1 in 136 U.S. Residents Behind Bars

Associated Press, May 21

1 in 136 U.S. Residents Behind Bars

By ELIZABETH WHITE, Associated Press Writer

Prisons and jails added more than 1,000 inmates each week for a year, putting almost 2.2 million people, or one in every 136 U.S. residents, behind bars by last summer.

The total on June 30, 2005, was 56,428 more than at the same time in 2004, the government reported Sunday. That 2.6 percent increase from mid-2004 to mid-2005 translates into a weekly rise of 1,085 inmates.

Of particular note was the gain of 33,539 inmates in jails, the largest increase since 1997, researcher Allen J. Beck said. That was a 4.7 percent growth rate, compared with a 1.6 percent increase in people held in state and federal prisons.

Prisons accounted for about two-thirds of all inmates, or 1.4 million, while the other third, nearly 750,000, were in local jails, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics.

Beck, the bureau’s chief of corrections statistics, said the increase in the number of people in the 3,365 local jails is due partly to their changing role. Jails often hold inmates for state or federal systems, as well as people who have yet to begin serving a sentence.

“The jail population is increasingly unconvicted,” Beck said. “Judges are perhaps more reluctant to release people pretrial.”

The report by the Justice Department agency found that 62 percent of people in jails have not been convicted, meaning many of them are awaiting trial.

Overall, 738 people were locked up for every 100,000 residents, compared with a rate of 725 at mid-2004. The states with the highest rates were Louisiana and Georgia, with more than 1 percent of their populations in prison or jail. Rounding out the top five were Texas, Mississippi and Oklahoma.

The states with the lowest rates were Maine, Minnesota, Rhode Island, Vermont and New Hampshire.

Men were 10 times to 11 times more likely than women to be in prison or jail, but the number of women behind bars was growing at a faster rate, said Paige M. Harrison, the report’s other author.

The racial makeup of inmates changed little in recent years, Beck said. In the 25-29 age group, an estimated 11.9 percent of black men were in prison or jails, compared with 3.9 percent of Hispanic males and 1.7 percent of white males.

Marc Mauer, executive director of The Sentencing Project, which supports alternatives to prison, said the incarceration rates for blacks were troubling.

“It’s not a sign of a healthy community when we’ve come to use incarceration at such rates,” he said.

Mauer also criticized sentencing guidelines, which he said remove judges’ discretion, and said arrests for drug and parole violations swell prisons.

“If we want to see the prison population reduced, we need a much more comprehensive approach to sentencing and drug policy,” he said.

Black Mask #7 (1967)


[007332] Morea, Benn & Hahne, Ron (Eds.). Black Mask #07. New York: 1967. First Edition. 25.5 x 33 Cm.. Magazine. Good. Political underground magazine. Black Mask evolved out of the New York Surrealist Group and the American Anarchist Group, initiated a number of politico-artistic demonstrations, and eventually transformed themselves into the underground revolutionary group, Up Against The Wall Motherfuckers. Linked to Heatwave/King Mob in England, Rebel Worker in Chicago, and the Situationists in Paris. Revolution and dada, futurism and surrealism; The sexual revolution; Black America. 4 pp. Small tear at the fold. Writing on the cover in red. Ex-collection Steef Davidson. Language: English.

Alphabets are as simple as…

18/04/2006 London Telegraph

Alphabets are as simple as…

Writing systems may look very different, but they all use the same basic building blocks of familiar natural shapes, reports Roger Highfield

If there is one quality that marks out the scientific mind, it is an unquenchable curiosity. Even when it comes to things that are everyday and so familiar they seem beyond question, scientists see puzzles and mysteries.

Look at the letters in the words of this sentence, for example. Why are they shaped the way that they are? Why did we come up with As, Ms and Zs and the other characters of the alphabet? And is there any underlying similarity between the many kinds of alphabet used on the planet?

To find out, scientists have pooled the common features of 100 different writing systems, including true alphabets such as Cyrillic, Korean Hangul and our own; so-called abjads that include Arabic and others that only use characters for consonants; Sanskrit, Tamil and other “abugidas”, which use characters for consonants and accents for vowels; and Japanese and other syllabaries, which use symbols that approximate syllables, which make up words.

Remarkably, the study has concluded that the letters we use can be viewed as a mirror of the features of the natural world, from trees and mountains to meandering streams and urban cityscapes.

The shapes of letters are not dictated by the ease of writing them, economy of pen strokes and so on, but their underlying familiarity and the ease of recognising them. We use certain letters because our brains are particularly good at seeing them, even if our hands find it hard to write them down. In turn, we are good at seeing certain shapes because they reflect common facets of the natural world.

This, the underlying logic of letters, will be explored next month in The American Naturalist, by Mark Changizi, Qiang Zhang, Hao Ye, and Shinsuke Shimojo from the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. The analysis is simplistic but, none the less, offers an intriguing glimpse into why we tend to prefer some shapes over others when we communicate by writing.

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'Why be normal when you can go where the nuts come from?' …Os Mutantes

‘Why be normal?’

Brazilian rockers Os Mutantes were poised to take over the world, but they collapsed under the weight of 1960s free love and drugs. Now they’re back. By Will Hodgkinson

Thursday May 18, 2006 – The Guardian

‘Why be normal when you can go where the nuts come from?’ … Os Mutantes

There is a rich lineage of great musicians who have been discovered long after their due. The Buena Vista Social Club took 40 years to find an audience outside Cuba. When the English singer Vashti Bunyan released her debut album in 1970, it was met with such deafening indifference that it took her 36 years to get round to recording a follow-up. Had Nick Drake known that his dismal-selling albums from the early 1970s would become cult classics, he might still be with us today.

But perhaps the most dramatic revival story belongs to the Brazilian psychedelic band Os Mutantes. Formed in 1965 by Arnaldo and Sergio Dias Baptista, teenage brothers from Sao Paulo, and Arnaldo’s girlfriend Rita Lee, Os Mutantes were Brazil’s most inventive and irreverent rock’n’roll group. The trio became the backing band for TropicÔø?lia, the avant-garde movement formed by the singers Gilberto Gil and Caetano Veloso in 1967, but in the mid-1970s the band fell apart – not least because the two brothers argued over, of all things, guitars. By the 1980s, Os Mutantes had become a footnote in Brazil’s history; outside Brazil, few got to hear of them at all.
“What has happened to Mutantes?” says Veloso, when I ask him about his old friends’ late-flowering international success. “Everyone has gone crazy over them! When Gil and I were in England in the 70s, we would play people Mutantes records and the reaction would always be the same, ‘It sounds like a Beatles rip-off.’ We knew they were much more than that, but nobody else in England did … until now.”

Two decades after the band fell apart, the Baptista brothers are back together, rehearsing at Sergio’s studio on the outskirts of Sao Paulo for next week’s Os Mutantes concert in London. It will be the first time Os Mutantes have ever performed outside Brazil, and the first time the brothers have shared a stage since 1975. After that, they will be travelling across the US for a tour that is already mostly sold out. The US singer Devendra Banhart, a substantial name himself, wrote to Mutantes and asked if he could be their roadie. (They made him a support act for the London show.)

“It’s been so great,” says Sergio Dias, a toothy, cheerful, fiftysomething rocker who looks rather like a Brazilian version of Paul McCartney. “We’ve been working hard, Arnaldo is sounding better than I’ve ever heard him, and we’re getting on so well. I asked God for a reconciliation with my brother because all of this bullshit between us had been going on for too long. And you know what? It happened!”

Sons of a poet father and a concert pianist mother, the Baptistas brought a deep musical knowledge and a literary grounding to a love of the Beatles that inspired them to form a band. The latter they shared with Rita Lee, the rebellious daugher of Italian-American immigrants. Together, they would perform Beatles songs with an orchestra on Brazilian TV, and it was here that they met the classical maestro Rogerio Duprat. He introduced them to the singer Gilberto Gil (now Brazil’s minister of culture), who made Os Mutantes part of the Tropicalia movement. When Gil and Veloso were jailed and then exiled to England by Brazil’s military dictatorship from 1969 to 1972, it was left to Os Mutantes to lead the country’s psychedelic revolution, providing the hippy underground with its own anthem, Ando Meio Desligado (I’m Feeling Spaced Out). But they collapsed under the weight of free love and drug use in the years that followed.

Rita Lee left in 1974 to become a solo artist of stadium-filling popularity and questionable artistic merit, while Arnaldo Baptista had mental breakdowns; his brother Sergio worked as a session guitarist in the US. The brothers fell out (Arnaldo said that it was because Sergio liked Fender guitars while he favoured Gibsons) and by the 1980s Os Mutantes were either forgotten, or thought of as Rita Lee’s old hippy band.

Why the revival? Mutantes became a hip name to drop after endorsements by Beck and Kurt Cobain in the early 1990s, but the cult only really got going after the 1999 release of Everything Is Possible!, a compilation put together by David Byrne on his label Luaka Bop. On the cover was a picture of three freaky teenagers joyously jumping in the air; the inner sleeve showed them dressed as aliens – and the music was equally intriguing. Ave, Lucifer was a tender, poetic ode to Satan while a cover of the Brazilian singer Jorge Ben’s O Minha Menina (My Girl) turned the samba rock of the original into a garage-punk classic through the use of a bizarre effects pedal powered by a sewing machine, built by Sergio and Arnaldo’s elder brother Claudio.

This inventiveness was at the heart of Os Mutantes’ creativity. Frustrated at the lack of decent musical equipment in 1960s Brazil, the band had no choice but to find ways of re-creating the backwards tape sounds they heard on the Beatles’ Tomorrow Never Knows (by aiming a can of bug spray at the microphone) and Jimi Hendrix’s wah-wah pedal (Claudio’s wooh-wooh, which made Sergio’s guitar sound as if it was going to be sick). Everything Is Possible! got the message out: while the Beatles and the Stones were making history, three teenagers from Brazil were fighting the twin forces of a military dictatorship and a lack of resources with surreal humour and ingenuity.

The fact that Rita Lee isn’t playing with the Baptista brothers is a sign that not everything is resolved. Lee and Arnaldo Baptista met in 1964, both aged 16, at a high-school battle of the bands in Sao Paulo. They became sweethearts and, with Sergio on board, Os Mutantes were born. After Rita Lee stole the keys to the wardrobe departments of the TV shows they were appearing on, Os Mutantes’ theatrical image was born, too. She would dress the band up as conquistadors for one appearance, witches for the next. “Everyone came to me for ideas,” says Lee. “Why be normal when you can go where the nuts come from?”

The good times were not to last. Sergio dates the beginning of the end to the time Arnaldo took off on a motorbike across South America in 1970, leaving Lee behind. He returned to marry her on December 30 1971, the day she turned 24. The marriage was over by the time she was 25.

“I didn’t leave. They chucked me out!” says Lee of her 1974 departure. Arnaldo, whose heavy LSD intake in 1971 was already affecting his mental health, remembers it differently. “Rita Lee put me in the madhouse.” Why? “Because she wanted to go to Europe. I went to the madhouse five or six times over the next 10 years, and I was somehow disconnected with the world and I wanted to get out. So I jumped.”

In 1982 Arnaldo attempted to escape from a psychiatric institution by jumping from a fifth-floor window. The fall put him in a coma for six weeks, but he emerged from it with his future wife Lucinha – a fan who had read about the fall in the press – by his side. Since then he has been making a slow recovery, living quietly in a small town in the state of Minas Gerais. He is philosophical about the forthcoming concert. “I am happy to be making music with my brother again. Maybe it doesn’t matter that Rita Lee isn’t doing it because we have this new girl now.” (She has a name, too: Lia Duncan.)

The London concert fulfils a long-gestating dream of the Baptista brothers to play in the land that inspired them in the first place, and Sergio has been digging out Claudio’s old contraptions to re-create the unique Mutantes sound. Until recently, the Baptistas were unaware of the cult that has been building up around their old band. “I didn’t even know that we were booked to do the concert,” says Sergio. “Nobody told me! The whole thing seemed to happen naturally, like a spontaneous combustion. At first I was pissed off. Now I think it’s great because it would never have happened if it had been left to Arnaldo and me. In fact, it’s some kind of a miracle”.

Ôø? Os Mutantes play the Barbican, London EC2, on Monday May 22. Box office: 020-7638 8891.

How to Mimic a Third World Regime

Philip Slater * 05.17.2006 * The Huffington Post

The selection of General Hayden to head the CIA is merely another step in the neo-con campaign to eliminate democratic constraints and give the president dictatorial powers. A general who enthusiastically endorses spying on American citizens, Hayden’s appointment is a giant step away from that old-fashioned idea of checks and balances. I believe a secret, military, governmental authority aimed at its own citizenry translates pretty well as Geheime Staats Polizei.

The long-term aim of the neo-cons, it seems, is to transform the United States into one of those Third World military dictatorships that we used to be so fond of setting up in Latin America, Africa, and Asia. Since these have become less fashionable in the Third World, perhaps it’s a bit of nostalgia that leads the neo-cons to seek it at home.

These “backward” countries (1) had centralized militaristic authoritarian governments that kept close tabs on anyone who disagreed with their policies; (2) had a steep gap between rich and poor–with a small wealthy class and a huge underclass; (3) had a large proportion of their budget given over to the military establishment; (4) placed little emphasis on education, except for the very rich; (5) had poor human rights records.

Democracy is still alive in the United States, but it’s not because the neo-cons aren’t trying:

1. Executive authority has reached unprecedented levels under the Bush administration. Bush has authorized spying on millions of Americans and initiated warrantless wiretaps. He has refused to enforce any laws passed by Congress that he doesn’t agree with. He has made explicit his belief that anything he does or approves is automatically legal. He has declared himself above the law–both national and international. Secrecy has attained epic proportions–the Bush administration spends six billion dollars a year keeping information away from the people.

2. For thirty years, after the end of World war II, economic equality increased in the United States, but since 1980 the gap between rich and poor has ballooned. Gini coefficients–the most effective measure of economic inequality–are growing at an accelerating rate, after a brief pause in the late 1990s. Incomes have declined for the poorest 20% of Americans, but climbed steeply for the richest 5%. This at a time when the most prosperous nations in the world are also those with the greatest economic equality.

3. The Pentagon’s budget is higher than those of the 25 next highest nations combined. A hundred nations have military budgets smaller than what the Pentagon spends in a day. Fifty have budgets smaller than what the Pentagon spends in two hours. The cost of the Iraq war and its fallout (the long-term health costs from the widespread maiming of our troops, for example) is now estimated at two trillion dollars.

4. Twenty years ago the U.S. ranked first in the world in the percentage of its people who held a high school degree. Today it ranks tenth, and our position is rapidly declining. In 1970 more than half of the world’s science and engineering doctorates came from U.S. universities. By 2001 the European Union granted 40% more than we did. The puny salaries we pay most of our teachers helps explain why the American educational system ranks at the bottom of industrialized societies. Money spent on teacher salaries is the single best index of a nation’s future economic health.

5. Since 9/11 and the passage of the ill-named Patriot Act, hundreds of individuals have been imprisoned for years without a trial, without being charged with any offense, and without access to a lawyer. These are the kinds of abuses that helped trigger our own revolt against Britain, and to prevent which the Bill of Rights was passed.

Decaying institutions are characterized by short-term thinking. They sacrifice future assets to maintain present dominance. The United States is increasingly handicapped by its enormous investment in military superiority at a time when military might is becoming less and less relevant to a nation’s strength. Bush’s huge deficits are creating a situation in which our government will soon become a wholly-owned subsidiary of East Asia. Subordinating education and economic health to military supremacy is suicidal in today’s world. The administration’s militarism, its authoritarianism, its mistrust of its own citizens, its reluctance to join other nations in tackling international problems, its inability to tolerate dissent or criticism of its policies–these are signs of the mental sclerosis that has always heralded the decline of great nations.

WHAT WAR LOOKS LIKE.

Army: HBO documentary could trigger stress disorder
By Barbara Starr
<a href="CNN Monday, May 15, 2006; Posted: 2:10 p.m. EDT (18:10 GMT)"

WASHINGTON (CNN) — The Army surgeon general is warning that the HBO documentary “Baghdad ER” is so graphic that military personnel watching it could experience symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder.

In a memo dated May 9 and obtained by CNN, Lt. Gen. Kevin Kiley said the film “shows the ravages and anguish of war.”

“Those who view this documentary may experience many emotions,” he said in the memo. “If they have been stationed in Iraq, they may re-experience some symptoms of post-traumatic stress, such as flashbacks or nightmares.” (Watch what made a bloodied soldier in Baghdad plead for his life –3:33)

HBO is releasing the documentary on the operation of the 86th Combat Support Hospital in Ibn Sina, Iraq.

The film will premiere Monday at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of American History in Washington as well as on 22 Army posts.

It airs Sunday on HBO — a division of Time Warner, the parent company of CNN — and will replay on Memorial Day.

Kiley, who has watched the film with senior Army officials, said it is “an extremely graphic and moving look at how we care for severely wounded service members.”

“This film will have a strong impact on viewers and may cause anxiety for some soldiers and family members.”

He noted that “some may have strong reactions to the medical procedures such as the amputation of a limb.”

Kiley said military medical treatment facilities should be ready to help troops and family members affected by the film. He suggested that mental health facilities should extend their treatment hours and reach out to the troops proactively.

Army officials said they fully support the film and note the Army gave the filmmakers access to the hospital. But privately they said it is so graphic that senior leaders do not want to turn Monday’s premiere in Washington into a social occasion so many will not be attending, preferring to let the limelight fall on the military personnel.

After screening the film, officials said they are aware that some may use it to make an anti-war message.

“A 4,200-year-old structure marking the summer and winter solstices that is as old as the stone pillars of Stonehenge.”

GATEWAY: Archeologist Robert Benferís team found this clay sculpture of a frowning face at the Buena Vista site near Lima. The disk, marks the position of the Southern Hemisphere’s winter solstice. (Robert Benfer / University of Missouri)

From the May 14, 2006 Los Angeles Times

Celestial Find at Ancient Andes Site

The discovery in Peru of a 4,200-year-old temple and observatory pushes back estimates of the rise of an advanced culture in the Americas.

By Thomas H. Maugh II
Times Staff Writer

Archeologists working high in the Peruvian Andes have discovered the oldest known celestial observatory in the Americas — a 4,200-year-old structure marking the summer and winter solstices that is as old as the stone pillars of Stonehenge.

The observatory was built on the top of a 33-foot-tall pyramid with precise alignments and sightlines that provide an astronomical calendar for agriculture, archeologist Robert Benfer of the University of Missouri said.

The people who built the observatory — three millenniums before the emergence of the Incas — are a mystery, but they achieved a level of art and science that archeologists say they did not know existed in the region until at least 800 years later.

Among the most impressive finds was a massive clay sculpture ó an ancient version of the modern frowning “sad face” icon flanked by two animals. The disk, protected from looters beneath thousands of years of dirt and debris, marked the position of the winter solstice.

“It’s really quite a shock to everyone Ö to see sculptures of that sophistication coming out of a building of that time period,” said archeologist Richard L. Burger of Yale University’s Peabody Museum of Natural History, who was not involved in the discovery.

The find adds strong evidence to support the recent idea that a sophisticated civilization developed in South America in the pre-ceramic era, before the development of fired pottery sometime after 1500 BC.

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