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- > First Hopi Violation of Accommodation Agreement
- >
- >One of the central provisions of the "Accommodation Agreement" is that the
- >Dine' will be allowed to practice
- >their traditional religion without interference. What the people were told
- >is that they would have to get a permit
- >for construction or use of the HPL, but that it would be a formality, that
- >the permits would be granted as a matter
- >of course. The Hopi Tribe told this not only to the Dine' but to Congress
- >and the Courts. I heard these
- >assurances myself, more than once, from the mouths of the Hopi Tutsqua
- >Team members and their attorney.
- >
- >Frances Bahe and her grandson stopped by my house yesterday, with their
- >Princeton intern, Ben Bishop.
- >Fortunately it was lunch time, so we ate everything in the refrigerator.
- >They had all been at a ceremony the last
- >night, and there were problems.
- >
- >The ceremony in question was the N'daa, otherwise known as Enemy Way or
- >vulgarly as "Squaw Dance". It is a
- >four-day ceremony, very expensive, and is done most commonly for veterans
- >who suffer from the effects of war,
- >but sometime for people whose illnesses are caused by contact with
- >non-Dine'. It takes place in two different
- >locations, each one has a hogan and a big fire, and usually a big brush
- >shelter. Certain objects have to be carried
- >by men on horseback from one location to the other, and there are a number
- >of conditions regarding the route
- >that has to be taken. The riders have to stop at the midway point and stay
- >overnight, with a fire. The "Squaw
- >Dance" part refers to the night time two step dance around the fire in a
- >big circle, where the women pick men to
- >dance with them and then the men have to give the women something valuable
- >after the song is over.
- >
- >According to Mrs. Bahe, this particular ceremony was held for one of
- >Albert and Rose Francis' sons. One side of
- >it was near Ganado and the other side was on HPL in the Teesto area. The
- >family asked the Hopi Tribe for a
- >permit for the ceremony. They were given permission to build the hogan and
- >shelters at the Teesto end, but
- >were refused permission to "carry the stick" across HPL or to have the
- >midway ceremony. As a result they had
- >to use an alternate route. The riders had to travel along the highway,
- >which is wrong for this reason: ambulances
- >carrying sick or bleeding people travel on the highway, and there are
- >places along the highway where people
- >have been killed. This is not a good thing.
- >
- >It is less than 3 months since the deadline passed for signing the
- >"Accommodation Agreement." The families
- >who signed did so in large part because they were assured by the Navajo
- >Nation, Congress, and the Hopi Tribe
- >that they would be able to practice their religion without interference.
- >So soon, and already the agreement is
- >being violated.
- >
- >Three months ago the HPL was crawling with attorneys, Navajo Tribal
- >officials and "support group" type
- >people. Now, when the families encounter a serious problem, they have to
- >face it alone. This is evidence to me
- >that the "Accommodation Agreement" will not work if it depends on the Hopi
- >Tribe's good faith. The families
- >need full-time, on-site legal assistance, and there must be some avenue of
- >appeal.
- >
- > More rain!
- >
- >The summer rains have come early and everything is green. You see flowers
- >all over the place, some of them I've
- >never seen before. Usually when you drive through Crystal, over Narbona
- >Pass, when the view opens up onto
- >Eastern navajo you see an endless expanse of gray and brown, any time of
- >year. This year what you see is
- >green. It really looks weird! Last week I left the lid off my garbage can
- >three days and collected 2 inches of water.
- >A lot of people are saying the rain is the result of the ceremonies which
- >were held at Sarah Begay's place this
- >winter and spring.
- >
- >jn
-
-
- PRIME ANARCHIST here. This is ATI issue #
- It's Sunday, July 20, it's 7:20 p.m.
-
- I have a one line pap #'s run. But first this.
- About the article you just read, keep in mind that it is NOT the Hopi PEOPLE
- that are against the Navajo resisters living on their lands but the
- tribal government that CLAIMS to represent. That is key.
- I know. I've lived there many months, many times. That was the only
- misleading part of the "B-fore mentioned" article, so I figured rather
- than change a single paragraph, line or bit-abyte I'd give you the whole
- shabang. Uncensored, unedited, un-gate-keepered. Dig? OK.
- Prime Anarchist Productions presents the now way too famous numbers run.
-
- http://www.znet.com/~jef/comic.htm
-
- Activist Times, Inc.
- running numbers since 1988.
- Your creative source for cool characters to click on.
-
- Oh, by the way. ATI now has the usenet noozgroop active again.
- Or at least useable.
- Check it out if you dare.
- alt.society.ati
- "things are gettttttttting pretttttttty interrrrrractive around here..."
-
-
- CALENDULA SECTION. READY?
- July 28, 1968. African-Americans gain citizenship.
- August 16, 1862. Santee Sioux open war against trading posts.
- Aug. 17, 1896. First auto-induced fatality.
- Aug. 18, 1994. Miracle the white buffalo calf born in Janesville, WI.
- September 5, 1887. Crazy Horse assassinated.
- October 1, 1976. World Vegetarian Day.
- Oct. 9, 1967. Che Guevera executed, Bolivia.
- Oct 12, 1492 Natives discover Columbus.
- November 2, 1812. Lord Byron speaks in favor of Luddites in Parliament.
- Nov. 12, 1974. Karen Silkwood murdered.
-
- THIS FROM LYN & SHAWN:
- >The recent disclosures of CIA involvment in importing cocaine, drugs
- >and guns to L.A. are not new. Since its days as the OSS, even before
- >its official founding in 1947, the Central Intelligence Agency --
- >CIA -- has been involved in drug dealing, overthrowing legally
- >elected, democratic governments, torture, and other human abuses.
- >
- >The Agency re-installed the Mafia in postwar Italy and the Corsican
- >mob in France; they brought Nazi scientists and intelligence officers
- >to the US; they subverted democracies and installed brutal
- >dictatorships in Iran, Guatemala, Congo, and Chile.
- >
- >The CIA Shipped heroin out of Southeast Asia and cocaine out of Latin
- >America, to support its counter-insurgecy wars. In Burma, the CIA has
- >been accused of wiretapping the DEA (Drug Enforcement Agency) to
- >protect drug-dealers close to the ruling military. In Mexico, "drug
- >war" money goes to the generals involved in drug-running to fight
- >popular resistance.
- >
- >The time is now to say:
- >"TOO MUCH IS ENOUGH! CRACK THE CIA!"
-
- >Subscribe -> email MAJORDOMO@TAO.CA
- > with the message SUBSCRIBE A-INFOS
- >Info -> http://www.tao.ca/ainfos/
- >Reproduce -> please include this section
-
- This is from natty reb:
- >BELGIUM:
- >
- >Phony electric chairs which imitate high-voltage shocks and offer
- >volunteers a certificate of grit have become an instant success on
- >Belgium's coast.
- >
- >The handful of machines, placed mainly in the coastal town of
- >Blankenberge, produce no real electric shocks but strong vibrations giving
- >a similar sensation. After the ordeal, which starts when the equivalent
- >of just over a dollar is inserted, survivors receive written proof of how
- >much "voltage" they could cope with. Smoke billows from the chair when
- >someone takes the highest dose.
- >
- >Pregnant women and people with weak hearts are advised against trying out
- >the machine, said the manager of an amusement arcade operating one of
- >them. "It is quite a sucess; a lot of people are seeking the unusual and
- >they hear about all these executions in the USA."
- >
- >Belgium, which used to execute criminals by guillotine, has not done so
- >since 1950. It finally eliminated the death penalty last year.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Exxon is real outsider
-
- An Editorial
- The Capital Times
- July 10, 1997
-
- How intriguing that the critics of a recent protest against the
- proposed Exxon mine would choose to dismiss the protesters as
- ``outsiders,'' while missing the fact that the real outsiders in
- Wisconsin's mining debate are multinational corporations such as,
- well, Exxon.
-
- The Earth First! environmental group has launched a series of
- protests against the mine, which would be located near Crandon,
- and this development seems to have unsettled apologists for
- out-of-state mining interests. This is understandable, because
- opposition to the proposed mine is so widespread in Wisconsin
- that mine supporters have to be feeling a tad beleaguered by the
- prospect of national environmental groups adding their voices to
- the chorus.
-
- Rather than attempt to argue the merits of the Exxon mine,
- however, critics of Earth First!, including our friends at the
- Wisconsin State Journal, have begun to portray protesters as
- ``mining outsiders.'' ``Self-serving noise like that generated
- Monday by Earth First! is not welcome,'' snarled the WSJ in
- response to a nonviolent protest outside the Crandon Mining Co.
- office that saw 29 arrests.
-
- What the mining apologists miss is that much of the Earth First!
- activism surrounding the Crandon mine issue has been organized by
- Earth First! activists from, you guessed it, Wisconsin. And even
- if there are Wisconsinites who may object to the civil
- disobedience component of the Earth First! protests, it is
- impossible to argue with the fact that opposition to the mining
- project is widespread among residents of the Crandon area -- as
- evidenced by township elections last spring, which were swept by
- mining foes.
-
- One of the reasons the opposition to the mining project is so
- widespread is because of concerns about Exxon, a corporation with
- a dubious environmental record, which Wisconsinites simply do not
- trust to protect the state's natural resources.
-
- Exxon has no connection to Wisconsin, and no commitment to the
- state's environmental or conservation traditions. In contrast,
- the opposition to the Exxon mine is home-grown and rooted in the
- grass-roots environmental tradition of Wisconsin.
-
- If the mining apologists want to push ``outsiders'' out of the
- debate, we are quite certain that the opponents of the mine --
- including the people from Earth First! -- would be more than
- happy to oblige. So long as we start with the biggest outsider of
- all: Exxon.
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Lifted With Pride From
- TheCapital Times Homepage
- By PAP. Prime Acquisitions Presents.
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- This is from my friend Laurie. Those of you following back from the late
- 80's ATI days might remember her...
- (you'll notice that this issue is mostly a "forwarded-letters-to-the-
- editor" format. Hope this doesn't get too boring too fast. Next weekish
- we should be settled into our new headquarters and ready for the weekly
- ATI's you've all come to know and love. (or at least tolerate.))
-
- >> WASHINGTON COMPUTER USER SHOOTS PC IN FRUSTRATION
- >>
- >>
- >> ISSAQUAH, Wash. (July 11, 1997 8:45 p.m. EDT) -- A man was coaxed out
- >> of his home by police after he pulled a gun and shot his personal
- >> computer, apparently in frustration.
- >>
- >> "We don't know if it wouldn't boot up or what," Sgt. Keith Moon said
- >> Thursday.
- >>
- >> The computer, in a home office on the second floor of the townhouse,
- >> had four bullet holes in the hard drive and one in the monitor.
- >>
- >> One bullet struck a filing cabinet, while another made it through a
- >> wall and into a neighboring unit. No one was hurt.
- >>
- >> Police evacuated the complex, contacted the 43-year-old man by
- >> telephone and got him to come out. He was taken to a hospital for a
- >> mental evaluation.
-
-
- (notas primeras, you'll also notice there is no correspondence report
- from ground zero, and no journal poem to end the issue out. I'll have to
- compose one on the spot perhaps. And next week will be a new journal poem
- and perhaps a ground zero column. <clears throat> perhaps a ground zero
- column? hint hint.)
-
-
- Hi,
-
- My name is Kevin Brownlow and I am a journalism major at Michigan State
- University. Currently, we have one large campus daily, which has become
- grossly outdated with what the students want to read. I would love to get
- some kind of input, if you would, to give me some ideas to
- start an alternative weekly. I would really like to get information on
- organization, finances, recruitment, along with any other important
- information.
-
- Thank you,
-
- Kevin Brownlow
- Michigan State University
-
- M U S I C R E V I E W
- by marco capelli
-
- Lilith Fair. Hartford. July '97.
- Wow.
- Great.
-
- C U L I N A R Y R E V I E W
- by marco capelli
-
- Veggie Max Sandwich.
- Blimpies. Anytown. USA.
- Kinda sux.
- But
- It'll do
- For now.
-
- OK. This is about all for ATI87. I'll leave you with this poem dedicated to
- the revolution in the Congo. Is it any wonder there's some oil down there?
-
- THE OIL MYTH.
- (c) 1998. Prime H. Anarchist
-
- Wars and rumors of war
- Oil and rumors of oil
-
- I've got a girl for you tonite,
- I tell Dennis Rodman;
- After the game,
- You know
- You and her...
- "Is she UGGGGGLY?" is his
- Only question -
- For beauty, is an asset.
- Can be measured, manipulated manhandled
- & capitalized upon.
-
- Mr. Speaker, I say, Mr. Prez, Mrs. Prez:
- I yield my thyme and beg to reserve
- It back just long enough to
- Tell you about a
- New small country.
- Looking for democracy, freedom,
- Help from US, advisors, politicians,
- Maybe help to someday grow big and
- S T R O N G
- Through open, American monitored
- Elections.
-
- Are they oil-less, you ask me.
- They ask me, she asks me.
- Mrs. Speaker, for oil is an asset.
- Can be sized, sounded for, measured,
- Sucked, raped and capitalized upon.
-
- 'Cause if she ugggggly---
- Won' give her my time no how.
-
- For if they LACK oil,
- We're JUS' nah INTRIST'D.
-
- Oil
- And rumors
- Of oil.
-
-