ARTHUR PRESENTS SUNBURNED HAND OF THE MAN "NO WAY OUT" TOUR MAY 3-16 ACROSS NORTH AMERICA..

(poster by darryl norsen, dnorsen at gmail dot com)

From the band: “No Way Out will continue in May with a one-way sunburned trek from Boston to California. This time we’ll be on our own and playing with different bands throughout the trip.”

May 3: NYC at Mercury Lounge w/ Ira Cohen & Sunburned, The Believers, Can’t
May 4: Pittsburgh at Paint & Body
May 5: Cleveland at Inside-Outside Gallery w/ Blck Tygr , Scarcity of Tanks
May 6: Bloomington at Landlocked Records
May 7: Kansas City at Record Bar
May 8: Oklahoma City at Conservatory
May 9: Denton at Rubber Gloves
May 10: Houston at Rudyard’s Pub
May 11: Austin at Emo’s
May 12: off, but looking for a show
May 13: Tuscon at Solar Culture
May 14: Los Angeles at Spaceland
May 15: off
May 16: SF at Hemlock Tavern


ARTHUR PRESENTS IMAGINATIONAL ANTHEM TOUR

The first “Imaginational Anthem Tour,” named for the acclaimed acoustic guitar anthology series from Tompkins Square, will begin June 3 in Brooklyn, New York. The tour features Sharron Kraus and James Blackshaw (who are both featured on the forthcoming Imaginational Anthem Volume 2), plus Sean Smith on West Coast dates and Jesse Sparhawk on East Coast dates. Here is their current itinerary, with additional dates to be announced…

June 3: Brooklyn NY at Soundfix
June 3: Brooklyn NY at Brooklyn Fireproof
June 4: Philadelphia at Khyber Pass
June 5: New York City at Tonic
June 6: Seattle WA at The Tractor
June 7: Portland OR at Towne Lounge
June 8: Ashland OR at Mobius
June 9: Davis CA at Delta of Venus
June 10: San Francisco CA at Adobe Books
June 10: San Francisco CA at Hemlock Tavern
June 11: Big Sur CA at Fernwood Resort
June 12: Monterey CA at Outer Edge Studio
June 13: Los Angeles CA at The Echo
June 14: Long Beach CA at Fingerprints
June 17: Montague MA at Bookmill
June 18: Somerville MA at PA’s Lounge
June 19: Burlington VT at Box
June 20: Portland ME at TBA
June 22: Edgartown MA at Aboveground Records


ROTC buildings improved in North Carolina.


Two ROTC buildings vandalized

Vandals spray slogans and spread paint on N.C. State and UNC-CH structures

Jay Price, Staff Writer
The Raleigh News & Observer, April 27

Vandals staged attacks early Wednesday on the buildings used by the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps at N.C. State University and UNC-Chapel Hill, echoing similar assaults on three Triangle recruiting stations last month.

As before, vandals sprayed anti-war slogans and profanity, splashed red paint and claimed responsibility with a mass e-mail message to area media outlets.

Lt. Col. Carol Ann Redfield of the Army ROTC program at N.C. State was caught off guard. “This is the first time I know of that anything like this has happened here,” she said. “I certainly appreciate that people have different opinions, and they should be able to express them, but I have a problem when they damage property.”

The e-mail, from someone calling himself “celest ialbeing” said, “Stop these recruitment centers that target poor people and people of color to fight to maintain the power structure that (literally and figuratively) imprisons us daily.”

The vandals sprayed slogans at the base of an entrance to Reynolds Coliseum, which holds the Department of Military Science, and tossed paint onto an ROTC sign above the entrance.

Investigators had good leads, said Sgt. Jon Barnwell of the N.C. State Police Department.

At UNC-Chapel Hill, campus police spokesman Randy Young said investigators were aware of the e-mail and the link with the attack at N.C. State. “We’re certainly looking into that,” he said. Investigators think the UNC Naval Armory was attacked between 4 and 5:30 a.m.

A student who signs up for ROTC mixes military training with regular classes and can get help with college costs in return for serving as an officer after graduation.

It is not clear whether the attacks were related to incidents in March at recruiting offices in Durham and Raleigh, but the subject line on the e-mail message Wednesday was “more red paint and anti-war.”

The attacks Wednesday were coordinated, but that doesn’t mean they were well-planned.

At UNC, the vandals used spray paint for slogans but chose a 5-gallon bucket of water-soluble red paint to splash the landing, columns and steps. A cleanup crew blasted it off with a pressure washer.

“Thank goodness they used water-based paint,” said Angelo Baldwin, a crew member. The slogans — including “we won’t fight your wars!” — also were removed quickly, but the doors must be repainted.

At N.C. State, the slogan “Army ROTC trains murderers resist acts of war” was sprayed in a place all but invisible to passers-by. The vandals’ arsenal also included another puzzling choice: Christmas tree ornaments, which were apparently tossed at the ROTC sign.


Tonight (April 27) at Little Joy.

from Arthur Email Bulletin Message No. 0038…

Join Arthur Magazine and The Journal of Aesthetics and Protest for The Echo Park Social(ist) Aid & Pleasure Club every Thursday at
Little Joy public house at 1477 Sunset Blvd. LA , CA 90026
21+
9:30pm to last call
FREE
Don’t think it’s not possible that we will play the forthcoming NEIL YOUNG anti-war/anti-Bush album “LIVING WITH WAR” in its entirety at 10:30pm tonight (April 27).

LYRICS TO NEIL YOUNG'S "LET'S IMPEACH THE PRESIDENT"

http://livingwithwar.blogspot.com/

Let’s impeach the president for lying
And leading our country into war
Abusing all the power that we gave him
And shipping all our money out the door
He’s the man who hired all the criminals
The White House shadows who hide behind closed doors
And bend the facts to fit with their new stories
Of why we have to send our men to war

Let’s impeach the president for spying
On citizens inside their own homes
Breaking every law in the country
By tapping our computers and telephones
What if Al Qaeda blew up the levees
Would New Orleans have been safer that way
Sheltered by our government’s protection
Or was someone just not home that day?

Let’s impeach the president
For hijacking our religion and using it to get elected
Dividing our country into colors
And still leaving black people neglected
Thank god he’s racking down on steroids
Since he sold his old baseball team
There’s lot of people looking at big trouble
But of course the president is clean
Thank God


Counter-Recruitment Basics : Youth & Militarism : Issues : AFSC

from the AFSC…

What is Counter Recruitment?

Counter-recruitment is what community members and activists call their efforts to dispel myths about the realities of military service and refute false information provided by military recruiters or advertising. Sometimes counter-recruiters are able to work in schools – alongside military recruiters – but most work in community groups or in public spaces due to lack of access to schools.

How to Get Started
Equal Access – Legal Precedents for Providing Alternative Information About the Military
I’ve heard that public school districts have been sued for allowing military recruiters access to schools while denying such access to persons who hold different views about war and military service. What have been the outcomes of these lawsuits? More >

Getting a Voice at Your Public School
Ten things that worked at my rural New York State school. Tips on how to make your voice heard about military recruitment on school campuses. More >

Find People Countering Military Recruitment in Your State
A state by state list of counter-recruitment organizations. More >

Trainings and Workshops
In our training workshops, we aim to build the capacity of young people and those who work with young people to address military enlistment issues within their own communities. More >

MAY 1968 DOC SCREENING IN SANTA MONICA

American Cinematheque

Sunday, May 14 – 6:30 PM

REPRISE
1997
195 min.
Dir. HervÈ Le Roux.

One of the monuments of contemporary documentary cinema ó and not only in France, REPRISE offers a provocative re-evaluation of the tumultuous and by now mythical events in May of 1968 and their aftermath. On June 10, 1968, students from the Parisian film school, IDHEC recorded the end of the strike at the Wonder Factory in Saint-Ouen. A young woman worker refused to go back to work. After director HervÈ le Roux saw a photograph of her in Cahiers du CinÈma he began a long search for this “heroine,” a search that charts the changes in French radical politics over the past 30 years.

“When we set up contacts with everyone in summer 1995, explaining our intentions, most people including the unionists asked, ëWe would like to contribute but who would ever be interested in these old stories?í I didnít want to make an antiquated or a nostalgic film. 20-year-olds consider it a historical film. It describes a vanished world: large industrial companies in left-wing suburbs, a kind of company culture, a sense of belonging which has disappeared and been replaced with insecurity, the fear of the loss of jobs. And yet, despite predictions by officials about the workersí situation, it remains basically unchanged, the way others predict the death of cinema.” ñ HervÈ Le Roux

The Last Days of Tarquinz

The Last Days of Tarquinz

“The critically-acclaimed Ziggurat Theatre Ensemble invites you to the legendary city of Tarquinz. This metropolis may be famous for its ornate palaces and domes, reflected in the shimmering waters of its lagoon. But the people of Tarquinz are all harboring a secret; a mystery which is theirs alone and which will only be shared with a select group of visitors. Eccentrics, lovers, liars and clowns conspire to make your visit to Tarquinz unforgettable and astonishing.”