....~-tnnwowc.wn,,,1~-,w.,~~or ~ -. -. ~ I Ascensio With the By DAVID STOLL WHEN I WENT looking for the White Panther Party in the Haight-Ash- bury, I found this sign next to the door of their burned-out flat at 1632 Page St. To the people who do not know. entering any of these flats. 'Cause if the dogs don't get you-we will. Thank you. July 12 San Francisco police looking for a burglary suspect broke through the door. They were met by three bullets fired down the stairwell. Although no one was hit and the entry was apparently illegal, that didn't stop a Haight variation on a theme recently played in Watts. First pelice cordoned off the area, sort of. Then a command level officer arriv- ed, as did a special sniper unit armed with a semi-automatic version of the M-16. While police officers and citizens haggled behind parked cars and had cover, the snipers took up positions in the houses across the street, hundreds of spectators crept up the sidewalk and at some distance from the scene a Pan- ther ran through the streets shouting at people to take up arms. Police blame the fire on an arsonist. They say it started after their snipers fired two rifle shots at a man spotted in a third story window. Police also say the man was holding a blazing molotov cocktail. No one else saW the arsonist however and many witnesses say they heard in the Haight: White Panthers 21 year old Miranda Nelson, the burglary suspect police say they were looking for. THE NIGHT before the incident police called Miranda to the door twice for questioning. They mentioned a stolen 10 speed bicycle. The second time police took her down to the neighborhood sta- tion where they held her for an hour, accusing her this time of stealing stereo components. Finally they released her for lack of evidence. Phillips and Tom Stevens, the other Panther who shot at police, were never arrested and never charged with any- thing, apparently because citizens have the right to use firearms against police breaking illegally into their homes. AFTER THE fire, police cleared ev- erything out of the Panther flat, in- cluding food cooperative records, books, newspaper flats, money, ID and legally registered firearms. As of Sept. 20 the money and ID had been returned, but nothing else. As of October 1, the Pan- thers had filed a four and a half million dollar suit. Miranda, who has pretty green eyes, brown hair which just covers her ears, and no criminal record, doesn't look like a very likely burglary suspect. She was seven months pregnant at the time of the incident. On September 18 she gave birth to a 6 lb., S oz. girl, by Terry. "WE'RE INTO survival through serv- ice to the people," said the first Pan- ther I encountered. In order to get that far I'd had to stand and argue through -.g;v,. :."r t.: "aM'f?,r.l..t 7.;: "'-''? ':..~: :... r :..:.. ...- :'S+r *tX.%.*. .*.*."v::: * ... ... . " We're into survival through service to the people,' said the first Panther I encountered. In order to get that far, I'd had to stand and argue through a cellar door painted in National Liberation Front red and blue. In- side I found a band of people thought to have disappear- ed with the Jefferson Airplane: poverty-stricken, dope smoking, armed and militant hippies bent on creating a self-supporting urban commune and making the re- voluti on." g SCK g".t: .; {{a"n:4 + ;"r wv: rw"t.tnvMt : }C. vs 5% { m a+¢t".".;t~,.{s r"."y% C':"S t:"4":{: r":.; operative doing $2500 volume per week; a People's Ballroom concert series; and sale of 50 cent newspaper by former panhandlers turned vendors. The eight people who work on the food cooperative make $23 a week, Zig said, "and survive." Panthers have hous- es and members in Marin, Sonoma and Alamenda Counties, but since last fall they've concentrated their energy on what they call Ascension in the Haight, communal transcendence in the slowly reviving hippie seedbed. THE POPULATION in the Haight is noticeably post-hippie, but less transient than ever before. Waves of speed, heroin, and alcohol have passed; crime is under control; and the summer street population now goes to Berkeley. Busi- nesses have reopened along Haight St., although they come and go with alarm- ing frequency. Visible communal institu- tions are no longer much in evidence, al- though various social agencies and neigh- borhood groups are. A strong if largely invisible collectivist movement is here as it is all across the country: small groups of people eating, sleeping, and making their livings together. But the Haight is most of all a neigh- borhood of poor and working class peo- ple, heavily doled, woefully housed and under a great deal of urban renewal pressure from real estate and develop- ment interests. EARLY ATTEMPTS to make more ra- tional use of the Haight included a new freeway, then a convention center and condominium development. As plans were developed, much of the neighbor- hood passed into the hands of real es- *'mre interested in reap- ing windfalls than in maintaining proper- ties. The decay which ensued sprouted flowers, then weeds and now yet ano- ther attempt to make the Haight ap- pealing to the middle class by driving out the lower. The proposed Rehabilitation Assistance Program (RAP) would get houses up to code by loaning money to landlords. Pre- sent tenants would incur the cost in the form of increased rent. They would also probably be forced from the neigh- borhood, probably to join the stream of migration across the Bay to the Oakland area, where poor people have been driv- en in increasing numbers because it is the only place they can afford to live anymore. While RAP critics file suit and Pan- thers battle police, downtown the pointy- headed Bank of America tower over- looks what is widely regarded as one of the most pleasant and sophisticated cit- ies in the world. It's so pleasant, in fact, that many corporations are relocating their headquarters here. However, the artists, poets and writers who have made this city their home since Beat times are supposed to have gone. AT 9:30 one morning Aries Larry Weissman and several cronies were drinking beer and sunning themselves in front of the 439 Cole St. house. They were waiting to go out on a hauling job. "We're mostly working class people, veterans and ex-prisoners who believe in communal living and the struggle against capitalism," explained Larry with Schlitz in hand, just as a fight broke out between a tired looking wo- man and a member of the beer drink- ing fraternity. A small child, her face smeared with catsup, scurried anxiously out the door and was greeted warmly; she broke into a wide grin. An informal count of five houses came up with thirteen children, "plus some pregnant ladies." "I want you to cut that shit out, Michael," admonished a father to his strapping, tow-headed five year old. "You keep puling that stuff, throwing rocks and stuff, and somebody's gonna take you seriously. You're gonna get in trouble." Then, to the other people present, "Don't let this man con you; he's sticking around here today." Earth evicted from the 439 Cole St. address - it's the house pictured in the poster on this page - so residents strung barbed wire around all the ap- proaches and ran a blocking beam be- hind the wall that faces the street, so that if police tried to batter down the front door. They would also take with it the entire front of the house. Good Earth then invited a police of- ficer to inspect the defenses, promising to match force with force and suggest- Aries Larry explained the theory of social equilibrium behind the Panther- Good Earth police policy. "When cops get edgy and they try to fuck us up, we put 'em in their place and they mellow out. We always show them we're too tought to fuck with but we still leave them enough ground to stand on. We don't want to drive them to the wall; we want to make them responsive to the community through community control." from 7 to 20. After the Panthers were kicked out of their house in Berkeley, half a dozen came to live with Good Earth; since then they've multiplied rap- idly. The Panthers became a power in the unsuccessful petition drive for a 1974 California Marijuana Initiative. During the campaign a rift developed between the Panthers and Amorphia, Inc., the non-profit marijuana paper corporation which underpined the effort. Panthers four shots including two dull thump- ing ones. Some witnesses even say they watched police fire a grenade into the house with a shotgun-like device. WHOEVER started it, the fire burned well. Firemen arrived quickly, then stood behind the crowd for a while before putting the fire out, apparently in good and natural fear of terrorists with ma- chine guns roosting under the fl o o r boards. A week and a half later I found the Panthers at nearby addresses, jubilant and pissed. "We're not into kidnapping, bombing or any of that SLA'shit," assured Terry Phillips, one of the men who fired down the stairwell and lived to tell the tale. "This kind of invasion used to hap- pen all the time in the Haight," he de- clared. "Now it doesn't so often, and one of the reasons is that we're proving people have the right to defend them- selves and their property with firearms." Sitting on the sofa next to Terry was a cellar door painted in National Liber- ation Front red and blue. Inside I found a band of people thought to have dis- appeared with the Jefferson Airplane: poverty-stricken, dope smoking, armed and militant hippies bent on creating a self-supporting urban commune a n d making the revolution. MY FIRST contact was named Dever. He is 31 years old, looks pale, talks un- derfed, and is hollow and angry in the eyes. "We figure all people need is food. shelter, a reasonable amount of mari- juana and access to rock 'n roll," Zig said, shutting the dooron a fine July afternoon and setting the block back in placeon the elaborately jammed door. "We're into living on our enterprises and sharing everything we have." Refusing both outside employment and welfare, an estimated fifty Pan- thers are struggling to support them- selves through a "food conspiracy" co- .. . . . .. . . . . . .. . . . . .... . . . .. .... .. . . . "'We're not into kidnapping, bombing or any of that SLA shit,' " assured Terry Phil- lips, one of the men who fired down the stairwell and lived to tell the tale. 'This kind of invasion used to happen all the time in the Haight,' he declared. 'Now it doesn't so often, and one of the reasons is that we're proving people have the right to defend themselves and their property with firearms.'" Eighty-four years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Pn rnmrA 1074 News Phone: 764-0552 ing that a successful eviction would at best wreck the house, at worst burn down the entire block. The officer re- ported to the court the eviction could not be carried out; Good Earth later legalized its occupancy in court. Between them the Panthers and Good Earth now control half a dozen flats and houses in the Haight, on most of which they pay no rent. In lieu of rent the Panthers hold on by strength of num- bers, rudimentary fortification and the fact that Haight landlords are as likely to abandon tenements for taxes as fight legal battle with tenants. The Panthers have also taken advantage of a recent California Supreme Court ruling, to the effect that if a landlord fails to provide contracted service, i.e., habitable quar- ters, tenants have the right to put the rent in escrow and spend it on main- tenance. SINCE MAY the Panthers have also been fighting a series of skirmishes with police and park authorities over sound and park permits for the People's Ball- room concert series. "We're not in conflict with law-abiding law enforcement," explained Phillips, "but unfortunately there's not much around here. The Panthers happen to enjoy fairly amicable relations .f i t h the precinct-level police, but consider themselves at war with the special squads and their commanders frcm downtown." The Panther "support your local police" program advocates cooperation with police to carry out their legitimate purposes, peaceful witness of all po- lice incidents, formation of legal defense groups when incidents, and armed self defense in accordance with the Second Amendment. THE PANTHERS have grown suffic- iently crabby about armed self defense, in fact, that they now reprint with ap- proval articles from Guns and Ammo X T, -~. ..sL,., : - 1r L, a. ., COMMUNITY CONTROL of police ac- cording to Panther lights can get pret- ty rough however. One night in June two men on the beat tried to make an arrest outside the Omnibus Cafe on Haight St. just as the neighborhood crowd was coming out the door-friends of the Panther-Good Earth axis, accord- ing to Larry. The coppers were beaten badly enough to be hospitalized as were three other police nailed as they tried to get out their squad cars. As far as they know, they're the last Panthers left in the world. Chapters were originally formed in places like Ann Arbor and Berkeley in the late sixties. The effort to organize on a national level quickly fell apart, however, leaving local groups to their own devices. Ln Anni Arbor the fetish for M-1 rifles and arm- ed revolution never got beyond the pic- ture-taking stage, but it did land half a dozen party members in jail on a variety of charges. IT'S BEEN three years since the Ann Arbor White Panthers transformed them- selves into the Rainbow People's Party, leaving the Berkeley chapter more or less on its own. That was the point at which chairman John Sinclair disavowed armed struggle at this stage in history, beginning the long journey down the road of revolutionary praxis to musical entrepreneurship, nightclub management and debt. When the RPP was dissolved in turn this summer, Sinclair declared it had been a "premature formation" a, an organizing tool. However, in the Haight he is still regarded as a founding fath- er and his book, Guitar Army, serves as a charter for action. Opinion on whether he was ripping off the people was divided - "We're not into making money and we don't like what he's do- ing" said one - but I heard more Haight Panthers praise than damn the man and his works. argued that instead of spending money on travel, office expense and big-bang ads in establishment media, the money should have been spread around to vend- ors so they could circulate petitions full time. DURING A Climactic CMI meeting, the Panthers, in their own words, "quiet- ly carried a central committee member out the door," then "physically criticiz- ed" CMI President Michael Aldritch when he refused to show them financial books and called the police. "Punks who use the name of the people to rip the people off, they're go- ing to get punched out," said Aries Larry of the incident. Classes other than the lumpenproletar- iat, which the Panthers say they are, may be taken aback. But leave them to their struggles, because here is not there and eight years after the Summer of Love there's still a Haight. At night mercury vapor lamps, crime fences and empty streets recall bleaker times. Even during the day one senses a guarded spirit in the people sitting in doorways with impassive expressions on their faces. The smell of poverty inhab- its the Panther flats; food, when it comes, is highly prized; and during the long afternoons grubby children play in the corners of empty rooms. BUT IT isn't all over yet, not by any means, because the old,decaying hous- es are still brooding in the sunlight out on the Western Rim. Spiritual unclarity may be running rampant in the world, but around the Panther houses it's still pretty clear. Someone is running up the street after us. Larry is hanging out a third story window, yelling: "They had to give us a reason! Those fuckers can't just deny us a permit without giving no reason!" "They didn't give us no reason, Lar- ,," nn~ hU. nswer upw.ad r na y IUUae -,, 71T .. ,IIO6 1 ... 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mi. 48104 SGC* It's all up'to yoi TODAY IS THE LAST day for fil- ing to run in the October Stu- dent Government Council elections. You've got until 4:00. SGC can be a meaningful po- litical body, rather than merely something to complain about. A student government should be a forum for student thoughts, opin- TODAY'S STAFF: News Dan Riddle. Jeff Dav. Della ions, demands, and sugge not a free-for-all where portunist with any goal i quent member. There is probably no on University who could not some kind of change, expr kind of quibble with tI things are run. Further, t no doubt many people wh ticulate, forceful, and ca effecting change. Someth' be done. but change does y _- ARIES LARRY is. a member of the Good Earth Commune, "an old-fashioned hippie family" living in the Haight since time immemorial. It is now closely al- lied with the Panthers. Three years ago Good Earth numbered between fifteen and twenty houses and several hundred people; it also dealt most of the mari- j juana in the neighborhood. Now Good Earth is down to two houses and twenty members. Aries Larry blames the col- tstionS- lapse on financial mismanagement and any op- "spiritual unclarity," but most of all on s a fre- police. In particular Larry blames a dope raid e in the in the spring of 1972 in which police ar- propose rested 71 people, the bail for whom "sort ess some of left people behind on the rent" as he ways Larry explains. A judge recently esti- here are mated Good Earth members had been o are ar- arrested five hundred times in the last pable of six years, on charges ranging from pos- ing can session and sale of narcotics to assault nt .ust on police officers, breaking and entering