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Compiled by the Los Angeles Free Press Archive Research Unit

The Charles Manson Report


from the Archives of the Original

[circa 1969 1971]

ebook Reproduction #: A72 (c) Los Angeles Free Press 2010 This material is not to be copied for distribution or sale. This material is not to be posted on the internet. Legal additional copies may be obtained only - from: http://www.thecharlesmansonreport.info

Table of Contents
I. Introduction to the Los Angeles Free Press II. The Complete Listing of Text and Photos III. Fair Use / Disclaimers IV. WARNING! V. Additional Research VI. Other Reports & Products

I. Introduction to the Los Angeles Free Press


Arguably, the Los Angeles Free Press, begun in 1964, was Americas first underground newspaper. It is the paper credited with beginning the alternative press of the 60s that exposed what the mainstream media did not, and that gave voice to individuals and groups that had an alternative opinion especially those that wanted to stop the war, provide civil rights, and/or give safe haven to different lifestyles. The sixties and early seventies were a tumultuous time; seemingly, one social movement followed yet another. There was the Civil Rights Movement, the Free Speech Movement, the Gay Movement, the Womens Liberation Movement and more. And the advent of the Hippies, the Yippies, marijuana and LSD, and music that had never been heard or that ever had so much to say. Each of these social shifts birthed events that, today, are recognized as cultural milestones. Newspapers of the time, when they did take note, often did so in a derisive fashion as, surely, no good could come from such an uprising against tried, true and cherished values. The perspective of the Los Angeles Free Press, to say the least, was different. It wasnt just a reporter of events, but a community member, often a participant, even a Sponsor. It provided widespread, radical thought the opportunity to gather strength and move forward. The counter-culture brought new ideas; the LA Free Press published the events that came about because of them. It did take positions and support the principles of some of the many movements of the time. Though, mostly, it was known as a supporter of movements themselves; it was not so much an espouser of a particular doctrine but a record of the rippling effect of the various doctrines on its community and on society at large. The style of the LAFP, wherein it reported the views of the participants, not simply what the establishment interpreted their actions to be, and the type of news of which it was comprised, eventually had a national impact: literally hundreds of other newspapers, from one side of the country to the other, were begun because of it. They set out to establish and exemplify themselves as the touchstone of the counter culture of their own locality, just as the Los Angeles Free Press had done.

In many ways, they did replicate the LAFreep. Its basic format, for instance, to become what is, today, known collectively as the alternative media. However, there were very few that had as large and as vibrant a hometown community as Los Angeles. LA was the heart of the new consciousness; LA had Love-Ins (the name originated there), Be-Ins, Teach-Ins, and was just, in general, In. An LA band might just have been playing another weekend gig, but soon it was their song on radio stations emboldening protesters throughout America; the Manson murders were in LA, but they were on the nightly news nationwide; the Gay movement first took to the streets in LA, and then broke into a New York City riot that gave it national momentum. So, while the 60s were unfolding across the nation, the many events in LA itself made up the bulk of each Issue. Therefore, the archival material presented herein is not a compendium of national news. Nevertheless, it will inform your historical perspective of the nations change as many of the LA events published in the LAFreep and more often than not, not published elsewhere - were seminal ones for the era. Additionally, as we've only selectively released our Archive material on the internet, this Report is almost totally comprised of documents never before published there. It will surely enable you to evaluate present day events as few others can, and to present a viewpoint that will garner acclaim for its depth; others can only parrot the same material that they all share. What is herein, is as unique as it is rare.

II. The Complete Listing of Text and Photos


As this is a research compilation, the archive material gathered here is in its chronological order by Issue Date, years 1969 through 1971. The page number given is the first page of the item found in the Report (it is not the LA Free Press page number within the Issue). The article may be several pages long; after the Article and/or Photo/Drawing/Ad Description is the number of pages that that item consists of. If there is an FPS in that Description, it means that the very first page of the article or item is a Front Page Story of the Los Angeles Free Press. All items appear in their original full-page format so that they remain surrounded, as they were, with other articles, ads and photos. Its a great look back at all of what else was happening at the time, and adds context to the items of the Report itself.
The following is the complete listing of the full-page reproductions of the original archived issues of the historic counter culture Los Angeles Free Press- Americas first underground alternative view newspaper- that are included in this very special Report!

Publication Starting Article and/ Number Date Page or Photo/Drawing/Ad Description of Pages 1969 12/19 11 An Open Letter to Piers Anderton and KNBC-TV from Lawrence Lipton, 1 12/26 1970 1/9 1/16 1/16 1/16 1/23 1/23 1/23 1/30 1/30 2/6 2/6 2/6 2/6 2/13 2/13 2/13 12 13 14 17 18 20 22 25 26 28 29 31 32 34 36 38 39 Letters to the Editor: copy of letter to KNBC in support of Mr. Lipton (and) So Whos Wearing Chains? with photo of female Tate Suspects, 1 Letters to the Editor: The Son of Man / Manson, 1 Manson Can Go Free, *FPS, 3 The Manson commune Hippie Murders Lie, 1 Letters to the Editor: Reactions to Lawrence Liptons Open Letter, 2 M.D. on Mansons Sex Life, FPS, 2 Changing Focus on Manson, 3 Letters to the Editor: Anderton Yes! (and) Anderton No!, 1 Manson Interview (Part 1) / First Interview with Manson in Jail, FPS, 2 Letters to the Editor: 1. by Damsel, 2. Lipton, Yes, 3. Lipton, No, 1 Manson Interview Part 2, 2 Manson, Guru of the Hippies, 1 The Family Tells Their Story, 2 Demonic vs Devine in Lifestyle Rituals, 2 (Manson) Jail Interview Part 3, 2 Letters to the Editor: Manson Yes (and) Manson No, 1 Manson case: a fair trial?, 2

The Complete Listing of LAFP Text and Photos (cont.)

Publication Starting Date Page 2/27 2/27 3/13 3/13 3/13 3/13 3/20 3/27 5/1 5/22 5/22 6/5 6/5 6/12 6/19 6/26 7/3 7/3 7/10 7/24 7/31 7/31 8/7 8/14 8/14 8/21 8/28 9/4 10/9 10/16 10/23 11/6 11/13 11/20 41 44 45 47 48 49 50 52 53 55 56 57 58 59 60 62 64 65 66 68 71 73 74 76 78 79 81 83 84 85 86 88 89 90

Article and/ or Photo/Drawing/Ad Description, Number of Pages A Letter from Charles Mansons Friends at the Spahns Ranch, 3 Charles Manson Defense Fund ad, 1 Judge Revokes Mansons Right to Defend Himself, FPS, 2 Media Ignores Mansons Music, 1 Chas. Manson writes a letter to the Free Press, 1 Ad for Charles Manson album, 1 Charles Manson: Declaration to the Court, 2 Charles Manson Letter (and) Letter from The Family, 1 Why is the Manson family still at the Spahn Ranch?, FPS, 2 Letters to the Editor: Manson Returns (by Charles Manson), 1 Hypno-hype,1 Talk to Charles Manson - $1,000 a Crack, 1 Letters to the Editor: Manson Story Changed, 1 Manson Trial Starting Line-up, 1 Manson in Wonderland, FPS, 2 Letters to the Editor: Congratulations, 2 The Crisis of the Brassiere, 1 Mansonia, 1 Judge Decrees Ban on Private Hearings, 2 The Case of the Susan Atkins Rip-off, FPS, 3 Linda Kasabian confesses, FPS, 2 Mansons X Statement, 1 Nixon Guilty Manson Declares, FPS, 2 Linda Kasabian in the Citadel of Honk, FPS, 2 Manson photo with caption, 1 Manson Gossip Column, 2 Tate Meets Cosmic Chopchop, 2 Cast Call for Blood Alley, 1 Introductory Note with drawing (and) An Open Letter to Tim Leary from Charles Manson, 1 Groveling for the Manson Blood Money, FPS, 1 Manson & the Missing Groin Clink, 2 Beausoleil, Manson, Death Row & the Gas Chamber, Revisited, 1 Its Time to Pull the Plug on the Honkoids and Creeps, 1 An Iron Flower Blooms in the Void (and) Manson Shakes the Judges Hand, 1

The Complete Listing of LAFP Text and Photos (cont.)

Publication Starting Article and/ Date Page or Photo/Drawing/Ad Description, Number of Pages 11/27 91 Mansons Declaration of Innocence, FPS, 8 11/27 99 Scenarios be Damned: the Defense Rests, 2 11/27 101 Guillory interview Part 2; Interview with a Cop, 4 12/25 105 From Charles Manson - To You Who Live in the Music, 1 1971 1/8 1/22 3/12 4/23 4/23 6/11 7/23 7/30 8/27 11/5 11/12 106 Five Poignant Points to Ponder, 2 108 Manson LP Ad, 1 109 Love and Youth March to their Graves so the Old can Live by Charles Manson (from jail), 3 112 Was the Manson Trial Entertainment?, 1 113 Manson LP Ad, 1 114 American Dreamer (movie) ad, 1 115 Manson Goes to Trial Again, 1 116 The Poetry of Charles Manson, 1 117 Manson Mayhem, 1 118 The Family: The Story of Charles Mansons Dune Buggy Attack Battalion by Ed Sanders, reviewed by Allen Katzman , 1 119 Police Beat Report / Two Female Manson Family Members Arrested for Prostitution, 1

*FPS = Front Page Story

III. Fair Use / Disclaimers


This compilation is from the copyrighted pages of the Los Angeles Free Press. Further, there are items on these pages that were copyrighted as well, and may have had such copyrights extended to this day. These items are being reproduced here only within the format of our newspaper pages, and not as items of and by themselves, thus we believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material by us as provided by Section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Law. If you have a copyright interest in any item herein, and object to its use, please contact us directly at support@losangelesfreepress.com so that we can remove it. The Los Angeles Free Press accepts no liability for the use or reproduction of such materials copyrighted, or otherwise claimed as intellectual property by past contributing authors, artists, columnists and/or photographers beyond the removal of said items and that only for its own distribution post notification by said persons or their legal representatives.

IV. WARNING!
The material provided herein is for your personal use only; it is not to be replicated or transmitted, and no link to the material may be provided by you to a third party. This is per your Agreement made prior to your downloading of this material. To be absolutely clear, any provision by you of the material herein to someone else by reproduction of same, link to same, or posting on the internet of same is absolutely and strictly prohibited without first obtaining written permission from us. Such permission may be requested at: support@losangelesfreepress.com And, therefore, any un-permitted use by you OR the use of it by any person to whom you provided the material will result in your prosecution to the full extent that the law permits, including the assessment of fines, incarceration, or other penalties and remuneration for such use.

V. Additional Research
The Los Angeles Free Press Archives include all issues published from 1965 thru 1973 and can be searched by our staff on your behalf. You can request additional information on the topic of this report; perhaps for a time period that has not been included, or for a closely associated matter or individual. If, on the other hand, you would like us to explore an entirely different topic for you, that request can also be sent to support@losangelesfreepress.com to let us know what you're looking to find.

VI. Other Reports & Products


Additional Reports are available at: www.LAFPResearchReports.info For posters, caps, t-shirts and more great Los Angeles Free Press products, please visit our online store: www.CafePress.com/LAFreePress In addition to the items at CafePress.com, you may contact us for custommade products that utilize the unique graphics from the newspaper's archives, at: support@losangelesfreepress.com. Finally, this Report consists of 108 pages drawn from 46 different Issues of the Los Angeles Free Press. Of those pages, 12 are Front Pages that may be obtained directly from us in their full-page (11 x 17) format, as can many of the remaining 34 Front Pages. And many of the 94 pages that are not Front Pages can also be requested in that same original, full-size, readable and frame-able format. And most of these Los Angeles Free Press Pages may be purchased WITHOUT a watermark! All of the available pages can be seen at: www.LAFPResearchReports.info There, too, you will find the price for each one and discounted prices for their purchase in various sets. Please go and browse just looking through all of these is sure to bring back some great memories!

Compiled by the Los Angeles Free Press Archive Research Unit

The Charles Manson Report


from the Archives of the Original

[circa 1969 1971]

(c) Los Angeles Free Press 2010 This material is not to be copied for distribution or sale. This material is not to be posted on the internet. Legal additional copies may be obtained only - from: http://www.thecharlesmansonreport.info

Copy #A72 - Do Not Post - Do Not Copy

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press Please Do Not Print


Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

10

Copy #A72 - Do Not Post - Do Not Copy

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press Please Do Not Print


Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

11

Copy #A72 - Do Not Post - Do Not Copy

Page 26

Janmry

9, 1970

Los AngeJes Free

Press

PLEASE WRITE
\ n c hajvlicmft a f r o m Beeltf w o rn u i vi>' T i c - a c e , will u i B v e r alU J o h n , Bov J 6 3 , San P a d r i ' C a l , SOTS 3,

J a c k [if St. L o u i s , Looking f o r w a r d l o your v i s i t h e r e iBleT ihls m o n l h , M a l l h t w of O l e n d a l e . Cr^jQvy c u i ^ l e haj|[]^ome n i e x e c 3 2 s e i j w / r a r t i s t i c 22 n t h l o v e l y pod s e e k i n g friendly clean good l u o k i n g Intelligent g i r l f o r d l s c r e ^ fun & s o c i a l a c t i v i t i e s . Send l e t t e r , p h o n e n u m b e r A photo to: D y e - n a m i c Ent. 5025 w i l s h i r e Blvd LA 90036

YOUNG GUYS
If u n d e r 2 3 , c o m e ami grcKive with 2 c o l l e g e b o y s , 1 8 and a s , who dig m u s i c , p l a y s , moviefc, n u d i s m , Irtdour g a r n e t . R e l e a s e t h o s e t e n s i o n s , find s a t i s f a c t i o n , enjo^ good tlmer weekday e v e n l i ^ s t w e e k e n d s at p r i v a t e WLA pad. Beginners welcome. Write J O , PO B i a 2 4 5 0 e , LA 2 4 , No dopera. G I R L S ATTN',: V o u r e v e r v - u l s h a n d c o m m a n d OBEY EDI No r e q u e s t r e fused! Anjihlngr P O B lftG05, L A i e

J i m of GlendalH Al ^^f Highland p a r k . Two g r e a t guys * g o l o ^ e t h e r s o w e l l ' Matthew of C l e n d a l e . J a p m B l e 4 0 wants to m e e t f e m a l e with lots uf seK. w r i t e f^ Mitch, P O BOY 730f^ U>ng Beach 90607 m STUDS ATTENTION Sflny w ' c p l both 38 w l f e 5 ' 4 " , 1^0 3 6 - 2 6 - 3 6 w a n t s well built v e i l ' e q p t h n d s m h a i r y guy 4 s e x . Send p h o n e and photo-7ohn R., B u t 1726 West O r a n g e , Calif. All answered.

YOUNG GUYS ATTENTION


Cln m u s e yng guv well gulTI wnts m t u 2 h gd tiudriy '>-33. Foio fona T e d 525 N. i . a u r e ] Ave,, LA 48

W ' c p l Trini swInR In 3 0 ' s d e a n d i s c r e e t to m e e t s a m e | o 4C, p h , o r add, p h i i ^ i , ni> koolifi. Hetly L e a h y , 6 0 1 s . V e r m o n t , L,A, O0OD5 A t t r . cauc guy s k s m a s c s i r o r bl ver^ black slilnneil guvs lo p l e a s e In e m r i r Frt-nch W H I ^ . P . P . 40C S, 2n(l A l h a m h r a DlflOS Intelligent a t t r a c t i v e a ^ r e s s L v e , feminine g a l s e e k i n g m o r e p a s s l v e g a l with s a m e quail fic at Ions, p i i Bill 2461 L . B , 30801

BEAUT1FULGIRL27
w a n t s to meet o t h e r g i r l s o r ciiup l e s . Have h a n d s o m e bovfrlend. No m e n , Photo anil phone lo Kay, FOR 5524 MlsMon flHIs

MAKING LOVE
A t t r i c l 2$ w ' m sing uninhibited w e l l built t o s e x u a l l y Katisf; wt'm a n in all wa>a, F^Prtc^ k v e . S i n c e r e d i s c r t r e i , :-r' l i m i t s . All a n f i : e r d . P e r r , r e l a l p o s s l M P O B 12^a C a r d e r j r u v e , C a 92642

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


FAST WOMEN
RICHMOND, VA. EAST COAST
L o c k i n g f<jr ne*' T r i c k s " Har I'wne r can u s e a c o u p l e of s m a r t ^ a l s . B,.K 2 0 6 , V e n i c e . A[lraH-[ivP Z5 j r o l i l F e m i n i n e blg a l Inleresced In another fern, g a l fur friendship And fun. W r i t e p O p . x 9342, l . B . 00810 30 vDuld l i k e to m v e l yi^tutf n o m a n ] t o 30 for sen and '' Fi>tK> a r d injur appTc)ated. s ^ n d lo Err.eBi L Box 160^3, R i c h m o n d , Va, Aitenllnn husbaikris, f a t h e r s , m e n . ] would LlVe TO d i s c u s s v o u r g i r l f r i e n d , s l s i e r , u'|f,dufhlr,c4>us l n , " w r i t e Ken, P O Bon 6343 Anahel-L, Calif. 92B06. Hand'^'imf w e l l b r e d f&rier'u m a l e s e e k s woman o r wife for sfcllsf^Inp m u t u a l n e e d s P O P 38531 Holly SlTLgU w in l a t e 3D'6, ir..une Thinking, has rtl<;e p a d , likk^s ver> M'ung, T'lln girls fur fun Times. Could b e gener^'U? t'l n g h r E'fl- Send phone n... o r a d d r e s s t.^ P . S . POB^ot 2716 v a n > u i s , c a l i f . 91404. IF VCV'RF A N F U C O M E R . . . NOW IS TI3F T I M F T o COME ' S I N G L F CRICKS" S i n g l e w - m n e e d a g a l 16 to 30 for m o m m a h e n , c l e a n , w h i t e , not f a t - h i p typf fine. Must be a w a r e , w r l g n t (*i Hank, GlOfl 3 r d A v e , , L . A . 90043 1 h o p e tni s e e )ou al ^TCC Sundav s e r v i c e . ' . You'U IOVH Rev. Trn.y. We all d o , Maltheii of C b m i l a l e . OIRIStiNT.^ W / m 3& V l l * g'lOLi i n c o m e s e e k s respiinsLwe f e n ' a l e fh>r p<isblble m a r r i a g e and foreign I ri^veL WriTn J e r r y Rohert*., P< Box 7 3 0 5 , I>ing B e a c h , trallf. 5(1607

ATTENTION GIRLS

p r o f , m a n , r a u c g e n e n ' u s , Ulte t.^ m e e t g i r l s 2 0 - 3 0 fur fur and d a t e s , s e n d a n s w e r to C. R o p e r s r'-' 4 t l 4 o n , 5624 SanTa M o n i c a Blvd., Apt 2 1 4 , L . A .

ThiiuiJhl f 111 n c s s

NEED A GOOD MAN?

I Jt-^i Also f r IV J

C a u c . bach^^^ 4 0 , F r e n c h i well t u l l t see^is a i t r a c t W e sllni g i r l s o r couple, Een de S^ntls, Cardan? P h o n e lisred dial 4 1 ] . I S ^ ' T T H E E f E (.NE

THE HOLIDAY BATHS


fur t h e m a l e onl> ( s e e HEAl TH CulumnJ

Bl-GIRLS

JANE MANSFIELD TYPE LEFT IN LA?

WEALTHY

Beautiful yntung HoUyvLjud model wartlH til m e e t a t t r a c t i v e g i r l s . E x p o r i n e u p . Safe hust^and i s a v a i l a b l e . Vou m u s t s e n d pic ^ phone - , D i s c r e t i o n a s s u r e d . P O Bov 1002, I M h n i o . t d 9003a Col g r a d , 3 3 , : . ' 9 - , ir.5 l b , b - t k Ing f o r g i r l for s e r l n u s relatl<n' s h i p . Am t u r n e d off with dope, drinking, smoking, material ism, but go for apLirt-i, s e n , i-uUure, peofjle. BoK 4 3 7 6 , I r v i n e , 02<jt4
ATT^^TH^, PRFTT^ BI-SPX-

If u r 2 3 - 8 w / r busty not fat fun fr Intelllgertl w nce<J 4 gd p m f w / m fi'O- 180 s i n c e r e t o p Job arlileTIc gnod bkgd new In tiiwn used lo tivp ^ a l s tlreil of u s u a l b s In finding rT 1 l l v t - | n p o s s . Phobi A Info ILJ J a s o n L, 11325 fills, N . Ibillywd 91602, O a l s onlyl

I ain ZQ, &'2' t a i l , h i n a s r - m e ajid w e l l M u r - i t e d . fir"lher o r s l s l e r i n m ' d u c ^ m e ! ! W r i t e TO H e s l d e n t B< 24430 Li^S .^ri^e]*s 30024

40L^II m a r r i e d m a n willing t" b e g e n e r o u s to s w e e t ^oung t h i n g . Bcflt 35151 LA 9D031i

Ami J e s u s s a i d unto h e r (an ,ii1ulir e s ? ) ' N e i t h e r do j condemfi i h e e giH, I "I SU-' NO M O H > , it. J o h n H I I

A r e >iu m a l p caur. o r n r i e n r . g i i and 2ri o r under'^ [T y o u ' r e j J s o ffLHK]-fr.i.k]ne and s i n c e r e and i e e k a g e n u i n e nH'n-phoEie> c a u f . m a l ^ for a f r i e n d and = P l e ^ e w r i t e L,K, 02"; N, l a u r e l Ave., L , A , 9004a A p p r ^ i , phot s . V i r > d i s c r e e t , eaA^-gckng, c l e a n n'm s l i m t e l n e l e enjoys v i s i t s b^ cleaji s i n c e r e c o u p l e s . ' g i r l s {no h e i v v d r i n k e c ; o r pui*near1sv.'ani d ) B x - e i c a r d e m 9024?

SWING COUPLES PRIVATE PARTY THUnS.JAN. 15

M h j T h u r s " It wouid he s o o Full on M Ft\ o r Saf >ou"d h a t e m e . It la a* n e a r l i a p e r f e c t P a r t v a s We c a n p l u i . . . No Atags. D a n c ing b e g i n s at B : 3 0 . NO Chg_ T o p l e y Ti-o. 6875 P I C O .

Jack de \ me -Welci'mc baclifrLim Te:i:as. Neitt - V o i c e " scon- A l ways am^ll'U5,M^tT>^e^^^'fCle'lds]'', Gu^ 2 0 - 3 0 handsLime, m a s r . well built wanted b\ s a m e . Fone i fit., til Vr, p , , ^ 473 [.A I10G2B

UAL f ' H ^ r L ^ ; A t l r a - t i v e and Tot d l l i Bl Couple iiuld l i k e to meet new frlenLl'i for s e n t i e n t and s e n b u a l p l e a s u r e s , \ o u a r e r a r e If you a r e r e a l , s h e Is | , e - ' - h e n s l t l v e , g e n t l e and l u v e . Fie Is Sciirp l o , u n u s u a l and p r o v t r r a i l v e . Phoio and p h o n e T*. P . O . B < n C 9 a 0 5 , i . A . , <. alif. ^OMt> a-i.r)(|ng w / m 3B s i n c e r e , h o n e s t , ;,eplis woman for c o m p a n i o n s h i p , f r i e n d s h i p , !.ex, l o v e , 4-Ti', urlTjP.ij. boy 5 5 3 , O f d e n , t ' l a h 9440?

V e r j a t t r a c t i v e y'Hung m a n 30^6fT. d e s i r e s lo m e e t Women IS-3^ s g l . o r d i v . Til spend e v e n i n g s orii^ve A mutual p l e a s u r e s . Lei's use our h e a d s h a v e fun. 1 am very s i n c e r e . Semi frank | | r . , phuti. t p h o n e to D a v e , I i 3 2 N o , C a h u e n g a jjollywHHrfi U^OTB

J o h n of G l e n d a l e . Vour gIfT, wild c a r d s - M a n , toi. m u c h ! Merc I, A very a p p r e c i a t i v e Matthew of c l e n dale.

Female, furlylih, alt r a t l i v e , b l o n d e - s e e k s s i n c e r e friendship with lall unattached m a n - c i . l l e g e erlucateil r e<Lulvalent pref. B u s i n e s s o r prhf. m a n . . . . . . . R a c e unlmpi<rtanT . . . . . . . Write d d a l l s Barbara Marshall, C547 ^un^pl Blvd., l . A . 30026 C o i v l 34-:i2 want To m e e t m a r r i e d c o u p l e s in the s a n a r e a . P l e a s e s e n d pliHto A to P . O . Box 110 O n t a r i o , "iher Bern, phone Calif.

MARRIAGE IN 1970?

SAILOR IN DISTRESS

H a v e s l e e k 46 ft s l o o p , ne' s p o r t c a r , e t c . Need f l r s i m a t e 14 r s a i l ing r a c i n g and p a r t i e s . I ajn 4 4 , 5 ' 6 " ( outdinHT I'rpe, C h a r l e s Box 5 3 " T o r r a n c p ,

C o n g r a t t tv C.R. Pri'rluctl<ins i P a l RDCCO on b r i l l i a n t opening of " L e t T h e r e Be Bo>S' at Par*; Tlieatre. Matthew of C l e n d a l e

C^iod l"H.klng w m 32 d e s i r o u s of e x p hf a 3 - s i . m e . r m s i n e l e s i e r l l e e d u e e m p and d i s c r e e t , p l e a s e w r i t e ; O c c i ^ a n t , p ' t E^it 3 0 2 , Hvll>*-(,Lid, c a l i f , !lOD2a

O e n l l f , sinriTi-, mj-s^. w n t a l e s e e k s f r i e n d s h i p of s a n t n . 1 6 - 2 3 , 3'>e K., :i25 N. l a u r e l , LA 00048

r m 2 2 , m a l e , c a u c , '. I I " , 2 0 0 l b s bripwn b a l r , blue e y e s , O e i n l n l , v e r y b ' n e l i and shy would | | k e tu rae^l a g i r l for weekends d a t e s . 1 didn't c a r e what r a c e ^ou ar-. I a m l.H.k]nE for a ^ i r l 1 I an have fun with. Send pItoiLi and phone p l e a s e to Steve 14705 I^nkeS l i p S t , , S ^ l m a r , Calif. CH342

E u r o p e a n tH'm and e d u c a t e d gentl e m a n , 3!;, s u c c e s s f u l b u s i n e s s m a n goLid lo<klng, s i n c e r e and w a r m , d e s i r e s to m e e t an a t t r a c t i v e , p a s s i o n a t e yi'ung g i r l to 26, for fun, d a l e s and an un.'^elfi^h an-l meaningful relalLnrishlp, M a r r i a g e m i n d e d , hut not a condlllim. Phod. B4>precla1ed. p l e a s e w r i t e to c .Lqjant, Apt. - 1 5 , 1111 SVirlh L a r r a l t e e S t r e e t , Los Angeles, 9 0 0 6 3 , Thanh j o u .

l i m n g b r i d e wanle-ltti profe^i^jxnal r e t i r e d man f'lr luxury L've s e x . A. Ma.son, Apt - 4 0 4 , 601 S u t l e r St..^.F.

U'lu'^iui t a m b l k m g n . Z 9 l 3 g e n e s e l a

B a c h e l o r 32 c a u c . kind g e n e r o u s s e e k s isuJi for eve^wkn d a l e s , J | m Sllvesrrl, G a r d e n a , Phone listed dial 41U

Crroihvi g m 2D, Inlell, s i n c e r e , m a c , s e n s i r i v e < l n t In a r t s & s p o r i a - s e e k E s a m e . W r i t e 5c<<tl L. lOE P. 2nd SI., A l h a m h r a o i a o 2

TRIP TO BAHAMAS

Key >ou wlnger& Ljnn Kev& ^ h e r m e n a r e su'lnfflng again eacli vBlE-end at T h e E m p i r e Room 6641 v.. washlngtUEi Blvd. In C u l v e r Cli>, Get Into t h e s w i n g of t h i n g s and malie ic.

COUPLES

M a l e M c a u c e ' 2 - 200 l b s n e e d s t r a v e l i n g c o m p a n i o n femAle 2 1 - 3 0 fjrst c l a s s ex-iense paid t r i p , p i c t u r e ph - , a d d r e s s r e q u i r e d , f. J o n e s , Hf. 'I, Bx 6A, S l e d a d , Cal.

WOMF;N ONI,Y

ATTENTION

Two b l / f e wanted for t h r e e s o m e with 23 w m no f a g s . P h o i o , phone a p p r , PO' lOBO Eturtlo c i t i , Calif

A t l r , w m cpl 3:i 27 looking for 4 s o m e s f o r din d a t e s , c o c k t a i l s *. s w m g , s e n d p h " t " & phcme io C . D , , Bon 7 5 , L a k e u u o d 30714

J i m OnMl> 1 H a r r y of Laguna. Th'o fine C a p r i c o r n s , Wishing you a happ> b ' d a y . Matthew infGli-ndale.

OAV G L T S 18-27 Voung g u y , 2 3 , with groovy bod> will c o r r e s p - t n d with y o u . Send ph'il'h, d e s c r i p t i o n . Will a n s w e r a l l . Bill 5105 F a r h i l K n a y l ' . n , <:

WM h a n d s o m e g e n e r o u s BM " e k ^ W F lnrerpstT In F r e n c h b i t e . Til h e yiHur s l a v e . Send photic, phone a d d r e s s u- Ton>, 40C Sn. 2nd ^ t . , A l h a m b r a , Calif. D1602

C l e a n c u t / m 2ayrN w j r i s lomeeT a t t r , very a f f e r t , . Intelligent g i r l 22-2ri. Seriously Intent on m u r r l a g e . Send p h o t o , l e i l e r , ph, to; Bo* 2052, C o s t a Me^a 3Zfi26

FEMALE FRENCH CULTURISTS

Oa^ r e n a i s s a n c e m a n , 3A, s e e k s m a s c , t r i m , a t l r e c l l v e , no'Hm<ke n u n - d r i n k Ing, e d u c , h o m e - o u t i l o u r li^vlng, stall I e friend. S i n Dieci' a r e a . BCJX 4 1 7 , K m l n l t a s 32024), Fr>nchEiLan 15 for fun d a t e , ptr. l e P I . , I .A, seniis g i r l tieT IR To livlng companlons>tip, i ^ j h a l r r , 275T i . y t e l 3006^ calif.

HANDICAF GUV Shy, b i l s q u a r e a m 35 s l l p h t l i m p wiu]d l i k e t " m e e t fun l n v Ing, a f f e c t i o n a t e , m a t u r e w f 1 to -' all l e t t e r s a n s w e r e d p h o n e n o , \ t r l t e to occupant 14023 r r e n i h a * -3 Hai^'lhurne So I a m ' i a g e n i u s - a T l e a ^ i Tm i r l e n d l v : MaiTnp\L uf cilendale.

IF YOU ARE A

Male 23 l i k e s to p l e a s e o t h e r m a i n s H u r r y . L a r r y 11325 Blly St. No, TlollywiHKl, Calif.

W e a l E h i , Beautiful W o m a n , 30-4'^ no o t h e r s need a p p l w 1*1^ maii 37 I n t e l l i g e n t , d i a m o n d In tbi- rough Is i l r e d of w o r k i n g h a r d . Wanls t h e go.td l i l e , l o v e , p o s s i b l e m a r r i a g e . Boxes o^K. I n q u i r i e s lo SiHVp, Boy 139^, Sania Monica, Calif.

SWINGING CHICKS
Did >ou kn'w thar T h e r e ' s muclio s t a g guys al Tii>le' Too a j m o s t e v e r y n i g h t . It lb difficult for a s t a g gal to hu^ h e r own d r i n k . Dancing n i g h t i e .

1 need you! I want lo m e e t i^als who enjov p e r f o r m i n g , w m , 30, 6 ' 2 * , r e d h u l r , Htralghl, g e n t l e . We can meet for coffee orcuc^Ll a i l bflfikre m a t i n g d a t e . I don^t ujtuallj r e c i p r o c a t e but might If c o m p a t i b l e and you a r e an e x t r e m e l y clean p e r s o n . All t e t t e r s a n s w e r e d . P r e f e r O r a n g e Co,, i . b a r e a . W r i t e J a c k B . P O &Tt 7305 Long R e a c n , 3

Attr ync m a c cpl 'iwikinc 1"T s a m e for 4-fnfme"4. photu phone To Occupant, p o Bnx 1163, R i v e r s i d e c a l i f . 32ii"E

Orange County activist busted in his Bird for ^Blues^


SUE MARSHALL Orange County radical community ]adr Don Elder was a r rested December 31 In Tils Newport Besicli bookstore follow'.ng the publication of an arttcle In the UC Irvine-centered underground paper, "From out of Sherwood Forest," Although Don Is on the staff of the paper, and his bookstore distributes it, he did not write the offending article, nor Is he the editor of "Sherwood Forest* as the Costa Mesa Dally Pilot erroneously stated.

When a group of r ^ r e s e n t a tlves went to the Daily Pilot to protest the error, the paper r e fused to print a retraction. The Orange county Committee to defend Political prisoners naalntalns that Don's participation In the afleged offense Is negligible, and the arrets t amounts to political harassmeht. Earlier this month, -Sherwood Forest" printed an article entitled -Outlaw Blues* which was received anonymously through tho m a l t It stated Inessencethat shcpllftlnc from stores should not be t^n&ldered unethical, since big business rips off the public, E>on Eltter is charged with 5 felony counts of solicitation to commit burglary and grand theft and five misdemeanor counts of contributing to the delinquency of a minor (since 'Sherwood Forest- was allegedly passed out at corona del Mar High School),
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-Don was busted because the police want to get rid of the Bird," Barbara,whoworksthere, told the Free Press, -We're very visible because we're active In draft counseling and we provide legal advise," One of the Eilleged'complaints* from parents of high school students was placed by a woman whom the police chief called for Marvin Garson
Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

'If convicted, Don could face 30 years In prison and/or $30,000 fine for being connected with a newspaper that talked about thinking about committing a crime,* Che Sherwood Forest defense Committee states in a leaflet, Don spent two days (inf^lud^i^^ New Year's Eve) In Jail before being brought before a judge. At his arraignment Friday, January 2, his ball wa^ dropped from 6,250 to $1,B75 by Municipal Court Judge J.E.T, Rutter. Putter noted that the number of counts seemed arbitrary, since they all related to one act, and there are -serious free speech questions Involved,* Putter refused tograntthemotlon of the defense to release Elder on his own recognizance, -My bust was not a personal bust, but a political attack against 'Sherwood Forest* and the Bird, The only effective defense is a political defensewhich Stresses political nature of the bust. We have to mobilise people In t^is battle," Don Elder stated. * Sherwood Forest- claims that ever since It has been in existence. It and the Bird have been harassed by the Newport Beach City Council, Police D ^ a r t ment. Orange County Board of Education, Cablevision TV,Tom Reddin, and local business interests. At a December meeting of the

city council it was remarked that 'We are now powerless to stop these people, but sooner or later, they'll make a m i s t ^ e and we'll get 'em," The Bird has been evicted from Us present location, but the landlord has not specified a date. 'Local authorities have shown greatly Increased interest Inpossible building code violations,* the defense committee stated, 'Police have been frequent visitors to the store and have disrupted meetings, parklngmeters in front of the store have been well patrolled," During the course of the police investigation of the Bird last month, workers at the bookstore were harassed by the police, who purchased a $20 ad for a nonexistent clothing store called -Vli^o" and hired a girl to deliver the ad to the store. Detective Simon called the ad In, identifying himself as "Mr, Johnson" and the girl who delivered the ad copy was r ^ r e sented as -Mr. Johnson's secretary.

a Sherwood Forest r ^ o r t e r . She admitted that she had nul seen the paper. -The story attacked the police, didn't it?" she asked. When she was Informed that the article concerned shoplifting ratherthan the police, she quickly replied, -Oh, r m against that toot* Action is being taken. The Orange County Committee to Defend Political Prisoners u*Ees the public to come to Don's a r raignment on Friday, January 3 at 9 am, Costa Mesa Courthouse, 567 W, 18th St, Also, the committee plais to mobUlae the public to come to the Newport Beach City Council meeting at 7-30 pm, Monday, January 12, 3300 Newport Blvd., NewI-i^rt Beach, Contributions to the Committee Should be sent to P.O, Box 2441, El Modena, Calif,, 92667 or c/o Tlie Bird in Search of a Cagft, 2307W,BalboaBlvdNewport Beach, Call (714)675-7181 or (714) 549-4205 for Speakers or further inforn.atlon, WHAT WOULD IT BE UKE IF You WERE DON ELDER?

LETTER
Dear Freep, Are you ready for this? Jesus Christ Tlie Son of Man Man's Son Manson Alright, you can comeoutfrom under the desk, A cat was Just telling me about your DA, Evelle B, Younger, He sounds like a very evil man. He must have been aw^d1y uptight ahout not having anybody to try in the Sharon Tate case. Oh, he must have been desperate for someone he could convict. In fact, an innocent man he could convict would be better than a guilty man he couldn't convict. Well, when he got the word that they had a freakout hippie girl who was confessing to every solved and unsolved murder In California for the last hundred years, and she was a member of some hippie commune that lived in Death Valley, your DA said SIGN HER UP!

Younger could succeed Hoover if be really makes it big in this trial. Watch out for him. He started out as a TV Judge. His name Is also spelled Ev*ll be younger, which establishes a weird connection witlideadEverette Dlrksen. Every big city DA i s now a potential candidate for president, Just like every big city Mayor is,

Copy #A72 - Do Not Post - Do Not Copy

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litbY. Copy

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* o d aSBtHA 9Z x o f l

Gay violence predicted

Copyright MANSON CAN FREE Los Angeles Free Press


The Raid on Karenga's HQ Records, Film, Theater, Astrology, Food 130 Places to go this week-^see page 32
'"Ci^^t^o^^ $6.00PER YEAR
T h * LcM A n g t i N F n a nt, l i w .

Volume 7 tt-3 (Issue 287)

Phone: YES-1970

Jenuary 10-22,1970

Distinguished attorney maps out Manson's defense strategy!

-'VW

\--:.

Cbmdm M M M M has ttatd that ha intandt to act M hit own attomay, whan ha aoa to trial for tha Tata and, LM Bfanoa murdan. Tha fotlowing articia wai w i m n by a notad attomay practicjng Iwfora Fadaral Courti and varfoui vlata ban. Ha it alto a prizawlnning author on lawi ralctinfl to corporate and goyammam practlct, and of Mvaral books on intamatiotMl affaira. Tha following is hn commantary on tha Moion affalr...whkh outlinat tha mothod by which Chariat Manson should conduct the defame in hit trial. The uuthor oraren to remain anonymous for otwjousrajsons^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

The forUkcuTnlng trial of Chirles MBHSOH and his BUe^ed band of "hipptes' for the alleged murder of Sharoft Tate Ukd her companions will be an Inlereatlng demonatrallofi of how the law operates In a system administered by ukd for the members of the establishment. Ae one world-fanioufi author haa said: "Far too many lawyers have the morala of a whore and the soul of a pimp/* And it was probably with knowledge of this fact that Charles Maneon stated in his vety first appcAi-nnce in the Loe Angclee Court: "As far g,a I am concerned, T consider myHlfdead," How the law and the legal profesHion operates can be seen by observing the conduct of the Los Angeles District Attorney's office and the two atlt meys repreaenting Miss Susan Atkins, From the details iradually emerging ^ m the vaae. it has become clear that Susan's "confession" is not the true nlory of the mi.rdera at the Tate home, but that parta of it were concocttfd by her atlomeya with the connivance of a member of the staff of the Los Angeles District Attorney Thepubliehed Atkins "confession" islegallyafakel Lawrence Schiller, whoae background is discussed later in this article, concluded ftn agreement between Susan's attorneys and the Assistant District Attorney for the ole and exclusive purpose of exploiting her fdlse confession for the most base purpose: to make a fast buck out ofthe miaery and degradation of another human being. This is how it happened: On Dec. 1 and Dec. 4, 1969, Susan Atkine was released from jail in custody of her two attomeysand the omiatant diatricl attorney. She was taken to her attorney's Beverly Hills office on bolh days, and in the presence of the aasiatant district attorney, spoke into a tape recorder with a legal stenographer taking notes. Uiwrence Schiller was not in the office on those two days, but on Dec. 13,1969, the Atkins "confession" l>roke in the European press. This conCeasion had been sold to the Eturopcan press by Larry Schiller for a considerable sum of moneythousands of doUersI Since Schiller could have obtained the "confession" only through Suuian's attorneys, it can definitely be stated that Schiller, the two atUmieys. and the assistant district attorney were involved! It is incredible ^ by every rule or principle of American law that two ethical lawyers would pennit an aasiatant district attorney to ait in on their consultations with the d i ^ t they were supposed to defend un^ss all three

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But notice also that Sgt Mitchell, who was subaequently Indlded firr participating in the sune maasacre, has not received the same publicity as LL Calley. Why? Sgt, M i t d i ^ 14 a black man. l l i e choncee are too to I that U . CalUy will
Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

had an un4ier$tanding that Susan Atkins was to be used for the purpose of exploiting her alleged "confeesion" to produce money for themselvee, to be split with a public relations man who tumaoutto be Larry Schiller. There is no dotibt in thia attorney's opinion that no SupremeCourtin any state, nor the United States Supreme Court will permit the use of that confession if Manton knows how to use the les^l toots he say< Ac knows how to uae! FurtheTmore, the presence of an asaistent district attorney, plus his involvement, directly or indirectly in this nefarious plot to use and exploit AUiins, is gross misconduct and abus of office! Because the assistant distiict attorney, inlaw, in these circumtance4,;s an e^centof the D.A.'s office, and as such, he knew that under the law, his knowledge of the Atkina "confession*' would be publi^ed, and once published, could and probably will make any guilty verdict reversible in Supreme Court (This does not in any way implicate District Attorney Youngs or other members of his staff, since they could have been totally unaware of what was happening.) The conclusiveevidencc that Susan'a attorneys planned the entire "confession" is eeen by their atatement that up to now they had not received any money from the Schiller activities. But. as seen later, Schiller said he entered into a I n s t agreement on behalf of Soaan. If that be the case, then the two attomeya have no right to that money especially under those circumstances. Schiller stated that he has given them money; they deny receiving any of the "confession" money. Someone is lying. Finally* there is no proof thai Schiller has even met Susan Atkins, but in any case, how did he arrange a trust agreement with her unless her attomeya were present? What will the California Bar Ethics Conunittee do in this case? You can be fairly certain that they will do nothing. The *'moral and ethical" leaders of the legal profession will sit on their collective asses and privately applaud this^coup^bytwooftheircolleagues. Manson instinctively knew that he could not get a fjair trial "under the basic principles of American justice." Butif Manson had worn a uniform and had committed murder for his superiors in Vietnam he would hav been hailed as a hero. For example, witness the pious outpouring of sympathy for Lt. Calley when he was charged with the multiple murder, the slauphter of thirtMn unarmed men. women and children. In spite of the overwhelming proof that a massacre had occurred, in spite of the fact that the [VAmerican South Vietnamese Congreasional Committee signed a written statement that a maaaacre of several hundredsofhumanbeingshadoccurredCN.Y. Tlmea, Jan, S, 1970) , the American press warned that all the publicity that they themselvee had released and ;MibUahed in their own newspapers waa damaging Uie case against U. CoUey because of ^'undue publicity in violation of the Constitutional guarantee of a free and impartial trial" And with every publication ofthenews of the massacre, LtCaUey'a chancesforfreedomgrow geometricaUy-

go f ^ and Sgt Mitchell wiU be fboikd guilty end aantaooad to hard labor fur life. Yet Sgt Mltchdl woe obeying the ofden of his superior, LtCaJley-Thia is another example of how the double standard of the law onamtaa. It should be remembered that neitKer Chftr'ea Monaon nor Lt Calley made a ctmfeasion. Calley was at the ecene of Uie alleged crime and gave direct order* lo the enlisted Gla there to commit the alleged mordwa, Chariea Mstfiaon was not at the scene of the murdera Cor which he la to be tried. Both alleged crimes were revesled by perwma long after the alleged criminal acts were committed. However, in the Calley caas, his activities were oonceaied by his superior officers in the U ^ . Army until an ex-01, without seeking or receiving any kind of compensation, wrote many lettore to the U.S. Defsnes Deporteient and membcra of Congress. After many persona hod received hie letlera ^ and ignored them the story came out into the open, and waa confirmed by eye witneseee, and by official photographera of thell.S. AvmyinSaigonl But in the Monaon caae. disr* era no photogrsphe ehowing Manaon at the oceoa of the alleged Crimea, llie paraon 4fhoimplicatedHanaonweaoneSuaaiLA1kiiu Cor money in excess of |lfiO,000. Who ia Snsan, and how did aha eona her money? She claims that ahe waa a member of the Manaon "family" which had aami-relifioua overtonaa- Manaon. according to Susan, bod such fbnnidtble hypnotk powera that ahe, along with four other tzibsLl membm, committod ft^ur or five murders at the Tate residence, and OA the following day committed tha murdos ^ two other innooaat pereons. The press, although then ia aboolutaly no ptoof that Manson was at either of the muider sttaa, haa now connected him to both murdera. Suean Attbaa has alao connected him as the "ringleader" whom she and her coraponiuns ohtyd under a "hypnotle tranoe." Regularly, at least once a w e ^ the UA. praaa keeps hinting that more bodies will be fbund, vrhich were the work of Manson and his much-publicisad "occult powers," But no more bodies have been found. But the constoat reiteration that the police are ssalqiig mors bodlsa influences and molds public opinion. The LAPD now has the oppo^ tunity to "solve" every unsolved murdn of their boolca. Thus, th public, and ths prospective jurors who will ^ Manson, will hava been brainwashed. And whfla the Manaon affair is trmnpetsd from evsvy one of Ihs news media, the Lt Celley trisl slowly reoedse into obscurity - whlcb is where the American people would like It to etsy, acooiding totheGallupPoUofJan,ieTO, And who is Lawrsncs SiMUer, ths man who promoted Susan Atldnafbr thousands of doUam? Heia a m e n who, according to anatienal weekly news magasine,"... would do onytUng tbr a b w ^ " A aalf-etylad writer and PR mn, ScJiiller ber^ne a public figure by maUng a fbat bvck on the controversy surrounding the aaaaaainatfam of PraaJdant Kennedy. Since Sdiiller is now a public fiff^us, hia aetivitka can be legally cmmiented upon, and ao, with no maUoe In peaetioa or thoui^t some of his activitiss arehsrsby enumarakd; fpfeose tarn to psfle d^

rH

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Page6

January 16,1970

Los A ngeles Free Press

Noted lawyer tells Charles Mansonhow to conduct his own [

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


Bat n o sooner b a d t h e record been released t h a n t h e Sacretavy'of the Kennedy Memorial Society isaued a public t a t e v e n t t h a t they h a d never been informed of t h e Schiller propoaal. I t h a s been eetiniated t h a t more t h a n 36,000 copica of the recotd have been aold, and not one penny of the prwved have been offered to the Kennedy Memoriat Society. T h e next caper pulled by the promoter, Schiller, w a s a J a ^ Ruby d e a t h b e d "confesaion." I n this grotesque number Schiller dcaded to go for more than just a buck . be went for TWO bucks: Not only did he collect a s the [DMiQCer of t h e Ruby "confeeaion" record, but h e aUo a^lected aa the "busineaa agent" for the dying Ruby. But befora yon ciHdd s a y "pay m e / ' Schiller w a s receiving 'ome very naaty words from Huby's family. SebiUer also co-authored a book defending the WaVren CoDuniasion. The book revealed that it w a s written a s fast a s Sdiilter a n d b i s co-author could wnt. T h e 'facts" t a t a d i n t h e b o o k a r e o f highly questionable authenticity, but tha catabtiabroent preav gave the book reviews which helped i t s aaka- Not really good reviewa, but it made a With these accomplishments behind him. Schiller really came into h i s own when he took on Suaan Atkins ca a "dienl*' According to Schiller, he obtained a "confession" b o m hia cbent because h e w a s touched by t h e fact that S M a n was pregnant, since Susan, by admitting her guilt, woold aea a long term in prison. With tcar in h i s eyes, fiUedwitfacompaasionfortheyoungmother and her unborn child, h e woold show Susan h o w to provide fur t h e child's college education not with Schiller's money, but with the money Susan would recrive by confessing to being a m c n b e r of tlie "hippie tribe" that murdered Sharon T a t e and her companions. Speaking like a "sob sister" of t h e old Hearst press, SdiiUer spoke b i s feelings on a local Los Angt^li^B T V etatkm. During thia interview, Schiller, reclining comfortably, whined o j t his distress for t h e unborn Atltina child. Howevflr, when questioned by t h e television "M,C." concerning t h e distribution of funds obtained from the" "canfenkm," Schiller became coy, a n d then became evasive. T h e interviewer did not press him too hurd- Schiller admhtad t h a t t h e money received would probably run into n x figures; he admitted that his share would run between o ^ and nine percent; b e admitted t h a t t h e money received up to the time of the interview was approximately tSO.noO and going upHe would not discuss t h e alleged "trust'* fund agreement between himself and Susan Atkins. He stated that *dre w a s enough money for the unborn child to go through fDar years of college^ But strangely, he would not s a y In fact, if t h e trust fund is, say, $2OO.D00> a n d t h e money is invested in non-taxable state or municipal bonds, at nine penwnt per annum, t h a t would come to about f 18,000- Mr. Schiller could h a v e bread on his table for a long time and could indeed send his own children and grandchildren to college. Now E^chiller h a s another money-making scheme going for himself During t h e same TV interview, Schiller inadvertently exposed another method of making a fast buck outoftheManson-Atkins affair. He informed the TV interviewer that he was contemplating a Lawsuit against t h e I . A. Times f(W "bootlegging" t h e "confession" of h i s client. Susan. However, he assured t h e listener t h a t he believed t h a t the L. A^ TimeM a n d h e could arrive a t a n amicable settlement out of Gomi. He did jiot s a y that Susan or her unborn child would rvcedva any of the money he might get from the L. A. Times, or that any of such monies would be placed in the alleged trust fund. With all this going on, the chickens came home to roost with t h e announcement that Susan's attorneys were not satisfled with Schiller's benevolent arrangement of their client's foiandal affairs. After all. when a couple of hundred thouaand dollars are involved, some of it has got t o stick lo the real. bonebL-^.^ . .d attorneys, not just some pubhc rel ations man. But enough of t h e sobbing Mr. Lawrence Schiller, whose tears of compassion for M I P S Atkins and her unborn child would water the Sahara Desert, The important fact is that this "confession" was used by t h e prees to pronounce Manson "guilty." The trial will be used by t h e media to create e n overwhelming popular belief t h a t hippies, long-haired youths in general, are murderers. T h e question of Manson's guilt ia not important t o them a t all. But t o Manson i t i s very important because h i s very life is in jeopardy. And what this ah comes down to is: how does the law really operate for a person in Manson's circumstances? What happens before, during a n d after h i s brief appearance before the judge and jury? Unl^B Manson understands the e s t a b l i s h m e n t s rules in Los Angeles, h e is dead. From his statements i:j open court, th<ne is no doubt that Manson does comprehend that his chancer of receiving a trial under the basic principles of American justice are a s fleetiJig a s a snowflake on a hot summer day. Several examples of California justice.
III ' '.' I'i"'i

(CoDHmMd from PBge 1) In J a n . 1967> Cftpitol Recorda, a pretty big recording company in thte UniUd Statei, dedded t h a t one way of bowing a n extra profit on their baianc sheet would be t o iMrins l ^ t h an L P record dealing with t h e proponents a n d entice oT the Warren Comroisaion. T o induce t h e critics to apeak on thia rtCKtrd, Schiller, acting a s producer of the lecord, inibnned theee critics that p a r t of the proceeds of the reoord wotikl be f^ven to die J o h n F- Kennedy Memorial Society. Baaed upon that Tepresentation, many critics did peak, and waivsd th eir fee on behalf of t h e society,

who had the trust fund, who wsa the trustee, and who was the administrator. We only have his word that a trust fiind exists. What he omitted t o s a y is of more importance than what he did say: He did not inform us what would happen U" the "iruHt" if: U) the baby should not be bom? <2) If the baby is b o m . who receives the interest on the money which accumulates up t o the time the child enters college? (3) If the baby refuses to go to college o r does not h a v e t h e intelligence or desire t o go to college, who receives the money from the trust fund? (4) From the lime the child is b o m until he begins his c o l l i e studies, how does the child hve, and who supports him? <5) Who is the administrator of the confession-money? Schiller? If so, he h a s another ace in the hole, because a s administrator he could receive money from the trust!

as practiced by the local legal establishment, are hereby set forth to illustrate my point: One interesting example of corruption of legal practices in California can be seen in a case that occurred some four years ago. In that classic miscarriage of justice, a citizen signed a divorce complaint accusing his wife of committing adultery with a judge of Los Angeles County. In fact, thecomplaining husband included another attorney a s being a partner with the judgeThe outcome of this case is most intereating.The cuchholded husband w a s declared insane by a judge who was a friend of the accused judge. The husband remains, to this day, imprisoned in an asylum. The wife, who never denied committing adultry with the judge and the attorney, h a s vanished, but the strange thing is that t h e estate of the Earned husband is being administered by the wife and the attorney named in thehusband's adultery complaint, Theattomey was appointed by the judge, also named in the husband's complainti This is what might be called having your cake and eating it!

What is not so surprising is t h a t the members of the Ethics Committee of the California Bar found nothing unethical in the conduct of the judge a n d his co-adulterer. This is the kind of "justice" Manson will face when h e enters the courtroom, Afinalexampleof the kind of justice given to a member of theEslablishment as contrasted to the "common herd" is the case of a judge who presided over the Palm Springs area. One would suppose that a ;udge would have a greater moral stature t h a n a mere attorney, like, for example. Cooper, but a judge always h a s opportunities which a r e difficu It to dismiss, In Palm Springs, the judge in charge of the estates of the American Indians systematically swindled the Indians out of the monies placed there by t h e U S . Government, The money had been given to the Indians by a treaty, but the judge, seeing all that money in the hand^ of "savages" decided to h a v e s picnic looting the estates. How much he stole the Federal Govemmeni never decided, but it was in six figures. When he was caught with his h a n d s u p to the elbows in theft, the Federal Government 3nd the district attorney decided he should be warned to "goforthandsinnomore." But the judge was permitted to retain the money he had embezzled. After all. what could those savages do with it anyway? Buy a home? Have a little food on the table? Send their children to college? The judge, of course, received only a small salary. Only S28.000 a year. And with taxes and everything, he was entitled to live a little^ And in this case, t h e California Bar Association did nothing! Thus, t h e greatest problem Manson will face will be this corruption of justice by the judges and attorneys who Eire its administrators. Manson was absolutely correct in his statement t h a t he does not trust any attorney, or the law. But he may have some hope if he follows a proper lega^ strategyIf Manson were properly advised by his newly appointr.d advisor, he would, a t the very commencement of his trial,do the following: ( P l e a s e turn to Page '7)

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defense In court, actii as his own attomeir, and wm


(from Page 6> <1) He would appeal tor a CnaJ j>way from LOH Angeles County on the baaia of a campoxgn of vilification being conducted againat him by the media- He would fltreaa t h e opinion of the U . S . Supreme Court in the Sheppard Caae 421 Manaon should attack the California method of Belecting the members of the Grand Jury, The selection of the Los Angeles Grand JUTOTB for your information) i^ under the personal selection of the Superior Court Judges. In Jan. 1970, those judges announced t h e 1970 Grand Juriea, whose average male age was sixty-eight years ! The female members h a v e ^ n average age of fifty-five. An analysis of the ruling majority of these jurors shows that they belong to the WASP ethnicmftjority and tend to reflect theeconomic and Hodal philosophy of th judges. Since the list of the jurors is highly secret and i not released to the pubiic until the laat possible m j m t n t , no citizen h a s the opportunity of investigating the background of these men and women who have the power to destroy a fellow human being by isauing a criminal indictment for whatever reason. T h e District Attorney c a n always fmd a reason.

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Thus, a Grand Juror can be a Nazi, a white supremacist, a Bircher. a Wallacite ... he can have a passionate hatred for young people or for the color of your skin, or for the beliefs and convictions with which you have been associated^ The backgniund of Ihe Grand Jury explains why no policemon has ever been indictf^l for killing a member of a minority group. These furors tend to believe that the cop has an inahenable right to commit genocide under the banner of Law and Order. Grand Jurors are personal selectees of the judges. The judges can sleep well at night knowing that they can depend upon them to return the kind of verdict they want. This is why Manaon must atlark t h e method used by judges to select grand juries. T h e theory of t h e grand jury, a s it evolved in England, and in the United States, was thut the members ol the jury represented the over-all communitynot iust one ethnic group in the community.

T h e average age of t h e memt>ers oi m e uonstituttonal Convention in 1779-17B1 was 40 years. The average a g e of the 1970 LOH Angeles County Grand Jury ia sUtythrceJ And what fi hell of a mess those old people have plunged the country into! (3) Manson should atUck t h e method of selecting t h e members ofthe jury t h a t will sit in judgement on his case. <4) Manaon, if the District Attorney attempts to produce and read t h e Atkins $200,000 confession t o t h e Jury, should subpoena Lawrence Schiller, a n d Manson could and should compel Schiller to disclose and explain what, where^ when and how monies were revived by Atkins and Schiller for the "confession/' In view of the past interpretation of the "basic principles of American justice" by the California Bar, Manson will probably lose on 1. 2, and 3. Hut if Manson does not. at the very beginning of the trial, fight for a ruling on these thr^e points, he cannot raise them on appeal. Therefore. it will be interesting to see how his legal ^'advisor*' is going to ad vise M r Manson, Furthermore, Manson, in his prison cell, must be able to produce some evidence regarding these three points. But if the judge, the prison custodian, or the District Attorney's office refuses to permit Manson to study theae three issues, then Manson hoe a good opportunity to bv given a new trial, even if found guilty^ Afl to the trial itself, t h e only course t h a t can assist Manson is the old, old adage: "Kaep your mouth shut!" Do

not go on the witness stand. Bacause, a t n o time, according to the "confessicn" of Susan Atkins, did Manson appear at theTate mvrder site. The grvatcat danger that Manaon will sncounter will be a *'dsal" between the d i i t n c t attorney's office a n d the other defendants, Manson is the target that the satabliahment wants to shoot down and place in the gas chamber. A "deal" is on arrangement between a prosecuting office and a defendant or a group of defendants to confsas to a crime, implicating someone else, in return for a light sentence. Technically, thia is illegal, hut it h a s been used time a n d time again. The number of innocent persons convicted by this method is staggcrJngManson h a s as much diance of securing a fair trial in Los Angeles a s a Russian in a Siberian labor camp. Hia only hope ia based on the thr*e issues oudined above- The theory that he had, or has. the hypnotic power to compel several persona t o commit avveral murders is nonsense, and would be Isughsd out of a n y Federal court because there is no medical proof in the thousands of medical caac histories v i t s n ' of any person being hypiiotlKed to commit a murder. And to state that one person could hypnotita four other individuals to commit a group murder defies every law of medical a n d psychic science. I f t h e T>iatnct Attorney's office accepts the theory, then that office is automatically proclaiming t h a t those persons who acted in such a tranreor hypnotic state ARE LEGALLY INNOCENTS For, if they were acting under a trance, they had no will to commit a premeditated murder of another h u m a n being. And under the basic prindplea of American law, n o person can be convicted of murder if there be no premeditation, for there is no malice aforethought But will Manson. acting as his own attorney, be capable of adequately arguing these issues? Will h i s advising attomey advise him on how to obtain these facts ^n crosseiamination? If Manson can conduct a cross-examination, he may be able to hang t h e District Attorney w\th his own ropel

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WlliNCE UPTON
iff i t vvould do any l o o d "

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Cc^ies of the page containing my open letter were matled to television newsmen, commentators, newspaper columnists iid editors in the L,A. a r e a and also to all the seven members of the Federal Communications c o m m i s s t o n in Washington, D,C, Shortly afterwards I received a long distance telephone call from Washington thanking me for the open letter. As might have been eypected, the ihank you was from Commissioner Nicholas J<rtmson, known to lawyers who have apTeared at one time o r another before the Federal Communications Commission a s a l i b e r a l and open-minded' man. So you see, Mr, Fisher, it Just MIGHT do some good to write to the FCC, especially at this time when the KNBC license is up for renewal and Is being challenged by other business groups who charge that network-owned and conlrolle<! KNBC js not properly and fairly serving the Los Angeles a r e a . In my open letter T ctiallenged P i e r s Anderton tO'NAME the m u r d e r s that have taken place in the hippie communities In the U.S, to support his assertion that the Manson 'family* la in any way to be regarded as the inevitable endproduct of the hippie culture, and called on him to publicly set the record straight or resign, I also said, in my letter, that if Lie t r i e s to brazen out the matter with arrogant silence, KKBC should fire him. So far, there i s only silence, the kind of arrogant silence that betrays the contempt in which many teLevisio:t stations hold all public protestexcept where its advertising revenues might be threatened.
.^v^.>; -^^'^.-.. r*".

In the Dec, 19, 1969 Issue of the F r e e p ! published an open letter lo P i e r s Anderton and KNBC proteaiing rns broadcast of Dec, 8 in which he characterized the Benedict Canyon Sharon Tate murders as ' t h e end-product of the hippie culture," Among the letters from r e a d e r s V&R one addressed to Robert MuJholUnd, director of news cm channel 4 , supporting my open l e t t e i , describing Mr> Anderton a s 'guilty of a tragic piece of slanted, rotten reporting" and agreeing thai ' a c t i o n should be tak^n to eliminate this kind of vicious, unjustified, unsupported reporting.* In a postscript, the r e a d e r (George L, Fisher of San Pedro, Calif,) added, P d w r i t e l o t h e FCC if It would do any good,"

Joe Razo. Editor of "La Raza" being clubbed by LAPP. - photo by Berrera

PRESS
7fll3 Beverly Blvd. Los Angeles, Calif, 90036 (213) WE 7-1970

T i M M i n s o n " c o m m u n e " hippie mufdsfs l i e

P i e r s Anderton*s malicious broadcast was not the only one, of course, that equated blach magic, hy^Hiotlsm and s e n s e l e s s m a s s a c r e s with the hippie culture. Life Magazine lost no time in making the c a s e - a cover story"THE LOVE AND TERROR CULT, The Man who was their leader. The charge of multiple murder. THE DARK EDGE OF HIPPIE LIFE.* (emphasis mine) And Time, in a feature story, look the same tack and even quoted Lewis Yablonaky {special pleading champion of Synanon and author of ' T h e Hippie Trip") to the effect that "They (hippies) have had ao few love models that even when they act as if they love, they can be totally devoid of true compassion. That Is the reason why they can kill so maiter-of-factly," And, further'Yablonsky twiieves that there has been far more violence among the hippies than most people realize. ' T h e r e has always been a potential for murder,* he says, 'Many hippies a r e socially almost dead inside. Some require massive emotions to feel ''Jiythingat ail. They need b i z a r r e , intensive acts to feel alive.sexual a c t s , a c t s of violence, judily, every kind of Dionysian t h r i l l , "

Publisher and Editor

Art Kunkin Secretary to the P u b h s h e r , , . , Sue-Sue Assistant to the P u b l i s h e r . , , . Andy Getz Managing Edtlor . . . . Paul Eberie Associate Editors ,,,, Rev. DonSirachan Deena Metzger Music Editor . , , John Carpenter Book Review Editor Lawrence Lipton CoDv E d i t o r . , , Flora Greenhlll

One need only turn to almost any page m Y a b l o n s k y ' s ' T h e Hippie Trip^ to find such unsupported, undocumented statements of hippie violence, My tour of the East Viliagp has tuned me in to various significant sights, sounds, ^nd problems of the movement in urban a r e a s , I was i m p r e s s e d with the eloquence of some Of the Move seekers* and frankly dismayed at the chaos, poverty and violence that dominated much of the scene," <"The Hippie Trip," page 162,) ' C o m p l e t e freedom is implied by the e x p r e s sion, ' do my own thing.'* Anderton might have been quoting directly from such an a m biguous and slyly libelous statement m Yablonsky's book (see r e print of Anderton's broadcast below), especially when it is coupled with other statements in the book, such a s : "The mass media, whose original focu^ was on love-ins and gay, happy 'lower-children^ have shifted their focus to the violence and death which in my view has always been part of the scone since the inception of the movement." (Page 333.) Those who a r e inlerested in Yablonsky^s double-dt^aiing, double-talking record as a social and psychological bullshitipr will find a r e t r o spective review of his books in a forthcoming issue of The Living Arts supplement, 1 have been ignoring him in the f>ast, for reasons I will explain In my review, but when Time finds It ronvenienl to quote him as ' a close student Of t h e . , . s c e n e ' (the hippie scene) I thmk it is high time somel>ody blows thf'whistle on him.

Editorial S e c r e t a r y . Judy Llewellyn L i b r a r i a n . , . . AlJ'-on Kaufman Staff Writers Jack Weinberg Military E d i t o r , . S u e Marshall Guide Si Calendar Kitty Jay Production Editor Edgar D, Jones, J r . Production Assistant Sir Michael of Silverlake Proofreader , , , . T i m ' s Mother Business M a n a g e r , , , Fran Troy Business Office Joyce Office Manager Harold B r f s h e a r s Secretary lo the Office M a n a g e r . . J inda Jacobs Maintenance E n g i n e e r . . , . . . , , . Bill Dailf'y Display Advertising Richard Blyth, Mgr, LHlle Rird, Secretary
Bob C a m e r o n , Executive

Meanwhile let's concentrate on P i e r s AnderTon, especially since we know row that Charles; Manson is going lo be hi*; own U^vyer so thai, a s hf has alriady hintt'd, he is going to repr+.'sent himself a s a religious leader, a guru of a hip commune, family or t n b e t h u s taking full advantage of tli*- media picture of the m u r d e r e r s a s examples of the hippie culture and the mevitable end-product of that culture, I admonish all readers of the Fn-e P r e s s to write l e t t e r s lo Commissioner Nirh^la-^ Johnson of tlie Federal Communications Commission, Washin^on, D,C. 2n'r>4, And send carbon copies a;; well to other momlnTS of the FCC, Rosel H. Hyde, Rob-ri T, Hartley, Rob-Tt E, Lt'O, K*>nnrTh A, Cov, J a m e s J, Wadswo-'th and H, Rex Lee,

If vou have the Time to do ^O, you miehr also write to T?o^l^ ri Mulholiand, Director of News, KNBC, Chann*'! 4, 3000 West Alameda, Burl)ank, Calif, OlTfOS, and to Piors Anderton, same address. If you send me a copy of your letter and don't mind makinfi li an 0 P I : N letter, we will publish it in LTTTiiRS, wilh o r without \Our signature, as you d e s i r e , l e t ' s not i^-t P i e r s Andenon, KNRC, the rest of the media or Charles Manson and his murderous r r i w get awa> with Uu- faUehood Ihat (he Sharon Tate m a s s a r r f had anything at all to do with the hippie culture. Here, jusi lo prompt your memory, is tw- exl of Pi+rs Anderlon's broadnasT T h e Benedict Can>on m a s s a c r e is (he mevjiable endprwluct of the 'hippfe culture,* the culture ot 'do your own thing' and IJ-T it all hang out,' Thf first n a p door which openid ^o sjiow the ultimate heli of hippiedom was the ilai[;ht-Ashliury dislriot, where thirteen y e a r old g i r l s whined out oilers of their srrawm iHDdies for 'Whatever you wanna give me,' whrre a lat, homely fcTirl was tortured to death durinp a n o r p i , where death by viol'-nre or disease becam*- as common as in Calcuna. that ' n t y of dreadlUl nicht.* The hippies lose civili:^aimn'-: -wo r- sirirtions which

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VirRO

Bob Miles, Executive John M, Lee, Executive Receptionist , Dee Joniak Classified Advertising Jack H a r r i s , Mgr, Stephanie Silvera Loma Lee Circulation & S u b s c r i p t i o n s , . , , Elizabeth Benson Leo Libra

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A.l). LJob Haufi e d i t

(Continued from Pa^e 2) Yet it was, I think, "ritlint^ and went about their J b with meti- just, rit;ht and proper" thai the culous, precision, L w a s " n o c o n - poor and the dihenchanted of the ttal." of course. The police, some Catholic Archdiocese should jabbing Hot sticka iitto ribs und choose Saint B a s i l s for their faces, others clubbing people at demonstration on Christmas Kve. will, slowly forced the small The new church was built at a cost band of demonstrators l>ack of $'Mt miHmn dollarx with the throuKh the open door and out- stained-^lass windows alone co^b side. inR almost $2.511,4 KK). Then the screaming sirens were CatoUca poT 1^ Ra^a. one of the heard as patrol cara came from nil demnnstratinfft^roups, sponsored an directions with rod lightH flaahinR. "open-air" Mass which war* held Police were everywhere. rinKinw directly in front Of the life-size the church and clearing a path in creche outside of Saint Basil's^ front on t h e sidewalk. Someone, Celebrated in Spanish by the Rev. apparently a plainclothes cop, Hlase Bonppne and two assisting jumped on the top of one of the priests, the chicano Mass was, 1 patrol cars and, using a bulbhorn, think, the real spirit of Chriatsaid; "This demonfltration h a s maa. Father Bonpune prior to celebeen declared an illegal assembly. bratinK the Mass, told this re If yuu do not leave the area you porter that the demonstrators are subject to arrest," This re- were in the streets becauae they porter has not often Been naked had no other place to M^. He furhatred, but he aaw it Christmas ther indicated that the demonRve at Saint B.iairs Church as the Blrat*)rfl were "tryins lo act a pobce attack*?d the demon stra mesaaae acriiss" to 'iltrac^mtors. Or was the hate an expres- aervative bureaucrela of the sion of fear? No man will ever chancery office who rt fused to know, bul what wad obvious was relate t^i the neeii*( of the poor <d' the prior planning that had ^one on the Archdiocese. "I don't like between the police and the itfTLcials demonstrations," he said, "but of the I ^ s AnKelea Archdiocene. I don't know what elue to do." In the opinion if thi^ eye-witness to the events which took place at What prompted the demonstraSaint Basirs Church on Christmas tiob? lA't the sponnorinK organisat^ve, 1969, people were clubtied tions (there were twol .speak for unnecessarily and nrrentjj were themselves; made that coutd have been avoided. The Coatiti<m of ('oncerned If the officials of the Archdi*>reHc Catholics, a Kr<iup of anii^lo priests, had lived up (o their promises and nuns, and laymen: "Our cnll is to allowed the Uemonslrators to ent^T you, our brothers and sisters, to the church, the "police riot" march with UH for peace and juswould jiever have happened. At best, lice. We plan to celebrate Chrislthe midnight Mas" would hnve b '^n maH Kve by shitwin^ thai we are interrupted as the chicanow and concerned . .. How can we celetheir unglo Hympathii^ern repi'iile.^ brate th*' birth of the Prince of their demands lo "return thf Peace when; Catholic Church Ui the poor." Hut . . . O u r brothers continue to die then the lar^e television audience waichinKthfMiiSH<in KTLA (Chan- in Vietnam, nel ht wtiuld have known Ihiit . . , Huniier, unemploymeni, poor CatholicH were taking ti> the Hucaticin, pfKir housing rob the streets l>i*tause there was "no fEirm workers, our chicano and room" for them in Saint Basil's hiatk brolherM, the Indians, of any Church. hope for E l decent life. .rr We passively allow induHlry t " ixijlule our air, our streams, our When the Mu^fi ended inside the land, our lives. Church, Cardinal ^Tclntyre ad... W(." l a n ' l iioccpl our brothers, dressed his con<;regation by read- olten our own children, litrnuse in^c ii prepantl text, iind then, iis their hair in Xnu long, or their ^kin an atUT'thoufht, he told hi.s |>ei> 1*! a different color, or they wear pic thnit the demonslriition could iinolhiT slyh' nf ('liithioi" \w compared t<i the "nibble" M the fool id the ''ro^^! He anked Catolica pnr La Knya: "The the irm^reijation to torK'^'e the Church has noi fullillcd the wordn liemrmstralorri hetsiusi." "they Of Christ: 'I come not lo be s e r v know not what thev do'" ed, but to serve.' (Mattr 20,-28)

Police club Chicanos at Christmas services

Not responsible for cash enclosed m mall, Serond class postape paid at Los Angele.s, California. Published weekly, Svibscnplions- $C per year In tii" U,S., ^^B.GO e l s e where in tUf A m e r i c a s , SlO.l" elsewherE' In the world. First Clasi or Air Mail rates uponroquest. Unsolicited manuscripi'j and artwork that e do not publisl will be destroyed three weeks aHer recFipt unless accompanied \'\ a fuilsize, stamT>ed, selfj^'idressed return enveloT>e, Volume 7, Numbir 3 (Whol*Number 21") , faniiarv LC, IHTO

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hold man from (urninc himself into a monster: If von do your fhinit you Ignore organij^ed society whic^i protects E-acii pirson from the persons around tiim. And if your thint: is io slnuchfer stranjiers, Thaf'K ^whir^' il's at' lor you. The hippie.s also lose the resframl ol self-respect. In "heir illocic Ihov want to do their own thinp, but Ihey also want to IJP pari of a mindh'.ss mob, with no confidence in tlieir a:nlity to siand alone and no responsllnlily for (heir individual actions. If vou have so liltle respi'ct o r confiilence m your own mdlviduality thai you've heconu- part of a nSrcotici7ed crowd, vou may end up ol>eyinc orde: s to enter a tiousf and kill everyone inside. There a r e other ways of losing >our individual I ly andhumanity. You can become so overdjsciplinert that you a r e willing to obey o r d e r s to enler a village and kill evervone "here."

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Dear Editor^ As I r e a d Lawrence Lipton's a r t i c l e , "An O w n L e t t e r l o P i e r s Anderton andKNBC-TV," Ireally due s o m e of the poLnfs he was making, for T also w a s u p s e l o v e r Anderton's little bit of yellow Journalism, The statement of Mr, Anderton can lead only t o t h e f o r mation O f hate and distrust in a world where such things a r e a l ready 100 prevalent. What Is more Important, however, Is the attitude we ourselves project, Flag d r l v e r - a n t bumblebee w a r e house Junkheap that It Is today. And there a r e strong indications that this reformation of the world win not be accomplished by passing out leaflets In s i p e r * m a r k e t parking lotF. panther r e p r e s s i o n i s one Of these signs of the t i m e s , another is the current Welrdness In Chicago, The Impossibility of singing "We Shall Overcome" after a T34 tank has driven back and forth over your body a few times is obvious, a s Is the unllkllhood of chanting ' P e a c e on Earth" after a high-speed iHialtalled Kop bullet has scattered your digestive and breathing equipment all over the sidewalk. NOTHING, they let l i a l l c o m e o u t on t h e nearest Black, Commie, Gay, o r Hebrew, and therefore, from a sociological standpoint, they a r e probably a lot "healthie r " than t h e r e s t of us, who r e p r e s s our violent tenden:;les and try to project Love and friendship. What critics like Anderton fall to s e e a r e the contradictions and hypocrisy of t h e blasphemous mountain of Donkey 'njrd that we call ' s o c i e t y , " Heads don't learn violence by an osmotic p r o c e s s catalysed by LSD, p o t . Hash, Peyote o r whatever, THEY LEARN IT IN SCHOOLr pick IV any gradeschool teirtbook, or one of t h e "uplifting"

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c.w. ptoductionft pretants: n concert

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


Llplon's a r t i c l e is a good example of the typ? of g u t r e a d l o n that leads us Ift become a s bad a s the thing we a r e fighting. U hi attitude had b^en one of pity, he certainly would have offered a contrast toAnderton'sstaiement. iTistead, Llpton Is playing the same r o l e t o u s t h i t Anderton is to the straight world. We need more communication with those who distrust u s , not more football cheerleaders wha attempt to s t i r up emotion by referring lo someone a s * p i e r s , baby,**
^

SWEETWATER TAJ MAHAL ERIC BURDON THE FRANTICS LOVE

Lipton's conclusion was far more frighlenlnE than his attitude. He was in effect calling for the censorship of an opinion that was repulsive to him, He even went beyond asking KNBC to fire Anderton, He actually called on agents of the federal governmiint to enforce his views with thecensorshlp bureau of the State, the FCC, Please, Mr, Lipton, can't you s e e asking the police power of the State to come in Is the worst sort of gut reaction? The State Is not asolutiontoany problem, II i s Just a way to suppress those whom you dislike without getting your own hands blor>dy>

So exit the Hippie, e x c ^ t in ( P l e a s e turn to Page 0) the imaginations of the staff of the SANTA ANA REGISTER and the local TV news commentators. In their lights, "Hippie" s e e m s to mean a male with long hcdr, o r a female in a d r e s s bought at a rummage s a l e , o r a head, o r an^ljody that weareth dirty clothes and panhandles, (panhandleth?) Tlie only people in my p a r t of infamous Orange County ARMORED CAR FOR SALE Pulls' Armor ^l,it*^d vJitli bullet that ftt this description exactly pfo f wvind'ih- ,9 9Unports. a r e the undercover kops, s e e k 19-;/ <n'"rn^t,nndl BRINK*! ' ing to t r a p an unwary head.
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Dear Editor; t must have missed P i e r s Andertctn^s Httle lecture on the Menace of the Hippie, but I saw Lawrence Llpl*m's rebuttal In the Dec, 19th Freep, and tlked It a lot. Although I am a shorthair, t ffet very weary of the raiUlngs and ravings In the iqitight t>ress and <in the ifptlght corporateoontrolled airwaves about t h e "hippies," ihe entire C h a r l e s Manson tiling, and the wholesubv e r s l v e (in a more American s e n s e of the word) put-down of the young,

And then t h e r e a r e the (imny , 2B cenisi LO. icbS ih^n p+:,inurv. squiggles and sketches whlohap:J9G- 058G peared in the LOS ANGELES iQill D.ivid Hahn. TIMES as s u r e proof of all l o t ^ h a i r s ' violent natures. Shit! G r a d e s c h o o i e r s a l s o p r o > duce squlggles, stickmen, and blobs, and I douht very much if the Incidence iif rape, o r g i e s , m a s s - m u r d e r and theft In this group IS much ab<ive the norm, Yablonsky s e e m s <'onfused. However, if he s t a t e s that t h e r e is much r e p r e s s e d violence among ^hlp" people, I would a g r e e , Tm all for repressedvLol e n c e , I am SURE that a lot of Black, Chlcanu, Gay, Hebrew, and turned-on people would be very happy if, s a y , the police suffered from r e p r e s s e d violence. But they seem to r e p r e s s

rs

MISSING

'Let's Get Together!;

I mean^ i t ' s food for thought, especially now that the Si:perhuman c r e w has decided to wipe out t h e P a n t h e r s , another beautiful group of people seeking truth and new life-styles. What t h e fUck i s this "hippiewho appears in t h e media-' An Imaginary bogey, a thing that no longer exists, t h e free and concerned pecfile \n America having discovered that good acid t r i p s a r e t>eautin]l ^ d t h e warm feelings of friendship and peace Induced by inhaling the vapours of Pot a r e soul food, but that t h e r e also xlsts in the world bad Vibes of all s o r t s that must h^ altered, corrected, DF:ALT WITH, so that t h e entire World may become beautiful, instead uf the immense cosmic American

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also

Santa Monica Civic And. SAT. JAN. 31,8 RM.


VICK1 GALE DONVES 13 years old; disappeared OeC12, If you know Vicki's whereabouts, call Betty Donyes 663-7210 V I C K I : WE L O V E Y O U .

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January 16,1970

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(Continued from p e g e 9) biographies of "(rreal Americans* which a r e wrklten for the young, and you will find violence enshrined. Soldiers, paCrloU, HEROESr TTie "palrlotE" of ITTG will be shown shooting British pigs o r tossing crates of tea Into Boston Harbor, but of the pogroms conducted by these same p ^ r i o t s against Tories t h e r e win be no word. Across colorful paintings lithographed in full color th<* dusty legions. Grey and Blue, will m a r c h , and there will b e not word one that they marched and died in vain, Lee will b e p r a i s e d , and Slaughterhouse Tecumseh Sherman win be held 14>B8 Idealft t o b e Imltftted. Curiously, jtiTin Brown viU usually be depicted a s "not very n i c e / because he w u perhaps one or t h e few Whites who honestly loved the Blacks. WW II, In ihese texts, \s a crusade of clean-cut Yanks and stoutheaiied British allies (forget about the Russians,theywould have lost without our unselfish gifts of reject SpamJ aealnst w 1 c ked be- moni? ^led 11 splng Krauts aiid funny-TookIng, bacittoolh'd j a p Gooks, Vietnam I s a similar crusade against bucktoothed Cong Gookfi, THERE Is the source of America's sick violence, people! THERE and in the NRA f l r e a r m s safety c o u r s e s / THERE and on the shelves of the toye t o r e s , THERE Is the answer to the question, why i s there so much violence in the world Coda>-. YeSj after all the mealymoulhed promises of the toy Industry, the bright plastic battery-operated submachine guns a r e still on display, t h e &c ale-model plastic hits oT Nazi tanks and Kamikaze planes (and Pufr_the Magic Orsgon, butcher-bird ofVletnainO can still be seen, the dollar bags of toy soldiers molded out ofkhaklcolored polythylene that does not bleed can still be bought to stuff a Christmas stocking, Doar F r a a p , 1^4 Sharon Tate hypnotic hipp i e cult murdar Is the moat Im* p o r t u i t story you wUl ever handle* You oncht lo decide right now that It b e l o n g on the front pac every week. That will force you to s e t something worth p r i n t ing about It, If you don*t know where to b e gin rinding something worth printing about It, why don't you a s s u m e that Manson Is innocent^ just as a mental axerclae. it might lead you lo some Interesting places. Feed your head, Marvin Garaon San Francisco

THE STONEMANS
PLUS

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HAMZA DIN
Conning: Jan Nubian the world St oud player

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SWAMI S A T C H I D A N A N D A TONIGHT

1 would like to suggest to those who want to put a<>wn all heads and longhaired people, o r all Commune dwellers, becuise of what Manson i s alleged t o have done, that it might be Interesting to amass statistics on the number of Rfiplsts and Rippers who have been produced by our brave armed forces. Like, when the headlines of your local newspaper scream; EX-MARINE SHOOTS SELF AND FAMlLVOFFOURorsomething of that sort, Elchmann, Oswald, Hejdrlch, and Ray Stavro Gait all had short hair. ShantljJ,P,S,

l>*af Editor We all owe a deht of tfrctiturl^ to Elysium Institute (the reaarch and informational non-profit growth center working in th bahavioral eciencefl, related to nudity a n d "body taboo" ncuroaca, with a clothing-optional policy during , . ) for overthrowing th* local laws againslnudily in company. It is disappointing however, to learn from their recnt letter in the Frepp that thv Inatitute is not ready for such forthright a e i education for adults a s fiftieen couples fucking simuttaneDUrily while a n in* atructor coachea them in technique-

Cliannino Ha

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Uird knowEt, moat poorly nicking AiiiericanH need auch instruction for aduLta and for children- Be< aidfpB, a lot of people around here would enjoy participating even if they don't need the inatniction. Many of them would even be willing to pay the fees t h a t Elyaiiun charges. By the way, I get t e distinct Impreeeion that moat readers a n d wriiera of t h e Freep think they know where it'a a t politically a n d they switch bed partners a Little more easily than their parents did, but they still treat ee^ aa a n ego game full of one-up-man-ahip. They're still locked in to their destructive games ao much that they snigger nt people trying to free themselvea From sexual hnngupe Bt a fuck-in. Uwe, MifTPerstein Director, Catalyst Institute

tATORIUM INDEPENDENT ACTION COMMITTEE

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what?!?!?

A BENEFIT VEGETARIAN FEAST SUNDAY JAN. 18th ;i.6 P.M. The Integral Yoga Institute will hold a Benefit Banquet celebrating the dedication of the Institute by our Spiritual Master Sri Swami Satchldananda. A Vegetarian Feast will be prepared by H,E.L,P. Unlimited Vegetarian Restaurant. All proceeds go to the establishing and growth of the Integral Yoga Institute, which is founded upon Swamiji's teachings. Advance tickets can be obtained at H.E.L.P. Unlintited Restaurant, 7910 West 3rd St., (Fairfax and 3rd St.) or at the Integra" Yoga Institute. $5.00donation. For Information

sponsored by the

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call 653^357 or 465-1993.
call 653-2070 <Aih Oroval. 3-2070 FOR IMFI integral yoga m s t i l u l e 3 2 2 2 Benda R., Hollywood, Ca. 4 6 S i g g 3

Dear EditorKn>iw any father son handmaiden above m e none escape my s p i r i t your Idol at t r e e guns AlM A C dilnk* IhMS V H . n ril intmmkatmd. Ihmy mn pmt o9 m viMlm lah to z o r e s l e r moses j e s e a t o dus Christ self made holy mytha mriiMi cannot b wpifsaiJ. But thay no value those that used my ladara complloatad lntar4<dvt&oni vtd wa nMl mora than alofar^ MIAC d e r o r elevatloL. In my heaven thantforo naadi raaaafBtnn; to ftnd universe were not m e the v o r d out tha d a y of truth In our varni)w my battle as lord of sat4H)tb ioui BWumpMqna, damages to last mill trespaas to last farthing theft to l a s t cent t o tf v<Hi hava dona rvaaarch in tl>fl last cellblood t o r murdering me araa and wfani to laa it put to good to last deceit Ue adultery a e l v . call toz u r e evU vile deed done me. Dot If you Mnt to vnrk on Comdot, mlttaa, do ntmn^, or |uvt find out Chicago, a t .

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25

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Earth People^s Park opposed

Copyright MANSON'S SEX UFE Los Angeles Free Press


John and Yoko shave heads for peace 138 Places to go this week^see page 32
In two prt: Hn On* Copvri^i 1970 The LOf An0il Pin P r n . Inc.

Marijuana industrial complex forms

Vo/ume 7, # 4 f/ssue 288}

Se.OO PER Y E A R

Phone: Y E S - 1 9 7 0

January 23 - 29. 1970

Psychologist who lived with Manson family tells about commune


Chirin Mniort and hit *limily" llwd hi the HtlghtAahbury dittrlcl of Sin PrancliGo i n d left hi the Spring ol i9ftB. They mcMrad toulh, dote to ih cfw of th murdere with which Uwy ere cherged. A Height Ghnic nwercher, Aten Rose, followed ihem. Rote lived for four monlht with ttte Meneon femlly on \tm ''Spahn Movl Rench,** whtrt Hwy epanl a yter oper* ating a riding ataMeend dob)g verioui other thtngtafter laevlng the Height In an exdutive Intervlaw with Dr. Devid E. Smith, foundar of Iha Halght-Aahbury Fraa Cltntc, tha Bvrtcvlav BARB got tome Intlghta into tha paraonallty o1 the eccuted alayara of actratt Sharon Tata and four othara which we reprint below.

More takes place at demonstrations than confrontations iMtween police and protestors, f o r example, this girl and her friends were t>amming it up for tha Free Press photographer at the Induction Center Protest last week. Protestors have fun, too*

Jerry Rubin speai(S in L A


(Jerry Rubin, one of the spvpn defendants at Ihe Conspiracy trial now going on in Chl<:3^, spoke at Baces Hall in Los Aageles last Saturday nigtit. Pro^^eeds from the meeting, attenr^^d by about 400 persons, went to the ConSDiracy trial fund (ttie trial tifts cost lUe defense some $300,000 already) and Tuesday's Child, a new underground paper in Los Angeles. Art Kunkln^ iHibllsher of tin? I.,A, t^ree Press, was Master of Ceremonies. FollowlnB ^s thf^ teKt of .Terry I^ubin's remarks,)
So now we got to g<" o six-duy week. Did you hear what happened on Kridiiy? On Friday the judge niad< us slay after schofll- Whenever he makeB ufi stay after schools il"n because he's Rot a special unnouneemenl. He diamisHeB the jury, and then he aaya thwt the prosecution and the defense and the defendants have to atoy. And on Friday he aaid that now trial will be on Saturday bet^inning J a n u a r y 24. Six days a week? I shouted out t h a i it*a against my religion he didn't piok Sunday.

T h a f a the thing about Julius Hoffman. I can't figure it out. Like we had a witnesa on the stand Friday, a n d he came to the stand wearing a yamulka on his head. And Hoffman just went crazy. He

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judge! He's a hippie judf^e^
aaid, "Nobody can wear ii hat in Tiy courtroom. It's against the rules." I thought he was Jewish. but ^ So the witness, who was Art

Wnskow, snysj "Well, I'm an Orthodox Jew and when I testify I've got a hat on my head," and Julius like freaked out. He said, "It's against the rules. This is my courtTDCjm. We're happy to hear you if you're willing to testify without a hat on your head." So Schultz, Dick Schultz, who's the prosecutor, and who's also Jewish, tried to bail Julius out. He said. "Your Honor, you're absolutely right, it's against the ruleH. hut we want to hear whAt this man has to say. Why don't you excuse the rules for this time and let's go on." And Julius agreed. Ah, what

In fact he^s the perfect judge for this trial, you know, because he's absolutely ri^ht about what's going on. He Heea what happened in Chicago exactly. 1 mean, 1 much prefer a right-wing judge to a liberal judge. Because there's really n o difference in the verdict. They're both the same. T h t liberal judpe would probably bo worse. I mean, you've got to dip this law. This law was recommended by seven or eight Senators. It was opposed by Lyndon Johnson. It was opposed by all tbe liberal newspapers. Vet tbe people that are prosecuting us consider themselves to be liberal Democrats. 1 don't know what Julius' politics are, because he keeps reminding us it's not a political case. You know, like "Why do you keep bringini; up the war in Vietnam?" He said to Bobby Seale^ "Black Panther Parly? I'm not even sure the Black Pjinther Par*y exists. It doesn't mention the Black Pan' ther Party in the indictment, Mr, Seale." Last week he said, ' T v e

Dr. Smith told BASE Charlie and other members or the "Manson family" mostly young girls came to the clfntc In Apni and May of 1968 tor "general madtcal things^ not drug problems or psychiatric counwiing." RARE DATA But the raiv *'group m u r i a g e " sexual scene the Manson Camlly was Into attracted the cllJilcai Interest of Dr. Smith and Elose, then administrator of ttie clink. Ti*ey were concerned with health problems that crop up in dlfforenl types of communal living, and the Manson &mljy wasoneof the few they'd nin across that practised aINout sexual communism. From that study and their experiences at the Clinic, came a Mholarly pper on the group marriage commune to be publish^ this spring In the Journal of Psychedelic Drugs, WABNINC And coming as a by-product of their study Is a warning to people A ' Tho dig takingotherpeoples*trips: your friendly local gum Justmlght be an lnrre<iktbly persuasive schisophrenic with destructive paranoid delusions, and not a mystic at all. BARB winter vie wd Dr. Smith Wednesday night for clarification of certain points brought out in the study report circulated In typescript and received perm 1*:slon to use some of the Information It contains prior to Its publication, "He, (Charlie) was an AKiravenen, perauaawe Individual and served a s absolute ruler of this group marriage rommunev What he approved was approved by the rest of the group. WMt he disapproved was forbidden," tbe report says, NO BOOKS Tbe commune at this time consisted of about 20 core membera, 14 of them women, phis several visiting 'cousins," Three b t d

some college education, one even had a Master's degree, but education was ''Indoctrination'^ to Manson, and one of his chief lasks was 10 undo the "brainwashing" society had done on his mainly . middle-class charges, Manson '^felt that getting rid of sexual UihlbHions would free people of most of their other Inhibitions and problems," the report said. '-Most of the group had refuted the Clnancial and material possession orientation of their tamlltes with relative ease. The 'sexual orientation' ^vas not that easy/'

(Please turn topage 3)

miTIATlOK The researcher report how Manson went about the process of reorientation; CChftrlt>set UlmseH upas "initiator of new females" Into the commune. He would spend most of their first day making love to them, as he wanted to see If they were just on a *%%% trip", or whether they were serkiusly tnleiested in joining the family* He would spend a great deal of llmelalklngwUh them finding tut^ a s he put u , "wtiere their heads were a t , " An unwUiingnesa, lor example, to.encea:* bkmutualonlgenttai contact was cause for Immediate expulsion, tor he felt that this was one of the moat Important indications a s to whether ornot the Cirl would be willtiif to give up her seNUil InhlbUkoos, DISCIPLiHe The study touches on methods of disctpltnlnc family members and Drospacta who dU not shape up. These Included refusal to tAve sea with anyone who was not chUfUig fst enough, and, as t sterner measure, a "lone talk" tacluique, "This form would involve two or three partners In the commune approachlnf tbe indlvldiaiinquestton and asklDg "why are you here? What do you vant from us? If we aAad yon to hltcb-hlke to (Please turn to page B)

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January 23,1970

LOB A n g e l e s F r e e P r e s s

M.D. raps on Manson & his girls


a r e an adolescent In turmoil who (Coatinued from p a s e 1) new York u t d atay t h e r e awhile, is searching for a guru, you can easily be convinced." would you do It? D r . Smith continued: <'Thls i s "If the answer to the last queattoTi waft y e s , and the Individual one of the things that w o r r i e s us stUl did not go, he would usually a t t h e clinic. People c a n ' t s u r be asked t o leave and stay a m y r e n d e r a l l individual control t o until he went through sufficient higher authority, they still have to be able to think for t h e m s e l v e s . " "Changes/' WHAT'S REALISM? THE REJECTS H, , , I think t h e r e a r e certain People usually left "Invotpnl a r l l y ' ' a t the Insistence of the things anyone should be aware of, like what kind of grasp on reality Amlly..*" the leader h a s , how he a p p r e Those that stayed found t h e s t r u n l e for food " - which they hends reality, but Iha g i r l s a l termed an " a d v e n t u r e ' ' t o be ways say, 'What i s r e a U t y ? ' " "What Charlie did, the main one of the main preoccupallous of the fbily round. They would thing, was the sex thing and Infant consciousness. They put a r u m m a f e t h r o u ^ grocery s t o r e garbage bins thirlng food forays tremendous emphasis on that, s a y ing the ideal i s the infant. What to town. t h e y ' r e really saying Is any s o Other than that, bread c a m e in cialization I s t a d and the indivithe form of contributions from dual should reject it. new m e m b e r s o r gilts of money, "Then what he did Is substitute food and clothing from more afhLs own i^ilosophy, fhMnt " c o u f t l n a / ' T h e i r o u p stayed in condemned CRUCIAL TEST ranch buildings In return for mana" T h e crucial thing t o look for ging the stable of r t d ^ h.orses, Is how in touch wUh reality the the r a n c h ' s sole source of income^ leader iSj and, secondly, whether h i s vision runs counter to what KID CULT you Intuitively know i s d e s t r u c The group wasn't Into e a s t e r n t i v e . If people would think In t e r m s religion or d r u g s , but the simple dally round of work, lovemaklng, of what Is constructive and what i s destructive behavior, not what casual dope"sacramental u s e of smoking, and scrounging tied m is conventional o r not. . . with H a n s o n ' s thing about child" S o many groups don't develop r e n , the report Indicated, T h e r e an individual ethic, lust a group were s e v e r a l k i d s o n t h e r o m m u n e . ethic, and they a r e n t much bet" T h e child was always the cen- t e r off than if they had stuck with Ihe straight society they a r e t e r of attraction and went e v e r y relecting. They just go from one where the group did. T h e c h l l d w a s viewed a s the one to emulate and group ethic t o another gro^ follow a s be was considered un- ethic. . . tainted by society. HIP MAGNET '^(Hanson) used the word^ of 'Unfortunately, a very large number of guys like Charlie a r e J e s u s : -be who Is like the small running around. They seem to be child shall reap the r e w a r d s of a t t r a c t e d t o hip subculture with h e a v e n / t o guide their b m i l y and its freedom and acceptance. F o r child r e a r i n g philosc^iliy," Ute r e tunately, not many of them a r e port stateda s persuasive a s Charlie, and they IHTEKV1EW don't end up inpositlonsofpower... P r i m a r i l y concerned with health 'There a r e a lot of people like lasues, the r e p o r t dM not devote that, and many of them a r e in eatanslve attentton t o the other mental hospitals. Any Indlvit^ual pnibkemi r a t M d b y tills and s i m i l a r communal a r r a n g e m e n t s . So who h a s an all-encompassing dc-> BARB BougM and racelved a few luslonal system that has all the dditXictel insights from Dr> Smith. a n s w e r s i s very pursuasive l o a n adolescent who Is searching for D r . Smith said, " T h e problem a substitute father f i g u r e . " was that Charlie was dlstrubed. He developed a paranoid deiu BARB asked If the g i r l s in Manstonal system that led to violebce. s o n ' s family were different in any It w a n t a d r ^ thing. way. When we studied them t h e r e was no violence, tnil t h e r e la a talrly fine line between mysticism and ftchlzopbraala. Every com mane we've studied that has s u r * vived has had a spiritual leader. If the spiritual leader has nothing but posltln^ vislott* thlswoukln't iriiaB%talb^hilHlB happen. GIRL PROBLEM " N o , that's the dangerous thing, t h e r e a r e hundreds of thousands of adolsecent girls in turmoil that a r e looking for a n s w e r s , and if they get hooked up with a guy like that, they a r e in trouble. They must analyze their behavior t o determine what is constructive and what i s destructive, I'm concerned with the great deal of group conformity that exists in the hip movem e n t , " said the 30-year-old doct o r . " I t ' s supposed to be the antit h e s i s of conformity."

Tuesdayls Child
SUBSCRIBE iH n H'* a O 'C LOS ANGELES'MEDIA ORGAN FOR THE YOUTH INTERNATIONAL PARTY

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press n's A HAininn BAY


" I think communes can be a very positive and meaningful way of life but only if tht^ participants in the movement think lor thems e l v e s , " he concluded.
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SEASON OF THE WITCH

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January 23,1970 Chicago Conspiracy trial:

Los Angeles Free Press

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Mrs, Patii Brown. 19, or Santa Monica, a supporter o1 the Rene Guyon Society, stands silent vigil with a cross, proresiing tfie ct^u^ch law iialure instead of liurm-abatmg nature of Penal Code 'aws under which adults inside the Santa Monica Courthouse are being prosecuted for*providing sexual relief'to two Ch^'dren. The Legal Committ of the Guyon Society is profemng amicus briefs in the cases regarding the oral copulation^ masturbation and delinquency contributing charges. According lo the Guyon Society, most sexual laws, besides being violations o l the First Amendment, are exceedingly harmful t o the Public from a menial health standpoint Tne laws are based on precepts of Saint AuguBline (400 A D . ) whose mother, ironically, was Saint MonicB^ Neither saints are accredited with the required number o l miracles for samthood. yet Pope Paul did nothing to reduce Iheir stature last May.

Bill Kunstler denounces Daley 'Calculated official inertia'


5. That this political machine by its control or influence over national, state, and local legislatures, the judiciary, and executive offices at every level of government, is determined, whatever the cost, to, through demwratic and representative government, prevent the exploration, determination, and effectuation of meaningfui solutiona to the awesome problems presently facing the people of the United States and those of the rest of thf world.

Corporate redwoods!
The Gor^a-PBciflc CorpOTSiton In coopertUon with the Nature Conservancy, this s u m m e r mode a most generous itft of 390 a c r e s of Redvood forest to the State of callfomlflL, Including two magnificent Van Dusen Kiver Redwood G r o v e s . Tltese new s t a t e park lands a r e in the vicinity of Grkzly Creek Redwoods State p a r k , HumtKildt County, The donated parcel Includes 206 a c r e s of tlie finest old-growth Redwoods to be found In California, It has t>een preserved from cutting for many y e a r s by the Georgia-Pacific Corporation and Its previous owners in the hope that It could one day be aiMed to the park system. II Is valued T > y the Corporation at $6 milllonand is one of the largest single c o r p o r a t e gifts In the history of the conservation movement In this country. The Georgia-Pacific Corporation has set an excellent example for other American r e s o u r t e based industries, tangibly d e m onstrating the benefits of government and the private sector working together in the public interest,

lite Save - the - Redwoods League commends b o t h t h e G e o r gla-Paciflc Corporation and the Nature Conservancy for their public - spirited cooperation which has made possible this most valuable addition to the California State p a r k System.

We left our story last week with the thwarted Conspiracy unable to get useful answers out of Richard Joseph Daley. After the direct examination of the good Mayor, Bill Kunstler (for the Conspiracy) roae. and after the jury had heen rushed ^ m the room, said (from the transcript): Your Honor, the defendants make the for.owinf! offer of proof: In view of the court's ruling, refusing to declare Mayor Daley a hostile witn^dB, defend^ntH art< unable to cross examine him adequately. Had the Mayor been desiRnat^'d a hostile witness, the deTtndanlrt would have offered proof throu*fh his testimony to show (he followinKL T h a t there was a conspiracy, overt or tacit, between Mayor Daley and the Democratic Administration of Lyndon B. Johnson to prevent or crush a n y si^cnificant demonstrations against war, poverty, imperialism, and racism, and in support of alternative cultures at the 1968 Democratic National Convention. 2-That the members of thiu conspiracy planned and executed the use of every means at their disposal, including calculated official inertia, in the processing of ne^;essary permit applicationsn the deliberate intimidation of potential demonstrators, in order to deter their participation in the Democratic National Convention, the psycholoncal indoctrination of the public and the police with attitudes of hatred, fear, and distrust of the anticipated demonstrations and their participants and eupptalers, the open and blatant encouragement of violence townrd demonstrators by police and other military fortea, and the employment of savage, brutal, and inhumun tactics to intimidate, deter or prevent the exercise by the people of their most fundamental conKtitutionaJ rights, all in order lo prevent or crush such public exhibition of dissatisfaction with American domestic and foreign policies.

G. That the conspirators, in order to continue and even accelerate their oppres^iive and inhuman policies, have embarked on a program of intense and brutal repression against all those who ore seeking such Nrilution. including but not limited to mdividuaU and organizations committed to the end of the war in South ViHnam and the immediate and unconditional withdrawal of American troop'^ therefrom, the right of individuals to refuse to fight in unjust wars, the right of hlack people and other racial, ethnic, or socio-economic minorities to control their own communities, the right of rebellion a^jainst oppresmon, gn end tii paverty and economic exploitation, and the bed rock n g h t of all people to adopt a new way or fttyle of life in order to seek and find political, economic, and social values worthy of their support.

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3-That in so doing the conspirators were determined to continue the fraudulent myth that the petiple nf the United States had a real voice in their government and that they would have a eignifi cant choice in the national election of 19fiH between candidates supporting virtually identical policies of war, imperialism, racism, and the continued degradation and exploitation and oppreSHun of youth, ethnic, Bocio-economio, racial, and other minorities. 4. That Mayor Daley obtained and maintains power in Chicago by the creation and maintenance of a corrupt political machine which is supported bv those individuals and corporations standing to gain the moat by a continuation of present American domestic and foreign policies.

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Changing focus on Manson
swer charges of murder and conspiracy to commit murder to which she has already entered a plea of "not guilty." NfU'siveek magazine quoted freelance photographer Larry Schiller, who h a s reportedly met ivith and interviewed Miss Atkins, saying, "In my opinion she can't tell the difference between fantasy and reality," Schiller's view hm been corroborated by others, including law enforcement offioials, who have not^d that she lapses into periods where she thinks that she i^ part of furniture in a room. The District Attorney's case is further burdened by what officials admit in private to be one of the sloppiest police investigations of any case in recent memory. Even if we are lo roncedc that the murders look place a s the department STATE Required Zip D U N B A R J . VAN N E S S With its case against the accused Tate-I.^ Bianca slayers hanging on the testimony of Susan Atkins, some officials are concerned txiday t h a i the l ^ s Angeles District Attorney's office may bl<*w the case. Reliable informants tell us that Susan Atkins' mental condition is so delicate that she may not be able to withstand cross-examination in the trial, or trials, of her alleged co-conspirators. If Miss Atkins she ild break down under cross examination, attorneys for the defendants will move to have all of her prior testimony removed from the record along with any grand jury testimony that may have slipped through prior to that moment. Sources close to the District Attorney have informed us that Miss Atkins is now receiving psychiatric treatment while bemjf held tO anLos Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

7. l*hat in furtherance of this conspiracy. Mayor Paley, among other things (a)nn April ir>, 196H, ordered his polict to respond to the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King. J r . with irders ti> shoot to kill arsonists and shoot to maim or cripple looters in the black community. (b) Attempted first to ohslruct the peace parade of the Chicago Peace Council on April 27, \m^. and then brutalized the marchers therein as a warning to peace demonstrators to stay away fron* the Democratic National Convention. |c) Attempted first to obstruct the demonstrations at the Democratic National Convention on August of 196H and then harassed, victimized and brutalized the participants therein, and (c> Attempted to mislead the people of Chicago and the United Stales as to the nature and cause of such obstructive and brutal tactics. ft. That in furtherance of this conspiracy. Mayor Daley utilized the services of members of his This is (tur offer of proof. This political machine, including those of is what we would have hoped to ha ve Thomas Foran. the United States proved had we been able to have the Attorney for the Eastern Dislricl Mayor declared, aw we think he of lUinois and a former Assistant ought to be, a hostile witness and Corporation Counsel of the City of thus ivp us the ability to ask Chicago. leading questions and under the 9. That the indictment in this guise of cross examination of a case was procured &s a result of hostile witness. said conspiracy in order to (u) shift the deserved blame for the disTHE COURT: The objection of orders surrounding the Democrat- the government to the so-called ofic Convention from t h e real con- fer of proof of t h e defendants will spirators, or some of them, to he sustained.

deliberately elected individuals symbolizing various categories and degrees of dissent from American foreign and domestic policies, lb) punish those individuals for their role in leading and articulating such dissents, and (c)deler others from supporting or expressing such dissent in the future, m. That the indictments of eight Chicago policemen simultanefiusly with the present ones were delil> erately planned and pnicured to match the charges againsl the defendant'i iind thus give the fraudulent illusion that an even-handed standard of justice was being ap^ plied. 11. That Mayor Daley and his jidminifnlralorH hiive, for years, victimized the Black community in the City of Chicago by means which include chronic police violence. <-conomic oppression, and the abuse of federal and stale programs. 12. That Mayor Daley and his administration have for years hurassed, inlimidaU'd, and terrorized young people in the City of Chicago whii have adopted and maintained life style:* iif whit-h he disapproves, including the wearing of long hair and unconventional clothing. I^.That Mayor Daley maintains power in Chicago by a combination of <a) political patronage; (b) furthering the interests of the city's financial and mercantile communities; and U'l oppression of racial, ethnic, socio-economic, and other minorities. 14.That behind the Mayor are powerful corporate interests who determine hmad public policy in Chicago but are responsible to no elected or public body. These interests govern Chicago for selfserving private gains instead of social needs. Urban renewal works lo enrich thej*e private interests and against poor and working people who are robbed of their homes. No public programs effectively halt the polluting of our air and water by these powerful interests. No action by city government ia taken against the procticinjf racism of Chicago's Hoard of Healtors and other private housing interests. The city practices genocide against the black community and in particular (he Hlack Pjinther Party, which no group of citizens can effectively chi>ck or reverse without dislodging these private interests of their crintr<il over public officials and institutions.

was undergoing traumatic changes in it's lop level job, the facts remain that much of the hard evidence in the case was obtained by outsiders, such as televisnm crews, and the "break" in the case came from a ^ailhouse informant, and not from ingenious police work. Added to these facts are some judicial decisions which may delay the start of trial for Charles Manson for weeks or even mcmths specifically, the judicial order which prevents Manson from having the help of legal advisors at the counsel table in the courtroom. It's a well established legal right foran individual with money to hire as many lawyers as he has funds to hire and all of those lawyers have a right to sit at the counsel table and share their wi?idom and legal (Please turn to Page 12)

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January 23,1970

Los Angeles Free Press

Will D.A.Younger blow the Manson case?

There is another issue, too, which may prove thorny for Judge Keene. Since he h a s personally seen to it that the Manson case will be tried in his own courtroom, he h a s put himself in a dehcate pontion in ruling on Manson ^B antidpated request for a change of venue. There can be little doubt that Manaon'fl legal advisors will urge that \ht- case be moved out of the jurisdiction of the LOG Angeles area. J u d g e Keene^s apparent eagerness to hftve the case tried in his court may become strained when he is asked to rule on the moving of the trial not only out of his jurisdiction, but also out of the entire Los Angeles/Riverside/San Bernardino county area^ Sources d o s e to the case have confided a sense of concern over Judge Keen*B failure to investigate the Susan Atkins asserted '*first person" story with a view i n mind of bringing censure to one or more lawyers. It's little secret

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The "fee" for the sensational story w a s reportedly divided up with Miss Atkins receiving 45% of the tlVS.OOO price tag on her effon and 30% going to Schiller*s ex-lawyer Caniso. TTie balance, we are led to believe, went to the enterprising Schiller. SchiDer is not to be condemned for the enterprise, if indeed it WSB to be considered wrong or a mistake. But that a public official would agree to such an arrangement is shocking and deserves condemnation. Sources close to the District Attorney are quick tu puint ut that a major portion of their case surrounds the testimony of the Atkins woman and in order to insure that testimony be given to aid in the convictions of the other co-de(Please turn to Page 13)

(Continued from Page 2) experience in behalf of a common clients But, when a n individual wishes to represent him self a s "pro personna," the legal road to defendants rights becomes clouded. It was the decision of Superior Court J u d g e William B. Keene to allow Manson to be advised out of court by Lawyers Larry Steinberg and Luke McKissack, but their advice inside the courtroom wUL have to L-ome float the otherside of the railing m the form of passing notes from the spectAtors section to Manson seated alone a t t h e counsel table.

to insiders that attorney Paul Caruso is a cloee friend a n d unofficial political advisor of District Attorney Evelle Younger. Youngei-'H campaign strategy has often been talked about and decided in Paul Caruso's home. The court chose to appoint Richard Caballero, an iaBociate of Caruso, a s t h e attorney for SuBan AtkinBShoFtly thereafter, Suaan Atkina' asserted "first person" story of details of the mass slayings was unfolded to a world-wide audience of senAation-aeekers bylined by MiBs Atkins a n d L.A. freelance photographer Larry Schiller. We were then informed that Caruso h a s acted a s an attorney for Schiller and waa a party, according to Neivaweek, to the arrangement to have Miss Atkins' story prepared for European readers.

The "Family of tnimite Soul, fendants, certain "agreements" Inc." may play a roll in Manhad to be made. "Family" The District Attorney haa re- aon'fi defense. The reprpHonls joilhouse brother** peatedly denied that any "deal" was made with Miss Atkins or her Earle Nas^^h, Jim Moorehtad. iJonlawyer in regard to "immunity" aid George Austin, Ernest Townes* in return for testimony. But there John luiH Collier and Ernest is every indication, and we aBsume Shepard 111 who ure lending Manson it will be horn out in a courtroom, moral support and jail ceil legal that the L.A. District Attorney h a s advice on how to conduct his trial. no intention of aukitig for a death Judge Georg Dell h a s turned penalty verdict for its star wit- down the defendant's motion to alness who ia quoted in print with low his cellmate legal advisors to the admission that she h a s par- appear at the counael table with ticipated In some fashion or had him when the trial starts, but guilty knowledge of the murder Manson has prmiBaion to aolicit a n d mayhem slayings of at least what he can fmm his new friends eight persons. in the way of advice. The ProHBCution, which has been Miss Atkins' personal account ia not the only "leak" which has characterised by a predictable developed in the case, either. Reut- aloofness in its patient disapprovers News Service, a British wire al of Manson's conduct, haa not*d service, ran a story over the paBl that he may "Se laughing himNelf week which claimed to have ac- to death." As inappropriate ^is cess to the grand jury testimony t h a t might be, one wonders if of Miss Atkins and proclaimed that Manson realises the enormity of Manson never issued "direct" or- the crises charged against him and ders to his disciples to kill Sharon the penalty which thd State will seek to extract from him. T a t e or anybody else. He probably does understand According to the Reuters account. Manson only told his flock the situation; the courts own adto ^*do your t h i n g / ' It may be a visors, such aa respected estechnical matter, considering as- tablishment attorney Joe Ball, serted guilty knowledge of the first have talked to Manson and explained his plight. Hall, a former mass slayings and the alleged or der to buy knives, ropea and other President of the County and Slate gear usually characterized by Bar Associations, spoke to Manson prosecuters as a "murder kit,'^ in depth and at Length and de but it is nonethfleAg one more termined he not only had all his point which tends to show that this faculties but was bright and capable ia not the "open and shut" case of undertaking his own defense, which has been painted by some in Manson indicates his treatment law enforcement. by the Sheriff is not as nice as that treatment afforded him by ihe Court. He will soon learn that it is the Court, and not the Sheriff, which he will find to be almoHl as big an adveraary an the Prosecution which will seek his death in the gas chamber. Manson's biggest problem will be the testimony of Susan Atkins and, perhaps, the testimony of the others already under arrest in jails from Texas to Los Angeles. We have seen some evidence that "Vex" Watson is being shaped an the "cause celebre" defendant in the mass slayings, and can't help but speculate that it's a prosecution attempt to get some of the focue off of Manson, with whom they may have problems in court.

and sexual adventures obviously make good reading to sensationseeking members of the public, but Watson can be painted as the choirboy - turned star alhlett' turned-monster by the sensation hunting media whose pens are poised at this writing. Actually, everybody is a loser in this depressing drama, Manson was a loser, practically from the day he was bom, and had long ago been spit out by America as a reject before he made the scene a t the Spahn ranch. He is the product of a violent, uncaring society, and of brutal, oppressive penal institutions not the product of anti-violent, hippie culture, as the media have absurdly defmed him. His women are by-products of the sado-masochistic nature of the

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7 DAYS A WEEK
(IN HOLLYWOOD Ir WEST HOLLYWOOD AREAS) TO: ZAPPED-Room 208 Warner/ Reprise Records Burbank, California 91505 Dear Establishment Freaks, Here's my buck for the Zapped album. I sure hope you're not pJayingwithme. (Make checks payable to Warner Bros. Records)
M i T o u t CONVENIIMCi FOR LUNCH A DINHIR

By "Zapped," we refer, of course, to the lovely Frank Zappa and tiis merry men. Ever since Zappa got into iiis own labels (Bizarre and Straight), togetlier with an assist from us (Warner/Reprise), we've watched him pile cuno&ity next to offense, and offer one uncommerciai delight after another. Now for a buck, Warner/Reprise brings you a full, Stereo, 14>selection album (available only by mail) filled with some of the most disgusting yet highly praised moments from such Bizarre/ Straight freaks as: THE MOTHERS FRANK ZAPPA LENNY BRUCE THEGTCTs - ALICE COOPER - LORD BUCKLEY WILD MAN FISCHER CAPT. BEEFHEART TIM BUCKLEY and some other occasionally tasteless album artists. It's all divinely packaged, having been designed at no little expense by our latently talented art department.

Watson, according it> Grand Jury testimony, ia the only person who had ever been inside the Toie house, Manson had been driupn to the house once, but allegedly stayed in the car white his host went inside with Marty Melcher who then rented the home. In addition to that, the Grand Jury testimony and Atkins' story, as told to Schiller, makes Walaon the man who A) led the raid on t h e Tate house, B) killed the first victim, and C| participated in giving the death blows to alt the other victims in t h e Tate household. Manson's "hypnotic" prowess

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Page 13

^ ^ Friday January 30 ROYCE H A L L , UCLA"S:30 PM


"EvguHtti and aristocratic.' THE fJEUU YORK TIMES J H * mado iha Spanish guitar an Instrumsnt tn majaty and tona and baauty of style/' THE LOS ANGELES TIMES -tm^M^^^' ^
SKI?"

Guenilla theatre... 'Bbm Blam'


D E E N A METZGER From the midst of an elegant theatre crowd Rathered during the int^rmififlion of Farquhar'n early iSlh century Bt^ux-Strfilanm. a "rowdy play of road an tavern" and a piece of "boislerous mernment," a drum roll iiit<'rrupl*d pleasant chatter, Tut'-iday nijtht, In order to introduce a theatrical moment of confronts lion; nuerrilhi theatre at the Ahmanmm, on their sotdiera {Da Da Da Da) hut the revolution brought her down. Stripped of their uniforms now revolutionaries they stated their manifesto: Wf are out laws The Cities arc the rtfw fnyntier Afamfi'sto: Th^re are no limitu tu on r laiL teas n eas Bamn! Bamn! Bamn! Bamn! We defy taw and order with our bricks are pigs. Chica/pi tras breakfast We made an ometet of the demoeratic ettnuention. Bamn! Bamn! Bamnf Bairn! To survive u.v steal cheat tie forge deal hide a nd kill. The future betongs to the free spirit of the oultaut and we lake the outlaws oath. AH property ia target. All lawmen are enemy... From now on, total disregard for the man's home taht atreelit Holding a Rnntild Rcaj^an poster and marchinf? at Nazi heat to an altered Horst Wessel aonK i- U|xin the SwaMika 1h& miLhonB Look with lontpnK''The dny uf freedom and of hreud is neur. ., Soon Ronntd Re noun's flaR8 will fly through imt the nation./Soon education will have passed away.) the "Holdierfl" Huppr*rted a while baby

Tickats: $4,50, $3,75. $3.00, $2.25 ($1.50 ftudantfl availBWa at UCLA Coneart Tick ^'(v ""***><*<* Villaot, B2B-2963, B. all Mutual

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bottles garbage longhair filth obscenity drugs gomea gunn bikes fire fun a nd fucking There is no hnger any dialinetwn bet Veen t h cory a nd a ction Putities ia hou- we Itve The future of our struggle ia the future of crime in the ainvts We arc outlaiis. The cities are Ihe neu frontier. Mamfestoi There arc no limits to our lauiessnesn Bamn! Hamn! Bamn! Bamn! We defy iaw ttrxd order uith our brick A boitlci^ garbage longhair filth obacenity drugs games guns bikea fire fun and fucking There is no longer any distinction betneen theory and action. Politics is how U'C live. The future of our Htruggle ie the future of crime in the streets. We are all criminals in the blind cyesof American pigjuatiee. Goi^f Wf iike It like that! Afarsfiatt Ihthin and Mayor Daley

stores chuix-hes daughters Btms pels money tuttur*- gameii gttata laws ar.d order. We are the force* of ch atra and ana reh y, Wc are ererything they say wc arc and we a re pn/ud of it. We are obscene lawless dangenfita dirty violent and yrjuryf. While they saniz the "Communist Internalianrtle," a Huited man (audience? actor?) accosted the spectators; "This is the comn u n i s t anthem they are singing here. Aren't you goLng to do anything?'* (But does an audience ever do anything?) T h e beat changed Da Da Da Da ' ^ to dance and chaos. Then they put on their uniforms again nd to the sergeant's command - "ACTUNG?" - the actors (and what if Ihey were not acting?^ marched through the calm reflecting pool and disappeared"Better than the theatre inside," one member of the audience said. "But I don't understand," said an^ other) "the man tvho wa> against the cwnmunist anthem walked off witi. -;;em,r And a woman with a long noie looked down it and away,

Manson

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We do kmw thai it wiU tw pkiycd out in a ciiurtfodin while the priitaManist. Charles MiinHon, listens to his simics on riford licinK pum|)ed l<i the public by n n k 'n roil jifcks , , . and younii nirls ^ifE^I^ in 1^*^ ciiiirtr<HHn al Manson^s attempts jit hunittr Yet, throuKb si t^eries cif bun^UnK errors, leiial money miwhiH and political intriKUe. the wbnk case ajfainst the uccutied Tati^-La Bianca slnyrrn rnuld ^o dnwn Ihe drain^
*' EASTER

(Continued from P>ge 12) American way of a life a way of hfe based up<m authority and obedience, and unquefltioning conformity. They are also products of the ntfflect and indifference of their middle-class American parents. Watson'a story is yet to be toMThe public is expectinn to find ciul: Why did these nlayinKH take pjiice? Wh:it w!i the re*d motive? lAF LASTf Th book of booki f It iH innmn'ivnhle to the pubhc that (here may be no mtitive, at W E THRALADIDDLE ieahl ni mciliv? that the averati*' -contiini th holy icripturti of twoiiir family wiih fal kids and bin morlnuKi'W can undurntand nr eijuiite with the nature of the act. Fhnlawattte. s nsw rsligion

Theo there waa sliKht applause, smiles, shuffling, confusion, and a hesiiant. eager return to the seats and the entertainment of the evening. How close does the theatre have to comv to the audience before it is moved? Is Artaud's unexpected enactment of death by plague enough? Or dots the audience need manreality? How much reality, then, will it be able to Ivor?

th nvnn inttllactual. thtwayto: 'otil fTMdom thru riimy; 'otsi ntanhood thru puslHsnimlty otil commitment thru tpithy IPLUS- AT LASTRALAWATTLIAN JTROLOGY I

Qt v^ntodivl Sona$1 to: IRALADlDDLCjaS Btvoriy LA' 90036

SUNDAY LOVE IN'

SFALS ft CROFTS ARE ON T A RECORDS "SEALS ft CROFTS" TA5001 "SEEMYUFE"-TA191

Green Power anniversary Jan. 18 Rote Bowl Pasadena cdncelled until the Easter Sunday Lova-ln at Elytian Park Solano area, Hollywood, Cahf. (sifiht of the firtt LowIn). Stinrite services at 6:00 am till dusk, top roq|( groups plus ttie Bongo Kings. Another in a series of super Feed-Ins from Green Power.

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January 23,1970

Los Angeles Free P r e s s

rs letters letters letters letters letters letters letters letters letters lett
Dear Editor.
CD

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I
Sincerely, J a n e t Margolin .North Torrance

There are many grades of pot, depending on fteveral factors. The best grass is obtained after the plants h a v e flowered^ since alkaloid production i s greatest. N u m e r o u s methods h a v e been g i v e n which tell the best w a y to grow pot, but no methods have told h o w to g r o w the best pot. It is possible to grow super pot with a f e w variations from the established procedures. The following method guarant e e s that yon can grow the highest potency grass in the shortest possible time. Cannabis sativa is a so-called long day plant, QD hence it g r o w s best under the i o n u e n c e of 18-20 hours of light per day. Unfortunately, long photoperiods inhibit the formation of flowers. It h a s been found that after the plants h a v e reached the desired photoperiod to a maximum of 8 hours of light per day. Another characteristic of Cannabis sativa is that it is sexually polymorphic, that is, it h a s botii male and female plants. It can be s h o w n that male plants which are low in THC (Tetrahydrocannalnnol) content can be easily converted to female plants containing high concentrations of the drug. (ID First, place regular grass seedlings in a suitable container of soil and vermiculite, and w a t e r them regnlarly. The photoperiod should be long day (ia*20 faourv of light per day) for at least three weeka* When the plants have reached the desired height, grow them under the influence of a short photoperiod. l l i i a 'd best accomplished by allowing the plants to be exposed to light for a maximum of 8 hoors per day. After the 8 hour period, p l a c the plants in a light-tight box or closet which Is vented to allow for air circulation. After one w e e k of short idiotoperiod you m i l notice that all of the : 4anta have begun to flower. When all of the plants sbor evidence of flowering, resume the long day Ught period. It is very difHcult to identify the sex of a plant of Cannabis sativa until the flo^vers start to develop' The male plant h a s staminate flowers and the female h a s pistillate flowers. Since the highest potency pot comes from the female plant, most growers discard the male plant, or use it to cut the gcMd grass obtained &om the female plants. There Is a simple speciflcally designed method which can be used to change the sex of Cannabis sativa* After the plants h a v e just begun to flower, spray a dilute solution of NAA (alpha-naphiha)eneacetic' acid) on the HALE plants. NAA is a naturally occnring plant hormone which can be purchased fVom mcst any large nursery supply store. It is usually sold as "plant hormone.** Be sure the hormone preparation y o u get contains NAA. Make enough of the hormone, juice to provide each male plant Yvith a dose of 100-300 micrograms of NAA per day. Remember that there are 1000 micrograms in one milligram. Water the male plants w i t h this hormone juice for about three days. If the hormone solution is too strong, the plants will wither and die; if it is too dilute you won't be able t o see any changes In the flowers. After a maximum of seven days of watering the male plants with the hormone juice, st>rt using regular w a t e r for them. In about one to t w o weeks, ;be flowering action of the plants will slow down. When this happens, careftilly snip the flower buds and associated leaves from the plants. This is super grass. In Mexico, this super w e e d is called "GoUtas/' The dope w e in the U- S. smoke is garbage to the Chicanes and is thrown a w a y . Smoke this Super Grass with care for It is very strong. One toke of hi this g r a s s is like smoking t w o joints of regular stuff. When the flower buds have beeu snipped o ^ of all the plants, let them grow for about a week under a long photoperiod. Anytime you want to start the plants flowering, place them under strict '-lort day conditions until they start to flower. If you follow these instructions carefully, each successive clipping off of buds will produce even more buds. It must be considered that the temperature should never get belo^v 70 degrees fahrenbeit. There is almost no limit to the number of times yon can induce flowering by reduction of photoperiod. The w h o l e procedure only takes t w o months so try it! Signed, Cyclone

S"

Dear Editor: If you Chink S a n t a Monica City Schools is i<ndr a dictatorship ' . . you ought to examine Nortlp Torrance High School It is suirour<W by high fenced complete with locks- Each morning everyone ^ Btudenta, teachers, etc,, is locked in. The principal only un^ locka the gates at threeHe took down a Freep poster of Nixon because he was "afraid/' He's afraid of the poster... the kida are supposedly afraid of him, and the entire community should be afraid of the whole achmeer-

f I

Dear Editor: YoUi- J a n . 9-15 issue tres mag nifique. To all Gaya a cheer for continued good news and successStraight society has given their prejudiced views for too m a n y centuiies. Your coverage is to be admired for your work- T h a n k s again- For obvious societal comprehensions. 1 shall remain anonymousIncidental Iv, if heterosexuals were in the same category in which Gays happen to be, what would their reactions happen to be? Moat Cordially, An<-nymous Hollywood. C alifomia

Dear Sirs: This is my second attempt at writing- a letter to the Editor of a Newspaper-1 dcubt iC it will do any good to print a ietler puch as this, however the more letters of this type made available tO t h t public, ^ e better chances we as citizens will have of protecting our civil rights ^ 1 am a life agent with a large Insurance firm, 1 have no criminal record, I have driven nearly 500,000 miles in the past twenty six years ^automobile) without a traffic ticketIn April of 1969, I purchased a 1962 Harley Davidson Motorcycle for t h e purpose of fixing it up for resale. It was mostly Inactive till Oct- *69. Since then, I have received four tickets and have been arrested three times, all on the raotorcycle. The first ticket was for running a red hght, (he second for reckless driving, the third for no drivers license or registration in poHsession a n d obscured license plale, the fourth for exces:iive speed and driving without Ughts. SENTENCES: 1st. suspended, 2nd, fined. 3rd, dismissed, 4th, appear this month. Arrests were as follows; First, merely rode down the street to get a coke. Three police cars stopped me, they asked for my drivers license. I then discovered that 1 h a d left my wallet home when I had changed clothes, I explained, and asked if I could call and have it delivered to me. {several blocks only), T h n ' said "NO, you are going to jail, and they handcuffed me, took me to jail, impounded the motorcycle and hauled it away on a tow truck. After about two hours of whatever they had to do, they finally finished booking me,

to answer he would tell me to shut up. This continued tilt we arrived at the Hollyvrood station, at which time I was inform'-d of my rights, the charge against me, booked, allowed to make a phone call and then jailed. I appeared for arraignment on Jan, 8th, and was informed that the charge had been reduced to a misdemeanor, 1 asked how that happened and was told that the officers had decided to change the charge. When I appeared for arraignment on the new charge the next day, 1 discovered that T am now charged with RESISTING ARREST, OBSTRUCTING A POLICE OFFICER IN T H E PERFORMANCE O F HIS DUTIES, CREATING A DISTURBANCE, and something else along that line. I have forgotten the legal definition but it has something to do with disturbing the pace, I have come to the conclusion, perhaps unjustly so, hut ritvt^rthi:less, my conclusion is to get rid of the motorcycle. So it is up for sale^ It bolls me inside to think Chat I cannot ride a motorcycle without going to jail, but look at the odds, twenty six years driving an automobile and nol a ticket, a few months on a motorcycle and I am faced with a jail sentence. i cannot afford an attorney to fight this case, I am no match for t h e District Attorney I haven't the slightest idea of court room procedure, so what does one do? Irregardless of the outcome, one thing is certain, I will have to search deep within to find respect for another member of tho^e who "PROTECT AN n SERVE," Sincerely. DavidR. Wisdom

21

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Anderton, no I

(? 3

1 was then allowed to call an attorney. About six minutes later 1 was released upon my written promlse to appear. I walked hnme, I had to pay towing and impounding fees plus [ am still paying for the damage to the motorcycle. This all tijok place in the city where I hve, on Dec. 9 of 1969, Second. On Sunday evening, Dec. 28, 1969, 1 had the motorcycle parked on Las Falmas at Hollywood Blvd. Two Detectives in plain clothes were looking it over and decided that the serial no, DearMr-Lipton: The very fact that Mr- Ander- had been altered, I explained that ton's editorial dO angered you it is a Police surplus machine speaks for its at^curacy. And Su- and is registered by the frame san Atkins' reminiscences, pub- no, which is a DRF no. Again hshed in the responsible press, the handcuffs, and the tow truck, clinch the case, Uet's not quibble this time, the machine was deabout what conitilutes an "end livered to jail with me^ after some product-" Such murderous behav- time the officers wanted to do an ior ifi truly the result of living acid job on the ser. no. Finally the hippy life and believing the another m a n got into, the act and hippy philosophy- The hippy cul- looked the ser. no. over and deture is ready for a poat mortem cided to let me go, 1 think 1 was a s you so helpfully suggest. For- detained about four hours this time. The last arrest wa^ something tunately, we have an administration in Washington which will not to behold. Sunday afternoon, J a n , sland idly by while the hippy can- nlth, at about irOO p.m. I was stand cer spreads. Tou may not know ing alongside the parking lot at what "Nixon'a the One" means, Griffith Park, in the vicinity of but we do. Manson and his crowd the merry-go-round. Two police are in jail, and before the decade officers in a squad car were is over you and your crowd will be circling the parking lot. someone threw something at them, or in also. And perhaps then you will Ihe direction of their car. They h a v e killed off all of your liberal stopped and ran back and grabbed allies and without their help we will a m a n and started to take him be able lo exterminate you as you away. 1 knew that they had the so richly deserve- Then decent Americans will not have to support- wrong man so 1 walked over and you a s they do naw ond they will tnld the one officer that "You have have to if you are merely impri- the wrong man, that object came from back there in the crowd." A soned, ranger then pointed toward me and said "'he did it." A no longer silent member of the Silent Majority One of the officers told me to spread eagle on the squad car. which 1 did, and he frisked me and handcuffed me. A young lady, blond, appearing to be in her mid-twenties, came over and said to the officer, Dear Editor: ^That man did not do i t 1 did it." Did you see the show Piers AnThe officer pushed her away and derton did just a few days after said, "Get out of here. This m a n your Lawrence Lipton put him down? Anderton Cook a hippie a n d h a s been arrested." shaved and sheared him and showThey put me into the car and ed him forsaking the hippie life took me Eo the u p p ^ parking lot in favor of becoming a business- directly above the one we had just man. Was this his answer to Lip- been on. The one officer asked ton, or does he juM hate the y o u ^ me "Are you a ,wise guy?" 1 told culture or both? Anyway, dig him "no," He said "Why did you thit- The background music he throw that bottle." and I said "What used was the record, "You BeCfer bottle?" He said "I should take you Take Care of Business, Mr, Busout there and go up along side your ineasman," Apparently Anderton gourd.'* I said " T h a t would be easy, didn*t even pick up on the fact that I am handcuffed." He said "I could the song is a total put-down on Mr, tke them off." 1 said "Do it." He Businessman and speaks of him said "Well . . . 1 could blow with total contempt, ridicule, and your brains out." I said "Yes, you disgust. Funny! could do that."

"Hair"

Anderton, yes!

Dear Editor: I note with mixed feelings the ftae performance that the cast of Hair gave at Griffith Park in celebration of the holidays, J think a much more fitting tribute to "peace on earth" would be a bene^ fit program to aid the Black Panther Party. As all of you know, the Panthers, both nationally and locally, are under heflvy fire from the white racist power structure whose main concern is profit, not people. The Panthers have been forced to take up the gun in defense of their programs (Breakfast for Children, F>ee Health Clinics, etc.). These are all designed to benefit America's oppressed black and white humanity. Funds are desperately needed to continue these programs. The bail on the Panthers arrested as a result of the l A P D ' s genocidal assault on the Panther headquarters in L A , Dec. 8 ftf^roaches a million dollars.

Hair, during its run in L.A., has grossed a fantastic amount of money. Now is the time to translate the spirit in which Hair has been produced into concrete action. And what better way is there to do this than lo turn the message of Hair into money for the Panthers. Peace is an impossibility without freedom. The Panthers are being repressed because they have offered America essential alternatives for the solving of its problems. Isn't this what Hair is all about? A benefit concert as Fm sure you can see is of utmost importance NOW. I hope that you will give this proposal serious consideration. If the Panthers aren't supported I can assure you the "Age of Aquarius" will never dawn on American society. For today it's the Panthers; tomorrow, who knows, maybe it will be//air. In Struggle, EarlOfari

Whitney DeFeis Pasadea

The same o^icer kept asking me questions and each time I attempted

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MICHAEL HANNON Getting in to 0e Charles Manson ia a littl leas difficult than getting in to Aee th Pope but not much. In reaponse to a request relayed through frienda that Manson wanted to talk to a lawyer about things FHifted in last week^s article in the L.A. Free Preat,^ u 1 went to the jail to vitdt him. At the nttomey room window, T filled out tbo ..^v^l furms i^nd then had to ^tve a lot of additional A '*t^^n. AftM- tnsF'ectin^ my driv^r'a lic:ense ^nd recoriiij-b :nv home addreUi my business address, my signature and buuiness card in a apedal file, a sherifTs sergeant came out and took my photograpi. with a Polaroid and put that in the file also. Then they went throu|[h & cautionary instructionI was not to touch him* shake hands or give him anything tc look at without first showing it to the deputy They told me that although uttomeys could uEually give priaonerB up to one dollar for cigarette money, no such was to be f^vcn to Manaon. After these pT1iminaries, I was let into the at^ tomey-interview room where I saw for the first time a rather slight man with ahouldcr length hair standing againat the back wall. Afier all of the newspaper photographs 1 have seen of a glowering, wi]d-ryed scowler, 1 didn't even recognise this man at firqt l l i e eyes, then and throughout the inters view, had a gentle cast, even when he b^ame quite emphatic aa he did later on. His fadal expreasions varied from a kind of set atdtude of resigned endurance to a very pleasant and gentle smile. I keep coming back to that word "gentle" because it is the major impression the man left on me. After preliminary introductiona, I got down to buinness by telling him that X had been informed he wanted to talk about some legal tjuestions raised in the Free Press article. 1 told him that T was willing to answer his questions but that in return I warded h^a permission to write a story about the interview for the Free Press, excluding of course anyUiinic about the conduct of his defense which we might ttdk about Menaon smiled hla rather wry smile and, after observing that at least 1 was honest about it, began to talk, '*l want to retain my own voice. That is why I am defoQding myself. The atoriev that have been appearing in the newspapera are a lot of bonk. They keep quoting me as saying things I never said at all." I had to stop him to remind him that I did not take shorthand and to ask him to slow down. The talk then shifted to th^ book I had brought to give him, a copy of Charles Garry's Minimuing Racism in Jury Trials, a National Lawyers Guild publication devoted mainly to uncovering hidden prejudice in prospective jurors. All 1 could do was show him the book because they refused to lt me give him anything without a court order. I wrote the title down

25

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and gave that to the deputy to give to Manson. I hope he got i t For a while we discussed juries and the problems of appearing without a lawyer. I told Manson that Garry's twok related the voir dire questions used to pick the jury in the Huey Newton trial. H M U O D asked who Huey was. 1 observed that fot a person without legal training to defend himaslf waa rather like getting into the ring with Joe Lewis, "Worse,*' Manson replied and started to tell me why ht doean't trust lawyers. "Ton wouldn't believe the things that go down twhind this case/'Monson said. '*The first lawyer who came in here offered me 9130,000.00 to write my 'story.' We talked a little and he went away and wrote a story where he put all kinds of words in my month I never said. "The second lawyer came in here and he wanted to incorporate me. I haven't got a nickel to buy a pack of cigarettes, and he wants to incorporate me. ^Then the third lawyer comes in and wants to handle my defense fund. That ia all they ever talk aboutmoney. They all think there is money hne, and they all want to get their fingers into i t " "^at about the music?" I asked him. "Un't there money coming out of that? I thought there was some kind of Sammy Click chaiacter putting out an album." "Who isSammy GUck?'* Manson wanted to know, so I explained he was a character out of a Budd Shulberg novel and restated the question without thediBtrEu:tion. ^'Let me tell you about the music/' Manson suddenly seemed to grow more intense. T h e people involved with the music are all trying to keep it from coming out They are afraid of it, because it tells the truth." "People keep coming in here with brief cases and want to do things about money. I just smile and say 'yes' and 'okay" and 'yes' and 'okay,' and they go out again, and different ones come in with brief cases, and 1 say 'yes' and 'okay' to them too." Manaon s m i l ^ that wry smile at me again and said, "The attorneys too. Most of the attomeya j ist want the publicity of the trial. They don't care about the man at all. If there was some kind of writ that could get me out of here tomorrow, they wouldn't bring it, because they all want to go through the whole trial and wring every last drop of publicity out of the whole thing." "You are going to write about this for the Free Preas?" he asked once again, looking at me quizically. "Okay, I'll test you. I'll give you a story, and if you tell it straight HI give you more." Then we talked for a while about the advisabJity of my quoting him directly about the case ^nd the danger that through my paraphrasing and the District Attorney's malice hie words might get twisted outofcontextandsomisintrpreted,beuBed againat

himBscBuse of that problem, I have omitted details that I bdieve might rdate to his dfaas. With the additionaliwaming that this it merely my m o of what Charley Hanson to4d a s in the Central J w l two hourp ago, 0iis ! what be said; ^ "Evsr siiMM a wedt after Oia Tate nuwiara, they have been deeperatdy looking fr euMooe to pin it (i. Two hmidraddifmtiai and tluM heUooptcia descended on the randi where ws were stAy&nf lo Malibn And arreeted us. Two uniformed depu^ sheriffs, one sia-thfee and the other about aU-aij; worksd me over. One kneed me in ths cbsst breaking three ribs. If they wotdd let an independent dvilian doctor look at me they oould tdl l ^ the condition of my ribs that is tme. They k ^ ms thrta days and rdeased me. Thty rearreited me again the next day and again relessed me after three daya. That time I decided to go to the mounutine and get away from the harassment" <At this point it is interesting to remember that fbrmsr D^mty Sheriff Preston QlUory was howded off the Sheriffs Department bscauss of his refuaal to keep silent about Uie events of that raid on the Manson family at Malibu by deputies f^rom that. eubaUtion. Gillory worked at Malibu just befeta his termination.) "I decided to go to the mountains to talk to God, to apologize for oinete^i hundred years of this mees. l l i a f e when they got me and b r o o i ^ me here. "Vou want to know about my i^iiloaophy? You want to know where my philoeophy cornea frotn. I l l tdl you. I'm not firom your society. I havs spent most of my life in a world of bars and solitary confinement My philoeophy comes from underneath the boots and sticks and dubs they beat psoide with who come from the wrong aide of the tracke. People like me are e o d e t / s scapegoats. They keep getting away with it because no one will ay anything. "1 have been in jail twenty two ysaia," Manson continued. "My body has been locked up but my mind is (Vee. When 1 gat outside on the straet, I see all kinds of p s o | ^ whose bodies arefree,but their minds a n all locked up." During this speed), Manson setmed to grow more intenss again, and I could ses !;ow an unfiiendly cameraman could catdi him at an angle where his features might have that wild cast they get in the newspaper photos. Face to fkce, how> ever, they never lost the almost pleading look of someone straining to be understood, to communis cate the feelings inside of him. About then We were interrupted by the aheriCTe deputy, who wanted more information about siy background I Mt like tdllng Urn to get It ovt of the LAPD*a potitical doaaier but didn't I must hav-* f

(pieaiataratDFigea)

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January 30,1070
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'^^ga3

First interview with M e s Manson in jail


(Continued from Page I)

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


N o court h ^ s yet found t h i s m a n g u i l t y of t h e c r i m e w i t h w h i c h h e in c h a r g e d , BO t h e only cons t i t u t i o n a l l y p e r m i s s i b l e r e a s o n for k e e p i n g h i m i n jail a t t h i s t i m e a t all i s t o i n s u r e h i s p r e s e n c e a t trial. T h u s b a i l i s n o t too u n r e a s o n a b l y d e n i e d on t h e t h e o r y t h a t , guilty o r i n n o c e n t , a m a n f a c i n g so drastic a penalty might run away. B u t b y w h a t right d o t h e y d o m o r e t h a n m e r e l y k e e p h i m a v a i l a b l e for t r i a l ? By w h a t t w i s t e d conc e p t i o n of j u s t i c e d o t h e y a r r o g a t e to t h e m s e l v e s Yes, it w a s a h o r r i b l e m u r d e r , b u t n o c o u r t h a s yet found t h a t t h i s m a n h a d a n y t h i n g t o d o w i t h it. So w h y d o e s t h e Sheriff h a v e t h e right t o surr o u n d h i m w i t h r u l e s a n d r e s t r i c t i o n s ? W h y i s it t h a t a n a t t o r n e y c a n n o t e v e n m a k e h i m a p r e s e n t of a book on j u r y t r i a l t e c h n i q u e w i t h o u t a f a n t a s t i c l o t of red t a p e ? S e c o n d l y , 1 m u s e d o v e r t h e u n f a i r n e s s of t h e court system t h a t m a k e s a m a n choose between either r e p r e s e n t i n g h i m s e l f e n t i r e l y a l o n e , p i t t i n g h i s i n e x p e r i e n c e a g a i n s t t r a i n e d t r i a l l a w y e r s from t h e

a n s w e r e d h i m a little testily b e c a u s e M a n s o n said, "I don't h a t e them. I really don't. I pity them, I really d o n ' t h a t e a n y b o d y . " ^'You're a m o r e c h a r i t a b l e m a n t h a n 1, Mr. M a n s o n / ' I told h i m a n d w e p a r t e d , I d r o v e h o m e t h i n k i n g a b o u t two t h i n g s First, I t h o u g h t a b o u t w h a t a m o c k e r y t h e eoc a l l e d " p r e s u m p t i o n of i n n o c e n c e " r e a l l y i s . H e r e i s a m a n on t r i a l for h i s life, a n d t h e y a r e h o l d i n g h i m in jail w i t h o u t b a i l a n d m a k i n g all k i n d s of r u l e s a n d r e s t r i c t i o n s t h a t interfere with hia a c c e s s to people a n d m a t e r i a l s t h a t could possibly h e l p i n h i e defense.

t h e right t o p l a c e r e s t r i c t i o n s o n t h e n u m b e r a n d k i n d of v i s i t o r s h e c a n s e e o r t h e n u m b e r of telep h o n e c a l l s h e c a n m a k e or w h e t h e r h e c a n r e c e i v e a l a w b o o k t o h e l p t h e p r e p a r a t i o n of h i a d e f e n s e ? D e s p i t e t h e fact t h a t C h a r l e s M a n s o n h a a a l r e a d y been tried a n d found g u i l t y b y t h e m a s s m e d i a b a s e d o n police publicity h a n d o u t s d e s i g n e d t o m a k e t h e Sheriff, t h e District A t t o r n e y a n d t h e Police Chief look good d e s p i t e t h a t nO c o u r t h a s y e t c o n v i c t e d C h a r l e s M a n s o n of t h i s c r i m e , a n d t h e p o s s i b i l i t y c e r t a i n l y r e m a i n s t h a t h e m a y i n fact be w r o n g fully a c c u s e d .

District A t t o r n e y ' s office, o r p t s d n f f h i n u d f c n tirely i n t h e h a n d s o f a n a t t o r n e y , a m a n w h o m h e d o e s n o t a n d cannot^ e n t i r e l y k n o w , a n d t h e r e a f t e r r e m a i n silent, d e p r i v e d of t h e right t o a p e a k o r a c t on h i s o w n b e h a l f a n d forced t o allow h i s life t o h a n g e n t i r e l y o n t h e t h r e a d of a n o t h e r man*a akill a n d good f a i t h . T h a t ia a terrible c h o i c e a n d a n u n n e c e s s a r y one. S u r e , i t ia m o r e c o n v e n i e n t for t h e c o u r t s t h a t way. But remember t h a t anyone could become a d e f e n d a n t i n a court e v e n y o u o r 1 a n d a a k yourr^elf w h e t h e r c o u r t s e x i s t for t h e b e n e f i t of p e o p l e o r w h e t h e r people e x i s t for t h e c o n v e n i e n c e of c o u r t s . I fear t h e s e a r e o n l y a few of t h e r e a l l y k n o t t y problems raised by the Charlee M a n s o n case. W h e n . w e w e r e t a l k i n g a b o u t t h e difficulties of i^ propria persona defense, M a n s o n finally o b s e r v e d , " Y o u k n o w t h e y c a n ' t d o a n y t h i n g to m e . " ' T h e y c a n kill y o u , " I retorted, * T h a t ' a w h a t t h e y a r e t r y i n g to d o . " " T h e y c a n ' t kill m e , " h e replied. " H i e y c a n d e s t r o y m y body, b u t t h e y c a n ' t kill m e . " W h a t c a n y o u s a y to a m a n w h o believes i n G o d ?

In court with the Panthers

state prepares to railroad Panthers


E A R L OFAftI It h a s now been Edmost two months since the famed "shootout," Dec. 8, between the Panthers and the police. In the time that has passed, a series of intricate legal maneuvers h a s been taking place hc' tween the defense lawyers for the Panthers and the police and dis' tnct attorney' B office. All of the Panthers who were present at the Central Avenue of5ce during t h e pohce assault a r e being h d d in jail without bail during their preliminary hearing. The hearing, which is now well into its third week, is being held to determine whether there Is sufficient evidence to hold the Panthers over for trial. So far the hearing h a s basis of infE>nnati<vi supplied to the police by an informer^ Branton demanded that the identity of the informer be made known. The prosecuting attorney held that this could not be done because the infom^er's information was given to the police in the strictest confidence. Aa he haa done throughout, the judge upheld the prosecution's argument. On nearly every point uf contention between the Panther attorney and the pruae' oution, Judi^e Brown h a s supported the prosecution- Already, the judge h a s upheld the proae-

cutloo*a attempt to enter the records seiied by the police from the Panther offices aa evidence. He has also conaiatently tefiiaed to rule on the legality of t h e search warrants- This h a s all been done over the objection of the Panther attorneys. Aa the hearing haa progreeaad, it h a s become d e a r t h a t t h e police, the Dept Dist Atty. a n d the judge are all worhdng together. For exampla. C a l l a h a n would not answer many of t h e questions Branton put to h i m , (PUose turn U> page f 3J

been Little more than a police show- The evidence as well as the testimony being presented is heavily weighted to aupport the police version of the "shrmtout" All of the weapons supposedly used by the Panthers against t h e police are neatly stacked in the comer of the court for all t^ see. From the testimony, it is obvious that the state (white corporate power structure) fully intends to raihoad the Panthers into prison. The charges against the Panthers range from assault to conspiracy to murder police officers. From the State's view, the hearing is pretty cut a n d dried. A bunch of *'dnngerous niggers" shot at the police. Th^cfore they mut be severely punished as a n obiject example to other blacks and oppressed people.

Condemned Temple Free Party Sat. Feb. 7


FLORA GREENHILL The Sana Soucl ('vlfhout a cai'e*) mansion, at 1039 So. Ardmore, la being torn down soon. Built by a madman In the latter hair of the IMh century, the house has long been famed for the notoriety of Its lenaiits. Rudolph Valentino lived there, and for y e a r s , when it was the home of a apLritual church, seances were held and spirits left their bodies. The houae no longer looks as it once did, Imth beci^fuse of t h e cost necessary tor upkeep and b e c i u s e , unfortunately, 20th century standards of beauty and taste do not even come close to those of the Victorian Age. The prasent tenauta of Sana

Soucl have been e n ^ g e d In a long battle with the City of Loa Angelas to keep the house from belttg torn down, and the City b t a finally won. The residents a r e bav* lag a party, on Feb. 7, to aay goodbye to their beloved home, and everyone In the Loa Angelea community la Invited, The party la free; it ia not being held to raise rent, alnce the City Council haa already decided tbat tte houae MUSTbe torn down, A t t b e i t t b e T Ing will b e n a m e bands, free food and the e v e r - p r e s e n t caat of Hair,' Come, and mourn the dagth of ooa of the tew reroninia of a a age tbat la goQe-^aad wUl a a v e r return.

Don't let the 'Free Door' die


The Free Door is one of two Underground presses in the d t y of San I^ego. Its circulation is 10*000 and it is publiHhed on alternate ThuTwlayH. Hardly newsworUiy. is it? But it is! T h e San Diego Free Door decided about two months ago to rid itself pemianently from the money bag and went free! Yes, of all the papers in the Underground Press Syndicate, and to our knowledge, the only major paper which is not a n advertising throw-away, the Free Door is the only tree newspaper in the country-

The paper has a staff of -about ten regulars- We are not pcdd for our services. The publiaher is Dale Herschler. He does not make any protit from out paper. If he did, it would be put back into the paper and circulation jncresaed. T h e decision to have the 20C charge per paper dropped to zero w a s made, as always, by the entire

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On the occasions 1 have been in court, the proceedings have been about the sanae. I h e munidpsu court, where the hearing is taking place, is on the seventh floor of t h e Hall of (in)Justice. The courtroom itself is heavily guarded by marshals. Anyone "not authorized" at the heoring is thoroughly searched before being allowed to enter the courtroom. The presiding judge for the hearing is Jamisa Harvey Brown. The prosecution is being handled by Dept. Diet. staff at a closed meeting about two Atty. Ronald H. Carroll. Heading months ago. Although Dale pub- u p the Panther defense team ia lishes the paper, he h a s only one of Atty. Leo Branton, Jr, T h e proten voices in decision-making. We ceedings are always very slow are truly a democratically run a n d ddiberalive. IVpical of what's journal. happening here ore t h e prooeedT h e decision to g o free w a s based ings of Thursday, J a n . 22. Much upon the premise that the advertiser should pay the reader for the o f t h e key testimony by the police privilege of advertising the productl was offered Uken. Police SgL At Uie time of the closed vote, our Rasrmond Callahan, one of a long drculation was about 3000, includ' bne of police offidale who have ingmailings. We are now at 10,000 been trotted out by the prosecuond the possibilities are unlimited, tion. was giving his testimony t h a t But unforseen difficulties have day. The debate centered around arisen to dash our hopes of sue- t h e legabty of the search w a r r a n t cess. Lost month some idiots shot the police used to raid the PanH^ inch steel balls through the ther's offices. Callahan waa the windows of the Free Door office. officer in cliorge of conducting the Since that time, the Free Door search at the Panther'a Central truck's tires have been alaahed on Ave- office. two different occasions. The police Branton haa sought to prove t h a t are powerless, a n d not all that con- the warrant itself ii illegal and cemed. to find the perpetrators. the police search unconstitutional. Also, our advertisers, espedally As the testimony revealed, the (Pieaiemmtopage 16) search warrant waa issued on the

Tba Saaa'Bducl Tamide, archltectaral u a J r e l cHOO oolarg, fUmlag site tor - T b s TTip,"ft>rmeT ^ a l r L M l M eharea, atu. asum of the hip movement, U to b aite of a FINAL PAATT,

M*- *a

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Patfe6

J a n u a r y 3 0 , JS;.')

Loa Angelee Free Prese

rs letters letters letters letters lelicib letters letters letters letters lettc
D M T EcUtoT: We all owe a debt of ffratltude l o ElyalnmtnAHtottt(the research ml tnformaUonal non-profit crowth cODler working in the bftharioral aclttic, related to nudity and'body taboo" neuroses, v l l b a clothing-optional policy d o r l n e * . * ) for overthrowing the local l n against nudity in comply. Dear Editor Your article on Charley (Manson) was great Now all we h a v e to do ia get all that information to Charley^ My special t h a n k s to the lawyer but please have him stand up and talk to Charley. Charley U a beautiful maiL Tm sure Charley would not reject his help. If it's money t h e lawyer w a n t s then I don't know w h a t to say, but if "Family J a m " comes out maybe Charley a n d Mr. Lawyer can help each other o u t Pleaae Mr. Lawyer^ come out and toke a bow. Dear Editor: May 1 make a suggestion to any Americans coming to Canada? When you come to Canada be Canadian. In other words, leave the chocolate free hands with the M4^M home. (If aplgmy came to the U.S. you*d say -What's the matter with this guy, look how small he I s , louk how black he is^ he doesn^t speak English." TTien, "We've boen waiting for you, h e r e ' s a nice home In Harlem.") We d o n l have any special place to put you Americans and then forget about you, when you come to Canada you're Canadian, not American] Most Americans Imeet In Canada rub me the wrong wa>, eJ(her that o r you're hurting thelrwelrd American pride, and most Canadians (young Canadians) Tve discussed this topic v l t h agree with mo. Welcome to Canada Thank youH Michael Van Coudoever Vancouver more of an advantage we give to the double standard system. The advertising media h a s proved in a grand way how easy it is to manipulate and brainwash a mind that is afraid, guilty aod unsure of itselfA truly "liberated ch'ck" doesn't have to demand personal liberation; ahe commands it by thinking for herself, and not wailing for the rest of the world to catch up with her and change their aMlttides. She changes them, Mary Patricia BuUard Hollywood, California Dear Editor: c a r l Gllman remains a paid TV naws photographer at san Diego's Channel a, KFMB-TV, I saw s o m e action film he took at the recent disastrous fire In a Mexican department store. I don't know it he is still being paid by the FBI to inform on SMC, CMC, Black P a n t h e r s , and other revolutionary groups,

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


tl la <IUvPOintlng, however, to l a m from Uieir recent letter in t h e F T M P that the Institute Mnot r a a d j ror iicA forthright sex edcatlon for adults as fifteen c o i ^ e s fucking simultaneously while an Instractor coaches them IB t c a u d q o e . Lord know*, most poorly fucking Americans need doch i n s t r u c tloafor Mhilis snd forchlldren* BeaMes, a loe of people around h e r e wovld eojoy participating even U they don't need the Inatrwetloiw Hany of them would even b e willing to pay the fees that Blyalnai charges. By the w v , r get the distinct i m p r e m o n that most r e a d e r s and w r i t e r s of the P r e e p think they know where lt*s at poIttically, and Oiey switch bed p a r l D e r s a l l t d e more easily than t h e i r p a r a i t s did, but they still t r e a t seoc aa an ego game full of O D e - 9 ' n i u i - B h l p . Tliey're still locked in to flieir destructive g a m e s s o much tlial tbay snigger at peo|ile trying to free themselv e s from stttoal hangi^w at a fnek-in. Love. Damsel Dear Editor Your page one story headlined "Noted Lawyer Tells Charles ManHon How to Conduct Hie Own Defense" (Free Press, J a n u a r y 16, 1970) carries a n inference on pag& six that the Kennedy Memorial l i b r a r y WAS never informed by Capitol Recorda. I n a that part of the royalty involved in the Kennedy album would be paid to i t This is erroneous.

LIPTON,YES

BUTthe San Diego Free Door, San Diego F r e e P r e s s , and a revolutionary white Prof, at Sen Diego state College have had their houses shot at by an unknown weapon using 1/2 Inch steel ballsl Also, F r e e Door's truck had its t i r e s slashed 2 weeks ago, Ray Schwartz

January 18, 1970

An Open Letter To Lawrence LipIon:

By letter dated J a n u a r y 4. 1967, to Capitol Records. I n c . The Kennedy Memorial Library tentatively refused to accept t h e royalty, stating that the directors had decided not to accept contributions from commercial endeavora related to President Kennedy's death. To Whom it May Concern: Aa B matter of fact, the subiect This letter is addressed to the of royaltiea is academic a^ the author of the article in the 1/9/70 album never sold a sufficient nimi- issue of the Free Press, 'Twenty ber of copies to recoup nonnal One Demands of the Liberated recoverable costs- T h e rumored Chick." sale figure of 35,000 copies is Obvicuely, you are not a "liberLove, substantially ejtaggerated. ated chick." Your whole article Htir p e r s t e i n Yours truly, read as though you are waiting for D i r e c t o r CADkUST mSTTTUTE CharleeH.Tillinghast "the g-eat white father" to grant F o r S a m a l Enlightenmentin Capital Records, Inc. you [permission to start thinking LtwapdkLtfe* Counael for yourself. If you're not coming as often as the m a n you're sleeping with, then you're sleeping with the wrong man. If you are called a chick* broad, cunt, etc., it shows a lack of imagination on your part if Mr, Leooard GoJdenson. President you have nothing to call back, and AmsficMm Broadcasting Corporation so on down the hst of your twenty 1330 AvanaeOf T h e Americas one demandsNew York. New York

WO-LIB

Dear Sir: I t h o u ^ t you might be interested In the rpply thaJ T received from P i e r s Anderton(KNBCNews) in reply to a letter I sent him. Your a r t i c l e In the Dec, 19 1969, F r e e p prompted me to write and point out to Mr. Anderfon some mistakes he made In his editorial of Dec. a, 1969.

LIPTON,NO

He did, as you and s o many other people realize, make some rather naive statements ( ' T h e B e nedict Canyon m a s s a c r e Is the Inevitable end product of the ' h i p pie c u l t u r e ' . , , " ) , I simply asked Mr, Anderton to support hisstate^ ments with some established facts, which dldnU seem to too much to ask.

Dear Editor Lawrence Lipton (Freep J a n , 16) slips into the very bigotry of mindless tissumption he deplores, justifiably, in the demonology experts of the Establishment media^ He is uptight about the smearing of the entire hippie culture with innuendoes equating the hip lifestyle with murder, sadism and degeneracy following the Tate tragedy- And in passing he gives a fine dumping to Lewis Yablonyky, the sadologist who thinks like a policeman- (I took the same Line in The Nation of J a n . 13.)

GAY-LIB

The first thing women have to Dear Hr. Goldoksoa: ^ ^ ^ Laurence, Employee, ABC realize is that no one is going to We f udbnned that Mr. LAURENCE h a s been relieved of his liberate them except themselves, dirtMB i n the News Boom a t KGO TV, ABC, San Francisco, Those by enerdsing their free will. Wo(tf tte in thia aaaodation who know Leo best know t h a t h e is an men, as well as men, have the ktttdKgait, weU'trained. and responsible person, and that his capacity to decide what they will do meajF taleota fit him for newa media work. He h a s worked a t the with their lives, minds and bodies. fltalioii for five years; sconeone there apparently agrees. Granted, it Is difficult to pull out of We are aware of the nature of his suspension and that h e is bethe rut of y e a n of brainwashing i n g charged with various infractions of the rules. Wc believe the most women have received while real feeaou for his suspension i that he is a homosexual, a n d a growing up, but many of the indig H t a n t d v i l libertarian a t t h a t He h a s taken a public stand for nities and guilts suffered t>y v/omen rights^ we ioin him in t h a t public stand, and believe are brought on by their own comeaily t h r o u ^ such aggrevaive right of identification, and aspliance. It takes courage to act on can we becnne the free persons we believe we have the what a person believes to be right r i ^ tobe. and fair. If we women are waiting I n ajHitieo^ Mr- Laurence h a s a record of militant unionism, for men or government to change with NABET. D o n n g a work stoppage a t ABC two yeare a j o . h e things for us, we'll be waiting a w a s t h e most militant of the strikers, often atopping scab news long time. The social system, as it from tb* performance of their strike-breaking duties. We is, is to their advantage, and even ooly ccmjectnre that this action h a s militated against himthough they are aware of the inMr. I^urence is most employable; be wishes to be employed; equiliee in it, they aren't going to dmM hia job well. Therefore, this Letter is a statement of hurry up and change it. with him in hia travail. We ask t h a t you reconsider thia end reinstate him to full employment The more women feel guilty Peace On Earth, P i n t , aboul competing with men. their A. U e Dittua aggressive feelings, and the delAYLIBERATIO] sire to run their own lives, the E R ^ O N r a p i ^ ^ AnHele^^*

This Is what P i e r s Anderton had to say in his reply*Thank you for your l e t t e r . No Rebuttal. Sincerely, P, A n d e r t o n / * \ o RebutteL" I can hardly t>eUeve that. I really don't know what to think. It could mean that Mr, Anderton doesn't have any facts to support his statement. It could mean he doesn't believe his editorial needs a defense. Or Is he even Interested in making any attempt to su^^iort his claim? My most frightening t h o u ^ t is that P i e r s Anderton Is merely a puppet mouthing the words of some monster ttmi Is controlling what we see and hear on TV. and doesn't really believe what he lias said.

Yet Brother Lipton stubs his polemical toe and falla into the polluted stream h e despiaes. He writes: "Let's not let Piers Anderton. KNBC. the rest of the media OR CHARLES MANSON AND HIS MURDEROUS CREW get a way with the falsehood that the Sharon Tate massacre had anything to do with the hippie culture." (Caps added,) As the knowledgeable attorney wrote in the same isaue of the Freep, even the dubious and possibly rigged "confession'^ of Susan Atkins fails to indicat Manson's presence in the T a t e house- Her Implication is only by means of some horseshit about "mass hypnoflis" and "masterminding" correctly derided by the above lawyer a s unprovable and inadmiasable.

Whichever case i s t r u e , I think It does need a reply, I feel Mr. Anderton is obllEfsted to answer to the pubUc for his actions. An apology i s due for hia very unprofessional behavior, I t>elleve Mr, Anderton is more IntelU^nt that what ve have witnessed during the past month o r two. I sincerely hope he will act in a way that does reflect his true mentality (mainly by answering the charges against him). Peace, Letand Sly Long Beach cc: all members of the FCC

Innocent or guilty, freak or square* Manaon is entitled to the due process of law. auch aa was given Sirhan. But no. He is being tried, condemned and gaschambered in the press and on televisionUpton (I hope inadvertently) has contributed his mite to the process. He should mind his ethics think them through before rushing into print. J o h n Bright North Hollywood,Calif.

I beiff fully aware that there are always two sides to eveiy stoiy, do hereby subscribe to the oflier.
Name [ptoase iihntl GMitlemen, pleaw fifxJ oncloied my $ 6 . 0 0 covering the c o t U of a one years subscription [52 itsuw] to thtf Los Angeles Free Press. I live at city state zip
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Pafe2

February 6,1970

LOB Angeles Free Press

(Part 2)

Manson interview

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


MAN
DEMONSTRATING HIS SUPERIORITY OVER ANIMALS.
So Manaon h a s elected to represent himself. Ki application to as o d e t e professional legal counsel to BSBiBt him in court h a s been denied. The court will allow him to act as his own attorney but he will h a v e to do it entirely on his own. He can get advice from lawyers at night, on off-hours, but not in court. During my last meeting with him, Manson described in detail the conditions under which he must worL While you ar considering the fairness of this treatment, consider that Charter Manson h a s not yet been convicted of the crimes (Ple*^e turn to Page 12)
Ciiiu u m *> nipMt*

MICHAEL H A N N O N U y MOODd i n t w i o w with Charies M*t>f^y bi^aD v n y much like the fint exoapl that tbire w w less f m n a l i ^ about geOiau in to vec him. I identified myselt aaked tor Hanson and waa admitted into t h e CeDtr*! Jail Attorney Room rows of irtible bcnchee divided into UtUe cobadea with round stooJlihe seats on either side a n d a low partition in between. After t had waitMi about fifteen minutce, they brought in Manson. His amMaranoe and manner were much the t a m e aa the week beibre. 'Hiia time, however, he seemed mora at ease and we talked a great deal l^!iger, ranging over h i s pAparation for the forthcoming trikl, hi* p a s t life, his feelings a n d phiioa^by. 'niere w a s e n o u | ^ material in t h e iaterview for several artidee, Thie week, I a m going to concentrate m a i i ^ on the axpenence* h la having in trying to prepare to defend hie life in oourl In this repaet, Manaon's caae is not a t all nnutuaL In fact, it was almovt an old fUnibar ttory^ Try to imagine yourself in the position of a m a n bke Charles llansim. A particulariy bizarre s n d horrible cnme h a s occiured. l ^ l a w enforcement establishment, after a period of increasingly caustic critidsm from t h e media becauae of their seeming inability to "solve" the crime, ha finally

fomseed its euspidons on Manson, arraeted him a n d displayed him to the media with all of t h e calm, pntfessional good taste and restraint of 'nbfltias Caesar cdebrating a triumph by dmgginK h i s captives through t h e etreets of Rome. Manson ia enlarged with seven capital ofEsnaes, conviction of a n y one of whidi could cost biro hie life, like only available alternative to aeting a s h i s own lawyer is to ait hdpieas, d a y after day in a jail c d l effectivdy cut off fnra the people outside who might be important to the defense while eome tmnger, a court appointed lawyer whose skill and good intentions Manaon would have to take on ^ t h , does whatever kind of a job of preparation he is capable of doing.

Conspiracy trial:

Arlo Guthrie sings on the witness stand


T H E WITNESS: T am a n enter tainer a n d 1 do concerts a t colleges and clubs. M R KUNffTLER: Now, Mr. Guth^ erie, you staled that you were also a writer- Could you elaborate on that? THE WITNESS: Oh. Tve written
stories, mostly songs,

T H E CLERK: 09 CR ISO United States of America v. David T. Dellinger, et. al.

MR. KUNSTLER What is your name? T H E WITNESS: Arlo Guthcrie.

MR. KUNSTL^R; Mr. Gntherie. w h a t is yomr occupation? T H E WITNESS: T am a m u s i d a n . MR. iCUNSTLER Are you anythingelse? T H E WITNESS: I am an actor and
a writar.

sons, "Thia Land is My Land," which is knosvn to everybody T H E COURT- 1 have ruled on t h a t one. MR. KUNSTLER ia cnidal. THE COUKT: And don't you answer a question, eir, that I have forbidden the witness to answer.

THE COURT: But just tell what you said, if anything, and what each one of the others said, if anythingTHE WITNESS: All right Abbie
told me that he was inlerrsted in

poems,

M R KUNSTLER By the way. Mr. Gutherie. waa your father Woody Gutherie, the writer of "This Land is My Land?^^ T H E WITNESS: Yes, M R FORAN: Objection, your Honor. THE COURT: Sustain thp objection. I strike the witness's onewer and direct the jury to disregard it.

M R KUNSTLER Now, Mr. Guiherie. you also stated that you were an actor. Could you elaborate on that pleaae? THE WITNESS: Well, I have done o n t film, "Alice's Restaurant."

having a Festival of Life, and he w a s working with Jerry, and they wanted me T H E COURT: Now. you're THE WITNESS: Oh. excuse me,

M R KUNSTLER As far as being s m o d d a n is concerned, would yon state w h a t you have done in thathne? T H E WITNESS: I have been work^ Ing all over t h e country and in Asia a n d in Europe. 1 have three albums of m y own material and I have written a few song books. M R KUNSTLER You say you have worked. What kind of work do you d o in t h e musical fields?

MR, FORAN: Your Honor, just for purposes of saving time, I object to a n y further background of this witness. It's immaterial a n d irrelevant M R KUNSTTLER Your Honor, the

MR. KUNSTLER: Is that playing in Chicago now? THE WITNESS: I believe so. ME. FCmAN: Your Honor, this is a long trial and this silly stuffy THE COURT: I sustain the objection. I strike t h e witness's answer and direct the jury to disregard i t No reflection on your professional capacity. J u s t improper a s a matter of taw THE WITNESS; Thank you.

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' MH. KUNSTLER Do you know w h a t the occasion of being at t h e radio station was? M R FORAN: Objection, your Honor- Now he is asking t h e very question t h a t was T H E COURT: I sustain the objection. ' M R KUNSTLER: Did you have a conversation with Jerry Rubin a n d Abbie Hoffman at that time? T H E WITNESS: Yes, I did. STATE Required Zip MR. KUNSTTLER: Will you atate w h a t t h e conversation was, relating it to who said what. THE WITNESS: Well, Abbie and Jerry were talking to me about having a Festival of l i f e here in Clucago. MR. FORAN: Could we have who said what, please, your Honor? THE COURT: Yea. THE WITNESS: Abbie was T H E COURT: We d o n l expect you to have all that other talent and still know how to be a good witness, THE WITNESS: 0,K.
Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

MR. KUNSTLER: Now. Mr. Guth erie, I call your attention to midJ a n u a r y of 1968. Do you recall meeting with Jerry Rubin and Abbie Hoffman? T H E WITNESS: Yes, I met them in New York at a n underground radio station. We met for the purpose of MR. FORAN: Objection, your Honor, for the purpose MR. KUNSTLER: No, no purpose. You met them at the radio station, is that correct? T H E WITNESS: Yep-

MR. KUNETTLER: Try to relate it to the person- If you can't remember the perstin. then say so. T H E WITNESS: Right. 1 think it was Abbie because I was talking mostly to Abbie. and he wanted me to come down and sing at a Festival of Life here in Chicago, and we were talking about the purposes of it. and what I said to Abbie was that it would be rather difficult, you know, fo*- me to get involved in that bind of t h b g because we had lots of trouble before with feetivalB and gatherings because of police violence, and so we Abtrie asked me if I had any aong or a n y kind of Iheme song for the festival, and 1 said yes, '* Alice's Restaurant," and Jerry said ^'What's t h a t ? " He had never heard it a n d I proceeded to tell him about Alice's restaurant ^

found my n a m e on a piece of paper in the middle of the pile, said it was illegal to duipp it there, to come down to the police station and pick up the garbage, so I went down, and he arrested me, and I went with my friend, and we all went over to the garbage, looked around. We went to court, got fined 25 bucks, and eventually picked up the garbage and it was after that that I went down for my induction office physical examination thing in New York City at Whitdkall Street, and I went through a lot of tests and vision examinations, I had examinQtions and all kinds of thtngb. I eventually went to sec a psychiatrist.

THE COURT: Did you pass? THE WITNESS: Excuse me? THE COURT: Did you pasa the examination? THE WITNESS: Not yet. Anyway MR. KUNSTLER: Your Honor, this is a story of Alice's Restaurant, T H E COURT: Oh. this didn't happen to him? THE WITNESS: Vee. it did. T H E COURT: Oh. You're mistahenYou're mistaken, Mr. Kunstler. T H E WITNESS: I t d i d h a p p e n to me,

T H E COURT: The wilnese saya, "Thia ia what happened to me-" M R KUNSTLER- What did you DID YOU PAY THE | 2 5 FINE? tell him? THE WITNESS: Yea, I did. THE WITNESS: Well, 1 lold him that Anyway, I finally came to see it was about Alice and Ray Brock, the very last person in the inwho live in a church in Stock- duction center who bad aaked me bridge, Massachusetts, that she if I had ever been arrested, I ran a restaurant and that the aong told him yes. I was. He said waa not called 'Alice's Restau- "What f o r r I said "Uttering," rant'* because excuse me the and he said, "Did you ever go to restaurant w a s not called Alice'a court?" and 1 said, yes, and I was Restaurant, but the song waa, and unacceptable to the draft because that they hved in a church and they [ had been a litterbug in Stockhad a tot of room in the church. bridge, Massachusetts. and having alt the room in the The end of the song is the church, they decided that Ihey didn't have to take out their gar- c h o m s which goes: "You can get bage, so I thought it was funny. anything you want " too but anyway, they had a lot of room, and we had a big Thanks- THE COURT: Oh, no, no. No. I am giving dinner, and after we took oorry. Honor, out the garbage, so I thought it MR. KUNSTLER: Your was funny too but anyway, they that's the song he aong for the had a lot of room, and we had a defendants. big Thanksgiving dinner, and afl^r THE COUHT: I don't want the we took out the garbage and we theater owner where this picture went to t h e garbage dump, but it ia showing to sue me. was closed. There w a s a sign across t h e entrance saying, "Clos- MR, KUNSTLER We'll represent ed on Thanksgiving," a n d we drove you, your Honor, around looking for another place T H E COURT: No singing- No singto put the garbage. We found one ing. No Hinging, air. a n d dumped i t We went back to ^MR. KUNSTLER: Mr- Weinglasa t h e church, ate some more. and 1, free of charge, will represent you. H i e n you'll have to be T h e next morning I got up, we represented by Mr. Foran. got a 'phone call from a police THE COURT: I will reserve my officer who wonted to know who comment on that one. You please h a d dumped the garbage- He h a d don't aing, ( P l e a s e turn to page 10) (

Copy #A72 - Do Not Post - Do Not Copy

Page 12

February 6,1970

Los Angeles Free Press

Mike Hannon interviews Charles Manson in jail: part 2

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


r^ SARTORI " ^
I Zon Macrobiotic Organic I Catering - Parties, Dinnon I Any Function - Any Size. I PHONE - 465-2438 I I I |
Forty-five men are currently usi n g these faolitaea They share t h e u s e o f t h r e e t d e p h o n e s and are each permitted a maiiniuin of three^ ten minute triephone calls per day. Now that seems like a reasonable Sheriffs Department rule, doesn't it? They do have to divide access to t h e telei^one service e<]ually a m o n g t h e 45 pro-per defendants and you really couldn't expect t h e county to go to the expense of putting in more than three phone Unee. Coui4 you? Sheriff Pitdiess h a s more telephone linca than that coming to his own desk. TheSheriffhasa great many more such "reasonable" rules to inflict on t h e presumptively innocent men h e holds in l a ^ t r i a l confinement. Waks-up time at t h e New County IB about four in t h e rooming. Prisoners are not allowed to have books or a typewriter in their cells so they can do no constructive work on thfiT cases until they get t o the workroom a t nine. Hio!* t o call n witnesa, Manson said, one must s t a n d in line away from the work' tables for 46 minutes or a n hour waiting for access t o one of t h e tdephonss. Promptly a t eleven, the prisoners a r e all taken back to t h e lock-up nntii one in t h e aftemoon. Three times a day, t h e deputies insist on g u n g through their prisonerfeeding ritual whether Uie men wnnt t o eat or n o t T h e men a r e taken from locbup to chow halt a n d back to lock-up in a continuous procession. Their actual time in t h e chow hall averages about seven minutea. little lime t o e a t a n d never enough time to finish. From one t o three* t h e pn^per prisoners again get to use t h e worknxKn. liken they a r e again locked up away from the books &x;m three to ria while their guards provide them another seven minute meal a n d a ten minute shower. H i e balance of t h a t time is wasted in the lock-up waiting. Tlic workroom ia a g a i n open from six t o nine. Among Uie obvious issues in H a n s o n ' s case -^^ as in many other CMM ' - will be where h e w a s a t t h e timea when t h e various alleged crimes occurred. Establish' i n g t h a t fact, technically called a n alibi, always requires a n enormous amount oi pre-trial investigation. To imagine the difficulty, pick oat a date a n d tune" a t random

(ConUnned from Page 2) of which h e is accoaed (and m a y never bc)^ He ia presumptively innocent and i being held in jail aolely t o insure hie presence a t trial. Remerober too that these conditiona are not unique to Charles MansotL l l i e y aic what happens Xo every m a n who is in jail, charged irith a crime and defending himsell In the County Central Jail (the New County, a s it is called), there is a I6nd of combination law library a n d workrot^n for the prisoners who are in court in "propria pertona" that is, in their "own pnaD" without a lawyer. 1 h a v e never seen t h e prosper tank but M a j u o n deecribn i t a s a room about 35 or 40 feet square containing sijt metal tables a n d backless bmchea.

TheSheriffhassomr special rules just for Manson. To conserve time for h i s preparation, Manson arranged with a n attorney to bring groups of witnesses into t h e Attorney Koom B O that ihey could be jointly interviewed. That displeased t h e Sheriff because some of them laughed out loud and thus disturbed t h e atmosphere of monkish penance the good Sheriff apparently To interview witneAses, ManBon feels obliged Co foster in the institumust submit their names a n d ad- tions under h i s control. T h e first dreases in writing to the Sheriff who rule limited the number of persons conveys them to the judge. T h a t pro- w h o could come i n with t h e lawyer vides t h e prosecution with a con- to two. Then it was modified further venient list of potential defense wit- to forbid any attorney from bringing nesses (no s u ( ^ reciprocal courtesy witnesses into the Attorney Room is accorded the defendant). T h e judg< with him to see Manson- If Manson decides whom the prlAoner may and ia h i s own lawyer^ then there is may not see. Last week, three of no other attorney who is attorney Manson's requests were turned dowr of record and only the attorney of on the grounds that they would prob- record may bring witnesses in. ably h a v e n o information relevant to Thus, Manson is back to one-at-athe case- To even attempt to meet time interviews, ' such a n argument, Manson would have to expose not only his whole All of this is, of course, coupled tine of defense but also the progreaa with t h e bootcamp-fratemity-initiaof his investigationB and his state don type of militaristic harassment of readiness. the Sheriffs deputies customarily Once t h e judge does c k a y a wit- inflict on men in their power. Manson* t h e loudspeaker bawis, nees. t h e S h e r i ^ ie ready with a whole host of new rules a n d r ^ u - ^'Attorney Room, hurry up!!" He lations. T^e witness's first visit atops working and rushes out into can be of unlimited duration. In the corridor where^ typically, h e practice, t h a t means as long SH t h e waits for ten minutes or so while Attorney Room is open. T h a t room they find a "prowler" (a guard) closes for a half-hour three times to escort him from the prosper tank during each day. They don't tell to t h e Attorney Room. Then it is the witness about this so, if h e hurry up a n d wait^ hurry up and shows up ten minutes before one of wait, from t h e Sheriffs deputies the cloaing times, then h i s first who pass along the dehumanizing viwt of "unlimited duration** lasts treatment they themselves receive ten minutes. from their superiors by inflicting Therasfter visits with the witness it on t h e men in their charge. The bst of pettifogging regulations are restricted to one half-hour each goflflon almost indefinitely. Manson and Sheriff Pitchees h a s decreed thai is not allowed to tie his long hair his grace extends a maximum of only back with a string (he might perthree visits, Charles Manson h a s haps haiig himself with it even if it effectively exhausted this limit. If is only three inches long these he were charged with a lesser crime a n d w a s allowed to be free pending criminal types a r e very clever). trial, either on his own recognisance He is not allowed to hold a pencil or on bond, then he would be able to in his hand while m the Attorney consult a s many witnesses as he Room (perhaps they fear he might couldfindandcould talk to them for a s long a s he felt necessary ojt a s long BB his energy held out. Being charged with a capital crime a n d therefore denied bail to insure his appearance in courts h i s acceae t o witnesses is seriously limited by congiderationG of the Sheriffs convenience. How just. about six months ago and think of all t h e people you would have to talk to in order to eatabliah your whereabouts then. First, you would have to refresh your own memory by talking it over with family and friends. Tlien you would have t o talk to more people to find wi^ nesaes who aJdo remembered' and could corroborate your story.

^ta^ one of his witnesses or one of the lawyers whu c*3mc to see him). And on and on and on. Again, I aak, by what twisted conception of justice does the Sheriff arrnrffllp to himsplf the power to make these kind of rules and regulations for men who have not yet been convicted of a crime (and perhaps never will be)? Manson's case is dramatic because of t h e severity of the penalties h e faces, but h e is not unique. He is simply a dramatic example of the unreasonable a n d oftentimes sadistic exercise of

power by the law enforcement bureaucracy over those in its clutches-^ abuses that continue day in a n d day out, abuses justified only by Catch-22: "The people in power can do anything you can't stop j i i a m ^ r o m doing,"

JEWISH RADICAL COMMUNITY'S JEWISH FREE UNIVERSITY Spring Registration and Information i Valley Cities Jewish Community Center 13164 Burbank Boulevard Van Nuys, California 91401 Tuesday February 10,1970 8:00-10:00 p.m. A Radical Approach to Contemporary Problems

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ALWIN NIKOLAIS
DANCE THEATRE

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A phftntmftgori of DANCE - SOUND - LIGHT - COLOR "A f1jppadH>ut pirit" Program includet 'Tsnt" and 'Tower"

S A T . , FEB. 7 , 8 : 3 0

ROVCE H A L L , U.C.L.A

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Los Angeles Free Press

Copy #A72 - Do Not Post - Do Not Copy

February 6,1970

Last minute bulletinRADIO FREE

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


LAWRENCE LIPTON
'^Hanson g u r u of t h e h i p p i e s " That is how Chet Huntley began his news report about Charles Mansun'a latest court appearance in his broadcast on t h e NBC network, Wednesday. .Jan. 28, 1970. Tt is indicative of the spreading trend to smear the hippie culture, its communes and lifestyles, with the Sharon Tate murders and the line Manson is taking in his defenseHere is the headline that the L.A. Times gave lo an AP story out of Pt. Worth, TeT^as; "FIVK JN HIPPIE TAMILY' HELD IN 3 SLAYINGS." It turns out lo be a heroin story. Here is a part of the dispatch: "Five persona described as forming a hippie 'family' were charged Thursday with murder in the slayings ten days QRO of two men and a four-year-old boy, AsBt- Dist. Atty. J o h n Brady said the slayings came after the leader of the family was sold bad heroin that made him ill-" 1 alluded to the poeeibility that the Tate murders might be the work of plastic hip squares moeking their deeds under long hair, beads and sandals as long ago a s last August in my column in the Freep. and an article that 1 wrote shortly after that, before there were any arrests at all in the case, appears in the current issue of Knight magazine. Here are two paragraphs ^ m that article: "In these drclos (the Limbo of hip square plastic imitation 'hippies^) the temptation to overdo everything leads to excesses that sometimes end up in nlghtirares of Grand Guignol t h e a t r i c a l ity carried over into life and death reality." The Chicagoconsplracy trial ended in a wild free-for-all Wednesday with marahala brutally manhandling defendantSt their wives tnd % meml>er of the defense legal staff Captain J a m e s Reardon, a Chicago Deputy Chief of Police was testifying when Dave Delimger said, " O h bullahlti That's an absolute her Lets talk about what r stand for and what you stand for, but tet^a not moke up l i e s . " Judg^ Hoffman revoked DelUng e r ' s bail and asked the Marshal a to take him into custody. At that point, Abbie Hoffman rose to go over to where Dellinger was altting, and the Marshals threw him back Into his seat and started to beat him, Abbie Hoffman's girlfriend got up and demanded that the marshals stop beating him, and the marshals forcibly r e moved her from the courtroom. While all this was going on, (PUaee ttt rn to page 10)

spiracy trial AMERICA U S erupts into violence

Police freak out at UCSB

''Blach Mass phoney witchcraft" "Senaalion-Heekers, (the article continues) Ruilded bohemians und jaded La Dolce Vita sophiaticat^a have n<:vfr been without their charismatic a warn id, their expensive fortune-tellers and hnroftcopislfl, their luxury-loving holy men and their bizarre ^love cultSr' Tiiday they take their miidels from hippie muitels of the revolutionary counter-culture, mugniiifd and over-decorated with all the refinements that money can buy. In these drcleE4 the sacramental, pBy{:hedelLC catalyst, instead of being used to trigger the rdigious experience of transcendence, is debased by ignorance and abusive overuse into just another narcotics kick. Communal love and sex become drugged and drunken debaucheries modeled on their own fantasies of Black Mass phoney witchcraft. And hippies' disafriliation becomes the anobishness of an enclueive coterie. Everything, in ithort, except spiritual enlightenment, transcendence, unpossessive love/sex, renunciation of ego games, manlric and musical tum-ons and revolutionary social/moral commitment." (For further comments on the subject see my book review of Techntcianit of the Sacred in the Living Arts supplement in this issue of the FreepJ

All a b o a r d for t h e P o l l u t i o n b a n d w a g o n t Tricky Nixie has co^>pted the pollution issue. What this amounts to is that the issue is now regarded in nearly all political drdee as being against the man-eating shark and in favor of Mom's apple pie, unpolluted by industrial and commerical pollution. So how can you miss with an issue like that? The trick is that Nixie and Ronnie and their election opponents will try to outbid each other by issuing promises for votes an whoever gets elected will lead the good cause up a bhnd alley and club it to death. So "Right onP* must continue to be the slogan of the alternative sodety and the alternative press,

L t t e r a n d poem from a dead V i e t n a m G.I. Armv soedalist Fourth f'lass Henrv Klinaer of Saujzua w a s the first Southern Califomian to die in action this year. He wae killed while on guard duty, when 1970 was only four hours old, Spedelist Klinger had been in Vietnam for three months. He died when he was 20 years old. When he was buried in the Veteran's Administration cemetery in West Los Angelee a tape recorded letter he sent to his parents was played aa part of tiie military burial service and recorded by KNXT. In it he talked about l i ^ in Vietnam and he read a poem. The letter was the usual sad account of loneliness, lying around and thinking about home " . . . You just can't imagine how easy you have it at home* and I tell you, when I get back to the world and I get back to the family and other people , - - 1 may have a few words to say about it . -, what it feels hke to be in a war - . . A guy in the company's got a big sister who sent him a poem that she wrote out of her own words. I just want to read it to you:

"Take a man and put him alone/Put him twelve thousand miles from home/Take from his heart all but blood/Make him hve in sweat and mud/This is the way I have to live/And why my soul is the color 1 give/Your peace r a n t tivm your easy chair/ But you don't know what it's like over there/You have a ball without nearly trying/While over here your boys are dying/You b u m draft cards? And march at dawn/You plant your signs on the White House lawn/You all want to ban the Bomb^ihere's no real war* you say, in Vietnam/Use your drugs and have your fun/And then refuse to lift a gun/There's nothing else for you to do/And I'm supposed to die for you/I'll hate you till the day Idie/You make me hear my buddy cry/l see a guy in a bloody shred/l hear him say, This one is dead/It's quite a price to have to pay/Not to live another. d a y / H e paid the price to fight and die/He paid tiie price but what did he buy?/He bought your life by losing his/But who gives a damn what a soldier gives?/ His wife does and maybe his son/But they're about the only onesT" You hear the commands to the honor guard to "Fire!" their salute to the dead and the rest is silence as the nearest of kin receives the folded flag to keep as a memory of her war hero. Time for the commerdal. On a n August, 1969, broadcast'of a similar burial, the mother of the dead soldier was asked by a TV r e p o r t e r what she felt about it. Question: "Do you have a mesaage for the people in Washington who control the destiny of thia country and the war?" The mother's answer: "It couldn't be put on television."

30

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Receptionist DeoJonlak ClaMif led Adveriisi ng JackHafrts^Hgr. SlophanlaSlbMra LomaLoo Circulation ft Subscriptions..,EHtolMtttBonMin Loo Ubra Virgo ftagttiarius PbotoMtttography Undo Tom A rt De oartment -Kannla. Mgr. TD Donna HaufroGfil HJcnoaiRyan BobHoufrocht ^4ot responsibte for cosh enclosed in mail- Second class postage paid at Loi Angeles. California. Published weekly. Subscriptions: $6 per year in the U,S,H $S,80 elsewhere in the Americas. $10,15 elsewhere in ttie world. First Class Of Air Mail rates upon request. Unsoiicited maniiscripts and artwork that we do not publish will be daBiroyed three weeks after receipt unless accompanied by a full size, stamped, self-add resaed return snirelope.

(Continued from P i g e 1) fitins of a single professor, Allen is outepoiien in his radical beliefs and has worked closely with students in organizinB for various political causes. In his hfe style, h e is much closer to the hip culture which is quite prevalent amoEiR UCSB students than some faculty mnnbers feel is appropriate for a professor. It is generally believed that the real reasons for his dismissal are hie politics and his unwiUinffiieee T|i3BvriyBlvd. to ''maintain a proper distance'' LoaAngelM. CMf. loose from the stodenta. The Allen case (ai3)WET-nrD crystaUxes a n d focuoca in t h e ooblisherand Editor ArtKunUn minds of a large number of atudents a great deal of w h a t they dissecretary to the PublJsher 8ue-0u like sboul the University as on inAssistant to the PubUsher.. Andy Q a l i stitution. ^ansglng Editor PMilEbttIa En the foil, t h e student Lsgiela' Associate Editors,, PoaMttig llv-DonS4clin tive Coundt went on record urging p 4 If sic Editor John CfpStrtsr the anthropology department to reBook Heview Edi lor. Lawrenoa Upton consider the dismissal. They received no response. Finally, after Copy Editor Flora QrMnhW Editorial Secretary ..Judy LtoweUyn Christmas, a petition drive was Librarian Alison Kaufman organized demanding that Allen Staff Writer Jocfc Weinberg at least be given an open hearing Mililsry Editor SueMarahalt on whether or not he should be r ^ Guid& Calendar Kitty Joy toined. l l i e argument was made that if the decision to refuse tenProduction Editor Edgar D. Jones, Jr. ure was baasd on valid grounds, Production Assistant these grounda wo^ld come out at Sir Hldiaaiof ttitvartolw the hearing; if the dedaion was Proofreader Tlm'aHottMV capricious and arbitrary, the hearBusiness Off ice Joyco ing would expose this also. Within Businoss Manager. PronTroy three weeks. 7776 studsota, a Office Manager HaroMBraohMra majority of Ibe total enrollment e n d Secretary to the O Ff ^ce Managor twice aa many people aa have evtr UndaJoeoba participated in a student body elecMaintijnsnce Engl noar BM Dall y tion, signed the petition. Btill t h e Display Adveftlslng.,,,open h u i n g was denied, and the RkhardBlv1h.Mgr job termination w a s not roodnded. UtlttBM,SocroUry T h e Univerdty mede it quite d e e r t h a t thev weren't imprewsd Bob CaiiMfon. Executive Bob HUoo, Executive* enough to be swayed by thia overwhslming show of student esnti' JohnftLLaa, Executive

n i g h t On Friday a group of about 1500 gathered. Non-viol^ce oa t h e posture of the group waa reestablished. At 2;00 p.m- large numbers of outside police were brought in. A number of sweepend-dear actions by the police followed, a few demonetratora were beaten, and no arrests were made. Following each sweep, t h e tudsnta regrouped in front of the administration building. During the time of the poUoe vwsepa, u p to SOOO atudenta were involved. At &--00 p.m., the ochedulsd d o s ing time of the administration building, the students went home, promiang to retuin on Monday.

Action nn Monday began between 3:00 and 6:00 a.m. when the S a n U Barbara Sheriff e Department paid vidta to the hoDMS of three student loaders a n d arrsoted them. The throe wsre Kethie Joy R a n t i (IS), Alien Herohbsrg (19), and Louie Dewoy (22), WorrenU fbr Ifi other student leaders were also isoued, a n d all but one of thoee etudenta ourrendsred thsmadvea to police by oariy afternoon. They were charged with unlawful assembly, two d i f f m n t brando of refusal to diepsrse and violati<m of a treepeesing lew about coming on to Bomeone'a property to i n t e r t e e with his businsH. Thouoanda partidpated in the same octivltiea aUsged against the IB wrested. Th% act was on attosopt to doetroy ozioting laadseehip e n d intimidate othsre from naamniny Uedshlp. Boil far everyooo OKcopt Loulo D e w ^ woo est a t $1000 eedL Hia woe est et $4400. 8tiU nu>eo eottvity on Monday occturred- Thm% wsfe nuwdMo, mass ralUsa a n d the blotUng of entroiHiea. Ttwn waa little mnt^ intsrodian boMrevi potioe a n d divoDOtntore. A ftsting of ungurwasos, tmr, intimkletlnn a n d fhistntioa was widely Mt, bat t h e octivltisa oentinned t h n r a ^ out t h e dey. By eviing. ramon were floetiJDf around t h a i eomo sort of modifled opsn hearing woe going to be p^^voasd.

Volume 7, #6 (Whole Number 290), February 6, 1970

mont U p to this point, the atudenta h a d been going overboard to prove to eveiryane how reeeonable t h i y could be. On Thureday, J a n . 29, they dedded to take acti(H). A crowd of 1000 atudenta milled around the adminiBtration building, c a u n n g the building to be dooed. The Dean of Men, Robert Evona, infonned the gathering: "You a r e in violation of Univerdty regulation." But while t h e students were still trying to prove their ''rea^ sonaUaness" and maintain e nonviolent posture, the administration apparently wasn't willing to put on the same diarade. In reaponos to heckling by Joe Melchione, a atudent. Dean Evans atrock Melchione in the face with a bullhorn, breaking his glasses and cutting him above the e y e Campus police then charged into the crowd and injured other students- MomentOT' ily. t h e student stance of nonvic^ence was shattered. A brief shower of rocks directed at both the police and at (he windpws of the administration building followed. A few hundred students stayed at the administration building all

At tftt time of thia writing. (Monday night) t h e outcome ia etUl undoer. W h a t e v happono from her* on, one questioo viU ptobobly be dodMvo: will flio UCSB etudsnts be c a p ^ o of oatabtiahing a lespondble, d e d d v e and offtetivo laedarship in t h e b o o of I h e n presdon they are esperividnffr The adminialratian and potice o i e ftinctioning In a more d i s d a i n e d and coMfUnatod b a h i o a on the b o d s of stretsgisa whidi have b e m woriEod out in campus e t n g giss of the pest several y s s . The radical student movement i t everywhere feeing the teat of whether it can adept to this situation. What happens at flente Barbara may be some indicator.

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February 6,1970

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The family tells their story: an interview with

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


(Th fcdlowlng is an interview conducted by the Free Press wllb friendfl of Charles Mansoo.) SANDY: Tliere are a lot of things Po[de don't know. They've got all the witnssBSs locksd away where Cbaiiis or nobody can get to theroThey are doing everything in their power to make him impotent to defend himaelf. GYPSY: Soraebody from the DA,*s office we d<Ni't know who it is yet h a s bMn calling us up and sayt o g if we didn't stop banging around the ranch and being together, they wtffe going to put us all in a mental hospital- They've already put three people in m e n ^ hoepitals. Two boys and a g i i l The giri's Dianne Lk& Hiey've got lur in Paton, along with two young boys all jnvenilea who were ttudc in the hospital for a """*"*"** 90 days "obeerva tion" only because thdr parents couldn't be found and no other charge could hold them in jail^ LYNNE; We'rr their parenU and thsir sens and daughters. Dianne, who we call Snake, has been held Incommunicado in the Inyo County Jail for the last four months ^ kept in solitary and questioned a l all hours, so i ^ t e v e r her mn' tal state ia now can be credited to the authorities. SANDY: One giri who is twentysia was rdeased only on the condition that she get a "respecta U e Job." Her baby was placed in the cnstody of her parents in the midwest She's a key witneas in this case and has been warned not t o asaodale with any of us. or the State will take her baby.
PAULJ

SANDY: I h i s was in '68 the last bust in that house. They put me in for two Sleep-EZ, 1 was kept in Sybil Brand for six days Euid charged with downers until the pills were analyzed. All the rest were h d d for possession some eeeds found outside the hous. That charge w a s finally laid on Dianne so that she could be detained for looking young and all other charges were dropped. It*s just that now they were hep to all the girls and Charley- So, w got out of jail and went to camp in Ventura in a beautiful, tree-full spot, uninhabited. Our bus was stuck in a ditch, so we had made camp about a hundred and fifty yardB away under a d r d e of tree&. We had plenty of blankets and a fire.

This time, the man comes in with two big police dogs and all hii fear and we wre all marched out Hke captured animals, taJ^en to Ventura county, charged with trespassing -^ stolen bus another of thvir asBuroptionsThegirl with the baby we all had delivered two weeks before, was charged with endangering the life of a child and the newspapers read ''NUDE HIPPIES FOUND STREWN IN WEEDS." Mary was nursing the baby but during the long separation she lost her milk. After that release we all boarded our school bus and came here (Spahn's Ranch) after tracing us down, and finding UA atill

what they wanted , . , ^ i t was a beautiful place . . . GYPSY; But along with all Iheyoung kids came the man again, to grab up juveniLee and look for grasa which they never found. After a month, they gave us such a constant interruption that we had to close the place down and remake an old cowboy saloon. After so much of this type of hasseling we decided to take off in an old bread truck that somebody gave UB and go live in a ranch house that we had gotten permiaaion to live in. We headed out to the ranch in the Pannamint mountaine in Death Valley and had gone no more than 100 miiea when the police atopped us. They shook down the truck, took all of our gear and the truck had no regiatration so they kept us in jail in Lancaster overnight and then transferred us to Sybil Brand where they booked us for grand theft auto and held us for three days- The charges were dropped but we were unable to recover our property.

were on him immediately and had hifl hands behind his back. They pulled his arms way up marching him in front of everyone, GYPSY: I aaw the whole thing . . . right through the open doors . . . they took him behind the saloon and they kicked in his riba (broke

me they were cutting off my wel' fare because 1 wns lying that I knew about thea^ murdera. and that they would bug me until I told them something. They out and out lied to us said so and so implicated you they tried to get us all plotting against each other.

SANDY: We came back here (the ranch) to do what we usually do three) and then brought him back clean up, cook and take care of around in front of us end threw riders and just play really' him on the ground on his face The man could be counted on to with his hands in cuffs behind him make at least one visit a day, us- and said don't move. ually around four in the afternoon. SANDY: In thia iitUe shack - it was He'd just drive in and we'd all be all fixed up I had receiving out to greet him and heM usually blankets and diapera and lots of aak how Charley was or where he baby oil, boric add, stuff like waa. 1 remember one nigbt the that, and what they did was they took all the stuff that hadn't been opened and jusl carted it away. 'Hiey took baby oil big tubes of baby oil and squirted it all over the room, on the walls ., CATHY: They took sacktf of flour and spread it all over the kitchen in the farm-houae, they broke windowB . . . LYNNE: AU in the name of search... SANDY: Two cops were outside the kitchen door, and one said to the other one, "Can I kick the door in?" CATHY: And the other guy said, "You might as well leave it hanging." Ail the doora were unlocked. LYNNE: And they just went down the line with their big ol'boots bam bom you could here it all over the ranch, CATHY: They were tesiring the roof off... SANDY: They smashed a record player, a guitar and ac old antique juke boK of George's. They took ail our vehicles, our blankets . - , BRENDA: And then they ran us all around when we tried to find out where they were . . , they said they're here, no they're there . . then finaUy they said they didn't have them anymore. LYNNE: F^ally the word is you've got to have a salee slip on every artide!

Start from the beginning when this v h d e thing first came down on you. GYPSY; It started as soon as there wsre more than aboot four or five people togethsr. SANDY; We were Uving in no old house in Topanga Canyon and the man firat knocked on the door to look at the toilet. We even invited him in fbr coffee. There were a bvnch of yoong glris .around, and Charley and not too many guys so be says "Hey" to his friend, "there'e a bonch of girls up there and they look young." So he brings h i s tnmda tnm the department op and their knock is a Uttle hardor and the talk is a Httie more inaiatant 'Haa time it's to look for runaways.

all together, the police made regu lar cruiaes, and continued to poke around -^ some even pretending to be horseback riders. They always had their eye on CJhariey they'd see him singing, and a bundi of girls around him, you know. He'd go out and rap with thetti . . .

LYNNE: S e ^ they can't see what o o e o r t w o f u y s a r e d o u x g with all ttieaegiria.

LYNNE: And what would usually happen ia they'd wind up saying that they'd like to do what he's

SANDY; llHtr ssx'pwanota is up. n n , they atart putting things in tbslr p o ^ s t s on the way o o t We had m Qtos pipe that they fdt naedsd to be investigated things UkatfaAt LYNNK: Pret^ B O O D they just bust f i ^ i t itt the door, naing their guns and avthovity to put us on the floorUaoally wfaa they'd come at n i ^ t wiTd bo ringiag and they'd yell for MiT09 to be qibet It got kinda flnuvi'vaUyi natil tti*y dreamed ua mp aaaaa <Au^gee to hold us all in Jiil . . , QiiT'd l<t BS g o for l a i ^ of on anything, and t h m new tmsa to get us

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doing, but ... and thsQ all their otdigationa and restrictiona would cover t h a r faces. After a while wc could tdl that they were so envious that they hated Chariey and they didn't even know why they hated him. What it amounts to ia that we showed thm how good it w a s noi to be a part of the Eatalidishment OYPSYt We aet up the saloon here on the ranch at a nightdub, aU infinity black and atorrod lots of music and a place for the Valley kida to goLYNNE: We started to charge, to pay George, but found it impoasiUc^ ao we juat let psople g w e m W E : JVobody was fighting, 80 they didn't have mudi to doWhen they found Chariey, a big hubbob among the officers started . . . and they said things like '*so this ia Hanson)" and we beard his name echo through the ^ig throng. He didnH put up any re^ sistance at all, bat three of them
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man came up, asked for LD., after eating some combread 1 had offered him, he said, "We're gonna get that Charlie yet" pointing a finger at Charley and laughing, BRENDA: Oh, the best one was the dawn raid here fat Spahn's). GYPSY: Accorduig to the newa, it waa a "gang raid" on an "auto theft ring-" BRENDA: They arrested us all for Grand Theft Auto, and later told us the stolen auto was three miles up the road and that we'd all picked it up in the nighttime and carried it up there. SANDY; We only weigh about a hundred pounds each. I was almost nine months pregnant. We were all sleeping in different places, and at dawn they came over both bordering mountains and met in the middle. We heard loud crashes of doon kicked in and the sound of the helicopter flying low back and forth. I think it waa about a hundred men the ooUce had said more in khald uniforms, with bayonets jmd the whole shot LYNNE: Black and v/hite vehiclee were all over the front lot and the street . . . they kicked in the doors and pointed bayonets in our faces and the fear in their eyes and the shake in thdr trigger fingers waa really something 'specially to be on the other end of. SANDYi What they ended up with was a d r d e of about fifteen girls with pajamas on, aboot four cowboys, about fiv other guya rnd the doga. And, oh yes, one guy off the street who was just pess-

SANDY: Anyway, after all that, we just said Puck It, we're leaving and we went out to the desert. The deaert's the only land that nobody wanta, you know, they call it a waateland- It's super-beautiful out thereLYNNE: Sure gives your eyes a Stretch SANDY: We had permission to slay on an old minera ranch, A woman who owned it gave Charley permis sion to stay there. From the time of the raid here, they kept an eye on us they had helicoptera cirding the desert, you know. LYNNE: Routine Big Brother. SANDY: We dug a little bunker, you know, there was a house, but there wasn't enough room for everyone to sleep in it so we dug this little shelter for th winter, CATHY: And we took twenty-mile espeditions and camped in the high mountains oh yeah, and the police took pictures of all of us girls without our dothes on in the hot sun and later we heard their secretive talk about our "obecene, perverted ada," and how we were nothing but animals- And of course in the papera, we're nude nomads and "amazons with sheathed knivea" on our hips. SANDY: They also said that we were "emaciated" and "malnouriahed" cause we didn't have meat up there, and becauae we've dropped a lot of the load that d t y people carry around Anyway the man came in again in full force and busted us. Three gida were in the bunker on a mattiees. and it waa another dawn raid, and the cops shot through the roof of the bunker and just missed one girl's head.

GYPSY: "After all," they told us, "how do we know it's not atolen?" SANDY: So they put us all in jail for GTA. They took all of the dune buggies I had bought one of them, myself, after converting some stock. We had a big welding ma^ chine that a guy lent us, a lot of mechanical parts, an P.M. radio. tools and other stuff which they never gave back. BRENDA: In fact they took one of George's huge horse noedke in place of dope whidi they didn't find by tearing down the roofa and breaking mirrors and windows. SANDY: They took all the babies. And this is one point, one main ixnnt. Everv time they take a baby from his mother, they dangle it in front of her you know . . . what it breaka down to is that they tell the mothers to get back into the LYNNE: One guy got worid that ttuy're in or eise, house, and t h o u ^ t I wfu hiding GYPSY: You know, they got the a shot-gun under this big coat I baby, and they tell the mother if was wearing and hit me across the you don't say this, that and the face it's just that thsy were so afraid ^ we didn't know what waa other . . . reaUy. CMningoff butittook four hands up my dothes to find out I didn't have a shot-gunSANDY: Thia is the tactics they uaed on Susan Atkjna They put BRENDA: I waa sleeping in the worda in your mouth, and say sun with my shirt off -^ they threw didn't this happen, didnH thia a rock at my back to wake me uphappen?! The LA Hmnidde guys And when they had us all lying on did it to me in Independence after the gnnmd t^irether and Charley the Death VaUey raid -* l l i e y told wasn't there, one of them aaked.

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February 6 , 1 9 7 0

PmgmS

Charles Hanson's friends at the Spahn Ranch

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


real rough-like, "Where's Jesua Chtint? We want to crucify hiknl" GYPSY: Thai they put on hie Inyo tranocript '*Chartes Manson, AKA Jeeus Christ." They put il on him. He never deemed himself a holy man, nor anything elseSANDY: So they put ua in jail in incommunlcsdo. No one can visit them without the consent of their present lawyer. A guy got in to see Sadie before her lawyer stuck up his obstacle, Sadie told him that ahe wanted another lawyer but that she couldn't get past her present one. She also said that LYNNE: You know, general wave dutter, and circulation cut off all at once- Alao, eadi inmate ia up for every bit of authority each officer wanta to throw on Mm. Every time Charley wants to make a ph<me call, he's got to take off his dothes. SANDY: They look in his mouth, they look in l^s ass-hole you know, they completely shake him down. He can't evm carry a pencilt There's forty people, and three phones. He'a got to stand in line and usually right in the middle of the call the man wants to know what nuniber he's calling. BRENDA: Yeah, juat bundiea of interruptions for exercise of authority. spent with us amoontad to two days at ths ran<h, and oocaaioDal visits with fivv of the giris that w e n in jail up north for three months on a poaasssioD diarga. Thai'9 okay, t h a u ^ I dont know whatalae paole who never knew us could write but i f s opsn i<H><li** as ws, you back in. SANDY: BaA into Ihsir mhaa thsy sos a tUtty-five yaax old man that'e as happy aa a fiv* year oU, you know. He's not t U r t r five exoipt by the o a t e d a i . Bt he knows tbia earth, and loves warjr inch of tt. w^

e^iw^

Independence. They held Charley Incommunicado for two monthsAbout a month after we were all picked up, the Tate case got thrown in all of our fsces . . . I was out of jail and as soon as that came down, nobody could viaJl anybody in jail. Thpy wouldn't tdl him what his charges were, they just held him. Then the Grand Jury indicts him for murder. Susan Atkins was in Independence, and they hauled her to L-A and we don't really know what happened from thia point on with her. The indictment of Charley is illegal , , , there's no evidence against him, LYNNE: Looks like the People of the Stale of California is collectively the Grand Jury, ihe D,A,'s office, the pohce departments , . . GYPSY: The last court that Charley had, you know, moat people don't know what really happened in there, cause there's only the Titnea. and all them papers, you know, and (hey hear what they want to hear, Charley tried to bring out a lot of thinga in court, and the judge cut him off each time in procedure. First of all. he was to be allowed to see each witness three times, alone, and further in^ terviewB were to be with un attorney. Firsts there was no limit to the number of svitnesses he could aee at one time witli an attorney something that savea a lot of time. Apparently there was too much happiness in one room, BO it was limited to two witnesses and an attorney. Now. a day after hie last court session, they cut attorney-witness interviews off completely. He's got to get a court order to see witnesses more than

a month ago she sent a note to us through Cabellerowhich of course we never got Marvin Part, Leslie Van Houten's court-appointed lawyer found out that she wanted to change lawyera. Her lawyer is a former D.A Her lawyer got a writ saying that she's insane and that she's mentally incapable of making a dedsion to change lawyers, and he's arranged for three psychiatrists to examine her and submit their report to the court for them to dedde if ehe can change lawyers^ His job is in jeopardy and no telling what else. GYPSY; All the lawyers control what mail they get and what visitors they see, Charley WEmta to see his co-defendanta. The judge said he could if it's okay svith their lawyers. So who's running the show-

LYNNE: Since the procedure's the same, down to tiie minute every day. and the only real job of these officers is to tell the inmatea what to do. they have to invent things. They'll say things like, "wait over there by that line," and *'up against the wall" while they check with another officer to see if he's really been checkad like he saya. The waiting, and form* filling, and checking is endless and you can sure see it in the miserable faces of the nmn. SANDY: By the rules, all inmates have to go to chow, whether they're eating or not QYPSY: He's got to get a court order almost to move. He needs a court order to get books in the cell. He needs a court order even

ths aavage cuitists, Satan elavas, wild anuuBons, sadistic hippies, and you ktwkw, whalevtr else. Sure wish everyone could see that Svengali ia but a rrflection of thsmadvsi and that that's who they're tzyin' to kill, GYPSY: This isn't juat the trial of one man. They're g<mna judge themsdvee canaa he'a ( m ^ a minor. Chi^ey came into the world thrsa yeara a g a He's been behind bars.

LYNNE: And aome paopk would rather kili us than look at what's right in front of thstr eyaa, and always has bam- Charley said a beautiftd thing in couH that nevef get out He said, "The faces have changed, but ths robs* a n always the sama" And on another d ^ whi the jadfs was dsAndlnf himsslf aa an individual, Chariey told him, "Fm not talking to yon, Tm talking to you as thu Macfaina." BANDY: People bslter start getting hep to what t h a ^ n doing. If people only knew, they'd ^ v e their lives fbr him he ia us ha dosan't have any rulsa, any phi-' loaopby or opinions. He's totally open. LYNNE: There's a line out of his ong, of hu opiniofi - - it aaya: "If I told you what I thought would it Changs your opinioD? If I told you how bright you are, could you make the change? Mow can one compete with the Ocean? Hou' can one compara with Ihe Sun?

three times, l i k e we said, tney ve got some of the key witnesses locked up.

Juat the other day. right as we wpTe doing a newa interview, Bruce Davis, who'd just gotten on Charley's witness list, was picked up and charged with a charge he was alrcLidy released on three months ago- He's in Inyo County, now, for "receiving atolen goods" with an already reduced bail from twenty-five to twelve thousand. The "prindpals" in the Tat* and La Bianca cases are being held

32

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LYNNE: To our earthl There's beer cana and burnt spots in the most hidd) places - and all the animals run and hide fifom us . -. GYPSYi And how every minute of the day people a n working for a piece of paper, and that piece of paper is put into a big, huge mach^e that is working to blow this whole planet up. So when you see this and everyone does whether they want to look at it or not you can aay, "what can I do?" and what you can do is just step out of it. But of course whan you do step out of it, there's always the ones that wont to^ brings PAUL: What about the article in the Berkeky Borfe? LYNNE: That was funny. We never knew Smith he's the one who appeared on tdevision talking about ua through a tranaparent black vdi, for anonymity. I wondered what he was hiding from. And really, we juat figured that tiie Barb must have been hard up for things to write, aince I don't recall DrSmith ever going to bed with Charley. Aa for Al Rose, he tries- We send love. The "four months" he

SANDY: Charley said he wanted to be able to have a dictaphone machine you know, he can't read very wdl and Uiey denied him that BRENDA: Privately -^ in the public court they postponed the dedsion. SANDY: They denied him unlimited visits with his key witnesses. Yesterday in court since they're making it BO difficult for him to defend himself, he wanta the right of counsel. The U.S. Constitution says Chat a person can defend themselves with counsel, and that State Constitution s^ys it's either one or the other you have an attorney or you defend yourself. But the State Constitution aaye that the U S . Constitution is supreme over it This makea the State Constitution unconstitutional. LYNNE: But every set of rulea that I've ever seen in the whole system has some son of clause in it s a j ^ g . in essence, that they can do whatever they wish, so . . . SANDY; Oh, this is something you know, they're taking private dtizens ande the DA,'s office and just downright telling stories about us they tolked to some guys we know saying, did you know that so-and-so cut up so-and-so? They're gossiping and this is what gets in the press. Another thing is they wouldn't admit two out-of'State attorneys after Charley made his requests in court yesterday. The day before, they let than in. The deparment said they were barred for not having California Bar canU. In court, Chariey mentioned that psychology ical torture works as well aa physical torture. We know exactly what goes on inside those jails. He goes into the law library and geta out a book, and the man comes on the speaker soying tirtie to go back to your cells. So they go back to thdr cells where they can't bring law books. The air ia cut off the lights always on the mudc on the speaker goes from bardy bearable to blasting loud to in between stations you know, several at once, to ruasling of the guards, coughs, throat ctearinge.

QYPSY: Chariey would pick up a guitar and juat aing whatever came out, and ua with him. Some of thsss songs a n on tape.

for us to bring him a new Also, when it comes down to it, everyone can see that the Grand Jury is not a croaa-section of the public The Grand Jury has jurisdiction over dtizens of the U.S. it says. But having been convicted of a felony (seven dollar check, and a juvenile institution record) Charley is not a dtizen. So what does that all mean? Appaientiy nothing to them. I'm sure they can find some clause to bend for thdr meaning. SANDY: There's another thing that's in the constitution that a person has a right to protect his own property and person. This was violated when they indicted him on the word of one person or the supposed word of one pcraonGYPSY: Or what the lawyer saya thia person said. And we aU know w h e n the lawyer's from. Have you seen the book? The one Cabellero and Schiller have put out? LYNNE: Now. since Sadie has money, Cabdiero has tranaferred himaelf from court-appointed a^ tomey to regular client pay attorney. He has hia income set. No wonder he w.m't let her get word out, let alone see another attorney, SANDY; Anyway the obaUcles put up for Charley's Emd all the defendants defense are preventing the truth fkan coming out

lot of officers taking c a n of him all of hia life. And three years ago he stepped out of those prison walls, and looked around, hke for the firtt time, and he could see, as a new-comer seee what exactly ia happening to this world. He just looked at it, he didn't judge it. He did do a lot of time in solitary confinement in jail, so he got right with himself you bave to when there s just you and the wallsLYNNE: After he got out. he was on a mountain top, once, and he saw everything that he. as Han, had done, he, as all-men, GYPSY: Because we are we a n all msn- And we see what we're doing to the trees, to ths animals, and to the air.

PAUL: What about the muaic? GYPSY; The music is the only defense that Chariey has. But you know, tiie press haa dropped tho woH *'aUeged" eo they've already convicted him and who wanta to put out "the music of a murderer"? SANDY: The music ia soU truth. T^e biggest obstade ia that the ego of peo[Js doesn't want to hear truth. 'The fear wont come out of ite secure Uttle holse. GYPSY: This country is controlled by fsar- That's how they taught us what they taught us ^ through fser of taking away ths love and attention if we didn't do aa mommy and daddy said. SANDY: What we need is someone to bs rsal with us BomeoQe who^e ready to look at truth. We need aomehslpLYNNE: But aa for the songs and dances of thess business people -^ you know -~ If someone wouldcome d t on the porch with ne someone like us* who could slew down enoui^ to just fed us and be us, than the truth will come out SANDY: And if you're out t h s n -> cmne on in, ws nasd you to stand up DOW. Charisys livin' for the yoong to kssp them the way thsy a n he is thsm, aa open and childlike as a Uttls kid - and Look what they're doing to him!

PROTEST THE WAR IN VIETNAM Join tha protest line outilds tht AiMrin Ordnanoa A*MCiaiion titnquat at tha Bavarly Hilton Hotel fuomsr of WlNhira and Senta Montoa boulavsrdst TuaKliiv n^rt, FalKUKYl7>fi:MVMn- For ftirthsr iMomwtion eontHt UCLA/CASE I t 826-2386, tha Paaoa Action Counott at 462-8186, or th* Vietnam Morotofium Commlttaa i t 380-3611.

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February 6,1^70

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Demonic vs. divine in rituals and life styles

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t3.9S} LAWRENCE U P T O N I n t h e gret apocalypticat periods of change, thoB pivotal c h a n g e s that ai-e so rev<Jutionary in their impact on the lifeways of the society t h a t Ihey run t h e g a m u t from visionary revelations to madness a n d murder, it i s important to understand the role of t h e s h a m a n , t h e g u m , t h e poet w h o provides t h e n e w ritual a n d t h e new mythoflTechniciane of the Sacred is a collection of poems a n d m y t h s a n d rituals which h a v e served t h e purposes of c h a n g i n g l i f e w a y s in t h e past, if for n o other reajon Uian the necessity of distinguishing beiwetfn w h a t is eatred a n d w h a t is ptttfane, w h o ar t h e real ritual-making poet a n d w h o are t h e p h o n i e s w h o crawL out of t h e woodwork at such times a n d prey o n t h e society for their own selfa U r a n d i z m e n t , profit or just plain paycnotic sickness. We are in t h e midst of iiuch a Gatterdammerung t*iday, and that is why the question is b ^ n g raised once more a n d with such urgency in our time. PSALM IV Now I'll record my secret vision, impttssihle sight iif the face of God: It was no dream. I lay broad waking on a fabulous i-iiuch in Harlem having masturbated for no love, and read half naked an open bonk of Blake on my lap Lo & behold! I was thoughtlvas and turned a page and gazed itri the twifig Sun-flower and heard a voice, it was BMe*s. reciting in earthen measure: the \-t>if' Tftse mil of the page tn mv -irrrrf i-nr thni had iirrri heard before 1 lifted my eyes to the window, red walls of buildtng>i ftashi'd outside, endless sky sad in Eternity. Ifif sunlight gazing on Ihe ifirld. oportments nf tfnrle-u ^imulhir in the unitersr each brick and cornice slain*:^ with intelligence like a vast tiring face the great hrain unfolding and bronding in wildernestt! Now speaking aloud with Hlachc's voice Love! thou patient presence & bone ff the body! Father! thy careful watching and waiting iwer my mml! My Sim! Afy non! the i-nr/Zc^.v ages hiire remi-"ih''rid -m'! \tv son! My mm! Time h'lwled in angio<h in mv rnr' My son! My son! my Father u-ept and held m*' in his dead arms. Allen (iirish'rg Sept i.i^r,? ^ l\ehio It i> epedaliy timely just n o w w h e n a television commentator tike Piers Andcrton can sneak of t h e Charles Manaon ^'family" a n d the Sharon Tate murders a s "the inevitable end-product of th hippie culture"' a n d Chet Huntley c a n begin a news report o n t h e Charles M a n s o n c a s e with th<^ wo.de, "Charles Manaon, the guru of t h e hippieSn" a n d w h e n M a n s o n himself a s s u m e s t h e Jesus roie l a s h e did i n t h e interview i n l a s t week's Freep) "I decided t o g o t o t h e m o u n t a i n s to talk to God, to apolot^ze for nineteen hundred yearn of t h i s mess." 1 d e a r indication that he i s preparing to m a k e his o w n defense a s a hippie guru, takirig lUfl cue from t h e identification which t h e media h a v e already provided him w i t h , m a k i n g a court appearance in w h a t w a s described by reporters a s a colorfoi, paycheddic blouse. It i s not that a n y of t h i s m a y or m a y n o t h a v e a n y bearing o n t h e Crimea with which Manson h a s been charged^ but only o n t h e picture t h e media h a s been presenting to t h e public a n d M a n s o n ' s o w n i m a g e of himself a s a hippie-like g u m w h o i s being persecuted a n d falsely accused because of his hortility t o t h e Establishment and t h e tenets of a n e w religious cult of which he is the ipiritual leader. I t is n o t t h a t I expect a n y more real justftre for M a n s o n i n t h e corrupt judidal aystem of t h e U . S . t h a n I do for t h e C h i c a g o 8. He is entitled t o t h e help of all of us w h o are interested in justice for anybody a n d everybody w h o s t a n d s accused of anythinfi in this corrupt a n d brutalizing society- But t a m also interested in drawing distinctions that are being deliberately ignored by t h e media t o t h e detriment of t h e hippie life styles a s important manifestations of the n e w American revolution. The n e w life styles of t h e hippie culture can be seen in prrapective even in their confused beginnings only if one takes into account t h e e>tptrience of t h e race i n past cultures, especially during periods of revolutionary change. And no account of n e w cultures a n d new religions i s complete without raising questions concerning myth and ritualBefore t h e press, TV a n d radio succeed in pr9gTamming t h e American mind w i t h t h e slanderous image of t h e hippie culture a n d t h e new lifestyle a s a s e x ' " l o v e ' V r d i ^ o u s murder cult (for further proof of t h e growing c a m p a i g n to do just this in the press, see m y column "Radio E^ee Americo" in this week's Freep, page 4.) it m i g h t be a good idea to raise such a question so t h ; l w e will n o t be misled by the present smear c a m p a i g n into accepting the word of every false prophet a n d every cult leader whu denounces t h e Kstablishment a n d c l a i m s t o be creating new m y t h s a n d rituals for t h e Alternative Society, a s M a n s o n obviously i s preparing t o d o a n d i s already d o i n g a s a defense a g a i n s t t h e charj>es of murder h e is faced with i n the courts^ There are rituals of death a n d m y t h s of dath just a s there are rituals a n d m y t h s being created a n e w today for a Design for U f e . Ritual i s the sacramentalizing of t h e crises of Hfe: birth, puberty, marriage. conception, pregnancy, sickness a n d death, e v e n t s w h i c h ( a m o n g m a n y others) wre dramatized i n t h e rituals a n d became t h e vital subject matter of poetry, m u n c , dance a n d all t h e other arts. In the tribal cultures these were n o t on7y persona] but communal events^ T h e c o m m u n i t y helped t h e individual to meet these crises of life; it helped him t o be b o m , t a u g h t h i m h o w to live, love a n d work, heal h i s sicknesses, a n d a t t h e last it gathered at h i s bedside and helped him to die. From t h e first birth through t h e rebirth of Initiation to t h e final Vialicuin, t h e ritual arts g a v e meanirtg, beauty a n d dignity to every vital event of hia Hfs. l l i i B w a s their pmpoae a n d their function. M y t h i s t h e gad-making prooeas by which t h e community metaphorizes its Kapirations, le deair coUedif ptrgorufie. t h e collective desire personified. (Magie.et religion d a n j l^Afrigue du Nord. by E. Doutee. Q u o t ^ &om The Myth of the Static, by Ernst Caasirer, p. 352. Doubleday Anchor Book A52, N e w York, 1955.) M y t h g i v e s t h e individual a n d t n e group a a e n s t of o n g i n s , roots, a n d u s e n s e of continuity. In t h e arts, myth i s a t one a n d t h e aamf Hmv ihf r-injuTvor of tradition a n d the material out of which new myth i s fi^rever h-Anu iTvuU".]. Ii i s neither better nor worse than the culture (hat creates it. T h e Nazi "culturebearers" h a d their myth-makers, notably Alfred Rosenberg w h o in his book Dcr Mythus dc XX. Jahfhupderts tried to g i v e t h e s t a t u s of a m y t h o l o g y a n d a religion to Hitler's National Socialism. M a n gets t h e g o d s that he deserves. The artist, disciple, abundant, multiple, restless. The true artist: capable, practicing, skillful; maintains dialogue with his heart, mcpfs things with hifi mind. The truf artist: draws out all from his heart. works with delight, makes things with calm, with sagacity. works hke a true Toltec, composes his objects, works invents; arranges materials, adorns them, makes them adjust. The carrion artist: works at random, sneers at the people. makes things opaque, brushes across the surface of the face things, works without care, defrauds people, is a thief. (Aztect The most pressing need a t prt-Menl if for rtucramental forms suitjibU' for thi^ communal observance of such rites a s marriage a n d burial, and perhaps nnmc Hort of c o m i n g of a g e htuaL Many intelligent people of good education and mtidcrn tastes find ihemselveH embarrassed by thi- C(mvention] rites that arc ohqcrvtMi at weddings. A n e w epilhahimium i s needi'd which will celebrate t h e evi'nt in poetry, s o n g a n d dance without ri'peating obsolete symbfils and rcligiouH rituals, which h a v e IORI Ibeir siMnificance for t h e modern mindn and music which is sentimental and trite. A m a t i n g rite is needed which dties n o t at all depend fnr its cnntent and form m a marriage license or t h e blessingu of churches and prcacherH of any kind, csinrc B O m a n y such unions are shack-ups, which is, after all, an ancient and imcehonorable form of mating, I h-ive known cnuples who, in their desire for some sort of new and suitable rile l o mark the event havv renurled to HuddhiHt and Amt'riran Indian riles, without h a v i n g t h e slightest idea of whiit these riles signify, One couple employed a Christion minister a n d provided h i m with a ritual of their own, composed chiefly of quotations from love poems, a n d performed cm the beach lo rock music and t h e sound of t h e ocean woves. Another fled from family and friends a n d went off to a small hotel in the woods, where, atonen thi^y improvised something in t h e w a y of a "primitive" marriage rite put together fmm rememlM'rc<l Hits of The Golden tiough a n d readings in K\\e b<Kiks *d Marj;iiret Mead a n d Uronislaw Malinowsky. In Hawaii, Ihey tell me, it is not uncommcm for American couples to resort to "native*' wedding riteR. *ir at least employ uome H a w a i i a n dancers a n d musicianH to lend a touch of "primitive" ritual to a Christian or civil wedding. More often t h a n t h e church sUitislicF* will reveal or relisious leaders will admit, t h e ('hristian or Jewish marriage service is only a pcrfunctorj\ and ihi- real wedding celebration only begins afterwards a t some night club or a private party. The unvoiced reason for such unconventional rites is a distaste for civil and church riles which have lost all m e a n i n g for t h e mating couples a n d their guesbi and only m a k e them feel self-cfinscious, hypocritical a n d ill at rase. Ut Largf quantities nf fimd and cloth are piled in a heap. (21 The firidegri'i'm app*-ars outside hi^ own hiiune. whrrr a i-nntiitii'iiis stream nf human htidies leads fnrm his dt}orway lo that uf hi.s Father tn Laie. (3} As many pettpte as there n ' c permit him In lealk o n r their hneks os they lie prostrate on the ground. {-It When the Bridcgntom reaches the Father-in Low^s hiuise. thrrr nlil unnK'n prostrate themselves so as tn fnrm a living chair fur him. (MA fish is brought forward and. with Ihe aid of a sharp sliek. is eul up mid diced on a human body. It is presented to the Bridegrnnm uhn eaii if ran< (^}The pdef- of fntut and cloth are distributed to an mnnv peuple an there nnond Ihe fo'td is eaten. Afterwards the street of human bodies is again fnrmvd for the return. I7i The Bridegroom's family perform the same event fnr the bride. fFolynesin: Herrey fsland.tl Dance, like poetry and music, h a s a l w a y s been a part of t h e ritual a n d myth of t h e cultureT h e dance in all living creatures is a motor-activ-ity which ic somehow aM>dated with t h e liffsforce and. in m a n , early took t h e form of a mimetic magic n d a form of therapeutics. A n y set form of words, music a n d / o r motion i s a n t u a l i n the s e n s e of rite, ritus. even w h e n it takes t h e form of a neurotic subtitute for religious ritual, a s Eric Frorom h a s s h o w n . It becomes sacmrum rituum w h e n it is combined with myth, the godmnkinK proccsft, to perform a sacramental act. Tribal cultures today h a v e their secular corroborees a s well a s their sacred dances. When the t w o became differentiated i s another o n e of " ^ j ''""**^*""^ questions that somebody is a l w a y s raising. Play i s probably ? I uJif ^P'^^^P "^'^ ^^^ ^^*^ blend with one another frequently, a s in t h e Holy FooL What i s more pertinent to our problem is how a n d w h e n t h e dance lost ilfl * * * ^ E S ^ ""'^ became completely secular. P e r h a p s it is at t h i s point that w e shall find w h e n a n d w h y the age-old partnership between poetrj- a n d dance w a s disaolved. The line of t h e ritual drama in t h e W ^ t e m World runs from t h e Paleolithic through ihe Neolithic, t h e a g e of metals a n d on through recorded Egyptian. Hebtw, Greek a n d R o m a n history to Christian Rome a n d clear up to t h e Ri-niiiMsa-u'e with o n l y such breaks in t h e record a s are occasioned by t h e r a v a g e s of m a n a n d nature. The bibliography in English alone fills a sizeable book; i n all l a n g u a g e s It would require a h u g e card file, a n d t h e books, if they could be assembled would fill a g o o d - s i u d library. T h e fraction of it that \ h a v e s e e n required years of reading, a n d t h e impression I have come a w a y with is that t h e ritual drama.

Tech nicia rut of the Sacnd, Jerome Rot h en berg. (Doubteday Anchor paperback

like t h e life and death drama it portrays, is a l w a y s d y i n g a n d a l w a y s being born again. A s the old gods die their rituals die with them, but both are forever beinK resurrected in new forms, with new n a m e s , hyphenated at first perhaps und gradually c o a l e s c i n g into o n e until the seam vnninhes. Like a n y other vital operation it i s not without pain and in t h e hiatus between the old a n d t h e new every variety of charlatan a n d false prophet rushes in tti fill the vacuum, with results that have sometimes drenched t h e world with blood a n d driven whole populations into psychotic m a s s hysteria. T h e new a l w a y s announces itself a s t h e true, a n d t h e once sacred becomes the profane. T h e story is an uneven one, overlapping occurs, a n d there are revivals a n d a t a v i s m s and repressions, sometimes accompanied by slaughter- T h e w i s e men of o n e HUG liecome t h e witches of t h e next and the historic process of god-making h a s gone on from t h e remotest beginnings known to us until this very day, alternating with the twilights a n d d e a t h s of gods a n d m y t h s a n d t h e c h a o s a n d a n g u i s h w h i c h a l w a y s accompanies e v e r y s u c h Cotterdomrierung.

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Funerals and other occasions are in similar need of such mfxli-rni/aiion ot ritual forms. It is not enough to s a y that people are tii liberty t^ inv^-nl thi-ir own free-form rituals for t h e crises of life w h u h were once cominun;il ci'le'}r;itioTis. If t h e accent remains o n each one "doing b.in thin^." unbalonriil by iriluil \:\Ur relatedness, the vital needs for a saframentalination 'm<l ritu;ili/atii)Ti 'il' the Alternative Society will continue to remain unfilled. AntI thv new n'li^innH. chemical a n d / o r non-chemical, will lack t h e functioniil charii(leri'lii'S of all Irui' religions. N o new ethos h a s ever been created and implementt-d in scK-ial Eitii'in by everyone doing his own thing, Il is too heavy a burdon to lav on ihi^ individual, w h o usually lacks the talent to create h i s o w n private rilualn. There in. ol course, a sense in which everybody does his own t h i n g , must do h i s own thing: the s e n s e in which each is alone in his own body-mind-soul a n d must make all the million decisions he makes every day of h i s life^ even if they are only the lazy decisions to g o along with the tide of suggestions a n d persuasions with which he is bombarded from every side i n a customer-consumer society, rathor than yield t o t h e promise of w h a t is n e w a n d far o u t a n d lilxrrating^ liul t h e timi< Linnes on re-entry w h e n that other reality, the reality of or<linary sLites -if i-xperience, m u ^ be taken into account, because it i s on the level of ordinary and not non-ordinary experience a n d c o n s e n s u s that the visionarv's dream lakes ( P l e a s e turn to P a g e 51)

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Los Angeles F r e e P r e s s

February 13,1970

Page11

EiSTES SDNDiT LOTE-IN


Anniversary and site of the 1st Love-in was born twre, wilt be held at Elysian Park, Salono area next to Dodger Stadium, sunrise services at 6:00 a.m. till dusk! Top Rock Groups, the world famous Bongo Kings and a super feedin by Green Power it's free, good news or money contact Cleo or Aron in Hollywood. Calll Kids! Get otd Dad and young Mom t o step in it's here. Please bring Love, Peace and your jxidy and we do the rest. We'll be filming the Green Power story 6aster Sunday. All scenes are true, cast of thousands^ the picture is called "Hippies' Heaven". Green Power feeds millions productions. Love-in every Sunday at Griffith Park merry-go-round. Rock groups and Bongo Kings and free food.l

Manson in Jail
{from page 4) "But I won't let them do that on Dui 1 won E lei inem ao mai: on my back. I always refuse to work, Then they put me in U t asing ry, I sit in solitary, and I just to myself. Then they come In, and tliey say they're going to take my food away. So I just smilo and aay. T a k e it/ and thev take it awayThen four or five days later, when I haven't eaten, they come back in and insist that 1 m u t t eat because they're responsible for my health. Then they tell me they're going to take my mattress away. ao I unile and say, "O-IL, take it away.' They do, end that doan't t - ' - j - >"-j ^ . -""- ; work either. TTiey coma back, a n d they *y t h a t t h e y w going to tk; my clothM Bway Mid turn the cold air So r and give thsm a n d on. amilst aay, my cioth<, awayt* They take them awmy^ too, Ta k them but when tht doesn't v o r k , and I still won't let them make a pvoftt on me, they give all the things back. ' T v e spent a lot of time in solitary, and Fve learned to make music, I can play any kind of In^ strument there i s . Also. I can control my whole body. (At this point Maiiaon gave a n eKample of muscular control and finger coordination by doing rather intricate guitar fingering exerdsea in the air with his handa.) I've kept my p c a of mind, look tround, UKI tby tftk ttav r Qecdona of othar paopla u t b i o i ' I J / T k w t*b* tha r*fUclaiu "^r?^,^: * ? ^ J ^ ^ S l ^ ^ S ^ r ^ i S L . ^ ^ ^ ever tiy * " i UhOM n j m w ^ to rMch up lo be more to be into thMiMlvw. If they differentthe top dog Utefl tbem, and they lay back down a^ln Those of US who on t h e very bottom don't becooM involved in all t h a i I Uke eolitaiy. The only men I've ever met who really t d l the truth are the men yon find from

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THE GOLDEN BEAR

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iFEB. 10th thru 15th

Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee MM'-/, Jimmie Spheeris f ^ S l H FEB. 20th, 21st & 22nd Illinois Speed Press & Bernie Pearl Blues Band

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FUVr BAXROQUE & BERSERK

"Moat people would be dead by now if they had lived through what I lived through. L mean dead "Look e t Jesus Christ on t h s in their soul* dead in their mind. But I'm a conti-adictioit. cross. If t could experience t h a t , and still love these sorry bas1 sUpped through* * Most people a r e iMrn, and they taids, then I'm really strong. I weigh 125 pounds, a n d anyone cnn whip me. Yet Tve lived t h r o u ^ thetougheetpaiitentiariBs they've got. I've learned that, o long M yon go on loving them* they can't h u r t you. So I Just love them like a brother." H O U S E OF H U N T S M A N Manson concluded by telling about A n e h o r a i e , Alssks ffffSOt his experiences in Malibu, living in a bus with three women. "One evening there VTM a very poUte knock on the door, end there was a sherifT who very politely aid h e was looking for runaways and asked if h e could come in a n d look around, 1 said, 'Certainly, my borne La always open/ and he c a m e in and checked the LD.'a> and then he left The next night there was another sheriff a t the door. And h e rapped harder end was much mote bruik. He said, 'I'm going to d i e d i LD.'e,' and cflme in and checked I.D.'*, and then he left. The third rdght it waa a different aheriff, and he didn't even bother to knodi; he just banged In and waa very rude to everybody. So 1 pvdied up my bus and moved to Topanga, but soon they found ua there. I was still living in the hue, a n d they got to coming through a t night regularly, l l i ^ Just stomped through my house shining their flashlights in the a s h trays looking for seeds and tbins'- They never found anything becauee we weren't doing anything.

eoUtary' t ) n e time I went up un mountaintop* and I sat there a whole week. I didn't move. I Juat looted at the torn-up eeHh, and E thought about bow* in the Jails, they shut off t h e light with the bare. Here, 1 saw where they were tearing u p t h e whole earth. They're shutting off the light everywhere, and ineldeis Juit A reflection of what If a like outside.

38

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VISIONS Visions of hypnoticgUy induced
horror more rgl t h u i

"Then I moved to the S p a h n ranch. We vreren't doing anything there either, but they never would leave us alone. It was just their sex p a r a n i ^ They couldn't under< stand how a little guy like me could live therewlthallthoee women, and none of them could have any more than one woman. The aherilT would drive up, and he'd smile at the girla, and he'd say, T m Officer 0*Rlley/ and the girls would aay, l l i a t ' i nice. C a n we go now?' "And another sheriff would come up, puff out his cheet, a n d any, 'Say, Tm really not such a bgd guy,' and the girls vrould look a t him a n d a s k "May we leave?* and t h e sheriff would grind his teeth a n d drive ofl. I think thnt'e regUy why they hatad u s all no much."

wgrm handg touching

in the middle

of a winter distwice

direct me to

amucimum

down.

vktorlake

Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

Copy #A72 - Do Not Post - Do Not Copy

Pae6

February 13,1970

Los Angeles Free Press

OPEN LETTER
Homosexuaf Information Center 3473% Cahuenga Boulevard Hallyvi/ood. California 90028

iEarthpeople^ Dear Rolling organ ji transplants park


u
& Dear Editor After reading both of your articles on Earth Peopleu Park, I find myself very interested in it. The idea of someone <us, I guess) singling out a piece of land a s sacn!d and putting our e?oJogifita a n d technical knowhow to work creating a sane environment interested me greatly. But I am worried about the project, too. It must be done right or not at all. I mean setting aside 100.000 acres in New Mexico for a model of good environment is a great idea, but a massive task.

Stone

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


February A, 1970 Tlw Honorable A. Andrew Hatik U.S. Court House 312 N. Spring Street Los Angaiet, California Dear Judga Hauk:

The U ^ . Post Office in Los Angeles has Issued Prohibitory Order on your behalf against our making further mailings to you at 312 N. Spring St. The order states that you have found our literature "eroticaMy arotising" and "sexually provocative/'

Material mailed from the Homosexual I n f o r mation Center is primarily educational in nature. Not in our wiMest moment could we have thought that the tubiect of homosexuality would stimulate you tfxtjally. We hope it did not offend you< But whether it did or not, the material was not offered for sale. It was not sent to your home addren for your private titillation. It was sent to you ai a public figure for your information. In yourpositkMi as a District Court Judge you u n doubtedly must from time to time make objective decisions concerning the rights of homosexual citnens. For this reason our literature was mailed to you inthetame way it i i mailed to educators, religious leaders, legislators, doctors, social workers, viz., profaisfonal people and people in the helping profemons, strictly for your academic interest in a subject of public concern.

I am not worried about the people who seem to be working on it now. They are, at least, exhibitinK more sensitivity than a n y other movement now going. However, they are going to need help. 1 have a Ph.D. in soil science, and I have decided to volunteer my capacitiee to the Ea^th Peoples Park. I realize we might fail or it might get ripped off. But what the hell! What Fm doing right now only utilizes one tenth of my knowledge and even less of my creativity. So I feel (and I hope thtre are others Like me) that this ecological project may be our only way of telling the world w h a t we must do if we are to survive on earth at all. We could create a world consciousness if sensitive people were given full power to design environments for the needs of people rather than the needs of business. I know that if we in government were ever allowed to raJly all the technical, ethical, ecolological brain power, then something like Earth Peoples Park could be created within every city ^if America. But t h e cities h a v e already been doomed. So, until we can work within those cities, then 1 am going all out to express myself through such collective creations a s Earth Peoples ParkSincerely, J-DawsCoUins Los Angeles, California

Dear Rolling Stone, In a recent issue, you called it "peculiar" that the L.A. Free Press editor Art Kunkin should take genitalia out of photos in the FreepWhen Rolling Stone is facing the number of charges that the Free Press is, when Rollinff Stone bravely runs a list of the narks in San Francisco, when Roiling Stone is taking risks to move society forward like the Free Press is, then perhaps Rolling Stone will understand. You don't need a weatherman to come in out of the rainPeace all ways, Thomas King Forcade Co-ordin ator Und ergrou n d Press Sy ndi cale (DPS) New York City fEDITOR'S NOTE: 1 don't remember now whether or not I mailed the letter to Rolling Stone in rebuttal, but 1 did tell their editor, J a n Wenner, that our previous printer blocked out the genitalia of the nude dancers at the Big Sur Folk Festival. The pictures I took at the festival were submitted unretouched to the printers.)

Dear EditorHuman organ oftiody part t r a n s plants should be Illegal because t h e r e will soon be a very high demand for p a r t s and organs and this will eventually make it dangerous to go out on the street after dark. People that try to take c a r e of their bodies should not be s a c r U ficed for people that haven't taken c a r e of their bodies. L a r r y Anc^rson Miami

Post Office revolt

Dear Editor This letter is to indicate to you and your readers of the appalling and illegal action being taken by the Postmaster, Kay Omer, of the Valley Annex Post Office, in Van Nuya, Mrs. O m e r h a s seen Rt to regulate, unconstitutionally, the hair ntyles of all employees on the basis of a "ready, willing and able" clause, which is tantamount to unreasonable a n d illegal control of human individuality.

killing

John Vasconcellos Assemblyman^ Tventy-fourth District

We, at the post ofRce, have done all that we can to indicate to Mrs^ O m e r that the ruling is repugnant to our civil righta. We have demonstrated, been interviewed for Channel 7 news, broadcast on KBCA-FM radio, passed petitions indicating our utter disbelief, and have generaUy made our feelings known to all involved.

Memorable R.K. Procunler Director, Department of Corrections 714 P Street Sacramento, California 95814

(ft

While we agree in essence with the idea that a man has a right to be free from sexually provocative material if he so wishes, we do not believe t t M 39 U.S. Code 4009 is being correctly used for that purpose in your case. 1'he order should be rescinded. If, on your insistence, however, it ramams in effect, then your present attitude should be considered in any future judicial appointments that m i { ^ come your way, and you should be disqualified from sining in judgement on any caiet affecting the lives of homosexuals. Yours truly, Don Slater t o : Winton M. Blount The Hon. Thurmond Clark L.A. Free f>resa E.W. Schneringer

OD

Gay march

Manson - Yes

Deur Editor: TbflJik you for exposing another super-distort ion job by the evtabllshment^ m e d ^ I refer Fo your excellent interviews wltli Cbftr!e HftTi90n and his a s s o c U t e s , P e r t u p s it will open t f e v minds to the fact that the courts have nothing to do with jDBtlce and our m e d ^ tiave nothing to do with reality. Jack P e r c i v a l Pasadena

Manson - No

Doar Editor: PcT, wet, lovable Charlie, how frtgbtful to ihlnk of the e s labllsbment with their puny, cocked minds l;aving hounded, bad* f e r e d , ajid in feneral belittled this kind gentle ntan with the boy a m i l e . BULLSH1T!1 You a r e so one-sided In your statementstrying to please your btpple readers (which, by the way, you a r e making a fortune on, that the situation becomes asinine). These so-called sweet lovable people murderedworshipped the devilsteeped In their hallucinatory world. But an Innocent T o m a n ' s t>elly, e i ^ t months pregnant, Idlltng the child also. If you have any belief in the hereafter, you should tak^ a vcoDd look at your concience. You and your newspaper a r e truly a menace to any decent society. PRINT THIS IF YOU DARE. Charles Karalt Corona Del Mar
37

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i
He rushed upstairs, informed us of our'visitors' and we immediately called t h e police {Hollywood station). They arrived about five minutes later. In the meantime we had observed four persons, on either the next building . . . one story ,,. and t h e building next to it . . , two stories. T h e uniformed police asked what the trouble was. We explained it and were asked, "Can you think of any reason why someone would be watching you?" Our answer undersUndably was,^-No." They leisurely went to investigate, having made sure to be very evidently looking out the windows OD in t h e direction of the roofs. On their return they casually infonned us that: (1) they were plainclothes police officers; {21 they had not been informed of the reason for the surveillance: (3) perhaps they were Investigating some sort of 'conspiracy^ (4) they had no way of knowing w h a t station the plainCO clothes were from.

Dear E d i t o r My t h a n k s for an objective, honest article on the 'Gay' March of J a n . I t , 1970. It w a s fairly presented, factual and miraculously did not have any axe to grind. An interesting sidelight to the march (preceded by the raid on the Hyperion bar on Dec. 27, 1969). On D e c 27, four other persons a n d I were arrested at the aforementioned bar on charges {you guessed it') of 'lewd conduct/ I w a s *fewdly' talking with two friends of ten years' standing. One of the other persous arrested w a s m y roommate .. .not lover ...roommate. He and 1 were two of the many people taking part in the march. Three dayb later. on Wednesday, J a n u a r y 14, a friend of ours stopped by on his way home from a date. As he pulled up, he noticed someone on the roof of the building next to our second floor aprrtment.

Dear Rayr Please inform me of the details surrounding the killing of three Inmates and the wounding of another by a prison guard at Soledad on Jan. 31. I have neither read nor heard a convincing Justification for these deaths. Best regards. Sincerely, John

l l i e deadline for haircuts, etc. is Feb. 16th, and we are going to refuse, under any and all conditions to do any cutting. What we need now is help. We n<ed the press to show Mrs. Omer to the public a s the prejudiced and unqualified person that she is. Wp need your readers to write to Mrs, O m e r and demand a retraction of the order. We need letters written to Congressman J a m e s Gorman indicating the contempt in which she must be held. This is a copy of the order To all employees Van Nuys Pont Office

Youngblood

Effective Feb. 1. 1970 (which has now been revised to Feb. 16th) the following becomes the official local policy regarding the matter of personal appearance with respect to beards, mustaches, sideb u m s and hair styles: Mustaches must be confined to upp^r lip

Dear Editor: If Gene Youngblood is convinced that the most important thing is to control one's temper, there is not much one can say. Personally I found his original statement <Nasty Habits. Free Press, J a n . 23) a deeply moving plea against the dangers of mindlcssness- Being a Celt, 1 have never understood t h e Anglo-Saxon's abject distrust of the pas-lion ate perception. His warnings wtire in the fine classical tradition of Ortega y Gasset, a n d no one h a s yet to call The Revolt of the Masses, written from the urgent immediacy of the fascist destruction of t h s Spanish Republic, a "nihilist spasm."

Beards must be confined to chin Sideburns are not to extend below the ear lobes Hair -^ no long hair styles. When it reaches the collar, it is time for a haircut. Note^ Webster's JJiclionary defines "chin" as follows: "That part of the face below the lower Up." All employees will be expected to conform to this policy, and all Superviflora will be required to enforce this policy under the provisions of the Post Office Department's Ready. Willing and Able procedures," Kay Omer, Postmaster As you can see, this is an obvious infringement of our civil rights. The American Civil Liberties Union is presently involved in the Ennis v. L.A-P,D- case and is unable to assist us at this time. Therefore, we would like to urge anyone who can lend assistance to do BOr The matter is urgent, and I hope that you can apply pressure in order to help us preserve our rights. T h a n k you very much. r Sincerely, Alan Irwin Oken

u
u

But Youngblood is not Ortega, a s his over-**teered self-refutation (Free Press, J a n . 30) proved, Ortega wrote: '*lt is illusory to imagine that t h e mass-man of today, however superior his vital sphere m a y be compared v/ith that of other times, will be able to control, by himself, t h e process of civilisation, I say process, and not progress. The flimple process of preserving our present civilization is supremely complex, and demands incalculably subtle powers. Ill-fitted to direct it is this average man who h a s learned to use much of t h e machinery of civilization, but who is characterized by root-ignorance of t h e very principles of t h a t civilization."

I wonder where I could apply for a $750 a month job as a peeping tom? Thanks, Peace. E.N.D,

In short, to build new human cities on deserts and plains, which is clearly needed, is going to take much more than "intuition," isn't it? And you don't get that kind of competence with self-indulgence and mystifications^ Youngblood w a s right t h e first time. If there be salvation, it will not come from mass-man. Sincerely, Florence Fitzgerald J ames

Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

Copy #A72 - Do Not Post - Do Not Copy

Febi-uary 13,1970

PM*81

Manson case: a fair trial?


A,J,STAPLETON CharleH Manson the name IB almoat eynonymouB with evil, deaih of the movt homhle type. Who could doubtthatMansonandhia "family" are ffuilty, not only of conspiracy and the Mven counta of murder, but poaaibly of other muHera as wdl? Yet Gary F1eischman Linda Kasabtan's lawyer, aaid in open court Jon, 20, "There is no evidence that Manson conspired to commit the Tate murders. He has a strons case. In fact, there is no evidenceagainat htm" Flnschman. a s one of the defense lawyers* h a s access to evidence that haa act become available to the public. Another lawyer as' aodated with the case said privately, "Usually by thie time you get at Least a hint of a defendant's guilt a latent fingerprint something which makes you feel your chent ia not totally innocent " but in thU ceqe, nothinR. Not a shred of phy&Lcal evidence ae far a^ I can tell." How did the world come to the conclusion (hat Manson ia aSvengali who hypnotized his associates and ordered them to commit infamous crimes? Obviously, through the prcaa^ From the daily ^ n t - p a g e detailed BtoritA of the L.A. Times through the cover of Life magazine showing a wild-eyed photo of Manson, a Story haa never gotten more thorough coverage, calculated to convict the defendants before they were even arraigned. But the press did not concoct the story, and it certainly had no detsctivea in the field discovering evidence. Thestory was leaked, and the only possible source of the leaks were d\e police, vherifF and district attorney's offlcoi. No one else would have such information. The Tim^v, CBS and KFWB knew who the suspects were and the details of the crime at least two weeks before the chiefof police announced them at a press conferenc. The Tate and La Bianca murders were undoubtedly among the most vicious ever committed in California-Evn the foreman of the 1969 grand jury said he was shocked by the detail*. The public, of course, is fascinated, and stories on the crimes sell newspapers. It would be difficult for aity reporter to resist publishing any detail- In that senas, the pros* is usbig it sources, but likewise, the sounxa may be using the press, manipulating the press into telling a one-sidsd story and giving publicity to COTlain indi' viduals. not want to lots the CM. To pleais him, a lawyer couM I) mH ask for a change of venue (which would automatically take the case away from L.A. and Keenc's court); Z)notxr< cise the single Judidal challenge a defendant has a right to, which would glvs Uie case to another L.A. judge; and 3) not stskforasvsranos, which would divids the cstss into several separats trials stnd alao divide the pubUci^For court-appointed attomsya. M Manson himauf haa pointsd oat in court, Kssn* haa choasn tonomt deputy district attorneys, with doss ties to the D.A/s office. One of Kssns's appointsss, Marvin Part.who repreaented Leslie Van Houghton (chaiysd only in ths two La Kanca deaths) two weeks ago went so far as to p^t himsslf on record as not going to ask for a diangs of venue or for a severance for his dienL His client, charged in ordy the two murdsrs, can hatdlv gain by having what la said abont the Tate case rub off on hsr during ths trial

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


On Manson's first appearance in court, he eapreseed his mistrust of the courts and legal processesLiater, it became even mora a[h parent that he mistirusted the particular judge assigned to his case, William Keene, but he did not want to explain why- Tht judge kept asking him. Finally. George Shibley. a lawyer and friend of Manson'Si stepped up to explain.
Itti HILARIOUS MONTH

JUIES mFFEES
VMr

"Abounds with vitality and cinematic invention! Surpasses similar efforts in 'The Graduate' and *Easy Rider'!"
TIMJ ^ACAZISt

- D A N SULLIVAN. L,A. TIMES

PKR COUPLE ^lOFF SUN. ONL-Y


II,. ,.,

I EXCLUSIVE WEST COAST ENGAGEMENT,

VAGABOND
509 WILSHIRE BLVD. DU 7-21

N{J W
'. M r n r i \ j \\ V\ XKj;

UNDERGROUND MOVIES
SATURDAY MIDNIGHT FEBRUARY 14i A VERY SPECIAL SURPRISE FILM CONCLUDES OUR VALENTINE SHOW:

Sorry, wo cannot advertise the title of the final film.

"Evil is a hassle when it's concesled wtthtn our lives.nEKDrcising the demonic power, eNposing tt t o the lite of abjective coociou)nes mrulou&ly affords us triumph over i t . " -B.G.

"TELESCENIC" "WINDOW PANES" "THE HUMAN RACE" By Dave Batterson By Peter Conn By Jeff Dell "MOTHER OF FIVE" "QUICK RISE" By David McLaughlin By Norman Gerard "SONG FOR MY SISTER" By John Klein

On the basis of audience ballot, this was the second most popular f i l m at the St. Lawrence Film Festival. The story of a young girl trying t o make it on her own in New York City.

CINEMe
39

Please Do Not Print


"THE VEINS IN JANE FLOW MAINLY WITH COCAINE" By Bob Giorgio
lOHO lA m>'fH(AlR[

"Mr. Manaon has heard that the district attorney wants to run for attorney genetal, and that you will then run for district attorney," he said- He explainsd ^ a t Hanson feared that the judge and district attorney would be attempting to get all the publicity possible out of Manson*s trial and would only bs interested in obtaining a guilty verdict, not in iusticeDuriikg the explanation. Judge Keene turned rad in the face and w u visibly upsetL^st week, DietHct Attorney EvcUe Younger announced his candidacy for attorney general- If he is elected, his post will be filled by appointment until the 1972 elsctions and Judge Keene haa not been ruled out of the '72 race- Manson'a fears have been at least partially confirmed at this point Judge Keene is apparently very eager to keep the case in his cour^ room. Knowing that he would be in Department 107 after the first of the year. Kerne angned Manaon and his co-defendants to trial in Department 107, aomething he would not have done if he did not have more than a passing interest in the case. Keene will certainly get a tremendous amount of free publicity from the case- As a matter of fact, he already has been quoted prorusely in the press and had his portrait drawn for television whenever Manson has appeared. Of course, since the public is convinced of Manson's guilt, only a tough stance and a guilty verdict will make Manson's judge popular with the people. Judges, of course, have the power to appoint attorneys for indigent defendants- More politics is involved in that than meets the eye. Quite a bit of money is involved in defending indigents at the county's expense, especially in a big case like this- To be chosen fiv>m the many lawyers on the list, an attorney must please the judge, and that leads to defense attorneys who run their case* as the judge wants them to.. In Hanson's caae, the judge does

His reason for not asking for a change of venue? "When I was in Hawaii recsiitly they bdd a trial in a bttle town and it was the bigsst thing that ever happened there. t was liks a drcus. That's what would happen if ttiis trial were taken (o Modesto.'^ "Do you even pTsaume this case vriU notbe ftont-page in svsiy town and d t y in the nation?" bs was asksd- "No," Part anawsred, -*but Loo Angsiss is more aophisticatsd. After all, the Sitban trial was also hdd here; ao pecwU hers are Isaa susceptible to publicity." Susan Atkin's lawysr, Richard Caballero, is another rscsnt sadeputy district attorney. Hs rspressntad Susan in a previous marder trial (the Gary Hinman case) but began advising her and making statements to the prssa before he was appointed to represent her in the Tate caae. Originally, another lawyer named Condon was appointed to represent Susan in the Hinman case and he had agreed to continue as her counsd for the trial. Normally, Condon would have had the cass. but Caballero was suddsnly substituted. For some reason of his own, he bad his client testify for ths sUta before the grand jury and also allowed her story to be published. The s d e of ths story is aaid to have netted Susan (aikd Caballero) thousands of dollars, but Suaan's money was put in a trust fund for her child, while the county taxpayere continue to pay 1 er lawyer's fees. Inddentally, Ridiard Caballero's law partner, Paul Csruso, hohts the "Annual Ev Younger Birthday Party." Is Charles Hanson a misunderstood saint? Hardly. He is an ofV convicted car thief^ a person who haa spent moat of his life in prison. He took advantage of the hippie movement to submerge himself after leaving prison, and he proved to be anti-sodal to say the least According to his friend Shibley, he is not capable of being violent When Shibley called Manson a "nice, likeable guy" everyone laughed, but he has been witty and essygdng in court. During his court psrformances, Msnscm is gentle, eoftspoken, and soeasdy intiniidated that his wouldbe lawyers are amatsd a t how the judge can force him to change his mind at times.

(Pleaac turn to page 3S)

CUIMINATl ANCHNT A N D M O D i R N L O V I O f U P M N I S i

Sspart AdmiMion: S2.00nui 26tf for msmlwnhkp card

W e s t e r n ft S e t t l e M o n i c a

P b o n e H O 7-5717

Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

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Pa<e^

February 13,1970

Loa Angeles F r e e Preea

Police attack peaceful G.I. anti-war meeting

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


A n d t h e n t h e Marines a n d t h e i r supporters sang w i t h her I've s o m e t h i n g t o die for 1 had b e e n t rave 1 1 rig a r o u n d t h e W h a t m o r e can they do c o u n t r y , a n d t h r o u g h Canada, Sweden I've something t o live f o r arKl Germany f o r research l o r i f i l m A n d h o w about y o u . a n d b o o k o n what is potentially t h e m a j o r story o\ t h e day I h e resisrance By n o w t h e cameraman was set. t o t h e military by draft age Americans^ Flood lights III t h e interior o f t h e W e h a d filmed i Barbara Dane c o n c e r t W a i t i n g R o o m , all focused o n t h e a n d rally t h e w e e k - e n d b e f o r e ai t h e inside o f t h e d o o r . T h e lieutenant O l e o Struts a coffee house i n K i l gave t h e order. Cops d r a g g e d t h e l e e n , Texas, |ust outside o f Fort civilians away f r o m t h e d o o r . T w o H o o d . T h e o n l y serious p r o b l e m t h e o r - cop charged f o r w a r d a n d kicked m\ttt% h a d there was w h e n t h e KKK and pushed ai r h e t w o doors. O n e f i r e d u p o n (heir car caravjin. d o o r gave; it was t o r n o f t its hinges. The cops stepped aside ai^d t h e SP W e h a d f i l m e d t h e early p a r i o f t h e charged in. O n e o f t h e m ^Tabbed a m e e t i n g at t h e W a i t i n g R o o m , a n d t h e y o u n g m a n . In o r d e r t o a v o i d a camera h a d b e e n p a c k e d away. N o w , serious mistake t h e SP a^ked t h e m a n , w i t h i t i e cops t h r e a t e n i n g t o break " A r e y o u i n t h e m i l i l a r y f " W h e n he d o w n t h e d o o r , X gestured frantically r e p l i e d i n t h e affirmative h e was t h r o u g h t h e w i n d o w f o r ( h e camerad r a g g e d o u t and t h r o w n i n t o t h e van. man t o unpack t h e camera a n d set u p T h e question had t o b e a&ked. If a b e f o r e the d o o r was smashed-1 t u r n e d civilian was charged w i t h U A t h e SP l o t h e lieutenant, " D o y o u have a w o u l d have b ^ n em harassed. Yet, search w a r r a n t ? " H e s n i p p e d back, t h e q u e s t i o n revealed m o r e d e a r l y " W e don't need o n e . " t h a n b e f o r e that there h a d b e e n n o suspect, t h a i t h e false charge o f U A was "Why not?" t h e agreed u p o n p r e t e x t t o break u p " W e have p r o b a b l e cause of a c r i m e the meeting. being committed in there." T h e SP retreated w i t h their priso n e r ar>d t h e streets a p p e a r e d t o b e e m p t y again. I t o o k a short walk a n d saw that ( h e area was still w e l l staked o u t by p o l i c e a n d SP, some o n f o o t , some i n vehicles, and all o u t o f direct view f r o m t h e W a i l i n g R o o m , They w e r e w a i t i n g f o r xhic C t ' s t o leave. T h e CI's i n t h e W a i t i n g R o o m w e r e hostages. It was apparent that as soon as they stepped o u t o n t o t h e street they t o o w o u l d b e arrested, searched, pushed a r o u n d a n d t h r o w n i n t o t h e vans, A p h o t o g r a p h e r *or t h e Srreet i o u r n a l , a n u n d e r g r o u n d 5an D i e g o newspaper, arrived o n t h e scene. " W h a t crime? By w h o ? " T h e c o p t u r n e d t o t h e SP a n d asked w h a t c r i m e they w e r e investigating. T h e SP l a i d , " T h e y have a sailor i n t h e r e w h o Is U A ( u n a u t h o r i s e d a b erKe)." The lieutenant t u r n e d back t o m e a n d said, " I f y o u don^t get t h e m t o o p e n t h e d o o r w e ' r e g o i n g t o break it down/' Several officers had t o have w i t nessed t h e c r i m e . T h e photographer t r i e d t o file a c o m p l a i n i w i t h Lt. Sturm. >he lieutenant laughed. I suggested that h e arrest t h e SP a n d entert a i n t h e c o m p l a i n t . H e laughed again. Thn t h e lieutenant l e d a p o l i c e charge i n t o t h e W a i l i n g R o o m . The d o o r , still u n h i n g e d a n d precariously leaning against t h e frame p r o v i d e d n o real obstacle this t i m e . W h e n w t o l d t h e cops t o leave, t h e lieuienant a n swered, " W e want t o see everyone's i d e n t i f i c a t i o n , " I asked w h y a n d h e r e p l i e d , "These p e o p l e are all p o s ' sible witnesses t o a c r i m e . " 1 t n l d h i m t hat n o o n e w h o was i n i he Wait! n g R o o m c o u l d have witnessed t h e c r i m e w h i c h t o o k p l a c e o n t h e street a n d several doors away. I also t o l d h i m that w e c o u l d p r o v i d e (he witnesses for h i m right t h e n a n d 1 urged h i m t o make an arrest b e f o r e t h e SP disappeared. Me g r i n n e d . I called Captain A l l e n w h o assured m e t h a i t h e l i e u tenant knew what he was d o i n g . TheSP w h o c o m m i t t e d t h e crime w a l k e d t h r o u g h t h e street, brushing past p o l i c e officers a n d left t h e scene. M e a n w h i l e , m e t h o d o c i a l l y , t h e cops d e m a n d e d t h e names a n d addresses of everyone i n t h e Waiting R o o m , c i vilian a n d G l , d r e w u p a brief descript i o n o f e a c h , height, w e i g h t , c o l o r o f eyes, w h i l e others c o p i e d i n f o r m a tion f r o m t h e bulletin board a n d calendar o f events. I've b e e n j a i l e d ir> jackson, Mississippi; I traveled t h r o u g h Spain: I was c l u b b e d a n d gassed i n Chicago a n d threatened w i t h death i n Dalfas. But, for coldly calculated pohce si ale d e stfuction o f basic r i g h t s , ! have never seen t h e equal of San D i e g o , O p limists or liberals may vie A Sunday night as an isolated instance, j u i t as N i x o n views i h e M y Lai massacre. Realists are c o m p e l l e d t o recognise What evidently upset t h e Navy a n d that M y Lai occurs each week a n d M a r i n e brass initially tivas t h e march has l o r years, and Sunday e v e n i n g i n o* almost o n e thousand CI's o n D e t . San D i e g o is part o f t h e same repres14. They had carried posters w h i c h sion at h o m e that has resulted i n i h i c r i e d , " B r i n g O u r Brothers H o m e ; m u r d e r of Black Panther leaders a Keep Us H e r e " a n d " E n d Racism w e l l as t h e as-aisinaiion o f e n Thrtjugh Solidarity." This, f o l l o w e d lightened moderates. by serious organizing efforts at San The recently released Seattle story D i e g o a n d near Pendleton threatened t h e totalitarian h o l d o f t h e military offers f u r t h e r p r o o f that t h e c o n over the m e n it commands. T h e news- spirators are n o t i n Chicago b u t <r papers published by t h e sailors at San Washington. D i e g o , Duck Power, and I h e Marines M a r k t.ane is o n t h e West Coast at Pendleton, A t t i t u d e C h e c k , are n o w . H e is annious to interview starting t o catch o n , a n d they r e p r e servicemen or veierans w h o have sent Just J w o o l t h e m o r e t h a n fifty wiinessed atrocities i n Viet N a m . u n d e r g r o u n d papers published by antiH e can be reached t h r o u g h t h e war a n d miLitary Gl's. They began to Free Press at 9J7-1970. r e m i n d t h e Mers that t h e p e o p l e , n o t lifers, built i h e A m e r i c a n military d u r i n g W o r f d War II t o fight Hitler 5 i a i ( } I t i L o n d o n as O B S C E N E I a n d his c o h o r t s . A n d t h e p e o p l e w h o W f i D e f e n d Y o u r R i g h t Tck See put the military together m a n by m a n can lake it apart m a n by m a n as w e l l . ItAsltWasFilnned T h e spirit o f t h e busted C I ' s is h i g h . They sang i n t h e van; i h e y chanted i n "NIGHT INTRUDER" i M a k e i Fanny Hill Btuthll "What's the name o f the suspea?" I asked. The Iteuienant t u r n e d t o i h e SP a n d said, " W h a t ' s his n a m e ? " The SP said h e d i d n ' t have any name. "We'll know him when we w e h i m , " he explained. 1 t o l d t h e l i e u t e n a n t t h a t t h e r e was n o reasonable cause f o r b r e a k i n g t h e d o o r d o w n since t h e r e was n o reasonO n e of t h e m e n i n t h e SP v a n heard able basis t o p r e s u m e that a c n m e was t h e radTO b a r k , " T r y t o get close b e i n g c o m m i t t e d . " A f a c e i s n o i U A . If e n o u g h t o grab t h e cameras and de-^ t h e m a n is w a n t e d f o r U A his n a m e Is stfoy t h e m . " The Street /otvrna' p h o t o k n o w n . " A t that p o i n t t h e SP, t h e g r a p h e r t o o k a p i c t u r e o f t h e t a l l , nerlieutenant a n d I all k n e w that t h e d o o r vous SP. The t w o SP m e n m o v e d m o n w o u l d b e b r o k e n a n d some i n n o c e n t h i m . O n e g r a b b e d t h e camera f r o m I s t o o d there ai o n e e n d o f t h e r o o m a n d said t o D o n D u n c a n , " D o y o u have t h e feeling that this is n o t happening? Thai it's a film? A n d it's about some o t h e r c o u n t r y f " D o n r e p l i e d , "Yes, T h e n a m e o f t h e f i l m is Z." After t h e police left a n u m b e r of Marines w a l k e d i n t o a V W m i c r o b u s in o r d e r l o r e t u r n t o Pendleton, The Shore Patrol m o v e d i n , s u r r o u n d e d t h e bus a n d o r d e r e d t h e m e n outThey w e r e searched a n d t h r o w n i n t o a small gray van built t o h o l d f o u r m e n . t i g h t m e n w e r e k e p t there f o r " D o n ' t f e i l t o see i t / ' N.y. New* & Viflwt

A l l e n . H said h e was s e n d i n g LtU\ntt\ {phorveiic) at o n c e . T h e lieutenant arrived a n d said t h a i I c o u l d b e released^ By that t i m e a n a r m y of cops a n d SP h a d g a t h e r e d o u t side t h e W a r l i n g R o o m . Sturm s h o u t e d through the door, " O p e n u p or we'll break t h e d o o r d o w n . " \ was o ^ i art t h e f l r e e t surrourKJed b y t h e local military p o l i c e . T h r e e civilians s t o o d in I r o i l o f t h e d o o r , feluctant t o leave t h e w a y o p e n f o r t h e cops, C a r o l y n Just k e p f s h o o t i n g away w i t h h e r t w o Nikons,

man dragged o u t of the meeting r o o m a n d t h r o w n i n t o a w a i t i n g van. W e also k n e w , all o f us, that n o o n e i n t h e r e was w a n t e d f o r L A o r any o t h e r c r i m e . As t h e c o p s p r e p a r e d t o smash t h e d o o r d o w n w e heard t h e strong v o i c e of Barbara Dane begin t o s i n g ; I'm g o i n g t o p r i s o n For w h a t I believe I'm g o i n g t o p r i s o n So I can b e f r e e

h i m . r i p p e d it o u t o f his hands a n d o f f of t h e chain a r o u n d hi^ neck Thai was attached t o it. H e h e l d it high i n t h e air a n d t h e n t h r e w it o n t h e g r o u n d . I ' b r o k e i n t o several pieces. T h e SP t h e n p i c k e d u p t h e largest remaining p i e c e and h u r l e d it o n t o t h e street again. T h e n , h e t u r n e d t o t h e startled p h o t o g r a p h e r a n d said. "Sorry about t h a t , " A n u m b e r of p e o p l e , i n c l u d i n g Carolyn, w h o photographed the episode, saw t h e c r i m e c o m m i t t e d . The p o l i c e w e r e o n t h e scene i n large n u m b e r s again.

almost t w o hours. N o d o u b t every C I w o u l d have been arrested as h e left themeeiingroomenceptfortheclever action taken by those remaining. Since t h e maneuver may bcdr repeating Jt ki b e l i e f n o i t o dta]l it at this t i m e . T h o w arresied were d e n i e d t h e righ (o make 4 t e l e p h o n e call, w e r e not i n f o r m e d of iheir righls, a n d n o t even rold o t the charges against i H e m . Finally, they w e r e d r i v e n t o t h e SP stat i o n in San Diego and jailed t h e r e , l h n d r i v e n l o the M a r i n e Corps Recruiting D e p o t i n San D i e g o a n d jailed t h e r e , t h e n taken by bus to t h e jail outside oi t h e Provoit Marshall's ofMce at Catnp Pendleton a n d p l a c ^ i n an o u t d o o r cage, 1 here d u r i n g t h e c o l d rain. Some o\ the m e n were released late M o n d a y afternoon. They had b e e n falsely arrested t h e night b e f o f e . Most had n o t been given breakfast o r l u n c h . They had not been p e r m i t t e d t o sleep.

t h e c e l l 5 ; a n d t h e y whistled t h e M a r i n e t l o r p s h y m n o n occasion. T h e A C L U ^as already arranged f o r a public meeting i ^ go o n 'February ~ - - " - In - San '"^- D ^ ^^ -' 24. I h o p e t o show m o t i o n p i c t u r e films o f t h e raid at that ttme. A lawyer is n o w prepared l o b r i n g an action against t h e p o l i c e a n d Shore Patrol i n the Federal c o u r t t o seek i n j u n a i v e r e l i e l . B U I the costs w i l l b e heavy. Funds can b e sent t o the M p M Defense T u n d in car of Support O u r Soldiers, 3B46 Ingraham Street, Los Angeles 90005.

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Even ehe saya that 'Tex" Watson told her that Manson said for her to commit the crimes; so it ia also possible that Tex thought up the murders and pretended it was Manson's idea, Lut, innocent or guilty, it is appalling that public officials ahould take advantageof a ready-made situation for their own gain, and that publicity should be making it impossible for Manson and the "family" to gel even u semblance of a fair trial

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Manaon may be absolutely inManaon la right, however, in saying he mitft be hii* own lawyer. nocent. There ia no evidence at The only antidote to the poisonouB this point except the atory of a pubbdty he has received ia Manson co-defendent. a girl with admithimaelf. quiet and gentle aa he tedly low moralB, who cunfessea uaually appen, Hhowing the jury throughout her story that she is hiB own peraonality without the confused or doesn't know truth from fantasy at times. intervention of the preaa-

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Page 6

February 27, 1970

Los Angeles Free Press

A letter from Charles Manson's friends at the Spahn Ranch


A black and whit helicopter Is making )ow wide circles over us h e r e ot the ranch, i t ' s hot, and w e ' r e letting the elf be wiggling around without his clothes, and h e ' s crawling all over Brenda who*B lying on a blanket, kissing hiro. It's a pretty pictureone ttiat has t>en called dirty, while we w e r e acc^ised of child neglect becaoBe the babies weren't w e a r inc anytiilng. Tliatelfleadsu&all, If n jttdng dos. thoughts, his xn^itlons were soft and l ^ h t , but I was afraldofhlm. He told me he had a good place for me to go, I hesitated. He told m e , ' 1 can't make up your mind for you,* and began to leave, Iplcked upall my insecurities and ran to catch up to him, and I never left. He had another girl with him, who 1 fell in love with, and then thre was ;uiother, and another and so forth, until s o m e guys came along, and fell in love with al! of us. ft goes on and o n , , . . So we know It's p o s sible to break down walls, d i s card jealousy and b ^ o n e l o v e , t o gether, [t*s simple, little babies could show us, T h e r e will be nci <juestl<in when you meet this man. He says It all when he sings. He is a holeinthe infinite and Infinity has no "philosophy* It Just Ts. The people haven't even had a glimpse of the games that (he I J , A ; S office plays. District Attorney stovilz called my parents to try to tell them that I "need to he put away' for two years. My parents and my lawyer a r e not going for it. The D.A. (Stovltz) said to them that If f was nut living at home and going to schiKil o r h<"ldlng down a job, Ishouldhe put away. m o h e r ' s fmnt d o n r t u m a k e t h e l r own lives, to do what makes them happy that in the straight world there TS such a thing as iielng TOO HAPPYrand that we a r e taught, by asscirlatlon, rri>m hlrth that bodies a r e hadi Flverybcdy sees 11, We've all been through the same teachings. All our parents' guilts have been laid upon us. Life is simpler and much m^^^e fun than the rigid systematic living that we have created for ourselves, o u r planet W A S H E A V E N before we Invented pri)gressand threw a lot of garbage on top uf pure earth. If you see technological "advance" as anecesslty, then it i s . If you s e e what Is h e r e , now. In front of yuur eyes, you will look nofurther. Tlieguve m m e n t Itself, Is shooting for a new planet. But this Is the one we've got, and it's a beautiful one.

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


Pcvie call Charley o u r l e a d e r ^^bvt In actuality, he's our best follower. He always checked to ft If <rreryone was h^ipy, if the bills wpre paid, and the toil e t s were scrubbed. He knew all tiie animals, and knew If they'd bven fed, end knew every v i s i t o r who wanted a C147 of coffee. He alsowas aware of every v i s itor wtKt wanted a piece of taJl, We all k n n r that everyone can t a k e c a r e of themselves. But you get eoiiie d n u k who s e e s abunch <rf f l r t e nwnltig around and d e c k l e s to g r a b oneand there w e r e loto of guys like that who c a a e to OBT house, pushing and g n b U J i f t h e n Charley o r o n e o f Uie g i r s votdd have to st^> vp and M l Ibena flitf we weren't running wtwTBiioBee and that either they t r e t f e d ee with as much love as t h e r d l d ^ o r t h e y should split, Charley, and the guys, treated H 1& battrfltee. I i i e l r comp M t t love mede them kings to us ilrls-bet nobody s e e m s to understand Chat'ni^y feel that there B t t r t b e e o m e s o r t of tyrannical rwle to w a r r a n t our constant attPtkKi,H Anrwar, Charley would a r a t f l r waDi arouad with the g r a b b m , K*^ them a. ciq> of coffee asd r i down to them that we all owe Btt^h other and that if we vft a c r a s h - p a d , some wotfld Jnet stumble In and c r a e b M a n ^kart. Oo you siqipose the manbehind the badgethe man behind the symbol of beasthas ever had a brother^ or loved another man? Together" they s t a n d - i n uniformswhile they fight to move up in the line of authority, to gel each other's ^ b s , . . . and so, life goes on and r u m o r s float around and come to us. People a r e maklc^lots of money on articles they w r i t e from five-minute conversatl^ins with Charley, Not only a r e t h e conversations awfully short tn encomp a s s the lengthy articles that come out, but what they do hear come from his mouth is so often m i s - r e m e m b e r e d and what comes out In print Is but a reflection of the w r i t e r , who writes to excite and intrigue the r e a d e r l o t s of spice a n d ' p e r s o n a l style*-^you know. keeps on going, We all have a heavy case of the al>ove condition. We a r e each other's mothers and fathers and brothers and s i s t e r s and cousins and, relatively, everything. They got a lot of these people separated from us through fear. They did it to each one of us. Little by little we all began lo snap that living together Is worth all the harassment theywant to put on u s , and that If you can't live with thepeopleyoulovewllhoulthepjillce department getting anguished over it, o r trying topull you apart and stick you in UtUebuxes of your own like everybody e l s e s o m e thing's really ifl>. You've all read those science fictions lories about the future. gays could dig it and came Bd some ^ y s would go n r a 7 as beUlfferent as they came, telklnB i b o # C h a r t e r s harem" a w ] - w h o d o e s he think he I s ? Clivieydoeen*ttel} people what t o doL They do what they want to do. b tMA, the first time I met b l m , my father bad kicked m e out oi Ills bonse, I was sitting on a s t r e e t c o m e r at nl|[hl in Venice. Charley poiiped 9 , s m i l l n g , s a y I n ^ b e tniew Jtvtwhat my problem Be seemed to know my People like this, when askedfor help for Charley^s defense say things like"Oh, f thouc^t you w e r e all millionaires and lived in s o m e old castle o r mansion somewhere . . . " Those a r e the words of afeHowwhomadeagood five thousand off of Charley, and then said he couldn't h e ^ us with any bread. If s 0,K., though. See, we've gottfcn into giving money away whenever we've got it, and w e ' r e dumb enough to believe that t h e r e a r e awhole lot of other peop l e who do ttte sameIn fact we know it. Charley once gave away fifteen thousand dollars In a week, A girl came along, met us and drew out all her money. Was she hypnotized? Tlireatened? 1 b e lieve I can speak for her and say that she fell in loveterrible thing, you Just can't control it, it Anyway, some of our people need lawyers, and ball money and just candy money even, which we supply them with whenever we've got It. We, on the outside, live pretty much on what people throw awayand it would likely s u r p r i s e you what people throw awayl We've b ^ n living for three y e a r s on it. Really we'veallbeen thrown away cne way or another. Money, to us, is for spending. Up until now all we used It for was to buy candy, ajidgjve away. Nowadays in carrying on all the d e fenses, alt money goes fast, and the only defense left to Charles Manson IS THE MUSIC, This Is what they have already done to a number of Charles Manson's witnesses. They have 16year-old DIanne (Snake) mpatton Mental Hospital, They kept her in solitary for two months and tried to drive her crazy by interrogating her constantly under bright lights, I know, Tve t>een therel l AM t h e r e . They also have a young boy named Rocky. Theywentandconvlnced his mother that he needed to be put away and given t r e a t ment, su h e ' s In the s a m e Institution. 1 got a letter from Snake saying that She saw Rocky at a dance In the hospital, but that they'd put so much thorazlne In him, he could hardly stand up. Iliey'velabelled him ' p s y c h o t i c - p a r a n o i d - p s i chopath," AS for the paranoid who isn't, with the things they're doing to p e t ^ l e nowadays! They got two psychiatrists to sign their names on the dotted line, brainw a s h ^ his mother, and now can do whatever they want with him. TTiey can keep him for life if theywant to, "Hie thing that blows my mind i s that anyone can point a finger at You and Me,gettwosignatures of almost anyone, and then do whatever they like with us! Nobody wants to look at the Truth. If something is frightening enough to you, you usually dismiss it from your consciousness. How long will we dismiss the Truth? How long will we pretend that ' t h i n g s like thatdnn'thappen In America?* It's really a sad case how WE THE PEOPLE . . . abuse the young. It's really a strangely overlooked fact that children a r e put down, shut up, and locked up for loving themselves, for walking out their In fact, 1 was thinking the other day, the guy who sang "fur purple mountains m a j e s t y , , , ' was standing In the middle ofheaven-a clean, new wilderness, under an ever-changing sky. Now that song Is a ^oke. If everyone were to make this TTielr landa frightful hard thing to take responsibility forbut if everyone saw it as their ownland and took care of it as their own, the place would go throygh alut of changes. It's the young that will accept 11, So come to the t r i a l s your trials ajidseewhat'sgolng on. It's open. Come on In. To come back to the present; All of Charley's Consillutlonal Please turn to Page ZZJ So If you want to put out some, we surely accept. We have a box number in Chalsworth. It's Box *626, You'll know where to reach u s I know you're out t h e r e . The music of Charles Manson speaks truth. It Is tuned to a Universe, It SHOWS the gentlenes^s ofaman willing to give allsongs like Everyone who la the one, is alookln' for the last door , , , songs of the desert, of revelations, of things happening right now, of children old as the moon.

TWO DAYS AFTER-a comment on the demonstrations


(Cowttpuad from P a ^ e 6) of good vibes and music. Some ol ijiem had beeun t o think about socialism, but not for t o o long. Words, ideas, manifeitoa-tlKHe arc the old days. We want clion. " F r e e d o m / ' say Ihe W e a l h c m e n . qnottUft Hegel or Mant, "is the recognilioa of necessity. Necessity transforms i t t f into freedom. Right now violence is neccBary to smash Ihe stale, and we love Twlmce because il is necessary, twcause It aiMAa freedom." f i ^ l and Marx turn uneasily in their p i v c s . In tbe State arsenals the pigs and tbeir o r e n c e n prepare for the bailie. They have 1 strategy clearly worked out. They know what they want. They want to siwtth the rebellion. The courts havtf d o n e , and will do their pari. Now heads CMi be smashed more freely. The public opiojon polli validate Ihe strategy and the Uciics of Ihe tactical squad. It is their game. And they aie no less brave than the rebels. The ex-green twrels. now memb e n of police forces, smile and shake each other's hands before the buttles. Still frustrated about their inabihfy to wipe out the gooks over there, they can now turn their violence on other enemies. the lmiK-t*ured. spoiled brats. No uleas emerge. The brilliance of Tom Hayden's rhetoric and ihe penetrating wit of Abbie Hoffman, which had taught cntical, t o rebel, is now l o s t - t e m p o TOily-in the violence-which also t o m e s from the rhetoric and wit. The minority of y o u t h that feels the daily outrage of life in the U.S. moves itself further away from Ihe vast nwjorily of Americans who i h o feel it, but cannot accept window TWM*hiiig and pig bombing as an adequate aacwer. Their sense of futility remains, but tto ideas, no visions, no ideals come forth. Only more violence to threaten t h e v , Only Reagan and Wallace l o speak lor t h e n . Smash the state scream the icbeis. Keactn and Wallace, in more calm and ible tones, come on the leevee and in their well>understood euphemisms, state: "Smash these rebels," The viewers undeistand: smash the longhaired, nigger, spic, commie^ jew radicals. They are somehow t o blame for the malaise, the alienation, the pollution, the taxes. Violence has lieen necessary ifi all revolutions. The ruhng tlass nevtr gives up ils power without a bloody fight. But revolutionary violence has as ils end Ihitaking of slate power lo bujld a new society. In Russu, China. Korea, Violjiiim and Cuba the revolution sutct'odtd because the rulers had losl their ahihly t o control through Iht'ir ideas and Ihe majority of the peoplesympathmcd wjth Ihe revolution's goals and ideals hrccdom, peate, bread, l a n d - l h c i c mc^ni something concrete, j n d the masses knew
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The Chicago seven were tried for their ideas and for attempting to carry our those ideas. They showed what a mockery the "democratic process" was. They also advocated a new freedom, a new life style. This turned on thousands of young people. But it was only a t>eginning of n long process in which millions of Americans must become convinced thai Ihe system, corporate capitalism, and ihe stale, the arm of that system, must be smashed and replaced by a new one, socialist, with good vibes, brotherhood* unalienated work. The anger and rage are in everyone in this country. Bui those emotions must be translated into thought and revolutionary action that can show hundreds of millions of people who is the oppressor, how he oppresses, how the mind fuck works, how the great shuck is put over. The rulers are clever and their court system still functions, with all of its appeals and trickery. Hundreds of people will be arrested soon and wit! appeal to (he public thai ihey are innocent, and what they are fighting against is imperialism, racism and exploitation. Bui they will be charged with malicious
M
" v ^ -

mischief, assauJl, and perhaps murder Many will be hooked for conspiracy and new trials will begin. The system lias lots of rime and money. The police have lots of weapons. Perhaps some people wi!r begin to think about Ihe new sociely and what it would d o for olher people in il, " H o w does it feel?" screamed an angry man on the street lo the mob " G r e a t . " said a brother. "Take a brick and throw it through a window. This'll teach them that they can't fuck over u s , " The seven,'plus Bobby Scale, plus two brave lawyers, will serve time. They have fucked over us once again. We have not hurt them. Six pigs are wounded and hundreds of windows-broken "Greal " says the plate glass industry. 'Terrific," says Governor Reagan. "Unleash us now."scream the pigs. Has the response to the trial and the contempt sentences shown millions of Americans what a farce the "system" is? Or has It further narrowed the movement, isolated it from its -base, the majority of oppressed people? * Tin' TM't' M'twmvnl in'oph- gvf ti nJe from Hvrki-ky in tin.'iny. A lortyhatr ma ptiiiiii'ti VW bus haK piiU'd thctn up. "Whal hupiH'neif inun'" ^'Wt' showi'U ilivnt l/iey mit t fu<k over ii\. Thv nvi'iutuw i\ rm. nmn. rixhr fierf in the srn'i'ls. We're irwd thv ^y.\Uiti mtd found /fie'ii)iuifry. " "What was thexftitemv, tnun' ' Thi Mivi miiyetiivnt people ttitik at i-nch other. They are tired and one <}f them has

aeuion his hand. "The \er\Tefile. nv//. . . '*' hroke bank uitufoHs Wi'vi' \hoitfd thein that ti they dcfiue us a^ triminais fike fhey Jtd in ChieUfio (hen We 'II ditch the whidr notion of ertrnv. t:\er\-Uunfi thev Jfi IS ertmmti! and more and more ptt'phknowv. " The driver of the VWhus pjithfrorn hn P"*ket u wiirnand wrinkled enpv 0// iu Shao-ehYx How lo Be a Good Communist. The iw/i movement people read Ihe underlined parts. "f he good Communist wants "to reform mankind into the eompletelv selfless citizenry of a Communist wnietv. " Heor she "ean love and hate people. " "//c ui// never do to others any Ihinfi he wnutd nm like others to do lo him /refcrrmg lo his etimrades and potential comrade^/ fit' will grieve long before the rest of the world grieves and he will rcfoice only aflef the rest of the world has rcfoieed."' The two stare straight antad .nii' tlic If^ffit lam on the Bay Hridge. at the angry moton'sls who faee the eornmuie eyery day. "Man. this is tupitalism and we g'ttia gel ourselves together and huild the revolutionary movemeni. "saysttne. *^lt fell good breaking those Bank of Ameriia windows. '\{aystfie other. Thousandth "t ytung people listen to the radio and {eel a comhined and fleeing sense of strength and desperation from Ihe aciions in Berkeley. The Day After is ovet-. Some people feel lliat the revolutionary movement is a hitle more together than it was the day before, '^How are we gonna reach all Ihose peopfe ' ' says one. "t don 'r know ihe answer, man." says the driver of the bus. ^'hul / don 'r think we ean keep breaking windows all year. " i't Chicago the furv is still deadlocked. ^ednesdav. Februarv fH. 1^70. Two Dava Alter. R ^ r l n t e d by permission of the author from "Good Times," San Francisco

Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

Pftge22

February 27, 1970

Los Angeles F r e e P r e s s

Letter from Spahn Ranch


{Continued from Pag^ ti) Rlfhta M his own tttorniy have bn taken avKyi On of the most bftstc nglitsFree ^>eec1ihas bn dDled him, vhlle everyone from the Judge to the D.A., Co bupector Welsh oi ^ e jail, have spoken w they wished. Charley spoke to somw news media over the telephone 'designated for his defense;* and was thrown insolltarv confinement fortt.HlS|Aone *prlvllgea' were cut completely. His H A I L was cut completely. And^ In solitary* you mayheveno visitors. In Independence^ months ago, when Charley wanted to speak publicly, the Inyo County Sheriff forbade It for "security precautions.* Now, Judge Keene says that the gag rule Is to Insure that Charley says nothing'detrimental to himself' What could be detrimental alter all that's been written? The Judge has had Charley In solitary fortwoweeksnow. First Charley was toId'Uwasbecause of mid use of his phone privileges. Then he was told It was because he didn't eat their Food, not t J ^ e d , Yet, In Charleyslaat call he wa^ cut off. They play some funny games in therelike one particular order that Charley wanted to see was l o a f by the day shift, foundlate at n^ht when he couldn't have it, and ' l o s t ' agAln the next day, Charley made a motion for discovery (dl^lay of evidence against him. it took weeks for them to bring this evidence before Mm, We know what they're trying to use as evidence against him and would certainly like to disclose lt,butthegagrulemakes it impossible. The Judge granted thatCharley could see co-defendants, providing he had written permission from THEM AND THEIH LAWYERS. It would be easy to get permission from the defendants If he had means of communication. Some of the lawyers are another matter, Cabellerosaysthat Susan would choose not to see him, so he need not even bring the subject uptoher. Tliestipulations of thewrltten permission are only one-sided. Charley asked that ir the co-defendants did not wish to see him, thai aslgnednotesaylng so from th^mbedellverodtohim. This was denied. Numerous times the excuse for not allowing someone to visit the defendants has been they don't want toseeyoc," (Please turn to Page 23)

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STREET ACTIONTWO demonstrations are scheduled by the Gay Liberation Front of LOS Ang^lM* All Gays and freedom-loving p e r s o n s are urged to participate, Lavendax Sunday Time: March 1, 10-30 a,m, to 1:30 p.m. Place: F i r s t Congr^atlonal Churt^li, 540 Commonwealth, in the Wllshire district of Los Angeles, Why: lo protest the genoeldal attitude and acts of organized religion to the cay people and demand S90 billion in reparations. Type: Picketing of the FirstCong Church and other churches on WUshtre Boulevard as people arrive and depart for church senrlces. Demonstrators are urged to wear lavender cloth-

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tn his talk with the media, Charley spoke of himself, not of the case. His own voice is theorUy thing that can counter the mons t e r picture which has been painted in Imaginative detail for monthspainted only because the press was limited to one side of this esse. Whatever the reason, each officer can always say that he doesn't knew, A funny thing, though. Is that Judge Keene gave the order, andswltchedlttomake It look like Chief Krammer did It, Chief Krammer, himself, told us that the proper telphones were

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GLFLA to attend the caysymposlum March 27 to April 4 in San Francisco as a group,

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GLFLA MEETING like Feb, 23 GLFLA mi^etlngwas attended by about 35 people. Afemale homosexual was elected chairwoman for the month of Msrch, Hie Peace and Freedom Party convention was reported anddlscussed. It was stated that GLF should not consider the accepts ance of the Gay Liberation issue by the Peace and Freedom party a major victory as thoPAFJsthe one political organization that would be most responsive to Gay Liberation, It was suggested that GLF now attemptloinJecttheGay Liberation issueIntootherpolitical oi^antzatlons such as the Democratic and Republican parties as well as the Socialist and Communist parties which can be considered more antagonistic to the Issue, A report on the planned April 5 Gay-ln* to be held In Los Angeles was made and the need for more persona to volunteer for entertslnment was stressed. Minstrels, dancers, musicians, artists and other pe<9U are needed. Plans are also being made for

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but nothing tn vritlng hM ever been Alftned by thm. We know thv would not revise to see us. In court Monday, a numbAT of motions were brought t>efore the Ju<tge, very valid motions In BLCcordance with lw procedure, which we would like you lo see. They were, of course, denied. As for ittfWeve Just beginning lo see. W < were met with disillusionment vears ago whenweflrsi discovered that the court h u nothing lo do with tustice. Thre Is no love in that court, no God In the machinejust a lot of big words that swear to God, and sttig nate life. And In weeding through the meanings of those big words, with alt their giiUant, clever cuts to the man on trlal-^lo the men speaking rorthemselvtaralhar than administering Justice, they make the court Into a glidiaior ring.

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Febraury 27, 1970

Pafe9

In criticism of Jerry Rubin

'No' to circuses, No' to clowns, 'No' to Rubin

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There ia iin old quotation, source unknown to me, but il H^ea "Controversy equalizes fools flnd wise men/' I would paraphrase it to "Controversy can equalize fools and wise men" and apply it lo the Chica^fo circus, Rubin has removed himsdf from the battle, although I can appreciate that he may think he can luuKh Julius ri^ht off the bench. But by hecominn an auto graph-d I Spenser, proud of his "fan mail/' boasting of how "everybody plays his part perfectly" a s if Ihey "came out of central castinK," Rubin has removed himself from the original down unearth facta in thv battle against P'aseism. An ciut^tundinR habit of Hoffmun-typc meniulities is the ust of diver Hion, always manuKiog to ^et lightyears Hway from the gljiring and Hiifnifii^jknt details nf Fascism. And, so sadly it works. It gets the minds of Americans off the billy clubs and onti the Innff hair. It traps you into defending yourself <n an irrelevant, safe level. So Hubin joins in such leveling diversion^ like the ntdeo clowns distract the bulls from more impirrlunt huppeningri. l.evel out all differencew between prosecutors and defendants. CieC the minds, the ears, the eyes, the sympathy of Americans away from the real events. Clowns are fools, not wise men, when they allow controversy tn turn them into wist guys. Wise guys behave like eight year old schoolboys, yell "talllelale" at the lawyers and pile up theii candy wrappers. If Ruhin and Company think they are "really" subtle and sophisticated and just want lo show up the farce of th< conspiracy charge and trial that is not a trial, they do not ac complish this aim by being as stupid as their opponenta. If th* "joke" goes over the heads ol everybody and even floats out of control of the jok esters, what then? Backlash comes from peo' pie so damned confused by distraction and the stupid tactics o1 the defendants that their utten^ tion is permanently diverted to all t h e trappings of t h e silly circus Showing h<jw much you are Ukf your opponent would confusf anybody, especially since it helps renilpr the word "opponent" meaningless. Under the circum stances, what tiny chance is there that what is covered up can ever emerge? David McKeynoldfl of t h e War Rcsistera' Ijeaguc is rart- in his being HO conscious of the dangers of the whole self-righteousness route. He has written of how he is tired of being the "wise guy/* of how the "desire to prtjve how sophisticated we are" is "a vice Rubin threatened to urinate on an attorney. Swell, How short some memories art. The early civil rights demonstrators down South didn't Bet only ketchup down their backs. I'll never forget how I felt reading about one of those incidents. What kind of people "expressed" themselves this way? If Rubin on one hand says he is more morale or more right than his e n e m i ^ , how the Hell does he prove t h i s by imitating them? Or does Rubin believe, as expressed so vividly by the likes of J a m e s Bond, or other CIA types, that the "Good guys can do anything for the 'good side'?" '^any means necessary" you know. Or in our glorious Star-Spangled Not only can the right onea become the wrong ones, but the right and wrong become inundated by the garbage of words that deviate from the events. How brilliant piss on everything a n d forget about Fascism. But "^Piss on ynu" is a far cry froxn "Peace on earth" and Hubin has tak^n a fatal step in going from Peace to PisB. That is real deviation, real perversion, getting off the (rack and forming a milhon abstractions piled on top of one another- Rubin's garbage about "fan mail" is such perversion. J u s t like pollution now being called "a glamour issue" it no longer stinks nor offends the eye it's just an "issue" that abstraction will never settle. Gobble it up and make money out of it. If Rubin thinks he is, or at least was better than "them," more right than Hoffman, how can he think that repeating their tactics could prove it? George Orwell h a d Animal Farm published in 1946. The insidious way the over-throwers of tyrants become tyrants themselves is old stuff, but Orwell knew it somehow doesn't slick in the mind long enough lo make us act on what is there in the bathroom mirror. So Rubin thinks it's cute to yell at Mayor Daley "Do you rape your daughter?" Let us assume that Rubin is against rape, maybe because of the incongruity of negative and positive behavior. Why then does he himself try to combine exploitation with "love?" Rubin says he and his friends indulge in "guerilla attacks on the >udge^s psyche." Blah. If you want guerilla tactics, take heed of Nietzsche's warning: Even the hatred of squalor Makes the brow grow stem. Even anger a^aiost injustice Makes the voice grow harsh. Alas, we Who wished to lay the foundations of kindness Could not ourselves be kind, He who fights with monsters should be careful lest he thereby become a monster. And if thou gaze long into an abyss. the abyss will also gaze into thee. Rubin has slipped from the status of victim to that of executioner. What Albert J a m u s meant by being "Neither Victims nor Executioners" was the third altemativet being neither. And the most urgent message for all of us: when we stay in a rut and don't see the way out of both these categories, the two blur. It is too easy to leave one category for the other when the two are connected by a doorway of selfnghteousness.

HELENMcKENNA I see that Jerry Rubin h a s fallen into an crld trap. In his report on the Chicago "Conapiraiy" Trial. Rubin lelU us how he is enjoyinK himself be<:ause *'it'a fun/' the circua atmosphere he and Julius Hoffman are conspiring to create. Of CouTfle JuliuB and Jerry, Jerry and Julius, do mit "conspire" really^ but if two human did bit down deliberuti^Ly to create such a spectaden would it be much different in its consequences? I suppose "cooperation" between Julius and Jerry is a better word than '^coOBpiracy."

radicals have accepted With a vengeance/' He suggests that choosing sides "destroys our ability to see ull men impartially." I wonder if this is like saying "all is fair in love and war," that playing dirty seems inherent and necessary in playing at all. But if we accept the idea of playing dirty, how can we claim to be against somebody else's dir'y game? If it is so precisely human lo play dirty, maybe we had better strive to be in-human, or at least ascend to another plateau of hu man evolution.

Banner, the same sentiments, *'Conquer we must when our cause it is just?" Or how about that grand fellow Mussolini who truly believed that there is " . . . a violence that liberates, and a violence that enslaves . . . a violence that is moral and a violence that is immoral?"

real status of being largely right in the beginning, become selfrighteous and obsessed with "other-wrongness." the evils of the enemy, the absolute wicked' nesB of their Devil opponent. Some lines from a poem by Bertolt Brecht ore oaf thi* "subject." this *']BSue" liftt concerns concrete objects hke human heads that hit the concrete in Chicago:

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HELP AN INNOCENT MAN FIND JUSTICE IN AMERICA
CONTRIBUTE TO T H I

But Rubin h a s trouble with categories. He says it is all simply a matter of Death versus Life, America versus its children. Yet when Rubin imitates totalitarian tactics (read sometimes of the courtroom antics of John Birchers, slamming seats and interrupting), then it is more of the same, then it's two in collaboration, two agreeing to entertain the public one goal, one consequence the diversionary, equalizing circus, I reject that entertainment; it doesn't make me laugh, L makes me think of George Orwell and Nietzsche and Mussolini, Rubin hasn't been allowing "reason versus unreason" or "Good Guys versus Bad Guys" to flow forth naturally from t h e trial (as a secondary outpouring, rather than a contrived, prime purpose). The line between Good Guys and Bad Guys melts when the wronged oncFi throw away their

1 think we could sulwtitute for the word "kindness" in the above a lot of other words: ''freedom," "democracy," reason. Rubin chucklea over his "contempt of c o u r l " It is not any stupidly and legally-defined contempt of the "court" t h a t is so vital, but such contempt for a n opponent that you remove h i s humanity, first by word, then by deed. It is not simply a battle between Life and Death when we get down to details, but a battle between falling into the "Animal Farm" t r a p a n d constant, everyday awareness of that trap. This alternative of awareness may in the end be the only halfway decent definition we have of "good guys." of not being overpowered by such all-consuming contempt-fear'Swe, whether pursuing a Moby Dick or a Julius Hoffman or any "Enemy.' (Maybe what scents so impossible for us is what 1 called "inhuman,'^) Rubin says there is a "language gap." According to his example, 1 maintain that Jerry is once again co-conspirator with Julius Hoffman, [ realize that here 1 have very few who agree with me, outside of a few "psychologists of sex" with the surname of Ellis, plus some linguists like Sagarin a n d Whorf. Here is the "issue": Tom Haydcn said "Let's fuck up the convention." Rubin thinksthis is revolutionary, healthy language and with a lot of other people, would call me the "prude," But, when the word "fuck" Is used in turo ways, as positive and n ^ a t i v e acts, negative feelings rub off onto our sexual attitudes. Derogatory feelings about the human body are perpetuated by the contemptuous use of the word "fuck'* as a dutractive act. Our language reveals what we are afraid to admit. There is no "language gap,' at least not "between" the pornography of "fucking-bn a s t y " - H o ^ a n and "fucking-is' naaty"-Tom Hoyden. It is still Puritanism, still on Julius Hoffman's side. T h e Berkeley "Free Speech" Movement was only halfright. Making "fuck" only a nice word could be revolutionary. But with its present shifting, double meaning, it U reactionary, Puritanism is tenacious^ Again. Rubin shows his contempt, not simply for the law or the court, but for the human bodv and for life itself So Julius Hoffman is going "to

die of a hsart attack." What n l l y wishful thinking. Does Rubin know how many youns Hoflknwu there an, ready to n p l w him? All the 24-ycar old Minutemen a n d Nixon aides ore not about to katA over from heart attack*. Neither are all th young lafliMt who do more to dfet their own caue than any senile Hofbnan could doWhat is Rubin doing to publidse the day^by-doy inotoncM. th concrete reproMive acts of thoot Minutemen and Nixon men? With t h e aid of their young hooito, thy are probably l a u g h i n i out loud at the diversions of Jervy Rubin and the circus trial that OBTV** oa a cloak, putting certain peoplt out of the game while PuM^iem runs r a m p a n t What is Rubin doing to defeat our inUmal enemy our lack of sdf-crltidsm and exceoa of elf-rightoouaneas? How is Rubin displaying traits that put him aboue the level of the Hof&nant? " U k e a baseball game." aoya Rubin. It's more like the baoketball of the Globetrottcra a n d how "seriously" we rooct when one of them cries "Poul." And the "boy who cried w o l f ohifled the rules around where did it get him? Why can't Rabin play one game, a serious one, not autographscribbling a n d fan-mail reading? While Rubin i having such "Ain," what happens to the doily instances of FoBciam judges, schoolteachers, tary butchers and the by cops, "man-next-door" who our miliAmric*n them? How can the irrationality and the paranoia that madecondones certain laws like "con^iirades" ever be painted out if the same type of paranoia is indulged in by RuUn? If Rubin ever 14/0* trying to say we are "better than them," descending to their level does not prove it; it contradicts i t Jerry says "Juliua Hoffman is a hippie judge." 1 think Jerry Rubin is a "hvkging judge." Was Hogon'^ Htroet the first attempt to reduce Foadam to a barrel of laught?

"We control the whole t h i n g " boasts Rubin. No. Rubin h a s been taken; he is being controlled. If Rubin and friends had let Hoffman's side play the fool and show Hoffinan's side up by controst then Rubin could say ^ e y are "in control," Instead. Rubin aays "w< like are constantly insulting themi attacking them, and thnvwing them off guard." Yet Rubin d o i m a to uphold our Constitution. Is this some new switch on "defending to the death your right to say it?" It's pretty plainly totalitarian a n d not very much Constitutional unleos Rubin is talking of the Conotitu^ tion of the Third Reich, Jerry went through the doorway from victim to executioner so that now you can't see much difference between him a n d the "hanging judge/' "We're going to drag a pig into the courtroom and sec how far we get," says Rubin. I a m reminded of t h e very last word* in Orwells AnintU Farm: "The creatures outside looked from pig to man. a n d from m a n to pig. and from pig to m a n again; but already it was impoooible to say which was which-"

THE GOLDEN BEAR


MARCH 3rd-8th

MONDAY -

HOOTS

HOYT AXTON & ROY HARPER


(FROM ENGLAND)

CHARLES MANSON DEFENSE FUND


P : 0 . BOX S2S

27th 28th & MARCH Ist

SMOKESTACK LIGHTNIN'

CHATSWORTH. CALIFORNIA
WUD AOVWITII

Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

Copy #A72 - Do Not Post - Do Not Copy

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press Please Do Not Print


44 Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

^geZ

March 1 3 . 1 9 7 0
Copy #A72 - Do Not Post - Do Not Copy

Los" Angeles Free Press

Student Bar condemns DA's protection of cops w h o kill

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


A Cordner*s Inquest w a a h e l d and determined by a split vote that the death o c c u r r e d by criminal means. Then It was Eve He Younger's t u r n . As District Attorney, he had the choice of proceeding by Information and complaint, having the killer a r r e s t e d and p r o c e s s e d through a preliminary hearing (the treatment r e s e r v e d for cUlsens) o r of proceeding by way of the Grand J u r y . Younger chose the latter route and evidence about the crime was presented to the Grand Jury m a closed session by the D , A / s deputies. S u r p r i s e , the Grand Jury failed to r e t u r n an indictment. Thai was all Younger needed. Ke declared the case closed, " I t wouldn't be right for me to proceed when the Grand Jury has decided not to i n d i c t / ' Please note in this connection that when an ordinary citizen commits a homicide and the Coroner's Inquest finds death by criminal means, Younger takes the position that it would not be right for him not to proceed. The cop was c a r r y i n g a dangerous, unauthorized semU automatic weapon. He admits to t h r e e or four b e e r s immediately preceding the raid (an a r m e d drunk hunting for people smoking grasswhat obscene irony!!) and how much more he really had is a matter that could be questioned. Alt the witnesses describe the killer as waving his weapon around in an abusive and threatening manner, Tt discharged and killed an entirely innocent third party. Negligent homicide is a felony in this state. The Coroner*s Jury thought it was a criminal killing. Yet Lynn Compton dOesnM think the evidence strong enough to convict. What a delightful contrast to the attitude his office takes when an SDSer o r a Black Panther i s accused of s o m e thing. Then the most trifling evidence is sufficient lor a no compromise^ no holds b a r r e d prosecution. The Student Bar Assocfation's statement explains, "While we do not consider the guilt or innocence of Officer Sweeney, we do question the failure of the District Attorney to issue a criminal complaint against him so ttiat a proper determination of guilt or Innocence can be made In a court of l a v . There i s every Indication thai the probable cause for such action exists. The failure of the District Attorney to issue a complaint automatically places the actl<^s of Officer Sweeney above the inquiry of the law. This is the minimum demanded of our judicial system," The student's statement c m eludes, "A case that r a i s e s fundamental questions of the law and its enforcement is not one to he decided in the privacy of the District Attorney's Offlces.' ~ All that Is really not s o m e thing new.TheOistrictAttorney In this County routinely covers up questionable police homir i d e s and the entire establishment, the legal profession m d u d e d , lets him get away with LI arlthout so much as a comment. This lime, however, the Dfs;t Aitorney*s willful failure to carry out the law when cop killings a r e involved 15 so patent that he has s t i r r e d up a storm of opposition. The Student Bar Associations of u s e , UCLA and Loyola Schools of Law have jointly Issued a statement condemning Younger's disposition Of the Dyer c a s e , staling, " W e feel that It is representative of a growing trend which is placing law enforcement atx>ve the law. Such a trend is unhealthy and tends to create

MtCHAELHANNON On October 3, 1969, Heywood Dyer waa atandinff in his a p a r t ment holdli^ t n Infant, lli the apartment overhead, VerntMi Police Officer Frank Sweeney was c o n d u c t i n e a n a r c o t l c a r a i d j fortified with t h r e e o r four beera and a r m e d with his own AR H-16 semi-automatic rifle. The rifle went off, the bullet p n e t r a t a d floor and celling and Dyer w t a kUled*

further disrespect for both the law and its enforcement^^ One of the major faciors in provoking the law students to become involved In this cont r o v e r s y was the appearance of Assistant District Attorney Lynn Comptcm at UCLA to make a speech wherein he admitted that he had told the Grand J u r y that In his opinion there was not enough evidence to convict the ^op who killed Dyer.

Media ignore IVIanson'smusic


they would h a v e to read w h a t was in the paper. And they would only be seeing what another m a n saw. a n d interpTetd and wrote down. This way it just comes from the horse's mouth-*' Brenda McCann added: "If Charlie had an^-thine to say, it was in hia music The record was written by Charlie and hia voice is on all ot it along with ours." T h e record is being produced by Phi] Kaufman, a long time friend of Manson's. The album cover,is a reproduction of another coverthat of LIFE

D A V E MASON Last Friday, the people at the Spahn Ranch cal!ed a news conference to announce the release of Charlie Manson's alburn^ ^'CHARLES MANSON," But. they had to postpone it because Manson wfiR called to court Friday afternoon. During thut acHsion, Manaon waa "relieved" of his ri^ht to defend himself, and in the ensuing courtroom protest, three members of the family <Gypsy, Marc ROBS and Sandy Good) were jailed for contempt.

magazine in an issue printed jui4 after Mansun was arrested in Independence, However, on the album cover, the LIFE title h a s been altered to read LIE. Because, according to Kaufman, "First of all. the idea was that the entire press was lies . . . In other words, we tried to find the most offensive of the yellow joumalism and present it as it was. But ii was also to let you know it was a tie, and that^a the idea of the LIE.'^The picture usfd on both covers was taken about 2 and a hall years ago in Ventura Cn, (Please turn to Page 1&)

They re-scheduled the conference tor Saturday- But Gypsy couldn't be there because she was in jail, and. 3queeky who usually speaks to the presfl, was downtown trying lo see Charlies That left Paul and Brenda to face the reporters. r O S A N G E L R S FRF.E P R E S S When the reporters showed up, they were not particularly inM ) 1 3 Beverlv Boulevard terested in talking about the album, Los A n g l e s CatJrornia 9 0 0 3 6 even though the album was the Ipubljihed weekty) ^ , reason for the news conference. Inatead, they question&d Paul and Brenda about Manson's defense. They aaked questions like: "Why did t h t judge take away Chartie's I h a v v e n c l o i ^ $ 6 f o t a one-ysar lubschption iSliautti). pro per rights?" QueatioDs they should have been asking the judgeI have ancloMd S I O for a 2-vear subscription (104 iues). They just wanted to take a d v a n t a g e of getting members of t h e "FamPlea enter a subscription to the following as my gift, and ily" on film, but didn't wont to proinclude/omit (circle one) a gift card- Sign the card from: mote the al bumWhen the stories were filed and the final versions edited, there w a s 1 1 This is a renewal. litUe or no mention of the album. It you ask them wKy. they will tell you that they don't w a n t to contriFor Freapers Only bute to something a s "sick"' as an album recorded by a "magneticeye, hippie^ult, alleged murder mastermind leader" like Charles NAME Manaon. However, the same in(Please print clearly) dignant reporters a r e not a bit hesitant about exploiting Manaon's STRLT & NO. police press made image to proRtquirttd mote viewers or readers or lisCITV STATE teners and to sell advertisings The album w a s produced, say Manaon'a friends, to offset the bad PLEASE N O T E ; Subscribers, any correspondence you may hive put>lidty that*a been given htm in with the FrW Press concerning your subscription, please attach the press- Asked if it would have a n an address labeL in order to eKpedite handling. effect on the trial, Paul Watkins SubscrilMrs with an A F O / F P O address pay regular pricas* pap>' said: "Quite a n effect. T h e only Sffit wrappad, no entra braadway a m a n can express himself is For subscriptions to Canada and Lalin America, please add $2.60 the way he eapressea himself- If per yaar for postage^ rest of world, add $ 4 - 1 $ . Always send U.S. Currency. someone is interested in frnding out where (Charlie's et, w h a t kind M < ) VIN (;? ?? ? ? ??? ? Y??????T ? ???? ?? ???????? ? ??? ? ? ????? ??a m a n he is. they can get an of If l o , plaasa use form above, and attach old address labef. It takes album and listen to it. Otherwise,

Court imposes lawyer


(Continued from page 1 ) of rwo almost equally unreasonable alternatives. Allowing a defendant lo r e present himself and also have the advice and assistance of trained legalcounsel in the courtroom la not unprecedented. When ex-DA Robert KiCShke was on trial for the murder of his wife, he had other counsel associated with him although he conducted his own defense. Any time an attorney ^oes into court to defend someone accused of a c r i m e , he Is allowed to associate cocoimsel as e matter of course. turned yourself into some typ*? or errand boy where you take Into the courtroom motions p r e pared by others." The Judge forgot to mention that the whole problem would have been avoided by the granting of Manson^s request to aS" soclate co-counsel to a s s i s t him with the technical points. Then instead of having to deal wltli such intricacies himself, hi* could have had a lawyer^s help In presentmg his position In court. As he left the courtroom, Manson shouted back, ' T h e r e ^ s no lov In this court!" GypsySandra Good and Mark Ross contribute-i comments from the spectators' gallery and were immediately sentenced to five days apiece for "contempt.* Other members of the ^ m l l y were baited from the bench but no more of them fell into the contempt trap. Judge Keene said he could not tell whether Cathy Clllls had Joined In the 'outburst* so he challangeJ her to " s a y something," Miss Gillls refused lo r i s e to the bait and simply stood there quietly smiling so the Judge was deprived ofifurther opportunity to demonstrate his power to lock people in cages. The prosecutors, deputy Dls* trlct Attorneys Aaron Stovltzand Vincent Bugllosl, said they were delighted with the Judge's actlOT.s, I Imagine they w e r e .

Mvaral weeks to process changes of addr. Please be patient.

45

Please Do Not Print


The Court does have a legitImate interest in not having the procedure unduly prolonged by having everything duplicated by t>oth of the associated defense counsel, Ttut problem is solved by appropriate r u l e s allowing only one of them to examine any one witness and by allowing only one of them to make the various arguments. If Manson's motion had been granted, for example, he could huve allowed the trained lawyer to make the technical arguments on evidentiary points while he himself made the final appeal to the Jury and presented himself to them aS his own best defense. fn making his ruling. Judge Keene told MansoUj "Your performances have been hopelessly taade<iuate lo r e p r e s e n t yourself on such serious charges. You've
Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

^geZ

March 1 3 . 1 9 7 0
Copy #A72 - Do Not Post - Do Not Copy

Los" Angeles Free Press

Student Bar condemns DA's protection of cops w h o kill

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


A Cordner*s Inquest w a a h e l d and determined by a split vote that the death o c c u r r e d by criminal means. Then It was Eve He Younger's t u r n . As District Attorney, he had the choice of proceeding by Information and complaint, having the killer a r r e s t e d and p r o c e s s e d through a preliminary hearing (the treatment r e s e r v e d for cUlsens) o r of proceeding by way of the Grand J u r y . Younger chose the latter route and evidence about the crime was presented to the Grand Jury m a closed session by the D , A / s deputies. S u r p r i s e , the Grand Jury failed to r e t u r n an indictment. Thai was all Younger needed. Ke declared the case closed, " I t wouldn't be right for me to proceed when the Grand Jury has decided not to i n d i c t / ' Please note in this connection that when an ordinary citizen commits a homicide and the Coroner's Inquest finds death by criminal means, Younger takes the position that it would not be right for him not to proceed. The cop was c a r r y i n g a dangerous, unauthorized semU automatic weapon. He admits to t h r e e or four b e e r s immediately preceding the raid (an a r m e d drunk hunting for people smoking grasswhat obscene irony!!) and how much more he really had is a matter that could be questioned. Alt the witnesses describe the killer as waving his weapon around in an abusive and threatening manner, Tt discharged and killed an entirely innocent third party. Negligent homicide is a felony in this state. The Coroner*s Jury thought it was a criminal killing. Yet Lynn Compton dOesnM think the evidence strong enough to convict. What a delightful contrast to the attitude his office takes when an SDSer o r a Black Panther i s accused of s o m e thing. Then the most trifling evidence is sufficient lor a no compromise^ no holds b a r r e d prosecution. The Student Bar Assocfation's statement explains, "While we do not consider the guilt or innocence of Officer Sweeney, we do question the failure of the District Attorney to issue a criminal complaint against him so ttiat a proper determination of guilt or Innocence can be made In a court of l a v . There i s every Indication thai the probable cause for such action exists. The failure of the District Attorney to issue a complaint automatically places the actl<^s of Officer Sweeney above the inquiry of the law. This is the minimum demanded of our judicial system," The student's statement c m eludes, "A case that r a i s e s fundamental questions of the law and its enforcement is not one to he decided in the privacy of the District Attorney's Offlces.' ~ All that Is really not s o m e thing new.TheOistrictAttorney In this County routinely covers up questionable police homir i d e s and the entire establishment, the legal profession m d u d e d , lets him get away with LI arlthout so much as a comment. This lime, however, the Dfs;t Aitorney*s willful failure to carry out the law when cop killings a r e involved 15 so patent that he has s t i r r e d up a storm of opposition. The Student Bar Associations of u s e , UCLA and Loyola Schools of Law have jointly Issued a statement condemning Younger's disposition Of the Dyer c a s e , staling, " W e feel that It is representative of a growing trend which is placing law enforcement atx>ve the law. Such a trend is unhealthy and tends to create

MtCHAELHANNON On October 3, 1969, Heywood Dyer waa atandinff in his a p a r t ment holdli^ t n Infant, lli the apartment overhead, VerntMi Police Officer Frank Sweeney was c o n d u c t i n e a n a r c o t l c a r a i d j fortified with t h r e e o r four beera and a r m e d with his own AR H-16 semi-automatic rifle. The rifle went off, the bullet p n e t r a t a d floor and celling and Dyer w t a kUled*

further disrespect for both the law and its enforcement^^ One of the major faciors in provoking the law students to become involved In this cont r o v e r s y was the appearance of Assistant District Attorney Lynn Comptcm at UCLA to make a speech wherein he admitted that he had told the Grand J u r y that In his opinion there was not enough evidence to convict the ^op who killed Dyer.

Media ignore IVIanson'smusic


they would h a v e to read w h a t was in the paper. And they would only be seeing what another m a n saw. a n d interpTetd and wrote down. This way it just comes from the horse's mouth-*' Brenda McCann added: "If Charlie had an^-thine to say, it was in hia music The record was written by Charlie and hia voice is on all ot it along with ours." T h e record is being produced by Phi] Kaufman, a long time friend of Manson's. The album cover,is a reproduction of another coverthat of LIFE

D A V E MASON Last Friday, the people at the Spahn Ranch cal!ed a news conference to announce the release of Charlie Manson's alburn^ ^'CHARLES MANSON," But. they had to postpone it because Manson wfiR called to court Friday afternoon. During thut acHsion, Manaon waa "relieved" of his ri^ht to defend himself, and in the ensuing courtroom protest, three members of the family <Gypsy, Marc ROBS and Sandy Good) were jailed for contempt.

magazine in an issue printed jui4 after Mansun was arrested in Independence, However, on the album cover, the LIFE title h a s been altered to read LIE. Because, according to Kaufman, "First of all. the idea was that the entire press was lies . . . In other words, we tried to find the most offensive of the yellow joumalism and present it as it was. But ii was also to let you know it was a tie, and that^a the idea of the LIE.'^The picture usfd on both covers was taken about 2 and a hall years ago in Ventura Cn, (Please turn to Page 1&)

They re-scheduled the conference tor Saturday- But Gypsy couldn't be there because she was in jail, and. 3queeky who usually speaks to the presfl, was downtown trying lo see Charlies That left Paul and Brenda to face the reporters. r O S A N G E L R S FRF.E P R E S S When the reporters showed up, they were not particularly inM ) 1 3 Beverlv Boulevard terested in talking about the album, Los A n g l e s CatJrornia 9 0 0 3 6 even though the album was the Ipubljihed weekty) ^ , reason for the news conference. Inatead, they question&d Paul and Brenda about Manson's defense. They aaked questions like: "Why did t h t judge take away Chartie's I h a v v e n c l o i ^ $ 6 f o t a one-ysar lubschption iSliautti). pro per rights?" QueatioDs they should have been asking the judgeI have ancloMd S I O for a 2-vear subscription (104 iues). They just wanted to take a d v a n t a g e of getting members of t h e "FamPlea enter a subscription to the following as my gift, and ily" on film, but didn't wont to proinclude/omit (circle one) a gift card- Sign the card from: mote the al bumWhen the stories were filed and the final versions edited, there w a s 1 1 This is a renewal. litUe or no mention of the album. It you ask them wKy. they will tell you that they don't w a n t to contriFor Freapers Only bute to something a s "sick"' as an album recorded by a "magneticeye, hippie^ult, alleged murder mastermind leader" like Charles NAME Manaon. However, the same in(Please print clearly) dignant reporters a r e not a bit hesitant about exploiting Manaon's STRLT & NO. police press made image to proRtquirttd mote viewers or readers or lisCITV STATE teners and to sell advertisings The album w a s produced, say Manaon'a friends, to offset the bad PLEASE N O T E ; Subscribers, any correspondence you may hive put>lidty that*a been given htm in with the FrW Press concerning your subscription, please attach the press- Asked if it would have a n an address labeL in order to eKpedite handling. effect on the trial, Paul Watkins SubscrilMrs with an A F O / F P O address pay regular pricas* pap>' said: "Quite a n effect. T h e only Sffit wrappad, no entra braadway a m a n can express himself is For subscriptions to Canada and Lalin America, please add $2.60 the way he eapressea himself- If per yaar for postage^ rest of world, add $ 4 - 1 $ . Always send U.S. Currency. someone is interested in frnding out where (Charlie's et, w h a t kind M < ) VIN (;? ?? ? ? ??? ? Y??????T ? ???? ?? ???????? ? ??? ? ? ????? ??a m a n he is. they can get an of If l o , plaasa use form above, and attach old address labef. It takes album and listen to it. Otherwise,

Court imposes lawyer


(Continued from page 1 ) of rwo almost equally unreasonable alternatives. Allowing a defendant lo r e present himself and also have the advice and assistance of trained legalcounsel in the courtroom la not unprecedented. When ex-DA Robert KiCShke was on trial for the murder of his wife, he had other counsel associated with him although he conducted his own defense. Any time an attorney ^oes into court to defend someone accused of a c r i m e , he Is allowed to associate cocoimsel as e matter of course. turned yourself into some typ*? or errand boy where you take Into the courtroom motions p r e pared by others." The Judge forgot to mention that the whole problem would have been avoided by the granting of Manson^s request to aS" soclate co-counsel to a s s i s t him with the technical points. Then instead of having to deal wltli such intricacies himself, hi* could have had a lawyer^s help In presentmg his position In court. As he left the courtroom, Manson shouted back, ' T h e r e ^ s no lov In this court!" GypsySandra Good and Mark Ross contribute-i comments from the spectators' gallery and were immediately sentenced to five days apiece for "contempt.* Other members of the ^ m l l y were baited from the bench but no more of them fell into the contempt trap. Judge Keene said he could not tell whether Cathy Clllls had Joined In the 'outburst* so he challangeJ her to " s a y something," Miss Gillls refused lo r i s e to the bait and simply stood there quietly smiling so the Judge was deprived ofifurther opportunity to demonstrate his power to lock people in cages. The prosecutors, deputy Dls* trlct Attorneys Aaron Stovltzand Vincent Bugllosl, said they were delighted with the Judge's actlOT.s, I Imagine they w e r e .

Mvaral weeks to process changes of addr. Please be patient.

45

Please Do Not Print


The Court does have a legitImate interest in not having the procedure unduly prolonged by having everything duplicated by t>oth of the associated defense counsel, Ttut problem is solved by appropriate r u l e s allowing only one of them to examine any one witness and by allowing only one of them to make the various arguments. If Manson's motion had been granted, for example, he could huve allowed the trained lawyer to make the technical arguments on evidentiary points while he himself made the final appeal to the Jury and presented himself to them aS his own best defense. fn making his ruling. Judge Keene told MansoUj "Your performances have been hopelessly taade<iuate lo r e p r e s e n t yourself on such serious charges. You've
Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

"rf - - -

Los Angeles F r e e Press

Copy #A72 - Do Not Post - Do Not Copy

March 13,1970

IChas-Manson
writes a letter to the Free Prew
SWINGING CARNABY STREET
>^ *>. %

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


.<i S""'
FEATURE LENGTH TRAVEL-DOCUMENTARY FILM, I N FULL COLOR, NARRATED IN PERSON BY FILMMAKER

once tans of tttouaftnda of brothlers & slsteregaveallllliepreacliUr haa tried to hide this by putting one man, J,C,, out front, cramming holy holy down people's [throats, putting cros-^es every[where, mordeTing all in his 11a. TaUng all the beauty and I trying to make ugly, evil and sin or all the things god loves. Check this li, 'God is love* [but the preacher aays No, don't imake love," I say you mak^ love and you will see peace, love, con'lentment, but only after you rid lall shams, guilt and evil from your
mind.

Christ was not one roan, ha was many men and women as one. Beautiful people, giving all to ba* come one, now you know who you t r e and Pm calling ma to give my love to you, for iiovemyworld and don't want to destroy It anymore. If you see It as yours, than you must do what you muat
lo.

tx.
letters letters letters letters
I am writing ttils for two reasons, one Is tts unlikely hope tiiat the alchemists will start maUnv pure drugs ooce again, Hw otiitr reason Is this* that I might persuade ttia LA Free p r e s s to oae Its nuources to compile and pili* lish datallad information on how to manufacture LSD, psUocyUn, mascnllne and all the otter hallucin^ans possible to make i t home and ven speed. You would do people like me a big fsvor. We are at tbs mercy of ptUmakers' whimsy and greed. With how-to-do-it tnformftHon, we will be able to fend for owraelves and lay good stutr on our friends, KNOWIHO exactly what we are takli^ and Imowli^ that It Is ssfs*

I **- 1-

Cbarlaa Matron

psilocybin or speed ?

K E N N E T H RICHTER
-AHO-

n.^March 20-8:30pm ROYCE HALL

UCLA\

Sat. March 2 1 - 8 : 3 0 p m ' W I L S H I R E E B E L L

The people v^o died on crosses, [the one the Romans did not like, lived together and loved each other enough to 'die" for each other, 'Brothers, sisters. . .thoae words ifill short of the strong oneness we must show others.

PravntMlBvARMCHAIR ADVENTURES

TICKETS: $2.00, t.TS M&O SiuitonHl ON SALE NOW I t tK UCLA CONCERT TICKET OFFICE 10861 L Corn* Av*., Wwtwood. md ill MMtuil AgMkCiM. For information, disl "UCLA 9B3." WHvhlm E M I tlckMi, phona 939-1128.

A T LASTI The book o f b o o k i t

THETHRALADIODLE

-containI the holy scriptural of

SAN FRANaSCX)

O N E

MIMETMIH
PIHK:

NIGHT

ONLY!!!

Thral a wattle, a new religion for tite aware intellactuaL Showi the way to: Total freedom thru ilavary; Total manhood thru puiitlanlmitv Unfortunately, It seems that Total commjtment thru apathy most drug makers are more interPLUS- AT LASTested in money than In the welfare

Dear Editor; Recently, I purchased some pallocybln from what 1 know to be a reliable source. The psilocybin was good; it produced the colors and everything else It was suppose to and went Bwy after four or five hours as usual. But each tab was laced wltli enough speed to choke a horse, 1 was held prisoner in a state of hyperactive euphoria tor over twelve hours. I realise that many people think a speed trip Is groovy. However, some people don*t like epeed at all. We can't enjoy our hallucinations If we can't sit stlUformore than two minutes or Ihizdithesame thought for more thantwo Seconds, If someone bargains forL&D,psilocybin or mescaline, that is what he should get. And if he wants speed too, that's up to him, but he should be able to make the choice himself. At present, anyone who wants drugs Is forced to trust the alchemists not to burn him or add something extra when they make his pills.

',

gutter puppets

THRALAWATTLIAN ASTROLOGY I

M GORiLLA BAnD

Get yours todayr Swiu $1 to: THRALADIDDLE,78I3 Bavsriy Blvd., L'A' 90036

of their fellow man. Whether a pill maker adds speed to his product or substitutes one drug for another, he has cheated his customers. Selling bad pills is Just as bad as selling machineguns. Either one can hurt people.

If, for some reason you cannot publish that type of Infomatloo. then please be kind enough to let me know where to find it m y s ^ or send it to me. I wUl take It upon myself to spread the knowlage around as widsly as possible. I wonder how many people Intts street have bean thinking that ttey have bean taking and grooving out on add when more than hajf of their trips have been due to speed thsi they did not know about, t wonder how much better they might like ttis real thinga pure add trip witii no gratuitous distract'^ loos. 1 always feel that i have lost something if my drugs are lacad Witt some additive, and 1 sm sure that many other people would feel Uie same way if they had the chance to compare tte difference, l^ey should t>eallowsd to take that chance. Knowledge is Powsrr Because some of the admissions in ttls letter could get me into trouble, please sign ma; Speedy Balboa Island

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Valley Slate shidents busied at home in gestapo-ttyle down raidt

TUES..MARCH 17 - 8:30 P.M.

Studin City 7 8 3 7 1 7 1

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46

SALT AND PEPPER Charlie musselwhite iron butterfly SAVOY BROVfN& ^ andiuice devil's kitchen
MARCH tS-^Jnd g ^ MARCH 24th ONE NITE ONLV

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KEITH

DEVIL'S KITCHEN Sherman Oaks. Cal. 784QH

U I R L S IB WELCOME

EtevenSan Fernando Valley state College students andt^pprofessor were arrested on Wednesday March 11, at 7 a.m. Intheirhomes, and five others were preparing to turn themselves In on warrants allegedly Issued on charges broivht bv vrVA (Voices in vital America). In all, 19warraiitswre Issued, According to one of the students, the charges, buth misdemeanors, disturbing the peace 415 and dlsriqjtlng a public meeting 40B, originate from an Incident occurritig during a speech given February 19 by Nyu Gen Hoan of s. Viet Nam, The students are accused of -razzing" the speaker. Yet, accordlmp to one of those arreeted, Marv Wisley, another arrestf d student, wasattackeddurln^the meeting by VIVA people and his friends defended him, Wlsleyfilea charges at Devonshire Station several weeks ago against the VIVApeople but to ttls date none of the latter are known to be arrested. However, during today's booking,Wlsley was told the investigation was being dropped. Allegedly tte students were Identified from photos taken by police camera crews and Tom

Reddin*a KTLA photographer during tte incident. These atudenta had been informed of tte unpirit>llcited meetliv by a VIVA representative, I h e students are all members of tte leftist atudent coalition and are also members of tte IWW (Wobblies) and SRAF Ca Peace and Freedom Party afriliale.) The charters of bott lat* ter organizations have been s w pended, so tte students have no platforms from which to address tte college. jimBumpas, one of ttoae arrested, holds a law degree and Is a P&F candidate for councilman. Arrested Witt him were Mark Cooper, Heather Dashner, Dan Hitter, Richard Wolf^ Larry soley, Bryan Newell, Laura Snokes, Celeste Halpern, Sam Danato, Marv Wlsley and Phltoac4>hy professor Mel standlg. Warrants were also Issued for Andy Walsman, BUI Nlckllss, Ed Lawrence, Hitch Slgmund, Lalo Gonaalea and Vicky Temkln. A ball fund (t^lfi per person) Is being organised. Contributions can be sent to Valley State Legal Defense Fund, c/o Mike Lee, 9343 Amlgo, #2, Northrldge,CallL

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DANCING ^ C O M P L E T E DINNERS"

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MjMh 13.1970

Los Angelca F r e e

Press

FBMMBIEW

Patton and his war., the patriotism of a passionate fool


UICHAELR06S : Director anffaer'a cinematic There Is a point at vUcb outye is seldom very original or rifht fanaticism becomes a sub^probing, but at least he takes from Jeet worthy of heroic considera* the best and keeps his film moving tions; itisthispoiiitvbicbFranlc- ' rigorously and unotitruslvely, tia Shsflner's -Pattoo* makes using -the gigantic screen to a ^ l n and ttnln. Geoeral George dramatic advantage. He never 8, Pattn, J r . , was ralnclco'iousr, employs superfluous vulfority to de^>lr Tvllfious, sinvlemlnded,a comment on his hero's vulgarity; war lover wbo had the tortime be allows Fatton's own aelfof rindlnv U J thine to love (lead^ righteaamesa to speak lor itInff men to tlieir death and s^ow selL If there is any shortcoming, In the DtttkBtl interest)and i|lc it u Sbaffiier's inability to give ire^ter fortune to die alnast a cumulative, unifying force to Mmnltnnsousl} with its pasflnc the film's brilliant parts. as an object worthy of u s Mm. But Patton is so good we never It seams the man Patlon would have mucbtimelowelshitsmlnor cause more repugnnnce Ip the Shortcomings against its very viewer tbsn respect. Trne, obvious virtues. Host otnrlous lenrn to hate Patten's fvla. but among these, ctf course^ is the we also learn to imderatand the brilliantly focused performance imgrnntlc miftismtiactDsed of George C. Scott in the UUe bis men to foUow hfm itiywhere. role. It has been called^and Clad In the garments^ of virtue rightly so-~the performance of nd this very great actor's dlslln* guished career. Yet, 1 wonder how and unwaverlnr pntriotism. he Is many will marvel at the seeming the flghtioff persotfflcatloo of ease by which Scott achieves wbnt Americans motftbas praisebis complex character isatioo. A worthy in their leaders and r e twitch of the mouth or nostrils, ject in actuality. To us, Patton a maddening turning inward of seems a pompoas, passionate the eye, a quick-fused smile, a fool becauseturtle rightly says glib off-hand remark. He plays he Is a s i r t a ^ t h century man the tricky game of doing splits Uvlnr in the twentieth. That was between Patton as man and Pathis traffsdy. War pnsaed out of ton as comic strip hero, probing t>rava men's' bands and into the the man's soul while seeming to calculated /Inputs of mindless, be as emotionally flat as Kansas. spineless imreaucrats. Patton WAS John Wayne; war Lords The screeniday by Francis became Jerry Lewis. His justiFord Cun>ola and Edmond H. fication - of was was direct: North is exceptionally competent ThereV one thing yotf 11 be able and Intelligent. It makes us accept to say when you go home. When a man who WSA a poet and a fool, you'M sitting around your firewho kept a bible by his bed, who plaoe, wiQi your brat cm your slapped cowards, and knew the knso, and be asks you what you battles of history by heart, wbo did in the great World War , carried a silver-handled reytfu won't |iave to sayyouabovelvolver around like a talisman, Isd shit in Louisiana.* No( exactly and who was all soldiers and Ihe aame as a liberal official's never less than what he was. .^^isfv d'etre: -The object atmrn The supporting players are all / w a r Is to make sure that everyvery good, but sink Intotheback' body in the world has the p r i ground aeainst Scott's dominant vilege of drinking a quart of milk perfM-mance. Karl AUlden as a-day.' tf a faiwUc, Patton was General Bradley seems too nice nonetheless an Moest fanatic. to beasoldler and lacks tlie single And the movie about his life is purposeness of character which honest u d always interesting. made Patton a fit subject for this extremely good tragicomedy. -patton,' a Frank McCarthy/ Franklin ShafCner production released try 20th Century Fox, is now playing at the Pacific Pantages, AND BRIEFLY HOTED; "The Arrangemeut* (directed by Ella KazaiO: Puffy, artsy to the point of ennui, epic irtiere it should be personal, pergonal where it doesn't matter, drifting, senseless, pointless, irrelevant and dull, crossing again and again what Sarrus calls 'the thin line t)etweon passion and neur o s e s . ' Starring Kirk Doublas as an advertising executive in exquisite agony, Deborah Kerr as his twlttery wife and Faye Dunaway as his ballsy mistress. The H i ^ y Ending* (directed \ty Richard Brooks): Honesty about marriage-American style carried to a ridiculous eoa It may be the most laugbless comedy ever madeor,ror that matter, the quite silliest drama. With an attractive and all atwitler Jean Simmons and a bland John Forsythe. 'Butch Cassidy and the a m dance Kid* ( d i r e c t s by George Roy Hill): Quite Simply, the most entertaining Hollywood film around. About bow two Immensely romantic outlaws face life after life has passed them by, it has a ^eti^^ of visual motitm which accelerates (although sometimes sputteringty) until the bde-out. A witty screenplay tiy William Goldman and two perfectly wonderful performances by ^aut Kewman and Robert Reford, as Butch and the Kid, who had much moretotiveforthanmerely growing up and dying.

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


Next week: "Comlof Apart* and ' He Who Gets SUpped.*

Babitz rejects \inschooled Skald'


book, ' H i e Great Burocpie Hosx" bears out what 1 s u in the preface* when the average status quo musician Is confronted with historical evidence which shows that he is guilty of a hoax he does not try to changeheslmply loses his temper. Thit skald has lost his temper is evidenced by the fact that he called me a -cranky egomaniac.' How would he like It if I called him the *ODSkooled Skald?' To dissuade people from even listening to my record he calls it 'crotchety and arch'whatever that means. If he wore interested in authentic performance he should have said, -Althovh I do not like It I suggest you listen to it twcause it is based v o n 35 years of historical research whereas the average modern performance is based igton 5 minutes of research."

We, the undersigned wish to protest against Skald's unfair review of Sol Babiti's revolutionary book, Tlie Great Baro<fue Home' and the illustrative recording. When Skald says that regardless of Babitz's authenticity he *anJoys' the s'>und of the mod* e m performvice he implies that BabitE*s sound Is not enjoyable when as a matter of fact we have found the sheer beauty of the old violin and harpsichord sound enchanting. We urgeFreep readers to experience this'newold* sound for themselves. Ilie book, The Great Baroque Hoax* and record may be obtained by SMMting a | 5 minimum tax-deductible contribution to the Early Music Laboratory ^BoE 2552 LOS Alleles Calif, 9002a, Wlnthrop B, Chandler, WUllam Cbase,Edis Green,Gustave Leonhardt, Milton Hkomas IN DEFQ4SE OF HISTORICAL FACTS

make It less like a sewing machine and more HOMAN so thai it will be loved by the masses instead of the 10% which likes serious* mus^c. ft Is probably foi' this reason vh^ many younger musicians are joining the Early Music Laboratory.

Skald says that I am wrong in saying that no university teaches Baroque Swing because Prof, Apel in the Harvard Dictionary recommends a "rubalo* which sound like swing. Being of the status quo character Professor Apel rejects swing in his article on unequal notes, preteoding Bach played in the 20th-century slylel This I call the Great Baroque Hoax,

SOLBABtTZ Sitald's prejudiced review of my

Aald rejects my writing because it would -end the performance of Baroque music* Just when It is becoming popular, I do not wish to -eodBach p e r f o r m a n c e " ! wish to

I think that if Skald wUi read my bo<^ at least once and listen to the record to the end he might be able to write a review aimed not at exposing my paranoia" but advancing the caoae of historical authenticity
In a revolutionary maimer.

THE WORDS AND MUSIC OF CHARLES MANSON

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a joint venture p.o. box 4657 no. hoUywood, calif 91607
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No. H o l l y w o o d , Calif 91607
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Mardi27.1970

L w Angeles Free Press

Charles Manson Letter


Hrsr9ttftn; Bftdi wtak. 1 wm write yon ft lltr t ^ r s i a l j i c thoofhu and sxpsrlabcaa a a l v i l k t f a r o i ^ t b l a mata of mac^anleaL madnaaa eiUad ' t i u l a t t a s Jnrtlca.* Una* Una Ton v a r a of anottiar orU^ plaoat, or from aoothar galaxy aikd ara looking at maa for tha n r a t ttina. Man^hwolUatlDg 1il&iaalf^|Llllli aranrtiiliv ha can; at i r a r wltii Umaslf aad all Oia varld; locking Ua *oia In rowa igion rova of cagaa. Ha taaa coma to tba point of aimoat no ratBTD, I b a anlmala tbvl look to Um tor l0va and undaratandIng only aaa faar and daath. Hla dUUran*ba'a avan at war with hla owntaachlng avil and Saatt, ftaUing.fdr hta efaiidran to e o a a to tha grata. Laying bsra away from my amMlna all day Md a n nigbt tiitra la a load v a a k a r barking ordara, paaalig mlaary from tbalr m satlMad womaa on tha ontalde lliroiib Ilia Utfiwlio^liaychotogtcanr tortnra ttair brofiiarawlth avary conoalvilAa dabvroanlalng procaaa, it took hro moatiks of Working ttroBCh ttkalr confttalon to n t % pair of b o o t a . . . It only tooK two daya bafora tbay wara takan airay, Somadaya aa blgb aa twanty tlmaa, yon taka orr all of yoor dolhaa, opan your montti, ahow yoor aara,yoQrundarannBr Ilia bottom of yonr faat, and i ^ your rachtm and ao on and ao on-ragunantlBg tba aooL Hiara'a not M much control by baaUnga aa thara la mantil conditioning. Tha speaker aaya 'you wUl conform, you will conform..." It seama tha world la la Una and no one knowa wby. Uany hava axcuflfls; monay, c a r s , r e cognition, YOU hava a apMkar out thara. n alao tails you things. 1 hara brokao an tha commandmanta and muat ba judged by a c h r l a t l n court In tha naraa of Jeaua Christ, Tha aame eonri that's Judgad for the laat 19V0 yaara ta ntlU Judging, m the name o* Jaana Chrlat thay have and atili a r e murdering the world and all it's creatnrea, Nona of them believe Jeans Chrlat will ever come back...bacau8e If he did, they would be the first lo go. What chriatlan who conld see that aU the chHstlana dlad on croaaas years igo, could alao sea that they a r a afraid of d y i n g . , , only becuMA they're not ready to go to and become one with tha father, God ta whan you ain't. When one dJea in hla mind, he comes into a world of bUss and Dothtng-^not even a ga* chamber can touch love and peace. 1 live In my kingdom and t live with my lovenothing c m move ma from my world, not even Judge Keena who takaa tha courtroom away from tha people by saying it's his courtroom snd tskes the constitution a w ^ by saying "T make the miea here.* Conatltutlonal rights aren't rlihta anymore, they're privilages, Charles Manson

A c i d . . . a magic chemical
Dear Editor I^D, or "add/* as it is commonly called by its users, is a "magic" ^vmical that induces a mystical state of euphoria which containa within itself a aanse of great "unity*' toward other people and even things, a mobibty of eniotional expreasioD and a visual panorama of delicately hued colors of very fine texture^tors which cascade, whirl end blend together harmoniously. 3u<di an eKpovience an above but briefly described conititutes what a hippie would designate aa "a good trip." However, students of both occult and mystical esoteric matter* ar aware that there are seers in India and a few in this country who have experienced similar socalled "trips" without the use of chemical crutches auch as LSD, and aeldom experiencing the aforementioned "bad tripe." The seers prepare for their 'tripe" through meditaiiaTi. avoidance of meat and alcohol and a life of dedicated eer vice to men and animaii>. unmentionable; and this is the ecene of bad tripa^ Tlie use of meat or alcohol and ^ e "wrong" sexual meditations con prodace bad tripe. L9D and the "magic" mushroom produce ainular psychedelic results. It is well to know that the mushroom ia etiologically a predatory plant (vulture plant, i f you wish) that thrive in dark, wet places. And remember that LSD and mushrooms produce similar results^ Get the connec(ion eeoterically? While slightly higher levels of consdouonesfl are occasionaUy reached by the I ^ D user, there aie also many instance* where the lower levels of the astral world are reached and where the bad tripi are experienced It ie well to keep in mind that the astral world ia a tUtire worldy and desire "at b t " ia self-oriented; and while the downpull of add is very fasdn^ sting eapedally for its instent effect (without the need for arduous phydcal and mental preparation), but thia very "ease" of accomplish^ ment produces bad trips and, at best, biU the nUddU aut>plane of tht ostpo/ UJOrld. Now, the unselffah, aincere student of esoteric matters wilt seek to graduell.. sublimate alt desire in on effort to reach the mento/uwr2(f whose physical intei^ mediary is the Pineal Gland of which Uttle is known in this country and the keyword to this higher mental plane is admire (to leam to admire without desiring Ut possess). Possibly the use of ISD to shock aomeon^ out of a life of gmnn materiahsm might prove of some help but it is well to remember that the use of chemical crutches such as ISD in order to make a speedy entry into Heaven is regarded as profane by the true, holy, wise men of India^ Books on esoteric occult and mystical subjects may t>e obtained from your branch hbrary. They are often listed under TAeosopAy or RoaicrucianUm. J. Basil De Beltrond 2641 West 8th StLos Angeles. Calif. 90005

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


Now in India the psychedelic world of color ia colled "the desire world" (astral world) which is a plane of consciousness which in turn is divided into seven sul>plane, the lowest of which is called "the astral hell," vrfierein the depraved acti- : vities of former earthlinga are seen . by the viewer in crass^ blotchy color along with sights and sounds .

Helen McKenna answers everyone

:fi^ii5/iisi5'Sggts^i;i^^

Letter from The family


of attorneys.' The Judge ignored him, and asked his technical question again, s e e i n g to get a clear record so he could delete aUelse. Charley obviously felt more at borne than did the Judge. His manner was soft. He said, ' I cin^t conceive of any man speaking for another man. How can a mouse speak for a lion? A man. If he la a man, can only defend himself, I don't speak for y o u , . . The Jwlge, in his elsvaled seat, could not confront any suggestion that he come down aui be a fallow human being. He cut Char^ ley off, saying ttiat this was irrelevant, and continued asking his question, to which charlsy continually answsred ' y e s . ' The entire courtroom aitentlon waa on the defendants. At one point, the IndES felt ao threatened that he sought to regain hia attention by saying, Thls is MY courtroom and I make the rules here, Mr. Manson.Could you for one minute get in my position,' Charley asked him, sincerely. Wall, If you'd conduct your]>elf like a gentleman,* Keene

Laat iHuraday Hanaon^ Kranvlnhla, van Hootan and Attlna ili>aarad In court for raaettlng of thair tHal date. After CharleT*a court-sppolntad lawyer was granted bott a trlal-aavaranca and a paychlatrlc axaminatlon 'for* him, Charley finally told Oia ]ttdiga that ba did not go along with any of those motions, 'nta )ndga cut In tailing him ha waa not to apaak-^that It waa for hla lawyer to do his talking. 'YOQ aaid i conld have a naW'lawyerngbt7 WaU I wooM Ilka Ur Reiner to regain my pro-par status,' haaald. Moti<4i d a o l a d . . . - tta Jndga -bagao to ahgBta t h r o n g hla papara. ' Y o w honor, wotOd you lot* at ma? Yon'ra speaking to anottar n a a , ' C h a r l ^ aakad of him.

To that, tta ludga bad no pre* forrauUtad raactlon or anawar. Ha Mi otnrioualy fumbly (aa a man) and bagm to bring up soms O0iar pra-acfaadulad data. Charlay bad hla copy of tha Constltvtion wifli him, having read tg> on hia rlghta* dming tba past months, continually b ^ V shut off hj hla-bonora' aivrame "dlacratfton." I cannot give i ^ my voice In thia caaa* Charley slid. At anothar momant Charley axplalnad to tha Jndga, *In tha laat court aaaaton yon might bava noUcad that I aaamed to Ignore you* Thai, Hr, Keena, ia baanae In tha aaaalon before this you totally Ignored ma.' We've alraidy been through tfala Mr. Manaon," the Judge countered with finality. Then be ralnatatad hla Juatlficatlona 'for tba record,' Charley atood tgi, walked to the waalaliaakat, tossed the Conatltafclon In. - T h a r a / he aald, <lliere'a yoor foundationyou pot it In thara, not m e . ' 'Hia guarda wara igi st arms, Charlay came back and aatdown, and in all honaaty he told tha ladga, ! wantad to throw it at yoa but I didn't want to hit you,. llie aaaalon waa ao pcnrarful I dotf t lUnk aay reporter could ttek to U s ootaa. THa Jvlga 4 ^ t toying with hla typavrlttaD ;tck of liDportanca, ind Charley ^Mkad to ba grantad Ronald RaifMa t^r Ua Icvyer. 7 ^ Jodga llwn a*Cd H B TECHNICAL TCMUt If Charley wanted U r . Rdgbag far hla sMamay. - T a a ^ ' ba aatd, ' i n a f a what I |wtaW,Toirraorclimto Ukm_, m a t t a n a y , yon know, you vaart - M wm Wf my skoiea

51

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answering 'yes* to thejudee's question six tlmaa. Hughesslated plainly that Charley's rights are, and have been, continually denied him. He then asked that Charley ba allowed to apeak. The Judge aald, ' M r . Manson you chose your attomsy." Hughes informed the ourt of his Intentions to seek to regain Charley*a pro-per atatua. The Jndge told the court that the motion would be denied. Ha alao said thai if Charley did not quitspeaklDg out, action would be taken to quiet bim. At the end of the court Charlay spoke to the Judge, clearly, and with no vengence"No one's afraid of you, Mr, Keene.llie t r u i waa postponed untU April 20, and who knows when altar tiiat. Upon gatting ma transcripts of these court aaaalona, wa find tiie Judge's words In speeches for clearing the record, condaacMtding atatementa to Charley aa pretenae of underatandii^ klndnaaa, and out and > OQt omission. But who can you ttfl ttiat tba LAW la diaboaaat? Whan wlU we be raady to ballava aiai--wlMn w # r a right be' I b e r e isn't a Juror in this county that isn't blind or deaf or dumb that hasn't been reached by the had publicity' argued Paul Fitzgerald. The district Attorney and the Judge sdmltted that the publicity was so extensive that a change of venue would not do any good. Meanwhile the press still sat In the Jury box lookii^ and, Pm sure feeling guilty for convicting a man before he even went to trial. And now that all the publicity on the prosecutors side Is out, the court is enforcing a gag rule so that Charles Manson cannot talk to the press. ITisy have cut off his voice completely now. Plrat by catting off his phone calls and now ty taking away his prop s r status, leaving him without a voice to counteract tha monater image made of him. what are they afraid of? why don't they want blm to spesk? Could It be that fliey a r e afraid of hearing the truth? The ConsUtotlon haa not bean uaed in years and the whole system haa been run on trlckeration. Come to YOUR No, 1 waa not present In Chicago. But Chicago is a slate of mind, not a part of lUinols. Being there does not impart Insight or tha reasons for Chicago. Agnew and Ambassador Lodge have been to Vietnam, So have two men in the oppoaing camp Bernard Fall and Donald Duncan. Did Being 'niere provide validity therefore for both destroying And getting out of Vietnam? Many Americans saw* Chicago on TV but still do not See, 1 have been to many Chlcagos and have been on trial. If my desire were to stack up arguments on my 'side" alone, I could do that. But instead, I would like to mention some words written me by a man who saw flaws not in me, bvl in my arguments and made me thinl^ He did not attack my name or lack of it. He did s^y, in effect, that Rubin et aL had no obligation to play by the rulaa of

II aid. That will have to s t a r t with you first, Mr, Keene,' Charley told him, Charley waa c^antad Ron Hughes as hla attorney after

tween Its i)aws? Today's court session was for a Changs of Venue motion on the basis that the publicity has not only been tremendous, (perhaps more than any case In history), but SKtremely prejudicial and detrimental towards Charles Manson. Paul Pltcgereld (Pat Krenwinkl^'s attorney) listed the millions of readers each nawspapar had reached, and the millions of llBtsners each TV and radio station had reached. Ha read headlines not only Unking Charles Hanson tonumerousunsolved murders, but also accusing him of breaking every one of the ten commandments. HeadllneB Implying sadism, cultlsm, thievery, sexual perversion, and racisl and m>c1al prejudice. In fact, there is nothing theprasa missed to say to get every walk of life to be prejudiced against this one man. They've called him Satan, the devil, and jssus Christ, when actually he never even heard the name In regard to hiro until the myo County SheriFfs asked us "Where's Jesus Christ? We want to crucify himl" "Hien taking him into court they booked him as Charles Manson AKA Jesus Christ. Kow they've wrung every evil and perversity out of their Imaginations and projected It on one man,

Where do I atart? How do I get people to tske their minds Off my name, off publicity and On to my words? How do 1 respond to certain labels that do not really apply to me, but to some warped Image of ma? On February 21, 1070 my article crltlclxlng Jerry Rubin appeared in the Free p r e s s . 1 expected some response, but not ths bombardment thai foUowed (March 0 and March 20 columns by Lawrence Upton and a March 20 article by somebody with the unusual name of Maxwell Veribushl), 1 don't think I can ever adequately answer charges that 1 am st^>ld,' not among'people in the news,* possessing the journalistic style of Splro Agnew' or making some girl from L.A, "Sorry to have the name Helen.- 1 think thai such people are their own worst enemies. When they accuse me of "sniping from the sidelines," I wonder Just what game it Is pm accused of staying out of.

A "devil theory or history makes all our enemies absolutely wicked and we "good guys' abaoimely heroic. The world Isn't like that, Jerry Rubin has faults. And Eo do L ll^rough a lot of soul-searching and some more traditional study, 1 came upon Self ^Righteousness as a human evil that knows no bounds. I wanted to share this knowledge with other people, t knew I would have to fall at that attempt for many reasons. First,Iknowfrom Being self-righteous thai watching our step is Just about tha hardest thing in the world to do. Too many ego needs and too much wishful thinking keeps us from admitting It when we are wrong. Too many rationalizations and excuses for killing other Inferior" and Blig>id' humans kecf) telling us hirw Right we are.

a falaa game. Including a vicious trial and a bigoted court. Alternatives to clowning behavior were suggested, such as leaving the country or refusing to come to court at all. My alternative ^ of 'saintly-sacrificial behavior* was described as one that maintains a vicious authority,andwas therefore hypocritical. This man thought -better arguments on both sides" desirable. I may never completely agree witti the person who wrote that to me. But I don't consider him stupid" or one of those who should be 'gunned down," Among my comments to this person were; . . . last week l wrote Mr. Lipton that I was disappointed, not that he crltlclaed, but that his was not relevant crititilsm, and that I knew my arguments were not unassailable. Whenever 1 write anything, I realize there are holes In my arguments, that to write at all is to simplify and exaggerate, that my positions are tentative, but that 1 write only as far as my mind can s e e . . . I figure that I can be allowed some errors in my thinking without too much harm to people, and that the good will overbalahce that harm by stirring tip controversy enough to get people Interested... Yours was an intelligent letter and I especially appreciated your tone of v o i c e , . . H i a false decorum' of tyrants in power is repulsive to me too, in the past, T have written steadily on the futility of playing stacked games... Maybe 1 have used the Rubin mess to help resolve a personal matter of my own. 1 feel that I have been a victim so often that I may try to rationalize saint-like behavior to keep myself from engaging Ln what I see aa the worse of two evils self-righteous rage at the ' E s tablishment,' m trying to tell myself to control myself, I try to tell every disgusted person in this country to exhibit control... It seems very possihle to me that Helen McKeona is not the issue. 1 think I merely brought some tender spots to the surface, reminded pet^le of some of the confllcta that exlat, whether 1 do or not. As further evidence that the iasue is not a Helen McKenna issue, so far ihave seen NO COMMEINT made to the antiRnbln letters, nor to the article on liberal backlash in the sams issue as my Rubin article, I think the ssarch for a h a i ^ y medium between Malntly-sacrlflclal behavior' and murderous rage may be mlUions of years older than I am. I think that so continual on next page

trial.

I b a Family

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Recalling Councilman Snyder Media suppresses Reddin family scandal 202 Places to go this weeksee page 60
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May 1-7,1970

Why is the Manson family still at the Spahn Ranch?


ED SANDERS

It circlfiB beyond the weirdneMi barrier wby the Mends and ac> quaintoncea of ChaHea Manson continue U> live and work/play at the Spahn Movie Ranch. Of doea it? Far the Ranch aervee as an .^bvinufl communicationB bunker for the aliened "Family" and the ranch's phyBical Layout IB a campleK fantosy-pleTUH ctnnplete with Mh a a

Tim Leary: Letter from pnsorv-'*""'---*^*^


* ^ n d o u s enerj^ and u n d e . standing here and I m e * g lo ue his renewal eipenenM. I miss Rosemary so much- We find our religious center in our love^and it is very painful to be

trailen, abandoned automoUlM, you know thi they mads the MarlHlage coaches, "outlaw shack*," boro Man civarette commercials a frontier iail> a bunkhousc, a attKsSpahnRnoh?Think about it. "<iveHlem wiloon/* loU of trails, Rscvntly. they complstad the ndcreeks, horses to rent^ride, wen* ing of a monster movie there, and ranch hands. banrn hlUt and se- a few years ago Bonanxa ALmsd cret hauntsall n m by a blind some segs thers. The hiUs on both 83 year old man named George aide* of the ranch are very fam< Spahn who holds in his memory iliar to th B-Wastom frak and 40 years of stories and movie on* expects at u i y time for Tim business anecdotes. Hsll> don't Holt or Th Durtngo Kid or Chico . . f rUfEsrty to come riding down th

Citv r t i r t i tooling up for EXPERIMENTS IN ART AND TECHNOLOGY; i N PROCESS this weeKend nlv at Universitv o* Southern nalifornia^ See paga 6 f o r E.A.T. dgtaili-

' lKdiutr'9 Note: t* <-r u^ek as uv uere goina lo pnraa the California Supremr Court /vfuged withoiU ctimtnent to revieiif the decision of tfte ctturt which had denied bail to Tim Leary pending appeal of hit crinviction in California for poaneRinn of marijuana. Leary'a lawyers immediately filed an appeal with the U.S. Supremf Court. At thia moment the appeat brief IB on the deak of Supreme Court 'ftiHtice William Douglaa. Leary it Ktill in the prison at China and wrote the following note to u* from thertr). Dear Valerie and Art. It was so good to see you in Santa Ana even in those rushed hectic courtroom circumntancea. Wish we could have had time to talk. We shall soon. Rosemary has told me of your help and support. She has been a dynamo of energy and creative love. Thanks for strengthening hcT^ She is so strong and wise, A you probably know, it was the Free Fress article (Oct. 24, 1969) which the Judge used to support his opinion that I am a dangerous menace. I'm sure you see the significance of this attempt to suppress free press and those who write for the free Prrtt. The strength and effectiveness of any tree press resides in its capacity for Holding Together. In this case 1 am being illegally silenced for being a Free Pre$$ correspondent. This makes my legal defense a "deductible expense" in the same way that ATeuJsweek executives and lawyers rallied around the Newsweek reporter who was cited for contempt in the N.Y, Panther trial-

Dealers contribute dope to mail May Day joints


vidiii six to one for the death P S V C H E U U C 8AM Tricky Dick's vow to wipe out penalty for sales. America'a flowing marijuana These are but a few of the industry received a BCHOUH set- thousands of documented circumback during the month of April. stanced that have irked AmerAll over America, dealers and ica's 20,000,000 or more dope heads devoted tena of thnusandi* smohers to the point that "we of man-bours frantically rollinK have no choice but to serve nojoints and atuffing envelopes, in tice on the Nixon administration preparation for the nation's first that this Cultural genocide must annual "Mail in and Cross Coun- be stoDped immediately." try Toke-Down" Friday, May 1. 1970. May Day is also known as Law Day here in America; and henceFrom April Fool's Day through forth IS lo be known as *'J" Day. the laflt week in April, from coast to coast, heads pledged themselves On "J" Day all citizens who to send some grass to at leant a have not yet turned on to the few straight members of their truth of grass are expected to communities while counties co- get their chance. Dope smokera operative dope dealers werp have promised to mail joints with known to have contributed a pound letters of explanation to every of grass each, tearing random non-smoker on how to get high pages out of telephone books, and on this "ill*igar' subiftance. mailing >oints to every listed "Every policeman, mayor, sennameator, housewife, factory worker Over 200,000 American citizens and buHineasman wiU finally already are rotting in our pris- learn how to start the day right ons for so-called "marijuana with E t little bit of r e e f e r / ' crimes." White Panther John Sinclair is doing ten years for May Day, 1970, may well be poosession of two joints; noted the most important day in Amerpsychoktgist and en-Harvard pro- ican history when thousands of fessor Dr. Timothy Leary (ac- dopem in every city and town in cused by the Communists of be- the country gather in public parks ing a criminal theorist) has been and squares to share themselves given sentences totalling 20 years and the truth of the holy weed. for a sit)gle joint, and the GodThe only question is - will damn Eakersfleld City Council the Marijuana Question at last be answered?

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^t^'^ Love and Peace, Tim (contributions for Lasry's lag*] defense msy be sent to th* Free press rosrked Holding Togathar) The free press certainly must not be outdone by the straight press in protecting, rescuing and free its correspondents. The prison experience has been most educational. You can best judge a society by its prisons: Who and why people are jailed and how and how long arc they incarcerated. Prisons are the aped source of social change. All holy-effective social revolutions b ^ n hpre as the recent cases of Malcolm X and Ckaver ^ o w us- Tve obtained BRIAN KIRBY " " You put in * dime and dial the nuit>br. Ilia numbr anowar* and surprlsalyou gel your dime back. Far out, so you pocket the dim* aiid proceed to t*ll your hot news H u h to th* Prasp report*r at the other end of the lin*. And parbsps to a ll*t*n'ing polic* officer as well. Or 1* it th* FBI? For th* past savaral months people calling tti* Fr** Pr** from pay phones have bn gottlng thalr dim** T*lum*dtW* wore Informed recently. No one paid any parUcdar attantlon^ simply writing off the incident a* a bit of tuck, Wbo comPlains When they gel free call? W* called the l*l*phonB company business office, Wh*n<[u*ried about a pay phone raturnlnt th* dime even when th* call i t completed, th* phona con^any responded that this only happona when the number la tied in with special equipment, as when on* dials informatlonortbeoperator, ( P l e a s * turn to Pag* 2}
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separated. U*6 ury and I know you are giving her the love and understanding she counts on-

M o n wondMrtnl, howwsr, ^ ^ " ^ f f i ^ t S ^ n t t ^ ^ ^ diad cat. I l i a m^^^^id.^ at* i n t l y i ~ " "v curious about th ftunous aU*fd animal rittula they think war* consummatwl hy Uie Uagad ci^ cle^lurping l^D-coven at ths Ranch. So, this girl walked up to a ranch hand imd said. "My cat died- Ijet*a go somewhere and bury it, 1 have some inc*nBS-*' Hoping that she might partake of a brackish death ritual. Tti* fam^ ily also told how the polic* have batn digging up th* craek in bai4 of th* Ranch with a bnlldout. Som*ofi* told the cops that thsva was a tunnel built down by tha crack contsininf bodi*s and that ail that remained to do to fln<L th* tunn] was to nroove a huga boulder from th* entranc*- So they atmgglad to move ^ rock and found no tuimel and lft baMnd mor* buUdotar scoia in th* earthSo, it'* pkaaant to rid* down post the bulldosar goug** at\d you can actually r*nt horoea to rid*. But don't go oat th*r* to

by nakod g b b with LSD unaarad on th*ir Upa riding machliMtan roountMl dun* boffgU*, buddy. If* not Uk* that oat th*T in Chataworth wh*r* Mis* Froiam, M n . fFlso** turn topagt 2;

-*

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H a y 1,1970

.Los Angelefl F r e e Preaft

Back at the ranch


(from page 1) S M , Vim Cathy, Mr. Clem* Miss Yippto^-siy and others Uve and love. It's acary nonBthetert, because of t b i murder InvestigstionB and because of ^ constant preaence of the poUce who raid often looki n t to runaways, for murder in formatitm, and one suspecta, tor thrills. lately, the police have coma around often looking f c N T Bruce Davis and Brenda- W ^ , if the police let Brace and Brenda sHp out of their grasp, it'a their own fauh. The grand jury recently indicted Bnice for some alleged part in the death of G a r ? Hinnum, l i i i s they had to do becanae of Mary Brunner, Bmce waa living at the Ranch for quite a while, and tb< police knew of h i s alleged connsction with Hinnian (Davis was alleged to have driven to t h e Hiiiman home during the t i n * Hinman was supposedly b ^ n g held priaoner) ever since h o m i d d e detectives talked to B r u n n v laat Decemberao, if they thought he was fuihy, why didn't they arrest him then? h a ha they deserve it routine applied to the residenta of the S p a h n Ranch. T U s is still a democracyalthough a waste-strewn robotic versionand whoevet- is free at the S p a h n Ranch is free after months a n d months of incrediUe interrogation. All of them were questioned, accused of murder, uAd t h a t their babies would he taken away, told in jail that all of t b n r friends h a d deserted them a n d accused them, harassed at all hours . . . a n d finally the fiizz had to release them. They are free people and a s such, t h e cope have no light to come sneaking in upon trailers at dawn; no right to rip the covers off pretty nutnle naked young women and men huddled together in Bodomic silence.

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


I n fact, one was talking on the phone to Sandy Good just the other day a n d in the middle of the conversation the detectivee pulled another *'mini-raid"a car load of law officers looking far any evidence of occult gatherings of dog'blood drinking topleea witches muttering at the moon. But it's more serioue t h a n that, for the Anyway, when Mary Brnimer huffing policemen are angry and flew in hum t h e Midwest on sub- dangerous, and Bome cool night poena |4> taatify at t h e 2nd 6au- the people at the S p a h n Ranch may Boleil trial, t h e police imme- have to get ready to walk out into diately scarfed her up aiid ar- the hail of bulletsand they'd betretted her for *"suipicio:iB of pro-, ter be Eldridge Cleaver naked if they want to survive. bation violation^* and threatened to indict bar also for Hinman** So why do they endure it? The murder if ahe didnH t e s t i ^ agairut answer probably lies in the muBaausoleiL She held ont> accordn c . Ask any of them at the S p a h n ing to the prosecutor, until a few Ranch and they will show you^ ininntss before nhe was a d u d u l e d Once again the mutter? of Santo testi^v P a t r i d a Krcnwinhcra ders ia full of vhit will be heard attorney, Dave Shinn, waa seen in around the hookah, but the fact tb hiH outside t h e courtroom ia that the aongs of Charlee Manaavaral daya before while ahe waa son, especially as interpreted by in custody, in heated discussion the family every night at the with one of the prosecutova, over Spahn Ranch group singa, are the fact that Brunner w a s being often moving a n d sometiines held incommunicado beautiful. A lot of it is better t h a n what you pay six dolkar& for So she finally teatifled* and now at Uke Fillmore- About one week the protacntion eapecta her to tesat J o h n n y - O n - T h ^ p o t Reheartify slso against Mr. H a n s o n , a n sal Studios and a good recording act she wanta n o p a r t of. Uroe engineer would enable the frienda wUl tall. And a* fbr Btenda, the of ManBon to Leave groupa tike prosecution is rumored to be ufH Groaby-Stitls eating gravel. To t h e set that she wouldn't tell them friends of Manson. it's the music "where the guns are (allegedly) they perform together that HUBburled* out there in the Panataina a life style surrounded by mint mountaina, an indiacretion hostile police, buzzing helicopfor which DA^ Stovitz is said ters, bulldorera. and the constant to have threataned a 14 year jail intrusion of crew-cut touriata and sentence (till 1964, bar, get it?) reporters fiwn Paris Match. The on a credit card foTgery charge National Enqutrer, Stem, Time, from last year. So, ahe melted Ladiet Home Journal and The into the concrete void and t h e Ruaian Journal of AstTophyaics. cops are aorely wroth. One had the opportunity to heEir the singing after a meal served There's no auch thing as a the other night in the Spahn Ranch search warrant at the S p a h n ranch, "jail house." The jail house ia a "We don't need a search warrant; small building next to the Longwe can do anything we want," ia h o m Saloon in which there is ao a commonly heard police re&ain actual cell- One was happy that in the early morning raids. One is drad, also, of hearing the h a 1970 SflWViO PPESS W tft-fi ft ajwc the meal waa served in the sheriffs section of the jail rathe.- t h a n in the prisoner^B department. Three candles were placed on the floor*an occult act> officers, designed to propitiate the ap^ctrea of triimal imbalance. The food waa delicious and served in communal bowls which were passed counter-clockwise (an evil Maoist plot d e s i r e d to impede the sacred progrees of offshore drilling). Served were bowls of nuta, mushroom Cheddar cheeae soup, spaghetti with, 1 guess (I hope), sesame cakes and a delightful fruit salad with donute.

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Reddin family

past catches up

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After the meal, Clem started out the singing. He plrtys thR guitar very well sort of into Richie Haven's'type rhythm complexities. He led the singing of Charlie's Bongs with ability and fervor. And the harmoniea employed by the others were amazing and oometimee beautiful. Gypaie played tlie viohn and the others clapped, hummed and sang the aongs together. They sat in a circle around the candlee and smiled and made glances at one another in the jail house. If ever the baby/bathwater aphorism makes sense, it ia in understanding the singing and harmonies and religioijs intensity of the frienda at the Spahn Ranch, No one can prevent its beauty. And its revolutionary implications. For if the high school kida of the United States ever start singing together in auch a fashion, adioa oil slick. And one gets the impression that they think that hiraute unlearned tuneful m a n to whom they flash the bent-knee adoratio, is aome form of Jesus- That makes the Spahn Ranch the i-nhewed Bethlehem of Yeat's poem. And even as your eyes Klance at this article* they're digging up tiiere in Goler Wash, u p near Death Valley, the police, for oil cans* bodies, guns and dopeas they GonHnue to investigate the religious musician Charles Manson and his alleged Armageddon Dune Buggy Chorale.

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STATE Required 2ip

UONEL ROLFE The two wholesale Uguor oalesroen admitted they had been drinking since noon. Thomas* 31. and his brother, Michael, 29, claimed it had only been beer. But by eight o'clock, said bartende.- Jules Duval, when the pair entered Mother's Bar in IngLewood, they were apparently pretty amaahedSo when a fight atarted, it was a pretty hairy thing, Duval testified in a Torrance Superior Court last weekT h e brawl began over Duval'a refiiaal to serve Hanjld Grey, the 62-year-old uncle of the alcohol dealers, Ehival made the mistake of telling the brothers he thought Grey had already had enough to drink. Before he could turn away, Michael had hauled off and punched him, Duval told a jury. Duval teatifled that he then went for a nightstick at the end of the bar. and holding it in his hand, he attempted to persuade the two brothers it would really be best if they left. But Duval never h a d a chance. He aaid the next thing he knew a barfitool waa coming a t him through the air. Michael, who had thrown it, then jumped the bar, got Duval in a choke hold, while brother Thomas pummeled his face with hia cloaed flstS'at least ten times. "Let's finish the S.O.B, off," one brother aaid while they rested from their eihauating activity. '*Nawlet's go," aaid the other, thua aparing Duval a n y further mutilation thEm liie broken nose and ugly facial laccrationa he had

already suffered. Normally it would have been nothing but another bar brawl story, really not worth more than the coupis of inches given it in the local Torrance newspaper. TheOTilything was that Michael and Thomas' last name is Reddin, and when the Incident occiured in 1965. the brothers' father. Thomas Reddin, waa juat on the verge of being appointed Loa Angeles police chief. Eventually all criminal charges stemming fVom the incident were expunged from the official record. Duval, however, filed suit againat the two brothers, and laat week the jury found the brothers guilty of bfttteiy and awardwl Duval $3,500 general damagea and S600 punitive damagea. The jury apparently was not very convinced by the brothers pleas of aelf-defenae; too many witnesaea testified otherwise. Last week'a victory for Duval marked a personal campaign that had not been very hopeful when undertaken nearly five years a n d three lawyera ago. The first attorney he had talked with said he would take the ca^e only if Reddin, now a television commentator, didn't become police chief. The second attorney said there wasn't enough money in i t The third, from the crusading law firm of McTeman and Margolis, ^ took the case. Similarly, both metropolitan daily newspapers, the Timea and the Herald Examiner, refused to report the outcome of the caae laat week.

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Are the FBI, CIA, Attorney General or LA Police making phones free ?
(from page If Told the apeciftc p r o b l e m / that caller* to the F r e e P r e s s were conalstantly g a t i n g their money back, they admitted there was a wiring problem in the central office that waa reversing the ralaya. How does one create a wiring problem this costly to the phone company^ By tampering with the equipment. As when you a r e fnstalUnf wiretap paraphernalia. The phone company admitted that any wiretapping would be done out of the central office^ but addad that they did not feel compellad to inform the customer of any such bugs. However, thay a r o investigating.

So until they find a way to tap the lines AND keep your dime, you can call us at YES-1&70, freet Just be cool about what you say.

Gene Y o u n g b l o o d , , , , , , , , . . t - 4 3 LUa Williams 46 Liptan , . . . i . . . . .4 Harlan Ellison 50 Skald 45 Astrology 47 Hip Pocrates 57 Food for Thought 56 John c a r p e n t e r 41 Art and Technology 6 Rabelais 13 Dop 18 Christians 22 Fcolof y 26 Teachers* Strike 16 More Ecology 14 Cambodia 24 Hampton Killing 15 Gay Liberation News B Computransl^^^^^-^^^^^^

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rs letters letters letters letters letters letters letters letters letters lett Rand"we didn't do it!"
Mr. Arthur Kunkin 781'1 Beverly Boulevard Los Angeles, California ROOIIB Dear M r Kunkin: continued troop withdrawals and dinengagement, even as the generals plan Ui spread the war into yet aniither country. After the generals launch their attack, the campaign is presented to the people a s a fait accompli. Indeed, some f a d s (like the fourth bombing attack on North Vietnam) are withheld from the President and his cabinet. The man who promised to wind down the war, lo lower our voices and bring us together, announces the broadening conflict to a stunned nation, and next morning, goes to the Pentagon. Nixon has a finely honed sense of protocol and public relations. He scurried to New York lo *ipo!vgi2e to the French president for anliArab demonstrations in Chicago; he displayed Attornev-General Mitchell at his side while reacting to the Haynsworth and CTarswell defeats; he carefully let it be known he was engrossed in football while a quarter-million citi?ens demonstrated ngainsl the war last fall. But he doem't summon the generals to the White House. No. instead he goes humbly to them, to be briefed, perhops. or to report his obedience to their demands. Yet when the people^s elected representatives demand from him an accounting and a conference, the President will not make that shorter journey to the Capitol. T h e legislators are told that deputations from both houses will be received in audience together a t the Executive Mansion, for instruction rather than discussion among equals. And when young people demonstrate on college campuses across the nation, the warning against dissent comes swiftly and terribly; four unarmed students are summarily executed by troops, their college closed down, and their faculty and classmatee dispersed. Are we Vietnamizing the waror is Thieu^s suppression of dissent Vietnami zin g our govern ment? Wh at price "strict construction" of the U.S, Constitution now? James E. Brodhead Sherman Oaks

Pigture
Dear Editor; Agent provocateurs are a siTiou^ subject which the movement muconsider, [n some cases, dellint*' evidence Is presented which link^^ someonewitha government age Of'^. This wiLs the case with Sgt. Ti-d Cozak and two others a t the UCLA campus. Coiak and Fred McMurroy were students with confidenti.il addresses. Although some peo pi.' had suspicions, n'^lhing was al>Mi lately concrete. After being arrested in Westwoodat theTDA demonslr.i tions, Ted Cozak was listed a s n proserutloti witness as Sgt, Harrv Cijiak of LAPI). That's prelt'v concrete evidence that he's the man Often circumstantial evidence points to the fact that someone i> an agent, but nothing concrete i^ established. This is the case wiih Ivan Ka(7. of Cal Stale iJi. Ivar. made his first appearance a t one of the strike rallies. He jumpi'd up and exhorted people to take a building He grabbed the microphi>ne and screamed for action. No one in the campus political organiiiHlions

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


The Los Angeles Free Press of May fi carried an article on Page One under your byline, headlined. "Will Nixon Cancel T h e Elections? Rand (^orporatiim reporti'dly doing study for Nixon." The Rand Corporation h a s issued the following statement, which h a s been puhlidhed by Newhouse newspapers that carried the original speculative story: ' T h e Washington Bureau of the Nrwhiiuse Newspapera stated in ji news item on April 5. 1970, that The Rand Corporation 'apparently' h a s undertaken a secret study for the White House involving the pi>ssibilily of disruption of the 19712 national elections. "The Rand Corporation h a s not undertaken such a study; it does not contemplate making such a study; nor h a s it been approached by anyone with a proposal for such a study." We would appreciate your help in sethng this matter straight by informing ynur readers of this states ment. Sincerely, Paul Weeks Communications a revolution, through changes in our democracy, for the preMnt government isn't what it should be, it never really h a s been. What are ure going to do about iU brother and sister from ISlo 30? We can misspell America all we want, we can slander this country a s pignation until time ends, we'll get nowhere. The more windows we break, the more the eitabUshment makes replacing them, and the more the police have against us for persecution and the more t h e politicians have tu rave about come next election. We've been fighting for ten years and what really do we have to show? Whidi direction are we headed now? All our leaders from Medgar Evers to Timothy IfBry are either jailed, dead, or in exile. They sure a s hell aren't doing this revolution any good a t all in t h e circumstanceall We've burned, become violent animals. protested, chanted, marched, and signed petitions until we are blue. It simply isn't enough.

life. For the last seven years I've been a part of this revolution as a EohemiAn. Beatnik* and hippie individualist, Tve looked a t it from the establiihment^B view, the youth'a view, and while in England and Germany and a few other counties T looked at it from their view. Now it's time to put it down in front of our eyf$. we, the youth, future government of tnia nation. Where is our incentive? We know we have little else to do, it*s less a fight for life than 20 years agof Stoned on drags and up all night what else ifi there to talk of, or employ our construrtive thinking against but the government Weneed

on ajid on back through death, through all life time* befor^ the eun. back through endlcw nothing the forever until you reach yours e ^ center of the universe, and know. All is all, no more or no less. Give all; r n e i v e all; become all. The word "why" is gone, t *'Becauie" U the next word uaed to lock your mind- What doee "because" mean to you? Because your mother said lo? Reaion for? Excuse? Or ie it a word to trick the aubconaciouamind with euggeation? The mora you hear something, t h e more love (soul) i t likely t o accept i t You are sleepy becauae; we are fighting the war, because; this ie right, becauae; thia ia wrong, becauM; becauM, because, jot becauM, "Because^' is a word that goa with, "you are right ...'' "you can but ,-.." e o m e ^ i n g like 8 million tunes. If something ie right it's right; "but" ia juat a n " excuse. That's right "but," "one must be practical . . . reaeonabla and everyone goee along with w h a t other paople think." Everyone is thinking of what everyone ! may be thinking about their new car - . . how much money they have , . . if they are d r e s d right, doing right, going right. If one <you) would not care and comptetdy not care, completely give up to aelf a n d not care what other people think, it would b easy to aee we are going the wrong way. Why? Becauea you are right but, God says ao.

Speed forever

Dear Editor, I want to clear-up some ridiculous myths propounded by Allen Ginsberg on the subject of speed. He falsely declared that speed was " . . . bad for your mind a n d hrtdy, paranoid making, and generally uncreative," BuUshil! I have been shooting speed for thre^ years now, and lots of it. It hasnH hurt me one bit! In actuality it more of a "wonder" substance that gives one insight into the world and those around you. i would put it at the head of the list of chemical Huhstonces one fl/iouW use. It is belter than Heroin and Coke, and it really clears things up, putting them into a gentle perspective, I think a lot better on Melh than anything else. And Hs made me creative liH hell I am now decorating paper cups and will sell them to people. Does it matter that I carry a .45 to protect myself from peo pie like Ginsberg. Speed freaks ain't the lucnyci' snakes arc. I have nevi^r stolen any of Ginsberg's stuff, why doesn't he leave me alone! If I was a cop I'd hit and arrest him for that kinda shit, 1 don't have to steal his BtutT, I knock over g a s stations. Or hang a little paper now and then. Speed ought to be sold in drugstores and given t^i high school and grade scho<l kids to get their heads straight. I bet you geeks is too paranoid of Ginsberi^ and the Communists to print this TRUE letter in your "free" press. Shoot some speed and let the natural forces of the drug let you flee clearly. U p against the

Pigletter

wall anti-speed creeps, Speed Forever, Tom Sputz. The Busby Commune Tronia, Utah

Nixon war

Dear Editor; Several weeks ago. William L, Shirer wrote in the LA. Times that he feared the ITS might be the first nation to become a fascist state hy democratic vote. Events of the pasl several days make one wonder if this hasn't already happened. Consider: The electorate is deliberately misled, the President promising

54

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Manson returns
Dear FdUor-

Dear Editor: Cops shoot kids now. They shoot tbem with birdshot, bullets, tear gas. They hug the streets with microphones and club the first guy who doesn't run. They stand proud with their gas masks and their bayonets. Beat the children. Take away their freedom, Rhiml and kill your hnither. Where are ynu, man? What the hell are vou thinking of? Spray them with gas. Break open their heads with your clubs. Shove them intn the gutter with your black leather gloves. But don't undersland them. Don't listen. Don't be a goddamn human being. Don't he kind. Don't be sincere. Don't give them an inch, Eor if we gain an inch we will take a mile, But you can't slop us for long, fascist. This movement is too big to be suppressed, too big fitr your little brain to even had ever seen him before; in fact no think about, We're going lo win one at the rally recogni/ed him. si^me day. We're going to put you When a student reporter asked him cops in your pwn jails with your his nomeand tried tii interview him, own handcuffs on and let you feel Iviin would say ni>lhing Following how pleasant it is to be clubbed Ihi- rally, me phit thUki-iied further. and kicked. I'm going to fight for <!inny Thom-is, a student at Cal what I believe. That's more than Stale I J \ , spok*' with Ivan a few you do in your prayers! Damn times and sjud that he is "not ni you! Damn you! H"w can you sleep all familiar with the ideas a student knowing that you shot a kid? Vou normally has. He screams Utr piilil murdered a kid. And you certainly leal action, hut he hiis n< political can't call it self-defense, can you? consci<msness. On imc *ii'CJision he I wnnder if you even think about said he w-is t^raduaiing this quarter, what you did. You murderer, you andthenon anotherocciisitm he said that this Wjis his first quarter." lie fascist, you pig. told people he was a journahsm major, We function even with your har- yet no one in the journalism departassmentt your control. Don't you ment knows him. Comrrning acli vilv see, baby, that it's just binding us on campus, Ivan often pickets and closer together? The more you at- leaflets with SOS. talking with the tack, the larger our numbers grow. members all he can. People are thinking. And you can't There is no concrete evidence on stop that now, can you? Not unlesH Ivan Katz, hiiwever. A luX of fishy you kill us all. Go on home, pig, Foi^et about things are going on . . . what you did today and what you Walchd^ig saw. Sit down, and watch a good horror movie, and maybe even laugh a little With your wife. Take a look at the newfl tonight, and see if you can't spot yourself on TV. Tliere you are in the crowdl There you Dear Editor: are! Youf Youwith the blood on I have been connected in some your hands. ,_ , ^ form with revolution for my entire ^ Mel( -d:

Throw words away from your mind. Know and know you know nd everything is the way it is "becauA*'^ that'* the way God a y i so and it and you are perfect and all will work out if you If we realty want to change aiid love it all- To aee God's perfso reform our govermoit towards our tion you must be perfect If you are bad, that bad i t youre way of thinking, we could. We call the police pigs, but do we do any- . . . taught to you by the g u i l ^ . T h e thing more intelligently than them? world you live in is youra; it w a s Now if we really wanted to haMie bom whsn you first opened your the police department we'd cut our eyes and knew you were Now - . . hair, and shave and all look like perfect until m a n and woman put them. They woutdnH know who to their thing on you- Words and mora bust or which way to turn. In order words widiout meaning, only w h a t to really move 6\ establishment others' meaning* place on tham. we'd join them and work from with- When you love all the words, then in! But dowe? If we wanted to get a your world will b a* mine. Peacestart on our own aociety we*d pool I'm a t pcacv with me and if your all the money we spend on druge world ia not a t peace with itsalf, together and buy up enough land that ia too bad. You will have to and settle it. This would cause a clean it up youraelf, Vm going to threat. Can thepreviouriy mentioned the desert to bids ftrom the beast with the rest of the animals and ever happen? Never! You lee, we, ask them for forgiveness. the members of t h e youth move' ment, are a s bad a s the member's Wherever you go, you arc there of the establishment We cannot . . . so where can you go? Everyagree enough to get anything ma- one is what they are, and everyterialistic together, and if you're one knows what it is. No one carea thinkingWoodstock, the money grab- about you. only to play their game bing extablished promoters brought with you, and when you are gone that together, not us. We could also they are sad because they can't . start our children going in a good use you anymore , , , because evesolid direction and they could re- ryone is for themselves and they store this country along with our know it- Justice . . - no one carea help. But most of the young hip what happens to black man, mix, males won't even do this, they'd or white trash . . . a s long a s they rather run off on their pregnant can get away with i t They donH bchicks and leave their wives hold- lievp in w h a t they are doing. They ing the bag. Ninrty-nine per cent only want to go up and get more of these protesting cardboard col- money^ What's 100 young soldiert legians will be drawing in tw> to Nixon? Everyone can make much money using their degree's money. Money Power Kill with establishment companies Kill, They make crime and three or four years from now to prison , , , it's big business, a n d even bother to think of revolution the newspapers are part of i t and or change, much lesa do anytbi' you are a part of it too; so 1 say So where are we going? Not far. live with the world you makev What have we done? Not enough, There is no death. Jesus Christ except have a few of our good proved i t Your hell ia your hell, youtnful leaders killed, harassed and my love is stronger than your and thrown into jail. Who the hell hell-bound world, t am the truth, are the real pig's? Maybe someday and you have me in your court in love, equality, understanding again. Let me speak or let me go. and togetbertiws the hip people and Face yourself or let me go. God the eetablishment will come face says I live. God says you're wrong to face with some reasonable an- and I can prove i t . . . and you know swer's, and we can quit 'OINKlNG' it, and I know you do. at each other and get something worthwhile accomplished. How many people want to kill me? May 1 sign 24 years of youth How many people want to let ma and disgust go? This ia the question- They can Darrel R. Klein. call all of their paid witnesaca, put P.S. If you consider your paper up tnesa, but I have not broken their a free press you may print this. law and they know i t , - - so do yoii. If I give my life to the estabtishinent it vrUl be to me; it won't be in their gas chamber It will be lo anyona who cornea between me and the desert I'm five treat your world's opinion. Charles Manaon

Revolution

The word "why" is only a tefiection of discontent When you are a t peace and contentment there is only one, one sound in your ear. all is. Ohmm catling . . , Back through all the confusion, back through all you have been t a u ^ t .

keep on

truckin*

Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

Copy #A72 - Do Not Post - Do Not Copy

Page 44

May 22, 1970


aify hypnotism science. as^being an occult

LtM A n g o l i ' H F r t ' f P r o w H and consider that the way of life in Janan was totally altered by Douglas MacArthur He did away with all the ancient traditions, and a good example is prostitution. He didn't really do away with it; he only drove it underground and made the price go higher. It's like this, the old htory where the bootkgger and the church man in the South getting loRcther to vote the county dry. The church can hold its head up. and the bootlegger can have a very profitable business. It's very hypocritical. Key: How about Saentohny? it actually is, hypnosis. I believe the actual percentafft ia about a third of the effect achieved by o c lual hypnoeis, I understand it ia also quite expensivC(To be continuedi

Hypno-hype
DOUGLAS KEY Mr- William Deanyer ia a profe^lonal hypnotiat and h a s inairucted over 2,000 people in hypnotic techluquea. including admirals, a t l o ^ neya, docton. dentistSp and m^ny Others. A bloodlefls dental exCraetion (the fint) w a s perfonned upon a patient hypnotized by Deanyer in 19&5. In thi interview. Deanyer dic u i i e i hypnotism* Scientology, t h e Nichiren Shoahu Sokasakkai, political action by organized hypnot u U , and the Sharon Tale murder cave, Deanyer was instrumental in defeating Senate Bill 42 which would have placed entertaining hypnotism under a criminal code. production of previous lives under hypnosis. This u a s when the Bridty Murphy thing was popular, I worked with a woman who cUimed she had died in France of the bubonic plague. A doctor worked with me. and we stopped the experiment at the request of the woman's husband when she developed what appeared to be symptoms of bubonic plague. Key: How many people have instructed? DeanypT About 2,000. What kind of you

Deanyer They do this, bul it is incorrect. Because moat of your magic, preBlidigiladon, that sort of thing, we know it is training behind it. Hypnotism is not even vaguely associated w-th witchcraft, black magic, that sort of thing. The truth i& that hypnotism is a science, and is in a slightly more accepted stage than clairvoyance> telepathy, and ESP. Key: Did you know Charles personalty? Deanyer Yes. Manson

DEALERS.res on

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


Key: Do you thmk he had the capacity to hypnotise people f Key: professions? Kty: Wottid you care to comTnent on what happened at the Senate? Dttanyer; Wc spent about ten weeks defeating the knll which was a Testrictive measure limiting all entertainment hypnoeie^ This bill was proposed by Senator Nejedly. Dr. William Bryan, who heads the American Institute of HypnoBis, is a medical doctor on probation because of some moral convic tions, a n d his group tried to sponOT this bill through Nejedly. of Deanyer: Clergy, lawyers, judges, military ofRcers, public officials, movie starsa wide range of people. Oddly enough. Tve taught a great number of electronics technicians. in K"ey: Why are they interested hypnosis ? Deanyer: There must be some re la don between electronic technicians' thinking processes and the deeper aspects of the way the mind works. Key: What ie the greatest sible danger or misuse of notism? poshypDeanyer; I really do n o t I've never known him to profess an ability to do so. Tve found it rather odd that a number of publications have tried to portray him as such, trying to hypnrid7p ravens and the like^ and that he held these people under a hypnotic power He didn't hold them under hypnotism at all; he held them with one very common things An availability of drugs to people who would do anything to get the drugs as long as they didnH have to work for them. Deanyer; Scientology is hypnotism under another name. They simply have changed th^ terms used in hypnosis, U doesn't work well because it is not presented for what

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Key: So you don't think he hypnotized or brainwashed these people and sent thern on a mission of some sort?

t.in? F^ACIFIC COA-iT HVwV

\77 HiOEi

Key: Why were they in favor thitbiUf

Dauiyet: If they have been euccessfol in getting the bill through, they could have cornered the prolessional field for a select group of people, particularly medical people.

Kty: Do you think financial motivation u/oM the primary reason for their action?

Deanyer I'm ahnost certain it was. T h e lestimoDy they presented w a s nebulooa and not relevant No documsotalion was presented, I believe t h U t h e whole t h i n s was an attempt by Bryan and his group to lock up hypnotism for themselveB.

Deanyer Quite frankly, it is the hypnotist who thinks he knows w h a t he is doing and hasn't researched his subject thoroughly. And this includes hypnotists in the medical profession. I believe that any hypnotist who is qualified and is going into a phaseofhypnotjsnt should do all the research available and should be aware of any possible condition which could arise. If he feels he is in an area which he c a n ' t handle, he should bring the subject out and try to find another solution, or find another hypnotist who does know how to handle i t Key: Are you involved in the Sharon Tate case? Deanyer Yes. as a possible prosecution witness. Dr. Bryan was a defense witness, but the attorney who sought his services h a s since been removed from t h e case. Key: How did hypnosis the case? enter into

Denayer I don't think Manson is capable of hypnotizing anyoneKey: Are you familiar with religious cults such as the Nichiren Shoshu Sokagakkai and Scientology? Deanyer Yes, I've done studies on them. Key: What have you about them?

sandfalmdhcr
nio Oi^^ttv k^t.

discovered

Key: Hour much do professional hypnoOaU wuch as Bryan make per year?

Deft<>yert The ones who are also involved in medicine e a m around 175,000 or more. The average hypnotist In the aitertairunent field earns around $20,000. Key: Hour many profeteioruU noiiatM are in California? hyp-

Deanyer: I n all fields, about 2300. Key: How many worked with to defeat tht bdif you

Deuijwr: Slightly less t h a n a hundred, actively. Key: Do you or your group pian any legislation or would you like to see any legislation passed coneeming hypnotism? Deanyer Ye, we do. We hope to see legislation passed that would standardize the profeaaion and make it tnore ethical. T h e b a s k problem i s t h a t hypnosis is in the same category a s electrkily. We can turn it on and off; everyone knows what it ie; but it cannot be scientifically d e f i n e . My definition of hypnosis is that it is a science perfonned by an artist. Key: That's rather philosophical. Deanyer Definitely not- First of 11,1 would >By that r o one actually has complete control of another person, and it would be a physioal impossibility to change a condition of a lifetime within a few seconds with hypnoeiB. If anything, a subject is not in a trance o b ^ n g the will of the hypnotist He has a will of his own at all times and is (capable of making decisions at all times and capable of breaking the so-called trance whenever he ft^ls like i t Key: How long have you been a professional hypnotist?

Deanyer Actually, I think it was a publicity stunt by Bryan, On a local TV show in which I debated Bryan, I told him that hypnodsm could not have been involvni in the case, and if it had been, it could not be used as a defense- Bryan said he didn't really mean hypnotism; he meant brainwashing-The whole thing was a matter of whether or not these .. ^ , , , people were capable of making deciBions> or if they were in fact hypnotized by Charles Manson, If they were in fact hypnotized by him, then they were supposedly not capable of predicision. This w a s n l the case at all> because Tm sure the records show that drugs, not hypnotism, w a s the sponsor of the crime. But hypnotism was a natural thing, a scapegoat, to fall back on when there was no other explanation to offer. Key: A lot of people incorrectly, oat of their own ignorance, das-

Deanyer: Only this. The trances used in Nichiren Shoshu are actully based on a chanting, a lulling form of self-hypnosisthe principle is almost the same as that used in the Catholic church, where they speak in Latin. They don't know what's being said, but it sounds relaxing, find it feels good, and the Nichiren Shoshu ritual embraces the same principle. It also embraces a more scary principle. People who look into it closely and objectively will leam that the NSSG preaches world domination a n d is a militant, political organization. Although it may do something for you personally if you become involved in it. it will also do something for them on a much greater level

\r

GONE WITH vuf

The US government is quite upset about the NSSG, and they have every reason to be. The NSSG is like any other religious cult. There are workers, freeloaders, people who just w a n t to belong; and when you separate the actual number of people involved who really believe its principles all the way and will stand behind it and those who wouldn't, there wouldn't be that many^

GREAT DEAL OF NODITY! YOURSELVES, MY EVIL CHILDREN!


M

HUMS!

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THE FUN SHOW OF THE YEAR! with fatherly advice that saves you time and money! - by Prot. MARTY ENGELS

Key: It's interesting that they are a powerful political party in Japan. Deanyer; Not really, if yuu stop

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Deanyer: Since the age of 19 roughly 27 years. Ifey." What was your moat interesting ease?

Deanyer: One concerning t h e re-

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55

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Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

Copy #A72 - Do Not Post - Do Not Copy

Lo0 Angeles Free Preaa

Junes, 1970

PgeS

Talk to Charles Manson - $1000 a crack

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


Socialist Workers party meeting hall after bombing by Cuban exuea. Photo by John Gray

ED SANDERS Th6 s p e c t r a of Lawrence Sch11Ir has once again entered the TateLflBUnca murder cases, As of this writing^ plans a r e pending whereby Schiller will have excltjslvQ rights for the sale of p e r s o n al Interviews with Charles Manson. Pardnn me while 1 puke. It all started when P a r i s Match called one of the lawyers a s s o ciated with the case and stated that the magazine was willing tu pay the lawyer JSOO if he would set up an interview with Manson and that also Mansi-m would r e ceive $1000 for himselfall this for a few minutes of babble for the French populace. Tlie lawyer then made the e r r o r of cfllllpp Schiller about the matter and Schiller went into a tremhly voiced greed-grovel over the pht>ne, declaring of the vast sums to he scarfed up by Ihe "eKcluslve" rights to the vocal cords of Charles Manson. Thus It Is that probably the last two people who will have seen Manson with out paying a $1000 honk duty for the privilege were J e r r y Rubin and PhU Ochs who visited Manson last Saturday for several htiurs. Humors that Manson told Rubin of the location of 73 hidden bazookas burled r e a r Willow Springs In Death Valley a r e unfounded, Manson reportedly denied^ when asked by Hubln, any connectUm with the Tale house murders and said that Gary Hlnman was snuffed because of reprisal by parties unknown due to the dealing out of some had acid. More meadow muffins.

Why Is Manson allowing Schill e r to become Invnlved with him? probably because he desperately wants his side or version of the alleged events to come out all over the world. To dale Manson's story In unknown because of a court order prohlbltlnif him from talking. By the time that the trials begin on June 15 there will behundreds of expense account reporte r s spewing Into L.A. from all over the world to write about "the c r i m e s of the century." Hanson's mouth Is wi'rtli at least a quarter of a million to Schiller who probably will get his 25 per cent off the top as he did In the Susan Atkins confession book, Schiller evidently thinks he can somehow get around the gag-rule. Bo, thl.s naive reporter and d e tecto-punk was preparing to visit Charles Man sun after his court h&arlng on June 1 when suddenly he was mumbllngly Informed something to the effect that s o m e one named Schiller would be upset If Daye Shinn or any other lawyer escorted him in, Lawrence Schill e r ? I asked. Yes, Lawrence Schiller, The same Lawrence Schiller who ran down ^o Texas to Interview a terminally sick Jack Ruby and published both a record of Ruby's "confession* and a hastily schelssed-teffether book about It,

the worldwide rights to several organizations. Including P a r i s Match, Whan Match learned they bad t>een burned, they located Schiller In P a r i s and enacted kickjiss procedures against his face and body, beating him xtp. As a topper, Schiller wrote a sloppy book supporting the conclusions of the w a r r e n Commission H ^ w r l on the assassination of John Kennedy, a book that reads vs though it were written by known amphetamine heads during the Intermission at a Holler Derby. To get the support of Manson^s -family," Schiller has evidently promised a sizeable advance to be paid out of his own pocket. This advance, however, Is not against monies to be received for future Interviews, but is an advance to be paid to the girls for a book of Mansonanla they have been working on for several months. The book will IncludesomeofManson's song lyrics, poems, metaphysics and stories al>out various raids, Schiller, with his reputation and with the Manson image abroad in the land. Is going to have trouble selling this book. It doesn't matt e r , however, because the Interviews will make up for any money given out as an advance for the book, Schiller must kmw that the family is going to be heavily plssed-ofl If a book which they r e gard to be at least as important as the Bible duesn't come out. Watch For Schiller forming his own publishing company to putthls lyiok out becauije of chop-m> fear. Nobody In this casa,ls freefrom e r r o r and taint. The prosecution, the police, the Judges, thedefense, the defendents, the family, rna, certainly the honkoid media; all have added to the confusion and corruption and fake images s u r rounding thest' >'ldeous, damnable, devilish, despicable crimes and their alleged p e r p e t r a t o r s . All things surrounding this case; the coercion, the threats from both camps, the sleazy money-slurping, the servile lying scummy attempts uf the establishment p r e s s to Indict marijuana, group sex, long hair, LSD, and communes merely because someone like Manson may h a \ e adapted some of the styles perfected by one of the best generations ever to grow up In America- and finally all facets and aspects of Mr, Manson and bis life and familyall these things have to be exposed Into the healing sun of close examination and explanation before the reality of these events can finally be understood In our souls.

Cuban exiles bomb Socialist hall; New committee to force police to act
down on the floor According to Carole Sridman, the invaders continually shouted, "You will die for F i d e i r and "We are going to kill you commies." While the victims were being held at gunpoint, other m o n b e r s of t h e invasion force began smashing kitchen utensils, pulling down bookshdves and overturning deska They (hen poured gasoline all over the floors and walls and ignited the office. As t h e terrorists fled the scenes Peter Seidman began trying to put out t h e flamew with a fire extinguisher. When Seidman realized this w a s futile^ the magnitude of the flames bring too great, t h e OC' cupants fled down the fire escape.

DENNIS LEVITT A Citizen's Committee h a s been formed in Los Angeles in response to the arson attack on the Socialist Workers Party Headquarters. Named the Citizens' Committee for thi- Right of Kr^E Expression, the nrtcanization is aaking for a fuLJscaJe investigation into the fire-bomtnng and the arrest a n d conviction of those responsible for tho attack.

T h e following people have already made this d n n a n d for a r rest end conVidionr (Organizations are bated for identification only.)

The same Lawrence Schiller who approached Tim Leary and Allen Ginsberg at a drug cimferetice In Berkeley and conned them Into cooperating in putting: out a recording about the use of LSD, promising them it would be objective and honest, Schiller then got Dick Clark to narrate the record and edited It so that Ginsberg and others sounded like mutant Galnsbui^ers, Glnsberghadto threaten to shit upun the front lawn of the president of Capitol Records to get that company to withdraw distribution of the r e c ord,

A friend at Life magazine tells a grim tale of an article on use of LSD by teenagers that schlUer got Life to commission, Schiller, upon receipt of the advance money, proceeded to use part of it to round up a bunch of high school kids and then bought a d d , gave it to them, filmed and taped the^roup^s t r i p down the corridors of dope, Schiller also at one point ac* quired exclusive photographic rights to the beautIflcation of Madame Nhu, He proceeded to sell

AMERICA
iteoo (T O A s w e w ITJ
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Test case on methadone
condition he not use drugs. A month after E v a n s voluntarily be^an methadone maintenance treatment under an experimental program at the University of California Irvine^ the authority o r dered him to atop. When he refused, he waa rearrested foi violating a condition of parole. According to D r J o h n C. Kramer, director of the experimental proffroi" in which E v a n s w a s enrolled, methadone is a commercially available^ opiat&type narcotic with pain killing effects, which blocks the craving for and euphoric effect of heroin, "Methadone allows the patient to function without sedation or euphoria and with no impairment of vigilance, reaction time, affect* or intellectual function," Dr. KrB' In a case which could h a v e substantial impact on both medical treatment of heroin addicts and the arbitrary policies of parole authoritiee, ACLU volunteer attorneys will acek a court order permitling an ex-convict to be treated with a narcotic under a radical and much debated experimental program. Howard P. Miller and Richard n. Bronner will ar^ue in t h e State Court of Appeal in San Bemadino June ;t that Richard Carl Evans, a paroled narcotic addict, should be permitted to remain in a methadone treatment clinic even though methadone is a narcotic drugmer stated in a deposition aupporting Evans' appeal. T h e two attcm<'ys are seeking a court order overturning the February 20 ruling of Loe Angeles Superior Court Judge Harry V. Petris who hrid that the prohibition of the use or treatment with methadone aa a condition of parole was Biddy within the discretion of the authority. Evana, an addict for the past 17 years, w a s paroled a s an ou^patient fron^ t h e California Narcotic Addict Evaluation Authority on t h e T h e attorneys argue that t h e ban is not a n^Bsonable condition of parole, and is* in fact, antithetical to Evans' parole. Directly challenging the power of the authority itself, the two attorneys allege its refusal to consider t h e validity of the methadone maintenance program cmsiitutea an unconstitutional abuse of diacretion.
Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

Next week we shall begin a close watch on all events surrounding the Tate-house trial which will begin on June 15, No one will be spared scrutiny. And It's going to be grim. For already the TV camera crews a r e having Jousting matches with their cameras as they attempt safety blitzes and red-dugging techniques borrowed from football In their endeavors to get close to lawyers, D,A,'s, family m e m b e r s , and others a s sociated with the caseduringcourt hearings. Maybe some of you should comewltness It on the eighth floor of the Hall of Justice; a Utile taste of Hollywood Babylon, a few flashes of blood-guilt, m u r d e r s , r a c i s m , sex-magic, h>pe, sleaziness, desperation and insanity.

G.J. Cohen, General Rep., Asaod a t e d Students, UCLA. A r n o l d s . Kaufman, Pres,, American Federation of Teachers. Local 1990, UCLA. John T. Williams, V.P.. Teamriters Local 208. F r a n k Candida, Editor, Cal S t a t e LA College Times. John Parker. Editor, UCLA Daily Bruin, Barry Krugd, Vns., Cal Stale IJi VIVA. Malcolm l>obhs> Pres., LA Local 535, Social Services Union AFX^CIO. Paul Perhn, Menber, International Exec. Board, Tnt'l Longs h o r a n a n ' s and Warehouseman's Union. Saul Sancedo, Stu- Body Pres,, Cal. State LA. William G. Smith, National Law' yers* Guild. Strike Committees at LACC, ValleyState, Long Beach Statt^ UC Riverside

Those present all agreed that the attackers were Cubans. Judging ftom the statements made and patterns of previous attacks, the ta-rorista appear to be anti-Castro Cubans or, a s they are eometimee referred to, gusanoe (worma)- In past attacks, stickera eapounng "Cuban Power^' and anti-Castro slogans have been Left b d u n d . T h e list of thrir attacks in the Loa Angdee area goes back almost a decade.

forced everyone to He on t h e floor. They then poured gasoline on t h e entire building. After starting a large flrev they flei T h e Haymarket* almost totally destroyed, w a s forced to dose. Other bombings attributed to gusanos include the Mexican TOUT^ ist Department, Shell Data Proc aingCenter. Air France, and J a p a n Air Lines, Although many other attacks h a v e taken place, theSWP and the Young Socialist Alliance have been prime targets for the gusano terrorism. The Socialist Workers Party h a t been phyeically attacked five times in the last two years- The first attack, an abortive one, took place May 10, 196& During a public meeting gf the SWP and YSA. a bomb was found at the headquap tca-s. T h e bomb was drfuoed before it exploded thotigh, and there were n o injuriea to any of those attend' ing t h e meeting.

The Cnmittee w a s formed in response to a serieB of terrorist attacks in the Los Angeles a r e a T h e most recent attack occurred May 27 at the campaign headquarters of t h e Socialist Worker* Party (SWP>. On that day, at approximately 12:40 P.M., a band of heavily armed men entered the building. Four campaign workers, Peter Seidman, Sally Whicker, Carole S d d m a n and Tihy Alvin, were in the office at the time. Armed with M l semi-automatics and submachine Kuns, the terrorists forced those present into one room and made them lie face

In March, 1961, and again in 1963, amied groups of gusanos tried to tnreak up meetinga of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee1n 1967, 16 gusanoa disrupted a meeting at t h e Baldwin Park Civic Center sponsored by two churchea. Shouting anti-Castro slogans, the attackers threw tear-gas bombs and broke u p furniture. In Nov., 1968, the Campus Ntu>a at East Los A n g d e s Junior College w a s bombed, allegedly by gusanos. Tn Aug., 1969, three armed gusanos entered the offices of t h e Peace Action Counril a n d rifled t h e tilffl of the National Committee to Abolish HUAC. They alaodestroyed equipment and h d d three people at gunpoint. On April 13, 1970, a group of heavily armed gusanos invaded t h e H a y m a r k e t a meeting place for revdutionariee in t h e Echo Park a r e a After spraying one man's eyes with oven cleaner, the gusanos, armed with M l carinnea.

On Oct. 16, 196S, their headquarters was dynamited v^ith conwderaUe damage. Some time d u r ing the attack one of t h e assailant* left a "Cuban Power" sticker a t t h e scene. On Dec, 31, 1969, three m i h d d a m a n and woman at gunpoint while t ^ ' ^ firebombed and tear-gassed U m e T h e house had been adve t i . .. .u ;^ ^ l o o t i o n of a party celebrating tl- . Ith anniversary of the Cuban twvolution, sponsored by both SWP a n d YSA, On M a n * 30, 1970, aeven *hota trurn thre aeparate guna were fired into SWF headquprtera. T h e most recent attack. May 27, h a s been described previously. It WAS in reaponse to t h e w attacks, aa well a s inaction on t h e part of the Lo Angeles Police Department, that the Citiaen'a Committee for t h e Right of Free P d i t ical Expr^wslDn w a s formed- T h e Committee v^ll try to generate masaive public support o that ar^ refits and convictions can be obtained. At present, the LAPD haa made no arrests on any of t h e five attacks on t h e SWP. T h e functioni of the Committee^ in generating support, wiU be publicity for the a t t a d c ^ ok)taiiiing scJidarity statonents, sending delegations to see city officielt, and a massive petition-letter writing campaign. T b e petition, which supporters are signing, reads in part. "I aupport the campaign of t h e Cit< ixen'i Committee to secure the arreet a n d conviction of thoae r ^ apontfUe for the May 27 arson attack . . . " Support haa coma in from trade unions, new^}aper editors, college strike committees, anti-war organizations a n d other groups.

AnothflT function of t h e Committee will be to raiae funds to refurbiah damage done by the raid. Over SlO,000 damage was done to literature, of^ce equipment, fu^ niture and flKturea. as will a* t o the building itself Any per son interested in signing the solidarity petition, volunteering much needed time, or donating funds to refurbish the headttuaA tors should contact the C i t i u n ' a Committee, 1702 E. 4th S t , LA, 90033. or call AN 9^4963 or 263467a

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June5,1970

Los Angeles Free Press

irs letters letters letters letters letters letters letters letters letters lette

Dear Editor Don Jckon'8 article about poeaible Lot Angelea gay riota w a s sheer femtaay from a fertile imagination. I suppose he wrote it to blow C ^ e f Davia' mind out of orbit by lUggeating that all which ia needed to start the gay revcJution ia for aome pig to wave h i s baton at aome homosexual a n d we metamorphose from helpless Ump wriste to hairy'cheated freaking fag revolutionaries out to burn t h e town down.

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


My sincere t h a n k s to you for bei n g a rare but true free prees, L^ve, J i m I>iamond Loe Angeles

Gay revolt lacks fire

aims include the creation of a civilization without insanity, criminals or war. It h a s endured deapito massive attacks hy a suppressive group, a n d its membership consistently doubles every six montha. It now numbers more t h a n 20 million, worldwide- With each passing day they make gigantic strides toward achieving h u m a n rights for alt individuals everywhere.

Nevertheless, it ia true t h a t a pogrom against the gays has begun. The number of gay arresta have risen sharply during the past two months* but, alas. I sup^ pose most homosexulas a r e only going to crawl back into their cloMts until the thing blows over and allow the police to conduct vicious entrapment procedures against their brothers while they say nothing. Fire Queens, where are you? Although I have been active in G a y Liberation* I have yet to meet a single Buper-mititant, although there are aupposedly a few in the San Francisco area. Los Angeles Gay Liberation could certainly use more radical members s o that Mr. Davis may rest assured that we aren't going hack into our closets! I know that there are many in (he Mo\'ement who think that G a y Lib ia only a freaky little aide trip along the path to aocial change. Perhaps we are irritating some masculinity nerves in their psyche which they would rather not be corJronted with. Perhaps we are the ultimate revolution to puritanicnl Amerika. The masculinity ego trip gave ua the Indochina War, and it goea one hell of a lot deeper t h a n most of ua would Uke to admitYoura, Alfred Craig Member, L A . G a y Lib

Police buy flack vests

ous fascination with folk medidne. But their recent attempt to establish a causal relationship between sugar intake a n d acts of violence makes it clear that they don*t know a n y more about reasoning t h a n they do about seasoning. Charitably disreKardinK their statement that Bonaparte was named "Napoleon*' "from the napoleon pastry he was so fond o f (which is a bit like saying t h a t Prime Minister Nehru got his name from the funny jacket he wore), I'd just like to question the one about the Texas tower sniper. He had chocolate in his poeseesion when caught, say Mick and Lini, presumably proving that sugar incites acts of violence. How about saying that, becauMC he was wearing trousers- violence is ir-d(ed by pants? Or are you saving that for when you start to write a fashion column?

1>ear Editor: On May 20, 1970, a t 3 in the afternoon, 1 had a front row seat for the viewing of a bummer in the makingr Two of LA'B finest were doing their sworn duty by spending our time and money in a western surplus store {located in the 5200 block of Lankershim Blvd., No. Hollywood), purchasing seven surplus flak-jacs' .-, otherwise known as bullet proof jackets (or vests). One might rationalise this as a normal reaction in the face of rising turmoil all over the world, and specifically campus antics, so to further public relations - . . I asked plain clothes officer #1, "Getting ready for a long hot summer?" To which I got a shit-eating gi-in a n d an uneducated. "Uh-huh.'' 1 suggested to the other ofRcer that those "things" were pretty heavy underwear . . , but he aeemed much more reserved (perhaps too wrapped up in his thinK to hear me, the common plight of most everyone these days) and didn't answer, I sincerely hope you can print this somewhere, as it is of grave importance (pun?) to the young person in the street who will eventually be run over by these armor clad clods, Tech specs, although sparse, are aa follows: Seven bullet proof vests purchased for the sum of $4.50 each, (half normal price) to go to police issue^ The officers wouldn't give me their names, badge nirnibers, or destination- but rode off into the sunset in a light green four door nark-ark . . . i n (he direction of Van Nuys. Take heed, brothers. Love, Rev. C-A. J o h n s No. Hollywood

They call it rum hue. propter hoc. Mick and Ijni, and it's so grievous an error that it doesn't even belong in "Food For Thought." But if you're determined to conlin ue drawing inferences of that kind, it might interest you to know that near-perfect correlations emsl between the death rate in HyderabadIndia, from 1911 to 1919, a n d variations in the membership of the International Association of Machinists, during the same period. Now, if you can prove that they all ale sugar, you might really have something Uiere.

Sincerely, Colman Andrews Los Angeles

Ripped-Off Gl asks for help


Dear Editor Hi! (smile) My n a m e is Hiram Betorcourt, I'm in the artny, but I don't w a n t to be here. I aJso have a disease of the liver which I don't want, but that I can see. What I can't see is why I'm atill here, for the last two years I've been wanting out, and I have failed. C a n you give advice as to what to do or where to go? I have an attorney by the name of Heisler, but he's not yet showed a n y interest towards my case. So, therefore maybe I may not need him afterall. Someone should explain to me my righta as to what to do about my situation, and perhaps I can defend myselfAlt I have to say is that I'm of US stature and have almost 24 months of active duty- After 23 months of good time I went AWOL, and now, a year later, I was apprehended, have heard nothing from anyone, and have seen no one including my civilian attorney in two weeke. Why am I here? Why a m I here? Do you care? C a n you guess? Can you try? Will you write? Peace, Love, Joy Hiram Betorcourt

magarine to the table of contents: "1 Lived With Charlie Manson's Family," by Y-L, Freeman, page 34. Turning to page 34, I see two funky pictures of myself and a picture of Charlie on a make sheet1 begin to read the s t o r y , , , Out of Argoey'e 2500-word a r t i d e attributed to me, I had written approximately 250 words. Here are a few of the more sensationalislic and libelous statements attributed to me: "Charlie preaches love, but that was a big put-on. He is a tittle bundle of hatreds. He hates blacks, Jews and people who are taller or stronger than hewhich is almost everybody. He believes in Hitler's idea of a master race of untainted Aryans Non-whites must be extorminated! Hitler had the right idea with the gas chambers! Jews, blacks, i-nd all inferior races have to be eliminated so we can build a society of beautiful white people, living as one family. (Charlie) So Charle:' Manson took my possessions from me by destroying my will and toking charge of my mind. But he did not get from me what h e wanted moat: my identity. When I awoke, dazed, the next day, there w a s still a little voice inside that said, "I am Y- Lee Freeman," . . . I got myself away from them, and so I escaped becomingoneofthe slaves, and maybe winding up in a prison celt, facing charges of murder, I was so happy to be away from them, and afraid of what they might do, that I just held on - . , . Sensationalism, yellow press, one-sided viewswhether Charlie's innocent or guilty, the farcical cry of a fair trial rings true only in the'Cars of those conditioned to respond to symbols geared to the manipulation of their psyches. The basis for the American Judicial System is individual responsibility. If the system succeeds in proving that Charlie is guilty of the iTrime of controlling other peoples' minds, then the next logical step is the indictment of t h e militory, of industry, of churches, of anyone with a collective idea. TTie city fathers love contradiction.

Please send oash, check, or money orders, signed to East Los Angeles Free Clinic, 5016 Whittier Blvd.. Los Angeles, California 90061 Thank You David Sanchez Director

Monk writes from Vietnam


The following is a letter received from a Vietnamese monk who was recently released after three years in prison. He is a member of the "Coconut Monks" pagoda. He was imprisoned for refusing i*i fight. On Feb, 2-1, 1970, the Vietnamese government, with help from America "advisors," raided the Coconut Monks' islHnd. As o result of the raid, a hundred monks were sentenced to three years imprisonment euch. The letter begins:

Scientologist praises it

Dear Editor: During the last couple of montha I have noticed m a n y letters about, and references to, Scientology. The viewpoints you have published have varied greatly concerning exacUy what Scientology is a n d what it does. 1 have attained one of the highest levels avail a Ue in t h e organization <O.T.-6), and I feel that in all fairness to your readers you should publish tiie viewpoint of someone who h a s been a Scientologist for some years, is preaentiy a member, a n d h a s actually studied t h e Dear Editor One glance a t a certain picture organization in great depth. It in your May 22 issue reminded me seems to be the one viewpoint that of a certain draft card burning a t h a s not yet been covered, the MDM rally in Oceanside last Scientology is a way of lifc. week. Although I w a s at quito a Amaiingly. it is a workable way distance from the actual burning sequence, I couldn't help but notice of lifea way to survive bettCT, be happier, a n d accomplish more- the elaborate manner of t h e tirst Its technology contains Uie truths card burner, who bore a striking resemblance to one so-called Ivan about m a n ' s enstence^ In Scientology I have never been asked to Katz (assuming it was he pictured Dear Editort believe something which wasn't on pg, 5 in the Free Press) 39 real to me; rather, I have been [Lines: Six in the Fourth Place\ He WEU an unusually provocative instructed to examine Scientology participant in the rally, wildly gydata and decide for myself whether rating to the rock beat and seemall or any of it ia true or not. I ingly exhorting others to action. In have found self-avident, true an' any case, a t least two others folChanges to: awera to thousands of questions I lowed his lead to the great thrill of used to have concerning my feelthe crowd and who else, one won31 inge, who I reaUy a m , what I am, ders? where 1 a m gotng, why 1 eidst, and What do the people do with w h a t life is all about. It has been frauds like "Ivan Katz"? the anai^rer to my problems, wcvP. Lewie riea, unwanted feelings, a n d con* Del Ma- After a s a u n a a n d a swim, i went fuaionsto t h e Post Office I'd been expectAa I write this tettr. I have a ing the galley proofs of my S p a h n strong disagreement with one curRanch story, which w a s to appear rent aspect of SderHology- But so in the May issue of Argoay^ I what! Scientology i a n t perfect, received a "nothing for you, air" and neitlter am I. Still, I wouldn't from t h e General Delivery clerk trade half of w h a t I have gained for the same answer 1 h a d received for the deed to the universe a n d everythe last montik. I began ambulation t h i n g i a i t As a member of t h e toward the blind m a n ' s concession, Dear Editor Ohio Academy of Science, I have my eyes focus on the mag rack Mick a n d l i n i are the Cotton found it t<4aUy rational from a adtntiiic point at view. As a h u m a n Mather and the Mrs. Grundy of a n d the May Argosy.. -a cover shot bainf I have fovnd it to be the road t h e groaning board- Which is cool. of Charlie on an orange-red badito total freadom- S d e a t o l o g / a Far be it from me to question groond, with the capti(i, "Could tbaii Qiudot taitfla at their curi- Thia Mao Control You?" I open t h e

Katz strikes again

Charlie, you're a prime character in a chapter of my novel, The Indescribable Adventures of the y. Lee Freeman. In my original 28-page version of the Spahn Ranch story, I portrayed you and the Family according to my past projections and present stote of cacophonic brain echoes, good and Bad-Ood and the Devil, truly a band of everythings. I'm impressed by your challenge of the basic premises of the American Judirial System: memory as a valid instrument for legal evidence, the role of judge as dictotor, the desire to defend one's self without formal legal training. If you get a chance, dig on the section from the Gita where Krishna gives Ariuna advice concerning relatives. ^There was once a dog sittin* on a log, thought h e w a s a frog, jumped in t h e river and drowned." Chartie Manson "Ain't gonna fatten no more frogs for snakes," Sonny Boy Wittiamson II The Blues are r e a l . , . Y, Lee Freeman

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Manson story changed Free clinic needs coin Comment on Mick and Lini
EMERGENCY. We ar" sorry to say that unless the East Los Angeles Free Clinic can raise a substantial amount of money, we will be forced to dose. The East Los An^ftJes Free Clinic h a s now been opened for 10 months, and h a s offered free medical, psychological, and sodal care Co 3,500 patients, of which the majority come from a very low income barrio cmd would n o t be receiving care if it h a d not been for the money from people who have contributed to t h e Clinic. Now, after iO months of service, our m e d i d n e room is empty; our l i g h u are about to be turned off; a n d now we have no choice, but to turn to you for donati<m t h a t will give u s hope to go on a w i n g t h e pac^ft
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S.O.S. Peace is sentenced if three hundred years. 1 am B newly liberated prisoner cjf peace. Sine*- 1^67, I have b t e n in jail for the cause of my religion: the religion of puace preached by Buddha and Chriet, These two saviors of humanity tell man not to kill his brothers, that is- not to purticipute in any war, out of any reason whatsntv*-r. The government forced me to bear arms against my compatriots. I refused and became a non-violent prisoner of disobedience. We refuse t o fight because we believe that non-killing or Ahisma, is the root of peace. We love all creatures becoua4' we believe that was ia absolute and cruel and inhumane. We refuse because, tike mcitit Vietnamese peasants, we believe strongly in the LongHoo (DraKonFlower) era of the future, when the spiritual power of peace, symbolized by the flower, will prevail over the brutal force of deadly war represented by the dragons. On Oct. 27, 1969, the govemmi-nt kidnapped 1^6 of uur brothers right in the pagiHia with the intention to transform them into soldiers. They are now in the prison of Chi Hoa. On Feb. 24. 1970. the Kovemment landed a large scale nptrration with soldiers, policemen and American advisorsagainstour pagoda in Kien Hoa province (in the Delta) and captured over llHI nf uur brothers. They were sentenced to three years imprisonment fetch. They arc ccimpciHed of all young Vietnamese without any political affihation who have abandoned or refused the weapons of death on either side in thin internecine war, to work for peace in the love of Buddha and Christ, The resi of our community in the pagoda ia livinjj in suspense, in wait for another raid. Peace is in aRony, awaitinfr the coup de gra<. 1 light up a candle is front of the National Congress of the Second Republic to search for justice. In the quality of the first prisoner of peace reloused, in the quuhty of three centuries in jail of our brothers: We protest t h e policy of oppression, of capture, of torture, of detention and of ill-treatment exerted by this government against the peace lovers, and e sped ally against our co-followera. We protost the aggression into holy places of worship, like those raids against our pagoda. We would like to ask the representatives selected by the people to defend our rights a n d the constitution. Where is the freedom of worship? Is it a reality or only a lip-service word? This government says that it struggles for peace in Vietnam. We don't know if that is truthful or not. But judging by its actions, it always uses all means to oppress those who love peace. Today, 1 call for an SOS to e v a y body who h a s ears to hear. I will practice a fast from this hour until my call will be heard, Nzu Van They a monk

Hebeganhisfastin the beginning of April.

T
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MANSON TRIAL STARTING LINE-UP

J u n e 12,1970

s
Aa o f t h l s w r t t U i f f t l M p r o a e c v Hon Wit plipoing t o n e l i t t ditch effort* to get i r t l n f Kuierak r e moved ea U u w m * ! attorney. I h e y wlU probably ftU, Itiey feel that wltb Mr, Kanarek loahiffh poaU tlon for the defeoe* tbe trial will proceed too alowly, perhifM tak^ ing a t long aa two yeara to com^ pteta. Can you i m e t t a a a jtiry sequestered for t v o yeara? From all Indicationa, however, Mr. Kan^ rek la a highly ethical attorikey and they will juat have lo aikdure hia eittremaly detailed dafenae or hie client.

'Gas chamber'prosecution girds its loins for battle


ED SANDERS The trial of Charles Manson, Ptrlcla Krenwknkel, Leslie Van Houten and Susan Atkins for the m u r ders or Sharon Tato, Voltick Frykowskl, Jay Sebring, Steven p a r ent. Abigail Folger and Mr. and M r s . t e n o LaBianca probably will begin im June 15 as scheduled. The trial will last anywhere from four months to two y e a r s and the snuff buffs a r e alreatly lining up to get Into the courtroom. s e r to the court than to the d e fense (Holopeter), Another i s the fact that both Judge Keene and Evelle Younger had to know about Lawrence Schiller's and 8usan Atkins' alleged 'confession* book long before itwas published and the book is In obvious violation of' Keene's own gag-rule of Dec, 10, since Some of the Atkins material was secured from h e r right In her jail cell after Keene's order preventing extraludiclal statements by people associated with the case. Younger had to know about the book because the Los Angeles Times literary editor sent him a copy of the manuscript b e fore publication and asked him to review the bookT Another bummer Is that Judge Keene evidently applied out of court p r e s s u r e upon the publlcdefender's office In order to force It to requirePatrlciaKrenwlnkel's lawyer, Paul Fitzgerald, to withdraw a motion of prejudice against him (Uter filed In a California court of appeals) which. If granted, would have removed him as a p r e siding judge attheupcomingtrlals, Adios, spotlight, Fitzgerald ultimately won, but had to resign from the public defender's office to do so, able to deny Keene's r e q u e s t Keene is alleged tohaveaddressed the official in the public defender's office as follows? "You know how much this case means to me. Have this affidavit withdrawn,Then Keene called up th public defender himself, Mr, Buckley, and asked him as a personal favo r to withdraw the affidavit of prejudice. Nodlce, AndwhenBuckley went out to a dinner that night, neither Keene nor any judge p r e s ent at the dinner would t a l k t o h l m . It was right after this that an apparent conflict of Interest ap-

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There will bo only 12 spectator s e a t s in the trial room, the remaining seats having been alotled to members of the p r e s s who already a r e flying in from all over the world to file reports about the dirty hippies and Che show biz suck-Chrlll dope fiends they killed, Linda Kasablan, expected to t e s tify against Manson and the others for the prosecution, will have a separate t r i a l , the date uf which is to be set on Monday, As fur Tex Watson, the remaining defendant in the case, he Is still In the McKlnney, Texas lal], as he continues to appeal his extradition to Los Angeles, The Texas Court of Appeals has granted a stay of exiradltlun and there is a hearing In Texas regarding his appeal scheduled for June 17, U he lirses that appeal he can thengulnto a lower federal court where chances a r e good he'll get an addltinnal stay of extradition. So, don^t expect Watson on the L, A, set until September or October at the earliest. Bill Boyd, w a t s o n ' s attorney, is ^repurted to be very concerned about his client's chances tu get a fair trial In Rol^ lywood Babylon because of the publicity. Boyd has a lot of political pull In his area of Texas since he is the former district attorney of his county. In addition, Watson's parents evidently have enough money and concern to carry the struggle against extradition all the way up the ludlcial ladder.

A Special Report:

^Charles Manson The incredible


story ot the mos dangerous man alive./

Keene's association with the case began In December of last year when he was sitting as the calendar judge In charge of a s signing c a s e s to the various judicial departments in the Superior Court system. Now, Keene knew that he, Keene, was tc b ^ i h e p r e s idlng judge In department 107 in 1970, So, when the time came, he assigned both the Beausolell' Hlnman and the Tate-LaBianca cases to his own dept, 107, picking a trial date in early February which was a few days after he was to assume duties In 107, Chortles were exchanged among knowl ed geable observo r s when this occurred.

was to occur when K*tn inorkled (sic) the defender Out of the c u namly, that Fltzgeriid was to resign from the defender's office and become KrenwlnkeVs private attorney, enabling him to live up to his commitments to Miss Kronwlnkel, Fitzgerald then took the affiThe Jury aelectlon will be won. davit to the District Court or Ap- derful. J u r i e s , onehaadUcovared^ peals where it was held for two in Loa Angelas a r e culled from weeks. In the meantime, Manson the ranks of refiatered voters had filed a similar motion against and a r e paid only a U dotlara per Keene, A deal was efldently made day plus parking. Becauaa of the whereby Hanson's motion to r e financial hardahlp involved In move Keene was accepted a n d f l t z - . aerviiif on a langthy trial you can bet t h e r e ' l l ba few people on the Jury panel who coma anywhere near the marginal economic level of Mr, Manson and hia frienda, s o m e large companies aueh as the phone company and Hughes Tool Company pay s a l a r i e s to their employees during lury duty so there'll probably be some representatlvas or military Induatry on the jury. Probably a retired buaineaaman o r two, A houaewlte" o r two, A banker o r insurance man. But all those dresaed mod, ell liberela, all opposed to the death penalty, all connected with aoclal aervlce o r welfare p r o g r a m s of any kind, aU college teachers, all aoeiallat dupaa of any persuaalon, all, you can bet, will be weeded from the Jury t>y the prosecution. The d e fense's Job will b harder^ B^ing after the crypto hippie-haters, scholar* of the c a i e , those with extra Y-chromoaones, deathpenalty worahippers and thoaa tfflictw) with permanent Manaonphobia,

The prosecution will call about 80 witnesses and will probably sot up an elatx>rate timetable for their witnesses so that, since many of them a r e policemen^ there will be no conflict wUh scheduled upcoming summer vacations. Some p r o ^secutlon witnesses have been told to b e on hand as early a s June 3Z which s e e m s to me to be m e r e yodelIng In the darkness because Jury selection will obviously take at least two weeks. The point Is that une feels that the prosecution wants to package this trial as sllck'.y as posslhle so that it has a clear beginning, a smooth orderly presentation of evidence and defense rebuttal, and a quick gas chamber finale. The trial would be like a successful TV series If they can pull It off and they probably can't.

When Patricia Krenwinkle was extradited from Mobile, Alabama, Paul Fitzgerald ol the public d e fender's office was appointed on Feb, 14 to bo her attorney. To gain her t r u s t , Fitzgerald p r o m ised both to stick with the case and to defend her with only her Interests In mind. To this end he went Into court with an affidavit of prejudice to seek another trial Judge for the case,

iparConturtJncL ,< Coverage H m e ApocalTpse

MANSOtUAttA: Sensationalism of this genre, masquvt<Mng ai legltinnta Joumaiiinv mahatt extremely difficult if not Impossible fol'one In Mtnton's cIrcumftaiKM t o receive a fair trial, Tbe photo above is on the c o w of a papular fan maguina.

Thar* will be scant t r a c e s of humor at the t r i a l , Kowarar, ona notes that during the Jury eelaclion for Robert BeaueolaU's s e c ond t r i a l , , the proaecutor asked each prospective juror if Beauaolall'a youthful a ^ ^ a r a n c e would prejudice them eWter for o r against him. One fantaalaea that t h e r e will be many auch queatlona asked in the incoming Jury a e l ecUon auch aa: Mr, X, wiU the fact that Suaan Atklne' wayiBt breata r e m t l n unancumbered by r a a t r t l n t of b r a a a i e r e beneath her low-cut blouae have any effect on your ability to be an Impartial Jdror In thla caae?"

First of all there a r e some strange events that have occurred during the months of preparation *or the trial thai fire off heavy force fields of bummer vecbjrs. One Is the way that some officials have used the case for their political c a r e e r s . Another Is the way that the court kept attempting to appoint former assistant district attorneys as lawyers for the defense (cabaMero, Part) o r atturneys whose allegiance seemed clo-

Credibility G a p gaffed
MARY REINHOL7. KRLA's IrreverentCredibllltyGOp faded from the airways last F r i day amid mixed reports as to why the Pasadena-based AM radh> station (cancelled the satirical news program, Harry Shearer, who produced Cridibllty along with Richard Beebe and David Lander, says a chlckenshlt" mentality at KRLA brought about the canoellation. He believes that KRLA's management ^'bent With the wind' now blowing at the FCC, "The conservative FCC now has two Niyon appointees," Shearer told the F r e e P r e s s TuesdayStation manager Hal Matthews denied that the FCC had anything to do with KRLA'S action. He said that the station management, consisting of himself artdgeneralmanager Larry Webb, decidedtophase out Credibility in its present form because "the times a r e tao s e r ious" for poking fun at the news, Matthews reportedly told a member of the Credibility team Friday that the program was no longer funny" or "relevant," Former KRLA news director Lew Irwin, who quit his job last June after heading credibility for about a year, has no special love for the station, but he, too, doubts that the FCC figured In management's decision, Trwln, a founder of credlbiUiy In 196a, said that the program had become a sort of ' M a d Magazine* of broadcasting during the past

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year and had lost much of its political relevance. This does nut mean, however, that KRLA Should be considered a standard b e a r e r for quality in broadcasting and,'i>r anli-establishment vews. Shearer said that management unr:e told the Credibility Gap to rewrite a recent sketch involving Sprio Agnew and t i mak^ the vice president "look good," He alsii claimed that two sketches which referred to the assassination of president Kennedy were cancelJed after one a i r ing on gniunds that they were in "bad taste," Irwin remembers how he had to pound s^tme tables" in order to air his Interview with une of the Smothers Brothers at the time of their first trouble with CBS. Gene r a l manager Webb had cancelled the interview, Irwin said, and then finally agreed to let it be broadcast once. In February of 1966, Cliff Vaughns, then a staff member at KRLA, was Injured by poUcewhlle covering a demonstration at UC Berkeley. The station refused to cover his medical o r legal exp e n s e s , Irwin said. Later, according to Irwln, the station formulated an editorial policy which stipulated that r e p o r t e r s must "obey all police commands" and to report no news "which might spread civil disturbance," This policy was challenged by Irwin, He conferred with the ACLU which, he said, agreed to take legal action, Later,wlththe expectation that the ACLU would eventually Intervene, Irwin signed the policy statement ' u n d e r d u r e s s " because, he said, the station threatened to fire him otherwise, Irwln said he quit the same day that KRLA fired most of its field r e p o r t e r s and credibility's b r i l liant black balladeer Len Chandler because of budget problems.
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it seemed evident that Keene was prejudiced In that he signed the court order of Dec, 4 allowing Susan Atkins to be taken to her a t t o r n e y s office in Beverly Hills lor tne purpose of taping her con-fessioji. It seemed further evident that Keene'slnterests might closely coincide with the prosecution's interests because Keene couldbeneflt politically more from a death verdict than, say, a not guilty or life imprisonment In the case. When FltKgerald filed the affidavit, according to Fitzgerald, Keene asked him not to tell the p r e s s until Keene himself could make the announcement, Keene then called Fitzgerald's Immediate superior, John Moore, and asked him to order Fitzgerald to remove the affidavit. The public dftfenc'er's office, being com* pletely separate from both the prosecution and the ludlclary, was

peared in thu public defender's office developing out of Robert Beau!iolell>s testimony in theGary Hinm an m urder t n al whe n Be auso lell made s o m e allegations regarding m a t t e r s pertaining to the Tate case. The public defender could not defend both Beausolell and P a t ricia Krenwlnkelbecause the cases were connected and it is the policy Of the public defender not to defend more than one person a s sociated with any particular case or connected cases. All o t h e r p e r sons in such cases have to obtain private counsel, ^^ With the public defender (for which read Fitzgerald) out of the role of representing Patricia Krenwlnkel, the ruadwasthenopen for Keene to appoint a private attorney for heran atlorney,heh heh, who would agree up front to withdraw the affidavit of prejudice. Since Fitzgerald was a rising man of prestige wlfhln the de* fender's office and since he was making around |Z6,aOO per year t h e r e , no one could forsee what

gerald'a motion In tho higher court was thereby rendered moot, >avlnf Ken from the Judicial e m b a r a i s ment of being removed from luch a controversial case by a higher court, as he almost certainly would have been.

So, the current Une-up for tlia trial Is as follows; JudgeCharles Older, Defense: Charles Mansonattorney, Irving Kanarek, P a t r i c i a Krenwlnkel^^attorney, Paul F l t t gerald, Susan Atkinsattorney, Daye Shinn. Leslie Van Houten attorney, Ira Reiner, Prosecution^ Evelle Younger, Los Angeles District Attorney, acting through Asron stovltz,Deputy District Attorney, and Vincent Bugllosl, Deputy District Attorney > with the administrative assistance of Miller -Gas Chamber* Leary. Mr. Leary prosecuted and attended the execution of Caryl c h e s s m a n . He acquired his nickname because of his fanatical allegiance to the death penalty over the y e a r e .

In another devalopmant, a lady, evidently a courtroom r e f u l t r , has claimed that Hanaon looked wt her d v r l n t ona of hia court appearancee and becauae of the force of hie eyeEap*--an arthritic condition s h e had endured w u i m m e diately cured, ff ttia word gete out that Hanaon la a faith haaler^ ttera'a folng to be a heary crutch and cripple acena in the c o r r l d o r i of the Halls of Juatice in downtown L.A, One further thing before you move on to the food column: if any of you a r e p>tnfl to be In Pomona, r u m o r haa it that Manaoma fur-covared 'command dune buggy* ie on special exhibit (complete with blowi^a of the Life maganine Maneon article) at the county fair. This la tha ona seized at the Infamous Aug, l dawn raid at the Spahn Rutch when 102 policemen aided by h e l icopters rounded up Charlie and a few of hia a c ^ a l n l a n c e * only to s e t them free c o v l * ot daya l a t e r . Chortle, chorUe,

o r tha six parsons fired thai day, t h r e e were black, Irwln said Webb used to complain about ' a l l those militant-looking Kegroes* at the station. Meanwhile, Shearer, Lander and Beebe have elected to remain at KRLA, ' W e don't think the sta^ lion should be able to cop out by saying we qiklt," Shearer com^ mented. The 5tatl<m will continue to use the name -Credibility Gap* for a substutute program scheduled to be aired this Monday, Sbearar and company will fight KRLA's at^ tempt l o u s e the name (which, he claimed, was conceivedbyBeabe's wife), *KRLA has appealed to advar^ t i s e r s and the youth culture b y u s ing a hip Image," Shearer told lh F r e e p , ' B u t KRLA finds tha substance {d hip) troubleaome, It'e always t>een an establishment s t a tion,"

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Page 2 T h e Free Press on trial

J u n e 19,1970

Lofl Angeles Free Prees

^I come to bury the Freep not to praise it'


(from ptge I)

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


The defense did make a motion after several days of Interviewing prospective jurors that defendant Art Kunkln be allowed to r e p r e sent himself in eourt with the two defense lawyers, Albaum and King, remaining a s attornies for J e r r y Applebaum and the F r e e P r e s s Corporation. Theargumentfor this motion v a s that Kunhin's experience as a courtroom reporter (he has covered such important trials as that of Clay Shaw in New Orleans and the Chicago Conspiracy) as well as his knowledge of publishing would give him the best opportunity to prove his innocence by speaking for himself. Judge Harold Ackerman, however, denied this motion on thp ground that the substitution was being attempted after thetrial had begun. tn fact, the defense stlil had 13 jury ehallenges remaining at the time this motion was made and the Jury had neither been selected nor sworn in. The defense further said that no evidence existed that any copy ofa document was even stolen because the evidence would show an undetermined number of copies of both documents involved. No one could say with any degree of c e r tamty that such and such definite pieces of paper known a s property had been transported from one place to another illegally, obscure references to the fingerprints of a mail clerk who Once was seen reading the F r e e P r e s s at the Attorney General's office in Los Angeles not being certain evidence.

(he defendants a r e presumed In^ noc-nt throughout the trial unlll tiL thp evidence Is prpsentpd and the Jury r e t i r e s to make its verdict, the natural bias of older people fronn suburhia Js surely tgatnat (he F r e e Pr^ss style of Journalism. Defense attornips Walter Klnp and Mel Albaum Uidoonsid^r making a motion that would challenge the p r o c e s s whereby a jury cons i s t s almost entirely of peopleover forty and fifty years of age even IhouEh half the population is under thirty. However, after discussing Ihe matter with the judee, ihey decided that (he cost of defending against the present criminal charges IS hlghenoughwithouttaktngon additional issues that would lengthen the trial.

property," Basing themselves on the court decision ia Drew P e a r son versus Senator Dodd (discussed at length in last week's F r e e P r e s s article on this trial) the defense attornies said the evidence would reveal that a copy o f a d o c u ment which did not have c o m mercial value but nevertheless tiad public interest was not property in the legal s e n s e o f t h e w o r d .

A grim spectre in the courtroom

T h e ghost of Sharon Tate


defend himself or to defend himself with the aid of a lawyer at his side. Nicht Manson also has made motions for a change of venue to a northern county <San Frandsco County), a motion that should have beer; granted but wasn't on the grounds (1) that if the trial moved to a smaller county then he might escape; and if the trial were moved to a large county, the publicity would be similar to LA^s. Whether or not he's guilty, he's already on the way to the crematorium in thp minds of the masses. The publicity is right out of 1984. The images of bastardy, felony. car theft, sadism, sex-slavery, rock and roll and body odor are indelible in the streets: Manson fuck much. Guilts Manson live commune. Guiltl Manson I D . Guilt! Manson car thief arson. Gdilt' Manson orphan runaway. Guilt! Manson stab-come. GuilL^ Guilt^ Guilt^ (Pan to huge crowd of 5 million outside Hall of Justice screaming in unison^) Four legs bad, two legs good! Tut>e is God! Manson Bad! Commune Bad! Manaon Guilt! Hippie Dirty! Hippie Whore! Hippie Ugly! Hippie Shit! Toothpaste Good? Kill Manson! Kill Manson! K i l l . . . .

(Cross examination of the first prosecution witnesses quickly r e vealed (ha( mall clerks fingerprints a r e to be expected on documents passing through the AG's mail room because (he clerks do not take any precautions, such a s wearing glove!^, and that the copy of the F r e e P r e s s seen was probably the copy subscribed to by the Attorney General in Los Angeles, the copy naturally p a s s ing through the mall room where the clerk was employed).

Opening statements by both prosecution and defense were fairiy short. The prosecuting attornies said tJiat they were really for freedom o f t h e p r e s s BUT prepared (o prove that the two human and one corporate defendants had knowingly and t^rimlnally received stolen property, to wit, Instead of furtively hiding the a xerox copy of an inter-office Attorney General memorandum on "stolen property," which Is the c r i m e s allegedly committed by circumstantial evidence usually campus policemen at UCLA, and used to expose knowledge of a crime by a " r e c e i v e r , " the F r e e a printed r o s t e r of Narcotics BuP r e s s published the information reau personnel. ttiat it had seen (not "criminally received') the documents for the (It was clear, however, even during jury selection, that what really offended the prosecution whole world to s e e . Then, having was the F r e e Pr-^ss {xiblication been informed by the Attorney in August, 1969 of a r t i c l e s and General that the documents in editorials tjased on these docu- question were pieces of paper ments although, under present law, viewed a s property, it was a r ranged that attornies promptly r e such publication is not a c r i m e . turn (he pieces of paper to the In their opening statement, the Attorney General. defense attornies pointed out that the prosecution would first have The prosecution makes much of to prove that there was property this returning of the documents which was stolen before there as well a s the publishing of the could be a ' r e c e i v i n g of stolen Please turn to Page 30

Then ihe defense attornies made the point that even if the prosecution could prove that property had been stolen (which they can't), thn fact ttial F r e e P r e s s personnel saw the documentor and used Them as a basis for articles and editorials was not a criminal r e ceiving in a legal sense since there was no evidence ttiat anyone at the F r e e P r e s s had knowledge of a prior theft. Th^re was nothing marked cm either document toshow ttu( they were classified or confidential and nothing, also, toshow evidence of a controlled distribution.

(from page \) had them marched out of the couftroom. Aa Ihey were being led out, Sadie yelled at the judge, "Why don't you iiill us now? We c a n ' t have a foirtnal!" Miaa Van Houten was olent. but Miaa Krenwinkel shouted something that puzzled the audience: "Don't you know who we ore? Don'l you know who we are?" ^ Aranffe wordst seeming a reference to Miss Krenwinkel'a possible belief that ahe te a messenger or angellos or angel exialing within the substance of the Second Coming, namely Charles Man son. More and more as one l e a m s about these mysterious defendants, one realizes that the defendants conceivably believe that this trial is a literal crucifiiiian of the God-led chnaen from the desvn Kingdom. Sudi considerations, uHually written late at night, make one hunger for the sweet consciousnesanarrowing combination of cannabis and vodka.

tion News Service? One attempted to secure a seat from Mr, Frediani. a burly man with dark-rimmed glasses and modified Hat-top crew cut who is in his zenith of glory as the reporters treat him like God. Mr. Fred la ni is in chaise of seating and related matters at the (rial and generally scoffed at our punk imprecations for a s e a t showing U8 a folder of letlere indicating that such publications as National Obseri'or. Harpers. Der Spiegfl, and many others were hard ahead of us. Puck i t

X .

Anyway, the cnicifixion tableau occurred last FViday, the last court day tiefore Jury selection was to have begun on Monday the I5th til actually began on Thursday)^ Earlier in the week Manaon had turned his diair arc^'ind in the courtroom, refusing Lo face the judge, creating enough pissoff vectors 10 cause Manson's removal from the room, whereupon a Hpeaker system was attached to the door of the lock-up tank ao he could h ^ r the proceedings and a small window panel on the door was raised so he could see o u t That was on Thursday and both the prosecution and the defense attorneys agreed, for a change, that Maoson's liehavior was not really dieruptive so that he could not legally be removed from the court.

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STATE

Older then thought about it and the next day informed the defense attorneys that he had instructed the bailiffs forcibly to attempt to make all defendania face the judge in (heir seats. If Manson resisted, then that would supply the neceasary disruption needed to fulfill the requirements stipulated by Allen vs. lUindB (never mmd that the court provoked it) and in order to snuff Manson out of court After FVidsys little hassle, Manson was rewarded by being placed in the socalled "Sirhan Sirhan cell" in the Hall of Justice itself, a cell in which he is kept under Z4-hour surveillance. {One fantasizea at this point the world's first Onan Affidavit, B hypothetical motion before the court from Mr. Manson demanding ot^asional time off from constant surveillance to permit possible stupration of the hand.)

Onward. The seating for the trial is unbelievable^ There are 92 seats in Judge Older's courtroom ot"*rch *ft[y ITTrtot rz aa printed here last week) are for the general public- Right opposite the court door is a long, light blue-green table on which are ten phones, evidently direct hookups for the LA TimP9. the wire services. the Chi Trib. etc. Then? is a check point desk in the hall way at which all spectators are scarehed. Knives and tape recorders are taken away and stored and identiflcadon is required. (The snuff bu^s, those aged trial fans who haunt the building, are heard to grumble aplenty over 'he small number of spectator seats and the indignity of search.)

Some of you may have read the issue of kotlmg Stnnr wherein Deputy DA Aaron Stovitz violates the gag rule by telling much of the prosecution^s alleged evidence against the defendants. One has had the pleasure nf hnCeninR to the two-hour tape made of thiti historical monologue by Mr. Stovitz which contains much of interest to case buffs hke myself including the memorable Mne. "Linda Kasabian was a true flower child." Well. Mr. Fitzgerald, the very able defense attorney for Miss Krenwinkel, submitted a motion to hold Mr. Stovitz, in contempt of court for violation of the gag rule, the result of which has not come down as of this wntmg. As long as they're making motions for contempt why not d i e Jerry Cohen of the LA Timen for helping to ghost-write Larry Schiller's and Susan Atkin's "Confession Book" in violation of the gag. M r Cohen actually went into Miss Atkin's cell to get information on the night of December lUth after the gag rule was put into effect by Judge Keene. And how about Mr, SchiUer himself?) Mr. Pitzgorald has also submitted a motion to dismiss the charges on the grounds that the defendants cannot get a fair trial because of Stovitz'e interview. That has as much chance as me getting a Grammy Award for "Johnny Pissoff,"

IIP

B ^Quired

Why (hen, to return to the protest aspect is Manson so upset? Well, several months ago Manson submitted a remarkable motion to the court to dianuas chaises against him Iwcause he contended that he had already been tried in the newspapers and found guilty and that to try him ''again" in the courts would constitute double jeopardy. Thou scoffeth? Vou can come visit me some time and see my fave rave collection of over 2.000 clippings about this case from all ovr the world with headlines and phrases like "I Sucked Satan's Feet" and "Wolf-Pack Gang of 'nkrillKJllers" and "Hippie Sex-Fiend Bastard Son of TeenaiEe Proatatutc" and "We Were S a U n ' s Slaves," etc. Time and time a^ain Manson has made motions to be allowed to

Here, for history, is the seating arrangements for th notorioua Manson - Krenwinkel - Atkins Van Houten trial of 1970: 1-4 general public, KNGC TV, Agence France Prettfte. Security, 8-19 general public, Toronto Star fi Daiiy Star. TDfonto Telegram & Synd.. the Unknown S e a t New York Pot. Chicago t}aity News, Washington Post. France Soir. Le Figaro. NeiVBtivek. Time, US Neu)9 & World Report. Visnews, KHJ Hadio. NY Daily News. Chicago Today. Chicago Trib. KNX Radio, City News Service. London Daily Mail. London Daily Mirror. La Stampa. R Measaggero. Abendieitung. Deutsche PresneAgentur. KGIL Radio. KMPC Radio, Metro Media Radio, Radio News West KFWB Radio, Reuters, 50-54 Defense. London Daily Express. Axel Springer thow come all these Germans?) & Sohn, KABC Radio, KLAC Radio, ABC Radio Network. New York Times. Independent press Telegram (Mary Ncisvrender, a good reporter and probably the best reporter to have written on the case), AP Wire Service, Sheriff, Sheriff, 66-68 DA, KFI Radio, KHJ Radio, KABC TV, Herald Examiner, LA Times. UP Wire Service. 75-77 Judges guests. Sun Telegram. Stem Afoparint. Daily Breeze. KTLA TV, KNXT TV. Metro Media KTTV, NBC TV. ABC TV. CBS TV. Secu rity. German TV (!>, Citizen NewB. 90-92 guards. Get the picture? Where is the aeat for the Libera-

AH for jury selertion, Manson instructed his lawyer to accept the grst 12 jurors selected as OK. The theory being that he is already dead. The reet of the defense attorneys have not gone along with it so far. so there'll be a lengthy few weeks of endless questioning of jurors with the result probably being II retired insurance executives and a rich housewife silting in judgment of an alleged pumpprime Armageddon Helter Skelter brigade. The prosecution is always accusing certain people, off Ihe record, of having little care for the an uffed-out livea and the distressed families of the deceased. But is this honky feast of a trial what Sharon and Gibby and the others would have wanted? This town of Los Angeles is as superstitious a s Cabool, Misftouri, and everytime I mention ghosts people shiver and shudderBut the lacy veils above the faces of superstition are thin indeed- And who is to say, among those who Iwlieve in magical zaprays and spirits hovering in ths Chasm, that the beautiful ^ a i n sunsoul of Sharon Tate doea not wind at>ove the 13th floor of the Hall of Justice moaning in t^^e wind with her fellow slain right now, looking below at the huddled mammals harried by Death, attempting to trade in a courtroom, death for death. The spirits moan. As in the Odyssey. They moan, but not for vengeance, but for ihe miracle of being a mammal alive, lost forever.

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Ad in poor taste
Congratulations

All their lives black women a r e lencK a t ixte conierence, we are blacK T v o m S r a T K ^ s y e t t h e would aesum^ that he had lost hia black race has not been liberated. preached to that they are dominU ia neceaaary for black women eering bitches who force black men way and attended a n entirely different meeting^ T h e symposium to stand behind black men and sup- out of the family, t h a t they should was hardly the risque assemblage port them in every way p o s s i b l e - be dainty, delicate, and submissive of "criminal abortion Lata*' that even if it means standing before like white women. Sad thing that Dear Editor he described. It was, rather, a the stove five hours a day. T h e black men swallow this lie pushed You fellowi a r e always ranting non sensational medical meeting, black man needs his ego built up, by the massa. Black women have and raving againat "pseudo liberattended by about 60 physicians, not deflated ^ Something more t h a n had to be strong in order for t h e al*, capitaliitic piga. Jew-Zionist many of whom do perform abor- the vain pride of woman is a t stake mce to survive. Being strong doea imperiaHata) e t c . " You a r e suptionsleg al. "therapeutic" ones here; the ^ride and dignity/survival not mean domineering. It is time poaad to be w humnniatic, so tolthat this lie be acknowledged for and who could be called "abor- of an entire race. erant, so freedom-loving, ao civil tionists" only insofar aa they also In a time/country where the black what it is. rii^ta consdoua, s o anti<apita]could be called "hyaterectomiHte." White racist society h a a left man/wo man is being insulted coniitic, but brother* are you a bunch Less than a half-dozen h a d ever tinuously by all media, when mo- block women little choice. Even of phoniea! You get Rutledge "capbeen "in trouble with t h e law." vies tike L.B. Jones and The Land- the movement of "black is beautiitaliatic" money so you put hia campaign ada in your Free Press. Office abortion is presently il- tord make half assed pretenses to fiil" is slow. T h e sad fact ia, i t t Uke it is, where Birth of a shouldnH even be necessary. (Incidentally. whaVa ao free about legal in all 50 states, although tell L it?) Rutledge ia the tunatic w h o The entire black race h a s been there ia no aound medical reason Nation (honest a t least) is being practically foamed a t the mouth to for such a prohibition. T h e pur- revived at the d n e m a , where 282 divided too long by white standthink of colored Tom Bradley a s pose of our Symposium w a s to pre- black people (and I didn't see an ards pushed upon them by the masMayor and fometited the a n l i ^ m pare for the time when abortion article on that in t h e Free Press) sa. Too long limpid blue eyes and itic alander which hlped to delaws will be repealed, a n d phy- are placed in a concentration long flowing IresseSH milk white feat Bradley, bat you welcome hia sician a will be free to perform camp in Georgia, there is no time complexions and flat hf^hinds, c-cup money Juat aa the soiled t^pitalistic early termination of pregnancy in for bickering a n d arguing over bras have been pushed a t us. women^aHghte, What would a black money la welcomed in the "imperii Dear Editor a clinic or office setting. I think it's time everyone realman and black woman a r ^ e about? i2ed, especially unthinking cause aliatic'* t h e LA Tinies. How a r e I want to direct your attention to As far as we know, this was the an advertisement in the J u n e 19, They are both overworked and unyou eo different? 1970, issue of t h e Free Press first time a large number of "re- derpaid objects of oppression. As carriers like Miss Weintraub, So you print enaational wit a d s , (page 44), I put it this way because spectable" physicians met specif- Miss or Mrs. Weintraub so accu- something about black women. We which probably pay off but do get I have a feeling you are not aware ically to discuss abortion tech- rately points out. it's white men do exist We have voices of our nauaeatingly dull after continual of the offensive character of t h e niques and ways of refining them. who regulate the laws; who are the own. Let u s uae them. Don't speak This was a great step forward state. And Miss or Mrs. Wein- for ua; listen, rtpetition, wad you delight in call- "Rare Records' ad. Wanda Coleman ing the police "pi^a" which pracI h e use of dialect a n d stereo- when we recall the taboo that sur- traub mustn't ignore t h e fact t h a t tice of police baiting h a s resulted liberation typed cartoons are a n insult to mi- rounded abortion even three years despite t h e women's in nothing but broken heads for t h e nority people fin this case Orien- ago. Mr. Federick was both inac- movement, white women a r e still radical baiters. You would have tals). I a m personally offended be- curate a n d irresponsible t o imply majorly behind their white men been wiser to clean up, study up cauae this is precisely the kind of that t h e physicians gathered t o (the oppressors) a n d just because and become part of the police force degradation we have h a d t o face learn how to "avoid arrest" a n d a woman ia for women's liberif yoQ wanted a better more people- in the black community for so longs "leave no evidence/' Perhaps t h e ation doean't mean she's not a symposium as it happened w a s too m o s t . oriented police department. If you Dear Editor: I will not go into any song and dull to get a story out of c a n ' t beat them, join t h e m a n d dance about how t h e Freep is t h e Ed Sanders' story on t h e Manson change them for the better. voice of the young . -. and how you I applaud Weintraub's statement: trial is a n exceUent reportorial job Yours sincerely, must be ever careful lest some poiAnne Treseder "Losing weight is a political act and regardless of t h e outcome of Aa for your tiresome wailing a n d son slip in unnoticed , . . etc., for women who have been compul- the trial, t h e entire series of argnashing of teeth about the Black e t c . . You already know all this as sive eaters," This is so true- Es- ticles will constitute a powerful Panthers a n d t h e injustice done L This is just to pull your coat that pecially for black women. But for sociological document, well worth them, you m a y have sgme grounds us it is even more, it is our survi- preserving a s a collection in book for complaint, but where do you and some poison DID slip in. val. I have seen too many atatiatics form I have already sent Ray Avery they get off condemning all J e w s that prove a higher rate of obeeLty (Rare Records) a letter suggesting a the m e m y because they support I a m inclined to agree that t h e HmonR black women a n d Kirls in pre-trial publicity makes it unthat a printed apology to Orienlal larael's struggle for existence? proportion to white women a n d likely that the defendants can repeople a n d everyone concerned Screwthe Black Panthers and their girU. The reasons for auch obc' ceive a fair trial. Yet it is imposshould be immediately forthcom' Dear Editor: douUe4eeling freedom talkl You siiy are different Jng. have got a lot of nerve expecting sible at this juncture to rule out I read "Women: Fat of t h e Land" the Jewa to turn against themselves Miss Weintraub elaborawu uu the possibility thai the prosecution I a m a Bubscriber a n d a sup- in the Free Press (June 5-ll> with becauae arrogant Black mihtants porter of the Free Press; so please a great deal of interest and thought aome of the reaaona women in gen- may poaaeaa some damning phys expect it, a n d because t h e B P P take thia letter aa a tip to a friend you might like to know w h a t a black eral get fat and consume so much ical evidence to support t h e tessupport thoae who want to wipe Israther t h a n hard critidsm. woman and ex 270 pounder haa to food. But there is one reason s h e tinipny of their witnesses. J u s t for rael off t h e map^ Incredible! CerSincerely, say about Che feminist movement, did not touch upon, a s lar aa black the sake of argument, let us suptainly every Jew identifies with Ispose that the defendants h a d a n J o h n n y Otis Tve been loLlowing the ebbs and women are concerned: rael. After t h e Nazi massacres All their lives the image of white opportunity to be tried by the most high tides of the women's liberawhat self-respecting J e w wouldn't tion movempnt for quite some time beauty and morality is held up to unlikely group of jurors one might want a place in t h e s u n just in and have oHen enjoyed watching black women. An image impoaaible conceive of: people such a s Mr. case the worid becomes filled with but only watching from t h e side- to becooie for Ua. ao it means de- Sanders himself. Art Kunkin, HarBlack Panthera a n d Nazis once lines a s men like Hugh Heffner nying the nature of one's own be- lan Ellieon a n d others w h o a r e again? ing^ Notonly calling upon the black definitely riot repelled or offended are verbally barbequed. Dear Editor woman lo hate herself but to des- by theManaon family lifestyle. Then So the black militants want equalAt the end of the article a plea let us suppose that t h e evidence We recently read Don Federick'a ity a n d freedona, do they? Well, is issued to all st sisters of color. troy herself. This is no less than against the defendants was truly suicide. Spiritual and mental suicreport ( F r e e P r e s s 5/29/70) of bully for them. They can have alt Here ia the error. the freedom they w a n t just so they the Office Abortion Procedures It is of the greatest importance ide in most cases a n d physical in (Continusd an nsxt pug*] don't attempt to deny it to others. Symposium which we held last that black women not get caught up others. Certainly, they are not going to get months in the hberation of women movethe freedom t o propagandize agHad we not actually seen Mr. ment. It is wrong. Because they ainst another minority, not without a fight, r d rather fight tooth a n d SHERWOOD OAKS EXPERIMENTAL HIGH SCHOOL nait to the last roan, woman a n d Summer Session July 6 August 14 diild, than give the militant black Anthrapoloer anti<Semites the same easy cruel Eatf iflli-CanMmporarv U t , satisfaction t h e inhuman Nazis obImprovlntiontf Orsmi tained in slaughtering the Jews like Swimming sheep. Lord, deliver us from hypoA n & Csrsmlcs m t i c a l radicals! They're bte RntDV^phV- Clnemato^iphy 1230 QUEENS ROAD worst kind. Long live larael! Qisa nowing U x t n fr) BERKELEY 94708 M t h Ml leveU) Five will get you tn t h e Free Drivw'i Trslning Sr Eduutionil (extra free) WE fgEED TAPES OF TIMOTHY LEARY'S LECPress isn't "five" enough to print this letter. TURES-ESPECIALLY FREE UNIVERSITY LECTUITION: SI 00 PHONE: 873-4092 Mrs. Shirley Wolf TUREW. 785-4686 Full H i ^ School Credit Incidentally, who and w h a t is GridKuminaky? If hi

letters letters rs letters lett letters letters


Support for Israel

ters letters Ic etters letters Q^tters letters 1


he had better learn to stick to facta. {FP May 8) He lies in h i s teeth when he includes Israel in the US Cambodia-Vietnam expense account. 1 defy him to name one inatant of government LargesB, one instant where Israel h a s not paid for and is not now paying her own way in money^ Bweat, blood a n d tears. It i% the Arabs who are getting all the free hardware and experts from Russia. Israel pays cold hard cash with interest for every^ thing she gets, and sometimes ah^ h a s paid for merchandise sh haan't received, as in France-

Listen Weintraub

Elastic coverage

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editor and to Mr. Sanders that m y Jttr merely is bdaborini; the obviauB- Bill I think it ia alao obvious that the Free Press la attempting to balarice the tcales juat a bit, by covering this trial in a diffci^Dt way from the othei media. So juat onee, for the reon-d, I think it is necessary to accept the possibility {from p i g i 6t overwhelming- What would "our" that th defendants could be guilty. Let us state this, a n d then go o n jury do in this matter? How would Dear Editor from there. they dedde the fate of the defenI find myself both sympathetic dants? to and exasperated by t h e revelaIn our contempt for t h e estabtions of Roberta Weintraub ("WornItehment'a attitude touFard Mr. ffi: Fat of the Land," Free Press, Manson, let'e not lose ^ight of t h e J u n e 5-11), Sympathetic because fact that several human beinga one of the dearest pe<mle I h a v e were unquestionably destroyed by ever known ia a compulsive eater. someone. Soon, hopefully, we ahall She haa a most compassionate naDear Editor create a better way of life, a new ture and L B capable of enormous This is not a numbers gorae. I t aociety which will tend to disself-sacrifice on behalf of otherssipate and eliminate the cruel a n d IB not a game a t a l l Theae eases She is really beautiful but physi& destructive human behavior which exemplify t h e government's re- ally enormous, limited a a my unpression of dissent against which ie a port of t h e old civilization CLLDP h a s fought for three years. derstanding is, 1 cannot comprewhich ia dying. But meanwhiUt Doily t h e Nixon administration bend w h y s h e should h a t e h e n e l f M r Sanders, you and I both aurely O much and apparently be unaUe steps up its campaign t o silence B are entitled t o some protection to do anything about iL Sometimes &om homicidal maniacs. The car- the majority who disagree with it. I think she fightt her fatal fUw nage in Vietnam would be a feeble Today'^ targets are minority com- too energetically, thus giving i t munities, student activists or uninexcuse to j u a t i ^ or condone for a impetua I t ' s certain that i t wil' sinRle moment murderoua patterns volved Bpectators a t demonstra- taka more than tii Untitsd COn> tions. The issues are the war, jusof behavior in our civilian jungle. ventional wisdom of t h e average No matter where our sympaUiies tice for black people, a n d fair tri- shrink to help her. als for "conspirators." Tomormight be, certainly no one of ua row's targets are unknown- All you would want the reaponaibitity of On the other hand, I a m axsahave to do is work for change a n d perated by Roberta Weintraub's sealing t h e doom of the aadiat'a next victim, should we decide to your personal freedom m a y be in outpourings because ahe overval^ give liim back hi* (or her) freedom- jeopardy. The fight against repree- ues her personal nperiences. Most Hion must continue until the war is personal experiences just aren't Again I am asauming that the evidence waa so strong that i t w a s ended and the current stampede to worth a tinker's damn. Incident* kill dissent a n d thwart justice is which seemed terribly traumatic inpoeaibte to ignore. checked. at the lime of occurrence a r e not worth remsmbering one year laThere are targets in the military ter, unless some poaitive psychic Irv. L. Jacoba too: The Presidio 27, Fort Hood 3 , good came of them. They h a v e P.S. Perhaps it may teem l o th Fort Jackson 8^ Fort Dix 38 and t h e about as much worth as the bags of Fort Hood 43, These are just a few sugar we found locked in the cu|h of the many cases involving coura- boards of a furnished house w s geous men who try to express their rented in Seattle i n 1954. During opposition t o t h e w a r within t h < the rationing d a y s of the war. they niihtary. In other military cases, may have represented tome value. repression hits especially hard, Ten years later they were only a for there ia Httle chance for pub- quaint testimonial to t h e miseriilicity, outside support) or aid from ness of our landlady, Thns h a s a a dviUan a t t o ^ ^ ; way of trivialiting, And let us not forget the young I happoi to think t h a t male chaumen, oppoaed to this war, who conBcientiouBly resisted Uie draft vinism is a fiBct and t h a t women's fiome time ago. Many of their caa- liberation is proper to the " h e i ^ t es are now coming to trial, or arc of our timAS-" But anyone w h o in t h e appeal process- Hiey, too, pleads that men, t h e beleagurad merit continued support, for they and confuaed other half of the hutook their stand a t a time when few man race, a r e reaponaible for all the bad vibes some individual womhad the courage to ^Mak o u l CLLDF i i the only legal defense en ssem to attract (aa a serge enit organisation which h a s supported coUecU lint) h a s to b s Udding. O r aU of the cases mentioned above- you wish they were^ CLLDF h a s undertaken projects t o Most women in our society seem increBse t h e on-goinB availability to be entirely too other-dirsctedof competent legal defense for "Hiey use their b t h e r s , tiisir h u those who dissent Its Military Law bands, aodety, or w h a t have you aa Project, a special effort, place* en excuse for everything they a r e fall-time dvilian lawyers n e a r mil- a n d do. T h a t ' s shameAiL Atiyone itary bases, to aid armed force* professing t o believe that she ia personnel who face legal harass- primarily a product of rsactien. m e n t In civilian cases, although but that her salvation is t h r o u ^ many attorneys volunteer their the group, h a s to have a basically time, great sums a r e needed for low opbiion of herself, which no legal ressarch. court costs, a n d outside benevolence can cure. T h e appeal fees to assure t h e best le- only way to a healthy ego is to sst gal defense possible. rational goala a n d achieve. If b e ing weight and gaining control over No one knows who m a y need one's compulsions makes for a CLLDF n e x t Vrtial it can do is lim- better self-image, fine( B u t let's ited only its resources, PL join us inby support of its program., not drag all this labored juatifica-

rs letters lette Congratulations

rs letters lette

Women's liberation

"

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Repression of dissent
< - P- H > V ( -

i ^
. p p - I p 11 h r 1 I .

ASH bROVE

* * ' I * * 1 1 * 11 >y I v . ' i

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'i;d^3.19^ Jury selection in the Manson trial

Lor Aiiffelw Free PFWB

The crisis of the brassiere


'Why deetroY tfw bank of AmerlM btwidi'
A jftder of thia column, moved perhaps, by (he KNXT interview with Santa Barbara student Udrk Bernstein which I transcribed and published in this column (issue of June 19. 'TO), on the subfsct of the lala Vista police nots and the buTntng of the Bank of America^ has written me the following letter^ "DesT Mr. Upton: If there are people who want to know why we should ever hove wAnid to desQroy the Bank of America branch in Isla Vista 1 can CKpUlnwhy. Notonlyshooldthatbank be destroyed, but every bank should be summarily deatfoyed. The eiplanalion for such a statement is in the content of the enclosed papers which clearly show bow the fraud of banking operates and how it has been used &e a means to exploit the masses and reduce them to economic slavery. "Thraogh the penuoons syston exemplified by Bank of America, the nauon^s wealth has been siphoned off from those who produced it and placed in the hands of the privileged few. This system has been the Pandora's Box out of which nearly all our eco nomic and social maladjustments have emerged. As a result of having our entire money supply issued by private banks as interssVbeuing debt we must pnpetually repay more money to (be banker than we borrow in ortur to cover bankers' interest charges. This has fbrced UB collectively to try to sell more to one another than we buy from one anoUier- 'Hiis has caused the enmity of iodividnal against individual, spouse against spouse and country against country. It has created an economy in which we are producing goods for their cxdmngcalnlity instead of utility and in the process n p i n g the earfli at an ever increasing rate in a desperate a t t s n ^ of desperate d ^ t o r s to produce and sell more than they boy. "It however, sjl debtors were ever to repay all bank loons we would plunge into die depths of economic depression. There would be absolutely no money in circulation and there would be lOOperceot unemployment. "This iniquitous banking system and the corrupt individuals who profit from it still have an Achillea' heel which, if ever taken advantage of by the people, will crush the entire vidous system and cause the parasitical debt merdiants to disgorge their anearned wealth and will usher in a new social order providing the means to schieve economic and social justice. "If you should care to hear any more about the money and banking mess, tta ramificalioos and its solution, contact me- I have given oonaiderable time to an in-depth study of banking and monetary matters. The endosed matoial may be reproduced if you > dsaire. Sam DUworth" KD SANDERS Forty-nine per cent of the American populace reportedly are opposed to capital punishment. Evidently the registered voters of Los Angeles represent a clear violation of the American norm because only nine per cent of the 75 prospective Jurors called to date In the Clelo DrWe-Waverly Place murder trials have been disposed to place themselves in opposition to lung snuff. Of the 75 jurors called, 44 have been excused because of hardship the dennltlonofhardsMpincluding such things as Illness^ family problems and possible financial disaster because of being sequestered away from their jobs for six happy months in (he Blltmore HO" leU For lor In the West, Jurors In Los Angeles get paid onlyflvedollars per day. They may have, however, conjugal visiting privileges on the weekends, l>ut ths husband or wife must pay for the extra hotel expense, parking for their automobiles is free. sll blacks will be challenged off the jury by the prosecution within ten days. The prosecution continues In Its baEooka-shell attempts to stomp Irving Ksnarek, Manson*s lawyer, out of the case. Evelle Younger evidently has decided to use the Kanarek situation to scarf up a few headlines. On Tuesday he held a rold-mornlng press conference at room 600 of the Hall of Justice where he outlined the prosecution's quarrels with Mr. Kanarek, Narcolepsy prevented the Free Prer.^ reporter from getting ig> in time for this historic press conference but he was filled in on what happened by a snuff buff who had managed to ' s l i p in* to the conference. Mr. Younger sccused Kanarek of being both a professional obstructionist and Incompetent, N O W the latter charge, that Of being Incompetent, was not In the original hill of particulars presented against Mr. Kanarek, Evidently the charge of incompetence Is an addition from Mr. Younger himself, since the prosecutor, Mr. Buglloai, did not originally see fit to charge Mr, Kanarek of It. Anyone who has heard Mr, K a n a r ^ speak In court knows he has a considerable knowledge of the law, Is eloquent on occasslon. Is energetic In pursuit of the Interests of his client, is polite <iualittf>s which certainly do not point toward incompetence. Obviously, Kanarek*s transgression Is that he Is a threat to the slick scenario, the vacation schedules, the attention span of the media, the desire for as quick a trial as possibleand also a threat to the confidence of the prosecution's presentation. So, Mr, Younger Is going Into State supreme court to try to force Judge Older Into requiring an evidentiary hearing on Mr, Ksnarak's qualifications. since undeniably and correctly the yoiuiE ladles had, In the past, evinced a carefree attitude toward possible spectator loin-lookand the Jury box Is certainly right on the beaver shot eyeball fllghtpath. There is so much cunnlptiobla in America, especially in the older generations (see Dr. ^xick's railing against spread shots Inhlslatest book), that there was fear that Jurors mlghtget upset, should their gaze occasionally confront the defendants' private parts. So, friends of the defendants had spent some weeks preparing creative pant suits for the courtroom. Miss Atkins' outfit, remarkable in that her left pant leg Is very light green and the right la a dark green, presented the problems with respect to the bodice. The smooth green cloth was clingIngty diaphanous so that her breasts and nipples were visible, yea, o Ra, even so much so as to suggest a Frederick's of Hollywood hsrem ad, 5o, a decision was made and Sadie Is now wearing a brassiere. And Miss Krenwlnkel is now wearing a green velveteen pant suit with matching brown hand'embroidered cape although the cape is seldom worn in the hot courtroom, TTie outfits are alt handcrafted by the exclusive casualwear firm of Squeaky of Spahn,

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


nkHg SynMi: AiMriM's bMt kept secret
liM last Ihne that the nature of the banking system was the subiact of ortidea in the press was in the years foUowiniE the stock market crash of 1929 and the beginning of the New Deal under President Franklin D. Roosevdt In fact, a thoroui^ ov^hauling ofthebanUng system wasthe keynote of FDR's campaign for the p r s i i d i c y in 1S82 because of the numerous bank fjulurea fbUowmg tiiB stock market ct^apse. The promises to "drive the money changers from the temple" were never fulfilled by tbe Great White Father in the WUte House, who quietly dropped from hia "brain t n a t : ' everybody who was cc^mittad to "mcndng the mint from Wall Street to Pennsylvania Avenue," whidi was a phrase coined by Harper Leech, editorial writer of the C h i c a ^ Daily Neum and myself in articles on which we coliaborsted at the time and pubhahsd in a new national numthly magazine we published to promote i n ^ p t h studies on the subiect Like the problems of poverty and unempbymsnt, i4uch FDR made the subject of campaign ihetoric in dection after dection and never solved as he promised he wouldin fact, prevented from any workable solutionthe banking fraud was hushed up after he took office and remains to this day America's beat kept secret When the Ahemative Sodety writes, rewrites, American history, it wfll Gnally be seen that FDR, far frwn punishing "malefactors of great wealth." actually puUed their dieatnuts out of the fir^ defused the growing revolulaonary movement of the Depression 'do's, and gave new power and goveramemtal influence to the millionaitv industriahata and bankeare of the US; and finally "solved" the unemployment and dspression problems of the time wi& the age-cM panacea of production for warand the greatest burdsn of banking debt and puUic debt in the history of capitalism. So mudi for the great reformer and folk hero of the American maasea for whom they cried themselves a river on the day he was laid to rest in his millionaire Hyde Park estate in AfviJ, l4S. Seven tiave been excused foropposltlon to the death penalty. Nine have been excused because the advance hippie kfll-gasm publicity has prejudiced ihelr opinion regarding the guilt of the defend ants. To add It up, S3 Jurors have been excused and the tortuous volrdire of prospective mi<tdle-aged and elderly jurors drones onward and everything Is wonderful. Until late Tuesday there were three blacks remaining onthepaneU The prosecution has exercUed one oflts^Operemptory challenges and removed one so that now only two remain. The prosecution will have to be discreet In getting rid of these two blacks. So watch for them getting bricked off the Jury panel at intervals, say, of three or four days, Don*t laugh, earth mammal, AS a matter of fact, r i l bet a heavy Monday night of serious drinking at the Troubador (on the Warner Brothers' tab) that

TREE PRESS

another wdl kept secret, but one that is beginning to be ex posed and coafronted more and more openly. Here are a few voces that are b d n s heard in what some are calling the Consnmera'Revt^ A black woman rent atriker Don't pay no rent until they fix the services in your houae^ AnorAer 6/acA woman etriktr: Now in the files we saw there were 36,000 violations in thia pubhc housing. A euburhan middle-cliua woman: We are the benefidariea of the technology whidk has made us its victims. We "iie microwave ovens, sit before color TV sets which emit radiation, which meona our famihes may be dying while they laugh at someone dae's domestic comedy- This majority indudes the commuter locked for 20 per cent of hia waking h o u n in the daily, wearying crawl of autoa from the suburb to the dty- It indudes miliitms of ranpoUtan &miUea fed up with poor service and high ratee from public utilities that are not really public and regulatory agencies that do not really regulate. Who are fed up with air that is unfit to breathe while scientists predict that we may poison ouradves out tii existence in 60 years. We are saddened as we see our open buid the victim of continuous jackhammoa, construction cranes and bttUdaicrs. We are frantic aa we fmd that even our health and our hves are becoming pricad beyond our meana This ie a majority who will not stand silent fcv long. Beu Meyerson Grant (The <me-time Miss America who is now one of the foremost consumer champions) The unfortunate thine is that she really has to be a good mathematidan to unders t u d the way she's been cheated, because in many instances Ae'll pick m two boxes, for example, that look exactly the same size. and if she will read the waght labda she will ditcover that twif actually haa leas in it than another and yet the price* may be the sanks. She m l l y needs a slide rule, she needs a little paper and penal to find out that three pounds and seven ounces and tour pounds and two ounces do not tell her how much it is per ounce she's paying and whether she's getting a better buy in fme package than in anotherTo me it all sounds one about deaning the .T.000 oxen. He finally the sUbles. That did itin one revolution. like the lab<H-s of Hercules, espedally the bull shit out of the Augean stables with its had to divert the path of a river through day. Maybe river is the Greek word for

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'Hie prof'KUtlon's continued attempts to stomp Kanarrt are vary distressing to thia writer for many reasons. For one thing, lawyers like WlUlam KunsUer could well be nevt if such a challenge becomes a precedent. For another. It should seem obvious to anycns thst the cursus honomm of any pidllc official should not include walking ig> I bill of blood. In other developments, the trouble arising from the attempts of Mr, Manson to get the girls to fire their Iswyers if they attempted to question potential Jurors subsided, AU is friendly again in the defense camp. 'Hie three female defendants, sadie, Katie and Leslie, have been moved from their spot at the bsck rsll to a location Just in t>ack of the defense counsel table where they can freely consult with their attorneys and freely get data from Mr, Manson. Several dsys ago thereoccurred for Miss Atkins a momentary crisisQie crisis of the brassiere. In order to solve the beaver-shot^ direction-of-Jury problem, some of the attorneys had some time ago suggested that the girls wear pant suits Jaatsad of micro minis.

To spew lo a close, Mr, Fltxgerald, Patricia Krenwlnkel's dedicated and loquacious attorney, argued on Monday to dismiss charges against all defendants on the grounds that they caniiot get a fair trial based on Oie enormous publicity g a i n s t the defendants, citing particularly ths Rolling stone article wherein Deputy DA Aaron Stovitx presented the proaecutloirs msln evidence. The Rolling Stone tape may, however, have been a blessing In disguise, because Mr, Stovits, In loggheretlc affusioD, inadvertently mentioned evidence that had not been shown to the defense attorneys as required by law.

Tense, tense was the courtroom crowded with reporters as all waited for Judge Older to make his decision on the motion to dismiss the charges. Would Charlea Manson walk onto the streets s free man? When Older denied the motion, a pan-assembly sigh of relief swept through the courtroom. I mean, you could actually hear everybody sighing in joyful relief. AS for the motion to hold Mr, Stovitz In contempt for talking to the Rolling Stone reporters, Mr. Older had no way to listen to the cassette since he did not have a cassette recorder, Tlie defense haa flDSlly provided him with one. He will listen to the tape and make hia decision soon. One hopes, actually, that Mr. Stovltc is not removed from the case because that might provide the Impetus forMr. Younger to allow the baleful and muchfeared Miller Leavy to become an active proaecutor In the case, a grim event for all concerned.

The Great Bank Robbery


SAM DILWORTH The debt money swindle which operates t b r o u ^ the institution of banking is the comcntone of an exploitative economy. There haa never been a more specious method need to rob the laboring, pn> dadng and mercantile claaaea of the fruits of their honest eaminga. Ir is one of die chief instrumsnts which haa been used to build a money aristocracy which Uvea in idle luxury, deriving its wealA by sucldng At living blood from the people. ^rtuaily our entire money supply consists vf tkank credit, which is nothing more than ledger entries created through the firaud of banking by B- of A. and its money<Teiiting cohorts. When the banks creete money they lend it into circulation and demand a ransom in interest b r its use. But the vast Dcuvoii^ of bank loans are not made to the conaumer. They are made to the government (at local, state and national levels) and to the high priests of corporate capitalism. So this immense burdai of interaat, which is strictly a aamalhing'fo^nothi^g payment, can go virtually unnoticed bfr cause it is simply paaasd on in hidden duurges to the ultimate Gonsumsr or taxpayerThe wage earner who finances a 120,000 home through a 3t>^year mortgage loan at today's rate of 8^M pays 120,000 for the home and MaOOO m interest Thia gives an inkling of the enormoua dimcn^ sons of the exorbitant concMled interest charges that are added on to the prices and taxes we must pay. And who gets hit hardest? The guy at the fewest end of the economic strata, of course, since the largest proportionate shars of hia income is confiacated by the overt and concealed interest charges, all resulting from the legalized aitob ol banking. The fact b a t the Federal Reserve Act and subsequent banking legislation could be passed by flie Federsl Government to give the (please turn to page 13)

65

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18

Jnly 3, lOTO

Loa Anaelea Free Frees

A Banking parable

Temple of the Thirteen Suns


( ) to U w T a m i ^ of tha thirteen SHEW came tin rich and powoful dktot Omar the nurd* who aaid to tha soUamith of the temple* "I hava much soM and am about to daptft tar a tax omntry- If yon will keep diii gold aably for me ontU my ratom a year h a m I will pay yoQwdL" T1>e wily gddamitb coo^ied loodly and covend hie f a with a doth lert the lidi Omar the Third obaarvefadejoy to have thia treaaure in hie poaaeaaicm^ When he waa calm again and could look eeriona he aaid to Omar, "It ia a very grt^ peaponbi^ty and luk. But 1 will undertake it for a tithe of one ahekel in eveiy ten,'* Then aaid the chief Omar, "So be it'* And forthwith hie ilavea delivered many boge* containing in all a thooaand ehekele in B^d for whidi the goldsmith gave the chief tt parchment d^>oeit in writing (the forerunner of the banknote) payable "to whomaoever/' And thereupon the diicf Omar departed h^ppUy upon hie journey. Aa aoon oa he waa well out of the country tfie ahrewd goldimith called hia confidential aeribe and

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


TOHO LA BREA TH[ftTR[
THE EUTIITUWIW SAIIUMI PMDUCTIOH *,.dMta fftwg(*e * * *^*^^_,__ I * ^mt ! psJd Isr a ^ r f w g i M J

IlirKtw RMS Mtyir % ! if tkt Nriii M W I K ' pnalsN to M b tlw WiMKt Cnziist, FMMittt, M i tkt Fwthtst ! MMkal-Harrar-Sei-CinBdy m r nteanl Ht H SKCwdil 'Uitui tbi VaHiy if the DoHs' b t cnzrviin... hilariiin... wtrafein rm*tT'
- Rtdwtd CuktU|r, LA. HtrMtxminu

bade him thus* "Go now to the merchanto to whom I direct you and Bay to each that your maater haa a little s<>ld for hire upon good aecurity." And the aervant departed swiftlySewn there came a great merchant who aaid to the goldamith. "^l am in need of a few ahektia of goU. Will you lend it to meT' And die goldamith replied, "Money ia very tight thcac dayi, but it might be ao arranged. How much ia it that you need?" And the mer^ chant anawered, 'Two hundred ahekela," Then aaid the goldamith, "That ia much money. What eecurity could you pledge for eo great a eum?^' Then the merchant showed the goldamith a writing of hie poaaeaflicaiH of merchandiae. to the amount of a thousand shekels. The goldsmith said, "That is not enough. You must also pledge your dwelling {ptease turn to page 19)

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Poetry

Mansonia

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Beyond the Valley of the Dolls


A Russ M e y e r Production

Looking through my windowa m t h words you may call my eyes One with the sun in the mountaina I see through the eagle as he fhea My life has been youra for the

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You have shot my love with your gun Aa love's animala are slill falling Aa the Ug man kills for sport and fun Giving is the receiving Rewarda are never won Receiving* believing, oonceivingLove and Peace will overcome 'nirough Space turning drcles spinning V^hat small thought could Man concaive? Up from what? Down to where? Bad, good, looaing or winning To know ia just to believe,.. just to believe.., believe

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Tve weJked anvrng you But Tve never been a pert I have always loved you As I have looked inside your heart Nothing have 1 ever been As your world haa pasaeu me by l l i e earth h a s been my mother and My mind was left in the sky

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Laying my life at your feet As trash you kicked out the door Not once did you accept me And now I don't want you anymore A Black man gave me a cigarette And even his helping hand A Mexican taught me music - - > ?4y riiame is my own clan Only walls at your prisons Is all Tve ever aeen I ran away from your Citiea My brotbere who are so mean

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Once I did see the sun Where the eagle flies 1 look at the agony of my world And all the love that dies Animals are muc^ better Than any of you Fve seen Now, for your killing 1 must die - -. Or you and your crazy Machine, Charles Manson

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Los Angeles Free Press

July 10,1970
-w-

CIA in the LAPD???


SUE MARSHALL A CIA penetration agent? This was the description, conjuring up Images ofpolsoneddarts and sado-masochlstlc enzyme cleaners, which playwright Don Freed and attorney Luke McKlssack used to describe James Jarrett, late of the LAPD and presently stationed In Israel by the Central Intelligence Agency, ostensibly to act as a saboteur, (Jarrett has worked In this capacity overseas prior to this case.) If It wasn't for the zealous efforts of ten officers of the Los Angeles Police Department In trying to secure a conviction against Freed and actress Shirley Sutherland, the fact might never have been revealed that Jarrett (and possibly other LAPD cops) could act as a CIA agent while on the city payroll. The Sutherland-Freed case has proved a great embarrassment to the police department and U,S, attorney's office. From Oct, 2, 1969, when Jarrett tried to entrap Freed and Sutherland hy planting on Don Freed hand grenades which he had personally stolen from the San Diego Naval Armory, to December, when ten LAPD willingly complied in breaking Into the home of a private Investigator for the defense to steal tape recordings and papers, the actions of the police have been concretely Illegal. and held on S25,J00 bond to face a ten-year prison sentence. When the case came to trial Judge Warren J, Ferguson of the United States Federal Court dropped all charges In view of the obvious entrapment. The U-S. Atattorney, however, inanunprecedented niswe, appealed the judge's decision! But even more colorful things were to come. Luke McKlssack, chief Southern California counsel for the Black Panther Party, had been retained by Freed and Sutherland for their defense. In many of his celebrated cases, such as the Sirhan Sirhan defense, McKlssack has retained the services of prlvatelnvestlgator Mike McCowan, McCowan comes uncomfortably close to the mnd-squad stereotype of what a private dick" shoutdbe. He Is a licensed private investigator, a lawyer, a ladles' man, and a Gemini. Being a ten-year veteran of the police department himself, McCowan accepted the fact that one of his assistants, Sam Bluth, was a former LAPD officer who had been canned from the force for minor Infractions, ApparenUy, Sam Bluth dugbelng a cop to the extent that he would break the law to get back In, According to a Memorandum of Fact submitted to the court by the U.S. Attorney's office, the following facts came to tight while Sutherland and Freed were awalt-^ ing trial. On Dec, 10, 1969, Sam Bluth visited the Venice Police D ^ a r t ment and conferred with a Lt. Hegge, Tlie content of their conversation <thls Is from the U,S, Attorney, remember) was a meeting that Bluth had observed where Don Freed and Shirley Sutherland had discussed James jarrett, Lt, Hegge sent Sam Bluth to the glass house downtown where he laid his scene on Inspector McCalley, Lt, Loomis of the Internal Affairs Division and Ggt. sandlin and Officer Vincent Kelly of the ^telltgence D^artment, BlUth produced tapes containing recorded conversations between the defendants and Investigator McCowan, The police made copies of these tapes. Later that day, Sgt. George Arnold and Sgt, jack Guterdlng listened to the three hours of tape Bluth had provided. The next day, Arnold and Guterdlng followed Blutli to Mike McCowan's apartment, in the hope of finding more Information. Bluth broke in, and returned In 20 mlU' utes with no further information, on Dec. ID, three days later, Jarrett, Officer Russell Mellzer and Sgt. Arnold listened to McCowan's tapes. Meltzer and Arnold had sivervLsedjarrett'swork In LAPD capacity when the hand grenades were delivered to Don Freed in October, and these three policemen served as prosecution witnesses.

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


CIA agent James Jarrett (center) flanked by LAPD cohorts.
the entire case for the defense, I think It's shocklng,What this casB spoaights Is one of the major problems of tbla society,* stated attorney McKlssack. The police are too busy enforcing laws against others tc let themselves be governed b> these same laws, "Here e have an open and shut case of numerous grave and falontous offenses committed by these ten police officersand some of them are from the higher echelona of the LAPD. One would think that the relevant processing agency, the U,5, Attorney and the LA DinPhoto by Gilbert waingonrt I almost could say that the LAPD probably wasn't aware that Jarrett was a CIA man," Freed commented to the Free Press, "Maybe that's being naive. Jarret has been a 'hit* man-^the leader of political assassination teamsin Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. He had worked for the CIA In Latin America, He had come to the LA police to help train the special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) squad, which was responsible for the raid on the Black panther Party headquarters last December,' Even when Jarrett was working within the group called Friends of the panthers (now known as Liberation Union) as an infiltrator-^ even before ha was proven to be a cop of any kind^he was recog" nlzed to be sn Individual with serious mental problems, Jarrett talked freely about atrocities he had committed InVletnam and his current life as a cat burglar and gun-runner," recalled Don Freed, 'Uis acting-out personality was plain. To use the psychological vocabulary, he has a allo-plastlc personality. Here Is a man who was emotionally battle-scarred In Vietnam, and hisslcknesshasbeen channelled for the use of the C1^ Jarrett acts out with his & an Innerworldof sado-masocr. ^c adventures which fit exactly the patter he has been programmed to follow, Tlila Is the logical step beyond drafting and brainwashing someone In the army, Jarrett Is a victim, too, and his very existence demands an e:cplanatlon. There are thousands of men like him returning from the battlefields; beneath their clean-cut blonde exterior they are walking BchUophrenlcsand monsters. named Iti the suit at the time It was filed last March, but the U,S. Attorney's office has so far failed to respond, 1 consider this case sort of a reverse of the Friar's Club case," remarked Mike McCowan, 'Tn that instance, the attorneys anddefendents were Indicted under an archaic rule thatsays attorneys can't have copies of a Grand Jury transcript. Here we have specific evidence of a crime committed on behalf of the prosecution, and Buck Compton and Matt Byrne (U.S. Attorney's office) have done nothing to these Individuals who disclosed trtct Altomay, would tifea action, as they undoubtedly would agalnn John Do Citlaen were he to pradpltate the asm* crlma, The police, of couraa, by virtue of their fratarnlsatlon with this prosecuting agency, are immune to ratrtbutlon for their tnfractiona. What does one dovdian youhava an uncontested axposa of crlmaa bylaw enforcemantofncera andNO ONE WILL TAKE ACTION? Police who seek to flaunt the vary lawa they oalenalbly charlsh will undoubtedly gain Bolace from the Freed-suthtrland debacle,"

Maiuon trial report

Judge decrees ban on private hearings


sions with the defendants and lawyers congregating In his private chambers, THat way, the public, which has a legitimate rtght to know, could know what was occurring In a public court in a free society. In any case, the greatest contribution to the extreme delay in selectliv the Jury (excepting the gathering rumors of suspicion that for some reason the prosecution wanta the trial delaysd) Is the fact that Loa Angeles pays Its Jurors only five dollars a day, and no one, absolutely no one without alot of bread oranout-of^theordlnary employer willing to give an employee a six month pald'vacatlon," can afford to atick around to insure juatlca. Now, the Judge win merely reply when, say, the defense lawyers challenge the Jury selection system, that such a Jury

When Jarrett was In Friends of the Panthers, ] maintained that he was sick and should not be rejected, Jarrett ran tight, effective self-defense and first aid classes. He was skltled and patient and revealed a helpful, friendly side In direct contrast to his usual provocative behavior,' tn September, one of the young women belonging to the Friends was raped by reactionary Cubans. j a r r e t t suggested that mace be obtained for the women to carry for salf-defensa. Freed agreed. On Oct, 2, the day before Freed was scheduled to go to New York to supervise the Broadway opening of his play, "Inquest; the United States vs, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg/ Jarrett delivered a brown cardboard box which was supposed to contain mace to Freed;s home at 4:15 a.m. About 4:30, detectives arrived simultaneously at two homes, to hold guns to the head of Don and Barbara Freed, Shirley Sutherland and her three young children, Don Freed Shirley Sutherland were arrested for possession of hand grenades.

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alty, la that correct, air? 2, After hearing all of the evldaQca In this case and considering all of the circumstances, you felt mat ttila was a proper case for the Imposttlon of the death penalty, Mr. X, would you have the courage to come back Into thIa courtroom and, In effect, by your verdict, tell these defendants that they must die? 3, Could yi'U vote the death penal*v for a female defendant, Blr?4, '- j realiEe, sir, that the prosecution does not have the burdan of proving any dafendanfaffutltbeyondall f doubC Do yon widsmlaiK] that? a. Now, do you thlnfc that if you were selectsdas s |uror Inthlscaaeyoti could put aside complete, wholly, So, transcripts of the Jury seleverything you read InaaisrtlclSt ection proceedings are not availand if It became refresbsd as te able to reporters or Interested who was the p^soD who was rsparties by Judicial decree. Tranponslble for that article (aitlcls scripts with In-chambers and atreferred to Is the so-ctUsd Boam bench proceedlc^s edited out may Atkins confession In Dec 14 LA be purchased at the usual LA bum Times), pvl II aside, ind decide rate of 50f par page but they system only makes It more dlffl- this CBSs eolsly on Uis vridencs would be so gutted of interest and Gull to find an Impartial Jury pan- you hear tn this court? a. Do you el when such financial hardahlpa On Dec, 31, Bluth supplied Ar- continuity that theyvould be almost are imposed, butnotinpoeslblyao. have any opposition wtaataoevar to useless. sltUnf on a case where ttiePa(9la nold and Guterdlng with several And so It goes, o ptah, like an rely in part on clrcumstSBtld hours more of stolen tapes. When the trial ItseU starta, one Incessant aplarte drone, the quest On Jan, 5, Bluth met with Sgt. hopes that this Judicial order will of a just panel ol 'peers* to sit vldeDCa? 7, Do you undartand Dyer of the LAPD intelligence De- be lifted because once the Jury is in judgmant. of Mr, Manson, Ulaa the rule of conapiracy, sir, which partment and gave Mm a 15-20 sequestered and banned from read- Krenwlnkel, Hiss Van Houten and mskes a full conspirator responslMe for the erlmes of the other page transcript with more infor- ing or watching accounts of the case Mlsa Atklna. con^lrators, eventttougtahe hlnimation regarding the Sutherland- there la no reason why. reportara aeif did not comnait the crtme sod should not have access to all proFreed defense. On May Z, more than stiwaaka perhaps waatft even preaent sttbe ceedings. If the court does not alago, Mr, Fitagerald madeamotton scene? a. Can you ttilnk of any d r In March, Mike McCowan, Luke McKis.^ack, Don Freed and Shir- low transcripts to be purchased before the court to hold Mr, Sto* cumatsnces ondsr which youwovid ley Sutherland submitted simultan- or defense and prosecution lawyers vjtz tn contampt for violation of be wlllliv to vote for the death eous lawsuits against the City of to relate all matters occurring be- the courfa own gag rulabacauaa penalty for a partlcuUr defenLos Angeles In an amount tot all Ing fore the court then they might as Mr, stovlta revealed to Rolling dant^ even though the tvldence one million dollars. They are well have a preliminary kangaroo Stone migAElne a lot of the pro- showed that this di^Mdint41d not charging the police department acene In the ant-room of that little sacutlon'a case against the dafan* kill a fsllow human balng (referwith Theft of property. Invasion green gas room at San Quentln danta plua a constdarable c r o ring to Mensoi^ e. Yov cannot of privacy. Interference with Bu- and then aummarlly off the defen-- Bctlon of data from CalUomla conceive then of any circumstance siness Relation, and Abridgement dants, so far away from open trial Highway Patrol reports v In Inyo wherein you would ba wllliv to of Constitutional and Civil Rights, and ^ i r justice will thia spec- County. No decision has bssn mad* vote for OM d e a a penalty regardon the motion as yet, websllsvs. less of the evldencs (this Juror In the suit, the four defendenla tacle then become. You can bet a heavy atasb ttiit charge that Sam Bluth and the ten excused bacause of opposiActually, the court sessions out whan the proceedtngs are Anally waa police officers "entered Into a tion to daath-^ank)? 10, T f ytiu scheme...to knowing and Inten- of the ears of the Jury are going held they will be held In chambers v a r a asked by the court to put tentlonaUy steal,,,and aid and to be the most Interesting In this and no one will probably ever gat aside all nunors, all reports of abet the theft of clalmatYts'prop- trial, perhaps, especially If ru- to know what Judge Older will any type <if publleatton, and deerty, work product, and confiden- mors hold true and certain evi- decree regarding U r . Stovlts be- cide the c ase on the evidence and tial Information relating to the dence of aasoclatlon long talked cause of his pravloua decrss ban- aolaly on the evidence, will ytm be (Sutherland-Freed) defense.,. de- about In the underground* and ning the decreeing of his sscrat able to keep that pronlav? ate, fraud (the claimants) and toper- which we will not reveal here be- decrees. Is this Poland? lUe atratagy of the datense Is, cause of our faith In the rlghtness vert and obstruct j u s t i c e . , , , ' to be frankj tmclear to thlawrtter. of certain concepts of Justice, la Several Unas a day the dafaasa As to the questioning of prosbrought up In the procasa of the In all, nearly 20 specific viola- trial. The point Is, Mr, Older pective lurora, there are literally aceepta the Jury panel and thaotka tions of the Penal Code are al- could Just as welt remove the Jury tlwuaands of questions posed. We proaecutlon uses 19 one of Its 40 for history present to your leged In the suit, from the courtroom If he wanted shall, Innocent eyes ten typical prosecuLuke McKlssack and Mike Mc- to have a heartng q>art from their tion questions asked by the panel, Cowan have actively demanded that ears rather than holding these sec1. 1 uDdsrstand, Mr, X, that you chaUsoges to remove a Juror the U,S, Attorney's office seek In- ret clandestine suspicious sesare not opposed to the death penfpteosc turn topmm V dictment against the ten policemen ED SANDERS They're Into their third panel of 50 prospective Jurors In the Clelo Drive - Waverly Drive murder cases and justice oozes onward. It Is difficult at this point to follow the proceedings becauseJudge Older has flipped a ban ig>on any public knowledge of any proceedings occurring In judges' chambers or by the bench, and, believe me, a lot of the proceedings are private. One canunderstand this during Jury selection when Jurors are not sequestered and might possibly read matters relating to Jury selection that could hinder their chances to be Impartial jurors.

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Loe Angeles Free P r e s s

July 10,1070 99

PafaT

"tL,e origmriLal I spoon

The questioning of 'Mr. Dungeon'


(continued from page 3} wberei^on Mr. Fitzgerald sndMr. Retaer question the new Jurorsbut Mr, Fitzgerald Is not to tMs date exercising bis chslienges. The strategy Is probably this, that the onu^of jury challenge lias with the prosecution and that the defenssis ready to go to trial right now, all delays resting with the prosecution. front of M r , Mansoife chair d u r ing M r s , Ka^iblan'a v p H T s n c e attempting to block off visual communication. What happened in r e ality was thai M r s , Kisabien add Manaon atared at one another for about tan mloutea in a t o r t of battle of t h e b e a m s , Manson s m i l ing and imbllnliing (anyone who h i s engaged In a ataHng contest wltb Mr, Hanson m the courtroom wlU tell you that the guy has absolute control over his eyelids) and Kasablan returned hia glance unafraid. Nothing cauad h e r to melt and the minutes passed with much relief to thoae coucemed.

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press

JIMMY WITHER SPOON


witlu ^ mel orowm's

m
1

prairie madlness emdis simclay next:

JULY 10th SI 11th JUOEESILL

STEPHAN BISHOP COMING; LONGBRANCH PENNY WHISTLE

MCCABE'S GUITAR SHOP


PRESENTS IN CONCERT JULY lOlh & l l t h

the slmpl r e t s o n that idon'lthlnk It Is harsh enough. There oucht to be something worce than death, you know, for certain crimes," It seemed incredible, but i few minutes later Mr. Fltzfferald, Miss Krenwlnkel's attorney, further asked M r , Dungeon; - w h s t did you have In mind, the rack o r the screw?" Mr, Dungeon- 'Well, l am not Which leads us to the testimony a sadist, but something like that," of a jury which we shall refer to Mr, Dungeon went on (o cuniplaln as Mr, Dungeon, This j u r o r , who that some people convicted of murremains on the jury panel as of der a r e eligible for parole In this writing, evidently believes that few y e a r s , a fear evinced by other capital punishment should Involve prospective Jurors In the weeks of torture. You dun'l have lo he an questionings, shifting uncomfortexpert in Mandaean clay bowlmag- ably In their chairs over the p o s ir to know thst the world alwunds sibility of some day Mr. Manson in Code o ' Hammurabi freaks but getting out to return to his d e s e r t to find those who will express such commune, sentiment in front of a courtroom I mentioned earlier about r u full of r e p o r t e r s Is r a r e . Here Is m o r s that the prosecution s e e m s Mr, Dungeon's questionings to be l e s s than eager to begin The Court: "D^ y u entertain the actual trial. One has heard such conscientious opinions regard- talk In the corridors from varioua ing the death penalty that youwould people associated with the Hall automatic ally refuse to Impose of Justice and also from our s e c It without regard to the evidence ret underground hippie socialist spies. The rumors are that there developed during ^he trial?" is trouble on the Linda Kasablan Mr, Dungeon; "Yes, I would, for front. Her lawyers, Mr, Fleishman flUa MELROSE AVE, ' Ot 3-70ffl and Mr, Matthews, keep saying on television that she will walk out free at h e r Aug. 12 hearing, o u r s e c r e t spies tell u s that the DA's office wants her to remain Incarcerated until all possible appeals and r e - t r i a l s a r e finished, a time perlud of perhaps as much a s five years. The reaeon for this probably i s that, were she freed, she 7468 MELROSE AVC. mlfhl not be so eager to conform. A*Show<-FHP.&5Ar. There Is some s o r t of trouble 0:30 ft 10:30 P.M. r.m >V; afloat. Without the testimony of HOOT GUN. 8T30 P.M. r\% Linda Kasablan, the prosecution would seem to be without a sltfnlflcant part of their case against at least three of the defendants.

bfiULes s a r s

MUSSELWHITE

fktbucl^le's

Word h a s reached u s from B e r keley that the Jefferson A l i p l t n s will perform e benefit concert for the Charles Manaon Defense Fund at the Berkeley Community Auditorium oo Aug. 3. Also performing will ha the Charles Manaon Family Choir lead by Clem Titfts, Fans of Clem will b* happy to know that he la out of Jail and will be on hand to lead the alnginff In Berkeley, Movies of the famllyp Including footage of M himself, will be shown at the concert, U le almoet a year since the horrible vortex of Manson's brutality murdered the Innocent on Cialo Drtve and the unsuspecting on Waverty Drive, And let us not fail to p r a i s e the beauty. F o r Sharon Tate waa ]uet plain beautiful and s o were all the victlma of this dreadful ^ i r l t o f V l e t n a m c h o p - i v , But this talk of cyanide, these harumphlngs of death babble, thla Is what Is ugly, Indecorous, Ignoble and useless in the end, Ftir ir any of theibe humans did such a thing aa twang a fork in desd man's stomach ae en a c t o f rell* glous warfare, then thla affair h a s no bualneatt In a court of law.

"

SHOW TIME: 8:00 & 10:C:)

STEVE GILLETTE ^ mark tujnbull


826-4497 For Reservation*

3103 Pico Blvd., Santa Monica

BAG of NAILSf .%
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25 N. Fair Oaks Pasadena


MUSIC Daf^cing

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For everyone r e m e m b e r s the hearing on June IT where M r s , Kasatrian had to appear In court In the presence of M r . Manson and the other defendants, Tha p r o secution well r e c a l M the famous meeting of Miss Atkins and Mr. Manson en-ly last March whereafter s h e stopped being a p r o s e cution witness and fired her at< torney Mr, caballero. Tension zapped t h r o u ^ the courtroom. Would Charles Matiaon, evil mlnstrel-gunJ possessed of s b e witched permahard mahallngam, beam in on M r s , Kasablan with a high energy Satanic l a s e r - s t a r e , causing h e r to recant h e r relationship with the prosecution? Evidently that was the fear, because more than one person stood in

letter

Dear Editor;

m a matter of daye,CongreaBwlU face a critical environmental dedaion; whether t o continue fmiding the SST(auperonlctreneport),Wlth Ita dealgn now complete, appropriations a r e being sought to build s prototype. Mountii^ acleotlfic evidence shows thst buUdiDg and operating the 88T would be a tragic mistafee for many reaeons. Moat alarming a r e the fears of experts that exhaust vapors left at high altitudes by the SST might upset natural meteorological balances, eipoalng the e a r t h ' s surface to eiceaaive radiation. Tills fact sheet deacHbas these fears aiKi other haserda i n cluding the relentless sonic booms with which the SST threatens w alL What can you do to help? Wire or write your Conreaaman Immediately, urging him to vote agAinel funds for the SST, Show ttde letter to your friends and iMighbora, Aek them to write also. Write your Senalora as well, encouraging Uiem lo speak out against this sntl-aoclol monstrosity. Try to reach the public through local newspapers, radio talk shows, and the like. Thanks for helping, Reopectfuily yours, Phillip S, B e r r y President. S i e r r a Club

Wine Beer 7 Night!

Cdlmtijr
JULY 16th thru lOth

Girls 18 OK 793-1229 ECOLOCV FLAG STICKER


3'ne-'GltECN & WHITI 35< Eoch 3 / 1 1 0 0 ocAiia/DaTnisuTon Mounts mvrno I C A L S ft muWtL tkVt .LA .CJ>.tO04a

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_ DOUG WESTOW'S NOW THRU SUN. JULY 12th | ^ PLUS THECOMBIVOF

CR. 6-6168

S T E V E MARTIN
COMING NEXT

COCKTAILS . H O O T ON MONDAYS N O AOE LIMIT

eric andjersen

Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

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69 Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

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Pge8

July 24,1970
taken again to Caruso's office for a tape session. It was during this meeting, according to Miss Atkins, that Mr, Caballero attempted to place his hand within her dress as if to deliver a metacarpal loin-lunge. December 5. Susan Atkins, upon receiving an offer of some sort of deal from the prosecution, t e s tifies for two hours before the Grand Jury (Ron Einstoas of the LA Times gave Miss Atkins on this day at>out the oiUy good press she has gotten, describing Miss Atkins as a -soft spoken angelic-looking yoxuyg woman.') to Caruso^s office for a babble session. December 11-12-13, Days of Frenzy, TTie Los Angeles Times, Time Magazine and Newsweek learn that Schiller is going topublish Miss Atkins and all make overtures to purchase the ^confession." Schiller refuses to sell It to any of them becausehe can make the most money by selling It to various European newspapers and magazines. The Los Angeles Times becomes sorely plssedoff, vowing to get vengence. Runor has it that the Times tipped off the Court that the "confession' was going to be printed hut that nothing was done about it. Then how did the Times get the alleged confession that it printed on December H'^lt is a wonderful story and we shall prerenl to you a few flashes from its graceful reality.

Loe Angelee F r e e P r e s a
IF Y O U t I K E TO PLAY POOL T H Y A REAL POOL R O O M B I G M A M A ' S B 1 L L A R D S , 6 2 2 1 Laurel C e n y o n B l v d . 1 0 a m t o 2 i m 1 , B r 2 . Food X Good Soundi4. T.V. S P K L I I Summar CMicount l^iMi 10 sm to T pm U d J B Nitfit - Turn. & T h u n . Ladtaa ptV frea wh*n wcorted.

Susan Atkins
fconXinued from pogt 0 cript rtvtal thit Mr. Condon <paded to handle Mlaa Atkins' casfl wiUl completion. And there Is pracedent for hla aaaumption becauae^ even t h o u ^ court appointed )ob8 are sometimes civen out as i form of patronage (the fea are high, often as much as $150175 per court day), this is a mur^ dr case and he has already done cofwiderable work becoming familiar with It,

3GHri SO^D PRODUCTIONS FK5tNrs

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


FRI, JULY 3 1
Novemt>r IS, A cellmate of Suao Atkinc allegedly reveals to police the contents of certain conTersatlons she has had with Susan Atkins from November 7 thru November 11. November 19, Deputy District Attorney Aaron Stovltz goes to Death valley with a Search w a r rant looking for the Green and White School bus parked at the Barker Ranch, Novemt>er 26. Richard caballero, former assistant DA, shows iV for Susan Atkins* hearing at Santa Monica S v e r i o r Court. Now^ her attorney until that time, Mr, Condon^ has written a tetter to the court requesting that he be continued as her attorney because of his knowledge of the case. No dice, Caballero Is substituted for Condon, Caballero has athreehour private gab session with Miss Atkins and forthwith, according to witnesses, begins to give out confidential Information regarding the Tale house case (Remember that this hearing i s for the Hlnman case. Tlie chief suspect in the Tate-house case up to this point, at least for pvlbWc e a r s , is the bullet-headed man with deformed ears whose glasses were found in the hallway of the hotise on Cielo Drive), uttered to him in the privacy of an attorney-client relationship, December 1, T^e famous Al Devle/Meyor Yorty press conference in which Chief of police Al Davis announces that over 5000 hours of police effort has cracked the case. (It was the team of detectives investigating the LaBianca murders that first became auspicious of the current defendants. The Tata house investlgetors, on the other hand, had l>een overwhelmed by what they had uncovered in their Investigation: Video tapes, a dope smuggling map, 1 legendary film library, gambling debts, cocaine, MDA, cannabla, fairy dust ((rumors arethat the police had no knowledge of fairy dust)^, indications of occultism, suspicion of group trope, rumors of whipcracksinthesmog, etc,all this was overwhelming, leading nowhere,) December 7, Caballero announces to the press that Miss Atkins Is afraid that Mr, Manson might "conjure iv> a vision* to harm her^-indicating how insane the situation had become that Mr. Caballero should publicly discuss the private hex-fears of a client, December 3, Grand Jury completes receiving testimony. On this day occurs somethlrv wonderful. Miss Atkins Is conned into signing over her power of attorney to Mr. caballero and Mr. Caruso as follows: "By this Instrument I hereby give to my attorneys^ p_c. and R,C,, my Power of Attorney to enterinCoanyandall agreements with Lawrence Schiller, and/or Twenty Plmllco, Inc, of 3064 Elvlll Drive, LOS Angeles, California, 90049, for the wrltlE^r and/or sales of the first person, exclusive, by-line story i>f my life and/ or any portion thereof. Itisunderatood that the text will be taken from first person interviews with me and tape recordings In my attorneys possession and will include my Involvement in those events that transpired before, during, and after the deaths of Sharon Tate, Jay Sebring,Voityck Frykowski, Abigail Polger, Stephen Parent, and Leon La Blanca and his wife.- (The deal calls for 259 of monies received Co go to Lawrence Schiller, Qf the balance of the money, 4tfr goes to the attorneys and 60^ to Miss Atkins, By this agreement. Cab and Car do not have to account to Miss Atkins for monies received,

dODY GQLLINS

Schiller has a xeroK machine in his house (he actually had a xerox repairman present In his house all night while they edited the tapes and prepared the manuscripts for the world release dale). It was on thlsxerovmachine that Schiller made copies of the manuscripts for the couriers from all those foreign publications who each took a copy and would translate it Into the required lar^uage on the plane back to Europe* Some paragraphs got transposed In the first editions of the'confession* off the serox marhlne hut a copy from this transposed edition was given anyway to a courier from News Of The World in London since they had to get on the stick to make an early deadline, the ear-

ARLQ eUTHRIE
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HOLLYWOOD BOWL
m

(please turn to page 20)

^iBnA4zae

JULY 24th & 25th

PENNY NICHOLS FERN WOOD PACIFIC


PLUS
C C M I N G N E X T WEEK:

V 7/m-4

THE SMITH BROTHER

Fatbuc^le's
^4B8MELROSEAVL, RO.Stnwi'FRi. & S A r . 8:30 & 10^30 P.M. HOOT S i l N . 8:30 P.M.

CathY L u n r i o r d , J o h n M e n n i n g Pius Paul ElMTlel

*!^- >V^ V/'l'

December 9, Armed with the power of Attorney, Caruso and Caballero enterIntoacontractwith Lawrence SchlUer to publish the "confession." T^ey agree to open ^ an escrow account at the Beverly Hills National Bank under the title of 20PL-TATE. Into this account Is to flow all monies received from the book or newspaper sales of the confession*. As soon as checks clear Schiller i s to get his 25<^ and the lawyers their 75? (They are responsible for seeing that Miss, Atkins gets her share out of their 75^,) They agree that Decemt>eT H l s i o b e l h e world-wide release date. Moloch Is happy. December 10, Judge Keene i s sues his court order preventing those connected with the case from talking in public. Only a few hnurs after the gag rule Is handed down, Jerry Cohen of the L.A. Times goes to Sybil Brand Jail to get information from MissAtkln5,(He has been hired by Schiller to ghost-write and edit part of the t>ook,) Later, Schiller claims that II was he, using Jerry Cohen's name, who signed in on the visi t o r s list to s e e Miss AtklnsI December 10, Richard Caballero Is appointed Miss Atkins' attorney (using county moneyOlnthe Taie-LaBlanca case by Judge William Keene, Keene had to know that caballerD would be making money off the confession since he signed one of the court orders allowing Susan Atkins to t>e taken
TUESOAV JULY 2 M i t - A . W M t Action Writer* Wortcihop A y o u p of dynamic peepla vrfw take wrltmf Mriouifv l i iwldlne ! Hivt Apan mtingi' EnpaclaHy invited are c n a t t n writen K M I frtanA. f o r (ntarmetion a l l Barry D'l.ot* HO 4 5161

December I.Susan Atkins Is taken by Caruso and c i b a l l e r o to their office by court order <in the presence of Mr, BugUosl) for a tq>e aesslon, Caballero begins talking to the p r e s s about his client* December 2. Lawrence Schiller evidently comes ittto the picture, Schiller claims to have learned of a poasible snsan Atkins confession while drlvlag and listening to die radio ragtorts of statements ot Mr, caballero. Other sources Indicate that: Mr. SchlUer may hsve been tipped off about Miss Atklu* Impending ^confession" by tu employee of the Loe Augeles Ttmea wtOi whom Schiller had worted on Schiller's Jack Ruby death bed book,

December 2, 'Hie foreman of the Graod Jury announces, after a half hour meeting of the Ifi member CHmlual Complaints Committee durlTv which repreaentatlvee of the DA'S office presettt v e r bal evidence, that the Grand Jury will begin recelvlnc testimony on Dec, 9, December 4, suain Atkins i s

The Ecffio PaHc Commission on Law and Ordflr

A MARCH ON WASHItSIGTOW. November 22, 1970 to demand full investigations of American political ti nations. (See Calendar for our upcoming raUy.)
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70

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e20
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July 24,1970

Los Angdee Free Pregi


this Is the roanuscriptfortheLawrence SchUler book. As I l d on the phone, we are very anxious to have an authoritative person knowledgeable In ethical/tudlcial matters to comment upon this.Wefeel that a point of civil liberties as well as Journalism is involved. Because this is our only copy, I must know within two days If you will be willing to comment on this book for the Times book aecUon," Jan 5. Evelle replivs to Digl^iy: 1 am returning the nnanuscripl. When you phoned me, you didn't say anything alwut atwo-daydeadline. You mentioned that action would be required before January 12th. Under the circumstances I won't have a chance to read the book. Sincerely, EVelle J, Younger District Attorney Ir attachments," Jan. 22. AS if they hadn't ripped Miss Sadie off enough, Mr. ceballero and Mr. Caruso get her to sign an agreement handing over to them for "attornles fees" 50^, of her m. of the 7ST of the 100?, if you have followed the rlp-oEt, February 5,(circa)EvelleYounger announces his candidacy for the position of State Attorney General. 'Hie vampires float in the trance &
H i e moans rtse ig> f r o m the hoUywood amog

Atkins
llest or any of ttie publications. Another copy of this early fuckedtf> edition went to Paul Caruflo. This transposed version also happened to serve oa the text for the article printed by the L.A, Times on December 14. The Implication, since all later copies were correct as to text, is that caruao cave or sold hLs copy of the confession to the Times, The Times however has claimed all aloD^ that they didn't pay a pnny for the story (Schiller, however, claims that the Times legal department approached him to settle, when he threatened to sue them, and save him two thousand dollars out of court. One does not find anywhere in the bank statements from the Bev Hills National Bank for the escrow account any deposit for two thousand dollars. Could It be that Mr. Schiller bumed his business associates for (he 2 thou? Chortle Chortle.)

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


INSMOG-r=REE SANTA MONICA
no redemption from the evil and sin

no redemption The screams moLl In the spirit of the shrutis no redemption no redemption no redemption

ftosimudmoN \ ^jusrsnmuLAjnoN V ^
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no redemption from the hale and the horror the river is full of coipsea the river is full of the boats of death no redemption no redemption no redemplion

3O07MilnSt. 392-9724 S f l n U MOAica Optn 10:45 A.M, {Hmt 0 r | i o u ) A d u l U Only Brinfl T h i s A d f o r $ 1 , 0 0 D i s c o u n t

FOR LOVE OR MONEY


(SOMETIMES BOTH)

IT DEPENDED ON THE GUY

In any case* the Times got ahold of the text. They waited until the second edition of Ihe TlmesonDecember 14 (so (hat it possibly could have been picked up from a European sourcelong time lag) and printed It, lliere is some indication that the Times went so far as to gel access to a vacant AP wire on Dec 13 to feed the story to themselves so Ihat It would look as If il had Just been legally received as part of a wire service dispatch, December IB. The money starts pouring Inio the escrow accounl$19,125.00; $3251,25, JlS^S-JS.OO, S6405.00, etci A total of $Bl000.00 has flowed through the account up until a coxfl>le of months ago. Most of the initial money came from newspapers in Europe, Royalty money for the took, a lot of which is still to come In to the account, will be forthcoming this year. Jan. 5,1970, Dlgby Diehl, literary editor of the Los Angeles Times wrttes a letter to EveUe Younger to persuade him to review the confession t>ook. saying the followingt "AS per our conversation

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A COMPLETELY UNINHIBITED FILM IN ESTATIC COLOR AND SOUND FOR YOUR ADDED ENJOYMENT A HFTEEN MINUTE SHORT SUBJECT BROWSE IN OUR MODERN BOOKSTORE BEFORE AND AFTER THE FILMS. WE HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF PORNO - BOOKS - FILMS MARITAL AIDS, ETC. POR-HO THEATRE A BOOK SfORE 1610 H. CAHUENGA, HOLLYWOOD NEW F E A T U R E EVERY F R I D A Y

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72 Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

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Page 22

July 31,1970
in Danny DeCarlo*s bread truck, said that people up there were into their own trip and that now is the time for Helter Skelter, a i e testified thai she was told to get a change of clothes, a knife and her d r i v e r s license. She testified that than she got into awhlte and yellow (to) Manson; ' c a v e lovel' as a m e t - 59 Ford with back seat removed, aphysical expletive-exhortative sitting in the front passenger side; referring to a c a v e a s a n a r c h e t y p e the car being driven by Tex WatIn apposition to Anaximanders son; Katie and Sadie in the back; c o n c ^ t of the Boundless^ o r did the car parked at the end of the It mean b,) Linda tells MansonC's) boardwalk at the SpaU Ranch near c a v e love' referring to the l y r - George's house. ics of one of Manson's s o i ^ s . She testified that then the car Cave Love? Or should it have took off and was duwnthedrlveway been, MANSON FUCKS LINDA IK area in front of the Longhord SaCAVE, as is probable. loon when Mr. Manson stopped the When we came out of the court- c a r , stuck his head in the front room and saw the headlines we bet p a s s e n g e r window and said; "Leave a m o i ^ ourselves concerning the a sign. You girls know what to do. contents of the headlines for the Something wllchy,- (We assume second editions of the papers, L O , that that statement, allegedly by the Times new headline becsme Manson, i s not the substance yf the NIGHT OF TERROR and the Ex- conspiracy charge. It would be hard aminer became L I N D A TELLS to find a semanticlst, except perHORROR AT TATE'S, Chop always hapd Hayakawa, who would lestlfj' that - n o something wile hy" consticrowds sex from headlines. In any case, all that testimony tutes a snuff comjnand,) about sex and all that testimony Here a r e my notes, disjointed of chop-1^ Just has to be mixed and creepy, written during the together inextricably in this square closing minutes of Linda Kasaj u r y ' s consriuusness so that when Man's testimony last Tuesday; they hear of sex they will auto- Drove upClelo Drive, Gate, Turned matically think of chop; hear of car around. Parked near telephonfi chop, think sex. Sex-chop, As if pole, Tex climbed pole. Saw wires communal sex leads to murder. Or fall. Heard splat of w i r e s , road. dope and sex, o r dope and sex Car back down hill. Parked car and the Beatles^ white double al- right side bottom of hill. Then bum. Or dope and sex and walkie walked back up hill, Tex carrying talkies and dune buggies and gar- rope colled left shoulder, (Mrs bage gourmet reclamation. Or con- Kasabian Is shown white rope, versely. apprnxlmately 3/4 inch thick, yes thai*s the rope). All climb over Back to hack. M r s . Kasabian fence, c a r lights coming, Tex, get testified that on the night of Aug- d.>wn, Tex leaped forward, stuck ust 8th, that Mr. Maneon, In dis- gun to hisad of guy in car, " P l e a s e cussing a recent t r i p tip to HigSur
n*?

Los Angeles F r e e P r c M
T S ^ E a t T m a n ? "HeTusTTvoIc? don*t hurt me,- Four shots head. rising lo near falsetto) kept doing Slump over in seat, TeK reaches it and doing it and doing til" Linda in turns off ignition, pushes car a m t l e way back, (Linda crying sob- standing on paved walkway when bing *I saw him c l e a r l y face Frykowsky dies, wan face. All r e growing red, Tex tell Linda go in p o r t e r s looking at each other In back of house to look foropenwln- disbelief, Kasabian has to walk the dows o r door. Nothing open. Came eye-gauntlet past Sadie, Katie. Lesback, Tex cutting screen, Tex says lie and Charlie to the chart d e go back and wait at car, listen for picting layout ofhouseandgrounds; sounds, did so. What did you hear Mr. Fllzg 3 raid tenders object Ion to next? I head people screaming (low her testifying at the chart on the groan from Kasabian, Involuntary grounds map Is written on as to moan of someone seized by sudden body positions, etc, before these hysteria, sobbing uncontrollably. a r e in evidence. Kasabian back to Jury frozen. Seventy reporters witness box. More details r a snuff writing and straining to see and positions. Hearing over, "Oh God" hear, Reporters start to dart out eitclBlmed a reporter, checking to get to their phones to file story,) -It was just horrible. Even myem- his notes, white faced. Knots of r e otions cant tell you how horrible p o r t e r s comparing pads for accuit was!" Uncontrollable sobs. racy, checking for correct chop Blonde bailiff brings Linda glass of chrono. File out, looking In one water. Linda wearing hair In pig- another's eves in stunned shared tails with perfect center part. Red knowledge of bloodbath. It was difficult to breathe. Death and blue d r e s s , red bottom, blue top with red wavy bunting, long was there. Violation was there. AU the slain slain in all the holes and foxholes of every battle and sleeves; She is attended most slaughterthey werethere. And closely by her lawyers, Mr, Flei- the air was so Intense, so filled shman and Mr Goldman, Hearing with vibrations of disturbed psyat bench, Linda shown photo of ches, that one became almost unSteve parent slumped in car, ! conscious with the weight of it. duht have to look at the pictures, Pitiful walls of grief iVs in my head!!* Sobbing unlo float up from the hollywood smog squared handkerchief. (Lady in back of court room s t a r t s to sob,) Kasabian back by parked car. Ka- Let me have my baby tie asks for knife, given, taped The white m i t r e s handle, Alonethenbycar.Screams, of the souls ycreams from r e s i d e n r t , Man: float ab<)ve the chaos -No no!" No words for Ihe moans and Shrieks. Linda runs toward house. Front yard, Man walks, Let me have my baby stumbles out of house, blood coV' no redemption ering face, they look eye to eye, no redemption man falls over In bush. Gets up, no redemption Tex on lop of him. Howmanyfimes no redemption
' I K "

Sex-chop; sex-chop
(eoniinutd fnm page I) Di11 Csnyon abovt the E^aim RUkclkwh%T% 9h% and M pot after It lEuld* caTflrn. She dascribed a mld-JUy back ranch conjofatory body pile wherein Manaon allegedly clinked groins with a 16 year o l d ' a h y " runaway who bit hie shoulder before faceamach and submission, 'Rieproseciitlon waa obviously eager to get lots of f u ^ y fucky into the Jurors minda because they knew full well that t e r r o r Issllmony waa forthwith forthcoming. It s u r e was. F o r , jQst like tha -wind that changes ttv direction, changes Its name," har testimony changed in a m a t t e r of minutes from pure sex to p u r e chop. And it caught the preview edttlonsoftheLos Anceles Times and the Herald Ejraminer unaware. The Times came out with a p r e view edition that was becrowned with Ihe headline: MANSON FAMILY'S SEX LIFE DETAILED, Detailed? Detailedi! (Vou can s e e the man on the Freeway driving home glancing over to his right at the Times on the seat, salivary glands pumping juices so as to necessitate occasional gulps, anticipating^ O Ra, anticipating Genuine, L.A, Times certified HIPPIE SEX SECRETS}} The Herald Examiner headline, LINDA TELLS MANSON CAVE LOVE,' presented grammatical problems at to its meaning. Did It mean a.) Linda tells

Copyright Los Angeles HOLDING TOGETHER Free Press


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HoLiHNG TOG-riti:R b r i n g s goo<l f o r t u n e . I n q u i r e of t h e o r a c l e oiiee a g a i n W h e t h e r y o u possess s u b l i m i c y , c o n s t i i n o y . am\ perseverance; T h e n t h e r e i^ n o b l a m e . T h o s e w h o a r e u n c e r t a i n ^rnilufilly j o i n . W h o e v e r comes loo late f l e e t s with misfortune*

g4)temmeflt officials reporters publishers


professors religious leaders

smiling eccentrit^s

psycholt^sts

rich men social scientists women with beautiful faces artists and writers
m e n w h o charge fees city men movie makers

men who want to

men w h o want you to help them

Christians and Jews f-'orsnth Howerer f'tatt' Xdiiiit IHstnut T lO as these

y o u on their you from

y o u to their liilbin

74

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,
I
loafers

men who build their own homers children parents who Icam from their children
a m a t e u r mudiciana neiene ps>cholii-s duimala

HELP THE LEARY F A M I L Y

m e n w h o lo4k d l M i n u e t s woods

m e n w h o w a l k in llie w o o d s

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help you

well

meaning

men who sit b) \\te fire wanderers men who make bri^ad couples who have been in love for years unemployed men smiling men with bad reputalions
Prayan bv TIMOTHV LEAHY.

SEND YOUR CHECKS OR

MONEY ORDERS TO: H O L D I N G TOGETHER P . O . B O X 5017 BERKELEY, CALIF EVEN $1.00 WILL HELP]

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July 3 1 , 1 9 7 0

Lo8 Angeles Free Prese

.... News i n Brief....


Yippies at Disneyland
VIPPIE Aug. 6 will be the tlate of the First lntraatkni&l Y l P P l E ! Pow Wow. T h e n t e hp been chosen* Disneyland, Gatefl open a t 8 a.m. a n d while they will now let you in with long hail, etc., they caay not let you in without a ticket. B u t as the old proverbial saying goea, ' T e a r down the walls t h a t divide us.*' Nonsponaors offer the following noncalendar of noneventa: .Admission: all day "by any means necessary" Black Panther Hot Breakfast: 9-lJ a,m. at Aunt Jemima's Pancake House Young Pirates' League; 11 a m , on Captain Hook'H Ship, Women's Liberation: 12 noon rally In liberale Minnie Mouse in front of Fanta^v l ^ n d . Self Defense Collective; 1-2 p.m, at Bhootiny gallery in Fronrier l.^nd. Mid-Dav Feast: [i p.m. BarBQ of Porky Pig. Lai* in the afltrnoon YIPPIK's plan U) intiltrote and liherate Tom Sawyer's U b n d E>eclflring a free state, brothe and aislera will then have a smoke-m and festival Get it on over U > Dianeyla^^. Aug. 6 VIPPTE! Reports coming out of Orange C o u n ^ say that local police and sheriff's are undergoing heavy riottraining for the y i P P I E invasion of Disneyland, Further, they could be armed heavily with ordere to do iu So consider yourself forewarned. his account of the shooting, the man said, "We stepped around the comer of the building and the dudes on top of the fhurch Qred and h i t Carl right in the sto mach. 11 knocked a hole as big as your Hat in h i s Htonnach." R G. Blaylock, who identified himself as one of the policemen on Cop of the church, said he shot an Ml carbine at some armed men. Police spokesmen said the men on top of the church were armed with "personal weapons" such as shotguns, deer rifles, and carbines. They were not in uniform. nicating to the mass without wordaI feel no m a n can represent another m a n kje^ause each m a n is different and h a s his own world, h i s own kingdom, his own r e a l i ^ . It is impossible to omununicate one reality through another into another reality. * ' Charles M a n s o r

aug.6 disneylaiid

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


ROTC loses ground Manson 's 'X' statement
T am not allowed io be a m a n in your sociel>', I iim considered inadequaf- and incompetent to speak or defend myself in your court. You have treated the monster, I a m no! of you, from you; nor do 1 (undone your wars or your unjusi^t !iniTiji3t'.' tj>vi':ird^ thiojzs, animals and people thai you won't try to under*itand. 1 have Xed myself from your world, I stand in the opposite to what you tki and what you have done in the p a s t You have never given me the Constitution you speak of. The word* you have used to trick the people are not mine. 1 do not accept what you call justice. The lie you live in is falling and 1 am not a part of it. You use the word God to make money.

Police shoot black

DENNIS LEVITT KPFK h a s reported t h a t Carl Hampton, Cliairmanof the People's Party II, was shot and killed by police last Sunday night in a n incident which erupted into a gunfight which wounded four others near a church in Houston. Texas. Blacks say the police shot first i*hi!e the police say that blacks shot first Earlier in the evening of (he death, police had made a massive presence at a rally called in the black community Orte man who was with Hampton al the nme of his death said that he and Hampton had gone to investigate a report t h a t armed police were on lop of a church. Giving

Youl Look at w h a t you have done and w h a t you are doing. You make fun of God and have munlered the world jn the name of Jesus Chnst. 1 stand with my X with my love, with my god and by myself My faith in me is stronger than all your armies, governments, gas chambers or a n y t h i r ^ you may want to do to me, I know w h a t I have done and your courtroom is man's game. Love is my judge, 1 have my own Constitution; it's inside me. No man or lawyer is speaking for me, I speak for myself. 1 a m not allowed to speak with words so I have spoken with the mark I will be wearing on my forehead. Many US citizens are marked and don't know j t You won't let them come from under your fpot. But God is moving. Moving, and 1 a m a witness. I have tried to stand on the C-mstiiuiion. but I am not afforded the rights another citizen may enjoy. 1 am forced to contend with commu-

WASHINGTON, D.C. <LNS>-Ten years ago, nearly 300,000 students were enmUed in college ROTC programs, l-ast year, 196970. barely half t h a t number turned o u t And over 73 ROTC buildings were largeis pf attack by fire or explofliver^- Pentagon records list more than 400 anti-ROTC incideniB in the la^l c<>l]tge year, actions involving tcnti oflhounands of American college studenti^r The informaiion comes from a J u n e 2fl report in I'S Svw^ & World Rt^pori. nght-winR competitor of Timr and Nrtis^m-fk The following excerpts are particularly telling, 'There hgvt* been only t h r w arrests on fcdfryl charges of sabotage and destruction of Government property. "Law - enforeement officials, Stale and federal, complain they have trouble getting students or school authorities to identify anyone involved in the anli-KOTC incidents "In discussing the inability of the Federal Government to make more than three arrests, a Justice Department official said: 'If we could identity more, we would pmsecute. We have some tough laws on the books; ' T h e Pentagon, after detailed investigation, reported t h a t moat of the violence was intended as a protest against the war in Southeast Asia. T h e r e is a suspicion, however, among both military and federal law-enforcement otlicerti, that some of the violence was perpetrated hy radical groups with a wider goal: the overthrow of the 'Establishment.'" Right on!

international po^^->-

So far the experimenis with 1. 1-1) have only involved animals who have eaten food trcHliMl with it. hut a researcher for the Kmid and Drug Administration feels that 2, 4-D may be even more dan gerous when smoked. Furihermore, it is difficult to deie^* whether the grass you're about to rfmoke has been treated with 'Z^ 'l-D, since the anwker usually buys it m i(s crushed form and it is generally mixed with stronger stuff from Mexico,

Chicago rock riot

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Freep list law
STATE Requirftd

SUE MARSHALL Two law students from S o u t h w e s e m University Law School a r e planning a suit against the Ronald Reagan for Governor headquarters located at 1250 N. .Western Avenue, lxB Angeles, on behalf of the people of the Cit>' of IJJB Angeles, l l i e Reagan headquarters h a s an immense campaign poster which is exhibited to the northbound lanes of the Hollywood Freeway, a misdemeanor according to a municipal ordinance. According to Larry Glacey, one of the students involved in the action. District Engineer H. Ayanian h a s been notified about the sign and has been instructed to have it removed. If he doesn't, Glacey and Steve Hollopeter will file a writ of mandamasn compelling the government agency to do iLs job, "We feel that Governor Reagan should obey the law the same as everyone else," explained Glacey.

Recently the US government gave Mexico $1 million in aircraft and fmancial aid u> help in the control of drug traffic across the border. P a r t of it Was for developing remote sensing devices Well the city government anfor detection of growing fields of nounces a free concert"Sly and opium or marijuana, a n d anuther the Family Stone' a r e gonna do It p a r t was given for development of on Monday, July 27, Sly and the materials to eradicate the plants. Family Stone have cuffed Chicago Richard Kleindicnst, US Deputv audiences three times before, but Attorney General under Mitcnell, they're going to play this time, at said that the gift of five small 4:00 p.m. Sharp, It's reaHy hot, helicopters and three scouting about 90 d e g r e e s , and the park is planes to research out and des- Jammed, 75-100,000 people, but troy the marijuana was "one of listenlnp: lo Sly for free in a park the most historic occosioiw of co- will be Just fine. operation between nations in many When 4^00 came around and Sly years," illdnU show, the crowd became anThe Mexican guvernmtnt has as^ gry. Rumors began circulating that siKntvl HI.OIK) soldiers to the "we've been cuffed a fourth time." ^ a r c h and destroy operation and The cruwd moved toward the stage increased the surveillance of the and a number of people got onto horders, while the US law enforc- the stage, even though another ers have added iVM) new men to in- group. Fat Water, wa.* playing. According to a r e p o r t e r from crease the effectiveness of the Hcarehes on both the Mexican and the Chicago Seed, many people wanted those who w e r e o n t h e s t a g e (Canadian borders. The Bureau for Dangerous Drugs to get off. So bottles began flyhas expanded its oper^ilions hy ing at the stage. The pei>ple on adding agents in Frankfurt, Lon- stage began throwing back. don, Barcelona, Madrid and Milan. When the cops came onto the The US has loaned Turkey %\A stage, all anger wasventedatthem million for equipment for 7S() po- and a riot ensued. licemen assigned to Ihe suppresSeveral automobiles were set sion of drug trafficafire, many s t o r e windows were broken, and someloutingtook place. Police fired at the youths and r e ports range from three to six youths injured by gunshot. In all, over 100 were injured, 34 police mong them, o n e hundred fourtyetght a r r e s t s were made, mostly on charges of mob action. DENNIS LEVITT The California State Legislature has acted upon the fact thai the LA F r e e P r e s s printed a l i s t o f u n d e r cover agents last year, KPFK r e ported Wednesday afternoon that the State Assembly overwhelming* ly passed a bill making it a c r i m inal offense to publish the address o r phone number of a police officer with the intent to obstruct Justice. The bill, approved Wednesday, July 29, was passed with a 56-2 margin. It was sponsored by Assemblyman William Campbell, a R^ubllcan from Hacienda HelghU. The bill stemmed from the fact that last year the LA F r e e P r e s s printed a list of the n a m e s , add r e s s e s and phone numbers of undercover narcotic agents operating In Southern c i l i f o r n l a . In the aftermath, Mayor Daley shut down all music In the city. The F r e e City Music Community had been putting on free concerts every Sunday In Lincoln p a r k these have been cancelled. To the B-10,000 people who have been attending the concerts, they're out of luck, TTie F r e e City Music community is trying, to get the concerts back on, but as of now, no luck. By the way, about MayorDaley'a diatribe about pre-meditation to riotcome on, be rational. Is any left-wing group going to destroy their own rock concert?

WATCHDOG Chicago can be a frustrating city. Get your head bent In at the Democratic Convention, watch It happen again the nexl year. See Fred Hampton snd Mark Clark get murdured in your city. Have ringside s e a t s fur the Chicago Conspiracy Circus, Listen to Weatherman indictments handed down. Hear Mayo r Daley every day. Yes, Chicago can be a frustrating city.

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49dodtffT T'
i>t

MIEY
was released from jail on August 5. He said that he was freed not by Amerikan justice, but by the POWER OF THE PEOPLE. He also said that a number of Panthers were going to fight with the N. L. F.

Copyright How to lie to a lie detector NIXON GUILTY Los Angeles MANSON DECLARES Free Press
page 6
tn two p>rti: Part On Volume 7, No. 32 (Issua 316) $6.00 PER YEAR j^Lo.'tZ^Z'S^. , Phom: YES-1970 August 7 - 1 3 . 1 0 7 0
ED SANDERS Mlxoe'e cfoctore must have fkvep him too many ivpera the olherday vhen he delivered hla Kantian UuBler of subordinate alaahea and etulterinc half-santancea flaahlnf the sulll-flnfer at Mr. Manson. Waa Mion hailuctnatlnc? Was Ur. NlioD confualnc Ur. Manaon with Alcer HIaa or Helen C, hen Donflear Was the Presldeetof the United Stales, a member of the bar and the man who wenttoPolandtorPepsi-Cole, waa thu man coedemnlns Charles Uanaon in the middle of hie tiial? He was. And fuess what? HIa ma|aaty was Btlanded at the spe^ers plattorm In Denver by IT.S. Attorney General John Ponk^bonli, flowertnC In recUtixUnous obeaity Ilka ebnrfher In a Plemlah painttof* Hia words, home won the winca of hla cenlus, were these: 'I noted, tor example, the coveraca of the Charles Hanson case (there are three other defendants, Mr. Nlxop) when 1 waa in Loa Anteles, front page every day m the psi>era (you left out a verb and a connective, Mr.Nlxon), Here la a man who was gnllty, directly or Indirectly, of elfht mnrders Without reason (didn't you fall tor the Halter Stelter reason, Ur, Klson?)Mere la a man, yet, who, as far as the Goversfe was concerned, ^jpeared to be rather a riamorone fifure, a clamorous flpire to the youpff people whom he had bro^ht^ Into hla' operatlone, and^ lao, anotharthlnf that waa noted was tiia fad that two lawyera In the easetwo lawyara who warff^ a* anyone who cottld reed any of the atortea could tallwho wart tvllty of the moal outrefeoua, coatenvtntnia action In the courtroom (check your facts U n Nixon, Bon Hofhas, Uias Van Hontsn'a attoney, was ordered to Jailtora day because when aaslatant D,A, Bl^tUoal broufht Into evidence a pletere of Ur. Henaona ocelot*klBcovered-command*dnnal)U|ty with the Stralfht 8atane> eUib sword stuch In a acabbord afflaad to It^ the defenae oblactad, coraplalAlnf that they had not bate illcwed to aee the picture betora tfae trial bef an aa altowad l^ the ndea of court procedore In the Steto of catitomla, Mr, Buflloel

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tbe r - ghi liiaaarHniB n a n
to tock. SbsilincnglnlbtdlrneItonaf the Jury bos nn 4, Mettonator nlend Msdng mlatrlel were hedbnl nothing canw whete In bnf of !(, Kanarafc'a qnaaltoaiBg COD- lanntag hsMly en mj ttonad. Lunch time, n a ^ at %tO -WaU,- I ny, V Ibn Jndgn PM, when (he mtoineva are d IMVkt JmMwmmiM the Judge-a bench teracmtfaraace, Mlaaha. ibanUr. Mr. Manaon, plcftnd v tbe Loa Aagelea Times pravlcw adtttant UAH80N OUILTy/ VIXCM DBCLARE8, andflaabad IttolbaJtfy sUitog ontotone ^ af bar tor about s seconds. Mr. Stovito^ "Ho* lair* M n It ensy. ( (be D^Mdy Dtotnd Attorney, l y d - U*l><^ ^f "*>- ""i^* ted the ftoab and yditd, Tour Kranmabiyn dtonagr. HoDori- Ibabnliurndtodtorvaid Tbe M r to efMgn 4> and took tbe newwiper from Mr. fial^iiemte
Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

porcelain, her quarrelsome demeenor on the witoaaa ataod wherein she kept trying to project tbla our lady of the dope-flowars Imacs etandlng aloof from themean devlllBh cm^ipersthis was dapresalnc and boring. In any case, she's goingtowalk free neit weaktotrytopick iv the struhds of her life. Good luck, 80, we wentouttolunchand, v o n returning, discovered evcited reThere are two main dayatothe portora talkii about something Nliold incident last Mondey,whw Nixon had said about Manson. Had NIxiM delivered bis craceful son- Mr. Nixon revealed that Mr. Menorous sentences aliadfinc Mr, Ws son Is in agent of the Russian fullt; and laat Tueaday, when secret Police? No, only that Nisoo Charles M. Manson wavedthefa- thinks him guilty. Nixon the lawyer, Fieaed-otr describes theatateof mous MANSON GUILTY IftXON mind of the defense attorneys when DECLARES L.A, Times preview edition of AufusI 4,tothe Jury, they retomed from lunch and were mobbed by reporters who told them Let us examine each day. the grim nawa. Word csmethatthe Monday Ausust 3, Everything text was soon to coma over the is wonderful. Mr, Pltzf^rald fin- Western Union teletype Inatalled ishes up bis cross examlnatloD ID ttie corridor outside Judge 01of Mrs. Kasablan by ellcltinf from dera courtroom, clack clack clack, her the InUrestltv fact that she Nixon's evhony waa clacked frpm Is now to Join Oia nouvaan chop- (he robot onto paper, 11 waa unrich. Her flower strewn life story tellevehle. some one encgested la beinc wrlttm for book pti>llca- that there be a change of venue tion by none other than Joan Dld- to e concentretton camp. Others. lon, a writer for Life Uafaslne, In fact many others, auggsatad watch for Mrs, KasaUantoappear thai NtatoA waa a dum-dum. or an on the Johnny Carson show to put Idiot, Or abumbiliTtolant4airata down dopw-fropa Ji to hype ths little pig* who la allowed to sleep book. Watch alao for a heavy v - near tbt phone thai can call doan proval of the book of her lite In tbe A-boBb, B WW tto>atopAs. the LucemacaEine reviews. Watch, paid ntigsrtfd, Ae artlciAle, In addltlOD, for the Loa Anialee dedicated, perattaaive, atofMat Times to sertaUte It Watch tor and sharply atllred attorney fbr happiness. Mlsa KrsDwlnktf, nvroacbed the Jndgaa bench, anned with thaWaatam Unton transcript of Mr. NixAftor her Initial lestlmony otfe honkorema. What bwpsned which levelled the courtroom with next, becBUse of (be gag nfle of Ita unbelievably powerful hysterlB t-banch proceedings. Is tasrued of murder and deaolatlon, Linda from commnalBt agavto wtthin ths Kaaabian's testimony atowly turn- Hall of Jwmet, Ur. Older reed, as the days passed, into anob- fwed to accept (he ttfetypeprlntnoiloua tortUDua ftowar-whine as ovi aa 1 atatemant, in feet, by Mr. queatlon after queslton towd her Nbon, Evidently, however, aome trylnf to come on aa If ahe had sort of arrangement was made to driven to the Polanskl and Ls- bon-ami or to soap 19, the winBlanca houae for a love-In, Her attempts to come on like a pieeeof

told Ur. Kuihea tt^at Ur. Hitfiaa had in fad been shown thepldure. Mr. Hucbes replied, -Ym^re fall of ehit,' Not so oulraceouB, And Is Irvine Kanarek, one oftheflnest men one has met wrlUnf about thla case, Is Irvine Kanarek stvposed to lie down and smile while a bunch of mod squad proascutors fas hla client? Hie contompt citation came eboul when be sivi>i>aedly broke into the mlddtoofona of Mrs. Kasahlaiya sentences whereas the traaacrlpt seems to Indlcato that she, in fad, Intorrupted Ur. KaiiAreh.)and who were ordered to Jail ovamlsht by the Judf e, seem to mora the oppreaaed, and the ludge seemed to be the vUlaln, (That's rtsht, he wouldn't let Mr. Manson defend himself,)*

Woman'i Lib7

ffpa-puffini ipactatOf wstdMS the cn>wiwiQOf MMSflt<*wlt70. Morg pigtmo op p j ^


dows In toe bus thst the Jurora drive from the court buOittng to the Ambassador Hoirt, to prevent peapa at the beadllnea everyone knew would be aaen on the rrool pages of the evening newepsfera. This s o a p - v did not reeity work, because aeveral Jurors QMittedlbe beadllnea anyway from the wtodow off a newstand and no one can convlncs me that if one teror aaw a headline where Nixon stomps blame 00 Manson, he would not tben tall everyone equipped wito eers about it. Since mottona tor a mla-trlal could not be heard at that moment, Irving Kanarek, my favorite law* yer of ell time, biantoqoestlon Mra, Kasablan. It was a n e w a perlencetorher. She bed been abla to shake off the questions of the other defansa lawyera with her cool, flowertoh, verge-ot-bysteria Innocence. Not ao with Mr. Kanarek. He waa on her like a piece of scotch tape that one trlaa to kick off one's foot, Mr. Kassrek-a main thesis, evidently, was that Mrs. Kasablan i s nuto. Quaatton aftor quaatlon poured from him aa be glued In on her activities of last aummer. About her add trips. A*boul her state of mladaaafcedrova tftout on aUaggd irtaatom ol hak. Watcb tor ttila trial to end one year from today, Mr. Kansreb'a qoasttonlng tadudqMS ate ingplr-

Manaon. HegSvefikaMaTCrKr Bogltogl, tbe nOar D. A., who gate it to Ju4| Older. A heated aeaslon occurred there igK>n at toe bench, toe ceoii n ^ r t e f s tlngera really working et ae be punched the earda during (be Hate of bench-bebble. At 2-24 p u , the balUtr coUeded the r e d of (benewapapera lying on the defansa cowpal labia and Iba Jury waa taftau lro lbs eowt room. All Is tTito. Tbepruaaegtor clrculetad among toa endted r^ortera la Iba iMck of the courtroom. He walked beck and amllad and dmHed wilt tbe girt dilsBdents, m a girts hatotrying to gas. Word was passed erouBd Oat each JoroT would be queattoned to open con to ae if any ef (bsu aav (ha headline. to the meantime, tha gentteman from La ngaro^ who naaaBy site on my rlgbl to sant i l S baa not shown V f^ IbetftuiMMHiana* nton, ao a lady vbo btf baan wdttolinealldeytogeltotonaeorted to the a e i t Bbatotoher mld-nfUee, ebevt Ave toot fMrln heitfttt ^ a * * ^ k iMf slntvn orange dreaa, nmrtannad Caen. itoU ann s center-fnrtad John balrent ttatovondaHli, to aetnifir brnaOdng hardas

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August 7,1970

L M AngelM FMe PrcM

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RFA,

Manson
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fconiimced from page I) to tha obaarror from Newsweek IK] aakad him if Uumoa ia tha man with the board, *No, toat*a Ronald Huftiaa.* Craning and atrainlng for a vtaual on the K Finally her day-liig qnaat waa over and ahe got to match eyebaama ito Cbarlla Hanaon and aU waawoU, (^wctatora begin to a m v a to get into Una ioi general piMlc aaaU aronod 3:00 AM, It haa been reported that atructore-fraaka organize l}ie line eaxA rooming, dlapaoalng numbera on allpa o f p v a r BO that your place in line ia abaolat^T determined. Tba HaU (rf JwUcfi doean-t open till IjSO AU ao ba prapared for a few boura on tiie pavement.)

LAWRENCE LIPTON
<See my book review, Rethinking the Role of thm Counter Media in the Netv AmeHoan Revolution, in thia waek'a.Uving Arte aupplmenl) 1 have raatadly pointed out that thoae vriio have baan the VKhma o f miaednrntlmnand that meana all of ua. young and oUare the victima of a case of eduntiooal mafamantion aa aviova aa any lOod h a a n i tnflkted on ua by a ptofit^iada b o d Induatoy. Tha young paopk aapacially ara afHiGted by it becanae the academic beaumcncy haa baooma juat aa conapt alnoa Wotid Wajr U aa the r v t ot AM cwitaiktic ayetMn. It ia tn tha credit of tha atudent dkaidantadiattl^f h a v e i a o o g n i a ^ d u coiniption for what it ia and have been waging a rabaQion againM it, a l e M h o n that haa become worldwide, maUog tham tba apanrhaad of the revolution. T b k ia aU to tha good and may woD ha, aa I eoDtinue i repeat again and again in every channd of catmnunicatioQ open to me. that

WMNCELiPTON
te t t o ffMl MsmyT
W h a n IB Mil Lvmaid Wood of fli^it wing kme waa heading up v B o i W c k a a f t Und of booby pntafirmilitaiy oervtoalo bia ttajlaWoflId Wftrf, I h a d occaoion to intnrvlow him in onkr d o ^ w h a & v ha waa. u mmor had H, oigsniEing a aacret r I K m oo^p ^ i t e f M'iB'*'the U S gonmrnneDt aa a Laat otend ttM Bad4 iriH^ be aaid, w o n lOottiag to ovcrtfuow the H* d M M i t 'ITo d o n t have to do vnyihutM a g a n u t the l a d I b M i * - h e toU a u . "AQ we have to do u ait bw& uhd watc^ tlMdivorettdioiurA t Ifai 4 t e t and o f A t o d ^ M M V I bad oGcuion a k o to n n w i h g v o U t w U r o g A i t . "How^'* 1 a ^ v d hiai, *^cm p M trfl I aBO bohtod poar* Hia n p l y w a s , "Thafa onay' Voa i poa whmyott feala fwoYpboot inyoorbdund." in c o n B o n ; " n a t A e ' ' w n k f t a d of the d U t f t know iriko dia o a a a p was: that thqr wore aa Ukelp to hwtftfandaaafeey warototamonttieir

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


h p l B l y of doooPMPUttei to oapport a o d i cynidam in te k s s b i M v af i w o h t i o a a . And you d D n \ h a m to go &r back or far l i U to do i i T a a ttoad only to n n H u b a r the hard hata in WaU flfcwt and in tto White Honae raoeh^hig patriotic kadoa torn Tb My nodwig o f Oie n a n y occaaiona when te aamo <bary v i A b l n t h e r a n k a o f the iwolntion alt the way atnat oonua a v n n u n t a hi jntemational mvohiticinaTy condaraa^ItiajaatoaaofthafiutBoflife, and any nvobitianAry who h a m t b a n a d it la eittier veiy new to the Bdovement, or he can be tnvtad (I ttaan raiatnalad) to blow hie oool in a criaia and pat na a l hi laopaxlywhi^ the reaJ cncnQr, the Eotabliahnwnt and ita UMitlwiiaa fhmkiM, givo na Iha h o n e Ungh, Each Juror waa brought in aaparately and queried about what ha or aha had aeen Manson do. Host had aeen tha headllna. Each waa requlrad to take the Juror'a oattt again and admonlahed todisragard tha words and opiniona of Hr. Nlzon. AU said thor would. Soma already hnev about the headline, aa reported aarllor, because they bad been able to s e e it from ttia bua wliKiow, Juntlcowlll be served, buddy, tiM 7Dui may weU turn out la be nnr laat bopo of aurvtval. The conlamniatpaa of our ednoalJoitaJ pmccss it older and tn mtmy uy am dtAgeroae 0$ iheeontaminution of our eoU, air and wcittr, BUTnd it ia a big 'liutT and it haa become crucial in the laat two yean-mweducatkin by the conlaminatad academic ayatem ia a dveaae that naada to be ramadied.

MiMduoMion to not v i r t M

Harm OM you rt w h o Hw mmnf

OBO thing ia a i o ha imi'i yonr revohtionary comiada, no nutt v hatr m**gt*iA^ ^ niay aeem at timea or how poor hia judg m t n a y b a i n onatautanoe or another-At leaat yoo owe htm the b ^ a f i t o f fto doabi Spaitacua ooald hare toU yov that, if he had Uvid to l4il the atoqr. The Zeahrta. iriw flnng thaneehrea into g a n f U a nanlatioB againat the Roman oocnpying power in the h a t C a n t a i y B . o A h a v t o l d yoa a b o n t i t Itian'teaay to taU who the K ^ a a a n y ia, i f flnV <( the roMon that while the tyranbi a n p i c k ^ yoar podMo widi one hand they a n worting their v e A i a a M g h t o M a n d wWi tin oSiar. Social injnatke cannot aurTfrtTwrfcMifiihiTitArgfff^M-^^ B tha raST tMk o f nv<i^tion ia to lay b a n and ezpoae the fladal LIIL. That ia why tha fim uieCima of evaiy revohitiao a n tha a i t M ^ A a poato, tha JoamalktB, the aocial philpnoMU tyUe o f anti-nvohitionaiy Reaction bogan t ^ H d C a i S t f witch h m a and die ant^AiMTican csommittee inttibt U n f t i n d l y TM to I b t e a l M i for contempt o f e e a i L T h a t a d t t a o f the HoQywood " n r i n n i ^ pool p n ^ t a r i a r aoU o a t b * n tfaay w o n haalid b * n tha Inqvi^tlDn, and aoma a f tha U a U n d V T t a <UckMd oat and a n d a diithaal dnJa with thalhlaWhhnaataawttygDtontofiaaiahnidefliapototSome a n MoowfeMd hr the oppaaaaon and becooM n a r t y n by miat^Le. w o a tham and naver do find ont what hit t h n s . Not afi n a i t y n have aamarf tiMir martyrdom. They ^ v r t p t t tti^dnaa. W h n tha Power Stenctmo needa virtima to aat a good n a m p U Ibr ravahMlonarin they don't look too cloaely a t tta cndaatiala o f diair victina. n a t k 1 ^ tho n v o k t t o B u y education of tha people ia ao imp o f l i n t at laaatatthabegtonjng, ao they uioa'c Cam on and devour aacAoAar.

l l i e prosocutioD, tha court and the ffovemment are the rlghtooua Wfaolders of law and order, rlEht? RighL It ia our duty to be of tha law. Therefore I shall close this article with a bit of Information scarfed off of the tape that Mr. Stovitt g i v e last March 1 to RoUlng Stono MagaElna, A few worda wore edited out by the aditore of Rolling Stone becaoBO they didn't undaratand thn. Maytwyou can underatand thorn, so hare they are:

-OnLaBlanca^nirapwlthyou on the level; our caaa ia not that strong. Hkere are no tingavprlnts, no one aaw them, toera are nomotlonplctoras.* Doas this moan that there la film evidence forthcoming regarding the Tato house crimes? And doaa the dafeoaa know about any anch fUa evidence? Varltaa radUlagto. Q^F^ I OS \\i-1 IIs

It ia not a mark o f aupniority. It doei not entitle iti vKtuia to goof off aikd hang looaa to the point where they become unglued and beoome a haiaid rather than a bolp to.dw revohition- T h ^ neiid to be roninded that mieeducatian hoe to be foOowed by REcdiifotun. Revolutionary re-educatkm- It i s this aelf-adminiBtorcd educational tbcmpy that I am referring to wbM) I apeak of the role of the counter nuidia to educate the new revohitionory forces^ 1 mean RE-educate them. That ia what the free univemitiea and the experimental oolkgee (in vdiich, aa aome of my readen know, I have played a pdoneer role) ere all about *niat ia what Radio Free America ii about Itia on t h s e RE-educated young peopie that the counter media dmwe for iia reportera, editon, cohnnniata and technicianaand when U failB to Snd and ampby aucfa help it becomea iateUecfaaUy ondsnovritfied aiul vulnemble to failure from within and deetroction by ita enamiea from without When wo inabt that the yOung aboukt be heard, listened toand beeded,itiabecauaQ the young'-the irdiicated young, not tba retarded miaeducated victima of the aocielyknou/ more and know how to any it better than their ekleta. And AerefbreiJrservr to ba lietened to and heeded.

PR I: I: PRFSS

H i * mis of * Counter Moclis

It la d n p n a n a of ravohitionary education that ia ilw moat impotant rok that tha c o a n t v media moat learn to play. In order to p k y that r ^ it meat educate iimtf, firtt. It ia not enough to ded a n SPOttiaelf a ravohitinuiy. Vou^ve got to pay your duea. You've E 4 to taka the r h t e inWvad and learn by experience. You have a tofraadingtocaldiiapwilhtoo. Chainnan Mao ia very emphatic on thto point So waal^nin in hia time-And Che apent ae m u j i time nailing aa he did fitting. H a n v e n t y e a n of hia lift in tha Uhmor of the Biitiah Uaaeam. Anyone who thinka he or ahc haa only to ptdt np on a few of tha c n m n t nvobtionary alogana and he*i r w l y to p k y a rok pnperly in tha counter media ia aa dangeroua aa a q a a ^ doctor hanging out hia ehingteaa a eorgeon, A1ittkknowladg(ortooofti none ataU)iA always a daogeroae thing, bat ntvar m> dangnoua aa whan it ia put a t the aervico of Iha nvobitkiDaiy c o a n t n madiaeven widi the beat and braveat Inlnitiona in tb wodd. Rarohitian ia too importantand too danH iiDM b be left to people with good intontiona. Eapodally if they atill aabacriba to tha k o g - s p l o d e d notion that any revohttionaiy' nhidMl ponon can do anything anyone alee can do if only he or ahe la ghren a c h a n n to da i t I t waa carried to abanni I v g t h a in tha early day* oF the Soviet U n k n . In Chicago, daring d n tiiirtka, it waa actuary tried out w t t h a i p o a p o f atoAyaido worfcenaapart of a onion organiaing ddvB. Tha idea waa advanced by aome John Road Chib members that iha atodivaida vmrken conld write a collective proletarian ooTilgiven a httk guidance by a w r i t v or two who had aome ttp n k n c i in wilting novda. 1 waa one of thoee who volunteered to l i y i i ^ n reeuhe* after diree or feor triee, were ao embarraaatogftMTa M m n a oonotmad, moatly the 1vorkM^floveliak thomgrfna that Oa p n k c t had to ha ahandontd* with toaa of aelf-eat n n and o v m aoma dnip<nito ftem die nnioniiation campaign. What wa & i k d to take into aeoonnt waa that whik everybody OoaU taft a f t n a n a m n of ipeaking, writing waa an art, a dtfAcak ait, t h a t riqulna a litlk t a i n t and aoma yeara of practke. A s d nobo4> roalkad thia moaa than the workera themadvao, who had to ho coaaad toto the pnioct in d fint place. When it waa a v a r l h w n a A e o M h w d and reeeotAil to have aUowed themto ha ahncfccd into tiying It at aU. it woo nB aa unnaoeaaary. If anyone with half a n ear Ibr kngaaga had a n a d y gona aniund widi a notebook ( A k waa bft> iMM O a tape neoitdtri and jotted down a 4 u t the worken were aaytog, hawoaU have had a v a k a b k and ohen viy ekqvcnt book. Stoda T h r i pmvaa it in h k c o m o t book, Hard Tim^, An Oral Hitonf oftkt Qrmi i t e n t e i o n , and among the peopk he interviawad ttan may have Dai aome paopk who participBted in the G n a t Amerkan Novel pvojact in the Chicago of the thirtiee. fHttrd TImm. Iv Stadi T n k a l Panthacm Booka, 9836.) That nybody who wanto to bad enough, or a t a revotutknary actkn. ahonU be aqtected to write CMnpetcnt proac the tint dme oat; k am aonnd a n idea aa the notion that anybody who k a l k w e d tohavaatvatiteonki ovoriiaul an engine <tt-at ieaat f a a leaking

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J o a n , Eliaa, Conni Calendar Kitty Jay Phototithography. Andy Kant A n Department .WolfPaoi epb leS-K. d] liaard Mar Other ,AntF Not reapoaaibia for catii ancioaod la man. Second class postage paid at Loa Aivelaa, California, P ^ Uahad w e ^ l y . fiubacrtptiona: f S par year in tha U,SL, V9.<0 alaewher In the Amerlcaa, $10,tB aUawbara In ttiaworld. FirstClapa or Air HaU ratea v o n rmpaat. Unaolidtad manuacrlpta and artwork that wo do not ptftAlah will be diaCroyed Ihraavaaks after racaipl tnleas accompanied by foll-aiaed, stambed, self-addressed return "'^^'*'*-Volume7,m (Whole Number aifljAugust 7,1970 Qrculation & Sul>a ^ V )j 0/1&' / ^ ^
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l i U B m r l y Blvd. Lna Atvtf aa, CaUt >n>36 (213> WE 7-1970 Publ 9t Editor Arthur Kunkin Sec't to PubL ^u^n< Aaaiat to PubL-... J ^ d y Geti Editor in Chief Paul Ebart Man&ging Editor Brian Kirby Senior Editor.^ -Lawrence Lipton C<q>y Editor. Flora Greenhill Music Editor-.-.-John M. Carpent City Editor AngdaHotorronn Staff Writcn Dennia Levitt. Ed Sandcra. Lionel Rolfc Military Editor. ~ 3uoMarriiallD.D.,D.D.T. Prod. Mgr. Edgar D. Jonee, Jr. Prod- Aeaiat Sir Midiariof Silveriake Proofreader -. Arthur Roaa CompuQrpa Felix Flexowriler ft Laddy BusincH Manager Fran Troy OCfica Mgr. Harold Braihears Asst- o m c e Mgr Jjnds Main, Engineer . Bill D Display Advert -.RSBBJ&R Aaaoc Ret^tioniat Good Heac ClaaeiSed Advert Ozma. Lcm

T > u a i a f t t o i a y that a counter media newspaper or magaiina (or free unlvmsity or tplmenml ooDege, for that matter) doee not perfoim a naefbl toie in the revohitkm if ita fouaden and staff am without previous ioomaliatic or edncatkwal experience and can't write a half way deomt Engbafa MQtmic& There are at leaat 150 undatgnnrkd nawapapara (mayba twice aa many if we made a pnnar cenaw) and i t would be fbottih lomipoct that Oiay are all emfbd widi knowlaageabla and abta people worthy to tilt a lance at the E ^ a b l k h m m t preea, or serve to r a ^ u c a t e tbemeeWee and their mweducated nodara. But it <lDee mean that white it haa mvury r ^ t to t b its own thing in ita own way* it doee twt have the right to bally, or thraabm to "tibenttT other conntK media newep ^ M m i i d i m i p p m v e i o f f o r a n y o f t h a a u n y naaons that m a k e a c o n a t v madta newipi^er l A a t it ia. Cmaa-criliciBm, yes, internal criticiam hetwaan mambara of ita own ataff, yee. but always hearing in mind WHO THE ENEMY ia, eneX own feUow antietahhahmaot people or the Power Sfamctare, the hawka, the deciaion muken and their loumaHatk fhmkka of tha kept madia. We are atill too few and too vubambla to our oiccniee to waate our anergiee and reaouioaa on holiovdian-thou poHtical ego gamea arul power playa. When they fed their p m t v p fraatratkma againat the ayatem building up there are batter waya of practicing revolutionary tactica than turning o n the counter media, whaiever they may think of it, and ecrearoing "capitaUat pig*' and attemptijig blackmail and forceful rip&. Why not atart another paper themaelvea arkd turn out eomelhing neamr to their heart'a deeireand let the peopk decide, Ifae people t h ^ are alwaya demanding power to. turner to the people ah^uU a b o mean giving the peopie a choke.

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August 14,1970

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Temple of Human Hamburger


(continued from page 1) hypnosis. She waa able to break away and, abandoning: her child, she offed David Hannon's 61 white Volvo and drove to New Mexico, Just before lunch, h e r attorneys aaked h e r what she wanted to eat. Indicating: that s h e w a s jetting special eating privileges priur to her formal imrrtuTilty, Lunch. Lunch hour at the Hall of Justice Is rumur time. You hear rumors and r u m o r s a s people interested in the case swap Information. Dur-. Ing this particular lunch ttme I learned very little, I was told that Jay Sebrlng's appointment book has SusB.'L Struther'E name on it. I was told that a lady who appeared in the corridors outside the courtroom the daybeforewasnot^as she claimed, Charlie Manson'smother because s h e was much taller than Charlie remembered her to be and because she claimed not to have seen him frum birth, a falsehood, I learned also that i?andy Starr, the prosecution witness who was to testify abfjut the alleged murder weapon, was dead of a brain tumor. A young Black man approached me With a friendly letter hp wanted given to Mr, Manson. Isaid I wuuld t r y . 1 was toH th^t a famous New York sports w r i t e r had a copy of the peter Sellers film, ffumors rumors and babble. Happiness, readily at the photos). She couldn't go on. Court was recessed. Two ladles behind m e are chatting during the break, looking at Mr. Manson, ! don't know what that man h a s , . . F m looking him over, though. He must have something," Kanarek had been holding s Folio of photos of the victims. After court r e c e s s e d , r e p o r t e r s were heard to ask questions of the officials a s they left the courtroom, as- ' W a s her a r m over h e r face?" Ves, ' W e r e her eyes open or closed?" Closed. "Ye?, it was a horrible picture.'* Newsmen trailing along behind him firing questions about a group of color photos of deatb, alleged p r a y e r at the Polansky residence during the murth-work) was commonly heard In the Hall of Justice from many mouths In reference to d e s i r e s for Mr, Kana r ^ to get on the stick and get ofT the stand. Tills business of Kanarek lokes Is out of hand, however. Usually when you make Jokes about someone you wait for blm to be out of e a r shot. Not so regarding Irving Kanarek, the Bernard M a m of the legal profession. One remembers riding down In a crowded elevator with a network camera crew, the m e m b e r s of which were regaling each other with humorous abuse of Mr, Kanarek and,bytheeyebrow of F a , I swear that Irving Kanarek was right there in the elevator,

W^i^CE^JPTON
MoMyVWvniit llw u w vnd tiM Prafltg
MoDiythtttm U a religion. It began aa religion and to thia day it baa id) t h e mythology a n d ritual that goee with religion. " H M concentration of wealth in amall bulk brought about the need for aome place where it could be protected against thieves. Since only a foolhardy robber would d a r e Co arouse the wrath of the goda, the earheat banka in the Occident were national temples aoch aa t h e Greek ahrinea a t Delphi Dclos a n d Ephaaus. The temporal power of the prieathood i n this period derived in part from its control over the finandai reaourcea/'

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H u a atatcment ia not taken fmui anyone bent on expoaing the Great Bank Robbery* bent on debukking the centuries-old myatif' icationa of t h e banking ayatcoi; it a from a n article on banking in the Encyclopedia Americana, a n d it w a s written b y John De Jong* Aaaociate Director. Newa Bureau* the American Bankers Aaaodation. It ia not for nothing t h a t b a n k s and corporation skyscrapers have been called Cathedrals of Commerce, Before banka started imitating the architecture of corporate skyscrapers they were made to look like Greek temples. The brainwehing tchiuqueH of banking have always drawn heavily on the language of religion: the primacy of faith over reason. In the Apostolic Acts and Epistles of the New Testament we read, "Now faith ia the giving substance to things hoped for, the proving of things not seen." (Hebrews l l : ! ) And more Ihan one eain'ed theologian among the early Fathers of the Church etated in one way or another that the evidence not seen but taken on failh ia the eaaence of reUgion- I do not understand, therefore I believe. The theolc^y of moneytheiam is based on such religious "evidence."

'To coin monovr rogulato thg vakio thereof'

That is a quotation from the Constitution of the US (Section S, Article 5). It h a s been "interpreted" from the beginning out of all Kmblance to ix original intent. The banka, not the government, hold the power that waa meant for Congress to eiterciae. The banka "coin" money (credit banking) and regulate the value thereof. How? I refer you again to John De J o n g in an article on the operations of Central Banka in the Encyclopedia Americana: '*When a bank makea a loan, the amount of the loan ia usually redeponted by the borrower or the persons who eventually receive the money, and (heae deposits a^ain becom? available for lending. For example, if a bank holds Si million in deposits, and ia required to keep $200000 in the central bank and its reserves, it will have SSOO.DOO to employ in Zoans^ If the $800,000 is redepositedt the bank will be required to increase its reaervea by SIGO.OOO and it will have 640,000 additional loanable funda. By continuing this proceaa it is possible to expand the use of deposit funda through credit transactions by a$ much as five times Even though the funds loaned may be eventually depo^LtefJ in other banks, thf inflation of the money supply of the banking system as a whole wilt remain the same. From such cransactions comes the term "credit money," The expansion and contraction of the available credit money is governed by the central bank by increasing or decreasing the amount b a n k s must hold in reserver Thia control may be exercised by raising or lowering t h e ^rediscount raies^ charged Danka when tney borrow &om the central banK to refinance loans made to private borrowers. Through this control of the credU operations of the banking system, the central bank acts as a valve on tht monfy flow to the whole economy."

Out of theb* own mouihs


Why do I quote an official apologiat-apokesman for the b a n k i n g system? Because the banking system is so corrupt* so unconatitutional. ao immoral that it cannot be described even by i t s own propagandists i n a standard encyclopedia vihthout incriminating itself. It doesn't need to take the F i f ^ Amendment. The bankers and their stooges have done such a good job of brainwashing the banking syatem that they feel they can afford to tell it the way it ia without running any risk of creating a credibility g a p between the public image it h a s created in the schools, the press and ite own commercials and the facts about its operations. That public image ia ao tinnty fixed in the minds of its exploited and befuddled (deliberately befuddled) victims that they can depend on being taken a t their own values, on faith. It is still a |Mnethood administering the banking swindle in the tpmpk itself, a s they did in the New Testament slory of Jesus and the money changersand that was dhly the penny a n t e money peddlers, not the inside swindle, which involved the whole religious awindie itaelf. To this day people still think the banking system ia a recondite mystery that no mere layman can expect to understand a n d therefore h a s to accept on faith. And that includes socialists, conomunistj (in capitalist countries; the communists have their ourn mysteriea that have to he taken on faith), and it includes editors and pubtiahera of the counter media, none of whom, to my knowledge, ^ o w s the alighteet trace of ever having given any study or thought to the capitalist banking system a s Enemy No. 1 of the revidution. If they turn away from it because they think it is too complicated to understand, Uiey turn away from it on the pretext that it's too complex and too boring to make it readable. The banking system ia on a par with the religious eatablishment in that respect That is v^hy Moneytheism is the religion of the capitalist world.

Thou eholt hovo no other gode before me

And that. too. ia why the capitalist Power Structure of Amerika ia so venomous in ita panic and desperate haste to stamp out the uae of marijuana and psychedelic drugs in general. It persecutes hippies largely for the reason that it suspects that their interest in Zm and other pagan religions is subversive of the Judeo-Christian fbnndations of everything capitalistic from bunking to imperialist conqneat. And who can s a y that the Power Elite do not know where their intereata are threatened? They buy the best brains they can find to tell them how to siomp out ttieir enemiesor co-op their ideas. Coaptation is one of the biggest and most profitable scams gcang todajr. l i k e the Catholic Church, capitalism tries to co-opt aikd a d a p t itaelf to a n y t h i n g it c a n ' t beat head-on. Bt Cba C h o r d i haa finally reached the point of diminishing return ttn the policy of religious coaptation And. so, also h a s the Capitalist HoneythaiBtic ^ u r t ^ They are both going down to obUvion together^

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August 1 1 , morning, Kanarek showed Kasabian a picture of the Kanarek then embarked in the window thru which she peeped when afternoon, on a s e r i e s of questions Tex allegedly was cutting the regarding the trance stale. Kasascreen to get m. She recognized blan claimed to have been in a a table and a bouquet of flowers. trance with respect to Mr, ManWhat phase of his yueslioning is son, When s h e was asked what he in** Evidently he is trying to created the trance, her reply was pruvfi that a) she waR an ea^er memorable: - Everything aboul him. violent-minded c r e e p y r r a w l e r a n d The way he walked, the way he b)that, Since she has already ad- danced, (he way he sang, the way mitted that she s e e s fantasies on he made l<jve. Just everything adope t r i p s , perhaps h e r memory bout him," She said that she couldof events at the Tate residence n*t recall being put Into a trance and the LaBlanca residence are by anyone hefure. Kanarek's lack beset with a idol a and hallucination; of knowledge ahuul i]ccult trance and v) that s h e considered herself conditions harmed him considerato be a witch on August G and 9, bly h e r e , however, because had he !9G9, Kanarek walked toward h e r only gone into trances o c r u r r m g with photo of Mr. LaBlanca, It on the astral plane, he cuuld have was upside down. She gasped. Kan The aft&rnoyn queslioninf found had a few more days of cross exarek evidently wants to believe amination granted to him. (Aswell Mr. Kanarekcnncemedbypossiblp that Mrs Kasablan herself was the as blading a new legal trail lapses of memory bruuiht about by M r s . Kasabian^s u s e of LSD. Me one who tied Mr. LaBianra'shands bringing modern lonrepts of law with the 42 inch leather thons. fity & order into the spirit realm) asked h e r if s h e attempted to addice. m m l s t e r first aid t-.' VoijLclech Frykowskl, No. Did you speak t^l Mr, Kanarek then went right inblm? So, How do you knowv I Jusi "Were >ou a witch on the night to the marsh. He began tu ask her know that \ didn't speak to him. Tie that y^tu went to the Tale Imuse'"' ahout visions she hadseenondop*. shiiws h e r photo of Frykowsky, (.proseoutuin ohjecled, cuurt sus- The next Kaiiarnk c^uestiitnone shall Ohhh. T e a r s , ^Tearsstopped, and It tained ihe ^thjection, No answer.) pre^*^ent ti^ you is one of the most was difficult to realize this, when o n e ' s miiid flashes rack In rata- wonderful queslionh mie has evt-r she was granted lmmumt> several liigues Lif the trials of Scottish heard in life ikr l**gend, A human da>s later. Sinf^e immunity has wllfhes In the IGth century where- helng asked another human heincr been granted, not unls has she slopin ladies were accuse<l of being ped cr}ing but she can gaze quite "guiltie of murther by wili hwork,* M r s Kasubian, did i,ou ever spt^ your step-father In an LSli vishijwlng h e r a picture of i,eni> sion?" This historic question wjs LaBlanca, Kanarek askeil her If asked at 3:57 PM. Kanarek then she felt she was a witch on the began to ask Mrs, Kasabian qtii'ssecond night. She felt, Indeed, that lions about her concepts of timi'. l O S ANCEIFS she had such powers then but nuw It was unbelievable. He wanted to she feels s h e had no powers in compare her conrept of time bereality, fore s h e had taken LSD with h e r What do you believe you could conrept of lime at the Spahn Rand<j a s a witch?" (Prosecution oh- ch, or something. Evidently he. Jeclion sustained. No answer.) Did wanted h e r to deliver herself of you see the scene depicted In ihis a few metaphysical statements aphotograph?" Kanarek holdmg bout some sort of temporal dopeprosecution exhibit " 9 1 , an flXlO warp, or something. The Court ' ^ e l s ' B e v e r l y Blvd, s u r r f a l l \ -filtere<l cnlor photu nf a day ended and it was time, o L^s Angeles, Calif, 90036 victim, directly in front of h e r Toth, to stumble to the hookyh for solace and substance. (213) WE 7-1970 gaze. "No," Publ. & Editor Arthur Kunkin "Did you see 11 as a witch?" "fiiose who have accused me o[ St'C't to Publ Sue-Sue| " N o , ' he asked her If s h e had any Assist toPubL Axidy Get J previous knowle^lge of witchery making a hero out of Charles Manson can go make motions ctf unKditor in Chief Paul Eberl p r i o r to living at the spahn Ranch. iflcatl<in with a weather halloon. Managing red 1 tor B n a n Kirby She replied that she knew of a This t r i a l , this case, these defenSenior Editor, Lawrence Lipton group of people with a cauldron dants, these prosecuiors, this s y s Copy Editor Flora Greenhill who were undertaking double doub- tem of capital punishment, this p r i MUSIC Editor. John M. Carpenter ble toll and trouble routines in a son syslem, and the circumstances Clt> Fdiior Angela Motorman l a r g e rave near the Hot Springs of the m u r d e r s bring inlo sharp Staff WriierB Dennis Levitt. In Taos. focus everything that alls this mamEd Sanders. Lionel Rolfe Kanarek's queries then roamed mal society of humans called AmMihtar>' Editor Sue Marto God-consciousness. She said erica. I could write a hundred shall D.D.. D.UT. s h e had forgotten God at the Spahn pages about what i t ' s like to die Prod. Mgr Edgar D. Jones. J r . Ranch. She said she took LSD be- In the gas chamber, wilh the exact Prod. AeaiatS i r Michael of cause ' I liked it." He asked h e r if rituals of lung snuff, defecallon of Silverlake the God realized on LSD was the the person gassed, the whole barProofreader ....Arthur Kosa same God that s h e is thanking for baric dungeonlstlcspectacleof capComputyper Felix Flexowriter & showing her mercy bygrar^tingher ital punishment. Or 1 could write Laddy Immunity, No, the new God Is high- a thousand pages detailing the Businesa ManagerFran Troy e r , ' s o r l of," than the dope-thought dreadful m a s s a c r e s inflicted upon Office Mgr Harold tirasheara God. (Earlier s h e had testified that those suffering victims now overAsst. Ofrice Mgr Lindal she thought the mercy of God had taken to the earth, those seven Main. E n ^ n e e r -,-,,-,,- ,,,Bill O. granted her immunity from p r o s e - souls. This trial Is the time, Vou hear of it ever^-where. You can Display Advert. ,RSBBJ&R Asaoc cution,) hear them gossip In the TroubaReceptionist Good HeadI M r s . Kasablan testified that for a dour trying to one-up each other CJaaaified Advert Ozma. Lomal Uel whole month last s u m m e r she with secret information of stab Circulation & Subs Joan, Elise. thought Mr. Manson to be J e s u s patterns and gruesome t e r r o r and Conniel Christ. Kanarek asked h e r when clandestine theory. You can hear Calendar Kitty J a y she stopped believing s o . "iTteday of It In the beauty shop o r the Phololitho^^^aphy AniJy Kent 1 left." Then s h e corrected her- beaver store. It Is everywhere. This country whichperfectedthe Art Department .,,Wolf Facel self and said that she learned concept of the "free-fire zone" "Who Charlie really i s " while she epb K , S X dj Uzard Man^ was standing on the s l d e w ^ at the in w a r s against the o r i e n t , this Other A n l F a r m l polansky residence, (At this point country which finds f r e e f l r e z o n e s ,Not responsible for cash enclosed a rumor flows among the rep<jrt- and the spirit of the fragmentation tn mail. Second c l a s s postage paid e r s Ihat Mr. Older is e<>iog to bomb suffused upon the well kept at Los Angeles, Calirornla, Pubof the home land, this yank Mr, Kanarek off of c r o s s - lawns lished weekly. fiubscrlptlonS: tG examination in a few hours. After country Is In trouble. It Is time to per year In the U.S., SB,60 e l s e all, he has had ten days to chal- stop the fires of cruelty that Mr, where in the A m e r i c a s , $10.15 lange h e r testimony.) Salter spoke up against in arguing elsewhere in theworld. F i r s t Class against the death penalty for Bob o r Air Mali rates upon request. Beauoolell, ]t is time to slop, La^ During the luncheon break p e - t e r for the code of Hammurabi. Unsolicited manuscripts and a r t work that we do not publish will be ople were telling what one calls Later for cyanide. Later for bardistroyed threeweeWs after receipt Kanarek jokes. You hear people barism. Get out of Vietnam. Get unless accompanied by full-sized, putting down and laughing at him out of encroachment^ get out of everywhere in the hall of justice. the g a s chamber, get out of the stamped, self-addressed- return In the elevators. By the coffee temple of human hamburger. machines. By the phnnes, " P l e a s e envelope- volume"}, -33 (Whole God, make It stop," using a memNumber 317) August 14, 1970 orable line of Mrs, Kasahian (her

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der. who has been demanding the new system for s<Hne tirne> said. -One rf the most obvii*iifl and most shocking of water polluting conditioiu in the harhxr comes from the fad that many hundreds ofshipsthaf Vint the port dump Uteraily tens of thousands ^>f pounds of raw sewage into the hiLrhor every year, and we can't act (> prohibit the pTa<lic^e because uv have no pier-side sanitation system to carry it away.... "Apparently this is nit an impossible proMem to soKf. for the king of Denmark man.i^vs somehow to take his morning ^wims in Copenhagen Harbor, <ini- of the most active ports in Euni|ie," The new sewer system, now authorized for design this yar and for construction by late L971, will according to Snyderend the dumping of raw sewagi- into the harbor, and will be "one more step in reverang the trend to make Los Angeles Harbor a huge (esspool." or contmband ia foimd. After leaving, police normally padk>ck the place. The shit is probably coming down because the people of Ber keley are sick of passively get ting their heads brokcn^ After Ihe FSM, People's Park, antiROTC, the TWLF Strike, and one hundred other, the people are fedup. A number of bombings have taken place recently and BO the polioe are moving- Just a few nights ago, white an officer was doingflOMiehassLinK. a pipe bomb was affixed to a police car and destroyed the badt half It appaienUy was a piece of pipe filled with gunpowder with some type of simple detonator

RONNI SOLMAN t Black Panther Party of South Califoniia has Buffered some ihe most bnitaJ oppreaaion and reeaiDn that the Loa Angeles ice Department (LAPDI has to r. In ita two and a half year lory< 11 members have been ed, either directly by the po'. or by the US organizalion t has c^oee ties with the police artment. Many of the membera the party have been arTealed> 'aased or held without probable lae by the police, and some have n beaten, shot at and wounded, rt December, three Panther oft (or Community Centers) were ied an the 8th, and a long battle unj, as 18 Panthers defended ir home and their lives and w^re eequently charged with conapir'

H W boaic tactic of the police haa been to pick up everyone who is carrying a back^jack or sleeping bag. If they're under 16, they're detained at the station* LAPD frufn ita rampant terro- if they're over 18 (one woman . policiea againat all black peo- in her 30*e was picked up), they're DENNIS LEVITT and against Ihe Block Panther either taken to the city limits or cut looee with a waming. But if Three nights of violence hit the '^> in particular. they're under 18, trouble begins. community cf West San BemsFdlno The police call the paimts and this week as blacks reballed against tell them to send plon^train- what they termed harassment by i o n becouae their eon/doughtar the policefor no reason,is coming home. This even is hopBlack youths fired small caliber pening to some juvenilee who had weapona hurled molotovs and notorized letters fnmi their parents rocks at and police who were armed giving them permission to travel with AR-15 rules and service revolvers as well as pq>per-fogAlong with theae toctica, police have been raiding o number of gers (an apparatus used to spray Los Angdea Harbor Commis- crash-pada, homes, and store- P^irper gas). Disturbances began Saturday 1 ia, ot last, making final ar- fronts where people have been gementa for the design of a Clashing. At lost report, upwards night following the outbreak of a ' aoiDtary aewcr aystem for oftwenty reida hove been conducted. fight in a parking lot near MusNoimal procedure ia the aame aa cott St. and H u e Line St. Police Loo Angeiea Harbor. Ity Coundlman Arthur K^ Sny- that mentioned above, unless dope were called in and according to a

to commit murder, lost recently, the community rkers who aell the Black Panthnewspaper on the comer of 6th I Broadway have been arrested loet daily on charges ranging n begging and disturbing the ice to supected auto theft and berty. The Committee to Defend Panthers is an organization homed by the Black Panther iy ael up to fumiah the bail rand whwi thefte hai^aement arM occur, and to pay the legal I ii curred by lawyer's finan' I n e e ^ aiul ordinary court coats'n Aoguat 22, at 8 K M > FJkf., there I be a benefit for the legal dee of the Block Panther Party, d at the Grand Ballroom at tJk, atarTing Jc^mny Otis and his m, and featuring OfThe People. leaea show your support and toher we may all be able to atop

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According to the Tribe, the People's Coalition is forming street paUols to warn people about what's coming down.

Big Berkeley rip off

WATCHDOG To put it simply, Berkeley is being vamped upon. Hundreds of youth people are being arrested, shifted home* esotrted to the c i ^ innita. locked out of their pada, and just generally feeling the wrath of tl Beriieley Police Department T] Police Department saya the reaao. for it hitting the fan ia tht "akyrocketing" juvenile deliquency rate, but a mors ratkinal answer would be that the Police are trying to atop the reaiotonce of the people.

Ueona Metzger, 33-\earold mother of two, former Freep editor and a controversial English teacher, was ordered re.'stored to her junior rullege Job Tuesday morning, Ai. IK Sifwrlor Judge Robert Palton said, when ruling in favor of Mrs. Metzger, that she may have used bad Judgment in the selection of materlsl for her freshman English class, but he found her neither immoral nor unfit.

Deena Metzger restored

Black rebellion in San Berdoo

This picture a s s brought Into the down the aisle of the courtroom. courtroom b> the artlst,Nsncy pa- Another school contends thaf.her vis, to flash 10 Mr. Manson, i^e transgression was that she' was artist, a beautiful blonde Isdy who seen flashing the drawing, T^e came into court with semi-dlaphonous white panfs, bare mldrtff and drawing Itself has an interesting a smile was thruwn out of the seat history. Originally she had mads that she hadpersuadedNBCtosup- a drawing of Mr. Manson whiet ply her. Manson scholarship is her boj^rlendj waxing wroth, ha( divided as to the reason for her torn up and flushed. She, In defiremoval. One srhool of thoi^ht ance, consulted the pictures IT t>elleves she was thrown out because of her bare midriff, spotted Rolling Stone Magsr.lne and drev by Jud^e Older as she walked this new picture which shebrougb to the court. resident ut the community, interviewed t>y KPF'K's Dave Stevens, ^police overrearted and insured more problems. They swuoped down on Ihe parking lot with tear gas,* Monday night was the warmest, as officers reported thattheywere shot at by black youths. One resident, Mike Lary, received a bullet wound under his t r m . The San Bernardino Telegram reported that Lacey rtioelved the wound *when a shot fired by an assailant ricocheted off a building.* But according to an eyewitness, *poHce ambushed him. Police swooped down on him from twu directions.** Jnspectftr Holier! Vandertlnda of the SBpn Slated that Monday night the tempi* picked (g) at 7:30 p,m, when one of l u r patrol cars had a windshield knnrked out \ty rocks...." Ver>' siiiin thereafter a 9 p.m. curfew wa<; urdired for the area. The mainr und the chief of police of the clt> rode through the area last nlgtu and bricks went throtigh the windows of their car. Neither wus seriously Injured. police used Special Weapons and Tactlos (SWAT) forces which, according to an informed source, were trained at Camp Pendleton. We paint ourselves black so that we cannot be s e e n . . , then we crawl through the community to make sure everything Is quiet,* SWAT forces arearmedwlthAR-lsrifles and live hand grenades. ResMeotfl of the ctMnmonlty felt the dlaturbencea were caused by a hot summer with nothing to do and tMlng harassed for It by the police, KPPK's tan Harvey Interviewed a cltlren who said that when we have a party, which Is about the only thing there Is to do, the pigs keep cruising by and har-

Harbor sewer system

assing us," Another resident describing over-reaction sald| "If a disturbance happttns on lOth St,, they pepper-fog the whole area.' Tutsday night things were quiet In the community, but even while It was quiet, tension still rerpalri^
high.

Father Berrigan arrested


LINDA GACK On Aim. 11, fll 11:25 a.m. (EDT), the FBI arrested Father Daniel Berrigan near Providence, R.I. Father Berrigan had been In the underground for four months after the courts convirtedhim to a threeyear prison term for burnlngdraft records in Catonsvlllt^ Maryland. The FBI said that Father Bemgan would be taken directly to the Federal Penitentiary In Danbury, Conn, KPf'K reported reaction to Father Qerrlgan's arrest from Dan Delaney, Ku said that the arrest on!) strengthened his convictions to keep fighting the Inhumanity of war to any way he could. He also said that it may be true that -at a time of Immorality^ In Justice, the best place for an honest man la In JaU,' KPPK flired t t^ie of Father Berrigan that was recorded abopt two weeks ago from the underground. In the tape. Father Berrigan expressed hie hope that people of the nation would show thelrdisdain for the war In any way that they found, or any other way that their conscience would allow.

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GAY LIBERATION SUPPLEMENT: This week, the Frg. jn presents a supplement devoted entirelv to news and opinion on the Gay Liberation Movement The Supplement was written and edited by members of Gay Liberation, with design and layout by Anthony De Rota. In order to give GLF ample space to do their thing, we moved many of the ads to the front of the paper. Therefore, we ask your forgiveness and patience for O VINC ? T T ?t ??? ? ???? ????? ? ? ???T ? ????? ? ? ?? ??? ? ???? ?? ? ? the somewhat cluttered Firit Section of this week's issue. The Free Press feefs that GLF 10, plee UM form above, end attach ottf address lebeL It takes is an Important part of the cultural and political revolution taking place in the world tovaral weeks to process chenges of eddress. Please be patient. day, and we think you will find the Gay Liberatior^ Supplement interesting

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TED BALL 1970
h
r'

STATE

gHuirod ZIo

24 ori^nal dwipit to color or piinL L O O M for framlnf. Nko Thinfi CoiM In Bagglfti ( 2 . 0 0 T ^ . l n d . check or monoy ordv. SUNSET SPECIALTIES 5436 W. WiriNngton Blvd. Lot Anfeles, Calif. 90016

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August 2 1 , 1 9 7 0

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chemical weapons in Vietnam an effective way to stop the genocidal war which is destroying that counDEL MAR try. Continuing its presence at THEflTEP Edgewood Arsenal and Fort Detrick and extcndings its campaign to all parts of Amerika obviously, however, costs money for such things as volunteer staffs, postage, print5036 W, nco, L.A ing, telephones, t^tc. The coalition WES-6d24 requests all those in sympathy with $1JOO it and what it stands for to send as generous a contribution aa posp sible to a Quaker Action Groupparson It would also greatly benefit the With thii Ad. Good Peace-Ecology Coalition's cause on one tickat only. if all citizens would write their senators in support of the Nelson- I n i A I I L t U F ALGIERS Goodoll Amendment to the Milit("Spoksn In FrwKh"} ary Authorisation bill for procurement, H.R. 17123. ThiH amendment Show Tima Daily would prevent all ose of antiplant 7:00 8i 11:30 pm chemicals, stop alt supply to other Sat. & Sun. countries of such agents, and 2:1&,6:45&11:20pm would halt their production in the US, The passage of this bill could Plui force a nonmilitary solution in Vietnam and end the poisoning of the people and land of Indochina. \Xm W I A T A LOVELVMAR If we ere ever going to save ourStsn^ng: MSB0<S Smith selves from ourselves, a move& VsnMSu Rsdirsvs ment such as the Peace-Ecology Dally 9:05 pm Coalition is the way to do it.
S i t . S Sun. 4 : 2 0 ft diOO pm

Quakers form ecology group


(continued from page 7) the logan, "The IVee is Growing Mor Trees MaM Grow." Ciurrectly pUnniiig natiimwide demcuutratioiifti the coalition intffida to confront chemical wettpona, miHtaiy baaea, and corporationa with chemical eorp* contract* acToai tht coontiy. l l w new movement chairgee that chemical weapons aodi aa defoUanta and herbic' idea have become one of the hey fadoia in auppreuinff the fight for freedom ageinat impsrialianL The coalition alao poin^ out that all chemicftl'Uological weapon* are againat the International Geneva Accoida of 1924* and yet it has been demonslrated that many ore bdng used extensively in Vietnam. outposts of the DuUtary-industrial death complex. After the tree planting and petition preoentntion on July I, coalition supporters began a walk to the Edgewood Ar^ senal. On July 5 a rally was held at Fort McHenry whidi featured Pete Seeger and Stuart Meecham. July 9 was marked by a tree planting oataide the Fort Detrick Gate and the arrest of 14 demonstrators and two trees at Bdgewood Arsenal. On July 10, 13 and \A. several more trees and 15 additional demonstrators were arrested in attempts to bring lie to Edffewood's death machine. On July 16 a rally wae held in Baltimore and a tree waa planted ouV side Edgewood Arsenal. Aug. 4 marked the start of triale for the 29 who were arrested and a protest demonstralion was held at Edgewood Arsenal Gate. against war. No. What Edgewood is doing is executing a retrograde movement: 'Well accept the tree,' acting deputy commander says, 'as a tree/ Yes. The wonder is that it look Edgewood a week of confrontations with peace marchers, 29 arrests, endleas humiliating pioturea of husky MP e glaring at the 'offenaive' aeedling U* get the point. The point is that, if rival symbols were t^ be juggled, the tsee had them licked before they started. In symbol language, when the tree said life, all Edgewocii could say

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


Sept. 2a-Oct 4 has been adieduled for a seiiee of activities by the new movement indudit^ the planting of "the inne tjre of life and revolution" in the ccntfrs of death Unexpected support for the new ^Dugawy Proving Grounds, Rocky movement came from the estabMountain Arsenal, Pine Bluffs lishment press in the form of two (Ark.), Newport (Ind^) and many editorials 4July 10 and 16) in the other locations, Baltimore Sun. Both editorials H W , coalitioa alao intends to firmly backed the coalition, its obkeep "a presence and a pressure" jectives, and its tactics. The July at Edgewood Arsenal and Fort De- 16 editorial waa particularly intrick in BlaryUnd through an office spiring: and subsistence staff in Baltimore which will conduct leafleting and a t Let's make one thing perfecttempt contact with GI' and civilian ly clear: Edgewood, symbol of smi^oyees. the most bone<hUling side of Tht new movement has been acwar, is not retreating- It is not tive throughout July and August in accepting the little pine tree The new movement considers ittaginR confrontations at vwious as any symbol of protest this CBW Campaign against use of back was death For our part, we think that we hal] never see a ga mask as lovely as a treeThe initjal phase of the CBW project has served its just purpoee. C o a l i ^ n supporters walked a great distance carrying pine trees to symbolize life. They planted those trees along the way and at Fort Detrick and Edgewood Arsenal <to important centers for chemical biological weapons production). The combination of experience and commitment gained by those engaged in this nonviolent action provides a solid foundation to build upon in achieving the future success of this nationwide PeaceEcology Coalition now blooming.

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I '!

'. I ! ; \ i

'TYCOBRAHE
SOUND CO
T,"IH'., ! H M U ' . A i;tAt H CA[

First Manson-Kasabian Quiz f


Q. Danny De Carlos' pot plant, cultwater by the cave in Devil's Canyon waa called what? 1. Ehner 2. Clyde 3. Eatragon 4. Yul Q. Manson's rock group, which played in Topanga Canyon at The Corral, tn 1968, waa called what? 1. The Hydrogen Foot Fetish 2. The Milky Way 3. The Silver Beatles 4. The Horseshoe Lane DopeTroop Q. Which television station won the race to be the first one to film Linda Kaaavian re-uniting with her husband? 1. NBC 2. CBC 3. ABC 4. BBC Q. Where WBH Charles Manson on Dec. 31, 1967? L Lime S t , San Francisco 2. Tupelo. Mississippi 3. Grain Valley, Missouri 4. Sun Valley. California <Ans: 1.2, L4)

Ours alone . . , t h e Bhnbo-Burger*

(continued from page 3) tual. (Marsh was anreated outside the courtroom after tssti^ing by the Shore Patrol. Supposedly he waa on emergency leave and his papers aOowsd him to be in San Frandaco, but not Los Angeles.) Anyway, the next day the wh<4esale psilocybin dealer who diatributed over 1,000 tabs of substance at Topanga Beach last summer called this Tsportor up in a fury that anyone should duUlenge hia intcirrity as a d<v>e-dealer and say that he had dealt out dim dope. He has read accounts in the papers and he was angry. He said, "Kasabian is lying. She had to really get off on that stuff. It was really the best synthesized pailo-cybin ever to appear on the underground market Learv'i chemist made it'* Time forces me to end this columnbefore I have had the pleasure of relating to you Mr, Shinn's questions regarding The 3rd Eye. Suffice it to ftay that one of Mr. Shinn's questions was the following: "Mrs. Kasabian, does the third eye blink?" We end with a quiz:

^ini6o

1 M ''A

'KI.'V

ShOCP 1*1 L F ' - f f r )

I ' / n,9!>

THE SWING SCENE

TUES. TOURNAMENT NIGHT

(Bumpsr pool, choM, dsrts, etc,)

OTflNG, SWEATS SWAY 6 NIGHTS A WEEK TO "THE COLORING BOOK"

WEDS. TWO DANCE CONTESTS (Swing and Funky Boogsloo) THUR. SINGLES NIGHT (Singia ipU gat $1.00 for coming) FRI. HEADQUARTERS FOR SWINGERS SAT HINDQUARTERS FOR SWV4GERS SUN' "NEARLY NUDE NITE" (Great black4ight bod painting) Open 8 p m - 2 1 & over (dark Mon.)

AUG.21

ttaRoSO

the blues of the great

FREDDIE KING
13. Stning FrI. S a r S u n . Joined Tues-by ^

Robbie Basho JOHN ]

AUG. S.S

8162 Mclroac Avemie

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fi s .

M f n s t R e l R y of

Lee Michaels Barrel .

HAMMOND
tbno 5 0
OL 3-2070

1 ^

Li

Log AnfcJei 46

PROIHXE BY LARRY MARKS 0> A & M RECORDS

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AuguBt 2 8 , 1 9 7 0

liOB A n g a r a F r e e

Preu

Tate meets cosmic c h o p c h o p


EDSANDERS Last week th* Long Beach Independent PreM Telegram printrd a atory by it* ace snuff ftWuth. Mary Npiawender, indicating that Sharon Tote a n d Charles Manson had met and talked on a couple of occasionn t her houar on C i e b Drive. It must be s u t e d here that the Free Pre^ has known about one of the aUesed meetings since J u n e l U b u t w e h a v e h e l d back any mention of it pending hot pursuit investigatiDn of other similar things we learned. would have been to ask that she remove her makeup; she would have refuBtid and the relationship would have ended. Or something simiLar T h e original media sources indicating that they had met were two wonderful tabloid publicaltona. Midnight a n d The National Enquirer, who. over six months aRO, tried to assert that not only had they met. they were romantically invoIvi>d. Bah. The National Enquirer, on J a n u a r y 25, printed a story by someone named Hal Jacques who claimed to have interviewed someone at the ranch named Mike Armstrong. Mike Armstrong claimed that he was the foreman of the S p a h n Ranch but in fact he wasn't. He'd really been around the socalled Family only a few d a y s and had no ^ r s t h a n d knowledge of anything, but I have clippings of him babbling to the Enquirer. the New York Times and other publications trying to come on as if he were Mr. H a n s o n ' s right h a n d man. Bah. Ferrari in late July l % 9 outside the Old Post OfFice Restaurant. Subsequent interviews with information riuurces indicated that the lady in the Ferrari had on a scarf and sunglasses and that the color of her hair was not visible. It was not determined whether the lady was in an advanced state of pregnancy and there was no real certainty that the year was 1969. It could have been 1968. <Ie must be rpm*mbered xhat Mr^, Polanski was in Europe filming from early April to July 21st, She was back in the States for only 17 days before her tragic death. Au indications are that Miss Tate was totally involved in preparations for the arrival of her baby, preparing the nursery, preparing for her husband's arrival, preparing for his birthday; one can't believe that she was running around with Mr. Manson- It's utterly unbeMcvable.) It is known that Mr. Manson in fact knew and was friends with many more people in the entertainment field than is common ly accepted. For some reason, many famous people, once acquainted with "Charlie with the

KRLA
fj)ft THE CDMMfTTEG TO CONftAT HUHTlNGrONS DISEASE preenff

A MUSICAL TRIBUTE TO WOODY GUTHRIE


W o r d i a n d Songs b^ Woody OvthriO; A d o p ^ d t SJoged by MlUtird LampeH, Producod hy HoroTd tovenlbal

J O A N BAEZ

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ARLO GUTHRIE RICHIE HAVENS COUNTRY JOE M c D O N A L D ODETTA EARl ROBINSON
On March 23, 1969. Shahrokh Hatami, a photographer, a n d Sharon Polanaki were inside her houae. She was packing to fly to Rome to make a movie with Vittorio Gaasman called Twelve Ptua One Chairs. According to Hatami, Mr, Manson came to t h e front door and cvidentiy asked for the address of Terry Melcher. Hatami a l l ^ e d l y directed him to the gueat house where the owner of the property, Mr. Rudy Altobelh, was packing alao, since evidently he was planning to accompany Mrs^ Polanski to Rome. While they were talking, Miss Tate allegedly came to the front donr and copped a glimpse of Charles Manaon. Rudy Allobelli h a d met Mr. Manson previously at Dennis Wilson's residence. This was evidently sometime in the first half of 196B when Mr. Wilson, the drummer for one of the finest rock b a n d s in the world, T h e Beach Boys, was living at 14400 Sunset Boulevard, ALtobelli claims that he and Mr. Manson had a short conversation on the 23rd wherein he claimed to Mr. Manson not to know where Melcher. the executive producer of the Doris Day show a n d former producer of Paul Revere a n d t h e Raiders, was residing.

JACK ELLIOT

PETE SEEGER

norraticn bf

PETER FONDA & WIU GEER

HOLLYWOOD BOWL'.!;.%.?

for 6<irdsn BwM Call 27S-5011 Terraco ioNts 7,S0, 6.90. RsMrvod S.75, 4,7S, 3.75, 2.75, On al HaUvww4 I**! * Othm, IM* * H ^ tfrtt, U. CL A Slffhi A S<HIIMI Praductin

Anyway, Mike Armstrong, the pseudo-foreman^ took t h e credulous demi-writer from The National Enquirer, to a spot by the creek in back of the Western Set at the Ranch, to a mattress lying in the dust, pointed to it and announced that Manson and she had actually slept on t h e mattress. The Enquirer must have been handing out acme money to Mr. Armstrong. They fell for it for to. a picture of a bare mattress with the caption: Sharon Slept Here, appeared with the article. (One must admit here that one immediately boarded United flight H5, N-V. to Los Angeles, upon reading this article last J a n u a r y , in order to secure the mattress and mail it to Paul Krassner in N.Y. An intensive search of the Spahn Ranch did not come up with i t )

MMk Hri an MuliHil AsHHtau Km^ Otv t*H S sM Ltbvtv Ticilfu DtflMB l i i h ' ^ i tumn, MHV'B * S i i i * i n r .

(please turn to page I5t

Pack up all your cares and woes.


FniRPORT CDnVEDTIOn

One h a a encountered no indication, in 6 months of yodeling up many canyons of false rumor and misinformation, that Miss Tate and M r Manson were acquainted- It is a question, however, that h a s caused many items of questionable gossip to escape t h e lips of famous re' porters and television personalities in the hallways of the Hall of Justice. What is lacking, if the defendants are guilty, is a motive. No one in the media h a s really swallowed the whole Helter Skelter routine. Last Decemt>er. when the case "broke", one heard Mr. Meicher's n a m e mentioned hundreds of times in terms of a motive. No more. <0f the master hst of 29 possible molives in this detecto-punk's possession, a relationshio with MrsPoliinksi m not inrluded. , Nor ia Melcher mentioned.)

Not to be outdone^ the publication Midnight printed on February 16, 1970, an interview with someone called Mari <they also printed what was claimed to be her picture. Many people connected with the case, including MrManson. were shown this picture of Mari. clipped away from the article, and no one could recognize her) who made the bold assertion that Miss Tate once knew Mr- Manson and somehow "broke away" from his mesmerizing demonolotrous grip of passion.

But. .hey say, if he and she were acquainted then, ahh, a -notive! A motive! Pan in on French detective movie from *he 40's: a motive! I don't believe it. As one of the ladies at t h e S p a h n Ranch told me the other evening, the first thing Charlie would have done, upon meeting Miss Tate.

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We heard rumors from the Topanga Canyon area that Sharon and Manson were seen in her red

Even though the article is more or less well written there are enough internal inconsistencies in it to show that it was contrived (For instance^ Mari claimed that Manson met Miss Tate before she met M r Polanski. Impossible, because M r and Mrs, Polanski met in London, he direct ing and she acting, while making a movie for Marty Ransohoff called The Vampire Killers, in 1966; and Mr. Manson a t this time was in Terminal Island penitentiary.)

h e r e we go, s w i n g i n g low, h i g h , a n d in b e t w e e n to the T r o u b a d o u r l o r p u r p o s e s of t h e r e s e e i n g a n d h e a r i n g F a i r p o r t C o n v e n t i o n , now i n c l u d i n g m a d f i d d l e r Dave Swarbrick. playing and singing reels, jigs. English traditional oldies, and sprightly originals, a generous abundance of which are available on the group's four American albums produced by Joe Boyd, on A&M Records: FAIRPORT CONVENTION / UNHALFBRICKING / LIEGE & LIEF / and the forthcoming FULL HOUSE,

At the T r o u b a d o r S e p t e m b e r 2 through 6

^^^-^

"Yes Susie, there are AeaAs in Oiaige County!

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Hap^ 15
MOONFIRE F M H L V CANYON n C N K

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A CC^M(^F "M

Manson
tcontinued from page 6) bus", now tend to deny ever knowin K him. It in possible. Binct; one could make an amueinH list merely of the dauehtera of famous t^levirion and movie atani Mr. Manson had known with some intimacy, that on some occasion or other be and ahe could have met perhaps at a party or on ome fleetinR introduction. But all this talk of affairs is dumb. All the corridor whispers outride the court room about the girl (since proven nut to be Sharon Tate) named Sharon in the white Simca allei^edly ^ "movie Hlar" who visited the Spahn Ranch last summer; all the wbiHpprs are so many puffs of s^irfuiriLlJng fantasy from the tip of the galactic Hookah of Hookahs, Who really cares, even if Mr. Mans>in had an affair with Ronald Keabfun^s wife {except Mr. Unrub)? What does it really matter? It cannot bring back the beautiful breathing Mi^s Tate with her breathless supernal ^race. This morbid curiosity, this pryinff by myself and by hundreds oi other peiiple writing about this terrible trial, into the privute lives in search of a fantasy> what does It mean? It means that we are creeps, real genuine vermiform creepti; unless, as whispered, the day draws nigh when the Htm projector will be set upon a table in private judicial session and "secret, juM discovered" material will be presented for Bcrutinyr Kvorytbing will be wonderful) then, and we svill not be creeps.

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I 1 1 teil you what I've f o u n d out about ouf m u s i c : in many instances p e o p l e are ready for the m u s i c biM unless you tell them Ihat I h e y r e ready they d o n ' t realize i l . We m i g h t play, a p i e c e in a c l u b and the piece may be a d v e n t u r o u s . . . a d v e n t u r o u s in term? of its h o d g e p o d g e of styles and h o d g e p o d g e of ideas. And there are p e o p l e w h o wilt sit there and say: what is it? But if I sit there and say: w e ' r e g o i n g to do t h i s . , . a n d m a k e it l o l a l l y p r o g r a m m a t i c and p e o p l e are already p r o g r a m m e d t o ^ n d e r s t a n d what to e x p e c t , then they say. yehhh. It's a n a l o g o u s to e x p l a i n i n g to c h i l d r e n : this IS what the s o u n d of h " is . , , h a h / ' You see. A n d then you turn right a r o u n d and say " h o n o r " and they're c o n f u s e d because you don't say, "hab-oiTor. ' W e ' r e so full of a m b i g u i t i e s and i n c o n s i s t e n cies in our lives that a n y b o d y who has h e a r d a r e c o r d like ' M e r c y . tVlercy, M e r c y " or "Country Preacher" will hardlyexpecttohear ' EXPERIENCE IN E w h i c h i s m e r e l y ' M e r c y . Mercy. Mercy" in new c l o t h e s . - J u l i a n C a n n o n b a l l Adder ley

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A new a l b u m : The C a n n o n b a l l A d d e r l e y O^jjntol & O r c h e s l r a f e a t u r i n g : E x p e r i e n c e in E (W.Fischer-J-Zawinul) Tensity (David A x e l r o d ) D i a l o g u e s lor Jazz O u i n l e t & O r c h e s t r j i (Lalo S c h i f r i n )

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onornotlfshftift, then eitherhsr cass will be aeparatad 6fom the rest and the trial will go on without her (sbsgatting a separata trial) or the trial will recess fbr two w e d s while he recovers. 2. Tbebloodproblem^Noacenario fir the murders in any published account or police report has taken aeriously into consideration the fact that MiasTato and Jay Sabring were outside the house on the flront^ordi duT> ing the massacre. If you look at the large picture of the fhimt porch that Life published last August you will see incredible amounts of blood. All this blood is of the two victims mentioned. One supposes that the true atory of what aciually happened at the house on Cielo Drive last August 8th will comeout sooner or later. We have raason to brieve that l i n d a Kasabian recountad a diffbrent, much difTareot, story of what happsned there at the house to at leaat two people before she was arresteda story divergent from her 10 day testimony on the witnasa staiKl3. A few upcoming proaecution witnesses are asfoliows: Mark Lindaay, tlie singer, who has been subpoensed by the proaeeutioD; Givg Jakobson. a gentleman who evidently acted aa sooie sort of middleman between Terry Melcher and Manson in aetting up some propoasd moviedeal that fiell t h r o v ^ ; various fbrmer assodatas of the family including Paul CrodMtt<a gold miner from Gokr Wash, and Dora Canyon), Brooke "Tnnca" Postan, Paul ' l i t tle Paul" WatUna, Juan Plynn, Danny DeCario <th most oolorftil witneas one has evr obaervad), Diana Lake, Barbara of ths Spahn Randi kitdiSD, and* of oouias, Tarry H d chvr. The witnesses listsd who ooct kntrw the defendants are aapectad to babble about certain alleged violent Isndencica of M r Manaon and hia alleged avmad harsoL Happiness is huppiness. 4. Manson Mother #2. A second lady who claims to be Charisa Manaon'a mother surfaced recently in Spokanebuthaasince gone back undergnnmd, or, at least, the person who claimed to a major TV network that he knew where d i e ia, haa gone back underground. WiU the real Kathleen Moddnz Deere report in to tha madia, at onoe, please? What ia to be learned of this trial? FTOQ the revolutionary point of view, what impmsMis one the moat is the fjsct that, aa this country movss fbi^ ward into the years of ravolution and computer socialism, that the concept of tlw massacre hiu got to ba bulk-srassd from tha minds of earthlings. Maasacne pukaupmaaeacrsa, tUI all ia blood. And guUt ia paaaMi from mind to mind and womb to lamb. Every American honkUng, stainsd with the gore of h i s t u y and hmidreda of vanished American tribes, haa got t9 pull away from the blood, l l i e bkrad. O Lord, pull ua away from the blood.

i i

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"MBVn Csnis" houfs for ula.;^ Not forconvsniJoi>Bl tatfl-2vaBr^ otd. Oimstic. ipacioui. roof flar-^

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is to free Mr Manson and hia alleged dunebuggy attack battalion, harhar, and then the populacewill flee like a bunch of wide eyed tapira flushed out by a crazed ocelot There's the maiia joke: let him be ftved, they laugh, and then they proceedto lay " down a list of people like Steve McQueen and members of fjuniliaa of the deceased, who are out to off Charlie M., if he walks. There's no doubt that Charles Manson isahatcd man,One has just completed a pleaaantfour month itay at Sandy Koufaa's Tropicana Motel on Santa Monica Boulevard, Time and again gussta at the motel told one that if any of the girla or guys from the Spahn Ranch came to visit or to iwim, then they were going to move out. Many times one sat in one* s room meditating in sullen chromosome damage about throwing a mecaline p a i ^ for Mr Manson's entire circle of friends and then ahhl to get to watch the hordes of rising rock Stan flodi from the Tropicana, crowding about the front desk to chsck out, their Pakiitani sbaulder bags bouncing in tis'dyed quake* of pisaoft On another occasion a LA- Timsa reporter confided to me that he was afraid to go to ihe Spahn R a n ^ , mumbUntf something about fsai of being threatened a t was not Mr. Kendall). Mr- Manaon however, has not a few regular observon of court pn>caedings spooked because of his balefiil gate whidi they fvel, eadi of them, to be beamed upon them as* occasionally hie eyes strafe the court room* his bands all the while moving about his face in a rapid manner, a finger poking perhaps boieath hia chin, etroking his moustache* hia brows arched in a thirty degree angle up. Several times I have hesjrd reporters mention the flashing fingers and the desolate glance of this man charged with seven counts of murder^ At this point our article will disintegrate into a aeries of points of information about the trial. 1. SexieSadieUnowSickly Sadie, Of late, Susan Atkins has bean complaining of pains in her pd vie rsgioo> evidently atenumng from an ovarian c y s t She has been sitting with b*r hsad on the defense table and, as a result, court has been lacaased for several days, <f]er obvious pain and her wan lickly countMianoe were set aside for 3 seconds on Fhday when she flaahad a quick smile at TV etar Bob Conrad who waa sitting in the spsctator aection for the aftemoon.) As of this writing, it is uncertain whether Misa Atkins will be opsrated

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EDSANDERS sequent legal skirmishes, and the d j ^ 3 / S sere, fenced. hort ^M.^l "Mystery and murder, society, sex nine-week trial, circulation-consdous " " H ^ ; f ; U ^ r ' ^ ; . ^ 1 ; S r o S g * i andsuspensewerscombined^-this editors catered to the insatiable in^ ' >;^^ case m such a manner as to in-tereet of the American public in the ^ rIguf > and captivate the public fancy bizarre. Special seating facilities BEVERLY JOHNSON Co a degree perhaps unparalleled in fur reporters and columnists reprerecent annals. Throughout the pre- senting local papers and all major 466-7347 mdictment investigation, the subnews services were installed in the courtroom. Special rooms in the Criminal Courts building were equipped for broadcasters and telecasters. In this atmosphere of a "Roman Holiday" for the news media, Charles Manson stood trial for F 0 I THE COMMITTEE TO COMBAT HtlHTlNCTaM'S DISEASE his life/' presents Who wrote the above words? Was A MUSICAL TRfBUTE T O W O O O Y CUTHRiE it a liberal CIA agent in the New R^ublic? Was it the lead article in W^rdi andSongi by Woody Outhfie; Aitip^^d A Staged l ^ t week's East Village Other? Well, bf MilJard lampslt^ Produced by Harold Isventbat it was The Supreme Court of the State of Ohio writing about Dr. Sam * Sheppard, who died a free man- We have, of course* in order to strobe JOAN BAEZ you with a few thrillies, put in C. JACK ELLrOT Manson's name where was once Sam Sheppard'sARLO GUTHRIE What will happen to dvil order in RICHIE HAVENS the State of California if Charies Manson is ever set free? Panic Yoi^ COUNTRY JOE McDONALD hear jokes about the behavior of ODETTA people in the streets if Mr. Manson were freed a s often as you hear IrvEARL ROBINSON ing Kanarek jokes, and that's pretty PETE SEEGER often. There's the ecology joke: the nwrathn by way to solve the pollution and popuPETER FONDA & WILL GEER lation problem in Soutiiem California

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October 23, W70

*a clear and present danger'

The American Revolution 1970 - not a shot away


NOKMAN SriNKAD M's been Ijshionjhie tor the pj^t >iMr or two l o say ihal Ihu Resolution \^ jlrCiidy under i*iiy. which makes ii j hi) difficuh for mc *> 'a> thul the events ul |hc pjsT l e * mi'nlhh cledrly indie4il{^ ihaT iht- k e v n t u l b n ha? rm/\\ sljiilcd in eHrnesI Ihe vvord "Rcsoliutun" hu hccn rnlhcr freely USLJ in the past a m p l f of >ejrs as ii lahcl fnr cvefvlhin^ from non\iolenl protest ii> lift'Siylcs to the laniJiics ol the (ippresscil III ji Utn^ list ol lou^y films fomia official told the committee a lurid lale of woe. revolution and anarchy, al the end of which was the following exchange belwcen ihe California cop and Sen. James EasiUnd. EASTl.AND(eyes bugging|: " W h y . . .why that's open revolutioitr C A l . COP. "Ves sir. We believe it constitutes a clear at>d present danger to the sei;urily of the United Stales." The point o l this is ihat people like Eastland. Nixon. Hoover, and police olHcials have fcro desire to promote he Revolution. When people like this begin lo acknowledge that some sort of revikluiion is under way. ii'i* not because they want to but because they h a v e t o . They have to admit thai a Revolution exists in order l o pry the lunds out of Congreu and the state legislatures wiih which to combai it. later on (perhaps nol t u o m u ^ h later on) svc'll be hearing people like Nixon. Hoover. Mitchell a i d Reagan openly admitting that some sort of guerrilla war is go'ng on for the purpose o l securing legislation and or court decisions Ihat will allow the government In take quasi-wartime measures l o "proto^t Ihe internal security of ihe United States," '"Preventive Detention" {English translation: internment camps lor POWs> is only the optnmg wedge.

U-

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Rul Ihe "Rc^olulmn" IhJt I'm u l k i n ^ abi'ul now w the kmd thtu mvoUes A K\\\\ t.-AX hir conlro] o l llie e o u n l i \ , and nol A war fuu^hl wilh rhelorie or posters or symbolic cimrronlation?^. In Ihe second half of the iweniicih century, Rcvolulion \\AS bcconif nearly synonymoHs u j i h i!.ucrrj[la vjirlarc, and I hat's pncisel> whatN hcgun now m ihe Uniled Sluies the upcning *tai!es of a guerrilla star.
A jjuerrilCa u^r doe\ r\\\\ UIV^LIV^ OE

c\Kr\ olicti sidii sbiLh J dL'eLarjiiun. '^ coLinlE.-rilLxLiE4non. jind ihcn d v^nc> ol pitched hatik'^' ii soil o! HneulL^ up on you One dii> >ou sinldcnl> look iiToimd and reiilJ'e i h j l ii's been j[otn^ on lor >e4rs. bul vnu jusi ean'l pul your finger on when il Martcd. l i k e VicTnam. KW C u h j , or China: >ou e j n His the hcfiinnin^ of ihe wjir s*(ih A gi^en minor eseni wiiti iht; heiielil ol hmdsijtht, hui A\ Ihc time ni> nne dreamed ihur, for in^ance, ihe landm^ ol a few Oicn in Cuba * a i an event of ureal hiatoncdl import.

ThiJl\ where ^e'le at right now m the United Slates By perh;ips Vill, Iherf will h? d guerrilla 4ur hein^ foughl in this cMunlry ihal people i t i l l geneulK ajjiree b e j ^ n somelimc in IV70. It A U I he 3 vcr> [>ri:u1idr gueililLi war. and its Fxgmnings will ha\e reatly been st^ird. which perhaps is one of Ihc icMsons that m 1470 the war that has already hejtun M nol ihat easv to see

l^Offi

CSflwtn^iwsfj.*. Qui a RiCHrsnaniit

The guerrilla war has begun and the United States is slowly Klidihg into a domestic wartime footing. Public buildings are no longer open l o Ihe public. The police are being armed for anti-guerrilhi warfare, though not ncarty as rapidly as ihey would like. Consittutional liberties are eroding away in the face ol demands (or great' er goscrnment power l o deal w i i h Ihe revolution, DemiKnii^ have found it necessary to form a united National Front wiih the Republicans on the " l a w and Order"" issue. It's noi jusl a shot away anymore it's herr.

RLJI not |h:ii hard lo see. if >ouVe lookmg foi II hor msianec, there's ihe reccni ra*h ut bumhiiiK'-^ humh diieinpis, UILU h.imh ihriats 1 i t c p l thai ihiti lan't redll> an laolaled oul hurst u | Icrrori i m it's goiniE lii become a loclg-^ term pan of our live^ The Weaihermen have promised more bombings, a& ha\c Bn> number of other guerrilla iribes. like the Red Sun TritK, the Perfect Park Home ( i r o w n Ciarden Soi:bety, and ihc BEack l>ealh Moihcrfuckers. Auisi^inations of ihc Tamillies of puhhc ofTicialv have been threatened by The Invisible Men, another guerrilla Iribe, and 1^5 only a maticr of lime and not much of thai? before a few Iribes decide lo hang wmc big-name political tiophies on ihcir walls. Terrorism in the form of bombings j n d assa spinal i on & is ihe natural opening stage of guerrilla warfare, al leasT in an urbanised 'society. Small groups or even Tone individuals bent o n a^iaisiimling public officials and blowing up buildmgs simply cannol he effectively slopped, li's anyone's guess how many dedicated violent revolutionary guerrillas there are m the United Stales today, hut surely ihe figure musl be well over a thousand, Fven a thousand dedicated terrorists broVcn down into small independent groups can lilow up a lot of buildings and assassina:: a Loi o l politicians and Ihcn meh inio the great man-made jungles of the cities. Terrorists will he caught, bombinijs and assassinations will fail, hut there is iimply no way Ihal ihe governmeni can crush a terrorist movement. Moreover, this American brand of guerrilla icrroriam will be harder i o slop than even Ihe classic form, because of the complete decentralisation of the guerrilla iribes. As o f now, there simply is no over-all command structure nn any level: ihercfoie there is no possjbihiy ol the governmeni desiroyitig the guerrilla movement by grabbing all the leaders in one fell awoop. Further the guerrilla movement has a buili-in self-recruiting mechanism. Every lime a bombing is successful, new guerrilla Irihe^ spring up. whose only conneciion lo existing guerrilla tribes is a general dedication to ihe immc cause. Thuif the guerrilla movement gaitis new divisions without risking the exposure of a single man. The army of the Revolulion already exis1. has already engaged in a form of combal, and has evolved a recruiting meehBhim which will keep il growing, at least up 10 a point.

Ihey are convinced Ihal some form of ^io1eni revolulion i^ ahead- Nixon is expanding the ti/e of the FBI, diggmg a hi^ underground bunker for J. Edgar's boys m Washmgton. and moving lo expand the jurisdiction of the FBI ,to cover all campus dtsorden. while piously alluring ihe faithful that he hds no intention of turning Ihe FBI into a Xalional Police Force on ihc model of the Gestapo i^r the N K V P , Remember when the FBI's "Ten

Most Warned" li^t was stocked with bankrobhers and ax murderer?*.' Well, luok again. No sooner does the caplure of Angela Davis remove her name from J. Edgar's shopping list than \\ is replaced by that of Bernadine Dohrn. More and more every day, Ihe FBI is concentrimg its aliemion on politjca I crjmmals, so-called enemies of ihe Male. And if you don'l think that's the potential beginning of an American Gestapo, keep your eyes on ihokc

wanted posters in ihe Post Office. The next face you see may be your own. Or IOOIL at ihe recent Senate Inlernal Security Suhcommitlee hearings, m which law ofHcers from various parts of the country diitpUyed all the heavy artillery they had captured from revoruiionaries ( t h e l r w o r d T ) fc" 'he edi' ficalion of Ihe liftes of Sent. Eastland and Thurmond. While Sironr toyed some w h i t obscenely with a suhmachinegun. a Cali-

Man son & the missing groin clink


ED SANDERS G r c ^ J j k o b w n . Shahrokh Hatami, Rudy AUobelli and Hehei Skelter. And Truman Capote. Things arc getting weirder and weirder at the Hall of Justice at the gas chamber follies. The vigilling x-browed ladies were arrested a few days ago for "loitering" and for trespassing on private property wirhuul the owner's permis:tio[> . . . which raises an inieresling question of who owns ihe Hall of Justice in front o l which Ihe girls were quietly dwelling, complete with a broom to sweep the sidewalk and neal conglomerations of cinihing and steeping material slashed in Ihe shrubbery. They have since been bailed oui and have resumed iheir field positions next to the newsstand at Temple and Broadway, even in ihe rain as Ihey sit huddled beneaih hand-sewn ponchos in dedication to i b c i i father Gregg Jakobson. who was longfissoci3ted with Charles Mani^on during l^bli and l%V, has lestiFied for several days about some sort of change he detecied in Manson following (he release of the while Beatles double album, containing ihose evil songs. "Sexi-Sadic, "Heller Skeher," "Revolution 9." "Piggies" and Ihe one about Blackbird flying in the dead of night. of John Lennon's song aboul hominess as symbolized by the motions of sliding down an attruclion in an English amusemeni park called Heller Ske^ier It made one want to roll in the aisles w i i h bughler. The only thing evil one could find upon listening to the song about a hundred times might pos&ibly I K whai appears to be electric sitar overdubs from the left speaker during Ihe doub k lade which sounds, in the mind more finely luned by marijuana, like an endless insect march of wrecked maniacs. Other than that, what is there to Heltcr Skelter? It is impossible to Itnow what combination of forces prevents the truth from coming out. but this motive of Htlter Skelter is a huge concretion o l mule mucojs. I l is not Ihe burden of the prosecution l o prove a motive in order i o gain a conviction, so why keep up this hype about a black-while race war? The peopte of l-Os Angeles are entitled to the truth and not a duplicilous gibberish sandwich. I have no access to any heavy investigaiion files, nor have I talked to un> cops, but 1 know enough aboul ibis case lo know thai the true story of Charles Manson and ihe true story of events from Last July I. 1 % * , through Augusi 10. I96Q. is many years probably from public presentation.

Where does it go from here? Expect a rapid rise in bombings and the beginning of a lung series of political assassinalions^ The next step n\ay he the Qsiablishmeni ol guerrilla sanctuaries, small urban sections in the ghettos and in places like Berkeky where the police can only go in massive force. Along with this may come the iKginmng of really sierioui sabotage. Our lechnological society i t peculiarly vulnernhle to sabotage. A well-placed bomb in a power station can plunge a great meiropoliian area into darkneu; Ihe destruction of key computers can throw an i n d u i l t i a l complex or a governmental department into chaok. If a few thousand terrorists want to bring America to an angry, assgrinding halt, it's really nol Ihat difficult. A couple of hundred key asiassi nations, a thousand welhplaced bombs, and a highly-sophisticated leehnQlogical culture like our own would be left staggering and sputtering. And I ben whal\'

He was ID be praised when he informed us Ihat he was nol going lo write .i book about the murders. He was recently stomped into the slams in Santa Ana for a couple of days because he balked a l testilymg for the prosecution in a murder case after he had interviewed in depth the alleged murderer in that case. Terry Melcher WKK supposed l o show up the other day i o ielify lor the prosecution, bul he burned them for his limen supposedly being in Soston at the precise momeni he was scheduled l o appear m the D A \ of^ce to talk over his testimony. In aniicipaiion of his teslimony. M r . Melcher had a one man picket line waiting for him. should he have shown up for there was a gentleman bearinga placard walking back and forlh outaidc the Hall of Juilice evidently claiming ihal Marty Melcher. his father, who died several years ago. had been poisoned. Only in L A , O Ptah. o r l y here in Honkville.

One need only look at what the nslioiial government if doing to see that

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When you look paU 1471. sober prognoitlcation becomn indistinguishable from the most lurid science fiction. What this country will lie like during the Preiidcntial Blcetion campaign of I9?2 (assuming the election is held} beggars description. The Revoluimn has begun: the guerrillas are in ihe streets and the bombs are exploding. Can the Revolution lie won? Can it be crushed? O r will America endure what Vietnam has endured a quarter century or more of continuous guerrilli warfare? Jakohsan could have been much more damagmgto Mr MansoII ihan he actually WBK. There are many more things i o which he could have testified had he been more viciously opprobrious t o Manson Jakobson was genuinely affectionate lO' ward some asperls of that complex person Charles MansoOn particularly his music* his singing, hi personal magnetismnot to mention the magnetism of Ouish. But il is difficult to n u k e sense of his testimony because of all (his bullshit about Heller Skeller^ On CTOst examination, living Kanarek. with a dry drone sounding like a Bob Newhart comedy routine, read ihe lyrics Truman Capote showed up the nther day in court and he wa:i quickly spotted by the same two jurors who spoiled Rona Bhrreii when iihc visited during I i n da Kas^L>ian\tesi4mon> Rarely do Ihc j u r o n all stare in the direction of the specialor seals, but when Mr. Capote strode in to the courtroom attired in a dark gray suit, lassled black shoes, round. gold rimmed tmied eyeglaises and a black tie, they made notice by punching one another gently in the arm and even bubrisiously pointing m hi direction. One had the opportunity o l talking wiih Mr, Capote and he is great. Mekher will testify that he decided not to produce a documenlary movie about the family ^hich was to involve a sound inick and record o l Manson'i >ongs. He probably will not testify aboul much else probably except thai he was once driven home in a Rolls hv Dennis Wilson and Gregg Jakobson while Charlie was silling singing in Ihe back seat. This was in ihe spring of 1%B white Melclkcr was stdl living at lOOM Cielo Drive. Ihe house of the later mur der?, Nor will he testify about the famous Malibu Beach home. Nor will he testify about Ouish For Ihe very decentraliution and diffusion that makes Ihe guerrilla tribes so impossible for the government to decisively crush will riuke h impossible for the revolutionaries l o actually win a final victory. There is nol even any firm agreemeni on what Ihe practical goals of ihc revolution are. Shahrokh Haiami, Sharon Tale's personal photographer^ who w a i working filming her one day in March of l % 9 nt she packed to go to Rome to work on the movie. TUWiv Pim One Chain. testified. M r Hatami-was preparing a documenury film tan Miss Tate and a short hirsute man approached the houic I ipU^9e turn to p o f r 12) I But a lot of people are fed up enough with things as Ihey stand to reach for their rifles and bomba; Ihey don't agree on whal they're for. bui they bloody well Itnow who and what they're againii. And the AnMrican EiiaMishmeni knows full well that thetc revolutionaries arc its implacable enemie*. II sounds like the foimula for one long mother of a civil war.
Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

Pitched battles between gucrrillai and poltce,* Mass ar^on and the burning of cities? Ambushed.' Pogroms? Concenrmiion Camps where lenglh of hair need be the only entraivcc re(jmremeniV A coup by the US Army or a scries of lDi;al coups by police? Foreign intervention? Chinese volunteers'

Copy #A72 - Do Not Post - Do Not Copy

Page 12

OctoUr 23,1970
n and I lalked l o ChamberLin in prjvale. 1'U give you a final siaiui report on ih 30ih in ihe Frecp. However. I sugscbl Long :fke^c<l ^hins, caniecns of waier. handkerchjefi, rcdball Jci sneaker?, cic.

Lo0 Angelca Free Preaa

'Oct. 31 O u t N o w ' status report


CONNER Thr pulice hoaid has thumbed its nose al u^ again. Miindamn Ym^ Chir n e u i i inauU was sneered n u i in parental aloofness. Wednesday Oc:t.|4ih. ihc "Ociober 31 Oui N o * Commaice" wa& told, " N o , yon may not have J permit '.o hold a peopk's march Trom Pershing Square to the City Hall," and. "No, you may not have a permit ID hi>ld a people's rall^, to prttlir^il the war. at Ciiy Hall." Belorc it kills this countryTMr And (hos? \o* I.Q. jawboneis are worried about the E O M sale and S50.00 wonh of t\t gias^ rftd. l'\c 'alf a notion If rife them all or lurn *cm m to the DepL of Mental Health. you will hold the demonstration even without a LEGAL permir?^ I guess Dave^& answers wren^i newsje enough and the interro^fcrrr wanted him to say something booming like, "listen, you peoplefuciers, if you don't give us the permit we'll march left over your righteous asses," L was gritting my leeth and thinking, ", , . c'mon, Dave, say n. . , he wants lo hear you say it so say it. . . j u m p up and punch him off thai chair."

S*t. Oct. 3410:30 t o m i d n i t f i t nOMEIITSCHCCII

PATHICK f RAWLCV
(Mt. Tflchnicolor)

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


The reasons fur denial ate:
The encu'iCi lor denial are: I ) ihe 1ai*n ha" h t t n Ireshly seeded and the people might damage it. 2} a new ciiy poUc> It i o nor allow poliiical demonslTalions on governmcil property. 2) a^embling thousands o l peop k in the downtown area uvill create traffic problems which will inierlcre * n h " R A P I D " iran*<ii s>'siem^ and p i o e n i added difficuhy because of ihi: crowd attending the rouimc End O f The Month Saley The - O u i Now Committee'" has made efforts to effeciively carry out and meet every kgal prerequisite for permits. Since there has been no mistake (he police board has found need to construct pedy barricades. This forces the commiiiee t o hire iawyers and do court baltie in hope ol winning the march and rally permits Friday, October Ife, a pri:si conference was held at 10:30 a,m. at the Temple United Methodist Church. Saul <Sa-oolJ Sancedo (Pres., Cal Slate I -A Student Government). John T. Williams (V.P. teamsters I'mon local 20^1. and Dave Chambcrtin Iregioiial Student M o b orj^m^er) met the media Saul Sancedo read a brief siaiemeni with the pleasant tone ol sarcasm which only us revolutionaries dig. He accuKd (he puliec board of being petty and inid it was juiit a mutter of lime before the people put a halt t o this brand of tyranny. I raised a clenched fist and ihi: Carnale smiled a wee bit ^o agreemeni-

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There seems lo be a cUmate of i n sanity with ihe puppet-pohce board and (heir puppcieeis, profiteers, inc. Somebody up there has lo be either insane, menially retarded or drunkFigure thi: ihou&ands of people warn to march d u u n one of ourovitstreelb twhich we paid to build) and assemble on (he lawn at Cily Hall f b o i h of which are paid lor by us. the people} and voice our right of protest (o our leaders (whose salary we pay). W e u a n i iu march i n d shout, "STOP this insane war! Stop killing people! Slop!

Channel 11 asked Williams if he wanted to take off his windbr^.^jl^cr before the cameras started, s>ncc it bad the Teamsters Union insignia on the f f o n i . Coo! John said "Hell no. . . I belong to the onion so \ can wear the jacket" I was surprised (he> didn'i ask him t o take o l t his skin lest he be identified as a black

Channel 5 kept asking Chnmbcrlin whiit the commiiice would do if the permits weren't won in court. Dave I t p t saying, "we are going to challenge ^he denial and remain determined to carry ihnjugh with the march and rally," But " 5 rihe Tom Reddm police station) U e p i s a y i . i j , ' ' p t i vou mean to say thai

Saul used about ISO words, all of which can be found in cursory exammalion of the dictionary- - if one can read Cinr of those words was " I m p<:rialism" Thi!^ /inged the sphincter muscle of a baldheaded M newsman (Putnam's Tednecksl. much resembling Nikiia, who WB> squatting low on the lloor looking under tables and shoelaces for Communists. When Saul said, ". . , imperialism", the dude shit all over himself. ""Vou used the word i m perialism. , that's a comminist word . . is thta thing comminist'T I don'i know if he felt he got an answer because we were all ton busy laughing at the paranoid Jerk. That ended the news conference. We went back to the committee of-

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Where oh where is Dennis Wilson?


teoniinuedfrom poge 3}
looking for someone M r Hatami direcied him t o ihe back house in order for (he perHHi tuask the o ^ n c r o f the properly about Ihe ikought individual. if it is flllowed into evidence, Rudy Altobclli. the owner of the so-called -Tate" house, w i l l testify that be had met Manvod at Dennis Wilson's house in I96S, that around March 23, t % 9 . Maruon cmme to Ihe t o t a l l e d back h o u u or guest houw in which he lived, and he aiked where be might locate Terr> Melcher. Haiami looked great on the witiwss tiand with elegant chrseled Iranian featurei, his hair long and swept back in an A r t i i i d i a n Cuhion with white lufis hanging on each ear. He was knxious, O Ra. to get off the wittwss stand in order to return to Europe where he is on heavy anignment l o r a m a ^ / i n e . He could not poiiiively identify Marison as Ihe vuiior of inarch. 1969. Sharon Tale, he tcMified, outw to the door to u k who i i it? a i Mansort allevntly walked dovfk the qwner-ellipsis sidewalk (hat curvei from the driveway to the front door of the hoiue on Cielo Drive. The proiecutiork. at this point, is alleging eyeball c o n t i c i beiwccn M i s t Tate and M r . Matison and nothing more^ I f anyone could cast light on certain bewildermg aspects of the case, he certainly could. There are rurnnrs alloat that M r W i l i o n , * h t n questioned by the aulhorities. adopts a mishiga attilude and ^ c a k s in vague Enochian terms. So the rumor is thai he will not testify. And thus Mr. Kanartk will not be able to elicit from him. on cross exammaiton, the surprising list o f famous starlets, childitn of cnlenainment giants, and people with hot careeij all with whom Manson chnked groins.

The Peace Action Council

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Sunday Evening, October 25, 1970, 8:00 p.m. Embassy A u d i t o r i u m , Grand Avenue between 8th & 9th Streets Dougtu

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"^ Members of the Seattle Liberation Front
f o r political activity f^rflowjng th verdict I n I h a Chicaeo C o n t p i r a c y Case. Recendv Indicted under the " R i p B r o w n L a w "

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Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

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Los A n g e l e s F r e e P r e s s

November 6, 1970

Pages

Beausoleil, Manson, Death Row & the gas chamber, revisited


ED SANDERS It seemed incongruous to be discussing Frank Zappa with a condemned man on Death Row, San Quentin. Rut we were. Bob Beausoleil and I, sitting ina litlluyellow room together during a nervous hour wherein the subject went from murder lo music tci Tim Lcary to Aloister llrowley. Visiting San t^ucnlin was wonderful. I took a bus from San Francisco north to San li^ifiiel and then copped a Yellow i'^b to the austere bayside prison. They 7ap you with a metal scanner; then you walk up (heflower-lined road to the visiturs' lurret, whereat you announce the name of the person you intend to visit. The waiting roomhasbenches similar to those in bus depot waiting rooms and the walls are lined with a r t t^urhs by the inmates, all for sale. There aredisplhy rases filled wilh handcrafted Jenelry and tealherwork. cable car desk lamps and woodworkings of various kinds. Softly in Ihu background plays the country music station. Wailing lo see Bob Beausoleil on? was treated to Roger Miller, a Johnny Cash ti>p 20 golden hits album commercial from Columbia Records, and the Tammy Wynette song about how difficult it is to be fAithful to Just one man, especially if he is a creep. Manson became public knowledge and it became obvious that if he were not given the death penally then Charles Mansion fAKA Devil) prot>abl^ would not receive it-only then did Kvelle Younger and his underlings decide to kill him. It must ever be remembered that in his first trial, ending in a hung jury, the prosecution did NOT ask for lung-snuff. And for over a year the papers haveburied thousands ofimportantissues benenUh a myriadofheadl]nD!iand hype stories about this relatively unimportant series of murders. Vou don't see anyhcadlinesabout napalmed rice paddies, Vou don't see any headlines about the payoffs connected with this case. You don't hee any conciliation or peace in the papers. The newspapers a r e likea devilish sermon of fire, with their endless pages of ads of badly made life props, with their boring collations of butchery. And Manson i s a n a l c o holic editor's dream come true an oversexed, acid-gobbling, long-haired, nearly middle-aged, song- singing, devil - worshipping, bastard son of a teen-age proslilute who thinks he's Jesus and who formerly was arrested for white slavery. With people like Manson on the front page, you don't have to do any serious investigative reporting. And the authorities can shoot as many Mexican - Americans as they want. And the real criminal.^, the criminals with the computers and the oil slicks, walk around worshipped. Meanwhile, back at the Hall of Justice, the prosecution is preparing to rest their case. Rudy Altobelli. the sharp-witted gentleman who owns the house at IOUJO Cielo Drive, testifiedabout his encounter with Charles Manson on March 23, 19fi, when Charlie came lo the guest house Uioking for Terry Melcher. Mr. Altobelli had met ManFion t>efore at HenniB Wilson's house, Altobelli testified that he told Manson that Terry was living out in Malibu, prot>ab|y with his mother. berate scheme to trigger off the destruction of the United States by black militants. 1 mean, come off it. The real ^lory will be told, and it is already typedand linked away safely. Paul Watkins, famous for his National Enquirer "I WasSalan's Second In Command" article of many months a^o, testified also about llelterSkeller. Walkins was at one point, according to his t e s timony, an avid follower of Mr, Manson, He thought Manson lobe Je.sus, in fact. Ron Hughes asked some interesting questions ofMr. Wathins on cross-examination, such as; "Can you tell us about Charlie's power?" TowhichWalkins answered, "It's a maze of agreements and implied agreements." Hughes also askedacouple of questions abouta legendary event in thehistory ofthe Family: The Miracle at theHouseonGresham Street. Manson, according unaliated. There once was a stunt man ranchhandaltheSpahnRanch who disappeared. His car,loaded up with all his ge^ir (minus his matched pihiols) was discovered in Canoga Park after he disappeared. According lo many sources, he was beheaded after a few weeks of friction with certain people. Anyway, one Vern Plumlee, a former " m e m t w r ' of the Family who is currently held for some stabbing In Long Beach* led the police recently on a skull search of the burnt Spahn Ranch, which included a search of a large waler tank high on the hills north ofthe ranch- Vem clainted lo the fuzz that Clem told him that Shorty was buried by a eampfire down the creek by the cave, but only chicken Iwnes were discovered'niis is about the fifth time that a massive search for Shorty's body has been undertaken. Raneh raids) about the activities of Manson and the Family, Mr. Gardiner and Mr.Gibbons, whoare employees of the Inyo County Districi Attorney's office, came up with some interesting data. However, what power on earth could have predicted that the pretty and nubile Miss Like would turn up a year later with Mr, Gardiner as her foster father!? Any waj, early Ihisyear she was admitted, as a minor, into Paton State mental hospital. Her legal parents tried to visit her and to claim her but were told to fuck off. Hospital lackeys diagnosed her as follows: lllagnosis: 29S.00 Schizophrenia, chronic undifferentialed type (with group delinquent reaction). 30^.58 Behavior disorder of childhood and adolescence. 304,7 Drug; dependence, halluclnoKens (prominent). Prognosis: Extremely guarded for any improvement in thisgirl.'* A Conservator was appointed for herthe Inyo County Coroner. She remained in the nut hatch until this past August, even though she was reported by her captors to be sane atraul a week after she was committed. Afterher release from Paton Hospital she bas lived with her foster father- In coming to court to testify the othe r day shelmrea starting resemblance to Ihe English cousinin the Patty Duke Show, with her hair combed tn similar manner, her face scrubbed shiny and a white sailor shirt and blue skirt covering her body, which seems to be tending toward chub-chub. In honor of her impending testtimony the i-browed girls vlgiling outside moved Insidethe group of snuff s u b - a l t e m s moved inside to wall for Snake Lake. Aa she walked into court escortedby her "Father"* and by one of those smllhig deputy DA's who tookthc place of Aaron Stovitz, Squeaky yelled out. *You ain't plastic and you know It. You can't turn your back on love.' At 1 write this Snake hasnH actually testified but, as of a hearing on her ability to remember events of summer-fall 19G9, she has been i d judged c o m p e t e n t t o t e s t i ^ . S h e l a etLpected to testify regarding conversations she heard about the death of Rosemary LaBianca and also about the disposal of certain items pertaining to the LaBianca crimes.

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


Beausoleirs name was called from the speaker ,system and we walked into the visitors room. F o r condemned prisoners, visits a r e conducted in private locked cell so 1 was placed immediately in this ten by siv yellow rcHim and clang clang the door was locked behind me. Soon Bob a r rived and relieved for us the grim sensation of being alone in a locked celL Beausoleil hadheeded the Man!<on appeal to > i (he forehead, and his was almost healed. He was attired in jeans and a blue denim work shirt, hi.s chin covered with a shortgoatee. He seemed calm enough. One had heard many times of the strange change in Ihe behaviorof condemned men on Dealh Row. whereby they allegedly become rather brutish and choppishly feral. Not so. it seems, with Beausoleil. who seemed calm and rather placid, given the c i r cumstances of possible future green lung invasion. We talked of many things; of the days in San Kranti^co when Beausoleil lived with filmmaker Kenneth Anger and helped Anger make "Lucifer Rising"; *tt the T < ^ n g a Canyon days of 1968 when Beausoleil played an Indian seout in the immortal tennis shoe Indian classic. Hamrodder;oMho long-ago day!i when he participated in those innocent Mothers freakouts, "Frank used to let me gel up on stagesing harmony on the Oldies but Goodiesyou know, with Vlto and the others," he recalled. He mentlonedhuw he had visited t^appa in thesprlngof 19G9 and tried to interest him in recording the Family; but evidently there was no interest. Irving Kanarek, when c r o s s examining Mr, Altobelli, almost created a few heart attacks in the defense camp when he asked Altobelli the following question: "When was the first lime, Mr. Altobelli, that youhadoccasionto recall the purported presence of Mr. Manson on your premises in what you say is March of 1969? When was the first time you had lo recall it after it allegedly happened'.'" Altobelli answered: "When I was Hying to Rome with Sharon,^ Well, when he said this, everybody thought that Altobelli was about to gun down the whole helterskelter motive for the murders, Kanareh was quick lo change the line of questioning, even though AUobelli interjected that he was willing to explain his answer. Nor did the prosecutor, Mr. Bugliosi, go into it on redirect e i amlnation. Mr. Beausoleil is reticent in the area of conversation dealing with the murder of (iary Hinman. As you know, he finKored Mr. Man,son out as the snuffer when he testified at his second trial, but since then he has given no indication that he is sticking by thai story. But none, either, that he is not sticking lo his testimony. Time will tell. Whatever happened, Beausoleil is a now-gene ration American, ills parents a r e straight, lawabiding ILS. citizens who pray before their meals. During Rob Beausoleirs second trial we had lunch with Ihem several limes at the various hideous cafeterias in the downtciwn public buildings, and one heard prayers for the first time in ten y e a r s . They shod up for their son with a Confucian fervor throughout his trials. It*s hard tohnow whathappened but certainly the HornetGodsummcmed hy Iho early Acid Tests descended upon Robert Kenneth Beausoleil. who is legilly dead. And it is the media and Iheirclients, the blood-thirsty ghoulbrains of the public, thai will have sent him to the gaschamber, Eor only after his association with

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Frank Fowles, the District Attorney of Inyo County, testified about some sound tests he conducted recently at the Myers Ranch in the Death Valley National Monument. His testimony was given to add strength to Barbara Hoyt's testimony thai she heard Susan Atkins say that Sharon Tate was the last to die because she had to watch theothers die first. The overheard conversation allegedly took place inside the Myers Ranch, which i s abouta quarter mile up Ihe wash fntm the famous Barker Ranch. Brcmks Postin, famous in Mansnniun circles for his ability to enter into the trance state at will, testified about the meaning of "Helter Skelter" in terms ofthe prosecution's contention that Sharon Tate. Jay Sebring, Voityck Erykowski, Sieve Parent and Abigail Kolger died a s part of a deliFowles really wasn't neededal the trial, but he probably was brt)ught down by the prosecution as a courtesy measure. Hedidnot testify about the famous file of nude photos ofthe Family, including the whispered-over MansonLitlle PaUy-Clem-Brenda circle slurp. Nor did he testify aboullhe camera equipment confiscated at the Barker Ranch in October of 1969 or the film therein which, according to the authorities, when developed tunned out to l>e blank. The continued search for Ihe head of Shorty O'Shea continues Vern Plumlee is famous in Mansonian circles in that, armed with a sawed-off shotgun, he creepy crawled the homes of Jack Jones, the star, and Marvin Miller inJulyof 1969. From the home of Jack Jones, creepy crawled at 2 AM even though the lights were on, the c . - c . - e r s 1{K>konly a cowboy hat. For veril> they creepy crawled tmly to e\pi'ricnce Ihe tidal wave of the Ureal F e a r , One of the last prosecution witn e s s e s is to be Dianne Lake, who had lived with Charlie Manson for almost two year- . i r l o r l o h e r a r r e s t in Death Vai: > in October 1969, After h e r a r r ^' Jind after the further a r r e s t s (tgardinglhe murders, she wa^pl^rced in an insane asylum through a frightening police state-like collusion of Ihe Los Angeles nistrict Attorney, Ihe Inyo County llislrict Attorney and hospital auihorlties. In late December 1969. Dianne Lake (known ah Snake to the family) was ejilen-,ivel> interviened by one Jack tiardiner and one Buck GiUlons (Yimous in that he confiscated Sandy (iood's breasi pump during the Barker court reads thai he ia "rapidly reverting to a fetal state." And you can better beheve that the D-A. is not going to let Tex Wat> son Into a nut hatch unless he is really in heavy orbit. Even now, however, officials a r e veryhesi^ lani to say that he Is really Insane, but rather say that "he's doing it tohlmR^ir" If he dies, it will be the fault of the Districi Attorney's office t>ecause Charles Manson, in front of wltneascfi, offered to bring him out of It. Manson is alleged to have said, ".lust give me ^0 minutes with him alone and r l l bring him l>ack," Where was Sharon Tate on August 2. 1969?
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Interestingly, Altobelli testified ihaiwhen he was rushing back from Europe after the murders, he thought of Manson as a possible suspect but did not blow it to the police when they questioned him. Then the prosecution was Roing to bring to the stand a Sgt. Maupin. who works in thellallof J u s tice escorting prisoners around. Allegedly, Manson (last June 10), offered Maupin $11)0,000 lo help him escape. The idea is so absurd that Charlie could have 100 grand aroundunless the rumors that Manson has two secret sponsors a r e trueitissoabsurdthal it would seem to me to detract from Ihe main body of evidence the prosecution has presented, rather than add to iL In any case something must have happened in chambers to prevent it, because I don't believe that the good s e r gCninl got to testify in front ofthe jury.

to legend, had his membrum virile bitten in twain by ayounglady named Bo in Ihe spring of 1969, causing blood lo spew in all directions, Manson. through magical healing powers, was able to sew himself together and heal the sutures, all in one occult swoosh* so that even the s c a r s were removed, Walkins testified that he, himself, had not seen Ihe event, but [hat it occurred when Manson and the others were living on Gresham Street in Canoga Park.

We checked with Thomas Noguchi. Ihe L.A,Coroner,when the rumors about the Sheriff's Office looking anew forMr.tl'Shea were spreading about. It is known that lievil's Canyon was held to be sacred long ago when Indians lived nearby. Well, evidently Hhen they were digging in Devil Canyon early this year for Shorty, they uncovered some sort of Indian burial ground, a fact that hampered operations in that each skull had lo be exmained as to its age and likeness to the one sought. They have not found Shorty.

In addition, as of (certain interviews we have undertaken over Ihe months. Miss Lake has some interesting data in her mind r e garding the Gary Hinman murder, data wtilch would in our opinion cast considerable light on the reality of that grim tragedy.

On Friday, O c t o b e r 3 0 , there was a hearing to declare Tex Watson insane. Everybody knew that Watson was out of it. The former all-district halfback for Farmersvllle. Tejtas HlghSchool was down from ISO pounds t o l l O ! One kept hearing from various officials, "Aw, he's just malingering!" But there was and i s some danger that he will die, and the last thing Sheriff Peter Pitchess wants is for Tex Wataonto die of malnutrition in the Los Angeles County JaiL So the human skeleton of Charles Watson has twen shipped to Alascadero SUte Hospital, where probably they will thorazine him up for a few months and feed him some sort of liquid mounds bar through the nose for a while andthenship him t>ack for trialthai is. if he doesn't die; and the ^ecretgossip in the Hall of Justice is that death is imminent. The report to the

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Lo Angeles Free P r e s s

November 13, 1970

ManBon trial pessimism

It's time to pull the plug on the honkoids and creeps

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


I c a n t r a c e t h e exact circumstances, day and hour, whereupon I became forever a pi;hhimi:it in all matters relating to human conduct in liOS Angeles.lt was 3;58 pm, AugustZT, 1970. I was sitting in the inelegant Hall of Justice, watching Justice attempt to be civilized. Dr. Katsuyama. the deputy medical examiner of the County of LOB Angeles, was standing at a large upright paper chart whereon was drawn, in caricature, the out Line of the body of Lino l^Blancaeverybody knows that the word war was scratched on Mr. l,aBLanca's stomach, and it would seem thai mere mention of the fact should have hufficed. I'm sure the defense dtiorneys would have stipulated that there were such wounds upon him. However, Mr. Katsuyama, who t e s tified thai he stopped counting the number of autopsies that he had performed after his SOOOth. was called upon lo draw upon Ihe diagram the way that (he word was carved into the full, rotund stomach of this businessman viclLm. To do this, he held up a color pholo with his left hand-a photo of the actual scratching in the flcshwhile he drew with his right. The stand upon whU'h Ihe drawing was taking place was right next lo the j u r o r s ' box, and several j u r o r s were obviously freaking out at Ihe picture, in ghastly surreal color almost haviuK that Andy Warhol silkscreen quality from which Mr, Katsuyama was sketching. The stomach g r e e n , the scratching seeming to be magenia in c o l o r looking like two double rows of X's which, upon closer look, became Ihe bayonet cuneiform WAR the Klyph of our demented a^^. So whal is to becomeof murdere r s ? That's what 455 humans on various death rows around the United States would liketoknow.f say. give Ihem a pleasant island and let them chop to their hearts'conteni, because there's no such thing as being judged by one's peers given the sharp class distinction in America. Witness the grim Iroop filling the j u r y b n t i n t h e c u r r e n l i r i a l . Juries a r e almost always composed of bartaric punks, eagerfor blood it seems, and vengeful at h e a r t - n o t to speak of the obvious fact they a r e representatives, usually, of the oppressor class. So, to turn the lives of m u r d e r e r s o v e r t o these Howard Johnson wolverines is a joke- S o a l s o i s i t a j o k e to turn ' T e l l il l i h e l t w a a ' s h o u l d b e t l i e motto of the defense, and it could be the most interesting social aa^ tire since Juvenal blew the whistle on Ihe Roman theater crowd in 50 AD. And it wiU be that, l f - l n d e d - t h a t la in the game plan of the defense and/or If the defense can hack die pissoft vectors and thv preasure. Another thing, before I tahe soma psilo-cybin.Thc prosecution i s evidently going to try to have awom into ovidence for the Jury to ponder, when they deliberate, some seven large color photos of the murder victims (prosecution exhibits 87-93), which a r e aaghastly a s anyone can possibly imagine inflammatory, prejudtclal, creepy, n i ^ t m a r i s h , and,..well, you might want, automatically, to condemn your own mother Ifshe was on trial for such a crime and you saw those photos. These a r e thephotoa that sent Linda Kasabian intohysterics, and Ihe ones of which allof us court o b s e r v e r s have been catching glimpses throughout the months of the trial. 1tisol>sceneto make andblow up such colored photos for a jury to see. Small black and while snapshots might t>e a c ceptable. For instance, incivildamage suits, such garish color photos a r e not allowed lobe presented twforc a jury. LeI's hope they a r e quashed from the exhibita. Happiness Is a warm gun bang bang shoot shoot No radamption Bond-slaves rapped in the hides of wolverines raid the warehouse No redemption prison s>''t<m- And ii's time to bring il om into Ihe open, time lo expose [he werewolf reality of the American Kclt-ghouls and their lackies, I'd rather be in a concentration camp any day than be a professio^ial oppressor bootlicker for the LOS ANGELES TIMES o r irPl, There is no such thing as justice in l.os Angeles. Manson has not had a fair trial, and Ihar^ alt there is to il. The prosecution has been allowed to bring in four months of hearsay that wouldn't let Manson goon tour with the Beach BoysinMayof 1969. Jail the ponk-honks thai allowed the police state tosetuphelicopter patrols in the valley last year.Jail ALL the murderous o p p r e s s o r s then we can start talking about justice and the dignity of ihe law. In any case, the defense will begin shortly, and il should be interesting, since the defense has subpoenaed some very interesting people. Perhaps, at long last, under oath (ha, ha!> a certain person What about the bloody ribbons draped over the bach of the Dutch front door? What about the police blood test, done on a certainwhipcord? What about the glasses that were found, face down, and opened up, by Roman Polanskl's btoodspotled blue steamer trunks near the hallway of the Cielo Drive house? What about all Ihe unaccounted for fingerprints? What about all the screams at four am, three hours after emphasis, AFTER-Ihe murders? The screams of the napalmed nil the mind of the future novelist No redemption The future Judges in the name of America fly above the neih-fry, fly above the paddies No redemption No redemption No redemption

ED SANDKKS There is truly no redemption. Thp basic question i^ whal its sooiciy does with m u r d e r e r s . The honkoids of the cold war, those who sit in the Pentagon drooling; over blueprints for fragmentation bombs and Ihe murder of orientals, th<^y a r e rewarded after their stintfi of murderous service with the vJctpresidcncy of precision parts in missile factories. Or with slock options. Or with endless lecture babble about Ihe beauty of battle fields of blood.

a human i.tc over to pt'opJe like Judge Ohi I, a Reagan appointee, the forms'i i;oneral counsel for the Flying Tii'tT Corporation, and a man so urKKLlled at criminal law as to mahc iine laugh. Is it possible to glaze it over, chuckle, iind say thatManson isobviously Kuilly, so fuck him?Either you're fiinn^ to have a just, democratic governmentor let^s bring il out into the open and start setling up the camps and the slave bins. For that's what Manson is a product of; social injustice and a slave s y s t e m - i . e . . the American

Rossip in Ihe most scandalous manner. The judge, all along, should have pui some of these establishment lackies in Jail. When the Herald-Fvaminer violate*, the ^ag o r der: 7ap the molhorfuckers in Ihe slams. When Juan Flynn preened for the cameras: zap him. When Ibose nouveau - flooiy snitches, Howard and Graham, started cooing to the media; jail them. Jail thai mod lawyer: Caruso. JailSlovitz. Jail all these people thattook bribes. Jail the cops that rippedoff Rudy Altobelll's guesthouse after the murders. Jail that parole creep

^ut^ioenaed, who was connected wilh the famous Monlerey Pop F e s tival, will have to tell whal happened to the hundreds of thousands of doll a r s missingevidently ripped off - f r o m the festival. HA ha. Or will evidence ofalesblan Hollywood coven be uncovered? Or will there be the entrance into the trial spotlight of a blond-wigged, 290-pound black drag queen? Whal about Ihe obvious fact that, during the murders, William Garret son was not, absolutely NOT, in the guest house where Officer De Rosa found him the next morning?

Whal about the dope smuggling map found in the house? (This is not to ca^i aspersions on dope smuggling. Some of the fineslpeopie smuggle the finest dope past the border creeps^) What about the films found In the Bahamas. In Virginia, in a room off the loft in Ihe murder house? Andatacertain agency? What about the famous whip whip party of August 6? What about a man named Small, wanled for dope dealbig, who allegedly claimed that he was ihvolved in the murders? What about the 12000 cocaiiiv bum? The bad mescaline? The -HaU SaUnf crowd?

Phone call paranoia

The Black Mass bombers are going to blow it all away


JOHN HARBINGER (The following information was lahen down in Shorthand, over the phone, last Tuesday morning al three a.m, I had been awakened by an intense voice which demanded that I gel a tape recorder because "I'm going to give you the straight dope on Ihe bombings." {I responded Ihat I didn't have a recorder, butthatlwouldgetapencil and paper- The voice agreed, and what follows is the result of that session, slightly edited for cfflicisenessJ V: Talking at>out Ihe bonlbingsAll them pig stations and banks and laboratoriesH: Wail. You're saying that a group called the Black Mass is r e sponsible for some of the bombing Ihafs be^n happening? V: Right on! We doing it and everybody else is getting the c r e dit. We getting tired of taking a back seat. H: Just Ahal bombings a r e the, uh. Black MJI-'S claiming credit for? V: Isia Vista, for one. We did Isia Vista, We burned it downHi Thai's not a bombingV: We dnn'l just do bombs. We HARBINGER: Okay, I've got my bum things, loo. We b u m a lot of stuff. pig c a r s di>wn in WaitsVOICE: You ready to record? H: Wen, okay, but what about H: Yes. Why did you call me? bombings'.' '^'nu were talking about Wt Because we want to get our story told, Vou a writer; you tell bombings. V: Yeah we do them. too. We il like it is. blowed up .; it lab, up in WisconII; We? We who? sin. We bombed il flat. V: Black Mass. We the lllack H: The ruivcrsity thing,inMadMass. We want the world to know about how we doing the work and ison? V: Thar*^ the one, Wt blowed it taking the risk and a lot of them honhie fucks getting all the c r e - down becE.nse they were making stuff for Ihe honkie fuckin" army. dit. H: What work? What a r e you They weri' making things to keep blacks down in the miliUry. So talkine about? we blowed their a s s up! H: Anywhere else? V: Bet your a s s ! We blowed up some pig stations around the country. We blowed some in California and some more In the middle of the country, but those didn't make the neMs so much. We even blowed some in New Vork. H: That all? Vi No, it ain't. We blowed some ROTC buHdings, too, and a couple of armories. We blowed them because they hassle Blacks same as the army. Hi The ROTC? V: Right on! They no better than the big army. They Just a little army, stuck in the honhy schools to keep Blacks down. H: Is thai why you're bombing things? Because they're out to hold down the Black people? V: That's part of it, but it ain't alt. We blowing things up because it's all got to come down. The whole scene is a big honkie chase, see? It's set up to rip off anybody without money and guns, and to keep Ihem down onceyoudone that. It's all a low-energy trip, made lo keep us downH: Didn'tJohnSinclair.theWhite Panther, say that? V: That's right. Sinclair said it. He said that rock-and-roll, dope, and fuckin' in the streets was where it's at; and he's r i g h t an* they thfcw his aas in prison for ten years. One of these days we going to blow a couple prisons. H: II doesn't bother you I h a t ^ n clair is white? V: Listen, man, you missing something. We ain't down on nobody's skin. We down on honideB and pigs. It Just happens thai most ol the honkies and pigs a r e white. Sinclair's a Brother, you dig? H: Yes, I can dig iL t'mgladyou can, loo. V: Right on. Brother. H: You mentioned bombings in a tot or widely-separated places. Does thai mean that you a r e a large organisation, o r a small group that gets around a tot? V: Well, you don't need to know that. Some of us do gel around a lot- Sometimes the same dudes blow three, four places. Just hang around lookin' harmless,then blow the place. We all look alike to Whitey- We aland around the cor-

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ner at a pig station, an' if we took like shoeshbve boys ttiat'a what the pig sees. He wanta to aaa us that way, you know; ha wamausall to be Stepin Petchit. So we use it gainst bim. We shuffle a couple times and he writes us off. No shoeshine boy scares him, Tlw we blow his asal H: And you want to toll me all this? W-. Rlghtt n t e Waaikermen and the Red Siai Tribe ai>d all thtm middle-class honkie ravolutionarles getting all the credit for Ihe work we doing. We don't like it. Maybe we blow a couple Weatharmen, too, thay don't watch out. H: Wall, die Waatharmen a r e a pretty aarious g n u ^ . t h e y sprung Leary. I'm inclined to believe that they have done the bombing they c l ^ m they have. V: Some of It! They donesomeof it. But every time we blow something, they Jump in and take the credit- They want people to think they the only group around doing any bombing. That piss us off. Brother. It piss us off. H: WhatabouttheRedSunTribe? fpiKMe turn to pogt IIJ

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Lo* Angetea Free Preag ED SANDERS Now that It's become, o r shortly will become, apparent thst the key to these crimes, aJJ ofthem.partJy involves dope traffic-we can relax and lake it easy, can't ve. Elmer? The other day, trapped in a hail ot gibberish from a liberal N,Y. newspaper, it became obvious-'it clicked together: the facts, thedata, the events, the people involved " i t was like a scenefromthatmnvie where Peter Falk plays that fumbly but sneaky Detective Columbo. 1 suppose one day or othertrials wilt have to be held by computer, to get around thosehairyproblems of prejudice raised by the Manson case. The Iron Flower bltfon^s in the void. C a u ^ t in^warp of emotion, as we a r e and live, it is one thing; but it will be another thing, five y e a r s from now, readiiiK the amazing transcript of this t r i al, the amazing horde of headlines, the ten o r twenty iKXiks about it. History will puke on it. And I'll be singing the Hope It Don't Puke on Me Too Blues-Sweet Marie.

November 20, 1970

Manson trial blues

Alleununer

An Iron Flower blooms in the void

SrStar 4 "" q * W A too. because Ae ' r a a y t h a B ; ^


caught me took me UDdw ^ f neck loch until I had le pretend to lapse Into unconecloyaneff D ; fore he would let me W - All a u was for a dsnottstratioo lo A r e e small rowboeu wUh * k m e j f ^ ner; ACTION FOR LIFE; e l | M Of us peace creeps, trylnfl to p r e vent, nonviolentiy, with or pMk bodies, the commissionliif of a Polaris siAmarine a s it prepared to begin iia vicll of 200 megaton death off the coast of China. _

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


Mayor, o r President, Ynrty will long since have been hold for ransom, 'napped from his helipad at City Hall as hewasgettingroadi to whirr home for lunch-held in remoteness whilt- ne^otAtJon.^; were made to fmd a country willing to accept, in exile a lefti/ed Charlie Manson m exch:inf;e for the gr>od Mayor. Relax. Relaif, TheLeftwill never ransom Manson out for the following reasons: that I'olilical Pig written in blood; and more importantly, because of his incrcdiblu problems regarding women^s liberation, A theocratic dune bug^y harem is just not the wave wushin^ the shurcs of the future governmeni. Neadtoas to say. honk won. The US Coastguard had a flotilla of cutters to bloch off our boata. When we reached the sub, M scheme was to dive cdT end iMMrd the submarine, an act guaranteed to get us ayear In the afams, P W plc^ plop plopped the frogmen m to the water off the CosBt Guard boats: the one assigned to catdl me. a short red head with a tattoo to Mom on his s r m . w e a r i n g a n a c tual flat top with modified duchtaiU> threshed toward tfie. gray flippers spanking the oily harbor waler-tup, a rope tied aroimd his wai&t leading back to the mother vessel[ leaped from my rohboat with my best flat splash, and Iwat Dr, Duchtails to the dock-whereupon 1 wss rammed by s General Dynamics tugboat and hauled aboard by two pissed-off General Dynamics workers whoweredeputixedfor the day to catch the peace fleet. Thai is the essence of the frenzy of the past few months as we figured out these gruesome eventsFrom a secret mid western source we were able recently t o cop 3 visual on Manson's entire probation files, rap sheets, etc. snd they a r e wonderful. The guy is a product of those sleazy I930's prison riot movies. He had his own apartment in Indianapolis at age 14 when he was arrested (according to Father Powers, a priest who befriended him) for stealing bread; a serious offense for which he was jailed. Because Manson was by himself, the police didn't dig it, and the welfare department insisted that he live infosterhome circumstances^ En five yuars, Man.son nili be d^ 'd; or placed in a tell or bubabm^a-buba scene; ttr free. Sup shuddering; In any ea^e, all or m r i l of Iho facts involvinf^ the real . An_- of how these miirdcrs came au' <. will and can be prinked, N'ot tha, it matters, Kor it is totally unimportant. What \h important is Ui preveni the yuk-yuks and the t:ik's Lodge crowd from trying to stomp down our tenuous culture of freedom and marijuana and psilocybin and sharing and Ra music and new forms of child raisingand distribution of r e s o u r c e s - I o prevent these creeps from tjying W i hit us with a series of pogroms becaijse a few American kids committed a rice paddy massacre in Southern California.

Manson shakes the judge's hand


tion of Charlie Manson's situation then: "He dldn^t have too many people that cared for him. That's the whole thing. They didn^t care If he lived or not,We had hoped that maybe he could start a wholt* new life with a kind of a family In Kebraskfl,'* An article from that year in the Endlanspolis Star reads, In p a r t i e s follows; "Only 14, tie rented his own room and supported tiimself wim odd Jobs and petty thievery, Hts mother turned him Into the city's Juvenile Center where he met Rev. George Powers, a Catholic priest," Father Powers lived near the Juvenile Detention center and used to visit almost dally. Hedeseribes meeting Manson: ' H e s l t r a c t ^ m y attention because he didn't have anyone who ever came to se him o r cared much abcwt him, so I kind of, took over and tried to be sort of a daddy. T guess. And he certainly had a great ni>ed for people in hisllfe, S o , r d t a l ( e h l m o v o r to my mother'e--she remenibere him very well as a kid that sort of followed her around the hous and when she was fixing supper, bp^dbe standing right there wanting to help her," ^He was a very dependent type kid who crsved attention and affection. And never got it, except in n d ' s o c i a l ways,"

For me, the past few monlhfi have been a s weird a s any I've spent since we tried to swim aboard a Polsris submarine for a love-in in 19fiK Throughout that summer of 'Al. we practiced a game tn a Connecticut pond near the sub dock in Croton, in New l^ndon harbcir, called Frogman vs. Pacifist. We would choose roles; then the pacifists would try to swim past and elude the fropnen and board the jnocjPMjp submarine.

Th^s Is a photogrspli of the 14 year old Charles Manson shaking ih^ hsnd of sJudeeHoffniSn.sJuventle Center Judge inlndianspolis, Indians, now d e c s s e d , father Georgp Powers, IheEenll^humanlrarian priest who now lives snd works In the Lower FsslSlderight around the corner from the old Peace Eye Books tor**, arranged to get Charlie inioBoyaTownthrough tht graces of this judge, In IMS, Charlie's admission into Boys Town h i r s m e a pfl^e one story In In^liaTupolls, because Of Father Powers* letter writing campaign. They even ran Charlie's picture In thf Indianapolis Star, Pol^iant, indfed, is Father Powers' descrsp'

So, the fusz were set to send the 14 year old Manson to refonn schoal, but Father Powers wrotea few letters to attempt to set Charlie into Boys Town In NebraeU. Evidently, he was persuaded that Boya Town was a place where be m U i t be happy. Surprise snr* prise, when Charlie dlseoreredtfaat it was just anotlwr grim knBtltutioral creep-trap. So, after a couple of days, he split, Laterttiat fkll of 1949, he was picked up In Indianapolis and began a long, a l most unbroken scries of iall sentences that will probably last well past 3001, Unless Aey gas him^ the chipped tooth boy shaking the hand of the Judge, The man on t r i alformsn^eattjH^^^^^^^^^

American Revolution 1970 - Part 3

Why the present ideological Revolution will fail


NORMAN SPIN RAD One must assume that the gual of any genuine revolution Is lo bring aix>ut existential change In the society In question-thai i s , lo r e o r der the society In ways that will truly Improve the persimal iwes of s significant number of individuals within the society. Maybe that's why there are so few really successful revolutions^ and why most revolutions that dosucceedstrsteglcslly end up In sell-outs and squalid dictatorships. T^jo often, "revolution^" Js conceived of as simply smashing the present order, whatever it maybe, and winging it from there,oncelhe "revolution" is "won," Toooften, "revolutionary p r o g r s m s " consist of ple-ln-the-Sky Utopian bullshit with zero chance of working i n a c ' tual practice and even l e s s chance of gaining any sort of mass a c ceptance. Too often, these revolutionary programs exist primarily as unnegotlable (because they are realistically untenable) demands designed to Justify the power-trip the revolutionaries a r e on. Far, far too often, strategically successful revolutions end up as mean1[^|ess substitutions of one set of shackles for another. and scope of personal freedom, A true positive revolution means richer personsl lives for the Individuals that make up a society through changes in the political, economic, and social structure of that society. Anything less is simply a co-op: the exchange of one set of rulers and thelrldeologyforanother set ufrulers and another Ideology, Why trade a headache fur an upset stomach? Bearing this InmindjWheredoes that leave the Movement, the Sec^ ond American Revolution, the Counterculture, at this iunclure In history? The difficulty of finding a proper name forthephenomenonls nol a g&od sign. Any revolution that has to fall back on calling itself THE Revolution can't have too clear an idea of where it wants to go, or If it does, it must know that its true Sims will probably he unpalatable to the very people It seeks to liberate. Just what a r e the goals of the Revolution? Since "the Revolution" Is not one. coherent party, movement, or force but a kind of loose psychic alliance of many groups^ ideologies,life-styles,and constituencies bound together primarily by a general realization that the present American pulltlcal, e c onomic, and social structure stinks, the overall goals of the Itevolution a r e little more than a set of general criticisms couched primarily in negative terms. Domestically, the Revolution wants an end to racism, an end to all artistic censorship, an end to the economic exploitation of the many by the few, an end to all puritanical laws against drugs and human sexuality. In foreign policy, the Revolution wants anlmmedlate end to the Viet Nam w a r , an end to the interventionist policies which caused the war in the first place, an end to Amer4caneconomic runirol of other countries, and in general, an America thatmlnds Its own business. Couched In these t e r m s , the program of the Revolution sounds about as threatening to the mass of the American people as a forthright declaration In favor of sweetness and light, ll^e problem Is that when the revolutionaries start talking In terms of slogans, demands, ultimatums,andprograms, they have a tendency to foam at the mouth, The extent to which the Revolution Is conimitted to Marxlslsolutlons to these problems cuts lothe heart of the matter, lliere is no getting around the fact that the r e v olutionary critique of American society is essentially Marxist, or at least neo-Marjclsl, There is also no getting around the fact that a successful Marxist revolution tn the United States is a political and military absurdity. forced of the United States, the National Liberation Front, with massive popular sigiport, has been defeated on the field of battle, no matter hov morally abhorrent the fact may seem. If the Pentagon were called upon to crush an allout armed revolution in the United States, it would all be over e x c ^ t for the executions and mop-ups in a month or two. If themostpowerful concentration of military force the world has ever seen finds itself fighting for Its own continued existence, anything In its path will be squashed very, very flat, precisely the direction the Revolution is taking, liie overwhelming majority of the American people simply do not want the entire s o cial, political, and economic e t n i c lure brought down In flaming ruins round them. No people will ever be converted to doctrine which declares that Ihey a r e m o n a t e r i , war criminals, and enemies of hmantty. By demanding total, radical, end Immediate change In the mosttwlligerenl manner possible, the Revolution only makes sny existential chance that much harder to ach-* ieve. Closed minded Ideologlcel rantlnge from the left produce only a corresponding froxen attitude oo the right, and aince It Is the left which i s challenging the statuiqtuOp such stridency tends lo drive the diffident center into the a r m s of social fascism. Which Is not to say thatthe Revolution should abandon the demand for radical, that ia, axIslenUal, change. But the first order of business must he to alter the power structure eitistentially so that further change at least becomae possible, Ute destruction of the preeent two party system would be etiehto existentlel change. With direct e l ection of the president, each afOia various American epllnter n d * tures would have its own political voice, TTiere would be at leaet four major potltlcii parties, possibly more. The country simply could not be governed without cooperstlon between diverse Interests coming together on an eq;uel fptftue turn to pa/if 11}

For simplicity's sake, as well as for honesty's, it would be betterlo call these bullshit revolutions coups, which Is whst they are, and reserve the word "revolution'* for meaningful existential social, political, and cultural change. Changes which hit people where Ihey really live, enhancing their economic well being, psychic health, relationships with their fellow men

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There a r e only two ways of winning a revolution: by force of a r m s , or by winning over the mass of the people. The notion that the military establishment oftheUnlted f!tates can be militarily defeated on the field of battle by anything short of the armed forces of mother superpower is Idiotic. Rven In Viet Nam, where there w e r e ell sorts of political r e strictions placed on the armed rho only way the Ravolutlon can succeed is by winning mass sigport from the American people, period. Whether this s v p o r l finds Its expreasion In Constitutional or Unconstitutional changes In the political and social structure isnot terribly relevant. The American Constitution is flexible enough so that any political, social, or sconomic changes may be accomodated within the legal framework. Ultimately, any government or power structure rules by either the consent of the governedor naked force or a combination of the two. If the Revolution succeeds n winning over the mass of the Amtrlcan people, the inslrumenlslltles of change wilt quickly open up, and nithing more drastic than thevlnning of a national election msyliecome the true expression snd means of genuine existential revolutionary change. If the Revolution continues to alienate the mass or the American people, nothing will be possible. And as things stand now, that is
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Pair* 6

November 2 7 , 1 9 7 0

Lew A n f f d e A F r ^ e P r e s A

Manson testimoBy

^You want a sadistic fiend because that is what you a r e '


(continuHi from p<igr V were alongside the road, that their parents had Kithed them out o r l h e > did not wanilogo to Juvenile HaJI; so 1 did the b5t I could and I took ihem up on my garbage d u m p i n d I toldlhemthi5> that in love there is no wrong. I don't care, t have one law I live b j and I learned it when I wasakidinrerormKchool;it*s donH snitch, and 1 have never snilchedtandltoldthemthatanyihing they do for their brothers andftisters is good, if they do it with a good thought ^ It is not my responsibility. It i s your responsibility. It Is the responsibility you have towardsyourownchildren that you a r e neiflecting, and then you want to put the blame on me again v i d again and again. Over and over again you put me in your penitentiary, 1 did not build the penitentiary and I would not lock one of you up- I could not see locking another human being up. You eat meat with your teeth and you kill things that a r e better than you a r e , and in the same respect you say how bad and even killers that your children a r e . You make your e h l t d r ^ i wltat they a r c , l a m jut a reflection ol every one of you. I have never l e i m e d anything wrong- In the penitentiary I have never found a bad man. Every man in (he penitentiary has always showed me his good side, and circumstAnces put him where he was. He would not be diere; he i s good; bumanr Jufit like the policeman thai a r r e s t e d him i s a good humanE have nothing against none of you, 1 can't judge any of you, B u t I think it i s hightime that you all started lookbtg at yourselves, and judging the lie thatyou live in. I Bit and I watch you from nowhere, and 1 have nothing In my mind, no n u l i c e against you and no ribbons for you. But you stand andyou play the game of money- As long a s you cmn sell a newspaper, some sensationalism, and you can laugh at someone and joke at someone and look down at aomeone, you knowYou just sell those newspapersforpublicopinion, just like you all a r e hung on public opinion, and none of you have any idea vrtiat you a r e doingYou a r e just doing wihat you a r e doing for the money* I b r a Utile bit of attention from someone. I can't dislike you, but 1 wilt say this to you: You havenH got long before you a r e all going to kill yourselves because you a r e all crazy. And you can project it back at m e , and y"u can say that It's me that cannot communicate, and you can say that It's me that don't liave any understan<ting. and you can say that when I am dead your world will tie belter, and you can lock me up ^ y o u ' ' P ^ * ^ " ^ ' > > " < ) y<>u ^^^ '<"*get about mefiut I'm only what lives inside of you, each and every one^rfyoun i e s e children, they take a lot of narcotics because 70U tell them not to. Any cbUdyouput t n a roomandyou tell them, ^'Don't go through that d o o r , " he never thought of going through that door until you told bioi not to go through the door. You go to the high schools and you show them pills and you slwwOtem what not to take. How e l s e would they know what it was unless you tell them? And then you tell them what you don't want them to do In the hopes they will go out and do it and then you can play your game with them and then you can give aitention to them, because you don't give them any of your lonYou only give them your frustration; you only give them your angr; you only give them the bad p a r i of you rather than give them the good p a r t of you. You should all turn around and face your children and Btart following them jnd listening to themITie music speaks to you every day, but you a r e too deaf, dumb and blind to even listen to the music.) ou a r e too deaf, duii^ and blind to stop what you a r e doing. You point and you ridicule. But i t ' s okay, i t ' s all okay. It doesn't really make any difference tiecause we a r e all going to the same place anyway. It's alt perfect There is a God; he sits right over here beside me; t h a t i s y o u r C o d . This i s your God. But let me tell yousomcthingi t h e r e i s a n o t h e r Father and he has much more might than you imagine. If I could get angry at you I would try to kill every one of you, Tf that's guitt, I accept it. These childr. everything they have done, they done for love of their brother. Had you not a r r e s t e d Robert Beausoleil for something he did not do MR. BUGLI05I: Your Honor, 1 am going toobject. This is not proper testimony in or outside the p r e s ' ence of the juryYou a r e slating a legal conclusion as to the guilt or inniHrence of another defendant in another case. MR. KANAREK: Your Honor, if we a r e to have equal protection of the law understood, Mr, Manson was going to make a statement over my objection, of course- and he is speaking. Now Mr- he is entitled he has not Unished his narrative. Now, if there is to be equal protecliim of Ihc law under the Fourteenth Amendment, Mr. Bugliosi should not Interrupt him. Then we a r e going to do our - whatever we a r e going to do, because he is stating thingN which Mr. Bugliosi doesn't like, Mr, Bugliosi i > > initri rupiing and I would ask the protection oflheC'nurl, your Honor. to order Mr. Bugliosi to obey the Court's order. MR. RtlGLlOSl: H i e r e hasn't been any order from (he Court that Mr. Manson can ju^^t rambletm discursively, your Honor, as t Jnadmis^dbLe matttTs. That is the wh<ile point of this pnuoedinj; now - (u determine what his teslimtms iw gninu to bcTHK COURT: I have hecird enough. |)o yiHi have anything else tit fmy --M r M.mMinV TIIK WITM>:SS: I have killed n^> one nMid I have ordered no one to be killed. I dim't place myself in thv SIMI of judKnu'ril. I may have implied im si'xeral iK-casiiHw lu SOXIM'^J differcnl pe^ipk- that I ma> h^ivt^bei^nJi-sus ( h i i^>i, bul I haven't dectdnl yet what I iim or wlii> I am. I Wits given a mime ;kn<l a number and I na>> pul in ,1 t-eir and I have lived in a cell wiih a iMnir ainJ a iiunith^i
I don't know who 1 a m -

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Yesterdayyou cannot p r o v r .\eslerd;i,i hjippeiiod loday. il would take you a l l da,\ ;tiid then il uonEd bo i n m o r r o w , and you can'l p i o \ o hisl week hapiicncd. Vou can'i p r o \ e an>thing evcept to *nui"seir

I am whoever you make me. but what ynu want is a Fiend; you want a sadistic fiend bE^cause that is what you are. You only reflect on me what you a r e inside of yourselves, because I don't care anything about any of you, and I don't care what you do. ] can stand here in front of this court and smile at you and you can do anything you want to do with me, but you cannot touch mebecause l a m o n l y m y love, and it is all for me, and Igive it to myself for me, because I look out for me first and 1 like me and you can live with y o u r s e l v e s a n d y o u r cq)inionofyourselves.Iknowwhat I have done. If I showed someone that I would do anything for my brother, include giving my life for my brother in the battlefield, o r give w h e r e e l s e t h a t t may want to do that, then he picks his banner up and he goes off and does what he does. That is not my responsibility. I don't lellpeople what to do. If we enter into an agreement to build a house. I will help you build the house and I wiL offer suggestions for that house, but 1 n o n l put myself onyou because that is what made you weak, because your pa rents have offered themselves on you. You a r e not you, you a r e just reflections, you a r e r e flections of everything that you think that you know, everything that you think that you know, everything that y<HJ I*ave been taught. Your parents have lold you what you a r e ; they made you before you were six years old, and when you stood in school and you crossed your heart and pledged alleglance to the flag, they trapped you in truth because at that age you didn't know any lie until the tie was r e flected on you. No, I am not responsible for you- Yourkharma is not mine. My father is the jail house^ My father is your system, and each one ofyou.eachoneofyou a r e just a reflection of each one of you, you a r e j u s i a reflection of each one of you, and you all live by yourselves, no matter how crowded you may think that you a r e in a room with a lot of people, you a r e still by yourselves, and you have to live with that self forever and ever and ever and ever. To some people this would be hell; to some people it would l>e heaven, I have mine, and each one of you will have to work out yours, and you cannot work out by pointing your Angers at people. [ have ate out of your garbage cans to stay outof jaH[ have wore your second-hand clothes. [ have given everything I have away* everything. t have accepted things and given them away the next second. I have done my best to gel along in your world and now you want to kill me, and Hook at you, a n d l look how incompetent you all a r e , and then I say to myself. *'You want to kill me, ha, I'm already dead, have been all my life-" '^i've Uved in your tomb that y o u i w i i t . " 1 did seven y e a r s for a (37 check. I did 12 years because 1 didn'thaveanyparents,Bnd how many other sons do you think you have in there? You have many sons in there, many, many sonsinthei'e,niostofthem a r e black and they a r e angry; they a r e mad and they a r e mad at me. And 1 look and 1 say, "Why a r e you mad at m e ? " He said. " I a m m a d a t y o u b e i ^ u s e o f what your father did.*' He said, '1 want to take your head because of what your fathers d i d . " And I look at him and I say, ^^Well," a n d l I w ^ at my fathers, and I say, " I f t h e r e w a S e v e r a devil on the face of this earth 1 am h i m . " And he's gotmy head anytime he wants it. as all of you do, too, anytime you want itSomeUmes I think about giving it to you; sometimes I'm thinking about just jumping on you and let you shoot me- Sometimes I think it would be e a s i e r than sitting here and facing you in the contempt that you have for yourself, the hate that you have for yourself, i f s only the anger you reflect at me, is the anger that you have got for you. I don't dislike you, I cannot dislike you^ I am you. You a r e my blood. You a r e my brother- That is why 1 can't fight you. If i could I would jerk this microphone off and beat your brains out with it because that is what you deservethat is what you deserve. Every morning you eat that meat with your teeth. You a r e all killers; you kill things better thanyou. and what can I say Io you that you don't already know? And I have known that t h e r e id nothing I can say to you: there is nothing I can say to any of you- It is you that has to say it to you, andthat's my whole philosophy- you say it to you and I will say It to meI live in my world, andlam my own king in my worldn whether it be in a garbage dumporif it be in the desert o r wherever it be. I am my own human being. You may restrain my body and you may tear my guts out, do anything you wish, but lam siLll me and vou can't take that. You can kill the ego; you can kill the pride: ynu can kill the want- the desire of a human being. You can lock him in a cell and you can knock his teeth out and smash his brain, but you cannot kill the soul. You never could kill the souL It's always there, the beginning and the end. You cannot stop it. il's bigger than me. I'm just Looking into il and it frightens mo sometimes. The truth 1.-* now, the truth is right here: the Iiulh is this minule. and this minute we e\iM,

in my family and anybody in my family is a white human being, because my family is of the while family. There is a black family, the yellow family, the red family, a cow family and a mule fainily. There is all kinds of different families. We have to find ourselves first. God second and kind, k-i-n-d, comes next, and that is all 1 was doing, I was working on cleaning up my house, something Nixon should have been doing. He should have been on the side of the roadpickinguphischildrentbuthe wasn't. He was in the White House, sending them off lo war[ don't know the different people that have got on the stand'-one friend said i put a knife to his throatI did. [ put a knife to his throat. And he said that 1 was responsible for alt of these Ulllngs1 do feel some of a responsibility. I feel a responsIbHity for the pollution; 1 feet a responsibility for the whole thing. I feel a responsibility for you. I feel a responsibility for my reflection. I feel a responsibility for my love of my brother as much as my love of my brother will let me have a responsibilityAnd I did put a knife to his throat, and here is what I said to him. Why do you lie to me? Can't youtell me the truth?** ] said, " T h e little lies thatyoutell me aren't important. Why must ynu lie to m e ? " I said, ")on'tyou know in Ihepenitentiary if you lie to somebody, someone In the penitentiary, they canjust as easily kill you. cut your t h r o a t , " I said, "If you lie to someone, it gives them an excuse toklll you," 1 said, "If you never lie toanyone you never have anyone to kill you because you never have given them an excuse. 'If you always t r e a t people right they have no call to come and hit you." 1 survived 23 y e a r s incvezytorturechamt>eryou have in this country, and] survlvedby bringing the good out in each human being I meet. You can call it fear; 1 am afraid 1 am a coward and I am brave; I am neither one. It don't make-any difference. And I look at the guys in jail. If you show them a good aide and smile at them, they will stiow you a good side and smile bach at you justlikeanytmeelse in the street. So 1 tried to explain to Juan that if he did not lie and he did not cheat, then he did not leave himself open to be hurt, but if he lies, then he leaveshimself open for that lie. It's a creation against himself II is a negative thought that he has about himself, and that he projects it at m e , and 1 tell him I don't want to hear no liesSo thenitgoes on to another witness, Dianne Bluestein. Dianne Bluestcin's parents kicked her out of the house when she was 13Dianne always liked to get attention from her father, around her mother's game. So she would do things liKedropcoffceand spill things and do childish little things so her Daddy would come and spank her on the hand. So she brought that problem to the ranch. She asked to be Bpanked several times. She came c l o s e t o b u m i n g t h e r a n c h u p a n d I would tell her, "Would you quit doing that," I says, "IfyoudonH stop doing that I'm going to spank you. I'm going to whip you-" And she would keep doing it, so as any father would do 1 conditioned her mind with pain tokeepher from burn< ing the ranch down o r to keepherfrom doing something that she may have done that wouldaffecleveryone, 1 have done the best t know how, and I have given all 1 can give and t haven't got any guilt about anything because [ have never been able to see any wrong. 1 never found any wrong. I looked at wrong, and it is all relative. Wrong is if you haven't got any money. Wrong is if your car paym^^nt is overdue. Wrong is If the TV breaks. Wrong is if President Kennedy gels killed. Wrong i s , wrong i s , wrong isyou keep on; you pile it in your mind. You become belabored with it, and in your confusion [ make up my own mind. I (hlnK for myself, I look at you and I say. "Okay, you make up your own mind, you think for yourself, then you see your mothers and your fathers and your teachers and your p r e a c h e r s and your politicians and your presidents lays in your brain with your opinions, considerations, conclusions, andl look at you a n d ! say. 'Okay, if you a r e real to you it's okay with me, but you don't look real lo me- You only took like a composite of what someone told you you a r e . You live for each other's opinion and you have pain on your face and you a r e not sure what you look likf, and you wonder if you look okay."

M> realii> \s my rciilily- and 1 sl.mdvviUiin nl,v^oM un m> rejili[>. Nours is >ours and I donH C'lre i^hal il is. Whiiiovrr you do ih up to .MIU. a n d i l ' s l h e same Lhiii>: nJMi ;iivsbitc1>

And I look at you and I say, "Well, you look at] right to m e . " y^u know, and you look at me and you say well, I don't look all right to you. Well, 1 don't care what I look like to you, 1 don't care what you think about me and I don't care what you do with me. i have always been yours anyway. I have always been in your celL When you were out riding yourbicyf l e l w a s sitting in your cell looking out the window and loohingat pictures in magazines and wishing 1 could go to high school and go to the proms, wishing I could go to the things you could do, but oh so glad, oh so glad- brothers and s i s t e r s , that I am what I am. Because when it does come downaround your e a r s and none of you know whatyou a r e doing, you better believe I will be on top of my thought. T will know what I am doing. 1 will know exactly v-hm I am doing. If you ever let me go. before you kill me. and then I don't really particular l> care anyway, because! still wilt be there and I will still knou what I'm doing. In my mind 1 live foievcr: In m> mind I live fnreverand in my mind I have always lived foreverTruth is relaii\o to the way you want to ihink. Vou can think it any wa,s >nuwant. but [have still not broken vour rule. Ipteo^f ttirn to page til

94

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T ^.j^j,-.v,yysjrTw.'";y Manson

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'If she <n't|ace deaths that is not my fault'


fcmtauuJ fmn pOMf I hare ikot broken your rvlebecauftfjieenicd a leasoa hnictiine ago, this man is Ckid. -^' " If you d o n t believe tie i s God, you fttand up in the c o m i n o m VMI be 111 show you. AMI if|hedQHitieren'tenoush>bCHiUgo out and get the A m y and that is enough. H ts the most powerful Sling on the face of this earth, and 1 accept his power tecauae I have no power greater tiivi his, THECOURT: Wearegoingtotakea^vcessat tbia time. You may step down, Mr. Hanson. . You may resume your statement a ^ r the reeess. We will receaa for 15 minutes. (RecessJ >!- - THE COURT: All partleaandcounael&represent.The jury la not present. You may continue, Mr. MansonTHE WITNESS: It is likened unto that you ivould bring youraelvea and aet yourielvea on a witness stand, and then take the guilt that you have for your motive and prosecute me, I am only what you made me, lam only a reflection of you1 have done everything 1 have alwaya been told. I have mopped the floor when I was supposed tomop the floor, and I swept when t was supposed to awcep. I was stnart enough to stay out of jail and too dumb to learn anything. I waa too little to get a Job there, and too U g to do something over hereIhave >iat been slttingin jail thinhingnothing. Nothing to think about. Everybody used to come in and tell me about their past and tiieir lives aM what they did. But I could never tell anybody about my pastor what my life was or what I did becausethavealwaysbeen Bitting In that room with a bed, a locker and a table. So, then ltmovcsontoanareneBG,tofaow many cracks can you count in the wall? It moves to where the mice live and what the mice are thinking, and you see how Clever mice arc^ ' And then, when you get on the outside, you look into people's heads. You tahe Linda Kasabian and you put her on the witness stand, and she testifies againslher father. She never has liked her father, and she has always projected her wrong off to the man-Hgure. So. consequently* it is the man's fault again, and the woman turns around and she blames it on the man. The man made her do it. The man put her up to it. The man works for her. the man staves for her, the man does everything for her, and she lays around the house and telSs him what he should do. because, generally, she is an extension of his mother. His mother told him what to do and she trained him for ZO years and passed him on to ihe wife. Then the woman takes him and tells him what to wear, when togel up, when to go to work. Then, when she gets on the stand and she wants to get out and wants to make some money and wants to be famous, here Is her chance. So, she gets on the stand and she says when she lotAed in that man's eyes thatwas dying, she knew that it was my fault. She knew that it was my fault because she couldn't face death- And if she can't face death, that is not my fault. Why should she blame it on me? 1 can face death, I have all the time. In the penitentiary, you live with it. with constant fear of death, because it is a violent world in there, and you have to be on your toos constantly. So, it is not without violencethatllive. It is not without pain that [ live. I look at the projection [hat comes from this witness atand often to the defendants. It isn't what we said, it i s what someone thought we said, A word is changed, "In there" to "Upthere," "Off of that" to "On t o p / ' The semantics get into a word game in the courtroom to prove something that i^ gone in the past. It is gone in the past, and when it is gone, it is gone. Sisters, It is gone. Brother. (ptetve tarn to pogt 9}

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T-MHKSt

cn.. IIM:.

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2. LOS ANGELES 4957-9 Hollywood Blvd. Lot Anaalet - 665-4783 3 . SEATTLE S39 C North^sta Wsy Saittia, Wathlngton

Incident af GM plant clarified


lncldents>-the educatlooal class b ^ Ita windows brokefi and its trailer attacked, Paula Pallywaa threatened, etc.-occurred in thA inti^lm period,) It should be noted that Shaw took a favorable stand toward Students almost througtiout the atrike. Shaw had appeared on a radio program at KPFK and said that hpwelcomedstudealsupport. In fact. In a letter addressed to *A11 GMAD Strikers Local 645 UAW Van Nuys, " Shaw said; There wilt bp some students from the colleges who will be coming down to help us,..1 think it is Important for the student to have an inside view oTwhatth'* tabor movement is all about. They will one day b? working in the plants with us."

ANOTHER MOTHER FOR CLASS WARFARE...

DENNIS L E V r f Reepntly the mass media tnimp^ eted an incident at the Van Nuya plant of General Motors. A local eatabUthment newapaper gave avcelleot coverage to a story which began, 'CcAlece atudenta bare been barred from Joining ftuto workers on picket lines at General Motors In VanKuys,.." The coverage which that Incident received was not ooly misleading and ekaggeraled. It left out many of the essential Acts of the alary. Briefly, the maas media reported that UC Santa Barbara aiudents were prev^ted from giving food to GU strikers by Fraok Shaw. Shaw had charged . Ihtl radical students were trying to Infiltrate the UAW, Then, following this action, Shaw was reinstated as strike chairman (he ba4 previously beendiamiasd by the local's executive board) at a membership meeting attendd by the rank and file of the local. In order to prof>erly evaluate tiie Incidnitp on^ must go back a tew weeks before the incident (something the media did very scantily). On October Z4, Shaw had been ren^ovpd as strike chairman b?cnuse of actions disruptive to the strike. Specifically, Uif tecullve board charg-^d that Shaw had been oteerved carrying Wf^pons around the local aod had threataoed pKi[4e Involved in the strike. Shaw countered that this was because his lifehadbe^threatened by 'communists." Yet. in front Of many witnesses,hehadtbreataoed the local's Financial Secretary, John cycara, with a chain. Also, he had struck UAW Repre sentative Howard Owens with a chain. Further, despite warnings by local officials, Shaw had disruptod picketing. In ftct, on October I I , he van arrested ftjr eauslnga tfi>ordr oo the picket Un'-. Also, since the second week of the strike, Shaw had threatened the Education Clasa being cooducted by the local. Peeling the claasea were 'BubverslTe".3bav had troken them op, Paula Pally (formerly on thestaffof the IntematloAal In I>etroit), one of the claes teachers, had been hassled by Shaw and bis Itilowers aftd on October S4, her ear was attacked (tires sill aod conrertibl top aiaahed), So, on October Z4, Shaw waa ramovad aa ctrllte chairman. The a n t major hicident took piaee Kovead>er 5, tt^ day the oladcBts cnae wltb food, (lilnor

Anyway, Alliance for Labor Action (which the UAW is a member of) student coordinators along with Jim Kosik, UAW student coordinator, worked with students to gather food in Isla Vista, They got together a full truckload of food and headed for GM in Van Nuys to give the food to the strikers. Arriving November 5, thp students found Shaw blocking Xh*driveway, Stiaw is reported (o have aaid, ^We don't want communist food," Morrie Hovland, President of the loca!^ ordered Shaw to move and let the truck In. Shaw refused and a heated discussion ensued. Finally, local officials and local members helped the Students unload the food. Local officials were outraged at Shaw's conduct, Nehadoncr^ again disrupted th? strike. That night, thpexecutivetjoardm^iand voted without (^)position to bar Shaw from the premises, Jim Kosik releaal th^^foUoving statement: "'^he overall reaction of workers to student baa tieen very receptive, except for a few incidents which were blown way out of proportion In the press...the student situation to the strike has not been Calrly r^vresMited in the local mass media." A mass meeting of the local (which had bern dlsctissed for Weeks) waa calledfor Novemt>er to discuss the progress of th^^ strike. Many people who had attended Education Claas meetings did not attend the mass meeting tiecause they liad tietn informed on the progress of tho strike o i a daily basts. Even at the ttlgh point of the meeting, less than 1/3 of Ihe local was present, Tbe meetiiig began at l:30p.m.

and around 4:00 p.m. the tssne of Shav's dismissal came up. By then, less than 15% of the local was present. Local President Morrl* Howlanu outlined five reasons why Siaw had been dismissed and barred from the premises: 1) Shaw had continually carried a chain; 2) Shaw had made disturbances on th" picket line; a) Shaw liad said that Financial Secretary John C Gara should have a bullet through his head; 4) Shav was carrying a gun around the local; ^ Shav had knocked down Howard Owens. Then, three hours after th'* meeting started, a votewas taken and Shav was re-instated. In a late development, UAW Region 6 Headquarters luis revealed that Shaw has been receiving information from the FBI at)out persons involved in the strike, (At the mass meeting of the membership, Shaw had boasted that a member of a Federal agency was present.) Ac^:ordlng to Jim Kosik, one of the local leaders heard Shaw talking on the phone with FBI agent Frank Kahl,
ARIES TAURUS

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Los A p g d c a F r e e P r c i will ! _JI"i t^lMJJJi'^'iMKl

November 2 7 . 1 9 7 0 -Hien I loc* at iha boait^^ say: WboUtbnbaaat? I am dia btaat^. 1 am Hn boBat^rt' am the blggeat beaat waHtb DM tacc of (be earth. 1 kilt averytfttW Oiat moves. As a man, aHabunab, 1 lake reaponalbUity for diat. Aaabuman, ltivoii'tbloafGod will ask you to take roBpooalbilltir for it. It is your creation. You live in your creation- I never created your vrorld, you created It. You create it when you pay tax* es, you create it when you go to work. Then you create It when you foster a thing like thla. Only for vicarious thrill do you sell a newspaper and do you cowtow to public opinion. Just to sell your newspapers. You don't think about the truth. You take another Alka-Seltzer and another aspirin and hope that you don't have to thbih of the truth and you hope that you don't have to look at yourself with a hangover as you go to a helter skelter party and make fun of something that you don't under standTEIB COtlHT: Mr. Manson, the purpose of this hearing is to permit you to make a statement which you will be permitted to make In front of the Jury. In order to be admissible, that statement must have some relevance to the issues in this case. You seem tobegettingfarafield. Do you wish lodireetyour statement toward THE WITNESS: Yes, air, THE COURT: - the matters concerning this case and the chargea against you? THE WITNESS: Yea. sir. THE COURTS AH right. MR. KANAREK: Your Honor, i f l nuy, I would object to your Honor's statement, THE WITNESS: 1 thoHghl you rested your caaa, Mr. KanarekMR, KANAfiEK: YourHonor,ontha basis that U la a dvnial of the right to eounael, affaetiva eounsal and your Honor haa violated your own edict that this is to be anarrattvo. THE COURT: You may prDcead,Mr Manson. THE VOTNESS: The iasMf in thU case? The i i i v a s i n t h l a c a a a ? . The laaoea are diatMr. V o O ^ r is Attorney Gatteral, and lUn he la a good nai) aiid doaa a U . B M llmMrbatoaiDtai HtMtiftofliJMBaaaL M r DElbi la M n g Ma Job l o r . r ha tMnaa tt is r1|M or aot. 1 couktaH lay. That ia v tobbn. 1 W avUsttce bi lUa eaaa la a Tbar* irat a gun SMtlaidanMn* the raiMb.1tbaloncMltoovaTyboiy< Anybody couM use the gun. Ttitr* was appnnElmately a hundred and fUty paopla gobw thiough dial ranch; anywhere from eoiAoya to motorcycle to peopla in th* eatartalnment field. Lawyers. Mr, Hughea has bean over to my houae several tinwa botore ttiaaa trials. Ilia police coma by atlaaat three times a woek. Thay go through the house. Thay have aaao the gun. It lays In thecomer. Poople play with it like aa if It was a toy. Anybody could have picked that gun up and done anything thay wanted to do with it, 1 don't deny having that gun. That gun haa bean in my poflaesalon many times, I traded that gun for Danny'a milk truck to keep Bill Vance from shooting up the ranch, because h* waa mad and drunk, and A * only way 1 could gat the gun away from Bill waa for the milk truck. That waa the ottly way I could keep from flghtkig him. Ha waa a lot biggar than I, The only way that I have bean able to live on that side of the road was outside the law. 1 have alwaya lived ouUlde Oie law-Whan you llva outaid* dia law, it la pretty hard, you can't call The Man tor protection. You have got to pretty much protect yoar own. You canU live within the law and protect yourself. You can't knock the guy down when he comaa over and atarta to rape one of tba girlB, or fltart to bring aome spaad or dooa up Oiara. You can't anforca your will over aomeona. Butthaginwaatheraiaa a lot of oflnr thlia wara Oara. Uha the n p e waa thara- Aa on randiaa with SO or 90horaaa,gafiarally ropaa ara arovod, and gaoarally, wbaa you laka cart of a horaa tmndi, you buy aun;1iaa,yoa

ManBon teMimony

^I am the beast* I am the beast'


fcontinaed fntm page 8) You canH bring the past bach up and postulate or moch-up a picture C't something that happened a huntired years ago> or 1970 years ago, as far as that goes. You eart only live in the now, for what ia real now. The words go In circles. You can say everything is the same, but it is always different. It is the same, but it is always different. You can "bul" it to death. You can say, "You are right, bul, but, but/' You sat here for 19 days ques lionin;c that girl. She got immunity on seven counts of murder. Shegot. ! donH know how much money ^he is going to make in magazines and things. You set her up to be a hero and that i-S your woman. That in the thing that you worship. You have lost sight of God, You sing your songs to woman. You put woman in front of man. Woman is not God. Woman is but a reflection of her man^ supposedly. But a lot of times man la a reflection of his woman. And if a man can't riseaboveawoman'sthought, then that is his problem. It is nut my problem. Bul you ^ v e me this problem when you set this woman against me. You set this woman up here to testify against me- And she tells you a sad story, how she has only taken every narcotic that is pos*iible to take. She has only stolen, lied, cheated, and done everything that you have got there in the book. But ii is okay. She is telling the truth now- She is telling the truth now. She wouldn'thaveanyuUerior motive Like immunity for seven cnunis of murder. And then, comical as It may seem, you look at me, and you say. "You threatened to kill the person if they snitch." Well, that is the law vvhere 1 am from. Where I am from, if you snitch, you leave yourself open to be killed. 1 could never snitcti because I wouldn't want someone to kill me. So, 1 have always abided by that law. It is the only law that I know of, and it is the law that 1 havealways abided by. But shewilt come up here and you enshrine her, you put her atwve you, and you strive tobeasgoodas something below you. [t is circles that Just don'tmahe sense in my reality. But, of course, again, that is my reality and ithas nothing to do with you.tjecauseyou have got your reality and you have to live with what you believe in. But this woman has got up here and <Lhe has testified. She said she wasn't sure, but maybe. Then the magical mystery tour wouldn't he able to be explained to youA magical mystery tour is when you pick up somebody else and play a part^You may pick up a cowboy today and you go around all day and play like a cowboy, Youputonahat and you ride a horaeThis Is all we have done. Wehave played tike mom and dad. We have loved each other, w e have done everything we could to stay outside the frame of the law, the shakedowns, Nothing has tieen stolen. 1 have got better sense than to break the law. I give to the law what il has coming- U is his law. If I break his law, he puts mebach in the grave again, I haven't broken his law yet, but it seems like if somebody lays around and somebi>dy needs to fulfill a spot, they snatoh it up and say, "This will do. Wewillputthisover here. We can hang this on him. or we can do this lo that." Then the word^ go into another meaning and another level of understanding. Why a woman would stand up and project herself off into a man and say, "Actually he never told me anything, but 1 Knew it all came from him." Her assumption. Am l to l>e found guilty on her assumption? You assume what youwoulddoln my position but that doesn't mean that is what 1 did in my position. It doesn't mean that my philosophy is valid. It is only valid tome. Your philosophies, they are whatever you think they are, and I don't particularly care what you think they areBut ] know this. Thatlnyourown hearts and your own souls, you are as much responsible for the Vietnam War as I am for hilling these people. 1 knew a guy that used to work in the stockyards end he used to kill cows ail day long with a big sledge hammer, and then go homeatnlght and eat dinner with his children and eat the meat that he slaughtered- Then ha would go to church and read the Bible, and he would say, "That ia not killing." And I look at him and I aay: That doesn't make sense what you ar^talhin^bwrt^^^^^^^^^

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.*^"**' (ptmattmrnUtfOMtm
I.I

'at is Rock and Roll at i


"This a l b u m c o n t a i n s surprise!no blues. It la Hock and Roll at its very best. Good, solid B o n g s ^ a few of them Instant classics. T h e singing ia funky, full of raspy screams, pusfaing pushing the m u s i c towards s o m e sort of ultimate . . - edge. T h e soul of tbe album Is the interplay between Johnny Winter a n d Rick Derringer, On

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T o g e t h e r , they sound like Hendrix playing behind Clapton. In fact, the album will remind you of t h e beat m o m e n t s o f early Hendrix a n d eariy Cream. 'Am I Here?* aoundi m u c h like Cream's *White Room.* The vocal to "Rock a n d HoU, Hoochie KOD' h a s the s a m e slide-punch inflectiona a s Hendrix'a singing. Tbetv are more e x a m p l e s of Influences At Work Here, but Winter a n d Derringer are m u c h too good to be mere imitations. They have learned; they h a v e transcended their infitiences a n d c o m e u p with s o m e t h i n g all their o w n . ^%

stage, iCt easy to s e e lipw it workt. D e n i n g e r p l a y i f u l t i r . straight from the grotp; aolld-^naky rock Unei. T h e root. Winter s e e m s to play gidtay i n a state of transported ecstasy, like the bare electric akeleton of rock dancing In tbe ndnd-itdce river- The branch. W n t e r ' i guitar-imagination h a s greater scope than Deirlnger^s. Winter** guitar builds o n Denlngei's* elaborating, decorating, getting slinky and sliding right o u t o f your brain. All without ever losing the beat, the s e n i a l thread of the mualc-

arockconivjcthcg ter'a|dafiu(if' yen] casWBleve diat poHvw). He seeidiliKve down-tcMtrtfa, more bdlM'^iI*- You can^vioe to ILln 1 ^ you'd better, 'T^i^terial Is surpiliittA, good-^-medalty DcTTtnief . compo^tum*. *Rock and BoO, HobcUe KOD' and 'Punkr Musk' are bodi aVurdy guod-tline' rockers, and would inak fine single*. mnter'aconqxkilttnUt though Intense and movbiff, tend to lack form. They sometUnea, aa on TfotUBg Left/ fan apart In ^ V ^ n u r ear. But what tba beU. T % U Ufinestuff, by far the beat thing Jidumy Winter haa don^. And tbafa aayini something/

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November 27, 1970

'I have kilted ho one and I have ordered no one to be killed'


He has got everything tnatevery can with the issues, but Ican't^ Like the four filing cabinetsSo I went ^nd bought a hundred lawyer would want to have except and BRjf feel of rope for the ranch. one thing: a case. He doesn't have There is a hundred and how many exhibits. I don't know. With a hundred and flfly feet of A case. Then there is Paul Wathins' rope> you can Vte up a tot ofpeople , Were I allowed todefendmyself. Mith that. You can cut ihat ropeoff I could have proven this to you. I testimony, Paul Wathins was a young man and u i e it for anything you want to could have called witnesses and who ran away from his parents u i e H tor. Th rope Is rope. Ube- showed you how these things lay, and wouldn't go home. longs to Itself. I bought it and and 1 could have presented my picture. brought il back to the ranch. You could ask him to go home, But 1 am inade<|uatc in educaand he would say no. I gave everything I couid thinh He would say: I don't have no of to that old man and that ranch tion: 1 don^i have much schooting, for permission to stay there, and 1 and the judge has recognized this. place to live. Can 1 live h e r e ? And r d say: Sure. have given the people that stayed So, I am forced to sit here and Just amble on without the thought So, he looks for a father image. on that ranch m y a l l . ttiere. I offer no father image. I say: To When no one wanted (o go out in The roite. the gun, the clothes. U be a man, boy, you have got to front and fight, i would go out and fight. When no one else wanted to was really convenient that Mr. Stand up and be your own father. And he still hungers for a fathclean the toilet, 1 nould go and Baggott found those clothes.Timagine he got a little taste of monev er image. So, he ^oes off to the clean them. desert and Hnd^ a father image. People would see me and they for that. I imagine that it just so happens, When he gets on the s t a n d - 1 forwould see what I do and see the example that I set- They see when 1 out of all that territory up there. get what he said, whether it had am cleaning out a ceRspool that 1 Muholland Drive, he just turned any relative value--oh. I was supam happy and smiling and doing it the c o m e r and pop, he happened to posed to have said to gt.i eel a knife s e e those clothes. Isn't that m a r - and kill Che Sheriff of Shish^jni.-. and making a game out of i\. Go get a hnife and kill the SherLi^e L was on a chain gang some- velous? And the bloodstain*^. Well, they iff of Shoshone? I don't know the where once upon a time and they come and nass the water. 1 makea a r e not exactly bhjodsiains; the? Sheriff of Shoshone. I don't think 1 have been there but once, game out of it or make a pleasure a r e Beniedine reaction. What is a Ben^edine reaction? I am not saying that ] didn't say out of a job. We turn it into a magWe got into semantics. It i s not a it, but if I said ii, at the t i m e t ical mystery tour. We speed down the highway in a blood stain. If it is not a blood may have thought it was a good stain, it is not a blood stain, 1 c^U I95S automobile that won't go but it a Benzedine reaction. That is idea. Whether I said it in jest or SO, and an SKE Jaguar goes by, ana somewhere else in another courtwhether I said it in ioking. I can't I slate to Clem, "-Catch him. Clem, room. recall and reach back in my memand we will rob him. o r steal all ory. You a r e dealing with facts and of his money," you know. I could say either way. I could And he says, "What shall we do?- positive evidence, if yuu a r e dealI say. "Hit him in theheadwiiha ing with things that a r e relative to say: Oh* I was just joking: or 1 the issues at hand, then you looh could say 1 was curiouj,. Bui to l>e hammer." at the facts. honest with you, I don't recall ever We magical mystery tourit. What else do you look at?Oh, the saying. Get a knife and change of Then Linda Kasabian gets on the clothes and go do what Tex said. Or stand and ^ays: The> werejjoinglo leather thong. How many people have ever worn I don't recall saying: Get a knife kill a man; the> were going to Kill moccasins with a leather thong in and go hill the Sheriff. a man in an automobile. it? I don*I recall saying to anyone; To you. il seems serious. But So. you have placed me in the Go get a knife and kill anyone o r like Larry Kramer and I nouldgei on a horse and we would ride over desert with leather rlothes on,and anything. In fact, it makes me mad when to Witchita* Kansas, and act Like you took a leather thong from my shot;. someone kills snakes or dogs or cowboys. We make It a game on How many people could we go cats or horses. the ranch. T don't even liKe to eat meat beLike Helier Skelter- i s a night- lake leather thongs from? That is in issue. cause thai is how much lam against club. Helter Skelter means confuThen you move on and you sa^ I killing. sion, literally It doesnH meanany So. you have got the guy that is war with anyone. It doesn't mean had one around my necfi. I always tie one around my head against kilting on the witness stand, that those people a r e going to kill other people, ii only means what it when my hair is long. It keeps it out of my eyes. And you pull it NEW mcansdown on yuur neck. And 1 imagine Fortune Telling Catd Gffmes Helter Skelter is confusion. Cona Jot of long-haired people do that. The Lowf}'^' i Rtjd Teur thm Fiihin' fusion is coming down fast. If you There a r e ^o many aspects to donH see the confusion coming this case that could be duginioand down around you fast, you can call a lot of truth could be brought up, ft what vou wish. a lot of understanding could be It is not my conspirac>. It is not reached. my music- I hear what it relates. II is a pretty hideous thing to It nyi. " R i i e " it says, " K i l l . " look at seven bodies, 102 stab Wh.\ blame it on me? i didn't wounds. write the music. "Read T*ur O n fulurt*' is a psychic I am not the person that prodevelopment aame. fun fof all ageSn The prosecutor, or the doctor, learn lo read ^uf M j r e . jected it into your social con- gels up and he shows how all the sciousness, that sanity that you different stab wounds a r e oneway, "The Lewn" learn wfiere you stand in projected into your social con- and then how all the different stab youf lile-MftdfiF and sweethMrfs Lne sciousness today. Vou put so much wounds a r e another way; but Ihty hM you. In the news.paper and you expect a r e the s.ame slab wounds in anoBoth g i m n af capyhBhtxJ people to believe what is going on. ther direction. I say bach to the facts again. They put the hideous t>odies on Svfltf $4,95 plus 45c l a i and [NKlaEe How many witnesses have got up for Each gamt ro: Quive Co. display and they say: Ifhegeisoui, here and projected only what they see what will happen to you. ImP 0 Box 1265 Burbink, Calil. 91505 believe in? plying. I am not saying he didthis. What 1 believe in is right now. 1 This is implied. don't believe in anything pa^t now. That could be cleaned up vei-y I Epcah to you from now. well. A lot of diagrams a r e actuBecause there is nothing here ally in my opinion senseless tothe to worry about, nothing here to case. think about, nothing h e r e t o b e c o n Fingerprints with jusi enough fused over. points. We couldn't ha\e ,slrcichpl My house is not divided, M> it^ Maybe it was II points. Well, house is one with me, myself. we will call this one a point. We Then 1 look at the facts that you will justify that by saying: Well. I have brought in front of this court. am a ballistics e i p e r i . Naturally, and I look at the 12 facts that a r e we didnU take no pictures of thjs looking at me and judging me. bullet. We ain't ROI no piclures, If 1 were lo judge them, what but we have got big cameras, thousands of dollars worth of cam&f:ile would that balance? Would the scale balance if I was e r a s , but rtc didn't el a picture to turn and judge you? How would of that bullet. you feel if I were to judge you? Why? No attorney would bring Could 1 judge you? it out. 1 can oniv judge you if you try lo if I could have questioned the judge me. That is the fact. ballistics man, maybe we could Mr. Bugllosi is a hard-driving have brought out a few m o ^ proseculoj-. polished education. thingsSemantics, words. He is a genius. I am trying to stick a,s close a^ I (toitiinued frvm page 9} and you a r e all asking him to kilt you. You a r e asking him to jiulge you. Because with my words, each one of your opinions or diagrams, your thou^tSn a r e dying- Whatyou thought was t r u e i s dying- What you thought was real is dying. Because you att know, and I know you know, and you know that 1 know you know. So, let's make that circle. You say: Where do we start from there? Back to the facts again. You say Ihe facts a r e elusive in my mind, They just don't mean artything- The District Attorney can call them facts with words. This is a fact (indicating). This is a fact: this i s a fact, Eleisafact-They a r e facts. Vou a r e facts. But the facts of the case aren't even relative, in my mind. They a r e relative to the I3th Century, They are relative to Ihe 8th Century. The> a r e relative to how old you a r e or what kind of watch >ou wear on your a r m . f have never lived in time. A bell rings, 1 gel up. The dooropensand I go out A bell rings and I go out. A bell rings and I live my lift-wiih bells. I gel up whena bell rin^s and 1 do what a bell says. I have never lived in lime. When your mind is not in timen ihe whole thouKhi is different. Vou look at time as being manmade, and you say time i solely reiative to what you want to think it i s . If you want to (hink meguilt.v. then

Loe Angelefi F r e e Presa you tan tblnA nrw &^^, uit^tt i^


okay with me. 1 don't dislikeanyof you for itIf you want to think menotguiliy, it is okay with me. I know what I know, and nothing and no one can take that from meYou can Jump up and scream *'Guilty," and you can say what a no good guy I am and what a devil, fiend eeky-sneaky slimy devil 1 am. It is your reflection and your right, because that is what I am; t am whatever you make me. Vou see, it is what happens inside the Now that the words just lose meaning, because the words to me have no meaning, A motion is more real than a word. The Indians spoke with it. They could explain to you with motions what they feltThis is what 1 intended to do If ipleaae turn to page I2t

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CAPER (tands for change a naw aitd b t t t t r way of rife. Are you Citiffi*d with Raagan, the California Lagislatura th law* as they now *tand. the high taxes, and all f tha rast f Would you like to changas ? I f w , wrlta with your commanti. )f you woutd like to rac*lv our compltta presentation brochurar i K l o x (T.OO to: CAPER. BOK 1227, Huntington ftrk, California 9 0 2 5 5 .

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By ^\"Worlds MOST C^U'llrnf-'d Oanc< Compur.,'

Martha Graham Dance

; i ? ^ ^ ^ ' | c d . 4 Econolnical Reform

Sat. Eve., Nov. 28, 8:30 El Camino College Aud.

Sun., Nov. 29. 3 P.M., 8:30 Royce Hall, UCLA


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^ n T ^ n e oT'what yoii want to call hippies. I n e v e r thought about being a hiH>ie. 1 don't know what a hippie is. A hippie Is g e n e r a t l y a g u y that's pretty nice. He will giveypu a shirt, and a f l o w e r , and h e w i l l g i v e y o u a s m i l e , a n d he w a l k s d o w n t h e r o a d . B u t d o n ' t t r y to t e l l h i m n o t h i n g . H e a i n ' t l i s t e n i n g to n o b o d y . H e g o l his own thoughts. You t r y to tell h i m s o m e t h i n g a n d he w i l l s a y . " W e l l , if that's your b a g . " H e i s finding h i m s e l f . Y e s . t h o s e children there w e r e finding t h e m s e l v e s . W h a t e v e r they d i d , if they did w h a t e v e r they d i d , o r w h a t e v e r they d i d i s up t o t h e m . T h e y w i l l h a v e to e x p l a i n t o y o u t h a i , I ' m just evplaining to you what I a m explaining to you. E v e r y t h i n g i s s i m p l e to m e . I t i s what it is because that i s what i t i s . I t d o e s n ' t g o any f u r t h e r . o v e r this case? How sensational do you think that you have m a d e this case? I n e v e r m a d e it s e n s a t i o n a l . I was hiding in the desert. You command got me. r e m e m b e r ? O r c o u l d y o u prove that? What can y o u p r o v e ? T h e o n l y thing you can p r o v e i s what you can p r o v e to y o u r s e l v e s , a n d y o u can s i t h e r e a n d b u i l d a lot in that j u r y ' s m i n d , and Ihey a r e s t i l l g o i n g to i n t e r j e c t t h e i r p e r s o n a l i t i e s on y o u . T h e y a r e g o i n g t o i n t e r j e c t i h e i r inadequate feeling^i; they a r e g o i n g l o i n t e r j e c l w h a t t h e y

Lo0 Angeles F r e e PrcBB

ManBon testimony

T o u made a monster'
(continued from page 10)
1 could represent m y s e l f , explain t o y o u w h a t i s I n s i d e of m e , h o w I feel aboul things. Because words a r e your wordsY o u i n v e n t e d the w o r d s , a n d y o u made dictionary, andyou gave m e the d i c t i o n a r y and y o u saldi T h e s e a r e what the words m e a n . w i i n questions because the i n f e r e n c e h a s a l w a y s b e e n on the q u e s tion, the question i m p l i e s , T h c a n s w e r is only r e l a t i v e to the q u e s tion. So m o s t of t h e i r a n s w e r s a r e i n t e l l i g i b l e o r u n i n t e l l i g i b l e ; then she g o e s t o a m e n t a l i t i s t i t u t i o n a n d g e l s on t h e s t a n d a n d she t e s t i f i e s and she says this: " I ' m only testifying" - and it's written in the record " I ' m only saying what is best for m e . I a m o n l y t e s t i f y i n g f o r what i s b e s t f o r me." A n d e a c h witness got up h e r e and only t e s t i f i e d f o r w h a t was best f o r t h e m , i h e y did not testify f o r what was best f o r m e . T h e y t e s t i f i e d f o r what w a s b e s t f o r t h e m , f o r t h e i r o w n benefit^

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W e l l , t h i s i s w h a t t h e y m e a n to you, but to s o m e o n e e l s e , they h a v e got a different dictionary, and things mean different things t o d i f f e r e n i people, and to m a t c h the s y m b o l s up a s y o u t a l k t>ack a n d f o r w a r d . T h e n you put a w i t n e s s up h e r e to s a y w h a t y o u s a i d . 1 could n e v e r say what someone e l s e said, I could o n l y say w h a t 1 said. You tell m e something and t o m o r r o w , if I t r y (0 repeat it. if 1 didn't have i t w r i t l e n d o w n , I c o u l d r / t tell you what you said. L e t alone a y e a r ago, let atone eight months a g o , l e t aKi:^e a w e e k a g o , I a m f o r g e t f u L 1 forget one day to the next. I forget what day it is o r w h a t m o n t h i t i s o r what y e a r it is, So y o u s a y , o k a y , a n d t h e n w h a t else did she say? T h e n she s a i d , * ' Y o u o n l y s e e in m e w h a t y o u w a n t to see in m e . " Y o u only s e e in h e r whiii y o u p u l In h e r . b e c a u s e w h e n y u u t a k e i J > D enough l i m e s you r e a c h a state o f n o t h i n g . V o u r e a c h a s t a t e o f no thoughtAn e x a m p l e of t h i s , if you w e r e to b e s t a n d i n g i n a r o o m w i t h s o m e one and you w e r e loaded on L S D , a n d th4' g u y s a y s , *'L>o y o u l i k e m y sport coat?'* What? That is all there is. Why? Why? Why comes f r o m your m o t h e r . Y o u r m o t h e r teaches you *'Why, why, why?'* You go a r o u n d asKing y o u r m o t h e r why a n d she keeps t e l l i n g you *'Be<.ause. because, b e c a u s e , " and she laces your little b r a i n with because and: I look a t t h e j u r y a n d t h e y w o n ' t l o o k a t m e . So 1 w o n d e r w h y t h e y w o n ' t look a t m e I look a t t h e m - H a v e t h e y j u d g e d me already? B e f o r e the case was p r e s e n t e d they would not l o o k a t m e . T h e y a r e a f r a i d o f m e , a n d do y o u know why they a r e a f r a i d of m e . Because of the n e w s p a p e r s . m o A t y orflsr for i m m f d l a t a f h l i v w y : chack requirat t w o w a a k i dallvarv; indkiata color d n i r a d PiProducU You projected fear. Y o u p r o j e c t ed f e a r . You m a d e m e a m o n s t e r , and I have to l i v e with th^i (he r e s t Los A n g e l e i , C a l i f . 9 0 0 6 6 of m y l i f e b e c a u s e I c a n n o t f i j - h l this case, (please turn to page 21i Dealer and Di<(rJbutor int;uiiief itrMited

think.

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1 don't p a r t i c u l a r l y care Ijccause a l l t h a t i s r e a l to m e i s r i g h t n o w . But t h e n , the c a s e i s r e a l t o m e . a n d I s a y : W h a t do I h a v e t o do t o m a k e you p e o p l e l e t m e g o b a c k t o the desert with m y children? You have your w o r l d . You a r e g o -

i n g to do w h a t e v e r y o u d o w i t h i t . 1 h a v e g o t n o t h i n g to do w i t h i t . 1 don't h a v e l h e s c ^ h o o l i n g i n i i . I don't believe in y o u r church. I don't b e l i e v e in a n y t h i n j j > o u d o . I a m not s a y i n g y o u a r e w r o n g , a n d I h o p e t h a i y o u s a y I a m not w r o n g Cor b e l i e v i n g w h a t 1 b e l i e v e in. Murder? Murder is another q u e s t i o n . It is a move^ it i s a m o tion, Y o u t a k e a n o t h e r ' s l i f e . Boom, a n d t h e y a r e gone^

A n d t h e g u y w o u l d p r o b a b l y not p a y any a t t e n t i o n t o h i m a n d s a y , " I bought t h i s s p o r t coat at P e n n e y ' s , " and then he s t i l l would not p a y any a t t e n t i o n to h i m . A b o u t t w o o r t h r e e m i n u t e s l a t e r t h e guy l o a d e d on L S D w i l l t u r n a r o u n d a n d say, " M y , you have a beautiful s p o r t c o a t . " B e c a u s e h e i s only r e a c t i n g : he is only r e a c t i n g l o t h e individual l e r m i n o l o g y , the p e r s o n that he has i r the r o o m . As you put t w o people in a c e l l , so w o u l d t h e y r e f l e c t a n d f l o w on e a c h o t h e r l i h e as i f w a t e r w o u l d seek a l e v e l .

-Because. Why? Because. Why?" And you don't know any d i f f e r ent. If you had two m o t h e r s , one to leM you one thing and one t o t e l t you a n o t h e r , then y o u r m i n d m i g h t be left w h e r e m i n e w a s . I f you had a d o r e n p a r e n t s that you went a r o u n d and o o u l d n H t>elieve a n y t h i n g y o u w e r e t o l d , but then y o u couldn't disbelieve anything you w e r e t o l d . A n d i t ' s t h e <iame t h i n g with this court.

JEWKLRYSUPPLIKS
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TradiBf 8 M d > * M a c n M < Maw S t i i D i H n l of Ganuinfl A n i i q u * C i m v o i

I don't b e l i e v e what these w i t n e s s e s g e t up h e r e a n d s a y , b u t l d o n ' t disbelieve ihem either,

metal parts, beads, cameos Si chains Huge discount to mfq. & Wholesalers 222 SANTA MONICA BLVD. Santa Monica^ Calif. -393-4169

I w o n ' t challenge t h e m , if the guy s a y s , " W e l l , y o u ' r o i ^ u g i > o d , " I say ''<)hay. I f that i s w h a t y o u w a n t to b e l i e v e , t h a t ' s ohay w i t h m c . "

A t All Discount Record Center Stores

Brinsley Schwarz

Y o u say; W h e r e did ihey go? T h e y a r e dead. You say: W e i ] , thai person could have m a d e the m o t i o n . He could

1 don't c a r e whal you believer I Know w h a t 1 a m . Y o u c a r e w h a t I t h i n k of y o u ? D o y o u c a r e w h a t I think of you? i X i i o u t a r e what m y opinion is? N o , 1 h a r d l y think su.

h a v e t a k e n m y l i f e j u s t a^ B e l l a s ! took his l i f e . If a soldier goesofftothekiattler i e l d . he goes off w i t h his lif e in front. H e i s g i i i n g his life- Does [ h a t not g i v e h i m p e r m i s s i o n to take one? No, B e c a u s e then w e b r i n g our soldiers bach and t r y t h e m in c o u r t f o r doing the s a m e thing we send them to do.

I h a v e b e e n in a c e l l ^ i i h a g u y 80 y e a r s o l d . a n d i l i s t e n e d t o e v e r y t h i n g he s a i d , ' ' W h a t d i d j o u do t h e n ? * ' A n d h e e x p l a i n s to m e h i s w h o l e l i f e , and I sat t h e r e and I listened, nd I e>fperienced v i c a r i o u s l y h i s whole being, his whole l i f e , and 1 Look a t h i m a n d h e ib o n e o f m y fathers.

1 d o n ' t think a n y o f y o u c a r e about a n y t h i n g o t h e r than y o u r selves because when you find y o u r s e l v e s , y o u f i n d that e v e r y b o d y i s oul for t h e m s e l v e s a n y w a y .

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We t r a i n t h e m to h i l l , a n d they go o v e r and M i l , and w e p r o s e c u t e t h e m a n d p u t t h e m I n ^ i l t^ecause they kill.

A n d we put t h e m i n j a i l b e c a u s e t h e y k i l l - I f y o u can u n d e r s t a n d i t , then I bow to y o u r u n d e r s t a n d i n g . But In m^'underatawUnB I w o u l d n't g e t i n v o l v e d w i l b i t , Aly p e a c e la i n the d e s e r t o r I n the J i l l c e U . and hd 1 not een the a u n f U n e ia the d e a a r t I ^ o u l d b * a a t i a f l a d w i t h tile Jail e e l l m u c l i n t o r t o v e r y o u r aociecy; much m o r e o v e r your r e a l i ^ , and much m o r s o v e r y o u r coanialoD* a i u l much m o r e over ytnir world, and jrour vrord g a m e e that y o u p l a y W o a r e ftll I m p a r t v a ; i r e a l l D i ^ e l o t ! o f i i K H i o y ; w% a r e b i g t b o u , d r i v e One e a r s , have $300 wmtebee^ W e a l l a i t b e r e i n o u r i m p o r t v K C . W e get Uttle guy, put him over there and he's generally l i t t l e r than thla guy, you donU get b i g tough g u y s i n h e r e .

But he I s a l s o a n o t h e r one o f your society's rejects. A n d i t i s t h e s a m e thin>f t h a t h a s happened with Dianne Blue stein. You've got around her. and you've o f f e r e d h e r a lot o f f a t h e r i n g , a lot o f ' s t r ^ B to hold to. then you h a v e offered h e r h e r suggestions, and y o u bought h e r d r e s s e s a n d y o u have taken her i n a n d g i v e n h e r l o v e i n a f o s t e r h o m e t h a i she h a s a l ways needed.

It looks that way to m e h e r e , the money that has been m a d e , t h e things t h a i I cannot talk about, and 1 know 1 cannot talk aliout 1 w o n ' t talk about, and I w i l l k e e p auiet aboul those things. How much money has passed

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h r t i K ^ y i d i w r i l i ntee b o y b ) h m t c M i o l o four wtfft H I M * o n * , l o o , CtuHhTp b r i n d e r f i l O M t v - l O M M o f l r M i k e t t t v O v r i e M y if n o t ikmrmvh wm b o m bv * rtwr tnd l i f t harm e t tfi of n o . ho m o d i a p r o m l w . . . B i n t n e w ^ n n a ^ b K h h o o M Bprin. ha wm N w d f r o m d r o w K o f Hhhwil I b * l i t t l n t o t h e Maam o t ttfe b y w o m n . ' r f t t r t t w t h a ^ p i t tit* l i t i to p m n r t t t t o o wHfc e n w i l i o m v t o n f h * d | > o f t o w n . t h e < t u n M n t h i m e i M t e r ' ' tetv - ' M d M M h e o w e d h t o m t brod f r o m pCvvlnfl In M B r o r t I n d r o N I n i bMtd. ttM f u v b e w w i t t o tm d M n ' t loob n w s b tike d w i b u t ha d i i f tt a l i w i b r i n r i W b o w e d < n d M M d h b h v i d . ' w M d i ^ rttM I ttat brinHey tehmn ^ a mmaea t o profMr r i i p a t t , Iha cantw^tthar i d and i h a d n a n t a n t f U i way i t ' i a l w a y i baao dona In i a nriddlo of t h r o a d Voch and roll w o m a n and tupar > t r a l # i l m a n . ' ( I L L '^in't l a a n * D dMWl m a n y tinea h a d o n t knotir w h * a ' > Sidkat in hatl'a gunna b donoT' NMwt. B R I N S L E Y S C H W A R Z I S B E A U T I F U L ^ d if tfta copa a n o n n a | M h i m lia may ba praaldint by t h a n / b y m n t o ma . what do y o u i i m p m i 7 ' * * " * " bfi#itty . rook M i d ran w o m a n lady c o n t a n t - mayfly . fa^i*d of a N b a i i b a i u t y quaan 4 J BT HUUL

N o w , w i l l you {^ve h e r that w h e n ' y o u f i n d o u t she l i k e s t o m a k e l o v e , o r a r e you going to look a t h e r l i h c she^s a d i r t y l i t t l e c v U n s ^ g i r l , and kick h e r out of the h o u i e because y o u h a v e thought l i k e that a n d don't want to admit It? W i l l you lock h e r back up when you a r e through with her? W h e r e does the g a r b a g e go* a e ie h a v e t i n cans and g t r b i ^ along^ aide of the road, and oil sllcka In the w a t e r , so y o u h a v e p e o p l e , a n d I a m one of y o u r g a r b a g e people. I a m onoof your nwtorcycle people, I

iSortiAeawftMf, Chtc>r. VO. No CXW.'tTvforCaii/.n^vlenfi.

I f I waft a b i g t o o ^ g u y y o u couldn't hold m e h e r e , and like the b a i l i f f t r i e d to put m e in the b a c k . 1 nouldnH let h i m if 1 was big e n ough. 1 wouldn't let h i m . I would say ' * N o / ' 1 a m going to d e f e n d myself. B u t ] a m not b i g e n o u g h s o I h a v e t o d o what l a m told, T h a t i s w h a t t a l w a y s done a n y w a y .

So y o u g o on to f a c t s a n d f a c t s , and without recalling the facts, and looking at the evidence, and recalling the witnesses, I couldn't stick c o m p l e t e l y w i t h the t o t a l r e a l i t y of the c a s e . Gutierrez. Sergeant C u t i e r r e / , a c a u l i f l o w e r e a r . e x p e r i e n c e , tough police officer w i t h p r o b a b l > 20 y e a r j i of e n p e r i e n o e o f I n t e r r o g a t ing people. On l o p of M s t h o u g h t , s e v e r a l human beings lived f o r j u s l i c e . law ar-d o r d e r . H e i s a g i t o d h u m a n b e i n g , h a s a f a m i l v a n d h;is t h i l d r t - n . b e l i e v e s in h a i h e i s d n i n j i , g e l s h i s pay < h t t k f o r i l . Hur a t t h e i^ame t i m e he w i l l [alii- ^ i h i l d . 17 y e a r s o l d . f r a g i l e m i n d e d i h i l d . and h e p r o g r a n w h t /

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MANSON
jund.Ac|l*52L^BihSt., ' bv ( l ^ * ^ i . o d > / {continued from page 12) [f I could light tnis case, and I cDuld present ihis case, I would take that munster bach and Iwould take that Tear bach. Thenyoucould find something else to put your Tear on because it's all your fear. You Look for something toproject ii on, and you pick a little old scroungy nobody that eat& out of a garbage can. that nobody wanu, that was kicked out of the penlien< liary; that ha*i been drugged throui^h every hell hole you can think of, and you drag him and put him into a courtroom. You enpeoi lo break mp?Jmpos-

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iSATURfJAY MIDNIGHTI DOUBLE DUET Novimbtr 21 "TkeBad" L -nie GolilaM Pomwnv" Bctlh by Jflmn Sroughian - PLUS "Mondfiani" "Cav" By Mek Fowf*r By Hobsrt F i l n n "AftBrnoon O* A Hrmt" By RobflTl Stuhmer "WALDO POINT" By Situi Rouda
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November 2 7 , ) 9 7 0 sible. you broke me yearsago;you hilled me years a ^ ; I sat in a cell and the guy opened the door andhe said, '^You #ant out?" I looked at him and I said, "Do you want out? Do you want out? You are in jail, allofyou,andyourprocedure. Thp procedure that i s on you? It's worse than theprocedure that is on me J like it in there/' I like it in there; it's peacefuL f just don't like coming to the courtroom. I would like to get this over with as soon as possible, and I'm sure everyone else would like logel it over with, too. Without being able to prepare a case, without being able to confnmt the witnesses and to bring out the emotions, and to bring out the reasons why witnesses say what they say, and why this hideous thinghas developed into the trauma that It's moved into, would Take a bigger courtroom, and it would take a bigger public, a bigger press* because you all. as big as you are and you know what you are a^ 1 know what you are, and I like you anyway.

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I don't want to keep rehashingthe same thing over. There are so many things you pan get into, your Honor, that 1 hav*f no thoughts on. It is hard to think whenyou really don't care too much one way or the other. THK COURT: Your statement is purely voluntary, Mr^ Manson;you dor'i have In say anything or any more if you don't want to, MR. KANARF,K; Your Honor. I want the record to reveal I cannot agreo with your Honor's statement. MK. riTZGKHALD: 11 might be a convenient time to recess, yout Honor; it's just a few minutes to 12:00, THE WITNFISS; I was released from the penitentiary andtlearned one le.sson in the penitentiary, you don't tell nobod> nothing. You listen. When you are little you keep your mouth shut, and when someone says. "Sit down," you sit down unless you know you ran whip him, and ir you know you can whip him then you stand up and whip him and you tell him to sit down. Well. I pretty much sit down. 1 have learned to sit down because 1 have been whipped plenty of times for not sitting down and 1 have learned nottoieU people something they don't agree with. If a guy comei up and he says, "The Yankees are the best ball team," I am not going to argue with that man. If he wants the Yankees to be the best t>all team, it*fi okay with me, so I look at him and I say, "Yeah, the Yankees are a f^ood ballclub^" Aad somebody else says, "The

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Dodgers are good," I will agree wiih thai, I will agree wiih anything they tell me. That is all I have done since 1 have been out of the penitentiary . 1 agreed with every one of you-1 did the be&t I could to get along with you, and I have not directed one or you to do anything other than what you wanted to do, 1 have always said this* you do what your love tells you and 1 do what my love tells me. Now, if my love telia me to stand up there and fight, I will stand up there and fightiflhaveto. But if there is any way that my personality can get around ll. Itry my best to get around any hind of thing Ihut Is going to disturb my peace, because all I want is to be Just at peace, whatever that tahes. Nott, in death you might find peace, and soon I may start looking in death to findmypeace, I have reflected in your society yourselves, right bach at yourselves, and each one of these young girls was without a home. Each one of these young boys was wlihout a homeI shuhred them the best I could what 1 would do A K a falher, BN a human bein^ to be responsible for themseU'Cs, not to be weak andnot to lean on me^ And I have told them many times J don't want no weak peoplcaruund me. "If you are not strong enough to stand on your own, don't come and ath me what to do. You know what to d o / ' This is one of the philosophies that Everyone is mad at me, because of the children. I always let the children go. "You can't let the children go down there by themselves," [ said. '*LeI the children go down. If he falls, that is how he learns, ihat Is how you become strong, by falling," They said, ''You are noi supposed to let the children do that. You are supposed to guide (hem." 1 said, "Guide ihem into what? Guide them into what you have got them guided into? Guide them into dope? Guidethem into getting raped on street corners? Guide them into the armies?" I said, "No, let the children loose and follow them." That is what I did on the desert: that is what 1 was doing. FollowinK your children I the ones you didn't want, ^each and every one of them. I never ashed them to come with me; they asked me. THE COURT: We are going to recess at this time, Mr. Hanson, you may step down. You may resume your statement after the noon recess. LOS ANGELES, CAUFORNIA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20. 1970^ 1:53 o'clock P.U. (The following procacdingB occur in open court. All counael and defendaota preieat. Jury abaaot.) THE COUItT; AU parties and counsel are prcaent. Hie Jury la not present. MR. KANAREK: Your Honor, may I addraaa th Court? THE COURT: Yai, MR. KANAREK: I gather thatttaa record will reflact, your Honor, and I ftm aure. hop^AOly, y o w Honor doaanH ohHct to my praviooa ramarta In comectloB with Mr. Hannn IKI In connaction with the odiar throe dafeotknU, may tbay ba daamad Ineorporatod Igr reference hare, Juat by way of raitermtiDn, your Honor? THt COURT; I haven't Iha allghtest idea of what you are talking about, Mr. Kanarck. MR. KANAREK: Your Honor, Iballeve what this Court ia dolngniea in the face of everything that our courts stand for, everything that lawyera stand for, in connection

with effeetlva right to eownial, connection with t h e THE COURT: You have made thU argument before. MR. KANAREK: Yas. 1 Justwantto make sure that no one La going to say, in future proceedings, that I am acquiaaclng. That la tha point. The Attorney Genera) now oftha State of Califamia la Mr. Yowgar, or probably wilt be at some time la the future. You know, they can't have their cake and eat it at tha same time. 1 Just want the record to reflaet, may it be deemed that all my previous remarks nre reiterated at this point in connection with Mr. Manson taking the stand, vid In connection wA our comments In chambers* and in connectiiMi with the defendants. I believe that these three femala defendants, certain remarks were made concerning them, may they ba deemed reiterated here? THE COURT: Be deemed reiterated? MR. KANAREK: Yes. THE COURT: Doyou want to incorporate them by reference? la that what you mean? MR. KANARFK: May 17 THE COURT; Very well. MR. KANAREK: Thanh you. your Honor. THE COURT: Now. Mr. Manson, I want to remind you, air, that if you desire to testify in frontof the Jury you will have to conflne your testimony to matters that are relevant to the iaauea in the case. Do you have anything further you wish to say? MR. KANAREK: Hay I aay this bi regard" THE COURT: Don't Interrupt the proceedings, Mr. Kanareh. MR. KANAREK: May I makeamo' tion to the Court? THE COURT: Very well. MR, KANARFK: I would move that the Court not allow Mr, Manson to testify at this point because Mr. Manson i s not a lawyer, and what is relevant and what is material many t i m e s TIIE COURT: If you ar* maklngan objection, it is overruled. Let's proceed. Do you have anything further to say, Mr. Manaon? CHARLES MANSON called as a witness in his own be^ half, having been nrat duly awom, resumed the atand and testified further as foliowa: THE WITNESS: There's bn a lot of ulh about a bottomlasa pit, I found a hole In the deaart that goes down into a river that runs north underground. andlcaUllabottomless pit because wharecoulda river be going north underground? You could even put a boat on it. So I coverod It up andlhidll and 1 called i t - w e all go outlhera witii dune bugfie* and thloga, and I call it "Tha DtvU*a HolOt'* aad wa aU U ^ aiMl wa Joka abol U. Yoo Mild caU It a bmllyjoka about Iha bottomlaaa p i t How many pagpla ro could hide down in IhU bote? Again, yoo have BkOflcal myatorr tour thai asoU of tha t i n a tbere'a M W M people at the ranch playlof magical myatary tovr, Raady a r r 1hou|M be m e HoUjivood atmt man; ha had a ear all paintadapattdnkahaaavardana any atmita. AjMlhar'fi|y was a movla atar, hot ha had abvar baan In any mo* vlaa. and avarrbody waa Juatplay* Ing a part, TOO know, Ukamoatpaopla gat atttck In one part, but Ilka wa ware JuatplajlncAfiarent parti every dl^r. One day you put on a cowboy hal and aay shoot aomebody. or tha twxt, yoo might have a knife, be a knife fightar, or go offlnQiv woods (pletme turn to pof* ^>

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Professional man, 33, single, cauc, EUROPE 71 * S n 7 t Archit. 40 Meks girl travelling seeks attractive female for love companion for ski vacationB thi and companionship. Children oh. winter and/or charter Europe 71. DEREK: 406 S. 2nd St-. Alhamhra Write Box 8303 Univ. City 91608 91B0Z Prof man 55 tall, well built, culLET'S DANCE tured, seeks SFV woman for disHave you ever had the d e s i r e to creet afternoons sexual pleasure. be an expert dancer7 Let's do It JG 11325 Blix No Ifolly. 91602 logcther the r i ^ t way. I wilt nnance private instruction. I am WILL YOU TEACH I S 7 . 33. divorced, e x e c , sincere, good- Beautifulp slender, refined, inexlooking, searching. PO Box 39423. perienced girl 28, with handsome LA 90039 hustand, would like to meet beautiful sensitive girl. willlngtoUach HATURE WIDOWS AND WIVES her the other ways of love. We W/M needswomanofmeanswilling visit the east coast often. Please write & send photo, tvhich will b to share it. Anything goes! returned, Lucy, 525 N- Laurel Box M l , Bellflower Ca- Phone- Ave., L.A. 9O04B WANTED ATT W/U 2 5 / U Generous w/m 48. wife ill A not To help satisfy needs ot att. 28 int. in sex. Desire casual daytime yr. old wife. Must be straight* meetings with w/f 35-55. Don Walcleancut A discreet- Send photo & k e r . 525 N- Laurel Ave.. LA 48 phone if poss to: GIRLS ONLY PO Box 3171 1ilewood Calif. Young, slender, beautiful girl, inW/m bach 46 wants to meet a wo- experienced, but willing to learn, man to teach him the whereas and wants to meet young, s j f / what-fors of making French love. beautiful girl- I live in F l o r i i a . I travel frequently. Cecilia, B.W.. Apt. 4 2729 Humbert. So. But 525 N. Laurel Ave,, LA 90048 1 Honte, 91733

Novemlwr 27, 1970


PREGNANT? Kansas City calibration engineer wants to meet an attractive unwed or nursing mother who wishes to keep her t>ab>. Vm divorced* 2t T s . old, and have a large comrtable home to share with a pleasant, mild-mannered girl who prefers the quiet life LO night lifeSpeed-freaks et al., should look elsewhere- K.C- is 3 h r s . from L-A- by Jet and a ticket could ans e r your letter. Send a photo to Frank, 3707 Blue Ridge tilvd.. Independence. Mo. 64052 MALE WANTED lor nude plx and traveling companion to huslnessman. Send photo, phone, salary requirements to: Tom C , 6311 Yucca St.. #1056, Hollywood. Calif. 90028

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ATTRACTIVE BI COUPLES OR SINGLES Beautful redhead sexy voloptous wife & handsome husband like to swing with groovy swingers for weekend fun- Have beautif-jl pad in Palm Springs. Box 4067 Phone A photo req.

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W/m 44, would like French affair with small petite erotic woman, married ok. Include photo Box 4044, Diamond Bar, CalU. 91765 Want shapely girl who likes toglve and be given enemas. 1 am a n e c tionate, straight male, white, 4 1 .
Box 190, c / o Halfway. ? 3 2 7 M a r h e e S t r e e t , San F r a n c i s c o 34114 W/m 33 s i n g l e n i c e

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IN SAN DIEGO ONLY Rewardr Locate girl pleasing to me. Write Box 604, SD Ca. 92101 Young uninhibited Seattle Cpls2129 N-E. 55, Seattle, 98105 QUIET SHY GAYS Sexy yg gay guy attractive, slim, 2 gay guys cauc & neg 30 & 26 bitchen bod. 28 waist, digs other to meet guys 18-35 who like good groovy gay guys. Write Alan, PO pics, musicals & quiet eves at Box 1232. LA 90028. Let's share home 4 ? Any race. No sm fern b a r our thing. Pics answ with same. types. Sincere, Steve, 525 N. Laurel, LA, Calif- 90048 I AM SINGLE 30, 6'2*, tolorant, sensitive and AGGRESSIVE MALE would like to meet a very busty seeks compatible female. I am ri who wants love and security, hip. young, good-looking, intellirite to Resident, Apt. 9, 150 S. it. real- Are you? Pax. 525 N. Spalding Dr-. Bev. Hills 90212 urel Ave.. LA 9004S HI BVBRYBODYI If you want to see some really good It's & A.Mfilms in your own home, see yidind I've been up most of the nlte ult films* under "Grabbers." letting these dirty ads. Oh well, G1RL ATTN: Your every command [ need the money to buy my old and wish obeyed! No request r e - Lady a mink coat. fused! Anything! POB19605 LA 19 EARTH POOD INN IS BACKlIf THEY'RE GROWINGTIl

MANSON

(continued from page 21} tor a month or two to be anlndian, o r Just like a bunch of little kids playing. Then you esUblish a reality vriUiin that reality of play acting. And then you get to conspiracy. Hie power of suggestion Is stronge r than any conspiracy that you could ever enter into. The powers of the brain a r e so SO vast, i t ' s beyond understanding. It's beyond thinking- It's beyond com p rehensionSo to offer a conspiracy might be to sit in your car and think bad thoughts about someone and watch them have an accident in front of you. Or would it be a conspiracy for your wifetomeniiontoyou20times a day, "You know, you're going blind, George; you know how your eyes a r e ; you're just going blind; we pray to God, and you're goin^ blind, and you're going blind," and she keeps telling the old man h e ' s going blind until he goes blind. Is that a conspiracy? Is it aconsplracy that the music is telling the youth to rise against the establishment because the e s tablishment is rapidly destroying things? Is that a conspiracy? Where does conspiracy come in? Does it come in that 1 have showed people how 1 think by what I d o , not a s m u c h a s w h a t 1 aay as what I do that counts, and they look at what I do and then they try to do it also, and sometimes they a r e made weak by their p a r ents and cannot stand upBut i s that my fault? Is it my fault that your children do what they do? MR. KANAREK: May I flnish,your Now, the girls weretalkingabout Honor? testifying. If t h e g i r l s c o m e u p h e r e THE COURT: Sit down. s i r . to testi& and they said ai^lhing MR. HUCHES: Join Mr. Kanarek's good about m e , you would have to r e v e r s e It and say that it was bad. motion. You would have U > say, "Well, MR. KANAREK: May I be deemed he put the g i r l s up to saying ttiat. gagged then? He put the g i r l s to not telling the THE COURT: Sit down. truth-" CROSS-EXAMINATION Then you say the truth i s as I am by MR. BUGLIOSI: J u s t a few quessaying it, but then when it i s gone, tions, Charlie, and then you can tomorrow i t i s g o n e . I t c h a n g e s , i t ' s take your seat at thecouneelUble, another day and it is a new truth. You say you a r e already dead, is as it constanGy moves thousands that right, Charlie? of miles an hour through spaceMR- KANARE: I object, your HonHippie cult leader, actually, hipo r , it is not material, competent o r pie cult leader, that i s y o u r w o r d s . relevant to any issue before the I am a dumb country boy who never Court. grew 19. THE WITNESS: Are you trying to goad me into something? I went to iall when I was eight THE COURT: Overruled. y e a r s old and I got out when I was MR. BUGLIOSI: Did you say that 32. 1 have never adjusted to your free you were already dead? MR. KANAREK: H a y I Have anobworld. 1 am still that s t i ^ d , c o m jection? May I utter my objection? picking country boy that I always THECOURT: Doyouwantaconlinhave been. uing objection. Mr. Kanarek? U >va tend to compliment a c o n MR. KANAREK: I don't think, in t n d i c t i o n about yourself, you can this case, I can have a continuing live In that confusion. To me i t ' s objection^ It is loo vital. all simple right here, r l ^ t now; THE COURT: Make your objection. and each of us knew wtiat we did. MR. KANAREK: My objection la and I know what I did, and I know that it is not responsive, relevant what I'm going to do. and what you o r material. do i s up to you. His state of mind I don't recognize the courtroomTHE COURT: 1 don't wantanarguI recognize the p r e s s and I recogment. J u s t make the objection. nize the people. MR. KANAREK: t a i l i n g for conTHE COURT: Have you completed clusion and hearsay. your statement. Mr- Manson? THE COURT: Overruled. You may THE WITNESS: You could go on answer. forever. You can just talk endless words. It don't mcananything. MR, BUGLIOSI: Did you say you were already dead. Charlie? I don't know that it means anyMANSON: Dead in yOur mind, o r thing- I can talk to the wltoesses dead in my mind? and ask them what they thinkabout MR. BUGLIO^: Define it the way things, aiHEi can bring the truth out you want to. of other pMple because I know what
101

the truth i s . but 1 cannot sit here and tell you anything that 1 think is important in relation to anything t>ecause like basically all I wantto do i s try to explain to you what you a r e doing to your children. You see. you can send me to the penitentiary; it's not bigthing-I've been there all my lifeanyway. What about your children, just a few. there is many, many more coming right at you^ THE COURT: Anything further? THE WITNESS: No. THE COURT: You may step down then. MB- BUGLIOSI: May I c r o s s - e x amine, your Honor? MR. KANAREK: I will objecttoihe District Attorney cross-examining on the basis that the law does not provide for any discovery of this type. This is in the nature of discovery. It is discove ryOur l a w - y o u r Hmor, has been very, very zealous about Pe<^le vs. Roblea. some isolated case, and some comments of theCourtwhich were taken completely out of conteict. and which have no application, I submit, in this case. And your Honor is defting the law of discovery where from the very beginning, i f - w e can go back many, manyyearsthe courts have made it very plain that the District Attorney cannot make discovery of a criminal defendant. THE COURTS All right. Mr.Kanarek. that will be enoughYour argument does not make any sense, s i r . This is during the course of the trial, and discovery i s permitted during the trialMR. KANAREK: But the jury is not here, your HonorTHE COURT: Hiat will be enough. You may c ross-examine-

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Court.
MR. KANAREK: I w a s t r y i n g t o e n unciate a legal objection. THE COURT: No. You a r e trying to disrupt. We all know what you a r e trying to do. Stop it. MR. KANAREK: May 1 be sworn, your Honor? THE COURT: Let's proceed. THE WITNESS: Mr. Bugliosi,2000 y e a r s is relative to the second we Uvein! If you step out of time, if you have never lived in time, youdon't know time. Time is like a story, like you change channels when you a r e watching TV. You change channels a n d y o u a r e riding a horse- You change channels and you a r e a pirate. Well, you change channels in your mind. Your mind tells you what time It is- It may be 10:30 to you. But to me. the clock never moves. T o m e it is the same. 1 always run tm bellsSuffice it to say. Department 104 i s a long way from Calvary; is that true? MR. KANAREK: I object.
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MR- KANAREK: I objecl. THE WITNESS: As any child will tell y o u MR. KANAREK: MyobJecUonTHE COURT: Youare interrupting. MR. KANAREK: 1 haven't finished my objection. THE COURT: Overruled, ME- BUGLIOSI: How long haveyou been dead? THE DEFENDANT: You didn't let me answer the question, Mr. BugUosiMR. KANAREK: 1 object. MR. B U G L l O S M t h i n k i t i s y o u r a l torney that is preventing you from doing so. THE COURT: Read the last answer(The record was read by the r e porter.) MR- KANAREK: Your Honor, if 1 may make this point? THE COURT: No, you may notProceed. THE WITNESS: As any child will tell you, dead is when you a r e no more- It is just when you a r e not there. H you weren't there, you would be dead. That is what oneofthewitnesses said. They killed the people that drove by in the car- Because they went away, they were gone, they were dead. BY MR. BUGLIOSI: Q: To be p r e c i s e about it, Charlie, tobeprecise-doyouknowwhat precise means? A: Yes. Q: Exact. A: YesQ: To be exact about it, you think you have been deadforcloseto2000 y e a r s , don't you? A: 2000 y e a r s ? MR- KANAREK: I object to that question. THE COURT: Overruled. MR. KANAREK; 1 haven'tmadomy objection. THE WITNESS: Irving, will you please? I can't be in the c o m e r there. Would you please from h e r e ? MR. KANAREK; May I make a point to the Court? THE COURT: You a r e interrupting and you a r e disnipling, Mr. KanarekNow. let the examination proceed. You maymakeyourobjecttonsas we go along, but youmay not interrupt the witness o r counsel o r the

MR. BUGLIOSI: You have heard of Calvary, haven't you? A: I have never been lo CalvaryMR- KANAREK: Your H o n o r MR. BUGLIOSI: Haven't you told people you have? A: No. I have experienced Calvary, but what you a r e talking about is the cross. MR. KANAREK: I object. MR, BUGLIOSI: The c r o s s ? A: Yes. THE COURT: Let's get to something relevant. MR. BUGLIOSI: You testified you wanted to go back to the desert with your children; is that right? MR. KANAREK:lobJect,your Honor. THE WITNESS: That is a very good question. 1 wouldn't object to it. THE COURT: State your objection. MR- KANAREK: On thegroundthal it is a solicitation of a conclusion. What he tesGHed toishitherecordTHE COURT: Overruled. Proceed. MR, KANAREK: I have another point to make, your Honor. THE COURT: Sit down, Mr- Kanarek, and remain quiet until the next question i s asked. MR, BUGLIOSI: Is that right: you want to go back to the desert with your children? A: t would like to be a good father and do what my chitdrenwouldlike me to doQ: Who a r e your children? MR- KANAREK:Iobject,yourHon' or, if I mayTHE COURT: Overruled. THE WITNESS: Everyone that loves me- Anyone that will return my love.

THE WITNESS: Do you know how impossible that would i>e? THE COURT: You may step down, sir. Miss Atkins, do you care t o t e s lif^? DEFENDANT ATKINS: No. THE COURT: Miss Krenwinhel? DEFENDANT KRENWtNKEL: No, THE COURT: Miss Van llouten? DEFENDANT VAN HOUTEN: No. THE COURT: Is il still your des i r e . Miss Atkins, to testify before the jury? DEFENDANT ATKINS: No. THE COURT: Vou do nol wish to testify in front of the Jury? DEFENDANT ATKINS: No. THE COURT: Miss Krenwinkel? DEFENDANT KRENWWKEL: No. THE COURT: Miss Van Houten? DEFENDANT VAN HOUTEN: No,
your Honor.

BY MR. BUGLIOSI: Q: Do you realize. Mr- Manson, that the only people who can setyou free so that you can go back to that desert is the Jury lnthlscase?You realize that? MR. KANAREK:lobject. your Honor. MR. FITZGERALD: That Is not relevant. THE COURT: Do you haveany relevant c r o s s - examination, Mr. Buglloai? MR. BUGLIOSI: This is relevant. THE COURT: Then get to It, sir. MR. BUGLIOSI: Q - I believe you testified for about an hour today; Is that correct. Mr. hfanson? A: I never paid any attention to what the time was, A: You testified for quite a while. You a r e aware tl-mt the jury In this case never heard one single, solitary word you said. Are you aware of that? MR. KANAREK: 1 objectMR- FITZGERALD: Immaterial and irrelevant. MR. KANAREK: It is immaterial, and 1 would like to make a point to the Court. THE COURT: Sustained, Do you have anything further, Mr- Bugllosi? MR. BUGLIOSI: One more question, your Honor. THE COURT: All right, BY MR. BUGLIOSI: Q: Mr. Manson, a r e you willing to testify in front of the jury and tell them the same things that y o u t e s lified to here in open court today? MR, KANAREK: Objection, your Honor, THE WITNESS: Tell them the same things? MR. KANAREK: 1 object. THE COURT: Susteined. You may step down.

THE COURT: Mr. Manson, do you wish to testify in front of Ihejury? DEFENDANT MANSON: YourHonor, is It possible that we could read that bacK to the jury? MR. KANAREK; Your Honor, if 1 may? DEFENDANT MANSON; Wouldyou quit interrupting me? MR. KANAREK: May I. your Htmor, just a moment? THE COURT: Just a moment, s i r . I am still talking to Mr. Manson. Sit down until he is finished. Is that what you want to do? DEFENDANT MANSON: Sir? THE COURT; What isityou wantto do? DEFENDANT MANSON: To repeat what 1 said would be like I didn't even say it. You know, to repeat It over twice. THE COUHT: l a m asking you if you want lo testify before the Jury? DEFENDANT MANSON: Testiftr before the jury? I havealready r e lieved all the p r e s s u r e I hadTHE COURT: You don't want to testify, is that right? DEFENDANT MANSON: YourHonor. 1 would realty like to get it over with one way o r the other. THE COURT: Answer the question, sir-

1 am trying to And out what you want to do. Do you want to testify In frontof the Jury? DEFENDANT MANSON; I'd like to offej a whole defense. THE COURT: WeU, I understand your answer to be that you do not want to testify, DEFENDANT MANSON: 'Hils testimony doesn't count? THE COURT: Does the defense have anything further? MR. KANAREK: Yes, I make a motion for a m i s t r i a l . ] make a motion, your Honor, there is no question that this Jury. 1 can't believe that this jury will not know what went on in this courtroom today, no matter what. You can have a thousand deputies march these j u r o r s off to the Amikassador Hotel, but there is no question but what those j u r o r s a r e going to know what happened in this courtroom today. People know about it, your Honor, who a r e hundreds of feet up in the a i r in the new building over here that they a r e building, the new Criminal Courts edlHce. People know about it who a r e n ' t anywhere near here, THE COURT: Your motion for a mistrial is denied, MR. KANAREK; T h e n t m a k e a m o tlon that the jury be voir dired to find out what they haveheardabout the proceedings in this courtroom. THE COURT: Motion denied.

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November 27,1970

Los Angeles Free P r e s s

News in Erief
Soledad Brothers benefit
A benefit breakfast for ttieSoIedad Brothers will be held next Sunday, November 29, 7:00 A.M. to 1;00 P.H, aLl3111PiircbeAvcnu.Gardena. Tickets may be purcLased for $1 at the Cat State Commimtty Center. 4506 So. Western Av^tue, LA. Phone 296-7160; o r at the CheLumumba Club Community information Center, 4619SO.Broadway, phone Z35-S074. The event ia being sponsored by the Soledad Brothers Defense Committee, and all proceeds will go to the legal defense of seven bUck Los Angeles men who a r e being charged with the murder of prison guard last July, The S o l e d ^ B r o k e r s Defense Committee believes that these men have teen arbitrmriJy singled out for prosecution because they have been known to have mitiiant attitudes. The case of the new Soledad Seven follows the same pattern as the Soledad Ttiree Case e a r l i e r this year. E>ecember 7 is the date which has been set for the beginning of the trial of ttie seven brothers. Their case will be heard before Judge Camptxil of Salinas, who is the same man who wa^ dismissed from hearing the Soledad Three case. He is scheduled to retire wjihin 90 days. "He is determined that before he r e t i r e s he will at least send these seven men to the gas chamb e r , " commented one member of the Committee. The spokesman said that the a l legations of the American p r e s s a r e totally b i s e . The individuals who made statements to the American mass media a r e unknown to Americans living in Canada, " E x ile leaders and members of ejdie groups never heard ofthose people who made tiiose s t a t e m e a t s / * The spokesman also ^ reported that t h e r e has t>een no recrimination against Americans since the War Measures Act, and that no American exiles have left Canada since its inception. t l i e flow of exiles into McHitreal had (Qjr.inished recently, thought (the fall-off started before the inception of the War Measures Act.) Around the beginning of the summer, about 100 American d e s e r t e r s and draft dodgers per week were coming into Montreal alone, but since the end of the summer, that figure is down to 30-40 per week.

^o

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\fi

Morlock lives!

af>

^^^:.<^i^^

An evil rumor was t>egun by unknown persons last week that A.D. Morlock was dead, I t i s n o l l r u e ^ h e is quite alive and wishes to announce that all classes at the F e l lowship of the Ancient Mind a r e Still in p r o g r e s s .

PAX protest rally

Why Charles Monson spoke out

War Measures Act

Since the War Measures Act took effect in Canada. American newspapers and tele vis ion Stat ion shave been reporting that American des e r t e r s and draft dodgers have been fleeing back to the United States. A few days ago. a spokesman for the Montreal Council to Aid War Resistors and the American Deserters Committee called the FREE PRESS and reported things totally different.

In response to the US l>ombing Invasion of North Vietnam, a m a s sive protest action at Los Angeles International Airport has been called by the Peace Action Council for this Sunday. November 29, 10:00 A.M. to 3:00 P.M. A picket line will be formed in front of the passenger loading terminals, focussing on Pan Am and Continental Airlines, which a r e the chief suppliers of pfanes to the CIA and the Army. Organizations a r e invited to bring their own signs and leaflets.

Scenarios be damned; the defense rests


ED SANDERS Even (hp lough TV eslabltahnient p r e s s , hardened b> blKiona of Treak stifnei, aald Charlie Mamson^s tHSltmotiy wis eloquent & moving. One famous TV commenu r o r , a mart v h o s i a r c s straight Into thee^es Of mil Lions of the Citizens of Los Angeles eacli nighty was seen tohavelear-sinlilseytfSj according roatrusiyobservor^as Man son's (e^lfmony ended. How did it come about thai Charlie Manson testified? U wasn't really testimony in that it was not given before the Jury but It Should show that this Ls an eloquent and very intelligent human mammal who Ls allegt-d to have caUed down those chopstnke^on Ci^lo and Waverly Drives. Here is a newspeak resume Of the circumstanees LeadLng up to Manson's deposition before the media of the world with the Jury absent on Friday, November 0. For months there was extaisLve discussion among the defense attorneys at>out what sortof defense the defendants should put on. Was Katte Krenwlnk^ 1 to say that sht^ was swimming at Clelo Drive a few days before the snuffs and thai i s how the pinky print got oil the door to the swimming pool? Or was the whoJe thing to be blamed oo an STPfreakout dope-blitz? Or were alternate scenarios to br presented? Or was there to be a general series of redoggmg maneuvers by the defense designed to punch holes In the prosecution case? Or was (here to be no de* fense? walk frer and book himself Into tor MlssKrenwLn'kel, if the de^ th^ Troubador. tense was ready to b^gln. All along, thi:' defense had Well, none of ibis (eam of deprimed the Inquisitive trial r e fense attorneys could quite swalporters with a scenario for thf low that scenario,So,tentailv*eLy, deiense involving 4 or 5par1s,50 as attractive as putttng Mama thai they, ITii-mf-dia, thought ther^ Cass upoalhewilnpsssiandml^ht would be a lengthy defense, Thf bp, the defense decided to rest, game for th*- media last Thurswhen the day should c o m - t o p r e s day, (he day the prosecution restent their case. On Wednesday, Novemb. r Ifl, ed, was to cajole one of the defense attorneys to reveal who was (o be al 7:00 P.M. at th# Slrhan Court Ihp first defense witness, not room on the 13th floor Oft hi'smog kno'vlng that the number of wllsmirched Halt Of Justice, thf^dfnesses was to be zero. fense attorneys, Mr Kanarek, Mr Hughes and Mr Fitzgerald; and So, when It came lime for Ih^ tht defendants: Leslie Van Houldefense 10 begin, Judge Older en, Patricia Krenwlnkel and Sucalled the Jury down in preparasan Atkins and Charles Manson, tion to near testimony. Attorney met for a final scheme sessiot^ Paul Fil/gerald said that subject for (hf defense. There w t r t four to (he defendants^ exhibits being Sheriffs deputies sittmg abouT uccepted Into evidence, the defive feet away obvlouslylistening fendants, each of them, would s o the attorneys complained about res(. This was followed Immedithe e a r s . The meeting was adately by the older defense altorjourned to (he at(r^ iey room on nii^s affirming that they werf the tenth floor. resting for their clients. It was stunning. The girls still wanted to testify and take upon themselves (he The prosecutor, Mr. Bugliosf guilt for the m a s s a c r e s . They turned ashen wirh s u r p r i s e , provwere going to take the stand and ing that the DA hadnot been tapp"freak the world ovt"not to ing the phones of (he defense atmention that they would exontorneys. Meanwhile, when Mr. erate Tex Watson and Charlie. Flligerald made his stunning an' ' Fuck that*" would be the nouncemi^t, the wooden doors of state of mind of any attorney the courtroom were flung open by confronted with such a siiuation. a stampede of reporters rushing So It was decided that the lawto the longblue-greentablefullof yers would rest the case and phones outside the courtroom. If (he defendants could then act you h a v e n e v e r s e e n a g r o u p o f r e according to their rights, (omake porters trying tooccupy (hesame motions to relieve th"lr lawyers space at the same time you a r e and go p r o p e r , or whatever, to missing an amusing visual. Anytry to testify. Why should a lawway as the reporter-pi ex us was yer allow his young lady client racing tothephones,Susan A(kins to fry under such circumstances? stood up and announced that she wanted to testify she and her So, now we spurt onward to Sisters, Thursday, November 19, where, Highly agitated, Mr, Buglioai in the morning session, thf prosand thP attornies approachi-d the ecution rested. The defens'ma^ bench forapnvalegaboramawlth lengthy andeloquentargumi'ntfor the Judge. II was decided to hold a 1hf> dismissal of the Indictments session in chambers with all paror al l4sl parts of them. For inlies presf.it, to decUlu If the atstance, why should Sadie be torneys were acting In IhebestlQcharged with the murders Of the leresis ofthelrcllents. TheprosLaQlancas when she wasn't on ecudon, and in my opinion, the the scene? Or why shouLd Leslie Judge, wanted to force the defense Van HouTen be charged with coninto prest'nUng wiinesses, as Ifa spiracy to murder those onCiolo trial werr a Iraxing match beDrive when there is absolutely cause that's the way th'' estabno evidence that was presented lishm'nl Opirates - maLte the litthat she so conspired* The Judge tle punks grovel b. fore you gas demed all of (he motions and asked Mr, Fitzgerald, the attorney (please tarn to page 19}

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The field was narrowed down to two scenarios for (he deft^nse: 1) to (ry (0 cast doubt o of h*? prosesulion case as being inconsistent or 2) to res( without a word, then give. Of course lengthy closing arguments before the Jury. A meeting of defenseatlorneys and defendants was held about a week beforelheprosecution r e s t ed. K became obvious that the (hrpe Lady defendants wanted to testify and take the blame for the crimes upon themselves. That was obviously OK with Charlie, Because thi-n, provided he co<Jld . get past the Hinman incident,and I the Inyo County Arson Charge and (ht parolt- violation, hecould

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hM Angelet Free Preag

November 27.1970
taocea couldn't have been better for him. The event was Juala preltmirury testimony, without cross examination, without the Jury presenl, without questloiu aaked, I.e. non-atop, the way Charlie likes it. And with the press of th world attentive to his every word. It waa a perfect set up to deliver himself of his eloquence, and to reveal some of the tragic dlvislona in hla mind, Mr, Manson's remarkable atatemenl is printed in full In thia lasue of the FREE PRESS. See for yourself.

PMI

Manson speaks; no chop chop


fcontintied from page 2) them, so when they retch and couffh sucking up the green corrosion at San Quentin, It will appear JUflt. The Judge was pissedoff that he wasn't inforrned that the girls might stand tip and demand to testily. In chambers, heattempted to interrogate the attorneys r . gardlog the reasons for the defense resting. The District Attorney concerned that the defense was trying to guarantee that the case will be reversed In ahigher court because of so me del i t e r a t e decision of the ftefenRe attorneys to behave in an incompetent manner. To avoid this possibility, (or the benefit of (hetrlal record, the Judge performed a eulogy in chambers In praise of the competence and ability of the four defense attorneys-waxing loquacious over their skills, their r e search, their knowledge in matt e r s of criminal law, their dedication the snme deferTse attorneys (particularly Irving ICanarek) he has pejorated by mouth and by Jail sentences, for months and months. to ask them. The attorneys antkounced that they would not ask the questions. The Judge threatened jail hut the attorneys werr willing to go to Jail, in fact they oven made mottws toberelleved from the case, but the Judge was not about to allow that, especially since hf had inxed himself in on the question of pro per. It would have been otnrloua to have allowed the girls to fire their lawyers uv* to testify for themselves ' pro per'' representing themselves* But he couldn't do that, since the alleged leader Of the ladies, Mr, Manson, had, on many occasions, ben termed '^woffully Inadequate" to represent himself. That being so, how could his so-called disciples, girls of tUs whimsy, be qualified to represent themselves?

Copyright SSLANE7 Los Angeles Free Press


Judge Older ruledthatlheglrls had a right to testify, even over the objections of their attorneys The judge told the girls to write out questions for their attorneys On Friday, November 20, the Judge decided that he would order the defense attorneys to call their clients to (he stand whereupon the girls would be allowed to testify in a narrative form. Iheattorneys retusea, i h e Judge decided that they would be allowed to testify anywaySo the stage was set, and the snuff buffs were eagerly packed Into the court room prepared to hear a chop by chop account of rice paddy murder, or so they thought. But what If the girls were to blame the murders on some one like Ronald Reagan? A difficult problem, so the prosecution made a motion for Ihegirls to testify first out of the ear range of the jury lo see what they had to say, HO that no legal e r r o r might appear on the record.

OF THE PEOPLE SATUKDAT, MOV. 28^.8:30 P . M . LOM0 BEACB AUDITORIUM

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The girls refused to do this, saying thai ihey wanted only to testify beforp the Jury, In fact, the girls were of a mind not to testify at all if Ihey had to give a pr*.view. So, In the midst of this galactic squabble^ Manson stood up and announced ttiat he was p r e pared to testify. And theclrcum-

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hm Aagcica g r c e Pre
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aWhirr uthurhan uMinntmn^ a --^v ttftlrrrrti pnHft/w* in a BimK Cuillory: Well, m Black or Brov^n gheiio Ihe philu^ophy n go in large numben and oCvup>'. F.P.
Vtitir

Interview with a cop


PAUL EIERLE (In our October 2 U M we published The Tim initalltneni of our iniervicw with pTFsiOii Cuillory, a former police oiTlier >nr about three year, h^re m Los Angela Coanly, He is one of the few Uwmen w have ever mci who uas willing to talk frankly and openly aboui the problems of Law enforcemcnl in AmericB. We think you will find his commenis extremely interesting and mfonnaiivv. Here B part iwo. which concludes ihe inierview.

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


F P Ami nisi die inditftiaiion owr ihe teehng of pi'ii-erle\\ne\\ tliui tiir Morld ittev li\r "i. the tollr^e. Ihifiiiiiiumiiv all "t du\ funirollfd hi little ilufue\ i'ho ftave pouei over ewnhmh, ami ei'er\-hinli et\t has no pinier at alt. Hr\. il*' lou tMmi to rap ahniit thf tijkei'-'' Biker', er^ imd nl like outla\'\ on tnnt.ifmles. and likr often vou see aiwotw \'ho i\ ndin^ u tttotim MIP teiiitiK n mkei. Yon km'u, li'Xi ijImoM an i o'tr m tin- I olln ifiai liuppetjs If he la ihe i^olneinaii^ uai pel* a inki-i Cpuillory; I have to disagree with y m on ihui Ihcie are several cclis briites in the Malibu area who ride motorcycles. They never get slopped. (pleasQ (iirnio next pag) F.p.: Oh. reafli' Yoti inratt like the aiuin oml ilir thttliwiH"! ft-oplt: (uillory: Ihere aie a touple ol very notable uclors that would vou like me to name them* F.P.: Wlu mo' (lUilloTv: They're very good actors and I icspeel their right lo drive a bike. Keeniin Wynn drives a hike a leu m the Matibu jrca He's a very nite person I've spoken lo bim once. As a matter of fact, it was v.hct\ \ had ^ i bunch of Biker* smpped one da> ihdi I

Cuillory: Now I believe ii a I believe GuUloiv: Right. Well, I nexer heard Mr. LAPD no lonf^r uses ii. But ihey Cleaver tatk about that but I a^rce still have men who linger around wash- with him there. room But ihe> don't actually go out and arrrsl - to aiimcl any more, but f-P: He WM it'x itte f/triioi '* i/ic thev're always in evidericc m washroh'nt. ami the Hhiie poliie are ilit rooms m major population areas downiHiitpiinti ariu\town. Ouillorv: British iroups coming m to f.P.. WotiUl II really moKr a tlrfoccupy Ihe colony. Ii happens fairly fprente. fli ihe Pamhen ^ai: havmg the .tHtimunilr timtrol ihe pnHi-e het-ame often In East I.A.. for instance. V\c vr li\-e in \itih tarfe itnttmunilie^' been talking to people down there Waukt it rralh in^e thai miuh tM- and there nave bceri more and more disturbances recently. Major iron-Ed.) fereme.' frontations between the kids and the Cuillory: Yet. U would. The depanpolice on Whillier Boulevard, which i* F.P.: Thr atmk Panihers heUfvr ihat meni Ikcads Ihn goes back lo whai the focal poini of everything in Eaiit iheMatk ionmiunU\ ami Fl^'FRYto"i- we were iiilling about earlier control muniti ihttuht havf /I'lat uminiunin- over iheir polite departments. They Los Angeles - the cruising and, you itmiii*l **yrr thr pt'tiir. / happrn w don'l wanl to give up any control he- know, the old standard rousi. Or>c of he fnmi a Mnutf timn vthrre iht\ Mtii cause to ihem conirol is political pow- the Most common techniques we used thr iii it iffli. ftt itther ^y|>rU^. Ihe er. The more people you control the to use was the old taillighl out OT no poUir y-fff jtiii\ I hutl gortr rtr ichimf mure power >ou ha^e, wAich is why the turn signal. You luio^. you'd arbit^ilh- arxf ft '"tr of Ihvm hmf beaiftj up SherilT wanted to annex LAPD when trarily stop a car for having one laila rnenitvr af nu /ainiiv, ht wttuM ha\t Chief Parker died. That was an ideal Lighi out or failing to give a direcheard friim nix fvihfr. tin re/onif-'*- oppOTtunilv for him lo gam 5.5UO tional signal. And you'd gel all par^ oitr frifrti/i. attit a tut '4 pti'ple in ihe additional men ^ving him a force of Ites out of Ihe car, uarch Ihe pi>ciets, then >ou'd uproot the seals, check rttrnmuml v. in excess of 10,000 ofTwers. Manunder the dash and m the glove N M . Guillary: Vou touched on somerhmg power is political power. It's true oL This is all for having oiw light uiit. very imporum ihcre. Not being from a politico and everything. But thvy don^i Can you imagine if you're driving small (own mywif I was raised jn \.vn want to give the local community any with all your lights out? They take Angeles. amJ here, the police are work- chance to control the police, hecau;^ your fenders off and look. ing in areas where Ihey don^i |j\r. then they're afraid they might come up ll gets pretty rank But. you know, The> often bve Tifiy miles from the with suggestions and ideas which would a m Ihey actually pdiioi, nnd they don^i go cnnirar> to what the department talking about occupying nei|>hborhoods and ireaimg people in different manfeel that ihcy have that much rwed to wants, ners, in Ihe past few years, the l:isi answer Id ihe people in the area lhc> pairol. Or fven in ibe area where they F.P: Uke a fitw Chief of Pitlifc three years, we've had our Black riots live! There's four of us here in Cuillory: Like a new Chief of Po- in our ghettos. And suodcniy. like we we're finally starlihji room nghi now. Individually or lice or relieving ji given captain of see our student coHecLivciy. hovv much conifol do we duty Thi^ is whalwe saw happen here ing up ^ludent riots no*. They art doing basically the same thing that the ha^c^' We ha^e no control ai all over ihe in Venice. Tbcy Wanted to see a new police. Nor do we as individuals. We captain placed there. Apparently he Blacks were doing in their riots. have no idea what policies our local wasn't cutting l\K mustard as far as And before it was always a middleclavt thing. "Look at the damn Niglaw enforcemeni agencies have. W^ have the community was concerned, but gers now. You give them so miKh and no idea what iheir policies ^re towards even ihough everybody. virtually narctfici. or SCJI offcibden. or any- everyone in Venice was against this ihev go out and tbe> burn and they dcthing. We don'i know. I know what ihey particular police captain, nothing is slroj " And suddi^nly it's ihc cullegc kids. And they Look at things so much were as of iwo and a half months ago bemg done because Davis c^n sa>, when I rnigned. but I don't know now. "Who ibe hell are they to tell me differently when it's the college kids and ihev're doing the same thing now. Because I'm a civilian. thai Ihey don't like my captain out And suddenly I hi- population is going to But Ihe only people who kna^w what there.*" have lo sit up and look at this and say. ihe polickes of Ihc^ departments are^ F.P.: Yeah, evrn ili"ujih it i% iheir "Well, there's got to be something are the people wiihin these depan- fim}miinitv. hasicaliv wrong with the system bemenls. They won't tell you what their Gm^lory: It's iheir com m unity. It's cause looV two grnups with entin> pohcy is as regards homosciiualif. Re- ihtir police department. And ihey look ly diflereni gojis, or similar (goals in member a few years Jigo when the LAPD at the side of iheir door and it says, some respects bai basically of dilhad what they affectionately called " l o serve and protect." I asked myferent backgrounds, are going out and Iheir "Fag S*^uad'7 The people with self when I Hrsi saw that, when they doing exactly the same thing." the tight levts and the lennies? Paul ^nd I Urst sianed putting it on the doors, Ahd they're going to have to ^hake were ulkmg about (his the other day. "Who are they ihere lo serve and proand I think thai this b the same thing tect.'" It's kind o f - a nebulous type their heads and say, -^Wc^L there musi ax if f were to see a girl walking thing. It's jusi thrown oul there on the be '^mething basically wrong here to cause ibis" Because Ihey can no longdown ihc street who shook her fanny -it er blame ii un people who live in a me or, in some '*a>, led me on. I door. would probably o up aikd start a con- F. F.: Ymi ran lalk a ginni ifffft ohiivl deprived area, and are economically i/ie depri\cd. We're dealing nov^ with versation, Ihinlying 1 would perhaps ihi.% i% somethintc that reatti iVhitr 4'intmitnii\-ha\ hadnttonarentw people who have everything you know, score. ot tirtlil i-eri- mmili. There itvrr.i Hf Bui, you take a hcmn^^ual. hf i^ of ii he quite a ditletent pdiii tit hinv lo ihe proverbial silver spoon in the different disposition and hi^ bait is handle a tiiuoiMn in a Whtte ^uhurhan mouth at birtb, yet who're getting oihcT guys. Fine. He seev a guy who rteiKhhtirhiHHl nhere ihere tn a galher- very up tight dbnut certain policies by the police instituted towards ihcm trie% lo entice him in the same wa^ thai iftj! ot people or ihere'% a mtgrret iiF a %\t\ might try to entice me. And he a iretfit cilalHtti iir yvharever, 'ntere'\ F.P.: Yeah. Ami ttie kid^ vho are gowalks up and makes the same kind of one polkr of handtmg a ^itimiion like infC out in the \trfei\ Hiih the fttink^ contad ihai I ^ouid try in make wilh the girl. And what happens? The I.APD puts Ihe clamps on him? Merifly beeaine his sexual behavior a dtrfercni. MDIANARTCBfTER Bui who is lo s^y what kind of sexuul OF CALIFORNIA behavior is normal? Who is iiuabried to say what sexual bchavioi- is norTHE WESTS FINEST mar Ceruinly not any police departSELECTION OF meni thai t have ever known? I have yei to see a police official who is that AMERICAN INDIAN ABT, inteUigeni. intelligeni enough lo tell CRAFTS AND RELICS AT me how I shouW enjoy my sex life RESERVATION PRICES or how ANYBODY shouk) enjoy his scK life. 12Gae VENTURA BL.. STUDIO CITY 1 Hk. E. of CntdMitt Ctnvon 763-3430 f.F.: I\ti'i t/tat kiml vf enlrapoitm iltenat^

> i 7 7 ! ! r O r D r i T w i - 7 * 3 r the Kid\ "hi' hay* hoil the i r it* trrm\ of ..pentlmft rtnmev ant Mii%loni:\ and nhn llie ftrpVu praile\. Gai|lor%; The kids who doni haif to be Ihere. The kids who really have no axe to grind except that maybe they've had It up lo their hips and ibc>'re just full of rcallv ligntenus indignation and ibc^ want to get oul and do something ihev leel now they liii^e to make some son of a stand for society if not lor themselves, h's not juvt a personal thing. It's ihir thing about doing It for society,

had contact with him. Uui the Bikers are considered to be bad iwws. HFB started ,i bike U\'' several years ^^o and Ihey mamiairied a hike Hie, ur did the last linic I heard. It is an inteUigente file niiul ihey gel a^l t'heve peti pic's names, descripliun of tbcir bikes, then- ages and sn on and their ;iliases and iheir means of livelihood, and the ivpc of Lrimes thev commit and this soti of thing They have a pretty good file on ihem. And they oftentimes step on these people even though ilH-v'rc nni doJn>; anything wrong at the time because ol their pasi record. So if vou're a Bikei and you belong to .n outla* Club, which is not JI jjiKid scene lo hegm wnti but 1 will siiy Ihis I tia;c met gooU Hikers in h:iLl eluhs. Ihev're not all bad people. Ihev just belnnjt to ii'i outlaw tjub which is. wuw. big deal. Some iy\ them ore really g^^od people

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Lofl Angele^Ft^ee Prestf ^TjTLCS!fF^^"^e3Tr^JeiTr^I!r" diWl'ilAW: Li'tiLity ^VMt


back to what happened in Hollister. California in about '64- 1 believe it was> when they sacked HollisterThat was the Hell's Angels- You see, when an outlaw motorcycle gang is new and they want to get the reputation of being an outlaw club that'^ when they're the most dangerous because this is when they want to go out and beat up a policeman o r h a r a s s a small town or local coffee shop o r something and really get a reputation a s b e ing had a s s e s . They have to go out and do something to gain some notoriety to establish the fact in e v e rybody's mind they a r e a b a d - n e w s club. Otherwise, they're just another motorcycle club.

53 I fIJxWUHeil U , ' j ;
possibility that there are things wrong that need c r i t i c i s m and nd changing, GUILLORY: I will say this, I've never used I D - n o t b e c a u a e l b a cause i t ' s against the law or fbr any other reasonJust that i have never had the occasion o r d e s i r e H this point- I'm not saying that 1 wouldn't o r I would* but t am stating that I never have up * j tni p^lntYou know, n a r c o t i c s - ' i t ' s a p e r son's own bag. It's tike his aex life. If a guy wants to drop radaor whites o r smoke g r a s s , i t ' s h i i bag. It's whatever he wants to do- Andl s e e noobjection to marijuana whatever. Reds and whites are s o m e thing e l s e . iMcauifl they dull your s e n s e s enough w h e r e you c a n - e s peeially drivingyou can s c r e w yourself up worse thanalccdiol. PPt What about the choke hold and the doctors saying it i s very d w gerous? GUILLORY: I'm glad you t e k e d that question. Y o u k n o w . i n t h e l i g h t of the supposed suicide that took place at East LA Station in e a r l j January, a young Cblcano narcotle offender, i b e l i e v e , wae found in h U cell. ersthey all standout. They've got the funny bikes and t h e y ^ e got the spiffed goodie in the back and they more or l e s s announce t h e i r p r e s ence by the waj their bike in designed and the way they're d r e s s e d . You Know, they're an outlaw Biker when they drive up. FF-. \n individual June Biker always gets rousted wherever he goes. GUILLORY: True. FP: A lot. But how do they deal with a large group of BikerK? GUILLORY: You mean when they s e e a big crew of Bikers? don't believe il was LA County- It was Santa Barbara, Like I was s a y ing, though, this i s the way they g e t (heir intelligence information. They go out there and they take p i c tures and they more o r le&s make the Bikers k n o w - m a k e their e x i s t ence known to the B i k e r s - t h a l they arc there and they're ready to kick their a s s if need be and take whatever steps are n e c e s s a r y . B u t , really, some of thes gangs are bad news. There are no two ways about it. And they have to be advised that the police are aware of their existence and aren't going to stand for any cra|>. Part of the Manson thing, too, was the guy. the Panther, that vanished si4>posedly on the Spahn Ranch.

Guillory
(Continued from previous page) FPr What ar the coolest c l u b s ibG most peaceful clubs'? GUILLORY: Non-exiBtlnfi clubs. There are various clubs. You find quite a few In the El Monle area They're hind of a l o w e r - l o w e r claHs type of club. You find a l o t u f pe^^leyour hillbillies and your people from back in the South arc big on bihe^'-they go for the garbage biKea, you know, with Ihe saddlebags and numerous lights and lots of chrome. They have these (unny-you Know, with the chicKen on the back of the jacket and t^ey always wear the aviator's cap and like t h a t - l h e bijj H a r l e y s - I h e y ' r e garbage bikes and they're obviously just n bunch of peopleouthaving a good time.

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F P They'rejiut really into a s e r i DUfi trip? FP: Yes, RIIILLORY: Well, normally they ^11 get everything they've got in the area and make a good safe stop whert they ^tup all the bikes and theyMl have sufficient manpower to handle the group. A one-man unit o r a two-man car i s n o t g o i u K t o s t o p a group of BiKers by t h e m s e l v e s . That's foolhardy, Nobody wants t o wear their siren a s an amulet for life^ It makes a hell of a peace symbol, I'll clue you. FP: Why are individual lone Bikers hassled s o much? GUILLORY: Well, because they're lone Bikers as I just said. They're easy^-you know, the point of U a a t resistance is this lone Biker. You know, they're e a s i e r and you can check Ihem out and spend more time collecting information on Ihem rather thanyoucanHcollect that much information when you've gut 3D or 40 B i k e r s , no matter how many officers you'vcgot. Youcan't do it in a systematic manner. With one Biker you can take your time and get all (he information) you Know-run a make on him- Did you ever try to run a m a k e o n 3 0 p e i ^ l e at one time? FPi It would be hard. Who'sdetermined the Bikers arc dangerous? FP: Did they do anything that was physically bad there? Dldtheybeat anybody up? In Hollister? GUILLORY: They beat numerous people. It's physically good d e pending on what end you're on. It's all a matter of point of view. FP: T h e y V e into rape a loL GUILLORY: Yeah- It's kindofanin thing for motorcycle elubs t o d o You hnoi^, I covered this when I talked to Fat Mayers about the Manson c a s e , and we were talking about the tact that these motorcycle c l u b s - t h e y get bome of the m o s t - w h a t I think a r e outstanding looking chicKsyou could want. They voluntarily come up and Live with the clubs in the summer. And they get school teachers a n d n u r s e s a n d social workers and liKe this- You Know, chicks that usually have something up h e r e , that they've got toyou know* a little Quirk that they've got to satisly. And like maybe they don't like their dating s c h e m e in the straight world and they want a s u m m e r away from things where they can Just come and let LI all hang outFP: Maybe t h e y ' r e t i r e d o f t h e t i m ' id bank clerk o r school teacher type a s a dale and they want s o m e thing more livelyGUILLORY: Not everyone wants to go down to look at the LA County Museum- you hnow. But let's face it. I'm sure the Bikers show them quite a bit of a different time than they would get in the city. Like the old Playboy cartoonthe g i r l i s mar r ie d and it's her weddingnighl and s he 's walking with her husband i t ' s a very good cartoonahe s a y s , "Dear, I ihlnkthere's s o m e thing I should tell y o u . " Andonher buttocks she has t a t o o e d " P r a p e r ty of H e i r s Angels '60 to '69-" FP: The Panther? 1 didn't know about thatGUILLORY: Okay. Well, this is rumor. There a r e a l o t o f r u m o r s g o ing around about the Spahn Ranch. Supposedly, you know, Manson b e ing very anti-Black had supposedly killed a Black Panther and the body was somewhere ontheSpahn Ranch and this, why-^thLs i s part of the reason that the raid was made on the Spahn Ranch, because they felt that Manson and h i s group plus the Satan Slaves who w e r e living there w e r e gearing for, you k n o w , a l i t t l e bit of a war widi t h e B U c k Panthers over this supposed death. Wedon't know if there was really a killing or not t>ecause the body was never found. And that^s theonly informa" tion I got on it6812 O. Sunwt BoulvBrd Tatatibcma ( 2 l 3 i 4 6 e - 9 5 n

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Le meI want to tell you s o m e thing right now. We talked about this the last time we w e r e together. And something I think i s really fantastic, and that La how much trouble your police agencies will go to to find oul things about you that they feel people should be aware of- 1 just came back from a trip back East and when I returned I found out that, first of a l l . E a s t LA Stationand this I've gotten on very good Information - has a memo up on Ihe bulletin board that, because of the article in the FREE PRESS, nobody was to d i s c u s s my p r e s e n c e there pro o r c o n o r w h a t i was like and was I a nice guy or bad guy whatever- And a l s o unbeknowsi t o m e that I've be>n using LSD for the last three y e a r s - i h i s i was very much interested in.

FP: We'd have to say allegMl. GUILLORY^ Alleged nareotic u s e r was found in h i s cell allegedly having committed suicide, ailogedly having crushed hla win4>lpe. Anyway, 1 want to cover something very interesting. F i r s t of all, in most of our lockup a r e a s unless a person i s s e r i o u s l y Injured where he requires hospitalisation, they'll put a person bach there in the lockup by himself unsupervisod in all s o r t s of alcoholic and narcotic s l a t e s , which means LSD t r i p s , a guy oti iq^>ers o r downers, and there's no periodic check at a l l . And the philosophy of the j a i l e n and the officers concerrwd i s if he dies he dies. Vouknow,nofaig|ojis. It will save us having to bust blm next time- That Is the philosophy. And this I've heard many t i m e s .

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FP: I heard something about the p o lice g o l n g t o a Hell's Angela'funeral. They went to that one funeral. The Biker that was ahotinthehead and they found his bo4y. So they hassled the funeral- They w e r e at the funeral tahitig pictures of people. Was that CKP o r S h e r i f f a o r what?

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FP: Far out. GUILLORY: Like if somebody was giving me something I didn't know about I'd want lo ktiow- That, and the fact that their thought was that 1 was probabLy - I probably b e longed to s o m e subversive organization, which my only reason for Joining the Sheriff's Department was to eventually itiseredit themAnd then from Malibu another p e r son that I have contact with told me that the d ^ a r t m e n t from downlown^thcy g o t this from the p e o ple working al the A c a d e m y - t h a t I was supposedly a c c u t e d of police brutality and I was really screwing around the uniform ad to speak, in their point of viewbut, ] will say this, no tjiarges have been filed against me and I think that if considering what I've done in the Sheriff's Department in their e y e s , if t committed a c r i m e In any way. shape or form, they would have prosecuted me. But it's m u c h e a s i e r to deal In character a s s a s s i n a tion than to come forward and a c cuse a person of a e r i m e which I think U - 1 don't think it should be done.

F P : But what they don't want to leave open i s s o m e possibility that maybe there are s o m e things that really deserve c r i t i c i s m and a s long as they can make you out a s some kind of psychopath they don't

Well, let's get bach to diis a l leged suicide. We w e r e Uught in Ihe Academy l l l a k e a a p p r o x i m a t e ly eight pounds to crush a p a r s o n ' i win4>4>e- 1> takes appr<ntimalalx six seconds to choke a person out. The normal method bring you use your w r i s t aa a l e v e r a n d y o u c b o k e out ueing die fir at of your forearm. You g e t the person back and you grab Ihem b e h i n d - f r o m behbid. usually putting your knee kv In U a tkack to gel him off balance s o thai he's kind of bowedbackwarda. This way he's off balance and t i l of hie weight i s at your command. Then, using your wrist a s your U v e r y o u come in on his windpipe pulling his head against your shoulder and, If you're rlght-handed like I am, my face cheek would be tgi t c t i n a t hie left aide of h i s head and then I could apply all the p r e s s u r e Ineed 10 choke him out. It would take about s i x s e c o n d s . Or. if I d e s i r e d to. I coidd a l s o crush h i s win<Mw> regardless of h i s s i z e b e c e u s e , y a i i know, eight pounds i s eight poumk to everybody. Andyourwiht^lP>> not ayou know, c L ^ t pounds does it. Also. I wish to make a s t a t e ment h e r e . Noticing how the L A P D was au|ipresaing-not subduing but s u p p r e s s i n g - t h e rioters In Westwood Village last week, they w e r e using their batons in the s a m e manner that we w e r e taught to u s e our w r i s t s . We are taught n e v e r to use our balona to choke a p e r son out f o r one very simple r e a son. You've got a b n t a s t l c l e v e r there and you canH Juilge how much p r e s s u r e you're applying. So. with a baton, attempting to cfaokee person but you could very e a s i l y eight pounds i s not that much p r e s s u r e . It lakes approximately five lbs. to pull the trigger on t h e a v e r -

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November 2 7 , 1 9 7 0 place near where I live. And that evening | went to work, and there was my Inspector and Ihe lieutenant And one of the Sergeants, Pve told this story many limes to many people. It reminded me of seeing a very bad rerun of Branded" where my sword was ceremoniously bnAen and thrown outaide the gates of the fori, I actually tjupected them to be playing the'Branded* theme as I left the Captain's office, F,P, Did they rip your buttons off? Guillory: Well, I went in there and they gave me the routine aboul falling to (4>pear For a court subpoena, which Is what they eventually relieved me ofdutyfor. Obstensibly that was their reason. They didn't mention tne fact that I talked to the press at all. But they started Questioning my loyalty tothedepartmenUThe inspector' the old siver-cop, Inspector Graham- madereferences to my loyalty and was trying to bum my brldgHS behind me and this sort of thing. And I said, well no, Vm just tired of talking to the wall, I have toomanyldeas and too many suggestltins. And 1 more or less told him 1 fell pd outgrown the ^ b , and he didn't care for that too much. And then he asked me for my service revolver, which I gave him, less the rounds, I told him If he didn't mind, the bullets were mine. 1 gave him my badge and 1,1}, cards -and they took my name tag too^ which Is considered part of the uniform- as If I cruld impersonate apollcemanwlthmynamelag, F.P. lliat would be a funny thing to do,

Loi Apgclea Free Prcgg ments couldn't be kepi t v - niy car or anything. So 1 reslgnedcame in the next day and made out a new resignation effective the following day, m e n I went down, the following day, to s e cure my nnal release firom personnel. So 1 ran across Inspector Graham, who was very i^set about having been talked to by the press. 'Hien he tried to give me the impression he was going to punch me out In the hallway, except it was a public building and there was quite B crowd around. Re eventually Cooled off a bit and went into his office.,. And that takes us ;f> to the present time. Except for he rumors which I found out about when 1 came tuck. No overt acts toward me by the department. Subversive acts. Undercover acts, 1 would Imagine, but nothing out In the open,

Guillory
Sun.-Thurs. I 0 i . i n , - I 2 M i d n i ^ l FH. A S a t , 1 0 a . m . - 2 a . n i . HOIXWVOOD 4 2 4 W N o , Fairfax Ave. 938-2353 WESIWOOD 1059 Broxton 477-2579 (Continued from previous page) age handgun.Soyoucantttflebatoo like tbal and crushaperaon's irlndplpe and aerlously tnjurehla throat without even rflaltelng It. And eapecUlly when you're angered alhliD, STul you're riBMiiw, trying to ubdue Mm, Vry easy to kill him with a baton, i rrovn. I <llasi>prove of anybody choking anybody out with a baton, 'mere are eaaler waya to do it. In the first place. If you've got the baton and you want to get it around his neck, lt*e harder to do that tb^-n It would be to Just choke him out. You're tiehlnd him snd you i^uld do It Just as easily with your wriat. But It looks more Impressive, you know, The tools or the trade,

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THEMOVEMENTTOWAROANEWAMERICAaiMmMad by Mitchell Goodman. A comprehaniive anambiaas, htftory of and guide to the ongoing Antarican ravohitton

F,P, More fun touseequlpment? Guillory: Thay spend a lot of money on equipment. They like to use all of their equipment. F.P. Do police officers do much planting- planting of evidence ? Guillory: All I can speak of Is my personal experience. Pve seen eirldence planted once or twice, l ^ e feeling is thta; if an officer arrests a person he knows deals In narcotics, say, for drunk driving or for balng drunk In the street, and he knows the guy Is a dealer.chen he feels JustlfledI think It's wrong myself- but he feels Justified In planting narcotic evidence on thepersonwhen he searches him.Kence^hecomes out with two or three reds or Whiles In the guy's pocket and then he gets a rap- he's on the felony bust instead of Just Qie drunk driving. In their mind. It's Justified because they -know" that he's a -bad' p e r s c ^

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4 1 1 . T H E M A G E L L A N I C CLOUDS by Diana Wakoskl. IHumimtkMis by one of the moit powerful and truthful of America'! young poets S4.00

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L X IL" O P E N I N G _ In Juiuary

Coma Together I VfHir Mind: Looaan it or Loose It. Evan hranoids have Enemies. M r b a dying business. God Oava Us Grass. BeWoa. Have a Nice Dy. All the world is watcMng the U. S. and all the a S. i wAchingT. V. OedlpiN flex ttte Home. Jeius is a Soul M H I . 1 Di*i*t RalM My Toy to be e Soklier.

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F^P^ TTiey fel that the end Justifies the means ? GuUloryt Plghtl RlghtlThatlstho whole thing behind police work. That is the whole philosophy In a nutshell. F.P. In other words, If they think yoi^re a bad news guy, theydon't care how they get you as long as they get you.,, GuUlorv: Oh nol There's no two ways atiout It, Ifhe'B an^enezny* of society, quote-unquote, then you use whatever means generally speaking, vlthln the lawthey like to keep It within the framework of the law-to get him. F.P. But planting Is not really within the law- so they go allttle beyond the law. Gidllory: Tliey C " ^ a little beyond the law. But, face U, who sees It? Who's to know? If s like the old expression- When a ireefallsin the forest, and there Is no one there, then i there any sound If there's no one there to hear It? F.P. What was the occasion that prompted you to leave police work? Guillory: Well, 1 guess that was In December, I smarted thinking that there were better things in life than working In aradlo car when! was 35 years old, Fm 25 now,and I feel this is a good time to get out And, as I told you earlier, t Just came back from a tripbarkEast, which Is what l had intended to do anyway when Idecidedtoqult,and r v e been gon the last 45 days, just travelling around the United Statee, Well, when I decided todo that, I submitted my resignation to l>e effective the 27th of January and then the whole thing hit the fan about my talking to KLAC Radio about certain things 1 felt the sheriff was concealing from the pd>lic tiecause of 1970 being an election year. 'Hie fact, well, of my talking about the Spahn Ranch raid. Manson and Atkins were both arrested there and that was one week after the Tate- La Blanca kllllnga. At the time, we had no Idea they were wanted and neither did LAPD. Well, anyway, when they were finally arrested by LAPD, it became quite apparent the sheriff didn't want this information known to the press becaoae It would make him look like an ass- even though we dldnot yet KNOWI You knowthepublic, the way they are. So I talked to KLAC about this and certain other things I felt about police work, and things I saw swept under the rug, and we talkedthe rifwrter and I dkl- at a

Guillory: 1 could lust see myself pulling somebody over, you know, on the freeway, using just my name tag. I think this Is typical of ihe way they thinkvery small-minded. They really should take tity buttons^ because the bultona are considered to be pari of the uniform- you know, they have the sherlfTs shield on them and all thisthe bear crawling around doing something dlrly. Well, after that, 1 was walking down the stairs, and they walked mi to me and said,'Look, why don't you jual go ahead and resign now and make it easier on yourself.* I couldn^t see that so I Just spiLl. 1 came back Ihe neail day after contacting the ACLU and they told me that because of the way the department Is structured, there was very little they could do about It, They could shaft me. By relieving me of duty^ they stopped all my pay and benefits, tut I had to resign soon or I would starve. My pay-

F.P. Sad to say, it seems that the only guys in police work who have any creative or i^onstructive Ideas about how to improve It are all getting out of police work. You, Hannon,,, what's to be done about (hat? Guillory: Right now there's nothing that CAN be done. Police men who are liberal ai all are all forced out eventually. There's no two ways about It, Pve seen It hai^en. F.P. Father by their own choice or they're forced out, or they just seem to say, "This la not for me," Guillory: Either forced out or they lust become so tired of,,,. F.P. Tired of bucking ihe bureaucracy? Guillory: Tired of fighting the system. They Just throw their bands t^ in the air because..,, like, 1 t>ecame very lax about narcotics arrests my last few

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Guillory
(Continued from previous page) months there and I really got turned off by most of the arrests I was making. I Just cjldn't have tbe spirit any more, T wanted to work; 1 remember IhB inspe<:ior Asked me at the inquisition when 1 was relieved , if i was giving IDO per-cent to my Job, I told him, *No,' 1 said that because my feeling was this; It only took 50 per-cent of my ability to perform the Job, 1 felt I was wasting the majority ofmy ability because they couldn't make use of Lt. F,P, "rtiat's really too bad. Because that's the whole problem with police work. It seems to attract Inferior men and spit out the superior man^thedecent man. And they're not utilixlhg the manpower they have. By that I don't mean their bodies alone; I mean making use of a man's imagination and creative Ideas Guillory: Hiat's the whole thingtheyre not utilising the manpower thoy have, and by that 1 mean his thoughts, hi judgement Dd his philosophy. F,P. And hopefully his intelligence and humanity, Guillory; Right, lliey can stick him In a radio car for 15 years. If he doesn't buck igi und he goes along with tb right-wing ethic, h6 will stay in the radio car, HeU never make detective, he'll never get anywhere unless he comes along and falls in line. And U*B not worth It Just to wear a suit for eight hours a day.

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F.P, TTiat's really the problem, Guillory: It is. It's like, the whole complexion of the military would change If they could Just retain fui^ard-looking officers and enlisted men, but they can't. You get a guy who really has his mind t'-sother, the first thii he wants Is out of the military, F,P, Did vou have quotas for traffic tickets ? GtUllory; No, the Sheriffs department does not have quotas for tickets, some of the other agencies do,.,, F.P. What about the LAPI^ ? GulUory: I canM answer that, I have no contact with the LAPD as far as,,. I have no friends in LAPD who would tell me this, F,P, What happens to a man who often comes In with no citations? GulUory: Well, look at illikethts M A K E I T H A P P E N WITH GrmtAFTER^ b u t e v e n b&ttar BEFORE
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F.P, "nion shouldn't guys like you be Btayiag In , trying to get IV into a position of authority? Guillory: You can't get into that position if you're progressive, lliey'll righi you all the way. There's no room at the top.and they'll tell you this if you ask anybody who's made it to the top. 'Hiere's no room at the top for a liberal policeman. 1 have friends and former roommates who told me when I Joined the department they gave me five years, 1 didn't make five years1 only made three. They said at the mo^'i- wtth the temperament and philosophy I had- at the time I Joined back In November of '66 was such that they couldn'tseeme making It for 30 years. At max, at mast, they said, five years, 1 really couldn't hack five years of it,

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105

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11MT

he wouldn't wort a traffic car too long if he didn't have any, if he came ID with % \og that showed nothing but su^Jicioiis vehicles and suspicious persons, Fd like to say at this time that whTO it comes to criminal cars, I think they're evaluated in the exact opposite manner from the way they should be evaluated,An officer's evaluated , working a criminal car partly by the number or arrests he makes each month. They're not concerned so much wlUi whether the crim In his area i s down or not. What's the easiest arrest to make? TJarcotlcs, Narcotics, right now, So,nrst,he can make a lot of narcotics arrests and have a real good evaluation- youknow-bedoingadamn good ]ob of busting every kid in the area. But his burglaries and his "crime in the street,* car theft, car stripping and what not go right to the ceiling. Why are policemen not evaluated properly? -which would mean that the crime statistics In their areas went down, then they would receive ahigher evaluation, flila would mean they would stay In their areas and patrol them properly. But they can't patrol their area when they're busting some kid for having a loint in his pocket , and going into the station and booking him. Because InMalibu this sometimes takes an hour Just to get from the arrest scene to the station and back Into the field again. iTiat's an hour that his area i s unprotected, I think some of your readers in the Mallbuarea should be very concerned with the fact that Hallbu has 190 square miles. And on the early morning ahiTt, which is the most active hours for people having heart atladw, children tMcomlng HI, traffic accidents, people coming home drunk from bars and what not, having accidents, drunk drivers and what not, Malibuhaa two- count them- two radiocarsl That's for 190 square miles. One car patrols the area ttvm the Ventura County line on the Pacific coast Highway aU the waytv to Sunset and Mesa, which la where L A P C s area atarts. Tlia other car i s serosa the canyoos and patrols Oie area whi<A borders canoga P s A , Hwy bave areas such as Weatlake, Twin Laka, Hidden Hills, all of those small islands of county residential area, Now, you give a car 95 square miles, Hrst of all, h v a not going to cover aU of his area in one night. And if you pull him out of the field- if be makes a bust during that shift, there ain't nobody there while he's gone for that hour. So if your baby starts dioking, or If yoi^re involved in a traffic accident, you damn well better hope the hi^way patrol Is nearby, because ttie sheriff won*t be, because he won*t be In the field. He's busting somebody for narc. But they're doing this big thing right now of putting as many cars as they can on evMiings and early mornings ar^ they're having them patrol the Weatlake housing area, which is a brand'uew ultra ^-expensive housing area. They're saturating this area with cars for one reason. Itie sheriff gota a lot of political siQiport from people living in Weatlake, and he wants to make It look like he*s really patrolling WesUake, which he Is during those hours. But the cars and the men that are being utlliaed on day shift and P,M,'s could be much better utilised working extra early morning cars There should be at leaat two extra cars on each elde or the canyon because for mutual ^assistance.

for 0D tbti, if a car recpMBta assistance- and It hapiwns very rarely because Malibu is a slow area- the one time you gel your ass in a sling and you need assistance, you don't have anybody to call, because on the Coast, unit, there's one CHP unit. They only run one car at night too out of their Uallbu office. So if they are tied up with an arrest someplace, or aomethlng else, you're dead. Now if you request assis tance, it takes- we used to time It at top speed, going from Pacific Coast Highway and Malibu canyon v^ Malibu canyon to the other aide where the Freeway is located- ittakesapproximately 16 minutes- and that's driving 00 mUee an hour in the canyon, which Isn't too very safe. Butyo4i do it because your buddy's aaala in a sling aiid you've got to get there. They encourage accidents, Utey encourage perhaps the death of an officer too because of their own fitigidlty in trying to impress somebody with liow wAl they can police a given areadurIngtheddy-forpoliticalpurpoaee oidy. n i l s is their prime concern -not protecting the people in the MaUbu arevroperiy, I hope your MaUbu readers wlU conUct the SherlfPa Department and try to verify this, ]t> s true. Two cara for l&O sQuare miles, F.P, Far outi Guillory; You were talking to me to the LAPD about police conduct. Well, I happened to be coming home one night and there'a a small strip of area up near Gardena 4Uch is patrolled by the County Sheriff, but which borders the 77th precinct. As I was com^ ing home with this relative of mine, we happened to notice two very obvious LAPD detective units. They had their small aeriala on the back, the big tires, the four-door, and the two guya wearing Montgomery Wardaulta. They're sitting there- twomento a car- and it's about midnight, F.P, tf B usually Foreman and ClariimdtB.

aad flrst Ihey gava we a a^rgeanl wlie wee at dneninw, and I told htm what t^e attuaUonwai^ 1 told him there were two immarked LAPD unita - detective unite- drag racing In the street and he came back and he aaya How do you know they're unmarked police care?^' And 1 said, "I know an unmarked police car when I s e e one," P ve bad enough eaperience, Akldcanptcknneonlintheatraat When I waa alx years e U , t could spot an wmarked car. WeU, nnaUy be gave me the waidi commander- iTth precittel He gave me the same routinaHow can you tell they're n' marked cars?"

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So I wrtU 11 down, Itoldhlnt I said, ' l U e y v e got s m d l aerlaU in the bach, and the big t l i t t and the four doors- and they're ol>vlonsly unmaxted police cars," And he waa giving me tiie rm-arotBd, Ttm typical dumb oltlaen on UM 'pbone^ You kDOW- 'We'll Uas ttiia Ofke oft,* And UnaUy I said, -Look- Pm an ex-pollceman. I knew what an nmarked car looks Uhe. I said, "Ellher we can sit here all night and argue about wtiatber tbeyre police cars, or else WCMM you Ilka to wait uhtu they kfil somebody, or one of them a t a c ^ igi , and they we can come down and look at them and aee tf tbay are really p^loe cara or ootT*

GulUory- EUght off the rack at Sears. Some of ttem sbotdd have stayed OQ the rack. Anyway, they raced their engines, and these cars are all aotomatic, and they svUenly dropped these Plyxnouthe down Into low geaA^r and tires wer* m^innicg and off m ^ ^ down the street. Wethougttt-youknow^ a coigile of c|(nnia,romg officers. Wdl, fliey went down about a quarter of a mile, and there were peciAe driving op and down the street vtw were obvloualy pulling over, getting out of the way, BUI there waa very little traffic because it was onabrldge thai crosses the Harbor Freeway near Hoover, So Ifaey came bach and ttiey lined v again, and may did it i^alnl Twice! So 1 got on Ihe horn and I caUed the LAPD

So he Anally got a little I V N * and he aald, -WeU, PU send a Bi^ervlaor right out,* Neadleea to aay, there waa no more drag racli that nigbt, l ^ e y did tUa four different times and theo ttey i w t disvpeared-tikeyavvorated. F,P, 1%ey got caught.,, CuUlory* Yeah- buthad InottoU them 1 waa an ox-policeman and t knew what an unmarked car looked like, I wouH bavegottao the typical kUa-oir. whic^ la ae typical of LAPD. B really plaaad me ofL Because diey could have actually kUled aomefaodV. Tea know- a ccHVle of dovna in namartad cara racing qp and down the sir sat. Chief DBVta etalBia he ha audi a profeaalonal department. And these ware men who had r t a e o f r o a kha ranka, who ware onea In the Uacfc and white cars- d n raclngt Ao they a h o i ^ Ittveroore professional pao^e In the Uack and white cars. But thaae guys were detacUves, and they're rao* Ing IP and down the atraetl I guasa tbare'a not n v ^ crlma In L,A. that tbay coidd devote their time to. Ihey just had to UU Ume radng, I think i f a swell that we have aneugb otflcera so the LAPD can ^ s r e a tew for a drag race F.P. Ttianke a lot. R was intereatliv talkiag with you, GulUoryi Thauk you.

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Log AngeieB F r e e Preag

December 25,1970
Laughing Devil, taking frowns f r o m clowns, and giving Kings crowns ^ - N o . it's not an Insane dream. There is a god. and I seen him ir prison! He's my Father, and he's mac at the Christians .... f o r whai they d i d i n your nameWhen y*ni c o m t your love w i l t f o l l o w , and then the w o r l d . Say whaifT Give it up! Cut it d o w n ! W e can pick it up if you want to. ADDBESS ( lUustrftUd

PU9
L A B E L S blow)

From Charles Manson

To You Who Live in the Music


- Y o u are ihe fmi and I am the i a t i For in my mind i was thinking A n d in Ihe music 1 d n live F ^ i This w i i r l d is sinking Afl your turd d i d gi^<e O n e way is one way is one Musi I send you yi>ur grave Or reach in your mind? D i m t C n m e Who^s Love's Slave? Woman, wife, mothers m i n d Boys d o stay Giving all is ail in return A n d the way is jhe way No price i5 a i l you get forever in your worlds what d o you huld. I tay 1 say, Thiiughit of fools who rli in forever! Trapped in woman's mind. Look through me ai ihe father I'm here l o gaiher my invn kind. Love d i m ' l die or gnrw o l d Come. Raise Irom the M i n d . Give me whales mine* Look hack through and see Jfs onty love calling lovers calling back, through WK Fall f r o m ihe time in your mind Lovers c a l l i n g fove t o S a n d Come f r o m your mother's mind We are Tingen on god's hand I t ' l o n l y your hand reaching out l o your hand A n d i i ' i reaching Tor w o r l d peace I give you n o choice for love gives me none I wear the mark 4tf the heasi Have no foith in w o r d i you hear A n d took at the ones yi>u speak Questions Ihey givelike holes in yi>ur brainr As a holy roof doe& Jeak .., So does the priesi H e has made me Ihe heast-

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TMd of ttH ilkdi, #>Ky miQitinti iteHttf HHII ri**rtlHmflntf. hiH-tniUit nd bofWif nofUHW? Ev wDntand wtiy m t i n * p i l n o t t t n v a r ' i aitaKilp^ tlon f v l th* mr (ll'i bKAia p w y p i f i tm tt tmn tmt mpmnnt HlvvtiHfiwn iml ihw'd mtka momy *n rr IhBv qmn you wlucflptkKiJ E w wwntt4 I niiavtna thM o u U Wl A t tnith (intf dldn'i t u n to kowlp > 30 vdtiart And 100 uOwtnimn m i l H HM w M niU H 4 m V i l buy Hn THE MAGAZIIdE YOUVE BEEN LOOKING fOft rS CALLED HOnStSHiT MAQAZtHt. Nat vm iihwttiMnml Ttv worit D1 Dnfl wrlW tud OM rt]it tvho at* itipooHbli tn no onaP Nanvi Hof^ihii lo hBp Mtt nun AWAV' ND man** whir you Of anyone vrUt tty iboul HcMinhit, yo^j i w i ' t By tt'i borirtgl Afotfinl unc* IMS. bsttBT Itim v<v'> ivAtk Qon inn HCI% lauft Than tn fou' ramahiAbla H b t i aifailAlfl, orp non Qlony Daw. All four nd a tMtoofl book loc %}Q_ v rf yo^j'vq cautA*^ two iH>H for 36, No linfpl* copm wM tiy mul. Mailtgd Ottt sitm lO plain laaiRl anvMnm Why w"d muny dolJwi on 'Hvh' magtrmn rthvn you thmw itum rtwiy' Buy a mafBJMii you'll UVB tnd ftrtad and ra^ nad. B^v HDnatfut Magaikw.

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^iiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiii^

| N E E D ABORTION HELP?I 1 WANT TO BE 1 g UN-PREGNANT? B


IS ABORTION LEGAL? Y , undar the provisiont of th legal California Therapeutic Abortion Act.

For on knees at (heir own feet A r e wimesacs "f g i ^ s i n come How can you hide from yourselves? The one is the one is ihe one. How much can love give'' Whai is your petty price? Hisc f r o m your wijmcn's grave. No nian can die twice

M y w o r l d has been locked in Christian thiTUghl^ Now, I'm unlocking it. and want yiur love to free the youih. Y<iur love can come logelher and dance away into a new w o r l d Forever

Y(HJ must come, in mind, to ihe cross

TRYITGREEKI

As my love is complete, so is my anger! I speak to Kings, und not churchma rriagc-minded, wife-mother-mind *:tX. woman worshipping boys. No man loves woman as I do, hut I o n l y see one womanMy m o i h e r my earth, trees, birds, Aninials. rivere.

TO WHOM IS ABORTION AVAILABLE? To any woman who it less than 20 weeks pregnant. (But please see us before then.)

Cti.e% TOWN,
U A. CaJif. 90046 874-4046

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M y father is the Universe and my mother is the EarthA n d you had better leave her now She's not even your k i n d ! Woman's awareness is more than Man's, as it should he. to she can take care of the K i n g . But no K m g would ever listen to, or let a woman run his kingdomles her discontent send him |{> war. Woman has ruled ihis w o r l d over Man's shoulder, whispering in his car wFui Ihe preacher t o l d her- as she looks for Falher in ihe pries! thai can't fuck.

WILL 1 HAVE ANY TROUBLE GETTING AN ABORTION? No. We have helped thousands of women without a single turn down.

L u n c h - OJnnar ' A f t r T h a a t r e .

DO I HAVE TO LIVE IN CALIFORNIA? No.

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on

i t n o l M at S 1 . I 9 H c h aiOTpoat./hwid.

Mother makes bnys of her sons by p r o i e d t n g them, and never giving them the w o r l d to fall in. O n l y by n j l l e r m g a lifetime alonCn by my self, d i d I T I M I that suffering is in Ihe minds o f f o o l i Love knttws n o pain, o r deathA l w o n e is a l w a y i alone with its eir I love Ihe love inside you- and it's mine. I give you ait. and I want Ihe same A i l is, as it f a i always been, and w i l l always be

IS ABORTION SAFE? Yes, if done legally and in an accredited hospital, by a licensad physician, HOW MUCH WILL IT COST? we nhr to ck>ctors whoM fees are the lowest in California. IS FINANCIAL HELP AVAILABLE? Yes. Madi-Cal miitanoe is available to those who qualify.

FOn IRMEDIATE DELIVERY SEND CHECK o n liL a R I G H T NOW T O

F R E E D O M L A N E D E P T . FP 3 8 W W I f l T B l h STREET L. fk^ C A L I F O R N I A

T h y k i n f d o m . ikg w i l l be done, Come t o your l o v e and it w i l l lake you to heaven- B r i n g a knife, and we w i l l go t o church. B r i n g your love and your willingnew to give a l l . and a l l w i l l be given you forever. Y o u o n t y get back what you give;

Merry Xjnas . from * Michael's.

^VATEH BEDS
7 for ]
7 H t ' '.'-TiT O H F A M

.">' 'it (riu ..iniii' .1 n\ I


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I n my p r b o n hinae are many k i n f f A i l l o o k i n g at th star a n d m o o n . I'm a frightened coward and w i i b tc be out o f town, I t u i if 1 were s i r o n f in numbar 1 w o u f d hang B r o u m t Artd watch the croiaes coming down.

f o r C o d is jusL C o n e l o the j a i t and live i n my muiic it U youfi! Love giveii T h e love thai lives in the women who w i l l i t n g tor you, is my love giving to love. By your not b e i n t t h e n , ii i i ' ' w a i i i n f l " f o r your w n s h i n e What w i l l lappen when the Wtt | o e i down in the morning^ H o w w i l l they live when the sun'i gone at n o o n ! Who w i n when k w ^ a l i g b i M a m t o shine? T I t f i M t battle w i l t K a r l *Dun-

HOW LONG WILL I BE IN THE HOSPITAL? ftmibly as little as 6 to 8 hours if you are tn the oarly stages of pregnancy. IS ABORTION THE ONLY ANSWER? No, maybe it's not for you. Call end let's discuiS ttia alter net iveSt HOW SOON CAN I SEE A DOCTOR? Today.

OUR SERVICE 18 FREE We want to help. CaH us anytime, day or night. That*s what we're bm% for. Youll find one tMng different about the service we offer.

I N T E H N A I i O N AL

SALE

1 CALL (213) 233-5169 M = OR 233-5160 1 ICALIFORNIAABORTIOISS ^COUNSELING SERVICE! P.O. BOX 73260
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Los Angeles Free Previ

RADIO FREE AMERICA Five poignant points to ponder


RR

Manson trial noles

LAWRENCE UPTON
InMMon, Slnc0rltf and Co-option
Somf wiXKTC once aid thai inn^Jiion i i fhc i m c ^ j m i form ot flaiifj-y Jl (*n * i i o he ihe insincere* fi>rm of tynica) cis-.-pimn The nr*i m a ^ . u i o ' (he *Ofcl rCTO^uiiun m ihc lasr rwu dccJiln has been rhe itngu^st i>f nd vrrtiiiitf. C y r t i a l wofd-mongefi graduaiftJ f u j m <he creauvc i*nti">g clauei and hired by i he ad i g e n c i f i H ^ lo ihai Then ihe ifleviiion huckiien jumped on I I K band ^iigLin with thevr sonip upera vrjpiSr Fvrji hcfore^hal^ r t d i o tried I^J Uage a wcimd c^^Fnebach. The rlii><>riper, imc of rhc J u t ID | i v v up aficr year) on ihc d i r cvvopied my own t>i>k, '"'v Hoty Barbar^i$, aboul ihe Bcal dencraiion. for a new unry line m d fi>r ii>oiiihi b a v d it* progfitni HrU" Trr-ni i>n ihe Lh^ra^irrs and even ihe locale, which ihcy changed frum my own Vcmte Wcsi ii> Wcsi Venice Faihion w m n n i rar behind, r o o p ( i n g f i r ihc Real ciothinit*andiiK reid'^ i n d i j m b o M r w f cap m a n u f a c l u r d oMcn-J me ^ percent of ihc grow u J e i if I would ter them n^me a cap I wi<re after mei - - and later (he Hip dresvwdy)^ which '^ m i l N^ huimi:^ m fjshron circlet. I l uaed *.> be M l J of (he Chicago itutisyardi ihai (he p n ^ c r i u w d every f v r l of \\K h>g e u e p i ihe squeal Bui f ' enierpnv Pui t^'und a uie even fof inc iqwealwhich i t m i i meant tn he a put-down uf the music of ihe hip TovlutionaJihough ihey have done iheir beii io turn n m m H squeal u h i l wiih ihe mulliplicaTum uf n^w hands for recoid eiiploiifliJnn, moit i^'f them n<n much hctier ihan (he d c i i h iqu^Jil KA a. hog m ihe i i o c k y a r d i T K laifti griH lo the capitaliK mill s ecology. p4>lluiKn. which t^ already becoming big buimeBs a i well a i a vc^te caichcr for fx>Iiiicaariv

KV SANDt;HS
1 On January 4. I had ^n JLEU-II

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


Co-opllon fiMMS cofnipUon
Everyihmg jhat the free enierpriK lyiiem (oucheii ii corrupt*. Noic ht)w he Rev Bihy Graham hat glomnicd oniu ihe htp hfeways as lubjeci mailer fi>r eiploiration which it neiiing him milliora of dollar) He ia noi ilone in (hr rdigiout crude bvimeo. Thou&andi of pfogrant on radio BTid TV. mo of rtvm on ihe hairpin tianoni ai ihe (ajl ciHli of ihe di'ii. n p l o i l (he im# of ihe far-nui youlh and ihcir New Moialiiy i-f unbridloJ l e i . d o d l y dope and general iingodtiiiei The p r o f i i i have never been [Dialed up^ buf I would guesA ihai rhey run into ih( mulnmiilion dollar bracltfi. f n u i n l u l v a i i o n f o r a tucit, a lubicripiiLin. jt memberihip A pioui yobrig e%<ingel> named Duane Peder>n is in Ihe youih-nving buiinCK He claim* a circulalHjn of JOO.OOO leimmonihly U>i Ihc Nrw Year edi(ion of hit Notffvtxnt Frte P^iper. buili up from an initial press run of lO.OOO 13 ntonihi >go. While ihe counter-niediA underground paper! v e fighimg for Caictenct these vultures who are preying un (he fUlllNliry of ihe unaware youth are matLing a bundle on mindie&a and eynicii imitationi of the Hip movement. They are the i h i l U and The f i r h i of capital i n n and f h e i i a r u i q u o whose j o b is lo diluT. neutralize and enu u r po(antial dittent. The prowcuiMn teenn io he veenog again ii>ward angirr ai Terry Mek^hcr foT the motive* of ihe murden, which IS d joke since iht whofe Terry Melt'hir aljhi wjis given h> Susan Aikin% when she w^* corfc>*mji over * ycdr ago. )i would uem [h.ii S.idii- FuJ hrr own piivdie vcndcCM .iguin^E Melchcr, fi't evidenlly she hJd expeciL'J him lo help her in ihe movicv Could II he EhaE Sadie warned Terry M c k h c r lo gci tier a purl in, say. ihi: Los Angeles pEoduclJm of Hair-, bul he didn't come iNnnigh* Oi maybe *" walk-on tccne for ihc Doris Day Show, a inte ha^f hi>ur of h^ircdom of which he IS enecurive producer. The whole black fear tcene and (he pTi^'rfrcution full well knows ir wa^ m4>tily a result of complex deplmgt Manson and ihe family hod wiih various blacks m (he HoUywmid area during ihe first half of l%V It had to iTo wiih butmess and t e i paranoia more thari his philosiiphy of Nack^white hate-hack More ihan likely (be protfcuii^m jusi couldn^i gel jnyoiie lo lemly cuccin ihinse f o r whiim ihc words "gat chambcr^^ would caute sobering and snilch-pr^blueing waves of fear. The D A rias charged the demure Oui^h *ilh atieniplcd nioEder. s^hich it ;i joke vnce ii iiikes uboul a niilMon doses of LSD lo huti a fruu fly. *<> 10 tabs of sunshine on an airpori resfaurani hamburger it furdly >i d i a i h

Lirc^im whcru Amu filovlt^ wus pUymg piano htickgrounJ Ji>d l>epury DA Vmceni HuglMvi was singmg. 'euning upi^n ihe punu. ii Johnny Muihis lype wT^iun ot HcUcr Skcher' W l u i live' l i t hJ^ k;Lp%mg ^uniniA[M>n. ihe provcul^'r t^aliicd hjck ;tnd U^rlb m Iroiil of thi: |ury rc^idinf;! ;i IviridisTii(c-n tfrgumeni h i k ^ ck-rk. on Signal, would hand varii>us of the huleiHis, large colored phi>!i>^ ol variLtus d d ^ bodies lo iiW ^ury wfh^ wouM nisv ihe gno^l iicw% iiiound lor 4i LiitJt'We. The jury swmpd noit p l i u w d however, prithubly bemirt*' Ihey had been cjichmg g l i m p ^ s o f ih? picluret l o i monihs since thojury bc^ t\ ipniy it few Tcci Ifom the pri^secutor'" able, where ihe phoiot have \ve" lying ariHinJ

Ihc h<ig fanri to fv i'Jiy^ Manm Manii.'d to aik ihe doctor only "nc quC'lLort which wimkl hilvc- hccn [hi \Mi quewiim of ihc uial Arc yi>u a Mas>n.*" The proscciili*r> was, in Faci. in ii pimuon ol liiiving to plucc J g.irJjnd of glory upon Ihc c'lUVIt o l LSD ^iricc all iheir n u l n wnne^tfi were sciirlcrs of j c i d LinJa K.iuM.in i i d m i i u d (o ^1 trips. V i r y m i j Cirahiim to one l i i p (laken lesn thjn j nmnlh l>ehire Sndic confessed Ut her during an evening heilsid'T n^ichl-nihhk- chaT ul ihe Syhil Brand I n ^ i m t e on November '.. I%9). Ronnie Howard. Ihe other Syhil Flnind snitch, admilleil lo \2 trips, Juan Flynn rook dope uplcniy, reliving hit blood Niih ciiperieiice) in Viei Nam while on LSD. H j r h a n Hoyr. Ihe girl wh,> ran uwjiy Inmi i l * Meyers' ranch Jfier ihe lantout JUH^H Flynn forccsucks was given iNai famous LSD ham burger hy Ouii,h. cvrdcnily lo keep her from lesiifymfi. This ioccurred (ust days before Miss Hoyt lest i lied

bc^ going 10 enguge in nine or len yeiir cosmic kill-game, proKihly tosiins n'lllionvot doK.bTs jn Irymg to out-mancuvcT Mausim and trienJi in (he Siaitf imd federal cojris. The honk-honks, including Judge Ofdc^ and Milier Levy, ihc diricior uf operalions for ihc D A s oflTcc havO been hyp'cnliciilly concerned over ihtf monlhs wilh ihc ci^sl of ihe irial. T h t y musi know ihiil Ihtsse grcai giimesmen. ihcK very men iire ^omg lo ^lenJ millions (rymg lo snurp M j n * > n . und if you read ihe t n m n p i '>f ^be inaJ. HIH Judge Older st'en* lo siiy. in the midti of his mediocre comprehension, IS " L e t s get o n w i i h i t " My caJculations

CMtimn tumod JOMUM Froaks

The W o U l i e i ( I W W revPluiiOABriea) of (he first rwo decades of (he cenlury u*d to c i l t ihem ChriHen. With Ood afid Jesus and pioui slogans at rherr fTonL lliey were aJwiyt lurninB up as i n f i l i r a i o n . informers and rmgermffi m t h e i e r v k e o f iheSytirm D u m e Pixlers<>n n no) interesied in luch sinall diBitfe operanona^ He has diKuvere^t I;MI ihere n more money in m y i i n t imMtAChed and uninformed young malcontenti inio imitaiwn Hrcct people; into "Jut People." A l l it (akes is lo offer <hem safe i m i u ( k H i i of hip slogans and hip aciiviriei like "Jesus Teach-ins," "BiMe Hapa'' and lelep^tone n u m f v n lo cail for iemt raps lo eurv drug addiction. AlHXit 3100 people, according to the LA^ Times, paid iwo dollar d o M l k i n i i o a i t e n d ihe First Annual Jeaai F*e^iple Fesiival ol Music M t l r HollywthJd PaMadiuiVk wilh J6 gospel rocli b a n d i featuring (he unging of P T . &oone and his daughters and an unichnlu^cd appearancif by e v a n ^ l i t t Arthur Bleaail- who hot a Sunie] Sirtp iiiini(ry lu young peopk. ReligiDU-typc show bif comet iU(ura1ly l o Duaner A farm bey from MinncflDuu now 32. he h wofked profeaiionally in wmedy and magic appearing moal reccniJv on the Trer Houif childrenA show He has co^MCid rock mmtc in his o ^ n pure and holy rnedium oi mmical evangelism aimed at whai he c a l l i (hr nreci Chririans. He is planning morilhJy conoeru |kc the one ( the Palladium. He use* bumper KicJiert and p i t i t t n " H o n k if you |ovc J e u * . " A l l power ihru loka" and ihe like. Ntrticing lh large number of undergrofind n e w v a f * r i hemg told on Hollywood Blvd.. he saidv "Godn whai's wrong wiih us Chnmans'* Wny can^l we d o the Mmc^^ Why l e n e the heaihen hippies to the [>evil and hl> freedom freaka?

tcenc Paul Watkins^ who has aJI ihc d a u aboUi p o r n o films, shaved and showered his brain with I ^ D f " r ihree year* yei he was a key pr(wi.'ution witnfSA. So il taused one lo chuckle over ihe a m o u n i of dope use ihai ihe proseculion hdd to play down v> fhe jury would believe its witness. There was 3 point, in facL when ihe defense w-ds planning 1o hlame |he murders on a snuff trance induced hy STP. They d i d n i warn to blame LSD heeausc vcrily> they ie*i ihai LSD was a saccharine however STP fad cmmgh bummer vibe* a f f i d i " i i *> ihat it was fell worthy of blame. Vou would have had ihe proseculion eii>Hing djipe d r o p and (be defense pulling it down, which was a chuckle chuckle tcenC'

indicate thai Oldex h,is said. " I ei sgei on wiih i i ' over t^lKI tiioes m i h i course ipf ihe [rial One k e l t ihai M d l t r l e v y , direciof ol operaiions of ihe D A s office i* re.iMy running ihe show hchmd ihi! scene Levy h ohviously a piiifuU while-hiufcd mriurcd soul, hui also a toriurer, a n>an wh"', in hi^ prime n ii p r o t f t u t o r delighied m gciring capital punishmeni where ihere was nocapiial crime C a r y l Chetsinun wa* enecuted, in essence, because [hey ihoughi he hjid forc'-'d a girl io gohhk him (IT'S a good (hmg [hey changed ihe law thai killed Chessman, for whai atKiui Juan Plynn, ihe man perforce hegohhled by young Barbara l.ipsettWhyir-Hoyl at Meyer s ranch far away from her home m ihe San Fernando Valiey) \i ihey gas Manson. war trimrnals like Wall Rosiow and McGeorge Bundy oughi l o he placed in that eniply gas chair neiit lo him if WCBK rcaily out lo gas aJI ihc bliKidy minded conspirators And what about l-i Galley, ihe hero of V F.W rriaga'inei and ihe man ihiii shi>t off the head of a praying, whiic-robed mimk knelt in fealiy?

2 The l i i i witnei) for (he pri^sccuiiDn was herdotlor, wfioiejob il was M show itial enirnsive use of LSD didn'i cause Diane Lake aka Slake; Ihe red-haired former dweller ai

3 Juii hke (he State went ape to murdrr Caryl Chesman They, from Rejgan on down l o (he pellei dfupper ai San Ouennn, are. one is wiirmg l o

4, One see:^ i^iai ihey have fmally arrested Clem for the decapiialion of ShcTriy O'Shea. I remember ihe first time I saw Clem on March \ 1970, as he was silling m ific adveriising departnieni of ihe Loi Angeht f'ff Frra while Gypsy. Sandy. Squeaky, and Brcnda, plus i w j film maken, were lyping away Clem was wearing a green fealher siiil and allhough ii

(pUttve turn to page 8/

Qotfa moutfiptoc*, whh forkwd tongue


Needle* l o lay c ^ r y o n e o f these ChrHten is a salesman of the surua quo. Buf the top man among ihese hnus o f Esrabrnhmeni piichnten i t (he Rev. Billy Graham himself One of ihe reaaont he can get awjy with > much d i H i b ^ i a l k iathat nobody ^^bove (he l O o f afundamenialiit HjpiiM HiNeihumper takcawhii he say* lerioualy enough ro waste crrTicai aitenoon on fam Besides w M i he myi is gone with ihe wuid of his public sermonL buried m (he bach "religion" paget of ihe daily papery and wha( is ao ephemeral at a telrnaion Hi(ervicw? Bui mtybcjutr once io'wAtMi>'should quote enoUfli in p r m l . if cinly I D convmo^ i b t hitiorian* of ibe future, if any. ihai w c h a cmataccAn creature JLI the Kev 3ili> ever managed losurVive inif) the 30(h ceniury So here are a lew ^ m s of wisdom from a Ch. 4 tniervtei* l a v Saiurday. for iniernincni m ihe Time Capaule

CniBMdm of m imMoum dinoamr

M L t V G f t A H A M T l v B i b k a y s The whfa( and ihe tarea wiU grow lofeflher. and (Ml ia a r*nge paradoa I (hinli we're in the midit of a retigkwj nvtvml m America. A n d at ihe same iime I ibinli were in the midii of a (real revival of evil. New forma of evil, almou 4 though tnme new dcKioni w e n k t loor in (he country. lOrahn'a crtfade a to revive belief m ihr old Chrisiian demonology for a new w i u h h i n t and a new Inquisition The wiich hun^rii fawn
a n fHm m"^ l b tm* rfvvc' H i i * r a ] wvrd Jil mppOTl Ol (tVlT VK-

limaall in Ihc name of JcMtn L . L | B I U . V C f t A H M laboul Martin Luther King]: He had a rremendow, moral impacL c^ieoaMy during (he laiier pari of ihe Hft e i and rhe early liatieK Bwl Ihen I Ihtnk (hai Dr. King became to involved in the political n d (he fociaf ihal he. too. $ot away from the |irocUmai>on of (be simple Ooapel There waaa time when he had both, m d o f course I admired him. [ never ipoke i ^ i n u him, I had him in I93T on my platform u. New York when t was condemned by many people for doing so. and so forth. Q Wm Mr. m J. dv Hovw mgmna. a liar'" C f R A l U M W e l l , now, M r Hottver may have some informaiion thai 1 don't know, I couUn'i make a comnteni un that because as far aa T know V never (oM me a lie. INoic the forked tongue icbnh|U Hoover Almv^f hBtcbile>d King a liar, publicly. I( has ben widely duaeminaied in it* media, and here it lhi> profentonaJ Chrmer evadmg ihe question tiy hinting (ha( the FBI director "toy havtf lecrei informaiion that >us(iriei Hoover in caMini K i n g t liar and then covering up by saymK k i n g never toJd him 11* - f p he can't say FacI i i Hoover did v y puhlicly *Ay he called K H W a liar and on what occaajon. and ihiii must ^ve been

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rholoumtHraphv ArtOapt. IBM CompOHf

known lo Graham, bui he is pretending to have missed it. God's mouihpiecie tpeakt wiih forked longue. This i i typical of (he Bev, Billy every nme he is faced wjih a dired question of fact. L.L.j tiRAHAM fafier fnplaming thai while he would like (o sec the whole world cunveried l o ChriMiiiiiy, Jesus said thai only a mmoriiy are going (o 'enter ihe Kingdom o f Heaven " ai^d 'at ihc end o f hiiiory" few irue Delievers will be iefi, so he iriet to square this with Amenca's pluralistic aiTLlude toward religions| We are a pluralisiiL naiion and we have trccdom itf religion I don'r ihink our forefathers ever mcani thai we were io have freedom from religum |WhLch makes air agnosucs and alheisis wnAmeric*" ainl (he Supreme Cour( sinners and ( r a i i o n L.L | I h^^pc ihe Supreme Couri i i going to clarify that one of ihese days- iCtarify means mcatii Ol abolish l o all douNe-talking evangeliitt and poliliciani who want l o leave i r v m ^ l v e t an out tirher way L L.f Q WoaltS you approve of clfrical activtS'Tt away from the pulpit, away from the church fvl dearly IdrntiJieJ at a man of the <hurch'* t^or injflinpf, Qprtesi who o r lo no out and become r i w/verf in social protest^ ( f R A H A M i I Ihink ihis is something ihal each individual drrgyman has io deiide f*fore (he I (^rd h i m i f i f I ihmk thai i i ' i ac&>rdin' to how he does i l If \K breaks IYK law while at ihe same time standin' in ihe pulpit telling people ihey ought to obey ihe lawyou know, ihe flih^e leocFies tfwi we arc l o otey Ivn. unlei ihey interfere wnh our relationship io GJHI and in our worship lo God. And ihe Scripture [cache* ihai were l o honor ihe king, Now when ii ^ a i laUing about the king thai wot Caesar and we're to honor (he governmeni, we're lo honor ihe auihoriiies. whatever counny we live in until it breaks our rflationihip wilh God. or in(erferes wilh our free worthip of Ood. ICommon sensr logic never inmipa ihc Rev Bdiy. o r any other fun danienlaltil. ol course Anything goe^ at long at il rings the cash rcgiuer | Q Mr. GrtUwn. wtvi poliiicat fimtts have yrfu placed on your own pplilioal tttrtiiism'' G R A H A M i Well, I have deiermmrd long ago lo siay out of p a r i i u n ^ J i i i c ^ aud I have '>ever endorsed a candkdaie I suppose I must be fair and tay that I have heen prejudiced a couple of times and I did allow mV preiudifle m ih<iw cuH of iim*. i rm*i"tr wher. .y^ vBr>i fi**.*..".. man ailackcd a UKntl of min and said thai he was morally unfit lO hold palilical o^Tice:, I came oui aod v i d thar t ihoughl he was morally 111 became I knew him personally and had known him for many years. Well, JhBi was pietly close, but t l v l ' t aboul aA d o i e ju I've golien. And I d o vole. J believe in exercising niy right of citizenihip. I urge all people to vole but I have yet to lell peopk who to vi>ie for. bui 1 suppose ifiar m ihe last eledion people could guCas who I was going to vote t o r hcLause o f personal f r i e n d ^ i p

Los Angeles Free Prew

7B13 Btvarly BouTevard Lot Anditat. C j l i f o r n l i 00036 1213) YES-1&7I Arthur Kunkini Publiihar Su< Sua SH'y. i o Potil, PaulFbvt a Editor' In Oiiaf MsnaginB Editor Brian Kirbv Senior Editor Lawrvnc* Upton Aaaoc. Edrlor Chris Van b t a i Ecoloay Editor Roflar Lovin P t v EdilO' Juttia Lavrvllan Staff Writafi EdSandan SuaManhall Michaai UcCanhy
Dfiflnii Lflvitr

PraduGtlon AaaJstant

Sir M e h H i gtSllvrtaka, rVodfrwrkr Arthur Roi CDmpu(VP*r Fdlx Fltiiowrilar ftLaddal Exacuhva R*dant Mnda Cantplrolltr Suranna Aintanane* Engintar BIN D. Display Ajtvtrllslttg Sob pantaron 5hlriv Ebailfl, SBc'vJatin|Litf>mlna l - 00b h t M t . M ^ . Roflar Ssfnaman FradWayn* Racaptionitt BMty Frodo CTaastr^td AcM Clrcalatloii Mga. David Mimcini Ehsa. Chria Slibicriplions ft Misica
M i t t / J>v

UndaTom Andy Kani

Mtolf Fac. K.t.K.


a p b f t Mao DM-BoPvap ttia FrM P r i Mdthar

Q tt^fm Hid of an efTtct does Ihe vor In Vielnatn or ony mvr have on Ihe moral fibre of ihe country''

GRAHAhfe i think ihe Vietnam wjir h t i had a v ^ y deirrmentat tfltxt o n (he nHiral fibre of Amertca, tiecause wc^ve allowed ii to drag along so long. I l would ha\e been far betier five years ago to have won ihe war, than to have allowed if l o d r a g on w t t h i o l i n k light at the end of the tunnel I think President Ninon is doing the only ihing he cart do is V k i namiie the war and get A n v r i i ^ n s out as quick as he can and I think ihai's what he's going lo do. |T( IS such mush-minded moneyiEieisni thai p i l e i u p mountains o f cash for the Chrislert I And i b i s . j i the Laj* *nd the P r o f i n

Not ratpontihla for cash ndOHcl In mail. Saeond c l a f i postafa paid at Loa Aniplat. Callfornii. Potillshad waaUy^ Subscrlptlam: S8 p H yaar m the U.S.. $8.60 tlaaviA'trt In t i ^ AmaHi^B. 10.15 Isawfiara in tha wo'ld. Flrii dwm or Air Mail r ^ t n upon rtquait, UntolicKvd manuicripti and artvrtrk thai VH do not puUlih will ba d t r a v i r h m ifMki aftar racaipt unlaft accompeniad by (uM. i u d , slampsd, salf-^ddranad, IAlurn HivalopB. Volume 8. fid. 2. (iM^ofa [te. 3361, J i o . 6, 1971.

Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

Copy #A72 - Do Not Post - Do Not Copy

Paget)

January a, 1971

Los An^elvs Fret Pi-esft

Manson anecdote

contest

v e n i c d gnhchevahlc he ih,i\ ijM iiv v n l v i ^ in >i fti^Ji'*pcci1 j j j i ' i i LI| pitckel


piH>l

/continued fri'm pan*'J'

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


He i-ii>ed |u hiive <i peni-Fkinl lL>r lalkini; ^hiiul hcjU'L:h<tp. and he Krcame n icg^'nd Hni<hfi^ ihe s^-hi>ljrs of (he ejge I K'memher c^mpiny oui m J>eaTh V j l l t y i*;ih < lem LIM M.I> V\ miks Irom \.M Palm.i\ I e^en wrore a poem dhorii him r u f ^ m g nulled ditwn a Death Valfcy hiiirn's pmh chcwmg on spikt: weed '^ Mee* later I lenirncd Ihdc more than likely Ihey were going lo indict hini M>oner lit Ijref fkir HI head-ntf vis j vi^ Shi*riy j n d Icarntng ihis. d chill i^miie 4^cpl dni*n my innocent neijli ihiir hjd ^(epi Siv elow ! him around the L;jmpfirc <^lcm wa^ leiN'ndary. for in Thai spring, he WLiuld v i l l i ihe girl delcnJ^nin h^ire Ut ami ji Jhey u l idlkin^ he k^LiulJ liH>( pri'pe ifiem under (he aiiorncy RHfm idhlc n^hl inside the Hdll ^if Jutlicc m downtown L m AngclF* 5 Ni>w |K Ihe time to jnriounee Ihc r i f i l annual ChjiJes Mjnsi>n Anei^dolt
Contest We w i l l pay ^ V l for tht- WL-IJ

A ft"* nuinth^ iJKT. hi," V'.iy '^.'iTi (if ihi: hiillihjiy L.r ihc A><'i' Prrv^ hikildinfl hu>:gin^ ifh' ri.-n^yi;ar <>ld dHiu>>hii:r nl Line ol ihc Mdlf niv-mhcrs lu- lYn hitfror Li| htr mt>rhcr ^*h. li.-.irr>cd i" n Idler) his h(ii>ds on her Ji> v.th- he t h ^ l y iftvinrcd into her I'jr. " There is no goih. Iherc is no cviT'

I>ejr J iriiLii Pjgl bherle's uriicle in yiHir <Jctolvr Mf isvue JslH'FU'nfk's rue K^eLiuse f ' his fiiiivc e^j]u,iiion or ^iVillum K She,irer He viys ihJl Shejrcr gjses ihe i iv prevtii>n <t\ "it nun <P1 deep sineeiily j n d h.ines[y i>f convhcKim " Severjl purHigr^iph\ filter, t h c r k - ijunics She,ircr HIS saying m ^i puhlic speech. "\ used lo he a Repuhlican. which ru^r gi>es t*p show vou [hill I have 'ly stArdaftfs &f afl 1 emphasis i>

honest dependable Service

deu. mi4i unuiudi hut (ruihful u l e oi Mtyone's a i x i c j a i i o n w n h ( Mrlcs Manson did/or the itJcallcd fdi?iily Thi' winning anecdoie io j p p c j r here Also. wiN the person in Santa Monica who left ihc ll^m ndte, pJe:Jbc >enJ ibcm Jo me al the f r Prrti A n d if anyone ha any mrormdiiiin ahi^ui Liny aspect of unknown trivia Ciincernmg Mjnson or the caw, n d it io us al ihe /Vrc Prrv for our hehcrdojller Jriteves.

minefM K I t T i c t k cannoi ha^c n K^th ways celling us t k i i She-iccL' is sincere and alS'i th.if he has n<.i sun^ dnirds Indeed' Lherkdiic-s not reah^e [h,i[ Sfiejrer is H cunnmg demagogui;^ who dcmpunce^ ihe Vietnam w j r j n d rhe indusrrittlisis wh.t pnllute the en vironment. m order tn u i n rempitriiry suppiiri frjim his dupes. J make ihis stjtcmeni upifn ihe hasis of a km^chy per^pfljl init'rview ,^i Shearer severnil yejirs ago. when Shearer uas nin j i d e lor Ihe gllr.i-KighiiM Assemhlymjn E Hichard Hriincv ,irul id>o ol a suhslunlial file dehne^iEing Shearers pohiieal gvrjtions t h e r i e should learn v m e lessi>ns from Ihc demagL^gy nl H n k r and CioehK'k s^h-i JlS4i '^dcnounced^ lh^ luAkevs and the pruAreers, while aceepling rheir suppirt elunde^lmcly H i t l e r j n d <M>ehhels oven ap' proprijted ihe name ol Socialist, and called iheiT obscurantist ideology

tNDEPENDENT

VW

SERVICE

999I.A0RKA AVE,
HOLLYWOOD 8760707

TRYITGREtK!

Ct<^%. TOWN.
7407 Santa Monica Blvd.

Regarding the Anurrican Indcpen' deni Pflriy fcherle repiuts ahogr Shejrer' "He denied thai it waf Wallace's purrv and lurther ^ p l a i n e d Ehai he belonged M a raL;MLm thai wj hostile to W d l l j c e " Three days j t i e i Eherle's arlicle Jippeared, I sa^ a paid political advertisement in ihe Riverside Daify Enferpriss. whn;h earned ihis heading

L. A. Calif. 90046 B744046

L u n c h ' Dinner - A f t e r Thaatra

Cast your seeds to the wind.


Whde a l l prices are <A"*% "^P' '^^ peoce econom/a p'ices ure going down. Now o\\ F^irnoik ^ p r i will tell tor 25 cn^ initeod of 50 teni^Enioy. Distribuiors tanloct Whptehcujie IndusTrlei I n t , I W Fifth *e , New Tork, N Y lOOll oj- White Houw Oisr Co. Int., PO. Bo* fl5B, Sciuwhlo, Ctilif., 94965 A pubiiE le'vlce o*'

Irimfinuiil friim pa*,"' ^' refute Spmrnid hy listing f i v e p i ^ h f i ^ a l o^|etllve^ tl^E have caplurcil ihc r,iney o( the mass*:v He is wrong The masses of ihis eouniry are oppo<ted io ihusc i>h|echvcv l[ IS KM.f to be misled f>y thi- koirien .(i^ among o n e \ fntnds and .uiUuirtani'^ After many California clevli<"h vetng who gets i-ltcicd and whdi happens lo ihc Ciinsinulionjf amendiiK'nts dnd oihcf propo^iiion<k

I am fo'ecU to conclude thdi niy fncnds und js'wmales HI ihe ofliee j r e simply noi repreu'ntuiive ol ihc cicc lorjie Norman Spinrad would like to siJe A piddicdl pjriy that iciilly ^[.inds lot m e d n m g l u l improvcmi'nE m the t|b.iJily uf h k nui limply v:cki]i^ lo overturn our form i^f government Jind t u ^ n i u i e o(\r set of pi^wer-m^d r u k r i fi>r dnorlx-r S<p wiiuk' I, hut f mo. see i( .1* a ii*rlorn hope In ihe -ih^cnc^' of such J piTty. I hcJong lo thi- Penice ,ind F-iecdom Pjrty and vim- lor (hi.ir liin dbdnilcs I v o u l J H O C like t < < vce llje goMrnn>eiit hew sinctly tn ihnj PeJce and freeJi>m P-irty line hul I would like to see some til ihesi- e,mdid,iii\ elecicd and'itr governmeri pidicy puFleiT -.onsideMhiy h'W.ird ihi- k^i I e h ' rhnii's ' term m.iny m i l vim demn and olhers applaud - hei.siLJs.' Ihey d o n i know whdi it mean-. W h,ii I * j n i Iri.m ^overnmenl is A gre.ii de-il more indivijunil liherfy Jind humanely hum.in Jigniiy My liK'nds -ind assocMcs ^,mt Ihe snmc thmgs I do. hui ihey jr..- -ij^iiost

VOTt FOR THi: AlVltRJCAN INDEPFISDfNT PARTY <liF.OR<i. W\Ll.\r.. PARTY) l i IS no di'uhl irue rhai She.irer is a member "t a laeiion within ihe American Indcpemkni Parly, hut t*t deny Thai ir i\ ^ W j ^ j c c Party i-. ^km w jsmg (fie Hirth Society's slcigfit'ufkind in cJHiimmg ifi.ii it is nut a poliiic^L organi/iition t b e r l e winds up his ariiek by slating " A n d if I k i d no oihei choice hut Hc^g.m and Icsse lUnruhl. I d vote ior Shearer wilhitut heMtatnin Amer> This is tbi' Imc o l reasoning IIMXI hy nnlkons ,-i delude*' <ierm.ins uho voEcd f^ir HKler and his v>-calkd S^nional Sk^cialist Party Mter reading Ehcrk'v nirlicle. and als*> a piete m your November f^ ssue conTamini: ,i propaganda release oT ihe hascisi Mmuiepi>ei>. I am vonsirained lo ask "W here is ihe I os Angeles Free Press hiMding'' C^'rdially ytiurs. Moiris KoiTiinsky

Whil^hcuse Industries. Inc, Distribulorof Patrioli^ Rolling Paper Co., Inc.

vmm

Ne-f ImV * Stin F-tminwio ^^lkl^lL.

(PS ] 4un wonderm^ why M r *^hcrle fbis u f d m<(hin): .if'out shearer's cacisi ideido)!v .^nil firs km<un lecoril I'f .i%SLHMl*im wnh racist griPU[>^ 4>iid individg.d> >

a l l l>emoi.rj|s4f>r indepenH.iH.-nis ^LH|IFI^

htr JX'moirJlK c.irididHiiesI We rt,in| the snime kind o\ ^ifri;rnmeiw hul ^ e tote kir different pcopk Where is rhe ftirty to represeni us* MiTl Pc'sieip

Poitr Rolling ft/lachina, Plartic Tubing For Rolling BUcMite Tubn & Fixiure. Ii>ceni And Bri Ovcalt, Paichei, Strobes, Etc. Lnther Hair Barrsttai, Poster Ditplav Boxei P L A T T POSTERS INC. 424 S. Los Angeles St., L.A. 90013 Phone (213) 628-1205-6

108

Please Do Not Print


POSTERS BLACKUTE BUkCK WHtTE

l i t W " 1 tA.1% ** v^ixL*t /


FIVE VEAR FACTORY WARRANTY
Hollywood,Cahf.9002a

Oistnbutori Wanted T l HoHymMld Wfatar Bad Co, Deal directlv with manufacturer. 6427 Hollywood Boulevard MioneMr. Jackat464 9 M / o r Hollywood, Californiii wrile: THE WATER BED CO, 467 4800 6427 Hollyv'OOtI Blvd.

ian6-si2

A l i o Available: E x c l u i i v e 1 9 7 1 Irnproved design Water b e d * guaranteed GO years d 8 . 0 0

Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

Page 40 onovouM
GET SOME R.ESH' SEJl-FlUCO L A ami S F Have a &ail: gal vou^a Hiitt^ ^ 0 0 roddv TO OHGY OU(Dt Boa 4J33T-F>> MoilywocNj ^OtMfl ADULT a o O K i PiiA cata*oQ at mose narfl - ro gal novBlTwB S*nd 2S c e n a foi both M over 21 ro GaFAKv 8DO*i9tort. 6464 Sania Mc^^ica Blvd L A Cfl>>r 90029 LOCAL SWIMOER ^Pieybov Apt T9e9> fof rurt-aaa<>ing adun coupler ana skngiei who i i r e a divcreer and conlidai^fiEii j luCi s^nd t i 00 10 LCX^AL 3WHV0CA P O SOU ?35e Long B M c h Call! 'iCt^? ft U WOHTHV C POT > Free mlo lor a siamped aeifaddreaaed envelope Poat Ott\C^ B'lA 57%0-FP L A Call' 900^7 INTERNATIONAL INTERRACIAL" CORRESPONDENCE CLUB LISTS' 100 Single white g i ' D IJ 100 tingle bUKk girls 1^ 100 iingie Men-can girN I' 60 aingle Oriental g i r q S^L 50 D i ' i a i i u a i g i r i i ii K giria 'noving ro Calif SS 100 Single man f3 iCO homo-sexual men i3 Memlwrahipa HO PO Box 4^*?2 LA Cfllil Clubhouse renlai llOO GIN SENG & fO-Tl TlNG Discounr saka PO Box 26442 f213) 383 9572 UHKT CATALOG Unuaiiai producQ and irefTii ui*>s rrrte sjvnpie Cay a"C sfrmyrtl M u l R only t r ro MARDAN EUT . g p j ^ ^ ^ - P Sher O a M C^ 91 -103 AOULT BROCHUACS ~~ Sea gieal iooi>ir>g guys A dotis m Hmm movies Top Ouaniv Sorifl H *fn DfiKhLjrB & ^arnph' film lo C a i a i y Enrerpriiea PO tlox IMTS Snerman O a m . Ca 914*3 ~ FRUIT i S P I C E T N C E N S 1D0 *IK;II Dags wno4eaaw r2 kinds Bells pl[4 A jflwelrV lOO Parradea OOK ?**9 Marhanar^ Sen Cfl 9026' PORNO U S A DENMARK Up to dale m t oi 20 u S companiee oMar^ng straigrr A giiy phoToi T't^i-'.-t * r i n i s AH riove CjtEakigs available Send $1 or ! S A Lisi A i^eiatka. ( 0 ^ i n Liai also $ n Boih imft I v %^ MICHAFL eOM 2fl4/B-F. L A . qpCgfl Ca U N U t U A L BOOKS CATALOG 150 TITLES s e x - WITC NCR AFT L SO PEYOTE HYPf^OTlSM ETC 50 CENTS WAYNE BOX 30600 LVWD CA ^)003H

Copy #A72 - Do Not Post - Do Not Copy

January 22, 1971

Loe Anifelee Free Press


VOCUPTEERS NEEDB> THE L A FREE CLINIC l i s N FAIRFAK needs people wfio care Needed a'C volunteer dentists dent:i1 a s s a psvchiffirisis priarjuacnis. doclors m s A peopfe who cart TielD du-rno the day m Ifte J o b C o Op and al Ihe Feed-In II Irlerealed please atop by lite Clinic oi cull 936-9141 WANTEO Locahons for expldrtalioii film prods Nrce or

uia*40CMii4 AAULTS
Prani4 to h t t p our ca|a>og ^rof" minori 3 M o d Si lo Mici^ana B31I Y u r c a S i L A 90028 A gat on b<g W l StaU U R 21

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


W/MrWWmA Fiu*
OAT MIOC MURES Groovy guy^ dorng rhe>r inrr>0 in S i SdiTiin muvioa (you won ( be 4]i9ap|KrinMdi Musi be a i b a i i 21 A i f g n Send Si tij* brochure A vunpJe liim 10 M Key Producnons Box Be Oep( FP VanNuys Ca ^140S _

CO**TACr IS yovr personal vehicle mrough nhich you wiH m e A aw>i>g wi<h Ihose g a ^ . guya A couplet v ^ ^ " ah-a^s warned tut' hav* n e w been able lo reach For free \^f'ynWiO" A brochure w'rln CONTACT' 311 Yucca SL L A Ca 9002B ^O^J rixtst flate you are over 2T e a * a * ~ * A UNIQUE CATALOGProOucrs for Ihe Gay v d ihe S[ri>i0"t Obaioa and FTTi/m a l i o 11^1 rnail n 00 ro Niirfonal Mail Order Agency Oepf G PO Box 99343 Sen f r a r c i s c o C a i i ' <wr09 9 9 9 9 t r 9

7 w2 cordieis vibrator For the eiciiemenl & p l e a u r e ol sahsfying relaxation OB^^ilned to givH deep gariltt maaseg* to all parb of me body. Onfy S3 A T Oallanl C o . P O B o - 5273 San Joae. Ca 95150 CAPITOL n e d d ^ i l D I N G TAPE C u s e t H s Cyyi2 c a n t i <ra CaO 00 carets ea C90-96 cents ea C120'1 ?5 M 6Tr CarTridUes 32 mir^i 01 an. * 0 mirvSi 10 ea 64 min-T25 aa, 80 min-Ji 3^ ea Plus all Ampei- Recording Tapes. C a u e f * n 8-Tr60*^ O t l u s l WE PAY W5STAQE C a i h Checl<. M O -Sorry no C O D Calif resHk'-ts add 5% t a i S<ind lor r;ompltr!e price lial Exhibd i^ost. Box 5f74 Dapt F Mission HtJIa.

daa^reiB n.jr Irmnds bj[>y i^an (xjm witM 0 d'Sease o l Ihe spine and may never wdlk We would liKe Id gel something Ic* him to took al but WB nave no money II anyone has an old aquarium that dcefln t leak. and woukJ like to donate it to fiim. It would de greatty appreciated Calf 60CM04 anylirrw If no an swer please keep trying Thank you verv much Fooiage for a wiW far out lilm docfmenlary Our Sacrel Weapon For Lovfl * Peace Gan Hershy Bar n(Kl udded trim full credits Port mtere-rl m film or cash Also mmd film maker to shoot Gen Hershy Bar in action Film from lovo'ins marches camput Call Hot Line . ^13 3B^'04 or write a en MBrahy Bar. 626 South H o w r l . Los Angeles Calif 90005 "UHUWAL'^ Looking people wanted fur vampire" motion picture Call Marifyn at Cglumtiia Casling J61-3421 Anyone interesiad in opening vegatanan rest i n H o i y w o o d a r e s contact 3 ^ S 1 7 ^

unuauDi pad piereried CuiiG531390


NOW C e n t e r F o r W o m e n ' i Studies M 6864 W Pico Blvd . LA W035 needs office furniture and supplies of all kinds Especla1^ a couple ot stflno chairs, lolding chairs liNng caEiir^la. bulletin boards We can pay modeit surra bul donatio' s including Blue Chip Stamps greathilPy accepted Phor>e P7a02fi6 Leave addreas and we will pick up or bring to above address any day afttr ^2 noon D E S P ^ ^ T E NOW' Green Power si at ion w a g o n stolen Need sUition wagon or var> to transport Free Food Call Free Stofe 399-9064 ClBo Thank?

Ca 9K<40

- P W V O H A L VaftATOR ' 7 1/4' tuiv [inly I 2 S 0 ' Spocial ADULTS Of^LV cat 50i.0rir. W H C o . BOX 1163-P Pofioo'^ Cal

91769

HOT R U M PHOTOH ijnceii^ored lor your enjoymen r Send Si lor aanipie and brochure FREEDOM FILWS Box 4642ft-F Shar Oaks C a 9004b Cvfr g j ABNORMAL POWERS Free leisoTis lor stamp:^] Hir-4dd r e u e d envelope Posi Office
BOA

-nm'pft

i*u

R t d . m i i t a & Bli>* I 8 " n a 6 " PfKiar: S l , 0 O H c h 2S4pafla9V Dtcah40**ch3/Sl.oa. S t n d c a t h , ehach dF m o ( o : POSTERS Boit4B6B N o r t h H o l l y w o o d , Calit,

57960-P L A CaNI 900^? CHARLC3 I4ANSON LP '4 incredihFv Eiefluliful So^'gi Wrinen and Sung py Manson Tv W o t Needs to Hear His A n S500 Prepaid THE CALIFORNIA CURATOP PO BOX 1152. H O U Y W O O D C A

HsFs's yoi-' flri*r lo gor your Alls started 9wappirg group SB' and Dihoi run-ri*d aciiviti*^ incbHMl p>criil* Fry your cofjy ruan luai S200 lo ORGIES Box 7 J 5 I 3 ^ M rioifywoofi qcOQj DF1UG HNOWLEOCf TaiH you doaa0). Bftoca and aourcsB lor way^ lo gel n^gJi Get youra lalay< ii*^ ^ 0 0 Ic GRASS SHACK 6oJi 74&34-FP1 L O l Angeles 90004 UHOCROflOUW PRESS A h s i or S5 undPrgcounO FiQAspape'sandrTragd;,'i'-s SiOO lO LAFP eo 46e Abileng T-^-..is ROW C O M M M M f t f ! ! AJ l r T * 0 r * w Ron CijOO cohlecT>ona' "^y Ferioi" A m a f c a n i - which 19 a como or r v i f i n t ^o rxxAa. and R,i^ Swao a bfand-new coilocrp'.n of pfima'iFy acology ofienteo ai Kponi' Onfy Si 9b each plus 50 c e n u pel otdei ' v poiiogs ana namJbng io Sav*7*' P'ess P C Box 4 f r ^ / B . L A Cmir 9COA& (Car^i m add ; ^ u w s i&iiJ AISO Cobb s Ccoiosv 'lag ^ ^'5 fpaeri on whrB pressure serv airivA-acchs anywhere' J lor a

PCRflOtML VBRATORS Batterv powered "and - i b r a t c ^ 1; x7 Buiiel "wsed Guaranwed tu rekeve tans-om unij ifiiH ("ed leeiing wrian dppiwd 10 any pari of IT* Cody Orders mailed s-'w"e day received ^la first f.lass n'ail Onlv 13 ao GOLtJEN WEST SALES C O . P O Box 15010. Las Vegas Nev B91H A QUALITY

PROOucr - rjOT JUNK

Free Qilt offer if over 21 Adult bool(s record? and hlms. f'^^ brochiirfi*. RoDe'I^ Hons*' P o S?9A Cvvl L AhBany C H I y l ' ^

II^IUlHIUUIIJIUUiUlUlUUlUIUWUlIlinilJU^^

MANUFACTURERS AND IMPORTERS


flag, $ 1 0 0 b i l l , ate. Inquire at

We carry aPI types: fruit-flavored, Zig-Zag.

B R I T I S H A M E R I C A N PAPER C O . 2 1 8 East Winston Street Los Angeles, California 2136802235

tmcli;

^ _^

GET H(GH GiDove wirh "AcapulcD Ped lOC^ loyal graaa^'yseliirn'dn ^ rX>mtr ifd %200 3 IjO-k^SS 7 uotit^o Okiaraniwa , RUSH your otOtt tcr StSOS B Q . a n g ^ i F P i . HQiywooJ xi36 M M ! OUT RACh H a y . and 1 1 ^ iirtgle gtrla, dun couplas ^ v * ahara yofjr m o i l rnipmara d f l a i ' e a AJth M'lnging groovy Hrtenda' Hun* K ) a I 4 l * d in Calilornpa R u t h S200 foday lo CONTACTS Bow 3e3as-Fr. Mo^^y*ood 9Q<a6 PQnNOOMPHf Vour name sent lo numarcrua ScariOnavian deaiara ot harrfcore pornographv ""ai Tftnrt <Xkl h * ilkJsEraietJ caiaiOQf 12(r0 To Ua(, 9 e ^ e N Oanvtin. At3ii Tan 7960*

WfTCMCRAFT, MAOtC A 0CCULTI9M MOST UOMFfREHENSlVE SUflVEV PUBLISHED 33 EXCITING CHAPTERS t^OO / fAX WAYNE BOX 30B0 HOLLrtVOOD C A j l F 90036 tmm M M PROIECTOR Bailory oporated En^Oy your Bmm rru^vies anywhere Sldp 'I'rn anywhere Will not t u r n "I'm Send S7 95 lo L O V E . Company P O Box 3614 Hol^Wood Calif 90026 NUDE M A L E S Boyt^dotl. Manhoocl. Nude Natural :ind CompfeteFy Ur>cenaorod' Something for everyone Send Si for NEW 42 p.clure Photo sel Catalog State in writing yOu are cpve-21 SCANDFA STLIDI01 PC Sox 46453 L A 90P4a Cdlil _ IN9TAHT COCK SiOO e a 3 for S2 00 A modern syniholic but saTiifactory subAtiiuie for ypur immediate pleasure (novaltrf J C Enterprises Box 353 Hollywood Calif 9002S __^___ BRUSSCLS BOY CWAHETTt LIGHTER 7 tJ2' labk) lighter o^eral^b [>y battery Preaa button on head and ttciy lights up Use:4 [wo ' C Caitars ^nol inclf Send 11 W to L O V . E Company Bok 3 6 1 * . HollywQod Cant 90026 HEAD GEAR TASOT DECK Contamporary N-'w * i | n bBsy msiFucnons W o o A^iERiCAN FLAG rolling papers reo white S, blue 30 cents StOO BILL rolling papers just olf the pte^a 30 cenia ECOLOQV FLAG bumpersdckers 3 x4 2 yreons A white 35 cenis ECOLOGY S Y M B O L * i n d 0 W itkcker 7 T^2 x 2 \I2 greon A white 33 cents kjiMidoc"p a roBchclip that l ai40 a kaierdoscopa Si DO a U l L E T ROACHCLIP S200 BULLET COKESPOON S2D0 B A M Q ^ ROLLER RoFIs regular hingsize wiifi i pack paper t'OO Minimum order Si 00 Price "' eludes postage A hartdling Calif res a M ^ ' ^ sales fax Cas^. Check or MO to NATIONAL OlSTRlBUTOnS CO PO B o . 4e?15 L A C-Mir W>"6

CASH HOW V/E BUT slereos. carieras. jeweliy. radios, tape recorders type writers, tvs. any thing of value Call Swap Shop j65^4707 Mdjor record producer looking for now writers singers Gall 4672181 lor appointment OeapCRATET My friends baby 15 crippled by a ijxne ailment and possidlo bram damage H B rriay rtev^r walk II anyonf^ h a j an old aquarruin that doesn f kiak and that thev do not need pleaae give n>e a call A lank full of brigfitly c o l c e d fish would be a w o n d e i ^ l thing to give the batry Thank you Mic>f HI 6604604 Keep trying A brand new magarine is being lorrrted Vou ned not be a proletsional w..iQr to ^anlribute The Mokicn Eaiers will bA shaped by the readers Send anything Chas W Turner. Star P | B . BX 424 Rockpori. Texas AManiee sfafl may be picl<ed from t o f res pendents N o o r d H r s P l e a s e
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LCOAL OOii> Turn-on guaraniaed Ju>t liNe grnss cooi( or smoke ht Large cleaned S2O0 lid rnakes 20 loinla 3 lids. t l O O V 4<ds SlO Dealers i^siiied WiNNEa Box *a47S ^ HoUyWOOd 90O4fl WANT TO SCREWS Join the Thouaanda of Eager Swingers ktoHftn^ \cn the ,ic[ion Ihey deaire -Join and you w.ll receive a Nsl of phone nuinOera of hundreds pf gals a n d guys waiimo lor your call You are listed FREE 1^ you wish when you iOn Sttrt Swinging fonjie Vou flfso gel [he "Swinge' emoiem ycxj va heatd ao much about Wa advertise and avN nadonAiPv Complete membership H a't priviieoBs S3 00 CRITERION Depr F P O d o i 674 Lo9 Alios Ca j*Cg2 Al^'BRASt IS a military ^rounseling magaima lor aitomeys conseJora and serviceTien it n sconsored by the National Lawyfl's GuildMmury Law Panef Proceed^ over cost 90 to Tfw NAFiDinal Lawyers GuikT Indigenr Ser^'ceman 9 Defen^ie Fund SubscnpT'ons are S3 nc to A n T i B r a i ? PO Box fl7'>e7 L J S Angeles Calif 90067 A d u " books magazines filrrrs. rfno priuio^ Cuiaiogs and sample pholos Si 00 OOLDFIELD. EO:^ 2erFP, H a q a f t ^ n . Md 2i740

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COLOR MAOAZma

3 6 " Color (O 1 9 6 9 ORIGINAL 20DIAC P O S I T I D M POSTEft VOUR wx posilion' S3 5 0 pr potter M j i l Ordtfr f r o m D A V E V RGSErslBERG P R O U . c/u H A R O L D ' S 4 0 5 Gaary Si Sjr> Francimo. Cat M102 Brochure. Dealers I n v i i a d

24" X THE LOVE Whdl's

Urgent^ needed Any malerials from the lestival-stilfs. slides. Ijfme, lApea Pteasecail now-(7lfl 499-1^63 or f7T4( 494-5156 Wanrpd Mete partner for new gay bar {Silent or active) Box 2065. H o l h ^ o o d 90020 O w n ^ r of B9i bu9 Maior amusemeni oenter Orange C o needJ inveator Reply VCR. Box 67404. LA 900G7 ARTIST 10 Phx A n / r*eeda 'ipor>aor. agant to help fin ants prlnllng of erotic water color painilngs 4oon tobeexhrbifedinPhx Good professional art Ph G02-2t)?-^8^(^ Addrs 702 W Ponland. Ph A n r flsCO? _ ^ WANTED FREAIW 6 0 0 1 6 On Art. poefry, lilmg. Ihe East. polithC0 diuga. ecnlogV'^''^'^'^'^'^ Cloihbound editions add paperb a d prelerred Hign prOf^-i Park Book Store. 14946 Crenshaw. Gardena 329-4700 !!>? Mof> Thu^s 10-9 Fn-Sat CWsed Sun Peace OLDER BROTHERS I want ppoi of your staler and'or yotir tirother Send sample and price to POB 16004 Mpfa. Minn Zip 5 ^ 1 8 Wanted WiKh practicing love. vengeanco A jjtiack spell* 677723b gittr 2 pm S CASH FOR BOOfCft! I NO SHTT 3T<Kr77 W A N f E D : ADULT BtKMS Papart>acka I I y^ nnd up cover I ' i c e will pay 5% of cover I will pay 10% for mags and more lor Pacifif- News Puds Likit-new OoQks tirify pleastf 3^9^700 Heffvy space groij[j 7erdik rweds another 'oxy chick m i t o p s e ^ f a r out cosBimes Prepa/e organic meafs. treek up our bu^ groove on concert tour Call are 714 BS74 j g Nuevo California Feniflie Srnp Tease Ccmlesiants wan red Uasfi prirea Hollywood Wesi.'069 Lincoln Btvd Beauty a nece?vlV 391-4223 Icr deUils A audrfjon firne P H O T O G R A P H E R S We nofld photo layouts, boy'girl. couples. girVgirl Call 3fifr33SI

LONGHAlRS' " C A N T FIND A JOa? COME IN AND SEE US BREAD EVERY DAY TRANS FTJRN 9 A M SHARP 4930 MELROSE AVE GIRLS ATTRACTIVE 21 TO 40 FREE TRAINING PROGRAM 5 DAY WK EXLANT WAGES LEARN TO BE A MASSEUSE teT-QgW W A N T E D - V O U NO M A N Age 19 ?5 Conservative and with good appearance lo wmk npfirox 4 V2 his claily or\ general house marnienance m eiichange for pvt room Sdoard Fiifia work for pay possible at times Aixfve Sunsei Strip 6s6-63no Legif ciMs oQly NORTTf HOLLYWOOD FREE CUNIC JOB CO-OP Job pfacflmeni Mon W B d . F r i 1 2 4 p m Vocational RehahiIllation Counsehrig'^on 6-10 p m N H FREE CLINIC 52?4 Lankershim B ^ d . No Holly POplar 3-6636 GOOD UPEE If you are lookmy lor the good Irle like m^atin^ people l e a r i to CM a female technician Call 656-9115_ I to 10 p m CASTING FTUM CO NEEDS PPfTTV GiflLS (NUDITY) GOOD PAY

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Femala rwOe models rwedad c i f l 27G-1268. 606-0099 or 394-9616 to recerye application Py mail _ DANCERS WANTED S50 CASH TO THE WINNER AMATEUR STRIP CONTEST EVERY WED NiTE tVe have auditions on Mon-TuOfi Every GAl (hut crynea in fc* Aud oetsSSexponsfl money ^7:^-9030 TOPLEV t o o 6675 PICO MCE J o a For fem only To help yng housewife 23 in tnautilul home. Judy 644-4009 A n P A C T I V E BARMAIDS For ckJb m W L A Apply artar 6 prn 10990 Wilshire Bh^d

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EJLCKI^IVI^ und sironi^ Damgh coioi mag'Uines m ihe Destfjuahty onty S3.'cnpy Aiimaii Si e - | r W c o ^ <^uicM ana d i i c i e e t delivery aga nst payn^nr m achance when you slate y j u are ova* 2i y e w i old and send n m your order to a B C . Box 60 DK2700. "^ronaftoj. Denmarif ADULT PHOTOS Films BooSs. Maga^inaa II S t r a f e d Caialoga. 25 cenB Vihrng 'mporft. Oepi H*, 406 S Second ST Alhambra. Calif 9100? < O v f 21) Tranivwatno Contacta 00 CctdSt 10 Coast D e Uila ErThpaihy Ciuh Box 12466 Seaftis. ^ a t h M m

Witehcah - Voodoo - M j g i o Satai^ism - Sorcery - rieacrafi' Workls largesl seWciinn of ^sua books curios occuH supiiiios spari Hu^h &4-pagA hiiustraied (dialog 2^ canH Impcria Box 2505-L Prescoh. A t a a a j i

POIIiVOCRAfMV LEGALf STOP lookinn^ Gtr Judga'i ft'iia fluliiia. ukir Sup^r & CHkign A Vour K*mt on our Milling L i t b ' Si pTocauitig 14 Socki il 1 1 1 you Irom H O L L V V i L L * . Bon 3471. HoltywHHf. C|. 9D02. R L i 2 1 7 S i ^ a t u r a mutl* Sl*T i n l f m t t

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POIMOORAPHY Wtm9 Tev C k i Oet II Lisi of 70 Dwiish A Swedish <nAil order i4altf<s ol F^Ard core pdrno who [i"er FREE color calaiogs 52 cash onfy ic OLAF 525 N Uiurel Av L A C e 90048 State you are IM/21 AUETPAUA WANTS VOU*

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M B t l M R OF A TRAC OH COMMUNE HOW ABOUT WRITING US A LETTER T E L U M U 9 A 5 0 U T IT: STVIE, RELATIOW^HtPS. WORK. ETC. W VOU POWT WANT TO GIVE VOUn NAME OR AOURCSS THAT 9

SALES JOB WATER BEDS M'Oarv Mod - VounH - Go Oenar lor partially estatllshed [err High ccKtimS Unlimited lulure Must have a successful dales histOfV and a lale model w^OCri Patrick Renrdon g|3/545-5032 GALS Atlractivo. OvOf 31 Maaaage A Healih Demo Money making oppoilunlly Call j 4 hoLir'^ 467-0362 MALE ESCORTS J-i hr Must bfl ?i over NEEDED NOW 461-^476 I qpm Help Wanted Girl-; over?Oyra for topless and bottomleaB dancers Local and out o l town Call now 3^-26^1 Barmaid pl-time a t t r ^ i - ^ ^ No exp nac M t a t w f l a r coslumB Apply6^ ^OajTi^Sun 5659 W. Pjco B l L A MALE DEMONSTRATORS Fern t In a rww and eKcitmg job as a private derrongtrator of the sensual water bed CALL 654-6047 ICN ESCORT WOMEN Earn St- and cf/et. 21 yrs min Apply now T-Opm 461-3478

Lost LarBe m^ie cat Blh A wht Viciriiry or La Clenaga. Sia Monica Blvd Reward 0 5 ^ - 3 9 ^ D O G S LOST VlClnl^ ot Sun seUFoothiH Be Hills L a r ^ lan A blacH shepherd ' Barney and a dlacM mmiaiure poodle, ahaggy with wtuie mnrkings 'Moustache' Ftvwvd upon identilicafion ^ia^fSOO

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IJWEL5 1000 d e k i i e P-color gakJ afripegumrned-padtled labeb prmiad wiih any narrw-add'eaa mr-et JIQ code l O O k K M i i i H l l N o r i m i L M Ervin PO B< ZfOS, Ingkawood. Cut 9CQ0S

Government asiLsled paaetfge SOiJCt) joOa latest governmental rprins. Si QC Special repoiV cm houamg. employ mer>l business. e d u c a t i o n , rant:hing rarniino. tajtet. r e a c h i n g , maps, e t c AUSTCO. Box 3fl23-FP. Lofig Reach Cakif 90)3

COMM Tor TRAD INDrAN LAND & LIFE neecb Iree oflice in L A from wriich wa can carry on our frgril lor Arrwican Indian nghls Phone J63^^4&

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NEEDED for BAIL FOR POLITICAL PfllSONEPS AND DETCNSE OF CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS Conlact Tfie Committee for ifie Delenaa ol the Bl^l o l Righti M A ^ ?I09

"WANTED OftOOVY O A L " FOR FASHION M O O a i N G CALL Mr Howard at Columbia Casting 461-:^? I Girl FrFday mocbl or nrllst Haaim minded 39g-3JB6 Wafited. Chick exper m lenTier w o i k Cal^ Gabriel. A67-55dB t^eningBhop SrrLiill production co needs arllsi for p a n Hme work Good lettering a m u s t Call 653-139^ Wanted Dancers nude, rhtjuire 5 00 fa 9110 pm 11^5 Sherman Way. C P WAMTtD-VOUNCt M A N age 19-26 Conservative and with gooil appearance lo work BpprpB 4 1 ^ hra deify on gerwrni tiousv melrierLbnce in e x c h a n ^ lor p v l rcom A tioard ExtiB work for pay posgJble al times Above Sunel Strip 656-6300 Ljfgii calls only

Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

Copy #A72 - Do Not Post - Do Not Copy

\A%\ Ani-tle'4 Frte Vrvw

March 12. 1971

Flack f r o m Sandstone

Board of Supervisors attempts to legislate against nude bodies


SHANNOIV Uniwr/i Ci'iifff "ilri'A-ili Cfuft't' 'inii'is 'I'lV pliiii' ^fu^ri- fhni' t n'oritii"}H\ llu'ir rimvn'iftift' It" tiwt-mhii' "f titttti' " C'liuiM^ O l d J i u n i c N.I. Ul,flWf. h h i c h r v q u i T i ' s i i | v r . H [ i r * i HP| " > r r i p w d i l O n E i / r s " iip be liLL'nsH.-d HI J u c I L I | .1 m.ipitF ^ u L i r l ICSl ElllSHL'Lk 'lll|HPU}!h i h l S i t K l i n j I l k . ' k T . tiW'iiitiUp/pr I'Ur/ine hi iliiI'li't/ni'"ii\.' l l v L L I U I I E > H i ' . i r d i>l S u p c r s i v i r i t Ut li.iPi ( l i t HHpi.'r.j|iiPii <p| i v t i k.cnu'i'i" III l l v k i k i i i i i y Cirunn liipfv i-llkTUiilspCiri nudlsl L.,Liil^t\ ,iilk1 Ills I v y u i p Em I v ,1 p J i i HPf iPv l i u i i i . i i i p<Pii.'riii'<L iPvf^- ^iic l l " " |pllk:rk.'ir .11 iliriv kur^ci'innt t^i^ups f^' l.lM mn^cnvnl Figdk.' E l k r , i p \

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I Was the Manson trial entertainment?


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nietlijiiv 41^ i h t fir'ihli'm h'vnt UJ U V ami til "rhjiukiincfi uf wtir-H(Jju''ii-iL Hinblli^iUK. ftnii III im" AintrK'iiris" in hiifitH thHi Ehji> wjJI la' Iht hmt uiifl la^r nf the ami n i u r d t m " H t r t P" i n 'ilfXTUinpiv ID shnw t h i l ')Ur ovKli'm wnrkK " Anrt irrili'i'd uui HvMi'm itri^-i inn vvrv wvW itit UH Whm I'riUi'rIujfinii'iit! Lflwvt'ni LflvirrlJMji almup diuii)i thtir hi'Xi in ur>*tUKe I'ai'h iXUvr. n-A umrnTpopi Mdiis^m K^tii Mr. Kixhnpi'i srrrriewhttl hinsi'H ac^Mmrif "t if>i' ITIAI prmitTJin^s fdijK TJI miiJlt ihin [iNjk llkv lU'itHT Nirhndv 'Jf-f'rnrtJ verv iiitJ'H'Klt<l Jn p;iviri|; i iij n wry fiiir ii'iaf firher, "^IF}!!' Ih*- rltr*'ji>i'V caw ilejienriH on diht^rt^ifin^ thi' li-<<tiinijriY ' i f [^IHHH KiLSHhian EPI thf Knund-^ that '^hc 'kail hi'4-n r r n ' l t ' r i ^ ITIMIPII' hv TukinpE I^SD.

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DurnrM ihe IMHI. ihi' nulhoi' m>tJi'i-rl the ifi'h'ibd|inT fidiftliiipi in llii'ir <>ear^ and cn IM ipMnn tUirrnR nff IIIIJI <^jiaiior '^miLinic "i frnwrnnii for no ajipiart'nl n'lw^in After also nhhrmnu r h t r'inirrjrnlH n f H r 'J'h^nltl^ Uncvrlcidtr' nf thv U I ' L A |M,vi'hiairii rlinir, whn rtavH thai IB-IUJU' who mv i1onvd "eKhiliir ni'itnr rt^llcsHniW iind "ina}ijir-t\inaw vifa Ts," M r Hi^^hop iri Tnavd iji l o n i l u d e itiat ihtHtfrudantit "evhihilcd unirimliikabli' nJKnn fif having hci'n. if iwi nn a ItiiKThv Hi'pd j'Kirnev, al IfSKl ' " i i niuili^i i'H[ai<>p4H) <Hi iiintv fhati oru' iiK'B.'iion " }]owrverH i n iKf HUIIII- writtiiir, he slutj-s Thai " L S D has few nh)tiii'vv. nhni'rvriblr i f l n l f t " J wondi-r whal I'ffn i>i Genriii' Hinho^i i i u l ' l vxhitiil if 111- w t i t <in Trpal foi nmrdri fnr innnv mnnlha of b^HiriM and inf u i m l i n ^ theloipi' in ilH'dt'iid ht-itt <A a swi'lli'fiiiic 1 ^ HurnmiT Apjarl frnni thi' damninn i i f C h j i i l i ^ ManH'Hi. Mil' Kumilv, or LSD, ihe ix-^iinioMv 4if WIIIPIPM <:aiitl>>nn indlHu r l no otii' hul llbt LA pritliii'. G H I U ' I . ' " " I , if vcHj rcmeinlHT, wa^ thi- niir GlHEBELS ANCiULA GUERILLAS iBLACKPAWTHERS

THE RWJNG

Slud.C>iy, 7 B 3 7 I 7 1

THEmSONGS,POfTRV AND STATEMENTSOM LONG PLAYING RECOf^OS

ISB/^ff fOR COIUPLre

CATALOG

PARE DON RECORDS, DEPT A P O BOX wra. BROOKLYN. N V 11202

m ihp i i i i l - m i l d lilt hrKf'i iiellmK 'mill iif H ri>|iv "t thi' liaiisi'ri|>L i h f narni^ |ir(iper(v * * ihi- TaU' b*tuw' Hul lhi wa<^ I'll enleilfliniii^ bihik. l l Wan I'Hi'lv III llie moinirik; ^nil HIP e'i'vv ri'jiil apid a hunMJniu> i t i i Chllyhiphi'i, Ihe tii-K- ti^il Mwrikeried d'lpoip, wpih nil pl> hjalaiillv lojidi>d hmi. ad perl iS't's a n d I'lnnl ion s i i i n l i ' "W<-ll, f>i' ^uii'ii-d Ivii^kinK, vou if|u><irrtli4ifti I liBwn'l ittvH hiHik know T Piifd hjiii lo shui upi, and llivrj 'Uuslrrt1i'HT<> liki' ihi~ ^ioi4' fn\ IH^I I hhjki'll IJpl Hltd llli'le W4<^ 4 1 NaiiiA D i e * no\id Tlh^ |>i< PIIIT' 4if ]y>lueinaii IHIIAJJII' in ihe |iiiliii pinniShiror> TflU- "pleading: for Ihe lile -if liiiK u n f l f ri( nil' An^iltiti riU' Ih-i halA-" l<Kitu''1 H^ if n iHiTii'Miaiiihi H-miii' Hiiii wa> fBhinliniE a (hHEiJ. ar-d rni III KHKiinnri- C^ininc. An^l ihi' one 111' kn k i l l III thr 't'kir mid C'hru>i|i|ii-i 'if her IvniK di^ad mi lhe Hix'i is no till hifn <ii rill' \fg Wi'll, ijten more linrrendHtu^^ ihaii a p>l;ile (umi ihiA i\ni me 4rti1ii ilii' fHiIm an^l t h n ' ^ ' Kienda S U I T The diawnLn mitUtinf nn' d"wn "n mv >l<niai'li A-wi 1 j u k n l nlv fivv nf kvi ^laln'M -ktaVt nh^tUnilp (hi-ni whal witn wtiHin and ll>v UAii aikd ituH^ ai'i' I'^ire^'iiled m* Inlle mr l o nhui upi, lliev f>uld nhnw me " Hark hntli-- w t m l i mai Ihe '^nrfnn' nf Tht'n tlu'\' diaut^eil liini rtui pnl'i llie fu'i skoi vaiil I'j -^^irpih' hnii (hi' Ihifles. \ I'UpH'll ihlH Hflllflll- llith- IXB'k Of"MPM', nil ilial would ItjiM'hii'it W4)uld dij wti on tin- ^ u ^ j d ^ m itw fini- if ('^11 icb^HMi had III Sill 1 I h f n i h i ' h - a l <>urfKrni*ik4'L rx'i'h''|< nfi i h r inurvli'rr'i A- ii lJJrll^ HUI he IH fihriir same rai k w i l l i fht- ftiin/'-i-'* /)ij.'r^ IMWO^MI'- <ip?iijii-i tin fHiliH < jfepmrr'Vln |>a< kat;i- ix H r'lAiiiK' apifji-almi nn'Fii mni dH L IIIKI'l ih'[l l l ' s I'll' I'liMiKh i I'i'iillv liki'if lhe nrvtfr 4i>UTaKiii^ Ei^ ^-v iu-lh e Tl mn<|>ti irnwnu rtf i h e i ' M l fUfififUi-i MaiiHcm. Mfan^ii'hili'. MJrl^4)ll ouldn'l I-MMI ttf* }iui I wi'uld tiikw like^l n v\*-ti hellei a nii^n ml Willi Air Liiikleiu^i on ihe i c i w r T l i i i n : h HL^hnpi aiieiidtnl tfn' l u l l holdint; Thar he's " i f i n i ! ' ' I IVBIP/Jn^ f^ithlullv J U h [fie ludue, hi^ n-phir LiiUdetiei liaiked (hin venluii' nut of iinB II* IHlJe morr ii^valniii than ihe nrw*<T|i('i imiTKiJi' ai i h r iinie. M m h Ihe t'""!'*''^'' " f hi^ hear', m mi-iriorv of ||p\ Hff EVni 1- i:ilirii ii|] wilfi ;ilrein of fti'x pH>r>i di'-id daujthtj'i iind ni nj^iled I'hpiliinjkiiork'x jind |ii "^ri'-.' tt-i PJI -^^W 'ilhei^ friHii fiillmy \i'1im Pi'^mrb' Mil ihe ^iinliniinii; feuifs nii'l lo lhe '<*ipne eMK. aPid dial LiiKla f^tiMrH of Lhe JiTt'ii nevs invnlvi-d m i h r Ka.-^aliirtn JH |iuMi<>hiiii: Iter- rnemon^t case Mu( h " f n n r f n i i o s Ihe i ju^i for inu4 h Ihe -^aiihe illiM-lfj-'li lea^rMi. at^aiiL'^i at id Anil wlial'^ li^l an- f'i\fIml if S4iiiii'iin<' ri'alJv w a n b l o iTiriki- H anif imi'es uf itslirrjnnv whii'li '^hiHilil krllini'. " f f d i i - whole i'i| I'd like heljj r<><iinflriii i-veprone'h hi'hevr [hnt lo -j'v n fuil-H oI'M LA11^Uh|l' I'dllnHi C h a i h r wax K^dlv and t!"^ hl^ ^u^llM' rf itH' |>4rl|ie mui r'H'fH'i'^^ |>liHil4rs. r1l^!>4't^- Anviiiii' Miieerelv nileii^>Uf1 Juil m i n i i t foi r h m l n i j i H .
l n ' i| III lln -IIJ.IPI L"'--'1 \\"'

113

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A h M X J . A f i s .. '

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R U T dinlu r'la'ja^iTK' Wi'n pn^^l^''^ d<",i r T ' J i . '^ Mamus A<i orr?55es 1 3 R E C T O R Depr FP Btm 77531 Loa A n g e l e s . C H ^ W h y a m i a r e v o l u t i o n . ! , ! ' ' by flW m o r e ^han a m m r m a n u a t ' T h e how t o andwhys of Lemn Mao C h e I S e n d 35 c e n i * t o B O J I 488 Giendale Ca H ^ T O R V O ^ SEN m t h e C'lir'n'a A m u s t frir i h e s e r i o u s Co I let I or OVER FtFTY FEET O F P U L S A T I N G C O L O R fl M M REEL O N L Y H E O O P L U S FtFTV CENTS POSTAGE FREE GIFT W O R T H 5 0 0 IHCAUDED W I T H FIRST H U N D R E D OR OERS S l a t e m l e i t a r I a m 21 years o l d SCARAB BOOKS PO I ^ O * IML' H o l l ^ w ^ - j i ] ' . . I tftd.'H LEATHER FACTORY Panra 127 . M Hd ^Mli 17.50 Rebai Hal a >2.u W h o k ' s a k ' o n l y . Iree p^r l u r e d brochure sandars granny boots j a c k e t s ^lala. e l c L i t t l e lyfeinco 6110 El Cajon S a n D^epq^Cal L I N P A T A L K S OlRTV^ t'l} I j n d f l - y o u n a h o r n y d w e t ' Let rne t a l k y o u OFF rtiin m y Tape rflc<>rqed F R E A K Y a e ' t a l k ' I g o Alt-out' Adults only Send 6 M lor fl r\>ins 1 3 0 0 0 lOr 3 0 m m s . eic Specify c a s ^ t e o r reel & l e l l m e w h a t y o u w d n n a haar baby PO Box '002 H o l l y w o o d 90Q26 Y O U C A N L E A R N TO D E A SENSUOUS WOMAN Practically j^omiqhi i-siig SELF H Y P N O T I C T E C H N I Q U E S for y o u r Copy o f L m t O EO M s S e n d t 0 0 t o H Y P N O S I S PO Bn 4614 N o H^ywd. C a 91607 FREE S A M E Y O O PUPPY i r e w j K d frir r e c o v e r y ml'.' about V'jki Ig white 1 y male SFirreyoO 4 V d d o g Plaan: look F r e e p 'r^enos 3 f l f l . i 8 i 4 Reward Siberian "Huiky lem white w'gray mask i w o black s p o t s I n j u r e d HoiiywrFod a r e a Billy 666-9999 6215 F r a n k l i n A^e M i m a r u r e S c h n a u ^ e r rf^ale kjsr E a s i e r at Fiysian Park R e w a r d P i e a s e j i a i i .^72-773i FREE S A M E Y O D P l f P P Y d r e i ^ a r d for r e c o v e r y into alyni' yuki i g whhip I y n i ' i i e aameyoO slPd d o g Pie.tse iicft F r e e n InendB M 6 - t 8 1 4 SilieFian H u s k y f e m A h i i e w q r ^ y r\aik flPi^arrj B II^ 6 6 6 9 9 ^

55
Need young tem w r i t e r to c o l l a b o r a t e p n s c r e e n play Have g r e a t idea a n d c o n n e c t i o n s N o crediEs n o r O n l y faient Ca<i fl Freed HO 6 25fri

fiS M G B n . a - M l ' J g i Q965

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JohOn^f
JOB COUHSeUNG C a n t tir.o a i O D ' is l o o h m g ir.* work a drag'' Learn h o * to ii"ii a g e l Ihe ]OD yoiH want C o m e to 9061 Sanifl M o n i i r a B l v d ii.ps t a i i a i TH,eHday m t e s at 6 0 0 P M Of t a l l t h e L A F r e e C i m i c J o b C o - o p at 9 3 8 - 9 1 4 1 fcf m o r e mlorniation

MnApfA^x
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THE PEACE S U L B P e w Bymtx.J g l o w O u l b F i t s s l f l o d u r d soi^kei T w o lor t 8 5 0 postpaid Satislaci'on guaranteed C o n t e m p o - K i l s . I 2 B i s h o p T e r r a n c e . S l r a i t o r d . N J 0afW4 G r o o v y e y a g l a a s e t your m e t a l Irame e l a c l r o p l a l a d g o l d silver n E r i j u a g r a v o r Olach $ 5 0 0 L e n s e s c o a l e d r o s e , y e l l o w . Diua. l y p w n . g r a y , violet g r o a n m i r r o r g r a d u a t e d b f o w n . g r a y mirror a i l anEi-rellAClive R e s b r o c h u r e P O B o n 1653 S l u d i o C i r y C a 91604 Qeauiiful Mexican~0irl3 needing Amer boy'lnpnos "money-bach plan Details 2 ^ c e n t s W O R L D BoK 3878 (MI3J San d e g o 9gi03^ N o I g u i d e t o s w i n g m q nutjF*im Gay biaexuaiiEy. sen o r g i e s d u b s & services Meei ne, people N o w m 3rd y t a r o l t e i ' vice AF> a p a o i u i e m o s t l o r anyone Rush your c i . . , r S i 0 0 Sarhple C o p y 1 5 0 0 F u l l I Y . SubscrFption Swinqers Guidp 6311 V u c C a L A 28 Light b o i hits Irom 1 5 0 0 W r i t e C A R H C R A F T Dept T4U PO B O A 116S V u c a ^ p a . C a Collcr.ior wants Oiiotleg L P s Dylan Be.itles. e k Also Oylfln ' a p e s aisrj t r a d e lor t a p e s ' ' o m m y c o l l e c t i o n Rill C o m P s P O B o > 3 0 5 Kanw^>od O a M 3&452

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Los Angeles Free Press Copyrighted Material

L o s A n g e l e s F r e e Press

Sunt 1, 1 97 ] Copy Copy #A72 - Do Not1 Post - Do Not

23

THE STAR & DIRECTOR OF "EASY RtOER," HIS OWN UFE. FILMED AS HE UVED IT
"The American Dreamer" is an objective, unsentimBntai portrait, fascinating in its dGtaii. unrelenting as its subject. Schiiter... has created an unusual, iliuminating motion picture.
PAfNE KNICKERBOCKER SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE

Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


TOM QUIGLEY AUSTIN STUDENT PRESS

, - . ' T h e Amencan Dreamer" does catch an im(>oriant filmmaker and an unpredictable huntan being in the act of living ...a man o is as naive as he is knowledgeable, foolish as he is wise, violent as he is peaceful

We see a number of different Hoppers but tfie question of which is the real one doesn't enter because Hopper himself doesn't seem to know or care and the various selves of the film has him show us have enough interest to fast the necessary ninety minutes

KENNETH TORAN WASHINGTON POST

Schiller's camera searches for the new. the different, the controversial. and now Den^^'s Hopper, who gave his youth to a business that did not honor him until he turned the corner towards manhood.
JAMES A, PERRY NEW ORLEANS STATES ITEM

Jack Nicholson viewed pal Dennis Hopper in "The American Dreamer"... "That's the way Dennis isalways honest He asked me about it and t told him liked it."

ARMY ARCHERO HOLLYWOOD VARIETY

"hose who love Dennis Hopper, the free-wheeltng cyclist in "Easy Rider". probably ought not to see Dennis Hopper, the ordinary man. in "The American Dreamer", because any time.a beautiful myth is destroyed. it has to be a painful experience.
MAL KARMAIN PALO ALTO TIMES

// you're interested in making movies or the New Hotiywood or sex or dope or Charles Manson or Dennis Hopper, then by ali means see this film. Watch a man convict himseif.
NEVILLE JOHNSON U. or CALlfORNiA, BERKELEY

"The American Dreamer" makes the real Dennis Hopper stand up. "Society loves to put bubbles up there and pop them and I resent it. I'd rather expose myself." he said, "J want to be vulnerable, but I don't sleep with cameras, so the film is not the real Dennis Hopper."
P08IN GREEN ROLLING STONE

"The American Dreamer" is one of (he year's most entertaining films. The sex is good hvt it temporary, like food. Once ihe need is gratif the search begins for somefhrng more permane more solid... Filmmakers Schiiter arid Carson have perceived something that Dennis Hopper " himself seems fo have massed, (hat he is his o greatest creaflon.
MARK HAGGARD COAST fM A FINE ARTS

It exposes harshly the loneliness and anguish that is forced upon Hopper and the walis of paddmg that he himself built to protect himself.

THOMAS PARRIS UN I VERS IT V OF OKLAHOMA

you are walking with Hopper, driving with hi, making love, smoking with him. and even this l confusing for it is difficult to separate Hopper.i person. beir}g himself, from Hopper, the actor. playing a role, I can honestly say that "The Amei'ican Dreamer" is not a film to be viewed onjy once^
JIM SHAN AH AN UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS

" D r e a m e r " . Uke "Celebration" and "Gimme Shelter", provides an insight into kiots of our time. It is natural to have idols. And to shed them. That's growing up. or whatever other threatening name is given to the process,
PAUL RiUGE CinCUS MAGAZINE

115

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CORDA PRODUCTIONS, INC. PRESENT

DENNIS HOPPER -THE AMERICAN DREAMER


A Film by LAWRENCE SCHILLER and L M. KIT CARSON

OPENING NEXT WEEK AT 10 SOUTHLAND COLLEGES


( D a t e s a n d l o c a t i o n s In n e x t w e e k ' s FREE-PRESS)

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SANTA MONICA CIVIC A U D I T O R I U M Wednesday - August 4th 8:00 PM Tickets A t : All Wallichs and Liberty Outlets. Santa Monica Civic Box Office. Reserved Seats: $5,50 - S5.00 - S4.50

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Poetry from Purgatory

HELPf
Anyone having ANY information concerning a shooting incident at a Shell gas station in Pidm Springs during the 1969 Easier Rock Concert PLEASE contact: JOHN BRADFORD 2309 Montana Blvd. Santa Monica

The poetry of Charles Manson


Ah a MHil Can hdiiKs from
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Copyright Los Angeles Free Press


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AH my Mm} <TIH

Inner City Theatre


1 ^ 1 5 W . WflJilii; filtin Elld. intVermari(J 735-1581

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LABOR DAY FESTIVAL VENICE BEACH, CHEETAH PIER AREA NAME GROUPS - FOOD ALL FREE DAWN 'TiL DUSK GREEN POWER FREE STORE 844 Pico Boulevard. Santa Monica FOOD and CLOTHING 399 9064 SPONSORED BY JEAN^S WEST

y o u give

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Spam's most exciting Dancers, Singers and Instrumentalists

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from end

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I I L

LISA A N D R A D E CALL H O M E MOM & DAD

LINDY OPERA HOUSE


SIDNEY ^2IJ LINDEN, gcner^J d"ii:t<j' W H S H I R E B L V D . , P h o n e 9 3 7 35DO

467-2066

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TWO
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WEEKS ONLY!
S A L E S Cell ] r - 0 l 3 . . o*^ f o r M i ^ t P a m S n i l h

AUGUST 10 through AUGUST 22


4 > f H F O R M A t J C i t : Tueirfnjy, W t i d n c i c f o y r t h u - i i i o ^ , f r i d o y , S a t u r d a y . . a 5 0 f". S^ndaf . 7 aO prn. M a M n < r l SaTuiCfuf a n d S u n d a y 2 3D prfi

Hiream hrat

alone with Ahine Tinie

lh'>uMht a l l Fi>r u^ I h e alonr-

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117

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m v hearT fjittw d o e v It nJi y e s I know will ^tarla* C^n M i m e o r i e k i l l w i t h w o r f b * an liEUO'* well inow river ruii-^ T U F i . W f D . T h U . r l & SUN E V t N I N O S H M u HmC 17li>, 1450, MOO A ^ A T I N F F ^ 5 * 1 (. SUh box 0 < F l C ( HOUP^ i : M O O N UWTIL J PM ( C E P T - o n , . - Pf,^r C17M0O i2n W.KI,,-. Bl.d l ^ . ( ( j u 1X3 5 * 1 i w r I S . UK S3 flfl LUWDAY * , . , j r i " i Col 0 O l i A r e t l i e y w h o k i l l ly l e l i i n j r i 4 h e r s i k > thrukiliJnK '' us bad'.' a inot her K^-nfti h e r -'n fo vfs J know When war. W h a t i*o v o u l.'t v o u r > ! i a e r n r r i e i i t Would ipwn vou xne ihe i.)--' UITIP t h e s u n I;L>% e m i n e n t

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L i V E ROCK MUSIC DANCING

l e a ^ e t o k i l l %ipur i h d d t o s a v e v o u r life'' do*"^ I t a l l t u r n ' ' thi' world

Wheit

JULY 27th thru AUG hi

UNDERGROUND

W h e n l ^ t h e k i l l e r t o \v k d k s l ' will si-^ w h i i l reiilly is'

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HOURS: 12 PM - 2 AM PITCHERS -aOf GLASS - I5f JAM SESSION SUNDAYS 6 P - 9 P l i

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AND

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STAYNK

3949210 1325 Santa Monica Blvd Santa Monica

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HoUyiood*9 NeufBt ISaturul Foods Restaurant & Store

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no ^ u r p r i w vour

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I ' O t ' A - l ' O I A IS 1irufrf:iniiTiJl. [hihvprK-ris\. dishoni'siv a n d filAin IriiJlvhir ih^ii L-niiie^ t r o n i i 'U'fNJi.iTinn'^ ihi'ir inf^rTii'-inji Hpfj'iii n'^ iinri f h i ' net wrprks SiPinerimi's i h e n i e n i h i-. s>l)Jid viai lu'-i \w\ l i k t ihiiFWirjjr npi l l i i i clnn't I TneAll. * h v Wa'Hle t^'^f^'^'^ ftifiii " u j i j j i ' r s " i\i-i ihe r i i ^ m n 'i of <7iiE AIIIPI T h t ; p j i r l k ' i f i a i i t ^ U J I I m^ rnonuol'iid idnris 1iiNj<r IPIIL " ^ ^ t i l i ' i i " lude, f u r IdAliM J . I / / , W j j t k - ( j iinif r u r i ' C i ' L i -fPid it> ifpFrimen Jjils ih.iE 4!r4t''H { ' ' h i l d r t n . K I T Fr^diiKiruil Aii'f Imr^i 'Hit of Fhf U'lev|^jnn sireen WFIII ntipveinenl f'Ah JJanny Viildei^ a n d |iluslic-hip musH' u n d idvlli* siene'^ <-i A u i ; u s t i n e L v r r . E'-i+'l-.' M u h H e i lite <>wini:mjj. vniintf. n f f l u i ' i t i a n d S e i n a . I ' f u i n ' Kiii/r a n d N J ' I I r i i n f r^J^, hejiLiTihil r h i n ^ N >:"iiiR dniAn in For Tejiinj 'J'i'ii I r o Crpra/oii. A n i e n i v i '\rid l^ieir rnrpioriile rm's.^ilpriSfienkcr^i w i l l Lru-lLi'1< KVIEI Mii'Lindii, js u n r m ^ U i k ^ M e . " L i f e is heiiuEJLil. R k - h a r d M a r l i n i - j t . Rviw Nurien^, und w f ' r e |IMTI nf it, a n d we're HJIHUIIM M u M i i ' , Efimt K u i / :iiiil F l i i h U'Autilul t o f p ' H H I L ' AhiFiprre T h e p r i f i v pnUiri-s m thipM' < f>ni.All pjTmTT'J'. Irihj" " L i Mumf" nieniJils Jiie in ^lJl^k, ^ i i j l r n i , jtinl r h i c m u " i v j i l tt" T" i h i ' Mi'4.hKHiriip 'ohmklFlk: tiffirrant [" i h f jiboFTiNUibh' .Art C'enrtr. JI n - j n - f m j f i l i - u l t n n d l e n Jiving I'ondiTinnH i l l m i e r i ^ K I j i r n i Icr III l."-y AFiRT-les workers jn K l n m L i ^ h r * l i v r m iih . o l i i l c L iiK'redihJe Mfiudor in f r i r n i owned nr l o j i i r o l t e d \r. IILI' I'lro'j divi'-hiii of ihv ^wirii;iii|-, Ih-iiiiTJIiil r o i - a ' * \ i l a C o i n | i u n v A n d f o r Ihe o|i p r t ' ^ ^ i ' d fjii Ml v i o r k i T s nri ihjj'^e |ji<-hisrorLi IjiiFrii. ( u n h i v is iht-ir l i l i 'U'*; ihe ie,i] Fhiiij;" H< then' w o u d . - r l n l nJu^fer^ l o v e I n i i i v IPFI i4'|e\'i>iim I I } were one (pf l}h^opfnei^inl I j i n n w o i k e i s Jilld hJiffM-ned lo -eefpiie rfl ihjisf- '-eii'-ii|ve*!Priimer''<jd'v in T V I wimikri w l i a l I ' d do No I jJini'l I D i i Auhiu-'l J I, Ifie A i i L i ' m a n I ' j ^ l l Libvrliv-. U n n u i ip|' SiHJthvrn ('jiltfiprk n o w eUAi'llv wh^H I ' d do I'fl f i l l u p i i M |>ctiTii>nH rhe I ' n i l v d SinU's r i n a - < ' o l i i Jmtlles w j ( h ^Ji'^oline, ami S u p r e m e ( ' " u r i U- ^Irjk^' j l o w n ^j'hmd then I ' d HTtiir Ihe n i ' i k - of (he !p^h^^I('^ rexiiJjbliHjr]'* i h i i l l>4iri I'^riK h i i i r irn Willi ma w'jiks, j4iKi ifri-n I'li iDEik- >(xidcnLs. N m so liiMtl HKip, EiTi M i l ' -\tw>. A|ipvHJinji f n n i i nn advvrsf [)4H'unK*nEiir\' i^jok a iiurk a l { ' L M I I ifi-i'i:>iiMn reiiderw* JUFH- :J'i hv lh<' ^ i h {'rrld's h e j i n l i h i l fjirms, Jiiid <'rxiir ^ r f i i j i C'oiiiE ir A|>fH.'at'4, i h e A f L L <^i|ji d i d n ' r like i h a i ii h i l W h v hell. jiN>H'd thT- h i i i h I 'JUii l o h t a r Ihe rase I h t 11 lovels f j i r m '-iifKniHiPi d i d n ' l " I n limn-hLiiK-d ^ludenT, L m i f a h l even eumv iplf wiLh ihc usuid. ^ ' Y u ' l l Kinir. Huspendtd f r o m Orjintiv nil u H|ii'|l j j i H h r t v t ' i i <'ok<' " S u r h rniLirilv's Sadi'fehjiH ^ J u n i ' i j d i l l c i i i ' hipsinwlitv B u i the w h u k i e a i n d i d n ' i 1 1 1 \W.'' e " d iherv - h a r d l v A H i'ihnflK^rji]|- ruii^ipis rn thv U-iinN D W , hov-i i m d KII'I-^ ' d ifie I'liiTi'd h a i r i v i u e rn \jiriipus i i r i ' u i t ^^nUiEJi S l a l v s nf the Hjink ol A n i i T i i ' * . a L nf htis'e Jilj )tn'i\ denied r e v i e w bv The vou E'an l o i n - i n a i i d plAV thv ^>i^ hus'i' Su(>iviin' I'rpurl " n o m J i l l t r w h i t h iCLpnl Mim-tffJy ijafTit l l ' ^ Ji f u n ^*JLV (he I'P^wvr i-MUil h'i'i rulvd," finimt fllwjiv". iieLhi inien-Hiinj; resLih>, A C H ' i.'oim'^el Fred O k r i i m l urH^d in and eim bt- f p l m t d b^' n n v ini-mJiei lA rhe | i e l i l i i r n lur A hejiiiriK h i e i l ForJjiy \ i m r f i i m i l v w h o \* .ifiahJt- of w r i l i i i u ihjbl the S u p i v m e { f o u r l " " h n u l d ni> H luiU'r i o \\w f'ltiriTni'^ionei'v o f i h t lori|(ei' kviiiPie" T^ir pirohlem w h i i ' h F e d e r i i F < ' o r c j i n i i i i i i a l i o n s I'lPiii"iierM-if.*, lEi'iiwo a n d fc-lerH," mj-ojon W h u l M I U i j i ' i^ ask i h i ' t'oliL-

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^ n b Q i n g Editor Snan K i r b v AitDC. Editor Michhcl Bl.ik^i C i l v Edilor JudiH Lflw^Men Senior t d i l o r L i w e n c s Lipion Ini'l. Rovi* Denni* Lewilt Fioofieader A r t h u r Rin& Bookhseper Linda O&plflV Advoftisinfl Jcthn BreuddH Bob CBmuror> John i M J o h n McPhoTson B o b Ml l e i , Mgr Pari I Homaiio Snndi Pt>ll Ml l i o n C * d i i Heairy Frad W a y n * Oniifivd Adi Marcie Hr Bert Recupiiuniii Ker^nd TvpHBttmg Pfluljita, L m & Co, PholDliThovapbv Undo T o m PhoTD Ediior A n d v ^ont A f t Dapt. faotjifiui, Ernflit Taylor Bi Dan McLan [>ign M i c h H l Zsk Circulation John Kssfia & Jackia SubKripliont Jeitica & Catedv Calfrndar K i l l y Jay Dee LuH

r*ot responsible f o r cath e n c l n e d In mail. Second c l a u poifave paid at Los AnoHlaf, California. PubiKbed wvakly, S u t n c h p t i o n i . S8 pa* year i n t h e U.S., J l l t f H wfTero in Iha A m e i i c a i , S 1 3 eliewtisre i n t h n w o r l d . F i r i i C l a u or A i r Mad f a l H u p o n reQuail, i f n i o l i c i l a d man uteri p i t a n d artw o r k t h a t Wfl d o n o t p u U i t h w i l l be d e t l r o y o d thfee weeks f r r* cerpi u n l e n * c c o m p a m a d by f u l l H d , n a m pad, lelf addretted, re t u f Bnuelopa. Vo. 8, Nurnbor ^fi (Iciue No. 371). A u f f u n 27, 1 9 7 1 .

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Page 42

November 5, 1971
Sanders covers the whole spectrum ot police investrgaiions that finally culminated in the arrest a n d convictron of Manson and his zombie zietgeists it all reads like the uncovenng of the cosmic caper of the century, and Sander^ bringa it all to a paak in a pyrotechnical display of scholarfy tirewortis and facts, a sort of teJeoiogicaf tautology of underground Journalism. r n e Family ts more than Just a b o o k a b o u t murder, u n f e t t e r e d magic, or instinct unchained; ^l is the maudlin mirror of American institutional I'fe. Vietnam war games, and public impoverishment of the ArT>Qrican soul filtered through the p s y c h o t i c v e i n s of I t s t r u e s t tieifevers.

Los AngeBes F r e o P r m HEVVOU SAV THArS MILD ^ I S ^ H E


W A Y Y O U A R E REG0ai>|zEI>7 DO SOMETHINO A B O I { r IT. DECLARE YOURSELF AS B E l M JOIN THE R O L L OF

Crime of cultural Ca-Ca

Rasputin of the new lifestyle


The Family: The Story of Charles Manaon's Dune Buggy Attack Bafa/lion by to banders EP. Oulton: New Yori*. i g / V S ; 95 ALLEN KATZItAM Ed Sanders nas done a lir$t rate reporlage/jot) of just " r e p o r t i n g the lacts. M a m just t ^ 'acts'" The Family is a psychedelic dragnet of Karmic jourriaiivn. Through the use oi expert witness interviews, trial lesiimony. 10 000 pages ot c o l l e c t ^ day-(o-dav dara and a year and a half of meat>denng over the actual Scn5 of I he Manson Famrly's maniacal mayhem. Sanders (white Angeles fCiry Of Angels) where the Oovjf does not fear to tread, a n d of H I S mm ions Of Dream Mefc h a r t s who would rather reign in Hollywood than serve fn Heaven ff rmsfdet has a reason rt is in the biblical Lew of Talon where the "punishment musi fit the c n m e . ' a n d only in Los Angeiea. California could such a cnme tit Charlie Manson a n d his dune b u g g y d e r v i s h e s a r e not |iJSi products of Anierica. but America is also the procluct of these children of trie Ninth Circle contingent fuianson's madcaps o n i h e Spahn Ranch Sanders maps cut M a n s o n s use of c o m m u n a l fiving, the manipulation of the H e i r s Angels as his own private shock troop border guards through muJII-lateral sexual commands to his family w o m a n l o " s t r i p a n d suck." And he notates all this in a fir>e f*r>es5e of facts rolled u p into Mar)son s o w n tittle ball of Apticrypha. At least hve separate individuals have c h i m e d that they were told by a memtjer of B r a y t o n s rebel O T O ledge that Manson was involved with the Lodge, both at the Lodge's desert ranch near BIythe. California, and at or>e of the cuFt houses in L A , near the USC campus. T w o family members, one of them Susan Atkins aka Sadie Glut?, have said that lte family participated m ceremonres involving the drinking of d o g biood arid the sacrifice of animals. This was alleged to be a sexual tonic Readers, however, should not take that possibility seriously The bJood-dnnkir^g of the family forces contemplation of tfw hideous possibflities of a new form of psycttedelic vampirism, i.e., getting hits oft of blood while on dope.

HUMAN BEIII6S
You B M : G v t l f i a t a dKriarirni VOu n h u n u n M r t g : I D . card; ptHodfe bullatfn of h u m v i f n t t r H t i d e n n t s . NOW, Y O U CAN PROVE Y O U A R E A H U M A N BEINOI I t ^ m H U M A N o l u r e t o fet Qthrt know vou n c o f f i J M tham M human M n i . SpacJal d t y t a n r w a r f SEND: NAME, ADDRESS, Z t P n d n u m b H o f p l u g O f t - 0 0 HC*t I f r i m * and tf ^ 0 0 a x t n l <o: HUMAN 613 S.E. 23rd 8tit Ft. Vmdmdd; Fla. $3316

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t

GIRLS WANTED

CHARLES w r i t m g a wet*ly report on the M a n son case for the Los Angelas Free press) has put logett>er a definitive booh o n this century S cnFi>e Of cultural Ca-Ca: the Love and Madn e s s g e n e r a t i o n of d r o p o u t s , d u n g a ' e e degenerates and diaspora

MANSON a n d m rhe Death Valley desed is a "cry in the wilderness," and his thievery on the material as weN as Ihe occult plane combrned with the totem trashmg of human instinct vie human sacriticiat lambchowder nruars is for this Hider-styled Hippie

" A c c o r d i n g to testlmonv at the Qrayton g a n g s trial, the Bray ton gang was mio drinking Ihe blood of sacrificed animals More important to the Study Of the Manson family rs the ' a c t that the Braytoi' curt also tjelieved most vehemently that there was an irr>mfneni black-white bloodbath to occur " A n d ihar r' was gomg if> happen in tne summer of T969 Sound l i k t Manson^" The murders of Gary Hinman rhe s o c i o i o g r s r w h o b e f r i e n d e d the Family thf' Bianca's. the middle class family innocent of any conneclions of lus' lapping and "creepy crawl.' and t h e Tate. Sebring. f r y k o w s k i . Folger quartet Pound to Ihe " d e v f l " t h r o u g h inadvertent rT>eeiings ar>d dope diatribes are not unrelated evenis.

No Experience Necessary ACTRESSES-MODELS-GO-GIR LS STEWARDESSES-DANCERS-ETC. HOUSEWIVES-SECRETARIES

THE F A M I L Y : A T K I f ^ . K f l E N W I N K E L . A N D V A N h40UTN Of d e l i n u m d i s c i p l e s w h o w e r e welded together into a wgr-like clan that killed Manson comes off as the Rasputin of the new lifestyle GO s, a mixture of dmoeba and ' l a t a h ' absorbing the worst of America arid its countercutture, perfecting "techniques of psychedelic brainwashing and criminal behavior under complex h y p n o t i c suggestJon-patierns to mold his b a n d of hoary worshippers towards the final kill of Western Civili^aiion a n d the impending Ar^ mageddon of "Helter Skelter. Manson began to listen to the song Hefter Skelter^ off It>e new 8 e a i l e s altium with earphones and sornehow as of a miracle t>e began to riear the Beatles whrspenng to him urging him to call tnem m London It IS unfortunate thai Manson evidenify d i d not know thai a heller shelter is a j l i d e m an English amusernent park " as w e l l as his loyal slormlroopers analogous revenge agamsi the Midd<e Class odentes w h o had given theif world the great black eye Listen to Sanders as he spflls the beans " H e had a way of stirnng up paranoia that was legendary Goose bumps shivered the back of the arrns dunng his whispered superstitious lectures on karma and immir>enr d o o m With language as flawed as a Presidenfs announcing an invasron of a South Asian country, he announced liiat the blacks would r^se up kill a few million whites, take over the reins of government "Ttien, Ihe story continues, after forty or fifty years the blacks would turn the government over to Manson Ahen ihey supposedly found themsefves unfit t o run the world OO-eeoo if was the Dig Christian weatthy Americans (hat were going l o get cut Ne, Christ, he, Oevji. was going to pun oft tte Second Cominc^. Now I t s t h e pigs' t u r n t o g o u p o n the cross he would s a y " S a n d e r s does a neat j o b of tracking the flow of M a n s o n s ideas in the cultural matriji of the Sixties He pinpoints dates, names and places of t h e o u l l a n d e r occult groups like The Process. Screntology, the Solar Ledge of the O T O (Orde Templi OneniisJ that interc o u r w d across Manson's path H e traces the steps of each member of the Manson Menagerie as well as its victims. Me unlocks the fpcts on H o l l y i v o o d s o w n rock & roll and movie stars involverrwot like Dennis Wilson of the B e a c h Boys, and Terry Melcher (Dons Day s son) as they stand forth tor Manson to witness their Christian guilt w i t h gifts of rrroney and encouragement

Cr^ntrai lo a discussion of plans lo kill famous people is the "list." about w h i c h a heavy area & silence has been created The "lis"' was four>d in Death Valley and if n a r k e d out those to die. " I n one report it contairted thirtyfour names of stars and businessmen to be kifJed This " l i s i " of family enemies included those who had helped out in the pa si but had ceased to aid It is a common phienomenon tor cults TO ha*e a hale iist or enemy iist At feast two groups o p e r a t i n g in l o w e r C a l i f o r n i a besides the Mansonoids. have, or had. enemy fists'

For underground movie work. We are looking for fresh, new facet 18 years to? for our motion pictures (we are NOT a school; we are NOT agents; we are Employers). We need girls for various parts in our world-wide distributed nwvles: walk-on, supporting players, feature players end stars; we use fully-dressed girls, semi-nudes, nudes, splits, beavers & action girls {however far you wish to go). We use girls ell sizes, all ages, all shapes; we are equal opportunity employers. We shoot our movies in various parts of the country: Los Angeles, San Diego, Santa Barbara, Big Sur, San Jose, San Fran< Cisco, Oregon, Washington, Arizona, Nevada, Illinois, A Wisconsin, Colorado and In the Southern slates and in the East; we have film crews spread all over the country - WRITE-WIRE-PHONE Mr. Calabria Adult AMUSEMENTS CENTER 1307 South Atlantic Blvd. Los Angeles, Calif. 90022

(213)2644763 269-9992

Attanflon Vsntur* i n d Swito B v l w a m l d i n t i . W f t l T E - W l R E OR C A L L : AMUSEMENT CENTER, GOO E a t S M t a O w i , V i t u r a . C d f f o m J i . (SOS> 643-9569

"A HfTHERTO UNEXPLORED AND POSSIBLY VERY IMPORTANT PART OF THE POP CULTURE OF THREE DECADES . . DESERVING OF PRESERVATION . , . THIS IS ONE OF THOSE INSTANCES IN WHICH T H t HUCKSTERS HAVE DONE US'A GOOD TURN. . . ." HARLAN ELLISON (THE STAFF, SEPT. 10, 1971)
h_.'K " ^

If 't air sounds like a moderr' oay doom-prophet revisited it is also a m a d Maa Magazmes Alfred E Neuman made flesh. Sanders lays it out for all to seeof orie man s foray into itie workt- a feral c h ' l d without parenti nurtured by the instifuiional teals of o r p h a n a g e s correction homes. prrsons and

M o l ^ o o d / B a b y F o n put u p o n ttie earth t o dymisiify t^ie mystery a n d w i t h his feral family of follipwers ISusan Atkins Ten Wa I son. Patricia Krenwmkel. Leslie Van Houten a n d many othersj to sacnfice all the " C h n s t i a n Piggies^ m blood ntual as preparation for the final takeover of Ihe uftimate T r u t h Tantrum The Family ts not only a g o o d SOCiorogicai biography of " h i p ^ murd e r It IS the oest Oit^licar detective story of trie purloined Eucharist lurnd lopsy turvy It is the story of Los

119

Please Do Not Print


IKS
^ilJ^Tf
r w

Those little 8-page counterfeit comic booHs called Tijuana bibles circulated under-desks in high schools and caused more mind boggling than anything demonstrated in Biology classes. You can't hardly get t h e originals anymore, but they're reproduced here in supersexed glory (and some with color added): Andy Gump. Tfllie and Mac. Little Orphan Annie, Ella Cinders, Jiggs & Maggie, Moon Mullins, Popeye, Joe Palooka, Rosie and Her Beaft and many more. And t h e relevant commentary is by people who remember t h e m well with nostalgia, camp, and joy in things past and pleasant.

^i^

rs.;-!-

MORE
"DIRTY"
COMIC8

.LITTLCT
COLICS

Edited by Terence Atkinson M.75

Edited by R. G. Kolt W.75

l U I eiriif Oittribotor (DfPtfP) f JL B H 9506, No. I M I n m d , Ct. f I I M

Gel Ihem from yoitr favorite booh^ sellai, or diredly from the mail order distributor {include 25c per book for postage and handling).

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Pag* 6

Novomber 12, 1971

Los Angeles piwo Press STUDY CLASS IN KABBALAH


N e w claM foegini T h u r K t a y . Nov, 1 8 , 6 p . m , O t f w r cimm in m v X i c i s m every T h u r t d a y . T a r o t C t a n , T h u n d a y , D M . 2 , 8 p . m . Mystic R i t u r t of C n o t t t c M M I , S u n d a y i , 1 1 . " ! , S O P H I A C E N T E R , 1 2 6 5 N . AlttNandria (at F o u n t a i n ) N O 4 - 0 6 5 9

Being a gay woman is confusing


Beir>g a gay w o m a n in this lime and Olace la very confusing^ a r d don't Fel a n y b o d y teU you different First of a l l There's your mother l e l l i n g you that g o o d 0\<3 SalFy down I*** street just got m^rned ar>d her hus{>and is so Qood Footing, and y o u r y o u n g e r s i s t e r is almost e n g a g e d to Fred and what about you dear. well. I suppf?se you re lusr partrcular you II find the right man yet A n d She talks at>out r>ei future grandchildren, and assumes thai you are just g o m g to foltow nght along You have visions ot saying ' WeU. mum. f think you'd barter g*ve the bassrnet arxi silver cnnstenjng c u p to Sally, and the monog^ammed linen l o rny sister, because I m never g e i f i n g married I m m love with my roommate and we love each other very rnuch. and we're gomq to live together for the rest of our Irvea.' wonder if anyone's being footed. Afterwards p e o p l e make c o m ments about now they knew o r e gay guy in hrgh s c h o o l w h o was really Sick, or h o w t h e y t h i n k triat homose^tuality should b e legalized, but lf>ey wouldrj t want therr chtkJren to know any homosexuals Or they think ih^t homosexual marriages are okay but they can't stand thf^ae blatant fags and dykes. hell, by threatening to fire you. by waiting for the morning when you nave just had a fight with your lover, and yelling .joul tiow you're the worst typist he s ever hired, and ugly to boot. So you pretend to be dumb, or very m u c h m love, or busV' Not felting any crack show m the veneer Then in the evenings you're afraid that sorneone wiM see you with your buichy friends and guess Vou kjr>d of wish they would, but you hope ltev don't And it s so nice to be around other gay women that you g o drinking a ^ot, and dancing and partying. Irying l o forget about going back To work. Which means that your life is divided neatly into two parts, neither of which acknowledge the other

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But than you imagir>e rier face after you've sa^d ruat so you g o along n o d d ' n g and leitmg ner believe (hat the right man will come along Suppose you Jive in a dormitory. With hundreds of oiter girls who are (altting incessanily about John and Richard a n d Charlie, and geihng pinned a n d lavalrered and engaged Unless you pretend to te very unfriendly iriey ask ycu about ail those Things, a n d what can you say about goir>g to ine movies w i t h your gjrlTrJends. what can you say wrien they nicely try l o liit you u p with their handsome brother in town for the weekend? So you g o out with their bforrier and try l o figure out ^ o w to avoid kissing him g o o d mght wilhout t w m g unfrierkdly. or else yoiJ make up all this schoof work you have to d o Every o n c e in a while someone w t l ' say something about the two girfa d o w n m e hall, a n d your s t o m a c h d'ops d o w n to your feel, but you c a n f let your facral expressior change the sfighlesl bit. you fusi preiend to be naive, or not very inieresied Sometimes you have a g o o d I n e n d b u l sne has a l>oytrienrf so o n Saturday n i g h i she goes off with him, and when they've had a fight you have to listen to how i l was a n d fiow upset she rs. S o n ^ f i m e s you put your a r m around tier and she (oofcs at you as if to tell you i o Slop t w i n g sick So you start talking about tier boyfnend again Vou g o to classes and try to keep from lookrng at t t ^ t>eautifui g^ri w h o sils across from you Vou flirt with the protessor because ^ e expects rt You rook ar the index of your SOCf'^logy book under hOmosenuafity and hardly anything atJout lesbians mayE: a paragraph that says that lesbians haven t t^een sludged very rtyjch B i g help Maybe Gay Liberation comes to talk to the class v o u r stomach drops d o w n to your feet again you ait and take very objective-took mg notes stanng at your rtolebook a n d

ir (\n

Some days you feel like you might g o into work a n d flirl with the other secretary by mist ah e. before you realized where you were When you tiave tiangovers you wish you couW setlfe down and lead an integrated fife But all the time you have to hitch up your s k i n or pants and g o off to get through with it. If you work in a factory maybe there are oit>er Jesbians around But tf>eres afso a lot of straight women around, sitting next to you, taJking about Their husbands and boyfriends. Every time a gay woman walks by. your head doesn't move but your eyes follow her down the aisle. When the w o m a n next to you asks " I s that a w o m a n o r a m a n ' ' you answer W o m a n " and drop the subject.

You c a n sit and do your job and not tafk to anybody about anything personaJ Vou can fie through your teeth hoping you can remember to b consistent. Or when anyone looks at you like Ifiey think you're we'^d. you can look back like "Sure i'm weird you wanna make anything of it? a n d g o oo talking about the weather Vou'll be a c c e p t e d as a wierd person One thing you cannot do is forger you are a strong, worthwhile person Nobody^s going to give you any support for being gay They can dig il If i1 looks like you're enjoying yourself, but how can you expect II.Jm to encourage you wt>en it gets hard? W e have to give ourselves our own support Most of the Tirne it seems like if s worth it QiiiekiilviF T i m LNS

L MS

Or maybe you have a j o b typing or w a i t i n g tables W i t h a boss w h o comes arm fooks over your shoufder. Maybe he doesn't even p i n c h your ass. hut one of the ways he keeps from being bored is to 'iirt with you. ash you if you have a boyfnend. buy you coffee, wmk at you every once m a whj(e And naturally he expects you to play n g h i afong You re silting there at Ihe typewriter, trying lo smile, trying to answer noneomilally, when w h a i you want to d o is sta^e him down a n d announce" "Mr Smith. I am not avaifable I am not a member of that group of femafes (hat you leef you can pfay games wdft Get fucked' However, if he didn't fire you immedlale^/ he could make your life

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T i C M T S : HuruJIL ttJlLLlCH^l r T I C H E T A O H SADVAHCC - S9-BD DOOfr l l l i n l l H r^pritw Ol UcVHll FULL 9An DAtlCIMQ

Police beat report


Operators of a Churches' Fried Chicken Outlet at t 6 6 0 E I m p e r i l Blvd report tt>e theft Sunday morning ol S404,25 wortb of fried c h i c k e n Ttie bandits fled the scene without taking any cash Manuel Pactyeco. art L A P D medal of valor w i n n e r was b o o k e d Tuesday in c o n n e c t i o n w n h the shooting of his estranged w i f e a n d another man. Alfred Thatcner AccOfdrng to the police o f f i c e r s b r o t h e r P a c h e c o returned l o the family home in Carson a n d found his wife and Thatcher in the t>edroom Pacheco then t>egan f*nng B o t i the w i f e ^ n d Thatctier were w o u n d e d Police were called and P a c h e c o was t a k e n j n t o custody A brush fire w h i c h broke out last Tuesday damaged more than 300 acres of land m the Castaic area. More ttian 200 firefighters from tr>e L A County Frre D e p ^ n m e n t were called in to tiaEtle the blaze Two ur>dercover vice sQuad officers report t h e arrest of t w o Manson f a m i l y g<rJs W e d n e s d a y Mane Alonzo 20 a n d Susari Bartelf 20 were taken into custody when they allegedfy attempted to proposition ftie two officers m (he HollywooO area They were b o o k e d on charges of soliciting for prostitution

120

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