding ex-offenders confined
    to the margins of society, where they have a notoriously
    difficult time building successful lives. A few states,
    at least, are beginning to grasp this point. Some are
    reconsidering postprison sanctions, including laws that
    bar ex-offenders from the polls."
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/06/22/opinion/22wed3.html

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

    16) The crisis in United Russia
    By Misha Steklov in Moscow
    http://www.marxist.com/Russia/crisis-united-russia220605.htm

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

    17) Russia after the war in Iraq
    By Alan Woods
    http://www.marxist.com/Russia/after_war_in_iraq.html

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

    18) The crisis in United Russia
    By Misha Steklov in Moscow
    http://www.marxist.com/Russia/crisis-united-russia220605.htm

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

    19) Insurgents killed in Afghan fighting
    5 U.S. soldiers wounded in gunbattle in south of country
    The Associated Press
    Updated: 1:09 p.m. ET June 22, 2005
    "KABUL, Afghanistan - American warplanes pounded a suspected
    Taliban safe haven in the mountains of southern Afghanistan
    during an assault that killed up to 76 insurgents and 12
    security forces, officials said Wednesday. Five American
    soldiers were wounded.
    The bodies of those killed in Tuesday's fighting littered
    a rugged Afghan mountainside. The surge in violence has
    raised fears that an Iraq-style quagmire is developing
    here, just months ahead of key legislative elections."
    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8197613/

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

    20) Current, former Walgreen
    workers file suit
    Drugstore chain accused of discriminating against
    black employees
    The Associated Press
    Updated: 6:51 p.m. ET June 21, 2005
    "ST. LOUIS - Eleven black current and former Walgreen Co.
    workers in Michigan and six other states sued the nation's
    top-selling drugstore chain Monday, accusing it of having
    a policy of discriminating against black employees.
    The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in East St. Louis,
    Ill., says the company has a "pervasive policy" of steering
    black employees to work in stores in areas that have mostly
    black or poorer customers, using an internal system to
    categorize stores based on race and income."
    http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8307598/

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

    21) Marines win Iraq desert battle, war far from over
    By Peter Graff
    Tue Jun 21, 2005 08:08 AM ET
    KARABILA, Iraq (Reuters) - U.S. Marines claimed success on
    Tuesday in another battle against insurgents in the Iraqi
    desert but acknowledged that the war was far from over and that
    guerrillas would soon recover lost ground.
    http://www.reuters.com/
    newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=8850204&src=eDialog/GetContent

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

    22) The Washington Post and the Downing Street memo
    http://www.wsws.org/articles/2005/jun2005/post-j22.shtml
    ---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*---------*

    23) From Marti Hiken of the Military Law Task Force (MLTF)
    of the National Lawyers' Guild
    Two MLTF members in the Bay Area have formed the Berkeley Draft
    Information Project and have published a booklet for [school]
    counselors, parents and young people: "FAST FAXTS about
    "Military Recruitment, The Potential for a Draft and
    Related Issues."
    Their address is: Berkeley Draft Information Project,
    2124 Kittredge St., #66, Berkeley, CA 94704.?
    info@berkeleydraftinformationproject.org
    www.berkeleydraftinformationproject.org

    Kristin & Dianne "work from a slightly different angle on
    this project: attempting to engage high school advisors
    and college counselors, who have a lot of influence with
    students about the 'next step' in student lives. They
    also do some of the same sort of things by engaging
    sports coaches, by using school e-listings, and by
    having a 'hard copy' book-style product available in
    bookstores to catch the eye of people who are not
    explicitly searching the internet for information.

    It is an important information tool for those doing
    counter-recruitment/draft counseling.

    Marti

    National Lawyers Guild Military Law Task Force?
    Marguerite Hiken, co-chair
    318 Ortega Street
    San Francisco, CA 94122
    415-566-3732
    mlhiken@pacbell.net
    www.nlg.org/mltf

    Kathleen Gilberd, co-chair
    1168 Union Street, Ste. 302
    San Diego, CA 92101
    619-233-1701
    KathleenGilberd@aol.com


    * To visit your group on the web, go to:
    * http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MOOS-BAY/
    *

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

    24) Vote on this online poll to help protect student's privacy!
    Hi Everyone,
    I received a note saying that New York State School
    Boards Association is considering supporting changing
    federal law to not send student contact information to
    military recruiters without their consent. All you
    have to do is vote on their online poll:
    http://www.nyssba.org/ScriptContent/Index.cfm


    The law they are considering supporting, written by
    Mike Honda (D-CA), would not release student
    information to recruiters unless they "opt-in".

    Please vote on this online poll to urge NYSSBA to
    support protecting student privacy. While it is New
    York State, it has important implications for the rest
    of the nation as well.

    http://www.nyssba.org/ScriptContent/Index.cfm

    thanks,

    josh
    santa cruz, ca

    From the Web Site:

    Military recruiters have access to students' names,
    addresses and phone numbers unless parents "opt out"
    by asking schools to withhold the information. Should
    federal law be changed to an "opt in" system?
    (See news link, below)

    Yes

    (376) 89.74%

    No

    (43) 10.26%

    Total Votes: 419

    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/college_not_comba

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

    25) Mass Mobilizing Meeting
    Wednesday, July 6 at 7 PM
    Global Exchange: 2017 Mission St. #303, San Francisco
    (across the street from the 16th St. BART station)

    Dear Friends,
    Please join us for a mass mobilizing
    meeting on July 6 to build the
    Seeds of Change: NO NUKES! NO WARS!
    rally and march to the Livermore
    nuclear weapons lab.

    • Find out why, in the midst of ongoing
    • slaughter in Iraq, we must call
    for nuclear abolition;
    • Stop the Bomb Where it Starts!
    • For the 60th Anniversary of the Bombing
    of Hiroshima, Help Organize the March
    to the Livermore Nuclear Weapons Lab!

    RSVP: Tara Dorabji, Tri-Valley CARES, (925) 443-7148,
    tara@trivalleycares.org


    ACTION ALERT*Tri-Valley CAREs*
    www.trivalleycares.org*
    925-443-7148

    SATURDAY AUGUST 6: SEEDS OF
    CHANGE: NO NUKES! NO WARS!
    RALLY AND MARCH TO THE LIVERMORE
    NUCLEAR WEAPONS LAB.

    On the 60th anniversary of the
    U.S. atomic bombing of Hiroshima...
    ACT to abolish nuclear weapons and war
    PROTEST new, earth-penetrating
    nuclear weapons at Livermore Lab
    CELEBRATE your vision of a peaceful,
    just and nuclear-free world

    Livermore Lab is one of the world's
    primary sites for the creation and
    development of nuclear weapons.

    WHEN: Saturday, August 6, 2005 at 5 PM
    WHERE: William Payne Park, 5800 Patterson Pass Rd.
    Livermore, CA (BART
    shuttles provided by the Peace and Freedom Party)

    To volunteer and for more info:
    (925) 443-7148 Tri-Valley CAREs
    www.trivalleycares.org
    ;
    (510) 839-5877
    Western States Legal Foundation www.wslfweb.org
    ; and
    Livermore Conversion Project (510) 663-8065.

    BACKGROUND
    The Bay Area's Livermore Lab is one of
    the three national laboratories
    that serve as the brain of the U.S.
    nuclear weapons complex, which today
    is modernizing and developing nuclear
    weapons to support U.S. wars of
    empire.

    August 6 and 9, 2005 mark the 60th
    anniversaries of the atomic bombings
    of Hiroshima and Nagasaki by the
    United States. Join with thousands of
    people at four central US nuclear
    weapons sites to call for an end to
    the development and production of
    nuclear warheads.

    In the Bay Area, the Livermore Lab
    continues to contaminate the water,
    air and soil. Over 1 million curies
    of airborne radiation have leaked
    from the site. That is roughly equal
    to the amount of radiation
    deposited in the bombing of Hiroshima.
    The Dept. of Energy declared the
    fifty-mile radius surrounding the
    facility as the affected population.
    This includes over 7 million people
    from San Francisco, to Stockton, to
    San Jose. The storage and use of
    nuclear materials at Livermore Lab
    continues to increase despite safety
    and security issues. The limit for
    plutonium at Livermore Lab has just
    been doubled to 3,080 pounds --
    enough for 300 nuclear bombs!
    Plutonium was recently found on site to be
    absurdly stored in paint cans and food cans.

    In Iraq, they never found nuclear
    or other weapons of mass destruction,
    yet the daily reality of death and
    destruction continues, sparked by the
    Bush administration's invasion and
    fueled by the ongoing U.S. military
    occupation. A majority of people in
    this nation now oppose the war, but
    the White House and most members of
    Congress are resisting the only
    solution to the crisis: bring the
    troops home immediately. We will send
    our message loud and clear to decision
    -makers and the public at large:
    End the war in Iraq, End the threat
    of nuclear annihilation!

    We found the missing weapons of mass
    destruction. On August 6, we will
    take our voices to the active nuclear
    weapons sites across the country.
    We demand an end to US nuclear weapons
    development, production and
    testing. We demand an end to wars of
    empire and an end to nuclear
    excuses for war.

    NO NUKES! NO WARS!

    *SEND SUNFLOWERS TO LIVERMORE NUCLEAR WEAPONS LAB*
    The sunflower is the international symbol
    for the abolition of nuclear
    weapons. We invite you to create
    paper sunflowers to be planted at the
    gates of Livermore Lab. Sunflowers
    can be large or small, painted, be
    creative. Make sure to include your
    name and hometown on the sunflower.
    For full instructions and mailing directions:
    www.wagingpeace.org/sunflower
    .

    AUGUST 6 NATIONAL ACTIONS
    March and Rally at core nuclear weapons
    sites across the United States.
    Join the global majority in saying
    "Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Never Again!!!"

    MAJOR RALLIES AT:
    Livermore Nuclear Weapons Lab in CALIFORNIA
    Los Alamos Nuclear Weapons Lab in NEW MEXICO
    Nevada Nuclear Test Site in NEVADA
    Y-12 Nuclear Production Facility in TENNESSEE

    For more info on each major rally:
    http://www.abolitionnow.org/augustactions.html

    TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, NAGASAKI NEVER AGAIN!!!
    NOVIOLENT DIRECT ACTION AT THE LIVERMORE
    NUCLEAR WEAPONS LAB

    WHEN: Tuesday, August 9 at 8AM
    WHERE: Meet at William Payne Park,
    5800 Patterson Pass Rd. Livermore
    Take I-580 exit Vasco Rd. go South.
    Take a right on Patterson Pass Rd.

    Music at the gates will be provided by Clan Dyken.

    NONVIOLENCE GUIDELINES: Nonviolence has
    always been a core value of the
    anti-nuclear movement. Details about
    the nonviolence guidelines and a
    complete list of sponsors and endorsers
    are available at:
    www.trivalleycares.org and
    www.wslfweb.org .

    TUESDAY AUGUST 9, NATIONALLY COORDINATED
    CANDLELIGHT VIGILS
    Organize a candlelight vigil at your
    city hall on the 60^th anniversary
    of the bombing of Nagasaki. In addition,
    you can organize readings,
    lantern lighting ceremonies, the shadow
    projects and more. In support of
    the Mayors for Peace, we are calling on
    local groups to invite their
    Mayors to participate in the vigils
    and read out proclamations.
    Contact: Jackie Cabasso,
    Western States Legal Foundation,
    wslf@earthlink.net, (510) 839-5877,
    *www.wslfweb.org*
    .
    ASK CONGRESS TO CUT $2 BILLION FROM
    THE NUCLEAR WEAPONS BUDGET
    http://capwiz.com/wagingpeace/mail/oneclick_compose/?alertid=7565846
    Act now to stop a new generation of
    nuclear bombs. Ask Congress to cut
    $2 billion to restrain dangerous nuclear
    weapons programs.

    Donations should be made out and
    mailed to: Livermore Conversion
    Project, PO Box 31835, Oakland, CA 94604.
    Checks of more than $50 are
    tax-deductible if made out to Agape.

    To Volunteer Contact: Tara Dorabji,
    Tri-Valley CAREs,
    tara@trivalleycares.org, (925) 443-7148,
    *www.trivalleycares.org*
    .
    Initial Cosponsors and Endorsers:
    Alameda County Green Party, American
    Friends Service Committee, Bay Area
    United for Peace and Justice, Bill
    O'Donnell Social Justice Committee,
    Buddhist Peace Fellowship,
    California Peace Action, Bay Area
    United for Peace and Justice, Fiat Pax
    Berkeley, Green Party California,
    Livermore Conversion Project, Martin
    Luther King Jr. Freedom Center, the
    Northern California Communist Party,
    Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, Peace
    and Freedom Party, Peace Fresno,
    Tri-Valley Communities Against a
    Radioactive Environment (CAREs),
    Veterans for Peace San Francisco
    Chapter 69, Wellstone Democratic
    Renewal Club , Western States Legal
    Foundation, Women's International
    League for Peace and Freedom and
    Women for Peace.

    --
    Tara Dorabji
    Outreach Director
    Tri-Valley CAREs
    www.trivalleycares.org
    tara@trivalleycares.org
    ph: (925) 443-7148
    fax: (925) 443-0177

    Before the word, was the silence. In
    this silence existed neither thought
    nor judgment. First came laughter,then
    the tears, and the sound was born.
    With the sound, the world flooded with memories.

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