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The A.W.O.L. sailors of the USS Midway in Alameda and San Francisco during the early 70s
The USS Midway in 1975 Off The Coast of Vietnam:
The A.W.O.L. sailors of the USS Midway in Alameda and San Francisco during the early 70s
By Lynda Carson - July 19, 2021
Oakland - According to the Merriam Webster Dictionary, the definition of A.W.O.L. means “absent without leave,” a term used in the military for people who left their post, or the military without permission.
In the early 70s, as the Vietnam war was coming to an end, in protest against the war, and the military, many sailors from the USS Midway, an aircraft carrier, went A.W.O.L. after coming back to the Alameda Naval Station (homeport for the Midway), from the Gulf of Tonkin, and Vietnam. Many additional other sailors went A.W.O.L. when the Midway went to Hunters Point in San Francisco, to be dry docked for repairs to the ship during 1973.
I personally knew around 30 sailors from the USS Midway who went A.W.O.L from the Midway in 1973, and I used to visit many of them while they were shacked up together in some apartments in San Francisco. They were A.W.O.L. from the navy, in protest against the war, and the military.
The sailors I knew were all from the same division on the USS Midway while they were in the Tonkin Gulf of Nam, and they worked on the flight deck of the aircraft carrier handling bombs before they were dropped from jets during the war. After they got back to the states from the combat zone and the war, in protest the sailors decided that they had enough of the navy and went A.W.O.L. before the Midway shipped off to Yokosuka, Japan, where American military personnel were hated at the time.
Some detailed activities of the USS Midway during the war in Vietnam in 1972, may be found by clicking here.
Additionally, more detailed activities of the USS Midway during the war in Vietnam in 1973, may be found by clicking here.
A photo of some sailors on the flight deck of the Midway in 1972 with some bombs during the war, may be found by clicking here.
The U.S. forces withdrew from Vietnam in 1973, and Vietnam was reunited in 1975 when the government of South Vietnam collapsed after a full-invasion by North Vietnam. U.S. military advisors were involved in the war in Vietnam throughout the 1950s until the 70s.
Reportedly, there were around 2 million civilians killed in Vietnam (Nam), and there were around 1.1 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong fighters who were killed during the war.
During 1969, over 500,000 U.S. military personnel were stationed in Nam, and by the time U.S. forces left Nam in 1973, over 52,000 died, or were missing in action because of the war.
During the war, protests against the war were occurring across the U.S., in small towns, and major cities including Chicago.
Sailors Go A.W.O.L. From USS Midway During The Vietnam War:
Protests against the war did not only take place in cities and universities across the nation, protests also took place in the military and on U.S. naval ships when sailors would go A.W.O.L. after coming back to the U.S. from Nam, and the Tonkin Gulf. Click here for more. Some military personnel also went A.W.O.L. in Nam and other countries as a form of protest against the war.
This was during a time that the Draft was still in effect, and people were being forced to enter the military against their will.
During the early 70s, the USS Midway, an aircraft carrier, was the flagship of the 7th Fleet during the Vietnam war, and was home-ported at the Alameda Naval Base when it was in port in the states from the war in Nam.
The Road Traveled To The Midway During The War:
After going to bootcamp, sailors who were heading off to sea and may end up on the USS Midway during the war? After bootcamp, they went to fleet preparation school for a 2 week period before heading off to sea. Fleet preparation provided some schooling and eventually provided orders to the sailors as to which ship they would end up being stationed on during the war.
Some of the sailors who protested against the war or the military went A.W.O.L. during the war from the USS Midway in 1972/1973 while in Alameda, or Hunters Point. Some of them eventually landed in what was known as Legal Hold, at 32nd St., in San Diego, at the Naval Air Station, to face prosecution or a court martial after they turned themselves in, which was before they were discharged from the Navy.
Once the sailors were in legal hold, some were placed in the brig, others were placed in a barracks, and some who were married stayed in apartments off-base along with their wives until they faced their prosecution, and possible dishonorable discharge from the navy.
Many sailors in Legal Hold refused all orders, and the navy had no choice but to eventually let them go, and discharge them from the military.
Resistance To The War & The Military By Sailors In The Early 70s:
In addition to sailors from the USS Midway being against the war and the military, reportedly, sailors from various other naval ships were against the war; “As the withdrawal of U.S. ground forces accelerated in 1971, the Nixon administration compensated for diminished firepower on the ground with intensified bombing attacks from the air. As sailors and airmen were ordered to participate in this onslaught, morale dropped and antiwar protest and resistance increased. The number of GI antiwar papers in the Navy and Air Force increased sharply after 1970. Organized antiwar protest began to emerge aboard several aircraft carriers. In 1971 junior officers and enlisted sailors aboard the U.S.S. Constellation based in San Diego organized an informal referendum against the ship’s scheduled deployment to Vietnam. Thousands of military service members in the area participated in the ballot and ‘voted’ for the Connie to stay home. A similar movement emerged in November 1971 in the San Francisco Bay Area to protest the sailing of the U.S.S Coral Sea from Alameda Naval Station. Approximately 1,200 sailors, one quarter of the crew, signed a petition protesting the deployment.
Some antiwar sailors took matters into their own hands. By 1971 acts of sabotage by crew members against their own ships became a serious problem in the Navy. Figures supplied to the House Internal Security Committee investigation of subversion within the military listed 488 acts of “damage or attempted damage” in the Navy during fiscal year 1971, including 191 incidents of sabotage, 135 arson attacks, and 162 episodes of “wrongful destruction.” The House Armed Services Subcommittee investigating disciplinary problems in the Navy disclosed “an alarming frequency of successful acts of sabotage and apparent sabotage on a wide variety of ships and stations.”
Two major incidents occurred in July 1972 that had significant impact on the Navy’s ability to carry out its mission. A fire aboard the carrier U.S.S. Forrestal based in Norfolk burned the admiral’s quarters and extensively damaged the ship’s radar communication system, resulting in more than $7 million in damage. It was the largest single act of sabotage in naval history. Later that month sabotage struck the carrier U.S.S. Ranger based in California. A few days before the ship’s scheduled departure for Vietnam, a paint scraper and two 12-inch bolts were dropped into one of the ship’s engine reduction gears. This caused major damage and a three and a half month delay in the ship’s sailing,” according to reports.
During the war in October of 1972, there also was a race riot on the USS Kittyhawk, an aircraft carrier at the time in the Tonkin Gulf. Reportedly, 40 white crew members were injured, and three black crew members were injured during the race riot.
Details of the race riot on the Kittyhawk that occurred while it was out at sea, may be found by clicking here.
Reportedly, troubles for black sailors in the segregated town of Olongapo City, Subic Bay, in the Philippines, led up to the race riot on the USS Kittyhawk.
Additionally, reportedly, many blacks on the Kittyhawk were against the war, and were fed up with the poor treatment they received by the navy, before the race riot occurred.
According to records from the Government Accounting Office (GAO), during 4 years that ended on June 30, 1977, the U.S. military reported 608,000 A.W.O.L.s exceeding a 24 hour period.
More about the governments attempts to address the acts of sabotage taking place in the early 70s may be found by clicking here.
-Lynda Carson may be reached at newzland2 [at] gmail.com
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
By Lynda Carson - July 19, 2021
Oakland - According to the Merriam Webster Dictionary, the definition of A.W.O.L. means “absent without leave,” a term used in the military for people who left their post, or the military without permission.
In the early 70s, as the Vietnam war was coming to an end, in protest against the war, and the military, many sailors from the USS Midway, an aircraft carrier, went A.W.O.L. after coming back to the Alameda Naval Station (homeport for the Midway), from the Gulf of Tonkin, and Vietnam. Many additional other sailors went A.W.O.L. when the Midway went to Hunters Point in San Francisco, to be dry docked for repairs to the ship during 1973.
I personally knew around 30 sailors from the USS Midway who went A.W.O.L from the Midway in 1973, and I used to visit many of them while they were shacked up together in some apartments in San Francisco. They were A.W.O.L. from the navy, in protest against the war, and the military.
The sailors I knew were all from the same division on the USS Midway while they were in the Tonkin Gulf of Nam, and they worked on the flight deck of the aircraft carrier handling bombs before they were dropped from jets during the war. After they got back to the states from the combat zone and the war, in protest the sailors decided that they had enough of the navy and went A.W.O.L. before the Midway shipped off to Yokosuka, Japan, where American military personnel were hated at the time.
Some detailed activities of the USS Midway during the war in Vietnam in 1972, may be found by clicking here.
Additionally, more detailed activities of the USS Midway during the war in Vietnam in 1973, may be found by clicking here.
A photo of some sailors on the flight deck of the Midway in 1972 with some bombs during the war, may be found by clicking here.
The U.S. forces withdrew from Vietnam in 1973, and Vietnam was reunited in 1975 when the government of South Vietnam collapsed after a full-invasion by North Vietnam. U.S. military advisors were involved in the war in Vietnam throughout the 1950s until the 70s.
Reportedly, there were around 2 million civilians killed in Vietnam (Nam), and there were around 1.1 North Vietnamese and Viet Cong fighters who were killed during the war.
During 1969, over 500,000 U.S. military personnel were stationed in Nam, and by the time U.S. forces left Nam in 1973, over 52,000 died, or were missing in action because of the war.
During the war, protests against the war were occurring across the U.S., in small towns, and major cities including Chicago.
Sailors Go A.W.O.L. From USS Midway During The Vietnam War:
Protests against the war did not only take place in cities and universities across the nation, protests also took place in the military and on U.S. naval ships when sailors would go A.W.O.L. after coming back to the U.S. from Nam, and the Tonkin Gulf. Click here for more. Some military personnel also went A.W.O.L. in Nam and other countries as a form of protest against the war.
This was during a time that the Draft was still in effect, and people were being forced to enter the military against their will.
During the early 70s, the USS Midway, an aircraft carrier, was the flagship of the 7th Fleet during the Vietnam war, and was home-ported at the Alameda Naval Base when it was in port in the states from the war in Nam.
The Road Traveled To The Midway During The War:
After going to bootcamp, sailors who were heading off to sea and may end up on the USS Midway during the war? After bootcamp, they went to fleet preparation school for a 2 week period before heading off to sea. Fleet preparation provided some schooling and eventually provided orders to the sailors as to which ship they would end up being stationed on during the war.
Some of the sailors who protested against the war or the military went A.W.O.L. during the war from the USS Midway in 1972/1973 while in Alameda, or Hunters Point. Some of them eventually landed in what was known as Legal Hold, at 32nd St., in San Diego, at the Naval Air Station, to face prosecution or a court martial after they turned themselves in, which was before they were discharged from the Navy.
Once the sailors were in legal hold, some were placed in the brig, others were placed in a barracks, and some who were married stayed in apartments off-base along with their wives until they faced their prosecution, and possible dishonorable discharge from the navy.
Many sailors in Legal Hold refused all orders, and the navy had no choice but to eventually let them go, and discharge them from the military.
Resistance To The War & The Military By Sailors In The Early 70s:
In addition to sailors from the USS Midway being against the war and the military, reportedly, sailors from various other naval ships were against the war; “As the withdrawal of U.S. ground forces accelerated in 1971, the Nixon administration compensated for diminished firepower on the ground with intensified bombing attacks from the air. As sailors and airmen were ordered to participate in this onslaught, morale dropped and antiwar protest and resistance increased. The number of GI antiwar papers in the Navy and Air Force increased sharply after 1970. Organized antiwar protest began to emerge aboard several aircraft carriers. In 1971 junior officers and enlisted sailors aboard the U.S.S. Constellation based in San Diego organized an informal referendum against the ship’s scheduled deployment to Vietnam. Thousands of military service members in the area participated in the ballot and ‘voted’ for the Connie to stay home. A similar movement emerged in November 1971 in the San Francisco Bay Area to protest the sailing of the U.S.S Coral Sea from Alameda Naval Station. Approximately 1,200 sailors, one quarter of the crew, signed a petition protesting the deployment.
Some antiwar sailors took matters into their own hands. By 1971 acts of sabotage by crew members against their own ships became a serious problem in the Navy. Figures supplied to the House Internal Security Committee investigation of subversion within the military listed 488 acts of “damage or attempted damage” in the Navy during fiscal year 1971, including 191 incidents of sabotage, 135 arson attacks, and 162 episodes of “wrongful destruction.” The House Armed Services Subcommittee investigating disciplinary problems in the Navy disclosed “an alarming frequency of successful acts of sabotage and apparent sabotage on a wide variety of ships and stations.”
Two major incidents occurred in July 1972 that had significant impact on the Navy’s ability to carry out its mission. A fire aboard the carrier U.S.S. Forrestal based in Norfolk burned the admiral’s quarters and extensively damaged the ship’s radar communication system, resulting in more than $7 million in damage. It was the largest single act of sabotage in naval history. Later that month sabotage struck the carrier U.S.S. Ranger based in California. A few days before the ship’s scheduled departure for Vietnam, a paint scraper and two 12-inch bolts were dropped into one of the ship’s engine reduction gears. This caused major damage and a three and a half month delay in the ship’s sailing,” according to reports.
During the war in October of 1972, there also was a race riot on the USS Kittyhawk, an aircraft carrier at the time in the Tonkin Gulf. Reportedly, 40 white crew members were injured, and three black crew members were injured during the race riot.
Details of the race riot on the Kittyhawk that occurred while it was out at sea, may be found by clicking here.
Reportedly, troubles for black sailors in the segregated town of Olongapo City, Subic Bay, in the Philippines, led up to the race riot on the USS Kittyhawk.
Additionally, reportedly, many blacks on the Kittyhawk were against the war, and were fed up with the poor treatment they received by the navy, before the race riot occurred.
According to records from the Government Accounting Office (GAO), during 4 years that ended on June 30, 1977, the U.S. military reported 608,000 A.W.O.L.s exceeding a 24 hour period.
More about the governments attempts to address the acts of sabotage taking place in the early 70s may be found by clicking here.
-Lynda Carson may be reached at newzland2 [at] gmail.com
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
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While the overall concept of this article commemorating GI resistance is good, some things are not so good.
Viet Cong is a derogatory term referring to the Vietnamese resistance fighters as communists. The entire Vietnamese people, men and women, north and south, fought US imperialism in the American War Against Vietnam as the Vietnamese called it. North and South were artificial zones made by US imperialism. Thus, all of the 3 million dead Vietnamese were Vietnamese resistance fighters.
Others murdered in the American War Against Vietnam were 1 million Cambodians, 1 million Laotians, 58,000 Americans and thousands of other people.
The American War Against Vietnam began during the anti-colonial war against the French right after WW2, with the US paying 80% of the French military costs, which ended in defeat of the French in 1954 at Dien Bien Phu. It ended on April 30, 1975, Victory in Vietnam Day, when the Vietnamese defeated the mightiest military the world had seen since Nazi Germany, that of the US, and far more deadly as the US had nuclear weapons. People were dancing in the streets in Berkeley and around the world.
Here in the US, this country was in a state of civil war in opposition to the draft, with every college campus being a site of protests against the draft, which finally ended in 1973. Sad to say, when the draft ended, most of the protests ended. We had hundreds of thousands marching in San Francisco between 1968, the year of the Tet Offensive, and 1973, when the draft ended. A man could be drafted if he was not in college, receiving a student deferment. Others, who did not obtain a political deferment for being a member of an organization on the Attorney General's list of "subversive" organizations, which included all communist and socialist organizations, or a psychiatric deferment for being openly gay, both deferments being risky in terms of obtaining a job, went to federal prison for a year if they refused to be drafted. There were also deferments for being the sole male support of a family, for being a pacifist who would not kill anyone which deferment allowed a person to serve in a medical corps, and the like. The rich, like George Bush, #2, joined the National Guard, or like Nazi Trump, got a medical doctor to claim he had medical ailments making him unfit for military service, did not serve at all. Poor people were often given the option of a jail sentence for whatever crime they were convicted of or joining the military. As always, the poor did all the fighting.
Those of us born between 1946 and 1955, both male and female, have the horrors of the American War Against Vietnam burned in our memory. Out of this nightmare came a large peace movement which served as an umbrella for the furtherance of the 1960s civil rights struggles to the women's and gay liberation struggle, the embrace of natural foods and a healthy lifestyle, alternative medicines including medicinal marijuana to Western drugs and surgery, and questioning authority when told to obey by the pro-war US government. The happiest day of our lives was Victory in Vietnam Day, April 30, 1975.
Viet Cong is a derogatory term referring to the Vietnamese resistance fighters as communists. The entire Vietnamese people, men and women, north and south, fought US imperialism in the American War Against Vietnam as the Vietnamese called it. North and South were artificial zones made by US imperialism. Thus, all of the 3 million dead Vietnamese were Vietnamese resistance fighters.
Others murdered in the American War Against Vietnam were 1 million Cambodians, 1 million Laotians, 58,000 Americans and thousands of other people.
The American War Against Vietnam began during the anti-colonial war against the French right after WW2, with the US paying 80% of the French military costs, which ended in defeat of the French in 1954 at Dien Bien Phu. It ended on April 30, 1975, Victory in Vietnam Day, when the Vietnamese defeated the mightiest military the world had seen since Nazi Germany, that of the US, and far more deadly as the US had nuclear weapons. People were dancing in the streets in Berkeley and around the world.
Here in the US, this country was in a state of civil war in opposition to the draft, with every college campus being a site of protests against the draft, which finally ended in 1973. Sad to say, when the draft ended, most of the protests ended. We had hundreds of thousands marching in San Francisco between 1968, the year of the Tet Offensive, and 1973, when the draft ended. A man could be drafted if he was not in college, receiving a student deferment. Others, who did not obtain a political deferment for being a member of an organization on the Attorney General's list of "subversive" organizations, which included all communist and socialist organizations, or a psychiatric deferment for being openly gay, both deferments being risky in terms of obtaining a job, went to federal prison for a year if they refused to be drafted. There were also deferments for being the sole male support of a family, for being a pacifist who would not kill anyone which deferment allowed a person to serve in a medical corps, and the like. The rich, like George Bush, #2, joined the National Guard, or like Nazi Trump, got a medical doctor to claim he had medical ailments making him unfit for military service, did not serve at all. Poor people were often given the option of a jail sentence for whatever crime they were convicted of or joining the military. As always, the poor did all the fighting.
Those of us born between 1946 and 1955, both male and female, have the horrors of the American War Against Vietnam burned in our memory. Out of this nightmare came a large peace movement which served as an umbrella for the furtherance of the 1960s civil rights struggles to the women's and gay liberation struggle, the embrace of natural foods and a healthy lifestyle, alternative medicines including medicinal marijuana to Western drugs and surgery, and questioning authority when told to obey by the pro-war US government. The happiest day of our lives was Victory in Vietnam Day, April 30, 1975.
Reading Material For The Radicals
July 22, 2021
Oakland - Just in case, below are a few links to some reading materials for the radicals.
We live in some weird times.
A fast scan of the headlines reveal that the government is letting Big Pharma get off with mass murder and none of the mass murderers are going to prison for the opioid crises they created across the nation. The GOP, neo-Nazis, are rigging the vote across the nation to stage a coup during the next election, and the Mayor and Oakland City Council just sold us out to multi-billionaire John Fisher, owner of the A's, for a proposed ballpark at Howard Terminal that will cost us around a billion dollars to support, or more...
Meanwhile, the covid/delta pandemic is running wild killing off our loved ones across the nation, and the pandemic has no end in sight.
That's right! It appears that the capitalists and the government have a financial interest in killing us off as fast as possible.
What a world... and just in case, see a few links to some reading material for radicals below...
-Lynda Carson
>>>>>>>>
GI Rights Hotline - girights [at] girightshotline.org
https://girightshotline.org/en/military-knowledge-base/topic/awol-or-ua-from-active-duty
War Resisters League
https://www.warresisters.org/
About War Resisters' International
https://wri-irg.org/en/network/about_wri
A Proud deserter
https://wri-irg.org/en/story/2011/proud-deserter
Resisting police militarisation
https://wri-irg.org/en/police-militarisation
Covert Action issues
https://covertactionmagazine.com/archives/
The Black Panther - Black Community News Service
https://www.marxists.org/history/usa/pubs/black-panther/index.htm
Barb On Strike - Berkeley July 11 - 17, 1969
https://www.jstor.org/stable/community.28033021?seq=1#metadata_info_tab_contents
The Seed newspaper (Chicago)
https://www.jstor.org/site/reveal-digital/independent-voices/theseed-27953942/
Overthrow newspaper (New York)
https://www.jstor.org/site/reveal-digital/independent-voices/overthrow-27953733/
(SDS) New Left Notes
https://www.jstor.org/site/reveal-digital/independent-voices/sdsnewleftnotesbostonma-27953273/
Madison Kaleidoscope newspaper
https://www.jstor.org/site/reveal-digital/independent-voices/madisonkaleidoscope-27953633/
Rising Up Angry newspaper
https://www.jstor.org/site/reveal-digital/independent-voices/risingupangry-27953778/
The Yipster Times
https://www.jstor.org/site/reveal-digital/independent-voices/theyipstertimes-27953967/
The Activist newspaper
https://www.jstor.org/site/reveal-digital/independent-voices/theactivist-27953852/
Campus Underground
https://www.jstor.org/site/reveal-digital/independent-voices/campus-underground/
Mass Action Handbook
http://www.uproot.info/actionhandbook/legal.htm
Liberation Movements
https://fas.org/irp/world/para/index.html
War Profiteers
https://fas.org/asmp/profiles/deffirm.html
CIA Front Companies
http://www.jar2.com/2/Intel/CIA/CIA%20Fronts.htm
Paladin Press
https://openlibrary.org/authors/OL2948109A/Paladin_Press
https://openlibrary.org/publishers/Paladin_Press
https://www.amazon.com/Paladin-Press-Books/s?k=Paladin+Press&rh=n%3A283155
AK Press
http://web.archive.org/web/20210209035401/https://www.akpress.org//
Loompanics books
https://web.archive.org/web/20040926045803/http://www.loompanics.com/
Loompanics book titles
https://web.archive.org/web/20040929080206/http://www.loompanics.com/TitleIndex.html
Loompanics books
https://www.earthlightbooks.com/products/category/2480/~/~/Loompanics
Loompanics book catalog - 2003
https://archive.org/details/Loompanics_Catalog_2003/mode/2up
Loompanics Unlimited book titles
https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/8244.Loompanics_Unlimited
Loompanics Books
http://web.archive.org/web/20060522120529/http://www.loompanics.com/cgi-local/SoftCart.exe/Articles/goingoutofbusiness.html?E+scstore
Loompanics book titles
https://www.bikvanderpol.net/files/book/i_3071/Loompanics%20Unlimited%20.doc%20(Read-Only).pdf
Loompanics
http://m.bikvanderpol.net/316/loompanics/
https://www.amazon.com/Books-Loompanics-Unlimited/s?rh=n%3A283155%2Cp_27%3ALoompanics+Unlimited
https://www.secondsale.com/publisher/loompanics-unlimited/40847/
Eden Press
https://www.edenpress.com/productcart/pc/home.asp
Steal This Book by Abbie Hoffman
https://semantikon.com/StealThisBookbyAbbieHoffman.pdf
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
July 22, 2021
Oakland - Just in case, below are a few links to some reading materials for the radicals.
We live in some weird times.
A fast scan of the headlines reveal that the government is letting Big Pharma get off with mass murder and none of the mass murderers are going to prison for the opioid crises they created across the nation. The GOP, neo-Nazis, are rigging the vote across the nation to stage a coup during the next election, and the Mayor and Oakland City Council just sold us out to multi-billionaire John Fisher, owner of the A's, for a proposed ballpark at Howard Terminal that will cost us around a billion dollars to support, or more...
Meanwhile, the covid/delta pandemic is running wild killing off our loved ones across the nation, and the pandemic has no end in sight.
That's right! It appears that the capitalists and the government have a financial interest in killing us off as fast as possible.
What a world... and just in case, see a few links to some reading material for radicals below...
-Lynda Carson
>>>>>>>>
GI Rights Hotline - girights [at] girightshotline.org
https://girightshotline.org/en/military-knowledge-base/topic/awol-or-ua-from-active-duty
War Resisters League
https://www.warresisters.org/
About War Resisters' International
https://wri-irg.org/en/network/about_wri
A Proud deserter
https://wri-irg.org/en/story/2011/proud-deserter
Resisting police militarisation
https://wri-irg.org/en/police-militarisation
Covert Action issues
https://covertactionmagazine.com/archives/
The Black Panther - Black Community News Service
https://www.marxists.org/history/usa/pubs/black-panther/index.htm
Barb On Strike - Berkeley July 11 - 17, 1969
https://www.jstor.org/stable/community.28033021?seq=1#metadata_info_tab_contents
The Seed newspaper (Chicago)
https://www.jstor.org/site/reveal-digital/independent-voices/theseed-27953942/
Overthrow newspaper (New York)
https://www.jstor.org/site/reveal-digital/independent-voices/overthrow-27953733/
(SDS) New Left Notes
https://www.jstor.org/site/reveal-digital/independent-voices/sdsnewleftnotesbostonma-27953273/
Madison Kaleidoscope newspaper
https://www.jstor.org/site/reveal-digital/independent-voices/madisonkaleidoscope-27953633/
Rising Up Angry newspaper
https://www.jstor.org/site/reveal-digital/independent-voices/risingupangry-27953778/
The Yipster Times
https://www.jstor.org/site/reveal-digital/independent-voices/theyipstertimes-27953967/
The Activist newspaper
https://www.jstor.org/site/reveal-digital/independent-voices/theactivist-27953852/
Campus Underground
https://www.jstor.org/site/reveal-digital/independent-voices/campus-underground/
Mass Action Handbook
http://www.uproot.info/actionhandbook/legal.htm
Liberation Movements
https://fas.org/irp/world/para/index.html
War Profiteers
https://fas.org/asmp/profiles/deffirm.html
CIA Front Companies
http://www.jar2.com/2/Intel/CIA/CIA%20Fronts.htm
Paladin Press
https://openlibrary.org/authors/OL2948109A/Paladin_Press
https://openlibrary.org/publishers/Paladin_Press
https://www.amazon.com/Paladin-Press-Books/s?k=Paladin+Press&rh=n%3A283155
AK Press
http://web.archive.org/web/20210209035401/https://www.akpress.org//
Loompanics books
https://web.archive.org/web/20040926045803/http://www.loompanics.com/
Loompanics book titles
https://web.archive.org/web/20040929080206/http://www.loompanics.com/TitleIndex.html
Loompanics books
https://www.earthlightbooks.com/products/category/2480/~/~/Loompanics
Loompanics book catalog - 2003
https://archive.org/details/Loompanics_Catalog_2003/mode/2up
Loompanics Unlimited book titles
https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/8244.Loompanics_Unlimited
Loompanics Books
http://web.archive.org/web/20060522120529/http://www.loompanics.com/cgi-local/SoftCart.exe/Articles/goingoutofbusiness.html?E+scstore
Loompanics book titles
https://www.bikvanderpol.net/files/book/i_3071/Loompanics%20Unlimited%20.doc%20(Read-Only).pdf
Loompanics
http://m.bikvanderpol.net/316/loompanics/
https://www.amazon.com/Books-Loompanics-Unlimited/s?rh=n%3A283155%2Cp_27%3ALoompanics+Unlimited
https://www.secondsale.com/publisher/loompanics-unlimited/40847/
Eden Press
https://www.edenpress.com/productcart/pc/home.asp
Steal This Book by Abbie Hoffman
https://semantikon.com/StealThisBookbyAbbieHoffman.pdf
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