Page Two THE MICH IGAN DAILY Tesday May1,97 TALKING WITH GENIE PLAMONDON White Panthers: New nam By CHRIS PARKS For the last three years, the name of the White Panther Party has been assoc- iated throughout the country with high energy music, communal life-style and the underground youth movement in gen- eral. Some people, however, have tied the name to conspiracies, bombings, and violent tactics. Several weeks ago, in an attempt to divorce itself from any associations with violence, the White Panthers became the Rainbow People's Party. According to party Minister of Com- munications Genie Plamondon, the new name comes from a series of Indian legends in which warriors of all colors rise up to throw off the "bonds of the white oppressors." All the people of the world are "warriors of the rainbow," she says. The change in name was caused by a need to "relate to people what we really are about," Plamondon says. And what the party is about, she continues, is pro- viding service to the youth community in Ann Arbor. The change in name be- came necessary to clarify the party's image for those "people who think we're involved in violent revolution". The revolution that concerns the Rain- bow party, according to Plamondon, is a revolution in life-style, and the basic doctrines of the party center a r o u n d freedom of expression of the youth com- munity. "Your life-style is your politics," Plamondon says, "and we choose a revo- lutionary life-style." The party's roots in the "life-style re- volution" and the "counter culture" stretch back several years to D e tro it, before the party as such was formed. Before there was a White Panther Party, Plamondon explains, the group that formed the nucleus for the party, including founder John Sinclair, was working in Artists Workshops in Detroit. These workshops were involved with building what she calls an "alternative culture." They sponsored poetry read- ings, jazz concerts and gen rally helped e, image Since that time, however, a series of ar- rests has seriously crippled the party's leadership. John Sinclair, founder of the party was convicted in 1969 of possession of marijuana and is currently serving a 9- 10 year sentence. While serving t h a t sentence, Sinclair, along with party mem- bers Pun Plamondon and Jack Forest, face conspiracy charges stemming from the 1968 bombing of the Ann Arbor of- fices of the Central Intelligence Agency. Plamondon also is charged with doing the actual bombing. Both charges carry with them a five-year prison sentence and $10,000 in fines if they are convicted. Federal District Court Judge Doman Keith has ruled that the government used illegal wire taps in obtaining evidence in the case. The ruling, however, is being appealed by the government to the Su- preme Court and a final ruling is not ex- pected at least until December. Meanwhile, the three remain in jail, along with a fourth party member Skip Taube who has been accused of harboring Plamondon. Genie Plamondon, Pun Plamondon's wife, claims the charges are "phony" and that the real reason the party mem- bers are in jail is due to the government's "fear of what we represent." "A big part of the threat we are is just because we are the children of the people in power," she says. "And we are not going to continue the same sort of life-style and make the same mistakes they made," she says. The shift in name, however, signifies the party's attempt to erase the image of violence and emphasize a stance as a community service organization. The Rainbow party is currently operat- ing a food coop in which people can buy fresh vegetables and fruit at a reduced rate. They hope to go even further this summer, providing food, clothing, and shelter on a large scale for the young people who traditionally flock to the city in the summer. See PANTHERS, Page 12 4 G;enie Plamondon to support young artists who were work- ing in new and unconventional forms. The formation of the party itself, she says, resulted from a call by Huey New- ton, Black Panther minister of defense, for a White Parther Party to work spec- itically with the white community. "We just decided that we would be the party," she explains. The party was based on the belief that young people constitute a culture in themselves. "A people are defined by their history, language, clothing, music, poetry and sacraments," Plamundon says. The party views American youth as a "colonized people," a view that stems from what Plamundon calls the "exploitation of our energies" by commercial enter- prises which package and sell the clothes, music and other paraphernalia of the youth culture. The original group was set up as a national party but its founders did not, according to Plamundon, "know what it meant to be a party." Many problems arose out of this, first among them being a lack of basic organi- zational strength and leadership. "Anyone who put on a White Panther button could call themselves a White Panther and we had to answer for their actions. We just weren't providing the proper leadership," she says. Problems for the young party soon began to multiply. In the aftermath of the killing.of Martin Luther King in 1968, a strict curfew in Detroit damaged the meager economic base of the party, which had consisted mostly of selling beads and other items at Detroit's dance halls. Questioning the security of their base in Detroit, the party moved to Ann Ar- bor in the spring of 1963. will turn out to be oe of the loveliest, most intellig'e-t ovies we'll see in all of 1971!" VINCENT CANBY.New Yark Times DISCOUNT SERIES SALE MENDE4LSSOHN LOBBY MON.-FRI. 12-4 P.M. t "A tip-top, tasty Truffaut truffle! A scin- tillating gem!" -BOB sALMAGGI Group W Network "A beautiful film! 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