
Movement for a Democratic Society, Austin Chapter
The Movement for a Democratic Society (MDS) is a multi-issue activist organization affiliated with the newly revived Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). Many of its members are veterans of the New Left in the 60's and 70's. The goal of MDS is the creation of a more egalitarian society in both the political and economic spheres. MDS believes in participatory democracy, the expansion of human rights, universal healthcare, the rejection of discrimination based on race, gender or sexual preference, the preservation of the earth's environment, the expansion of workers' rights, a more equitable distribution of wealth, and the rejection of militarism and war as a way of resolving differences among peoples and nations.
Contact: mdsaustin@nuevoanden.com
To join the MDS Listserv: MDS Mailing List
Yard Signs
We have revived the peace yard signs For Peace/Bring the Troops Home/NOW .
Signs are available at
Monkeywrench Books, 110 E. North Loop, Austin. (407-6925)
BookWoman, 918 W. 12th St, Austin
Ecowise, 110 W. Elizabeth St, Austin
Planet K Stores, Austin
$3 donation suggested, to cover costs and keep the project going.
March Meeting
Sunday, March 16, 3 pm
Location to be announced.
Coming Events
[Iraq Moratorium is always 3rd Friday]
March For Peace --5th Anniversary of the Iraq War, March 15
Noon-4, Saturday, March 15th, begins at Capitol
Instruments for Peace

Noon Rally at State Capitol
1:00 March to City Hall
1:30-4:00 Concert & Speakers
Come One Come All
Everyone Can Be An Instrument For Peace!

Dog Day Afternoon: Photo Gallery
Korndog Kennel : Gallery of Graphics
Dog Day Afternoon in Austin:
Dog
Moratorium Demonstrators Shake Off Rain
In Street Theater Bid to Curb "Corn Dog" Cornyn
By Thorne Dreyer
Austin -- A tall lean George W. Bush pushes a wooden dog on wheels up and down a rainy Austin sidewalk. The dog has the face of Republican Senator John Cornyn of Texas. A seven-foot tall Scooby Doo holds out a placard to passing motorists. It proclaims, “Curb Corn Dog Cornyn.”
A bandana-adorned shaggy dog of the standard variety shakes off the rain and accepts an organic dog treat from a woman whose t-shirt says “Bark for Peace.” A man with a dog snout, a “Beware of Dog” sign hanging from his neck, joins a contingent of pink poodles from CodePink in a group howl and a chant of “Bring Cornyn Home.”
In Austin it rained on Iraq Moratorium Day, but it didn’t keep the Movement for a Democratic Society/Austin from “bringing out the dogs.” Some 50 demonstrators dressed in dog costumes, many with legitimate canines in tow, joined in a lively bit of street theater outside the downtown Austin offices of Sen. John Cornyn, the conservative Republican senator from Texas, from 5-6:30 p.m. Friday, Feb. 15.
Their stated purpose: to “Curb the Corn Dog” – “Corn Dog” is President Bush’s nickname for Sen. Cornyn – and to shine a light on Cornyn’s reactionary record and his role as the president’s loyal “lap dog.”
Severe thunderstorm warnings and falling rain that broke a month-long Austin drought cut significantly into the expected crowd and curtailed some of the planned activities, but it did little to stop the zany exuberance of the demonstrators.
As the rain downsized to an occasional drizzle, they passed out “Barking Points” that detailed Sen. Cornyn’s dismal record on such issues as the War in Iraq, torture, civil liberties and affordable health insurance for children. The flyer noted that Cornyn has been rated the fourth most conservative U.S. senator by the nonpartisan National Journal, and it listed by name 28 national civic organizations that give Cornyn a score of “0” and two more that fail him with a grade of “F.”
And, the protestors pointed out, Sen. Cornyn’s standing in the Texas polls is “lower than a parcel of puppy poop.”
The theatrical demonstration was organized by MDS/Austin -- mds-austin wiki – with CodePink, Texas Labor Against the War, the Iraq Moratorium National Committee, The Rag Blog and SDS-UT/Austin as cosponsors.
A doghouse neatly crafted from a large cardboard box juts out from the street-level plate glass window of the Chase Tower building on W. Sixth Street in downtown Austin, Texas. In its door is the image of a basset hound bearing the facial features of Pres. George Bush’s pet senator. Above the door is a sign reading: “Offices of Senator John Cornyn, Republican of Texas.”
And, as far as the growling pack of protesters is concerned, that’s exactly where Corn Dog Cornyn deserves to be: in the doghouse.
Photos by Carlos Lowry
Bring Out the Dogs Feb. 15.doc
Bring Out The Dogs This Friday:
Protesters Mix Politics, Theater
At Offices of Sen. John Cornyn
By Thorne Dreyer
Austin, Feb. 13 – This Friday at 5 p.m. Austin’s Movement for a Democratic Society (MDS/Austin) is “bringing out the dogs” in a theatrical demonstration at the offices of U.S. Senator John Cornyn (R, Texas) who has been called “lap dog to the President.”
The canine-themed event will take place 5-6:30 Friday, Feb. 15, on the street outside Sen. Cornyn’s Chase Tower offices at 221 W. Sixth St. (between Colorado and Lavaca) in Austin. Citizens have been invited to participate in the theater by bringing their dogs or coming costumed as dogs.
The event’s stated purpose is to “Curb the Corn Dog.” (“Corn Dog” is President George W. Bush’s pet name for the junior senator from Texas.) The organizers intend to shine a light on Sen. Cornyn’s special tail-wagging support of the president on such issues as the War in Iraq, torture, civil liberties and bringing affordable health care to children.
According to event organizers, the demonstration will be “lively and colorful, but the message will be as serious as a riled-up pit bull.”
The event is scheduled to correspond with the Iraq Moratorium’s monthly “Third Friday” demonstrations against the War in Iraq. It is being organized by MDS/Austin, a multi-issue progressive organization associated with the revitalized Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). Official co-sponsors are CodePink, Texas Labor Against the War, Iraq Moratorium National Committee, SDS/UT Austin and The Rag Blog.
This is not a campaign activity supporting any candidate, but, according to organizers, is meant to focus on the political record of George Bush’s faithful pet senator, whose standing in the community, as backed up by numerous polls, “is lower than a parcel of puppy poop.”

CornDogHandbill-CMYKprint.pdf
U.S. Senator John Cornyn
Barking Points:
Cornyn barking points AE.doc
Senator Cornyn’s voting record demonstrates a frightening disregard for the lives and welfare not only of Americans, but of people throughout the world. The senator has a history of disregarding his constituents, and voting lock-step with President Bush, even as the President and his agenda have become overwhelmingly unpopular. As he runs for re-election in 2008, Senator Cornyn will struggle to defend his record:
On the war in Iraq: five years after the invasion, almost 4,000 U.S. soldiers and over 655,000 Iraqis have died, and a majority of Americans polled are ready to bring our troops home. Yet, Sen. Cornyn continues to vote for war funding, and resists any legislation which would set a timetable for withdrawal.
On torture: Sen. Cornyn was one of only nine senators who, in Oct. 2005, voted against the McCain amendment, which banned the use of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment against anyone in US government custody.
On children’s health insurance: In Aug. 2007 Sen. Cornyn voted with the minority against expansion of the State Children’s Insurance Program to cover 9 million currently uninsured children.
On domestic spying: Also in Aug. 2007 Sen. Cornyn voted for the “Protect America Act” which, likely in violation of the 4th amendment, allows U.S. intelligence officials to monitor, without a warrant, ‘suspicious’ communication originating inside the U.S.*
Source for votes: http://projects.washingtonpost.com/congress/members/c001056/key-votes/
Let Senator Cornyn know that Texans don’t need a Bush Lapdog who supports the war and torture and denies children health care.
Visit Senator Cornyn’s office: Chase Tower, 221 West 6th St, Suite 1530
Contact Senator Cornyn: www.cornyn.senate.gov;
(512) 469-6034 (p); (512) 469-6020 (f)
-- Alice Embree
Bill Narum
Bad Dog!!
John Cornyn on the Record
Bad Dog -- Cornyn on the Record.doc
John Cornyn is rated by the non-partisan National Journal as the fourth most conservative U.S. senator. The Dallas Morning News reports that he has always been a reliable ally of George W. Bush from the days when bush was governor of Texas.
Among his largest contributors are J. P. Morgan Chase, Exxon Mobil and the Bass Brothers Enterprises (oil money, classmates and long-time financiers of Bush). These big contributors get good value for their money. Cornyn voted against including oil and gas smokestacks in mercury regulations; against factoring global warming into federal project planning; against banning drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge; and against removing oil and gas explorations subsidies, despite the fact that the oil industry was making record profits year after year.
Cornyn is described by MSN Money as one of “Big Oil’s favorite members of Congress.”
His record also reflects a slavish subservience to corporate interests in every area. This is reflected in appraisals of his voting record by many civic organizations:
0% by the League of Conservation Voters.
0% by the National Abortion Rights Action League.
0% by Planned Parenthood.
0% by the National Family Planning and Reproductive Health Association..
0% by the Fund for Animals.
0% by the Humane Society.
0% by the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.
0% by the Animal Protection Institute.
0% by the National Trust for Historic Preservation.
0% by Citizens for Tax Justice.
0% by Public Citizen’s Congress Watch.
0% by Americans United for the Separation of Church and State.
0% by the Human Rights Campaign.
0% by the National Council of La Raza.
0% by the Arab American Institute.
0% by the National Association of Alcohol and Drug Abuse Counselors.
0% by the National Education Association.
0% by the National Parent Teacher Association.
0% by the Defenders of Wildlife.
Graded F by the Citizens for Global Solutions.
Graded F by the Genocide Intervention Network - Darfur.
0% by the Council for a Livable World.
0% by Peace PAC.
0% by the National Breast Cancer Coalition.
0% by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.
0% by the American Public Health Association.
0% by the Global AIDS Alliance.
0% by the Service Employees International Union.
0% by the American Federation of State, County & Municipal Employees.
0% by the National Organization of Women.
0% by the Americans for Democratic Action
-- David Hamilton
IRAQ MORATORIUM, JAN. 18, 2008
Opposition to the War in Iraq - From Deep in the Heart of Texas
By Thorne Dreyer - January 20, 2008 |
News
Austin, TX - January 20, 2008. Some 30 Austin activists, dressed all in black, stood in near-freezing drizzle in front of the Texas state capitol building for over an hour beginning at 5 p.m. Friday, Jan. 18, to express their disgust with George Bush’s War in Iraq. The event was part of Iraq Moratorium’s ongoing “Third Friday” demonstrations against the war.
The effort was organized by MDS-Austin, CodePink and Texas Labor Against the War. These three groups have emerged as an effective working coalition that has energized a dormant but wide-spread anti-war sentiment in the capital city of Texas. In December the three groups brought over 50 spirited Christmas carolers together at the same location to greet rush hour drivers with anti-war songs.
At the Jan. 18 event CodePink had planned to line the sidewalk with footwear symbolizing the Iraqi dead. The weather didn’t permit the “In Their Shoes” display, but it didn’t keep away the crowd.
The revitalization of the Austin movement began when MDS printed and began to distribute red and white yard signs saying “Peace. Bring the Troops Home Now.” Close to 3,000 of the signs have been distributed in the Austin area and are also used as placards at demonstrations, providing some visual continuity to the movement here.
MDS leader Alice Embree said, “The Iraq Moratorium has been extremely valuable in providing an on-going vehicle for the anti-war community to grow, to coalesce. And the visibility of MDS’ signs as you drive around the city provides a connection between the activists and the larger community.”
The next Iraq Moratorium activity will be a street theater event labeled “Bring Out the Dogs” scheduled for Feb. 15 at 5 p.m. outside the offices of U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, Republican of Texas, at 221 W. Sixth Street in Austin. Cornyn, one of George Bush’s closest cronies, is known as the president’s “lap dog,” and participants have been asked to bring their dogs to the demonstration or to come “dressed as dogs.”
IRAQ MORATORIUM, DEC. 23, 2008

Local anti-war activists Daniel Llanes, Fran Hanlon, Carol Petrucci, and Alice Embree sang carols in front of the Capitol Friday, Dec. 21, to call attention to the Iraq Moratorium, a national effort to end the conflict in Iraq. Women in Black, CodePink, Austin Movement for a Democratic Society, and the Iraq Moratorium National Committee co-sponsored the protest. Supporters of the moratorium gather the third Friday of every month. For more info, check out www.iraqmoratorium.org. Photo by Roxanne Jo Mitchell. Austin Chronicle
MDS CONVERGENCE IN CHICAGO, NOV. 11-12, 2007
Report on the MDS Chicago Convergence
The Rag Blog
The MDS Chicago Convergence took place at Loyola University last weekend, Nov 11-12. The following are some impressions of David Hamilton, Jim Retherford and Thorne Dreyer who attended together representing Austin MDS. Tim Mahoney met us there and also attended part of the event.
Positives. It was a great opportunity to network with veteran movement activists. In various workshops we heard from Carl Davidson, Kathy Kelly (Voices for Creative Non-Violence), Bill Ayers, Mark Rudd, Paul Buhle, Penelope and Franklin Rosemont, Mike James, Al Haber, Bob Brown (ex-SNCC) and several others. Most of the above were major figures in sixties SDS. Haber was the co-author of The Port Huron Statement. There was also lots of unstructured time for hanging out at Mike James's Heartland Cafe with many of these folks plus an impressive group of SDS attendees, mostly from the Chicago area, with whom we had some productive dialogue. These interactions were inspirational and informative. They sparked several new ideas for possible activities and directions to pursue in Austin. Example: Chicago antiwar activists got a resolution on the city ballot to support immediate withdrawal of US forces from Iraq and the cut off of funding. It won with over 800,000 votes.
The reputation of Austin MDS as a most exemplary chapter, along with NYS-Staten Island, was enhanced. (The Rag also received substantial attention, once being referred to as that "famous" underground paper from Austin.) We had the most active chapter representation. There were more people from Chicago, but most of them were activists who are working in different areas of the movement, rather than in a formal MDS chapter. An evolved MDS likely would be a combination of such folk, with major involvement on other movement fronts, with activists whose primary commitment is to MDS building.
In addition, we (David, Jim and Thorne) had the opportunity to work closely together - in some cases, altogether too closely given that our cheap hotel room had only two queen beds and Jim sleeps with a machine. The trip gave us the opportunity to kick around a lot of ideas at length. We'll share some of those ideas in an upcoming email.
On the down side, there were only about 100 people total participating, mainly from Chicago, but also from NYC, Austin, Baltimore, Florida and a few other places, including several local SDS folks. This reflects organizational infancy. We're not yet a national organization. That means, like SDS of old, the action will be local and the national affiliation will be largely symbolic, but useful for such purposes as the positives listed above.
The famed MDS "Board" (Chomsky, et al) is very largely window dressing. Four of them (out of about 50) were there and three of those have full plates in other movement activities that seem to take precedence over building MDS. We can't say if the board luminaries lack commitment or if MDS hasn't found appropriate ways to utilize them. If MDS is to develop into an important element in the US left, it will be from the ground up, not from the top down. This is really not a negative so much as a realization, but more national structure and direction should clearly be a goal.
Although this is controversial some felt there was too much "nostalgia", analyzing what happened in 1968 instead of thinking about what we are going to be doing in 2008. Certainly we learned things in the sixties that can contribute to our current work, and that can be shared with others, but we must do so in a manner that is not condescending and focus mainly on the future.
There was talk already of another "convergence" in NYC as soon as January. But we were such an impressive bunch, some began to talk about a "convergence" in Austin in the spring - like the weekend of SXSW just in case folks have a little spare time. We may have oversold the place. A conference in Austin might be a lot of work, but it could be a good way to get new people involved and to reach out to people around the state, thus creating a regional network.
-- The Chicago Three: David Hamilton, Jim Retherford and Thorne Dreyer for MDS Austin

The Chicago Three at the Chicago Art Institute
By Penelope Rosemont
In a hectic week for activists in Chicago that included Select Media Festival, Teaching for Social Justice Conference, SNCC commemoration, the Humanities festival, Natl Convention to End the Death Penalty, Commemoration of SOA martyrs, Bob Brown's law suit against the corporations, etc., the Movement for a Democratic Society (MDS) held its national convergence at Loyola University, from November 8 through 11.
Loyola provided fine meeting rooms in a maze-like setting on beautiful Lake Michigan. Thursday night eighty plus people attended Manning Marable's superb talk on South Africa, its increasing impoverishment and stratification caused by the demands of U.S. interests and investments. Marable spoke of the prison industry in the U.S. and observed that 1 in every 5 persons has a prison record. This has led to a mass disenfranchisement of black voters in the south.
Friday night SDSers from the 60s greeted old friends and out-of-town guests at Heartland Café.
Saturday morning was devoted to workshops and discussions. David Roediger discussed the Miserablist character of the University system, its conformism, its corporate character, its total integration into the repressive system, its total inability to function as a place that can expand the idea of freedom. Franklin Rosemont spoke of Surrealism, and its oppositional character, how it arose from the ruins of France after the First World war inspired by Jacques Vache a fellow soldier and close friend of Andre Breton. Kate Khatib drew on the creative side of surrealism. Amanda Armstrong who had organized a show of Exquisite Corpse drawings at heartland café attended. The show was accompanied by a pamphlet that discussed the effects of crisis of capitalism on the human imagination. Paul Buhle talked about the current evolution of the book from the days of the underground comics to today's graphic novels. Buhle is expecting any day the arrival of copies of his graphic novel on SDS. The discussion was fortunate to have present Thorne Dreyer from Austin, Texas who edited the Underground newspaper the Rag for 14 years; Thorne also edited Up Against the Wall, a wall poster/newspaper that SDS published during the 1968 Democratic National Convention.
Peter Linebaugh searched for the roots of our ideas of freedom in the Magna Carta and discussed the basis for his forthcoming book. Our ideas of community and also mutual responsibility come from that historic document. Linebaugh gives it a fresh perspective.
Muhammad Ahmad who had earlier in the day been interviewed by Michael James for Heartland radio did a workshop which centered on the experiences of the Black Movement in the 60s. In 1968 Ahmad then Max Stanford was in jail facing serious charges. He stayed in jail for a year before his attorney was able to get the charges dismissed. Michael Klonsky, Mark Rudd, Bruce Rubenstein, and Penelope Rosemont discussed the implications for the movement of the persecution of black radicals with Ahmed.
Paige Phillips showed a film clip that could be imagined to come from Saturday Night Live Comedy of a real news report on so called lesbian girl gangs terrorizing Memphis teens. It fed the fears of parents but was utterly unbelievable to any thoughtful person. An example of antigay bigotry in the bible belt. Andy Thayer, dynamic spokesman for the Chicago gay community urged solidarity and support for each others concerns and active support of demonstrations. He noted that the demonstrations by the black community against police brutality especially needed our support.
Thomas Good, Bill Ayers, Elaine Brower, Alan Haber, David Hamilton, Devra Morice and others representing New York, Chicago, Austin, Ann Arbor, etc. discussed current forms of popular resistance against the war and then joined by others began a necessary and long needed discussion of the future of MDS. David Hamilton proposed the following founding principles for discussion and consideration.
Formed in Chicago in August 2006, MDS affirmed the Founding Principles:
—the expansion of egalitarian and participatory democracy in politics, economics, and culture.
—the restoration and preservation of the earth's robust ecological health.
—the extension of human rights to include universal healthcare, decent housing, lifelong education, fortifying nutrition, reproductive freedom, and meaningful work.
—the eradication of systems of dominant power and privilege based on identity, including but not limited to race gender, nationality, sexual orientation, ethnicity, disability or religion.
—the growth and development of the commons, the resources that belong to society as a whole.
—the public control of corporate power to meet human needs and the expansion of workers' authority and rights, including the equitable distribution of wealth.
—the rejection of militarism and war and the enhancement of power and authority of international institutions capable of resolving conflict between nations.
—In working for the achievement of these special changes, MDS believes in working in coalition with like-minded others to create an interracial, interethnic, intergenerational and international mass movement.
During mid day, Loyola provided a lavish buffet, coffeee and free parking to the convergence attendees. Many visiting parents were offered the Spartacist newspaper and the Charles H. Kerr Publishing Company catalog. Campus tours got to enjoy the book tables of New World Resource Center and Charles H. Kerr. The Loyola Phoenix ran an ad for the Convergence and an expose of Loyola investments. We would not be surprised if new students chose Loyola because the Convergence made it seem like a lively place.
The afternoon session was held in another building. A bright casual room was filled to capacity and some late comers were turned away because of no seats. An estimate of the audience would probably be 100 plus. The panel on Peace chaired by Kate Khatib and Katy Hogan began with Kathy Kelly recounting her experiences in an Irish Court when arrested for Peace activities. After talking of the many innocent victims of war especially children, she pointedly asked the audience "What will it take to make you stop the war?"
Carl Davidson explained the political means of ending the war by cutting the funding to the war budget and urged voting for peace candidates. He also noted there was plenty of room for work on Civil Disobedience, GI resistance, and that a popular upsurge of sentiment against the war was necessary. Ahmed who currently has a book published by Kerr Co., We Will Return in the Whirlwind, spoke about the effects of war and poverty on the black community.
The 1968 Confidential Panel was chaired by Beau Golwitzer. Michael James spoke on the Berkeley Revolt, his early work with JOIN and community organizing. Michael Klonsky recounted the first days of his arrival in Chicago as National Secretary of SDS as the West side erupted in flames and fury after the assassination of Martin Luther King. He mentioned that none of us expected to live to see 30. Klonsky has a forthcoming book on those days.
Franklin Rosemont spoke of his meeting with Andre Breton and how that inspired him to begin a surrealist group in Chicago. Rosemont spent time in the streets and helping at the SDS National office during the days of the Democratic Convention. Bob Brown of SNCC recounted some of the national and international dimensions of those years. The contacts with the Zegakuran, German SDS, and French groups. Penelope Rosemont who worked in the SDS office in 1968 speculated on the importance of history, that remembering our history will effect what happens in the future; that we must examine those days, what we did, how we organized to be able to develop new strategies and avoid old mistakes; support a movement with a large left spectrum; support young anarchists in their efforts and not abandon our utopian visions. In the audience were many who had played a significant role in 1968–Mark Rudd, Thorne Dreyer, David Hamilton, Wayne Heimback, etc. After a short period of questions the discussion moved to the Red Line Tap to continue in a more casual atmosphere. Mark Rudd mentioned that there are significant indications that an attempt at recouperation of 1968 and the rebels of '68 is just around the corner as Universities and Museums plan their commemorations. This sort of recouperation happened in Amsterdam quite a while ago as exProvos unexpectedly ended up with state power. It is indeed a concern of ours. We want ours struggles and the story of our struggles preserved, but we do not want it contained, sanitized, consigned to the permanent irrelevancy of something from another time, another place. We had only just begun to formulate and imagine what needed to be done in the urgency of those years. There have been stunning technological revolutions since the 60s, but the social revolution that we envisioned, the vision of equality and freedom is in many ways is further away now than it was then. What is to be done?
The Session on Sunday began at 10am. Amy Partridge began with perhaps the most thoughtful and theoretical document on the concerns of the conference, it considered the attitudes toward themselves and to power that College students and young people have developed in recent times. She argued that most students think that the powers-that-be will recognize and redress their grievances without much effort on their part. Further that they already identify themselves as activists because they donate to or march for AIDS or breast cancer. They do not identify themselves with the struggles of the oppressed, they do not see themselves as oppressed. Partridge argued that we are seeing the end of identity politics and that if we can somehow find and address the concerns of young people today a new movement has real possibilities. This summary does not do justice to the paper or the discussion that followed. Bruce Rubenstein discussed unknown slave revolts in the US before the civil war and the legal evolution of rights for blacks and people of color. Kate Khatib talked of building a community around Red Emmas Bookstore in Baltimore where social services of the city are failing the needs of the people. Tamara Smith spoke about organizing another gathering. Gale Ahrens reported on the vast investment in the prison industry which constitutes the reinstitution of slavery. Penny Pixler of the IWW spoke about some parallels between today and the 1960s. Young SDSers from Columbia College, Art Institute, University of Chicago spoke about what they were doing, what their concerns were and how the new, I can only call it hyper-repression, effects the high schools. When asked why they identified themselves with SDS, one of them quipped "It's got great name recognition!" And I must say we should be proud of that; that SDS has come after 40 years to mean a fighting organization; an organization of resistance; one that never sold out. Alan Haber, a founder of the original SDS was there, listened and contributed his passion for peace and justice to the discussion. Someone expressed how exhilarating it was to be a room full of people who were really serious about social change. And it was! Everyone participated. Penelope Rosemont added "if you kept doing what you are doing, we are going to have a movement!" We called it quits about 2pm as everyone was hungry. Most of us walked from Loyola to Heartland Café where we again dined on some good and healthful food and parted ways. All in all thinking that some bridges had been built, some good thinking had been done, and that we had a fine core of people.

Dreyer, Retherford, Hamilton, Elaine Brower and SDS founder Al Haber.
More photos from Chicago, NLN
DOCUMENTARY FILM ABOUT TORTURE OF BLACK PANTHERS TO BE SHOWN NOVEMBER 14 AT RESISTENCIA BOOKS
The Movement for a Democratic Society (MDS Austin) is presenting a showing of the film “Legacy of Torture” at Resistencia Books, 1801-A South First St., Wednesday, Nov. 14 at 7 p.m. The showing, which is free and open to the public, will be followed by a discussion on the movie and on political repression in the United States today. “Legacy of Torture” concerns the case of eight former members of the Black Panthers in San Francisco, known as the SF8. The eight were among 13 members and supporters of the Black Panthers who were arrested in New Orleans in 1973 and questioned about the 1971 murder of a San Francisco policeman. Three were charged with murder after they confessed, but the confessions were later thrown out of court because the interrogation techniques included use of cattle prods and other forms of torture. In 2005 a New Orleans grand jury revived the charges and two of the previously tortured Panthers were jailed for refusing to testify and in January, 2007, new charges were filed concerning the murder. (For more information on the case, see the attached background sheet.) In the documentary film “Legacy of Torture,” filmed by the Freedom Archives, five of the long-time activists recount their experience and describe the interrogation techniques to which they were submitted. MDS Austin, which is sponsoring the showing, is part of a national revival of Students for a Democratic (SDS), the activist organization that spearheaded the protest movement of the 1960s and 1970s. It is a multi-issue organization that is involved in protesting the war in Irag, in the continuing struggle for civil rights and social justice, and in the fight for a more equitable distribution of wealth in the United States (http://mds-austin.pbwiki.com/).-- The Rag Blog
Mariann Wizard:
Report on “Legacy Screenings”
MDS and friends -- have just put a check for $35 in the mail for Herman Bell and Jalil Muntaqim's commissary funds ($ sent to Claude Marks to facilitate deposits at the jail) collected at the film showing last night. I believe King may have sold a few Freelines, as well, and as you know his profits from those go to the remaining two of the Angola 3, Herman Wallace and Ashoka Cinque (taka Albert Woodfox).
I know everyone enjoyed having a chance to meet King -- can you tell he is from N'awlins?? btw, he has given me a copy of "3 Black Panthers & the Last Slave Plantation", a film about the Angola 3, narrated by Mumia Abu-Jamal and with "a whole host" of other interviews and comment. Running time 1:49. I sure would like for us to be able to view this as a group! (Maybe King would join us.) If I had room at my house for the whole gang (and if my television set ever gets "repaired"!!) I would have y'all all over here, but those of you who've been here know that 5 at a time is pushing the limit. If we were going to show it publicly, because of the length I'd still think we should see it ourselves first, and talk about how to best structure a public showing.
I'd like to think that the attendance at both showings of "Legacy of Torture" indicates that there is a young, activist-oriented audience for this kind of information, and that we are probably only scratching the surface of it. The shorter format of "LoT" allows for discussion and interaction, but longer films such as "3 BPs", as well as "Murder of Fred Hampton" and "American Revolution II" (both of which I also have) offer deeper, more detailed analyses and, taken together, make more links. I still think some kind of mini-film festival -- a day or a week? -- when we could show all of these flix, as well as, say, "Rebels With A Cause" about SDS, would be a great event, a way to bring some of the actual LESSONS OF THE 60s to today's activists. But where (larger, multiple locations), and when/how often, and how to get the most out of it, is something we would all have to work on together. There are a lot of possibilities, and the key ingredient is determination.
Speaking of political prisoners, I was just pleasantly interrupted by a call from sister Marilyn Buck, who sends her greetings to all, and is really tickled to hear of the resurgence of geezer activity here. She has a terrible cold and isn't working today -- her job now in prison, as it has been for some time, is teaching other women to read. She reads a lot herself, ya know, and recommended a couple of books, one called "Beat Things" by David Meltzer and another called "Dr Rice in the House", about Condoleezza; I missed the author's name due to horrible static on the line (a short in the phone on her unit, apparently). Anybody have these?
--hasta
Mariann
Free the San Francisco Eight
PARTYING DOWN FOR IRAQ VETS, OCT. 19, 2007
On October 19, 2007, MDS Austin and CodePink sponsored a rousingly successful fundraiser and house party for Iraq Veterans Against the War. Guests packed the home and backyard of Alice Embree and Carlos Lowry to drink beer, enjoy a lively outdoor concert by movement musicians and salute the anti-war GI’s.
Musical entertainment was provided by Barbara K, Richard Bowden and John Jordan, Lightning Red, and Raul Valdez. Late in the evening the musicians jammed and the crowd joined in singing movement anthems and Latino protest songs.
The event raised $868 for the Iraq Veterans Against the War.
Carlos Lowry
More photos from the event
"LEGACY OF TORTURE" SCREENING AT MONKEYWRENCH BOOKS, OCT. 18, 2007
MDS Poster Art for "Legacy of Torture" Screening, by James Retherford
LegacyOKprint.pdf
VIGIL AT HUTTO DETENTION CENTER, JUNE 24, 2007
By Alice Embree - June 24, 2007 |
News
Austin, TX - June 24, 2007. Pictured: Austin MDS at the Hutto Prison where refugee and immigrant families are incarcerated. It’s one of two U.S. sites where children are incarcerated. The ACLU is pursuing a lawsuit against the practice. The prison is run by a private company (Correction Corporation of America) near Taylor, Texas. This was the tenth vigil.

MDS Austin at the Hutto Prison Vigil (Photo: Nancy Simons)
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