lost horizons - Discover the Networks
Transcription
lost horizons - Discover the Networks
F athoming the depths of Whitewater isn't L. J. Davis's only headache these days. The 53-year-old journalist's skull still hurts from a disturbing incident that occurred on Valentine's Day. Davis, a contributing editor at Harper's magazine, was in Little Rock doing research for his April 4 New Republic cover story on Arkansas's rich tapestry of interwoven financial and political deals. After spending a week reviewing financial documents and interviewing people in Little Rock and such fabled towns as Russellville (home of Park-OMeter, a parking meter company at the heart of former Associate Attorney General Webster Hubbell's billing fraud dispute with the Rose Law Firm) and Mena (site of alleged gun and drug running to Central America in the 1980s), Davis went to his room at the Legacy Hotel at about 6:30 p.m. to dress for dinner. "The last thing I remember is unlocking the door of room 502 to go in," Davis says. "The next thing I remember, four hours later, at 10:30 at night, was waking up on the floor of the foyer of my hotel room partially paralyzed with a lump the size of a darning egg over my left ear." Davis says his doctor found his injury inconsistent with a fall. "There was nothing to hit my head on. I was not drunk. There was no furniture in the foyer." Davis says his doctor told him that he was "struck with a powerful blow above the left ear.'* Due to the concussion he suffered, Davis says he felt he was walking on a trampoline for three days after the incident. He continues to take medication to dissolve a blood clot in his brain. He adds that the trauma-related amnesia blocked out exactly what happened and that he "may never recover that memory." Davis doubts he was the victim of a robbery gone awry. When he woke up, his watch was still on his wrist and his wallet still contained a couple of hundred bucks. He did discover, he says, that "about four pages of my notebook in a very significant portion were half torn out." Davis says he now regrets not heeding warnings he had received from the office of a "high government official" in Washington before he left for Arkansas. "The exact phrase they used was, 'You've gotten into a red zone.' " He says his contact urged him to "Work your ass off and get out of there as fast as possible." This official also told him to "think Danny Casolaro"—a reference to another independent journalist who was found dead with his wrists slit in the bathtub of his West Virginia hotel room on August 10,1991, while he was investigating links between the Iran-Contra affair, the BCCI scandal, the so-called October Surprise and other controversies of the 1980s. On March 8, about three hours after he sent a partial draft of his story to The New Republic by modem, Davis says his phone rang. "What you're doing makes Lawrence Walsh look like a rank amateur," a man with a rich, baritone voice said with neither words of greeting nor introduction. "Who is this?" Davis asked. "Seems to me you've gotten your bell rung too many times," the man responded. "But did you hear what I just said?" Davis only managed to reply, "Yes, I did. Is this —." Before he could finish, the man at the other end hung up the phone. This cryptic conversation puzzles Davis. "Somebody seems Please turn to page 6 A Professor Looks Back at the Radical Years LOST HORIZONS by VICTOR COMERCHERO Between the 60s, when the campus newspaper described me as "the point man" for radical change at California State University at Sacramento (CSUS), and the 80s, when, in the words of one colleague, I "declared war on the radicals" (a war that caused a minor campus sensation and was reported in a lengthy feature article in the Sacramento Bee called "The Astounding About-Face of a Rebel Professor"), I experienced the crack-up of my "progressive" faith. For years it had faltered; then suddenly it failed altogether. The decades bracketed by these cal activity followed by long periods of bear-like hibernation. Politics has always seemed to me to be a brutal way of shaping social discourse, and while I have been reasonably effective at this game, for me it is soulkilling work. Besides, anger is a young man's game, and there is no more ugly sight than an angry old man. So, as I've watched the corruption by the Left of my early ideals, I've tried with the passing years simply to follow the tragic movement of campus politics and to allow my anger to be transmuted into sorrow, a process which led me a couple of Perce: "I will fight no more forever." Still, my youngest son is now a freshman in college, and the relentless indoctrination is brutal, unapologetic, and administratively sanctioned. So the battle begins anew, although my chosen weapon now is the reminiscence rather than the soapbox. Looking back on the events of my life in the 60s, I find it hard, in all honesty, not to see it in stark, even melodramatic, terms, as a history of misunderstanding, of closeted ambition and ironic role PAGE 2 APRIL 1994 FIGHTING WORDS I believe basic civility and decorum demand that every respectable journal shuns certain words, regardless of who else uses them. I hope in the future you will abide by basic policies of civility and decorum. Every breach of these simple, basic, essential virtues, yes, virtues demean all of us. V. F. Massman Saint Paul MN DON'T RECYCLE THIS LETTER! I thought the pinhead who wrote the anonymous letter to the editor in last month's Heterodoxy might like this excerpt from UCLA visiting economics professor Ben Zycher's class syllabus. Describing the text for his "Public Finance" course, he writes: "The textbook (Harvey S. Rosen, Public Finance, 3rd ed., Richard D. Irwin, 1992) is quite good, although it is printed on recycled paper, the use of which adds to the toxic sludge problem, reduces (yes, reduces) the number of trees in the world, increases solid waste costs, and weakens incentives for efficient pricing of landfill use and siting. We would boycott this book were there an alternative close in quality and printed on virgin paper." Makes you want to think twice about recycling. Karen M. Holian Los Angeles, CA P.S. The class was one of the best I've taken. RUSH: A'CORPULENT CHICKEN HAWK* Thank you for sending me your information about your new organization. While I agree with almost everything your organization seeks to accomplish, I must regrettably decline your offer to participate. The reason is because you make the mistake that so many others have made. By championing the cause of that despicable, draft dodging idiot Rush Limbaugh, you reveal that your organization is yet another in a series of sham organizations that only serve to line the pockets of this corpulent chicken hawk. If indeed your organization is serious about doing anything other than acting as a platform for his uninformed, draft dodging, college dropout viewpoints, then I wish you well. However, as long as you have any connection to him I must decline your offer. Unsigned me is the blatant attempt at threats and intimidation, all in the name of supposed tolerance and "sensitivity"! Ha! Ha! Just goes to show what happens when you shine the light of truth and reason on those who take themselves ever so seriously. Keep up the good work! Janet P.McAuliffe Happy Wife and Mother P.S. "Final Analysis" is also priceless! HOORAY FOR HOMO-CONS Best wishes to David Brock, now able to come in from the cold (Jeff Muir's article, Mar '94, pp 9-10). A mere two years ago, many conservatives would have thrown him to the wolves. I suspect he might, off the record, express some gratitude to such pioneers as Bruce Bawer, who put the term "gay conservative" on the political map. Indeed, like Bawer, IT'S LATER THAN YOU THINK I am in full agreement with what you are doing. Unfortu- he might even have a good word for some gay leftists, whose nately, since I am 76 and living on a small, fixed income, earlier work made Frank Rich's cute smear campaign no there is nothing I can do financially to help. Cash is longer defensible. (But what a relief! He is no longer forced especially short now after a cold Wisconsin winter with to choose between the "closet" and a "progressive coalition" including such noted gay rights activists as Louis Farrakhan high fuel and electricity bills, etc... As I look back over the last 50 or 60 years, I am and Fidel Castro). Hugo S. Cunningham appalled to see how much personal liberty we have already Boston, MA lost. The Bill of Rights is being attacked on all fronts; the most recent example is the unconstitutional methods used by the feds in the war on drugs. Even worse is ahead in the KEEP THROWING BOMBS coming war against tobacco and the war against unconven- Cease and desist all publication! You're confusing everytional religion. Here in Wisconsin, the D.N.R. seeks to get body with the facts. What kind of a country do you think this legal right to force farmers to comply with nitpicking, very is? What are you trying to do, ruin the status quo? If you costly rules that really accomplish nothing but force small continue to print the truth instead of media innuendo and farmers out of business. partisan politics, how are all the other news media going to Robert Schmall survive? You're just adding to the problem by driving liberal Soldiers Grove, WI myopic reporters and newscasters into the ranks of the unemployed. I hope, I hope, I hope. MORE VENOM, PLEASE JA. Conover Although I love your entire publication and regularly read it from cover to cover, one of my favorite features is your RENO IS BURNING DOWN THE HOUSE printing of letters, particularly those of your PC-crazed, I believe you slipped in the article on Janet ("The Butcher of foaming-at-the-mouth detractors. These venomous Waco") Reno. You treated as fact her claim that "they set the communiques positively drip with hatred, though carefully fires...they brought it on themselves/' crafted to showcase the supposed moral/intellectual supeThere is scant evidence supporting the "blame the riority and purity of the reaction. What particularly amuses victims" attitude, and much evidence that the attackers directly or indirectly caused the fires. I've viewed considerable footage of the Waco matter, and although some of it is ambiguous (the media was kept at extreme distance) some footage clearly shows either a tankmounted flame-thrower or tank-mounted artillery firing into the compound. It is also known that the tear gas canisters are hotburning and considered a fire hazard. The tear gas also, in heavy concentrations, becomes an explosive vapor in the air. I've discussed the matter with numerous military explosive specialists. All agree that the actions of the attackers could easily have caused the fires and explosions. It should also be noted that the attackers chose to mount their assault on a windy day when resulting fires could not be controlled. Also, note that their casual contempt for the law and life was such that they did not even have the phone number of the local fire departments, much less have fire trucks and ambulances standing by! Finally, I note that much will remain forever conjecture. After having barred independent experts from inspecting the Waco remains while she conducted her own whitewash-style investigation, Reno recently leveled the remains and plowed them under. Honest investigators will never have the chance to document the truth, and Reno has probably forever protected herself and Slick Willie from criminal charges and lawsuits by destroying the physical evidence. Thanks for your great article about "The Butcher of Waco." I had no idea that she was eyeballs deep in pseudo child-abuse profiteering. Leroy Jones Studio City, CA HETERODOXY PAGE 3 REDUCTIO AD ABSURDUM FATE OF THE FISHWIFE: In the current issue of Lingua France, Jane Tompkins, wife of Stanley Fish, and author of "scholarly" books about reader-response theory, etc., tells author Adam Begley that she derives satisfaction from working weekends as a cook in a Durham restaurant called the Wellspring Grocery. She calls her new job part of "a trajectory of personal development" and hints that it may eventually lead to a complete severing of her ties wife the university. Members of the Fish family have always been blessed with keen early warning detectors. Everyone concerned with the fate of literary studies should hope that once again they are on the cutting edge; that Tompkins' trajectory continues, and that others of her ilk consider similar career moves. catch up with them and tack on penalties which would adjust the payment back up to where it should have been. If more people had been as farsighted and altruistic as the Clintons, we could retroactively erase the deficit" —Eleanor Clift, April 1, McLaughlih Group IN THE EYE OF THE BEHOLDER: According to an Associated Press report from Minneapolis, a Walker Art Center member contacted state health officials about a Walker-sponsored event in which observers said one performer cut another, mopped up the blood with towels and sent them soaring over the audience on revolving clotheslines. An audience member at the March 5 performance called health officials to ask whether spectators were at risk of contracting the AIDS virus if blood had dripped on them. JUST PLAIN BERNADINE: Recently some law professors around the country were surprised to get an invitation from Lawrence Fox of the Labor Relations and Employment Law Society at LUNA BEACH By Carl Moore St John's University informing them of an April 13 lecture by former Weatherman leader Bernadine Dohrn. In his letter, Fox described Dohrn as having "manifested an eloquent lifelong commitment to issues of social justice. " This will give a chuckle to those who remember her as a suck to Fidel Castro in the early 70s, as part of an operation attempting to plant bombs at the social functions of U.S. servicemen, and as an advocate of terrorism during her days in the underground. Bernadine presumably does not suffer from the aphasia afflicting Mr. Fox, but she has chosen not speak about the obscenities in her past since negotiating her way back into respectable society. During her appearance at St John's, she lectured the audience on "workplace child care, sexism and sexual harassment proposed health reform, and related feminist issues." Donna Shalala, move over! GOOD RIDDANCE: Arsenio Hall has given notice. After threatening to "kick Jay Leno's ass" in the late night television wars, he has surrendered and decided to cancel his show. It is too bad he didn't make this decision a few weeks ago. If he had, America would have been spared the sight of Hall slobbering over the likes of Snoop Doggy Dog and Louis Farrakhan. Hall's "interview" with the racist Farrakhan, whom he fawningly questioned on life and society as if he were Albert Schweitzer, will stand as one of the truly shameful moments in television history. SINGAPORE, USA: A recent issue of The Gay and Lesbian Times advertised an upcoming "Leatherfest Workshop" in San Diego. Among the sessions offered were "a demonstration and discussion of the correct technique for fire play"; The ABC's of branding; and "discussion of the sensually pleasurable manipulation of the anal canal with the hand and sometimes forearm." There was also a workshop mat managed to resonate with current events. It was Caning: "A demonstration of the different types of canes, where and how they originated, and how it has progressed over the many years of existence. The beauty, emotion and severity will be demonstrated." WHEELCHAIRING IN THE RAIN: In a Reuters dispatch, it was reported that the Odd Ball Cabaret of Los Angeles was ordered by city officials to close its main attraction, a shower enclosure where nude dancers cavort for male customers, because the enclosure had no wheelchair access and thus denied people who use wheelchairs equal opportunity to work as nude dancers. In one of the great bureaucratic understatements, Ron Shigeta, head of LA's Disabled Access Division, said "the law is the law, no matter how ridiculous it might seem to some people." Rich Danilla, supervisor of the AIDS epidemiology unit, said that the caller was told there was "low risk unless someone actually got the blood into their mouth, an eye, or an open sore." Walker Director Kathy Halbreich told the Star Tribune that the performance in which Ron Athey cut Darryl Carlton should be understood in the context of contemporary art and historical and religious precedent, including "the rituals of the church and the body and blood of Christ being used." This comment managed to be inane and sacreligious in one gesture. NIXON'S THE ONE: Richard Nixon must have died a little more comfortably because of Pavel Sudoplatov's Special Tasks, which was published a week or so before his stroke. The former Soviet spymaster made a series of startling revelations about the brutal world of Soviet espionage that should redden the faces of those in this country who apologized for the USSR for years and then, when that became too embarrassing, began to propound theories of "moral equivalence" between the Soviets and the U.S. Sudoplatov talks about arranging to please Stalin with the THE DEVIL MADE THEM DO IT: "Hillary and Bill assassination of Trotsky. He admits that Raoul Wallenberg cheating on their taxes was a protest against Reagan era tax was "eliminated" in a Soviet prison for refusing to cooperbreaks for the wealthy. Many middle class and wealthy ate. He fingers Julius and Ethel Rosenberg as "a naive people deliberately paid less than mid-1980s tax rates couple overeager to cooperate with us." In other words, required. They knew that in five or ten years the IRS would Special Tasks is filled with food for thought and food that old lefties will choke on. Sudoplatov's most startling claim may be his contention that physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer shared information about the newly developed atomic bomb with Soviet scientific contacts. Oppenheimer, made into a tormented martyr by the American left in the postwar era, apparently leaked information for reasons which were in a way more venal than comparable actions by traitors out for financial or purely ideological gain: he was fearful of the consequences should U.S. maintain a nuclear monopoly. In other words Oppenheimer was not so much proSoviet as anti-American, and thus a metaphor for the next two generations of leftists in this country. But if the revelations concerning Oppenheimer are the most sensational of Special Tasks, those involving Alger Hiss must have been of special interest to Richard Nixon. For the Hiss case, of course, was entwined with the development of his own legend. It was the first of his "crises"; the point in his career when he began to understand the extent of communist subversion in America and thus sensed the stakes of the titanic postwar struggle between the U.S. and the USSR. For Nixon's opponents, of course, his involvement in the Hiss case as the leading member of the House Un-American Activities Committee and a sponsor of Hiss's accuser and (they would say) tormentor, Whittaker Chambers, made him a marked man. Ever after "destroying" Hiss he would be Tricky Dick, cynic and opportunist, who would stop at nothing in his ruthless climb to power—a neurotic whose frayed cuff upbringing made him implacably hostile to those with a touch of class like Hiss; a politician whose discovery of anti communism provided him with a vehicle he would drive to the heart of American dream. Attention would always be paid to other Nixon "victims" like Jerry Voorhis and Helen Gahagan Douglas, but the fine art of Nixon-hating as it developed over the years always came back to the alleged persecution of Hiss. It was this episode in his career that stamped Nixon as the id of American politics, the dark-jowled figure whose ambition, coming in contact with his paranoia, caused a mephitic steam to arise from his public acts. It was never absolutely necessary that Hiss be innocent for Nixon to be guilty. But the fellow traveling left has always assumed that even if he wasn't absolutely beyond suspicion, Hiss's most notable public act was to become one of Richard Nixon's victims. The image of Nixon staring intently at the one time adviser to Roosevelt who was president of the Carnegie Endowment when he made his appearance before HUAC in 1948 would be part of Nixon's legend: the mongoose measuring his prey. But now comes Pavel Sudoplatov with something to say about Hiss and it is not (as the egregious Roger Morris and other Nixon-bashing biographers have said) that Hiss was victimized by an unholy alliance between Nixon and Chambers. On the contrary, Hiss had an "official confidential relationship" with Soviet espionage agents and was especially close to the GRU, Soviet military intelligence. He was a source of intelligence for the central spy group in Washington DC, and when Chambers testified against him it was considered "a setback for the Soviet Union." This is the sort of revelation one would expect to touch off a delayed self-inventory on the part of the left. Nixon was right; they were wrong. All the grudging admissions about his brilliant insights into foreign policy are one thing—especially when they are hedged by the obligatory words on personal corruption and Watergate. But what needs to happen is for those who were his opponents the whole of Nixon's career finally to say the unsayable. He was right about the biggest issue of his day— the "communist menace" and the willingness of American leftists and their fellow travelers to betray their country, and, once betrayal was no longer fashionable, to continue secretly to despise it. PAGE 4 APRIL 1994 CBS and the Writer's Guild Make a Barrio in Hollywood Half-Price Hispanics by K.L. BILLINGSLEY SCREENWRITERS WANTED for network television shows. Previous experience unnecessary. Talent optional. Must be Latino and willing to work for half pay. No anglos or blacks need apply. CBS did not actually run an ad like this in Variety or the Hollywood Reporter. It didn't have to. Late last year, when the network made an informal pitch along these lines, there were many takers. But injecting racial quotas into the television writing business wasn't the idea of CBS management alone. The Writers Guild of America, the union of film, television and radio writers, was in on it The collaboration involved both the Guild leadership and the Latino Writers Committee, one of the union's many official caucuses for "protected classes." On the surface, this move to bring minorities into the television scriptwriting business would seem to be just another of those "progressive" gestures that the entertainment industry occasionally wallows in—the sort of gesture that some may secretly smile at, as in the case of wearing all the color-coded ribbons on Oscar night, but go along with anyhow; But in this case, some WGA writers, including a number of Latinos, saw the CBS-WGA move as the creation of a kind of artistic apartheid. "Hollywood may be trying to recreate an entertainment version of the old Negro Leagues—with Latinos—separate and unequal treatment of one particular ethnic minority," says Migdia Chinea-Varela, a Cuban-American who has written for The Incredible Hulk, Facts of Life, Punky Brewsterm A other series over the years. And Julio Vera, also born in Cuba, who has written pilots for CBS and ABC, adds, "It is ironic that the Guild, which represents some of America's best known liberals, is now engaged in a brand new form of segregation." Yet the Writers Guild has always been leftist more than liberal, and often venal instead of principled. And given the history of the WGA, it should be no surprise to Julio Vera or anyone else that the organization should cooperate in a project like this one, involving quotas on the one hand and a caste system on the other. A short look backward shows that a number of the Guild's founders were orthodox Stalinists who remained faithful to the various schemes of the Great Helmsman, including even the 1939-1941 Nazi-Soviet pact During the Pact, in fact, true-believing screenwriter Dalton Trumbo wrote a novel called The Remarkable Andrew, in which General Andrew Jackson appears from the dead to argue against aid to Britain in its fight against Germany. It was also about this time that John Howard Lawson, also known as the "Hollywood commissar" and a prime mover of the Guild, was described by fellow communist Paul Jarrico as "an infantile leftist, a sectarian sonofabitch." Lawson's faction dominated during the early years of the Guild, and maintained a decorous silence while Stalin kangaroo-courted many of their fellow writers in the Soviet Union into the gulag. This faction set a precedent for the current emphasis on quotas by establishing an informal and covert affirmative action program during the 30s and 40s under which Party members wound up writing many World War II movies, after the Party line conveniently reverted to anti-fascism with the invasion of the motherland. Long before they were subjected to the inquisition staged by the House Committee on Un-American Activities, the Party members in the Guild were blacklisting, slandering, and obstructing writers, even liberals and leftists, who did not share their loyalties. Such vicious treatment perhaps explains why so many were willing to testify against the communist writers when HUAC finally did come to town. Lawson, Trumbo, and others who later gained notoriety as the "Hollywood Ten" are even today considered to be misunderstood idealists, not the shameless Party hacks they actually were, and are regarded with considerable subpoena envy, to use Norman Mailer's phrase. In addition to a strong leftist profile left over from the 30s and 40s, the Guild also maintains a healthy self-image. "As a union we probably have the highest I.Q. in all of labor," said Ted Flicker in his 1986 campaign statement while running for Guild office, without citing anything on the screen that might confirm such superior intellect "WE'RE AN INDISPENSABLE MONOPOLY," said fellow candidate Arthur Sellers (the upper case is his), "a small group who're the architects of a product in demand the world over." The key words here are "monopoly" and "small group," words that give us clues as to the dialectic that rules the Writers Guild of America. In addition to their dramatic craft, screenwriters are businesspersons with a product to sell. Many are writerproducers, who work both sides of the labor-management line. Those who sign the six-figure deals we read about are therefore also members of a union which helps the wealthy play the role of proletarians without power. It also helps them ignore the chief reality of their chic working-class enterprise: Only half of the 7,500 members of WGA West are working at any given time. Jay Leno's 1988 quip should have hit home harder man it did: "Now that the strike is settled, only 85 percent of the Writers Guild will be unemployed." While professing solidarity, scribes look for every advantage over their fellow sisters and brothers in the union. Given such an atmosphere, it is not overly cynical to presume that the writer Delle Chatman, an affirmative action supporter, called Chinea-Varela and asked for her contact at the magazine. It turned out that Chatman had written a response, and, says Chinea-Varela, "thought she could demand that it be published." Newsweek ran Chinea-Varela's piece in late 1988. the Journal reprinted it in June 1989 but added a response from Chatman called "Some Doors Must be Pried Open." "Affirmative action [Chatman wrote] is the last tool many minority writers have with which to exercise their creative freedom of speech. When women, ethnic groups, the disabled, and the mature are consistently locked out of employment in television and film* they are also being denied access to an ever-widening audience. And these two powerful media remain the mouthpiece of white males, who shape and steer the imagination of a country and an entire planet with the celluloid and video stories they tell. Their perspective on the state and direction of humanity is all many of us will ever consider until a more diverse crew of creators spin the tales, telling all sides of the varied truths that comprise the human spirit." Affirmative action, according to Chatman, "will have to exist as long as humans continue the tragic practice of discriminating against each other for differences that are God-given. There will come a time when it is unnecessary... but that happy day hasn't arrived yet. We aren't even close." I f this last point was somewhat like the ACLU urging a suspension of habeus corpus until a crime wave subsides, Chatman's words nonetheless represented the position of the Writers Guild, whose brass has no doubt that it knows what is best for the protected classes suffering from alleged white, anglo hegemony. In 1991, WGA executive director Brian Walton pushed the affirmative action process into the twilight zone of social Hollywood may be engineering when he suggested that some Latinos act as unpaid consultants on projects trying to recreate an with Latino themes. "It's not the Guild's business to recomentertainment version mend," Chinea-Varela immediately protested. of the old Negro "This is not a job referral service." Indeed, a Leagues with Latinos— WGA policy statement says: "The Guild represents writers primarily for the purpose of separate and unequal collective bargaining in the motion picture, television, and radio industries. We do not treatment of one obtain employment for writers, refer or recommend members for writing assignments, particular ethnic offer writing instruction or advice, nor do we minority. accept or handle material for submission to production companies." -Migdia Ghinea-Varela Chinea-Varela and writer Julio Vera complained about the consulting affair and found that debate over the controversial process was suppressed. Guild's current scheming Some derided these claims as paranoid. Yet a WGA with CBS for firing practices^ involving affirmative action document outlining the "Latino Writers Committee based on race and ethnicity is a matter of gaining economic Objectives" states that a planning session "will only deal leverage as much as pushing principle. with positive input and positive data that could possibly benefit the group and/or individuals. Negative data or In spite of her success, at a cost of what she describes as I 'bitching sessions' will be absolutely prohibited and "ten brain-numbing years," Migdia Chinea-Varela was not tolerated." Committee officials also maintained strict Agrowing uncomfortable with the tag of "Latina writer" controls on who could appear as a guest. This document during the 1980s. "Am I being picked for my writing ability, stated further, "It is the Latino Writers Committee who or to fulfill a quota?" she wondered. "Have I been selected represents the interest of Latino Writers in the Guild and in because I'm a 'twofer'—a female Hispanic—or because the film and television industry." This came as a surprise to they were enthralled with my deftly drawn characters and Chinea-Varela and others who assumed that the WGA, not strong, original story line?" She found "something almost one of its committees, represented all writers, not just insulting about these well-meaning affirmative action Latinos. searches" and came to the conclusion that "there can be no Vera complained to the Guild's Walton that he had affirmative action without segregation," especially if "our been "prevented from expressing my dissent and from names must be kept on separate lists." engaging the [Latino Writers] Committee in a reasonable Chinea-Varela, who resigned from the Latino Writers debate by the lack of parliamentary procedure." Walton Committee in 1988, sent the article she wrote about her claimed to have investigated the incident but did not call experiences in the industry, entitled "My Life as a Twofer," Vera or Chinea-Varela. Walton later replied that "debate in to the WGAW Journal, the organ of the Guild, which refused and of itself, however, is unhelpful unless it's directed to the to run it. The official editorial response was that the piece specific and appropriate work of the Committee." At the "needed a lot of editing." But as anyone who has read the same time he was blowing off those who disagreed with him Journal can testify, this would not be an impediment. The on the matter of assigning Latinos to monitor shows with more likely reason was that what Chinea-Varela had to say Latino themes, he was hinting at an even more aggressive challenged the Guild's position on affirmative action. program for Latino writers. Unabashed, Chinea-Varela sent the piece to Newsweek, If many would find the solution proposed by Walton a where it also encountered some strange obstacles. Hearing bit loony, it was not that they believed there was no problem that the piece had been submitted to Newsweek, black screenwhen it came to the issue of Latinos in the entertainment HETERODOXY PAGE 5 industry. WGA screenwriter Fred the membership. They simply presented it One participant in this electronic discussion wonHaines, whose 1967 adaptation of as a fait accompli. dered how much CBS would be willing to pay Sicilian Ulysses earned an Oscar nomination, Doreen Braverman, chief counsel of writers and offered to bring his own olive oil. One writer spoke for many when he said that the the WGA, says that the deal has nothing to cited abuses in a similar program at Disney, where nonentertainmentindustry has ignored both do with 38.F and is based on article 38.2, in Guild trainees rewrote the scripts of WGA members for half Latino talent and the burgeoning Latino which a company "agrees to explore with price with full Guild approval. Some who started out defendmarket. Dissident Chinea-Varela herself the Guild's Equal Employment Officer ing the program had second thoughts and wound up attackonce wrote a script about a Cuban new affirmative action programs to ing it. Talent, said one, should be the only protected class in political prisoner, only to have a proincrease employment opportunities and the business, which had all along been the position of ducer lamely reject it on the grounds the availability of writing assignments for Migdia Chinea-Varela, Julio Vera, Fred Haines and others. that American audiences would not acthe 'protected classes.' “Braverman Richard Yniguez concedes that the opponents of the cept a story about "illegal aliens." argues that the Guild's ratification of the plan make some legitimate points, but insists that they are "If the networks like CBS really 1988 Minimum Basic Agreement that ignoring the other side of the debate. The critics "are inciting want to increase access for Latinos, contained these provisions precluded the people against something that is positive," he says. He is not there's nothing easier for them to do," need for further debate. above playing the ethnicity card as the discussion intensi"Baloney," says screenwriter Fred fies: "You have disgruntled people who aren't working, who says Fred Haines. "Just hire them. Put Haines, who responded that what the happen to be anglo. I praise the union for caring what out the word that you want scripts from Latinos." But that is not what has come The Guild's Brian Walton membership had voted for was training happens to me, because I am not the majority." As for those programs for aspiring writers, not a feath- Latino opponents of affirmative action, they have a false about ' erbed for those who are already members of the Guild and are consciousness problem. "They consider themselves other 5 political preening endemic to Hollywood intersected trying to avoid competing for work on a equal basis. Latino than a protected class," sniffs Yniguez. with public policy last June, when the U.S. . writer Julio Vera agrees. Including established WGA memCommission on Civil Rights set up shop at the posh bers was "where they crossed the line," he says. But the During the entire Cold War, the film and television Sheraton Grand on South Figueroa and held hearings on the protected classes and Guild leadership loved the new plan, industry never openly championed the cause of a single entertainment industry. The heads of major studios and TV which had Hollywood Feelgood written all over it. Eastern Bloc artist or writer, though it did roll out the networks showed up to hear the news (which they already "The program is a wonderful situation," said Richard welcome mat for Marxist dictator Daniel Ortega and his knew) that minorities constituted a small portion of those Yniguez. "We're trying to do something good here, solve Sandalista entourage, with Ed Asner prominent among the working in film and television. They might have responded the problem of invisibility. We are hosts. Hollywood heavyweights such as with a wise shake of the head about the human condition; finding a little breath of fresh air." The Robert Redford and Jack Lemmon are statistical disparities, rather than being abnormal, are a fea- Guild's Cheryl Rhoden told the fans of Fidel Castro and attribute Cuba's ture of life in America and everywhere else. Black Americans Hollywood Reporter that it was "to the difficulties not to dictatorship and hit home runs at twice the rate of Latino Americans. Germans credit of CBS and Jeff Sagansky, in suffocating Marxist economics but to hold a higher rate of representation among piano manufactur- particular, that they have brought a the U.S. embargo. Dissident Cuban singular focus to the problem of an equiers than the Irish. Mohawk Indians are more highly reprewriters such as Heberto Padilla or the table hiring of writers who are Latino." sented than Cajurts among ironworkers in New York. And; as poet Armando Valladares never received far as the connection between equity and commerce is con- But established Latino writers such as Julio official support from writers in the cerned, the fact that blacks comprise about 75% of all Vera and Migdia Chinea-Varela, who had American dream factories. professional basketball players does not bother those who been holding their own in the industry for Unlike Lemmon and Redford, years, now found that prospective buyers plunk down hard-earned money for tickets to the NBA. Julio Vera and Migdea Chinea-Varela of their material lumped them in with the Instead, Jeff Sagansky, president of CBS Entertainand their families have direct experiment, professed shock at the figures produced by these hear- bargain-basement trainees. Producers ence of Cuban totalitarianism, which ings, letting it be known he wanted to do something about "the were cool to accepting material or they quite naturally oppose. Perhaps this offering jobs unless it was on these cutproblem." In true industry style, the networking began. is one reason why the official Latinos of the Civil rights commissioner Charlie Rivera was a friend rate terms negotiated by the Guild. Writers Guild have regarded them In another telephone conversation, of Richard Yniguez, co-chair of the Latino Writers Commitaskance and left them dangling in the Jeff Sagansky of Guild executive Brian Walton told tee, who showed up at the hearings. Afterwards he met with wind during their dealings with WGA CBS Entertainment Sagansky who, says Yniguez, wanted to "put his mouth Chinea-Varela that "Latinos can work for brass. But the two dissident Cubans where his money was." Sagansky and CBS programming half." To some, it was strange for a union believe their own Latino credentials are more solid that those director Charles Segars met with the Guild's Brian Walton, with a radical posture to be involved in what amounted to of some members of the Latino Writers Committee, which institutional scabbing. who produced a deal. is monitoring the CBS program. Defenders of the plan explain that it is based on article The WGA's zeal for affirmative action, it should be 'or was it simply Latino writers who had 38.F in the Guild's 1988 Minimum Basic Agreement (MBA). noted, includes no mechanism for verification. By the Guild's achieved success by their own hard efforts and standards, you are what you say you are. WGA spokesThis provides for a "Writers Training Program," which aims solid talents who were annoyed by the Guild's woman Cheryl Rhoden is on the record as saying that, in the at "enhancing the training opportunities of aspiring writers" social-artistic engineering arrangements with Guild, ethnicity is "self-determined." In 1989-90, Oliver who are women, ethnic minorities, physically handicapped CBS. Fred Haines and others complained that the "phony Stone listed himself as an "American Indian" and "Asian." and "writers in the protected age group," that is, over 40. To join the WGA, however, one must complete a certain training program" would devalue all writers. "CBS can That year no fewer than six WGA members claimed to be amount of work in the industry. Thus, technically speaking, no say, 'we've filled our quota for peons,'" says Haines. "It's Eskimos, an increase of 50 percent from 1988. One of these WGA member is an "aspiring writer," and this provision was disgraceful that the Guild would set up a two-tiered wage would-be igloo dwellers turned out to be Jewish comedy clearly for non-WGA members, as the article itself explains system, even more so one that is based on ethnicity." writer Rowby Goren, who says he made the claim in a when it says mat companies "may employ as a trainee on a term Haines told the Hollywood Reporter that "over the past 20 moment of whimsy. "I've always liked Eskimos," said basis an individual who has not previously sold any literary years, one of the most effective union-busting tools has Goren. "I wrote down Eskimos [on the ethnicity questionmaterial under, or been employed pursuant to, this MBA or been the two-tier system, under which...management naire]." When the story broke, none of the other WGA any of its predecessor MBAs." gets concessions under the guise of apprenticeship pro- Eskimos wanted to be interviewed. If the Guild was altering its rules to get into To gain protected status in the WGA is not difficult, grams, or whatever, which allow them the apprenticeship business, that would to pay new workers less money and says Chinea-Varela: "All you have to do is be willing to have been one tiling. But one of the first fewer benefits. Not only does manage- work for half. You can call yourself Latino." Adds Fred writers to take advantage of the program ment save money by paying some union Haines, "You are only a protected class when you want to hardly fit the description of apprentice. The members less, but they divide the union accept the notion of your own inferiority." credits of Julie Friedgen, a member of the Unwilling to do that, Chinea-Varela filed a complaint against itself." Latino Writer's Committee, include 21 In the weeks following the deci- with the National Labor Relations Board and Labor SecreJump Street, Crazy Like a Fox, In the Heat tary Robert Reich. Her case is being handled by the Indision about Latino writers, there was a of the Night, Magnum P.I. and other war of words on the electronic bulletin vidual Rights Foundation, a California organization active shows. It was a record that other Guild boards visited by Guild members. One in First Amendment and equity issues in academia and the members would envy and one which defender of the plan explained that it entertainment industry. To implement its affirmative-action indicated that Fiedgen was hardly an opprovided access to underrepresented plan, Chinea-Varela wrote, the Guild was violating its own pressed minority shut out of the industry. people who didn't get born into royal rules and agreements and failing to represent all of its After the CBS deal was completed, howHollywood families. If the program members equally. "The Writers Guild has gradually turned ever, both Friedgen and Latino Writers bothered anyone, they should decline to into a police state," she says, "which beats up those Latino Committee Co-Chair Yniguezclaimed that participate, a "love it or leave it" ap- members who will not subscribe to their imposed caste system, whether in the name of access programs or affirmathe program's true purpose was to train proach. established Latino writers to be "showtive action or whatever they choose to call it." Writer Julio Vera Others, with an eye on Guild rules The NLRB has dismissed Chinea-Varela's complaint. runners" and producers. This that otherwise levy stiff fines on members for working below interpretation came a surprise to many in the Guild, who scale, sought to soft-pedal the job description by claiming The rejection has surely encouraged the WGA's protected found no such language in 38.F. The rates of pay also proved that the trainees are not doing any actual writing but only classes, who are now planning to export the plan from CBS of interest. Provision 38.F called for a maximum weekly pay observing the way Latino reality was created on the screen. to other networks and studios in a quest to ensure that, based of $478, which CBS upped to $1,200—which was still on their ethnicity, some writers continue to be more equal If that were the case, however, Fred Haines and others than others. only about half the union's going rate. The WGA wondered why CBS didn't strike a deal with "the observers' executives did not subject the deal to any debate or a vote of guild." N PAGE 6 APRIL 1994 BODIES OF EVIDENCE continued from page 1 sions. Whoever called me knew what I'd just sent to The New Republic. There are only three of us who know what was in that transmission." Including the mystery caller? "That makes four," Davis says. These events have caught him by surprise: "I used to laugh at things like this—until I ended up on the goddamn floor." As for the President's home state, Davis says: "It is fairly easy for anyone who visits Arkansas to realize that they are not exactly any longer in the United States but have entered a kind of intercontinental Third World police state." D avis's experiences in Arkansas might be dismissed if they didn't seem to be part of an alarming, largely unexplored pattern of violence and intimidation which apparently has ensnared individuals associated with the Clintons, their former business partners, and reporters covering these matters. While this network is for the most part an informal one, elements of the official world are also involved. The police, in fact, are exactly whom Little Rock attorney Gary Johnson blames for the major injuries he received just three weeks before Bill Clinton was nominated at the 1992 Democratic Convention. In a video tape entitled "Bill Clinton's Circle of Power" (distributed by Citizens for Honest Government in Winchester, California: 800/633-0869), Johnson says that he captured then-Gov. Clinton on tape entering the apartment of his neighbor at Little Rock's Quapaw Towers. It was Gennifer Flowers, the woman who nearly torpedoed Clinton's White House bid when she told reporters during the 1992 primaries that she and Clinton had maintained a longtime extramarital relationship. Johnson says he installed a video camera as part of his home-security system and thus caught Clinton on tape. During a social evening at Little Rock's Flaming Arrow Club, he mentioned what his camera had cap-;/ tured. Not long afterwards, on June 26,1992, Johnson was attacked by what he recalls as a group of three men who hit him as they entered his house demanding the tape. "They looked like state troopers," he remembers, observing that they were husky and had cropped hair, common features among the state police. Johnson was beaten unconscious; his arm was smashed and his head was struck. In "Circle of Power," Johnson lifts his shirt to reveal a long scar stretching from his sternum to his waistline. It marks the incision through which surgeons repaired his perforated bladder and removed his raptured spleen. Johnson's theory about the state police was provided with a context last fall when The American Spectator's David Brock returned to Washington after his first interviews with a group of Arkansas state troopers who claimed they had arranged trysts for Clinton when he was .governor. According to the Spectator's Managing Editor Wladyslaw Pleszczynski, he explains. The morning of September 10, the offices only the media computer." were broken into again through the same wall, which had Adding to the puzzle, Ian Shapolsky, publisher of been repaired in the interim. On September 22, there was Compromised, says that on the weekends of April 2-3 a break-in at a studio apartment the Spectator maintains and 9-10, the locks to SPI's street-level warehouse and on the upper east side of Manhattan. shipping facility were pried off and broken. "I would 'These are the first break-ins in our 27 year say there was several hundred thousand dollars worth of history," Pleszczynski says. "We didn't neces- inventory in there and nothing was touched," Shapolsky sarily connect it with David's research, but it made you says. "We have $50 color photo books and copies of wonder." The American Spectator is not the only or gani z at i o n close to the Whitewater story that has suffered a break-in in Manhattan. On March 14, John Bell, publicity director for SPI Books in New York City, came — Gary Parks, U.S. Navy to work to follow up on the media contact he had developed to promote a new book called Compromised Compromised in there. A thief could sell those books on by Terry Reed and John Cummings. Among other the street, yet nothing was taken." He adds that SPI things, the authors claim that in the 1980s, then-Gov. Books has been in the same location on Manhattan's Clinton was involved in the CIA's mission to supply the West 22nd Street "since 1988 and never had a problem." Nicaraguan Contras. As part of that effort, "more than $9 million a week in cash was secretly air dropped into here are other unexplained incidents surroundArkansas, which became the CIA's domestic 'banana the Whitewater scandal, enough to provide republic' These clandestine funds were laundered for material for several shows of The X-Files. At the Agency and then used for the development of Arkan11:56 p.m. on January 24, for instance, a fire sas industry." was reported on the 14th floor of Little As Bell clicked on his computer that morning, Rock's Worthen Tower, headquarters of the Worthen "there was something wrong," he says. . "I quickly Bank, that loaned $3.5 million to the Clinton presidenrealized that my computer was a shell. It was completely tial campaign and held on deposit $55 million in federal empty, void, nada" matching funds for the fall 1992 race against George Bell's computer hard drive had been drained. Ac- Bush. While no one was hurt, the blaze partially decording to Julian Serer, SPI's director of computer stroyed the offices of Peat Marwick, a major accounting services, the hard drive's DOS partition had been de- firm that in 1986 redid the Frost Company's audit of the leted, then the disc was reformatted. He used diagnostic Madison Guaranty Savings & Loan. Madison was owned software to look for computer viruses, which could have by James McDougal, the Clintons' business partner in caused this problem, but found no trace of any. Serer, the failed Whitewater Development Corp. who is working on his second master's degree in meThe fire "is suspicious only in people's minds," chanical engineering, says he has never seen a hard disc insists Peat Marwick spokeswoman Barbara Kraft, who behave this way. "It was not a crash," he says. "This was adds that no documents were destroyed. Still, the timing simply a missing partition. The disc was brought back of the blaze seems significant, coming as it did just four to its initial state as if it were brand new." Serer days after the appointment of Whitewater Special Pros concludes: "It looked like sabotage, to tell the truth." ecutor Robert Fiske and within three days of the Rose The timing of this incident is significant. "The Law Finn's reported shredding of documents that be book was hitting that week," John Bell says. 'Hlie media longed to former White House Deputy Counsel Vincent mailing had been done for the most part, and when Foster. people called back I had no records to refer to, so everything was a mystery. Because there was such a here has been death as well as disaster. The flood of calls, I was working on a paper system and "suicide" of Vincent Foster (please see that became a l o gi st i c al sidebar) occurred the very day the FBI was nightmare." Bell says the granted a warrant to search the offices of Clinstrange computer trouble, ton associate David Hale, a former judge who claims which he believes resulted from that when he was governor, Clinton pressured his coma break-in over the pany, Capital Management, into making a $300,000 p r e v i o u s wee k e n d, Small Business Administration-backed loan to "completely eradicated... Whitewater partner Susan McDougal, ex-wife of James years of updated media lists. McDougal, central figure in the scandal. $110,000 of Thousands and thousands of that money ended up in Whitewater's account and was names. These were extensive used to buy 810 acres of land from the International lists that we had prepared for Paper company. this book going back for a And on his way home from a Mexican restaurant year." last September 26, Luther "Jerry" Parks was killed at "We do a lot of close range by at least 10 bullets from a nine millimeter controversial books," Bell semiautomatic pistol. Parks's company, American Concontinues. "We alienate tract Services Inc., had provided security guards to everyone from Islamic Clinton's presidential campaign and transition headfundamentalists to the Mafia. quarters in Little Rock. For maximum damage they would have taken out the "I believe it was premeditated," Parks's widow, production computer where a lot of our future books Jane, told the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette."! believe are formatted. But nothing else was touched, someone has been watching us." In an exclusive interview in the March 20 London Sunday Telegraph, Parks's son goes further: "I believe they had my father killed to save Bill Clinton's political career." Gary Parks, a 23year-old former Navy submarine navigator, says, "My "It is fairly easy for anyone who visits Arkansas to realize that they have entered a kind of intercontinental Third World police state." - L.J. Davis last September 3, the magazine's Arlington, Virginia offices were broken into. "All the desk drawers were left ajar and not closed completely," Pleszczynski says. "It appeared that someone had been checking the drawers." A boom box and Sony Walkman were taken, but otherwise the office "actually was left in pristine condition." Whoever entered "got in through an unused part of the top floor, then cut a hole in a thin wall into the mailroom," T "My dad was investigating Clinton's infidelities for about six years...I believe they had my father killed to save Bill Clinton's political career." T T HETERODOXY dad was working on Clinton's infidelities for about six years, starting in the campaign around 1983." He claims further that his father's investigative work was compiled in a pair of photo- and name-filled files hidden in his dad's bedroom, Jane Parks says that shortly before her husband's death, their home was broken into and phone lines were severed, knocking out a security system. When she and her son looked for the Clinton files, they "were just missing," she says. "I suppose they must have been stolen." Are Mrs. Parks and her son dreaming all this up? At least one lawman buys their story., "If they say that some files were missing, then I can tell you those files were missing," Sgt. Clyde Steelman, the Little Rock Police Department detective investigating Parks's murder, told the Telegraph. "The Parks family aren't lying to you." PAGE 7 Li addition, on March 1, while flying home alone in his private plane, Herschel Friday crashed and died in Little Rock. Friday, an experienced pilot, was head of Friday, Eldredge & Clark, Arkansas's largest law firm, and a member of Clinton's presidential campaign finance committee, according to Judy Jones, the firm's office administrator. Friday was landing on his private airfield in a drizzle at dusk, with both his plane's and the landing strip's lights illuminated. His son was guiding him towards the ground by radio. "Something happened that got him disoriented and he dropped out of sight," his widow, Beth, says. "The landing lights in the rain might have caused him to lose perspective." Mrs. Friday still finds this all a bit curious. "He had landed here so many times," she said. "He was a very excellent pilot." A t about the same time, Ambrose EvansPritchard, Washington, D.C., correspondent for the London Sunday Telegraph planned to meet an anonymous Arkansas dentist who, he says, was going to share "some knowledge of a sensitive nature" about personalities and transactions that had taken place there. EvansPritchard says he got a call on March 4 from a contact who had arranged the meeting telling him not to bother to come to Arkansas. "They got him last night," in a plane crash in Wichita Falls, Texas, Evans-Pritchard recalls being told about his erstwhile source. Early that morning, David Keating, a reporter with KFDX-TV in Wichita Falls, covered a crash that killed a pilot and three passengers including a Royal, Arkansas dentist named Ronald Rogers. A twin-engine Cessna headed from Dallas to the Denver area reported PAGE 8 APRIL1994 electrical trouble at about 10:30 p.m. on March 3. According to an FAA report Keating quoted, the plane vanished from radar near Lawton, Oklahoma, after the pilot signaled that he planned to refuel there. Oddly, the northbound plane crashed with a full tank of gas about 45 miles south of Lawton—just three miles east of the Shepard Air Force Base in Wichita Falls. Bad weather was not a factor that evening. "It was clear as could be," Keating remembers. "I saw the stars myself at 3:00 in the morning." Nonetheless, the plane seemed to have been lost. Keating says a map and magnifying glass were found in the front of the plane. "It's kind of strange. I don't know why they'd be this far off course." The front of the plane was totally demolished and the back was intact, according to Keating, who adds, "The whole thing is weird." As a result of all these ominous occurrences, EvansPritchard says he has been careful to remain a moving target on his three journalistic visits to Arkansas. Among other things, he changes hotels daily. "I check out and don't tell anyone where I'm going," he says. He can only remember one other part of the world where he took such precautions: "I used to do this in Guatemala and El Salvador when I was working on delicate stories and dangerous sorts of things." "It's a bit difficult for people to understand that this is going on within the borders of the U.S. You!ve got quite a climate of fear," says the British journalist. "There's a serious shutting-up operation underway." DEROY MURDOCK is a New York writer and president of Loud & Clear Communications, a marketing and media consultancy. HETERODOXY PAGE 9 TAILHOOK THE LAST WORD LT. BETH WARNICK, one of the key accusers in the Tailhook witch hunt. The scandal over the Tailhook conven- tion in a Las Vegas hotel, which caused the biggest shakeup in the Navy’s history and left a trail of ruined careers, is now part of U.S. military and cultural history. The government accused 140 Navy and Marine pilots of assaulting 83 women, but was unable to convict a single one of them in a court of law, a confirmation of the fact that this was a witch hunt rather than a legal proceeding. Heterodoxy reported on the scandalous nature of this inquisition, but the American media as a whole, intimidated by radical feminism, could not bring itself to pursue the story. The press found apolitically correct version of the outcome: The Tailhook prosecutions failed because the Navy was not really intent on convicting the accused. This was the theme pursued, for instance, by the erstwhile drama critic of The New York Times, Frank Rich, who wrote this about Tailhook: "The scandal has been swept under the Navy's rug. 140 marauding Navy and Marine pilots, 83 assaulted women, 0 Courts-Martial." Consider how Rich makes the alleged 83 assaults into a "fact," when it was actually nothing more than a claim which the government failed to prove in a court of law. Anyone who has read the government's own report on Tailhook knows that ten of these 83 women denied that they had been assaulted when asked by the government investigators. A Times editorial claimed that no one was convicted because scores of commissioned officers lied about what they had witnessed. In point of fact, no one was convicted because the women who accused the officers were proven to be liars themselves in a court of law. Commander Robert B. Rae, an attorney who repre sented some of the Tailhook defendants and has a long experience with Naval justice, knows as much as anyone about the tainted nature of the Tailhook investigation and the inner workings of the trial, which failed to find anything resembling the holocaust of sexual harassment that radical feminists and their agentsin the media claimed Tailhook represented. Heterodoxy's David Horowitz interviewed Rae on March 4,1994, A partial transcript of that interview follows: Q: How did you get involved in the Tailhook affair? A: Actually, in a couple of the cases I was referred directly to the individuals by people who knew my reputation. Q: What happened at the outset of this situation? Refresh our memories. A: We first came on board with the investigation shortly after everything was just commenced with Admiral Reeden, who is the Service Force Commander and the consolidated disposition authority, kind of the head honeho that the CNO and the Secretary of the Navy had appointed to do all the Navy cases. And from the outset, it was just a very difficult task to get any information from the government other than "these people are all guilty, we're gonna hang 'em all high and you're not gettin' any evidence." Q: We never heard anything in the press about the kind of extralegal methods and intimidations that went on in the Navy's investigations and prosecutions of these men. A: Which is one of the faults of the media early on. They took everything the Navy presented to them as gospel, including the Tailhook report and the facts that they supposedly had, even though many times they were indeed not facts, but outright falsehoods. Q: Give an example of some of the methods of the investigators. A: Primarily, there was a special agent, Peter Black, who was one of the head honchos in this whole thing, who on the stand several times under cross examination admitted to certain policies that they had, such as not looking into any extramarital affairs that may have been launched there at Tailhook. Q: In other words, some of the women had had extramarital affairs and therefore had an ulterior interest in lying and saying they were abused once their sexual play came out, to protect themselves from their fiancees and husbands? A:Sure. But it also played into the fact that they were trying to prosecute males for certain conduct, whereas when there was direct evidence regarding women who had done the same thing, this was ignored as a matter of policy. And in particular with Paula Coughlin [the most prominent of the Tailhook women] there was a policy that no agent would receive any information about her. She was right, she was true, she did everything good; and Admiral Frank Kelso [then Chief of Naval Operations] and everybody else was protecting her. Q: In other words, it's the exact opposite of wKaTthe media has said. That is, the top Navy brass was protecting Coughlin and the accusers and was out to convict the accused at all costs. A:There is direct testimony that shows Barbara Pope [then Assistant Secretary of the Navy] and many others wanted to hang people high. Q:. It was said that she told Dick Cheney [then Secretary of Defense] that if heads didn't roll she was going to resign in the midst of the '92 campaign. A: It was even more than that. It was basically if you don't do this now, if you don't fire them all, I'm going to quit. You know, they don't care about due process; they just want to fire them all. Q: Let's go back to this extramarital affair business. You had a client, Lieutenant Cowden, who was accused of participating in a gang rape of a Naval officer named Elizabeth Warnick. A: He had been accused of very heinous crimes by Miss Warnick, as well as another client of mine. It turned out that the Department of Defense agents in charge of the investigation, who ended up testifying on the stand, had to admit that she had lied to them under oath in order to cover up her own participation in events at Tailhook. Q: Was she having an affair with Cowden? Al Well, that remains to be seen. She certainly had consensual sex with him and other people out there, and she was certainly interested in protecting her position on that. But the charges she leveled against Lieutenant Cowden and some of the others were very, very heinous sex crimes. Gt. Gang rape. A:Yeah, right. Those kind of things are not taken lightly by anybody, military or not. Q: So Elizabeth Warnick admitted on the witness stand that she had, in fact, perjured herself. That she had not been gang raped. That she had been having sex with Cowden and had lied because she was engaged and she wanted to protect her engagement. A: That is absolutely true, and was. It is one of the most ironic parts of Tailhook, too, because Admiral Kelso knew about a very important clause in the Navy's sexual harassment instructions that says if someone falsely accuses someone else of a sexual crime or sexual harassment, those people will be brought to justice. She never was, of course. Q: So there was an outright attempt to defame the accused aviators. A: That's right. The defamation, for many of them, began when their names were originally released. For instance, Commander Greg Tritt, who is about one of the straightest shooters you're ever gonna see, was always portrayed as being in the third floor passageway where the gauntlet was taking place. And he was never there. He was never, in fact, charged with being there. There was never, ever any evidence at all that he was there. But the media accepted the government's word that he was a ring leader. Q: Some people say that Tailhook is one of the worst witch hunts in American history, far worse than the McCarthy witch hunt in the number of careers and the number of lives that were blighted forever, for no particular reason. A: We used to have warriors who ran the Navy and who ran the Armed Forces. Now everybody who's in a position of power there is a politician, and they only care about themselves. They don't care about the chain of command and those who work for them. The biggest problem we ran into here was the arrogance, all the way up through the chain of command, saying we're going to hang these commanders and lieutenants but God forbid that we should have to take any responsibility for these actions. Reprints of this article are available: $1 each. PAGE 10 RADICAL continued from page 1 lost; hosts of the defeated move through the halls like shattered armies. Even PC victors betray an angry exhaustion born of fighting for ideas that have already lost their resonance by the time victory occurs. Everywhere, one feels the growing enervation of decadence. It was not always like this. 30 years ago, when I began teaching at CSUS—at that time called Sacramento State College—the college was already convulsed by a power struggle stemming from its recent conversion from a teacher-training college to a liberal arts school. It was in that moment of pause before the 60s turned radical and began to pour out hatred onto anything American and democratic. There was a power struggle on campus, one which was both political and academic, but it was a hopeful time, not yet constricted by the smelly orthodoxies of homegrown Marxism. Everything seemed to revolve around the Young Turks' hope that a genuine academic community could be formed. Yes, back then the magic word was not "diversity" but "community." We hoped to create a community where ideas would flourish; where innovation would be tolerated, even encouraged. We were to be intellectually free and engaged. And indeed, faculty wrote articles all the time in the student newspapers or in countless alternative newspapers, so that the line between students and faculty was blurred. Let me be blunt. CSUS was still a college of the third or even the fourth rank, but the students and the faculty were both engaged with ideas and with each other. Dialogue was pervasive. Three years after I arrived, the school setup an interdisciplinary College Honors Program, and I was made Assistant Coordinator. This was the 60s, a period of great investment in higher education in California, and we were all—students and faculty—filled with hope. Today, not a single edifice of this world remains, only the rubble. That heady dialogue, even its faint echoes, has long since passed into silence. Today, only PC monologue rules. As a result, many of my liberal colleagues, especially the middle aged, corroded by an incipient sense of their own "bad faith," of their own cowardly complicity in the betrayal of higher education, seek desperately to deny responsibility for the collapsing standards, the corrupt educational practices, the warping of truth, the blatant ideological abuse of students, the large number of "burnt-out cases" among their colleagues. They blame inadequate funding, the power of TV, the break up of the family, and, especially, capitalism and its attendant pathologies—sexismy racism, consumerism, etc.—anything that exonerates them and demands of them nothing. APRIL 1994 B ut it is not only the faculty who have changed; so have the students. They are considerably less innocent and therefore considerably less hopeful than they once were; less intellectually disciplined yet more focused on grades; more jaundiced and yet less critical; more utilitarian but less pragmatic; more independent and yet less original; weaker in fundamentals yet greater in ambition; resentful of demands but insatiable in their need for approval. The list of paradoxes goes on and on. These students do what they must to survive, just as students always have, only with a singularity of purpose devoid of illusions and with a feeling of self-justification that brooks no correction. Informed that they can't read very well, an excessively high percentage bristle with hostility. They often adopt a war footing. Frequently the enemy is viewed as the demands made upon them—the skills, the body of material to be covered, the professor's expectations. Products of poor public schooling where the cliches of the 60s have come home to roost, they have few resources to call upon. Those demands that can be fulfilled within the constraints imposed upon them by their background and their situation—many must work long hours to afford even the relatively inexpensive college where I teach—are viewed as "reasonable"; those that cannot are resented as "unreasonable." To be sure, no task is deemed reasonable unless it can be met within the unstated student guidelines in a manner certain to receive a good grade. It is this sense of entitlement, this low-level psychic warfare against educational standards and the expectations of those professors who still have them—a struggle the purpose of which is unconsciously to diminish expectations and erode faculty confidence in the reasonableness of their requirements—that is so new in the academy and so momentous in its significance. In 1965, the first year I taught a course in Great European Novels, I included ten novels in my reading list, totaling 5,000 pages. I continued this syllabus throughout the 60s. Did the students read everything? No, of course not. They laughed at what they perceived to be impossible expectations. But it was good-natured laughter. They yielded to the inevitability of failed coverage, just as almost all of us in graduate school did—with a spirit of resignation, a sense of awe at the immensity of the task, and with an anxious heart and a dogged perserverance. I do not recall the difficulty of my courses or the "reasonableness" of my requirements affecting my course evaluations. We were all more carefree then, and, I think, more respectful of our different functions—the teachers and the taught— in the educational enterprise. I now have reading lists of under 2,000 pages in my upper-division courses; 3,000 became impossible three years ago. But of greater significance is the fact that students today have by and large a far deeper hostility toward the requirements. And more impor- tantly, theirperceived unreasonableness is no longer viewed as a source of black humor. Stiff requirements are perceived by some students as a threat to their vital life interests, which is why I find the students today more fearful and yet more disrespectful, and the faculty more fearful and thus obsequious in seeking to ingratiate themselves with the students, than at any time in my 33 years of teaching. The situation I have just described is, I suppose, symptomatic of a larger educational crisis, a crisis as much rooted in economic decline, demographic change, increased pressure to receive a college degree, etc., as it is in the devastating consequences of a generation of Marxist liberal educational ideology. But this ideology and the corruption of educational values that follows such ablatantly dishonest attempt at indoctrination, when wed to the new postmodern delegitimization of old institutions and American society in general, has made such deep cynics of students that their cynicism is almost imperceptible, visible only as the complex of symptoms I have described. It is, thus, for all the liberal refusal to confront it, a loss of faith in education as a soul journey; also, a loss of hope in its transforming power; acrisis of the spirit; and an exhaustion of belief. All these are the result of 30 years of exposure to an ideology whose unstated aim is to erode belief in American institutions and American life. Subjected to endless ideological assault, academia's immune system is shot. It has become subject to a variety of opportunistic disorders. And the politically correct are not immune from attendant diseases, despite their conviction that traditional society is sick and they are healthy. In fact, I am persuaded that much of the militancy of the younger politically correct faculty, much of their compulsion to ignore inconvenient facts—indeed, to deny that facts (or truth) objectively exist—and much of their intolerance and brutal suppression of dissenting perspectives, in and out of class, is nothing more than an elaborate defense mechanism to stave off the threat of a confrontation with a complex, intractable, and increasingly intolerable reality. F reud has argued that the ultimate measure of the ego's health is a strong reality principle. If so, then what we are witnessing in the narrow, hermetic orthodoxies of PC are countless individuals who suffer from a beleaguered ego structure, and who are therefore compelled, in order to maintain the ego's precarious organization, to withdraw from reality. This need to suppress awareness, which itself is symptomatic of pathology, explains the politically correct's wild, compensatory fascination with the postmodern ideology of the omnipresent role of power in human affairs articulated so vulgarly by Foucault and others. No, we were far more innocent in the 60s, and even if the age was filled with turbulence and pain, and even if its excesses are part of the origins of today's malaise, it was at its worst different from what we have today—the rhetoric of challenge without force or conviction, supported only by coercion and intimidation. And everywhere one picks up the stench of exhausted ideas that even adherents no longer believe in. My second, third, and fourth years at CSUS were marked by explosive tenure battles. The first battle, in 1964, broke out in the Education Division and involved a well-liked, innovative young faculty member who had a large student follow ing. In 1965, we had the first of two English department tenure battles. This one dealt with an eccentric but sweet old anarchist, who, because she had but an M.A. degree, taught only composi tion and freshman lit erature courses. She had a tendency, like many Of the goodhearted, to attract all sorts of campus strays, but she was adored by her stu- had a tendency, like HETERODOXY dents, and while she was wildly undisciplined in her grading and teaching methods, she had a profound and original understanding and an emotional reverence for literature, as well as a magic power to generate in her students a heartfelt love of reading and writing. Taking a leaf from the spontaneous student demonstrations that had formed in support of the education professor, I actively began to organize the students in demonstrations for this woman. And in order to increase the pressure on the tenured faculty and the administration, I established an alternative newspaper run by student activists, a paper called The Student that lasted until the end of the Vietnam War. The department decision to deny her tenure was overruled by the division. The next year, 1966,1 myself was, without explanation, denied tenure, despite the fact I had just published a book, written numerous articles, scholarly and otherwise, was active on key campus committees and had been awarded a Distinguished Professor Award, only one of four given to CSUS that year. This time, because of my close ties with student activists and also with the liberal and radical faculty, things exploded at all levels of the campus. And this time, the news of the battle, and of the student petitions and demonstrations, spilled over into the local newspapers and TV stations. An added irony occurred when I was selected in the spring of 1967 to be the Faculty Convocation speaker, the campus's highest honor and an event for which classes were dismissed. I called my speech "The Underground Man" and took as my texts Kafka's The Metamorphosis and Dostdevsky's Notes from the Underground. The student newspaper began its front-page review with this passage: "We are losing sight of individuals and beginning to gaze on labels; this is the inevitable result of bureaucratic impersonality and a view of the world which turns people into instruments and products instead of into rich and meaningful individuals. People will not be turned into instruments or products, only robots will; the rest will go underground." At the time I gave that speech, my target was the entrenched "old guard" conservative who were obsessed with the symbols of status and respectability instead of the substance of excellence. It seemed inconceivable men that this same speech would later seem a prophecy of an even more ominous future menace from my leftist allies, and that in one of the innumerable ironies that pervade the intervening years, it would become an even more telling indictment of them. Today, "going underground" has become for many students their only mode of survival in a brutal and dishonest PC world. At this time I had not yet learned to watch how people treat others, only how they treated me. I had not yet learned to realize that as people treat others, so will they treat you when you become the "Other" (to use a chic current formulation)—that is, the negativity to be overcome. It seems clear to me now, in retrospect, that my radical allies only seemedmom humane than the traditionalists I viewed as the opposition, because they were still powerless. And I see now that their vaunted "compassion" was only a means of seeking power—it contained the seeds of the postmodern belief that power.rules. all relations and in effect determines what is and is not moral. I should also have seen, but did not, that already in their intolerance and cruelty toward the old guard—whose offense, after all, was simply.-that they had different beliefs and believed what they said—they betrayed their real attitude toward difference, which is why the PC multicultural obsession with tolerance and respect for diversity is such a grotesque fraud and edifice of self deception. another life. I do not even know if I would recognize that young man. I do know this. Something more than a decade later, after I declared "war on the radicals" in a paid 2,000 word advertisement in the student paper, The Hornet (it had to be an ad because the paper would not accept it as an article), less than a dozen faculty members out of more than a thousand on campus would publicly acknowledge me or engage in conversation with me, so cowed by abusive radicalism had CSUS become. This "declaration of war" had been coming for a long time. But I had not seen it—not even lurking in the shadows. In 19701 would not have believed it could happen. With the exception of the death of my son, for whom I still grieve, nothing has matched my slow, agonizing but inexorable break with the left. At times during these years, as it became clear to me what was happening, I felt disemboweled, as if the moral center had been ripped out of me. I had bought so deeply into the Manichaean polarities of the left and had so internalized the perversity of its analyses (especially the obsessive oppressor-oppressed dichotomy), that for a long time I experienced the movement away from leftism I was powerless to stop as a fall—from idealism, from generosity and goodness—rather than as an ascent out of the cave of illusion where I had been a prisoner, deluded by unacknowledged ambition and resentment I grieved at my loss—of innocence, of faith and hope, of confidence and belonging. It would be nice to relate a Joycean epiphany that defined my falling away, but I experienced no such sudden burst of illumination. Instead, there was only an endless series of small discoveries made and repeatedly repressed, only with ever-increasing difficulty and each time with a greater sense of dissatisfaction—with myself, foremost, but also with the world around me. The more desperately I clung to my failing belief, the more I was compelled to attribute the failure to others and to increase my anger at them. It was a movement that wbuld lead me—as it has so many others involved with leftism—to what the theoretical love of humanity hides: misanthropy. Looking back, I can see countless small signs of the break that was to come—shock when in 1971, the radicalled Academic Senate voted to disband the College Honors Program as "elitist"; horror that it would terminate the publication and sale of faculty evaluations by the Associated Students. But there were large signs as well that illusions were yielding to a poisonous reality. For example, in 1968, when I was faculty advisor on the Visiting Speakers Bureau, a largely student-run affair, I remember thinking it would be a good idea to bring a feminist speaker to campus. (It was a year or two before the explosion of feminism in the university). I believe there were nine people in the audience. Here things also took an ironic turn. A couple of years later, in 1970, the first feminist consciousness-raising encounter group was held in the College Honors Center. What transpired, far from being a dialogue, was a hate-fest. Soon men were compelled to roll over and expose their underbelly, although instead of winning for them forbearance, as it does in the animal kingdom, this act of submission brought only the requirement for more, and more dramatic, self abasement. Sometime later that year, there was an explosion in the Educational Opportunity Program (EOP), a program geared to give financial aid to disadvantaged students, he tenure battles of the mid-Sixties effectively primarily but not exclusively minority. I had been on the destroyed the old guard at CSUS, and within committee charged with forming the program a year or two two years—certainly by 1969—the radicals before, and I was still active in the interview and screening and liberals, aided by an endless supply of new process. The newly formed Pan African Student Union young faculty allies, swept to power. Having (PASU) was demonstrating to get rid of the head of the by my own tenure battle become something of a cause EOP. He was Hispanic, and a good, caring, courageous, celebre, I found myself with greatly expanded influence and competent man if I ever met one. The issue: unresponand an enlarged arena of action on campus. siveness. And what was the nature of this unresponsiveIt would be tiresome to describe these years of power ness? He would not allow the interview process to be turned and influence. And while it might help define the place into a political litmus test; he thought the EOP was for the from which I began my journey of exodus from radicalism, disadvantaged, whether they were white, Hispanic, or all this seems so long ago—the actions of another man in black. I know the interviews were being used as racial and T PAGE 11 political screening sessions for the selection of the "right" (read "radical") minority students. I warned my Hispanic colleague, who already knew that a confrontation was brewing. But he refused to back down, not realizing how corrupted the academic environment had already become. A meeting in the Little Theatre on campus, which was jammed with 500 faculty members, students, and administrators—a meeting full of that supercharged en- VICTOR COMERCHERO, 1971 ergy so characteristic of the era that combined powerintoxication, angry self-justification and the desire for combat—turned into a kangaroo court. It was exactly as Dostoevsky described it in The Brothers Karamazov after the death of Father Zossima: Malice was unleashed and even good men were silent. I remember trying to make a statement in defense of my friend and colleague, but amidst the rhetoric, the angry shouts, the intimidating exclamations, the administrative pusillanimity, it was impossible. He was doomed. The next day the EOP Advisory Board fired him in a unanimous vote. After the pandemonium in the Little Theatre, I approached the leader of the Pan African Student Union— whom I knew, as I did many of the black campus leaders during the 60s—in order to explain my position. He was surrounded by other PASU members, and when I approached, he shouted, "Get out of my face! If I catch you in my face again, I'm going to kill you, motherfucker!" He had to be physically restrained and was hustled away, quite filled up with himself. The withdrawal from integration and the beginning of "cultural autonomy" (which in mis case meant excluding motivated, mature black and Hispanic men and women from programs like EOP in favor of young political radicals with poor academic prospects) had begun in earnest, much to my sorrow. The easy, open and trusting relationship between blacks and white radicals and liberals that existed in the early days of the civil rights movement had been replaced by a Black Power movement that assumed an aggressive, rejectionist posture. The ppliticization and balkanization of the campus in a radically new, illiberal, and destructive way had begun. Taking a cue from Lenin's perception of the defining power of language, radical orthodoxy renamed itself dissent and used mat name to suppress all real dissent as reaction. The silence that was to sweep over the campus in the early 80s and is still with us had begun. A fter my encounter with the leader of PASU, a Marxist revolutionary colleague in social work tried to console me. He liked and respected me, though in his eyes I was only a "radical liberal" and not a revolutionary. I think he was genuinely sorry to have seen me hurt and humiliated like that. I do not recall precisely what he said, PAGE 12 but I distinctly remember its effect, which was that in a revolution, injustice is inevitable, and mat I had to keep up or be swept aside. I would like to say that his attitude was unique, and, I am sure it was somewhat uncommon. But in the ensuing years, though many people on campus would be embarrassed to hear such views so nakedly expressed, it has become the ruling idea of the politically correct, the implicit assumption that legitimizes their calculated abuse of others. Drawn from Marxist dialectic, the roots of which are lost or were never known to most PC adherents, added to by other postmodern accretions like deconstruction, poststructuralism, and feminism, a campus PC worldview has grown up that legitimizes its excesses as part of the inevitable "dialectic." This confrontation in the Little Theatre, to be repeated in different guises over many issues in the next couple of years, is my first memory of the discovery, which was to grow, that to preserve my radical liberal credentials and status, I would have to surrender my beliefs to the "revolutionary tide," which even then was turning Orwellian. To preserve my power to influence opinion, I would have to surrender to the developing radical orthodoxy, thus making my imagined power a sham. Throughout this period, the "orthodoxy sniffers" and the "commitment checkers" were out in force, with their jokes, their jibes, their nosy corrections. I remember being asked in 1971 to give a speech attacking the U.S. incursion into Cambodia. It was a predictable attack on U.S. policy in Southeast Asia, but when I called the war a "mistake," the look of scorn from some in the audience was palpable, as was the exclamation, "He's just a fucking liberal!" A couple of days later, over dinner, a woman in the history department whom I was friendly with kindly explained to me how I had erred. You see, the U.S. was not "mistaken" in having intervened in Southeast Asia; it was a calculated, predictable act of imperialism. The anti-U.S. perspective, which I attacked in 1980 in a speech called "The Politics of Anti-Americanism," was just being born men. It is, of course, now a hallowed part of the ruling liberal ideology. Whether it was eliminating the draft, which I was against, or a host of minor issues, there was always a "politically correct" position, only that term had not yet been coined. It was nothing so heavy-handed as being told what to believe. That was unnecessary; one swiftly intuited the party line and swung behind it in language, thought, and deed. APRIL 1994 trators. The old, unjust double standard was being replaced by a new one that was even more outrageous. The cry of the newly franchised—"It's our turn now!"—rang triumphant throughout CSUS. The bullying and thuggery that had done in my Hispanic colleague during the early stages of the EOP became commonplace. Unable to keep up with all this "progress," I withdrew into my first hibernation in the mid-'70s. Nothing more clearly revealed the Marxist penetration of liberalism than the knee-jerk anti-anti-communism of this moment in our history, hi letters to the editor—by faculty who had known me in the trenches years before— I became overnight a "red-baiter," a "McCarthyite," a "reactionary." Overnight I became a nonperson. Faculty I had known for years as "comrades in arms" cut me dead or were embarrassed to meet my eye. Everything was in the body language, nothing in the actual utterance. When I was limited by the editors of The Hornet to he n I awakened, several years had one 250-word reply to a flurry of ad hominem attacks passed. The awakening was really by against me for my advertisement, I set up another alternachance; campus political life had be- tive student newspaper called Dialogue. For the next two come so oppressive, so nasty, that I years I attacked anything that moved—any student editoactually ceased to notice it. I went to my rial or faculty speech reported in The Hornetwas fair game, classes and went home. I had stopped reading The Hornet any of the absurdities that now marked campus political life and happened to pick up a copy quite casually one day in as a theatre of the absurd. I gave several speeches on 1980. The Soviets had just invaded Afghanistan, and the campus during the next two years on everything from "The leftists on campus had used this example of classic 19th- Crisis of Authority" and "The Decline of Confidence" to century imperialism not as an occasion for attacking the "The Politics of Anti-Americanism." I knew I could not win. I knew there was no way to Soviet Union, but as an occasion to put on a panel discusfundamentally alter the tenor of the discourse, no real way sion attacking U.S. imperialism. Now, I am very familiar with the liberal argument to get people to engage me in serious debate. So I set my that this is fair because after all we are Americans and sights quite low—to end the radical monologue, to frighten should be concerned with correcting our own imperfec- into decency the ideological thugs and bullies. My goal was tions. I could even give credence to this spirit of self- simply to silence them. And given this limited goal, I think criticism if, in the case of the left, it extended to one's own for a time I succeeded. Nothing on the ground, of course, has really changed, ideological affiliations. But it never does with them. On the contrary, any criticism of the left is viewed as a moral lapse of course. The ideological abuse in class goes on, but it is less blatant. The atmosphere did not sweeten, but it did not and an act of treason. Afghanistan was attacked; we were guilty. The grow more intimidating. Perhaps this is in part due to the efforts of anti-PC groups and individuals, but in the main illogic woke me up. Something in me snapped. During my withdrawal, I had continued to be alive to I think it is due, despite all their self-righteous posturing politics, as it were, subliminally. At some level of my and ideological bullying, to a growing crisis of confidence being, I had been keeping score—that is, comparing my on the part of the tenured leftists. For a long time, members of the left have been able evolving beliefs and secret predictions about what was happening with the evidence as it came pouring in. Whether to live by a double standard: judging American society by mis growing body of evidence caused or merely paralleled its failures and their own ideology solely by its rhetorical my withdrawal from the left is hard to say. I was certainly aspirations. But as the left has gained an increasing power devastated by Solzhenitsyn's The Gulag Archipelago. The, over the institutions that shape American life, its adherents unfolding events in Southeast Asia after the much-hoped- are no longer able to take refuge in the fiction of good for U.S. defeat there—the oppression of Hanoi in Saigon, intentions and noble ideals. They, too, have to be judged the desperation of the boat people, the Pol Pot genocide in by what they have wrought For a long time after I lost my radical faith, I tried to Cambodia—had vindicated the right and left me estranged from my former allies such as Jane Fonda and Tom Hayden find an analogy for what was happening all around me in academia. For a time, I settled on a comparison drawn from (who had made an appearance on the CSUS campus), now part of a silent left who thought condemnation of the the works of Turgenev and Chekhov, in that all around me Vietnamese would only give comfort to their enemies on I saw figures reminiscent of the well-meaning but superfluous Russian gentry, all of them ripe for annihilation by the domestic scene. The trial of the Gang of Four in China exposed the revolutionaries. here were other warning signs of a rupture that reality behind Mao Tse-tung, whom I had revered in the Today, I would still use a Russian analogy to underI ignored. But the first real fissure in my Sixties. While I and others in the professoriat had been stand academia, but I would place things in a different relation with the left—I did not consider it so applauding the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revo- time—say, the Soviet Union in the last years of the Brezhnev at the time, although some of my radical lution and repeating left-wing pieties that Mao had licked era, just before glasnost, when communism had exhausted colleagues did—occurred in 1972 over the is- famine in China, 10 million to 30 million people were itself and paralysis and corruption were widespread, but sue of affirmative action. I was against it, for, despite my starving to death, and enemies of the state had been chained the external forms held despite the rotting foundation. Oh, infatuation with Marxism and Marxism-Leninism, I did in solitary confinement for ten years simply for listening to the jokes that emerged-from the Soviet Union then—grisly not believe in collective guilt and therefore did not believe Mozart bits of gallows humor bubbling up from the depths of the in collective entitlement. In a long and withering attack Add to these the betrayal of the Cuban Revolution, long-suffering Russian soul. That spirit of futility—and the published in The Hornet, I excoriated my colleagues and the rise of crime and violence in our own society and the laughter-in-tears that accompanies it—permeates life in argued that the sins of the fathers being visited on the sons failure of so many domestic programs supported by the left. the American university today. might be God's way or even nature's way, but it was absurd It seemed to me that where the influence of the left was It is not simply that academia is drenched in lies, as to legislate it as social policy. greatest, the performance results were poorest—all these the Soviet Union was under Brezhnev. It is that the lies A war of words followed. I remember the response of facts made it harder and harder to engage in "those power- fertilize corruption and the venal seeking of power in a way one faculty member because it was so typical of the ful deflections" by means of which, Freud tells us, we cope that bespeaks impending collapse. inquisitorial spirit of the left in seeking to ferret out obscure with an intolerable reality. Lies, and the calculated refusal to acknowledge them, signs of racism and sexism. (Eurocentrism, patriarchy, and But it was the panel discussion of U.S. imperialism whether by faculty or administrators, so pervades campus other more sublime variations on these sins would not staged on my campus in 1980 that really brought home to life that we are suffering from an intellectual disorientation emerge until later on.) My colleague objected to my use of me the awareness that liberals were no longer defining that threatens the nation. Our colleges and universities are the term "white heat" in describing my anger; he called it liberalism, and had, in fact, lost control of their psyche and now prisoners of a perverse and solipsistic ideology, so a racist phrase. If so, I scornfully suggested, then "red hot" were allowing liberalism to be defined by radicals. Or to much driven by partisan political agendas that criticism must slur American Indians. I then proceeded to enlighten put it another way, in so many areas Marxist perspectives itself, by which we mean (in Matthew Arnold's phrase) the him on how these metaphors referred to the changed color had so invaded the liberal climate of opinion that radicals disinterested attempt to see things as they really are, is now of metal under high temperature. no longer needed to be radical; they could now posture as lame or captive. The very institutions established to ensure It got ugly, and I was seriously tainted by the contro- liberals and thus keep their respectability without surren- disinterested inquiry and the free play of the mind have versy, although at the time I saw it only as an isolated battle dering any of their programmatic goals. Since power now been fatally infected with politics and orthodoxy. That we lost. In retrospect, however, I see that this was the begin- resided with the radicals reborn as liberals, the old liberals do not acknowledge the virulence of the pathogen is proof ning of a long retreat on my part, marked by skirmishes were forced to follow them abjectly or find themselves of the perniciousness of the disease. over minority fiefdoms, and the growing bitterness of pejoratively redefined as reactionaries. curricular politics. After one of my letters scathingly atI tried to write about this. When my essay was not VICTOR COMERCHERO is a professor of English at tacking one of the feminist rhetorical excesses that soon accepted by the school paper, I had it printed as a paid California State University at Sacramento. became part of daily campus life, a group of eight or ten advertisement In it I said nothing very extreme. Neverthewomen, dressed as a coven of witches, gathered in front of less, I said enough. I attacked communism and the notionone of my classes shouting insults. This action, though fashionable in the early '80s—of the moral equivalence of witnessed by many, went officially unnoticed by adminis- the U.S. and the Soviet Union. T W HETERODOXY PAGE 13 The Stupid Club by STUART GOLDMAN fter Kurt Cobain, lead singer of the rock group Nirvana, was found dead in Seattle f at the age of 27, an apparent suicide victim from a shotgun blast to the head, his mother, Wendy O’Connor, told the Associated Press: "Now he's gone and joined that Stupid Club." She was referring, of course, to the long list of entertainers who have died by their own hand: Jim Morrison, Jimi Hendrix, Elvis Presley, Jams Joplin, Marilyn Monroe, and so on. friends into "spokesmen for a generation." And there's the rub. When Cobain chose to check out last week, he was dead meat for the hype machine—the media jackasses who perpetuate the mythology that rock music is dangerous and subversive; that it's anything other than product. If Kurt Cobain's death proved anything, it was that the process by which the number of people enrolled in The Stupid Club skyrockets dramatically when an icon dies. The following list, admittedly a partial one, lays out some of the initiation rites for The O'Connor's comment was a bitter one. Suicide makes Stupid Club in the period right after Cobain's suicide: people bitter. It also makes them nervous. As novelist Joyce Carol Oates put it, "The suicide does not play the game, does STUPID NIRVANA ACCOLADES FROM ASnot observe the rules. He leaves the party too soon, and SORTED ROCK CRITICS In Nirvana, two million listeners have found a leaves the other guests painfully uncomfortable." Clearly, lots of people were very uncomfortable about voice for their doubts and fears. Nirvana doesn't offer Cobain's exit. It is also true, however, that many used the any answers; these days it's an achievement just to suicide as a soapbox for flatulent statements about the nature pose the questions. If they have any message for the of rock and roll, of generational angst, and of the meaning of world, it's simply this: think for yourself. No wonder life. The press had a field day with Cobain. The Los Angeles the music industry thinks they're subversive. —Suzi Times ran lengthy pieces the entire week of his death. They Black, Nirvana (Omnibus Press). This one is interesting because it contains many of the even put his wife, Courtney Love (sort of a garage-band version of Madonna), on the cover of the Sunday Calendar major cliches about rock music and life. That it poses no section. The Los Angeles Weekly and. Newsweek plastered answers, only questions. (What questions?) And mat it is the rock star on their covers. The Newsweek piece asked, subversive. Every bad boy rock group looking for a quick PR fix has latched onto these calling cards. The notion that "Why Do People Kill Themselves?" After the orgy of press attention finally abated, it Nirvana or, for that matter, any other group that sells ten became clear that membership in the Stupid Club was not million records is subversive is, of course, absurd. restricted to the exclusive group that Cobain's mother had STUPID ADJECTIVES COMMONLY USED TO DEoriginally referred to. Of course, one expects a certain amount of stupidity to SCRIBE NIRVANA'S MUSIC Bleak, uncompromising, eerie, challenging, thrilling, come from people like rock critics, who are not necessarily an intelligent life form. However, the sheer amount of menacing, terrifying, anguished, shocking... Oh yeah, let's gibberish—the metaphor-mongering and homemade exis- not forget angst (even though it's not an adjective), a term tential wails—that arose in the wake of Cobain's death cut virtually every rock stooge writing about Nirvana manages across all age groups and cultural boundaries. It included to get into their copy. Nirvana fans and foes alike, record company executives, psychologists, sociologists, suicide counselors, disc jock- STUPID STATEMENTS BY AGING L.A. TIMES ROCK eys and a bunch of people with word processors who call CRITIC ROBERT HILBURN themselves journalists. Cobain was a deeply sensitive man blessed with a Just for the record, those who may detect a certain songwriting grace that has been compared to Bob Dylan degree of, ah, cynicism in the following commentary might and John Lennon—in. "Kurt Cobain, Poet for the Dysfuncget the notion that I don't like Nirvana. This isn't so. Prior tional Age." to writing this piece, I did a mini-Nirvana marathon of sorter As for comparing Cobain with Dylan and Lennon, the listened to all their CDs and read everything I could get my fact is that all three of these guys were capable of writing hands on about them. What can I say? They're OK, you some pretty awful lyrics, but the other two had flashes of know? Actually, they're pretty good. But "good," applied brilliance while Cobain did hot. (See Stupid Cobain Lyrics to rock groups, is a pretty relative term. Part of what Nirvana below.) Also, Hilbum fails to mention that it was he himself was all about (and Kurt Cobain himself copped to it) was who compared Cobain to Lerinori and Dylan, hot some attitude rather than music—the right attitude and the right abstract authority he is citing. There is no law against selflook at the right time. This is what allowed them to sell ten plagiarism, but a writer ought to be wary of alluding to his million CDs when other groups own unattributed opinion as if it is received truth. that are just as "good" did not Cobain felt as confused and troubled as any of the Their luck—random millions of young people who had bought the albums he enough to be scary, random made. enough, in fact, Maybe. to make a person He might be dismissed as a guy who was more lucky feel a little , than talented, more indulgent than tormented. But he was suicidal— so much more... made' Cobain No comment. and his MORE STUPID JOURNALIST ANECDOTES According to an observer, the journalists on the scene of the Cobain suicide immediately divided themselves into two camps. The checkbook journalists, led by representatives of A Current Affair, offered $1,500 (a pittance by tabloid standards) for an exclusive to the electrician who found Cobain's body—and immediately got whatever interviews there were to be had. The rest of the press, including representatives from Rolling Stone, Spin and numerous local papers, were relegated to grabbing any kid wearing a flannel shirt and ripped jeans and grilling him for opinions on the fallen leader of his generation. Unfortunately, many of these fans were either too drugged out (or, it must be said, in keeping with the theme of this piece, too stupid) to provide very good interview material. SOME FAIRLY STUPID REACTIONS TO COBAIN'S SUICIDE BY NIRVANA FANS I thought the way he went out was cool. —Tracey Wilsher / think it's a publicity stunt. —Jeff Pierce Kurt Cobain was God. —Mickey Holzman STUPID FAN LETTERS WRITTEN TO NEWSPAPERS What is it about being 27 years old, extremely talented and having no reason to live? Scientists must have an explanation. How can somebody so uniquely talented think life is not worth living?—Karen Benton The idea of turning to scientists slays me. Hear me out, all you Nirvana fans who are buried in confusion and grief and hear me out all you talented people who don't think you can go on because your own passion and trueness are in jeopardy. The biggest creative buzz of your life comes from saving yourself and filling up with gas for the next run. —Pamela Lawson Serious New Age damage here. Kurt's songs were vicarious primal scream therapy. When you heard Cobain's pure-id, you could feel his pain, which was also your pain...and the cathartic effect was undeniable. —Tyler Caraway Vicarious primal scream therapy? I thought Cobain was a metaphor for the 90s, not the 70s. STUPID (THOUGH POSSIBLY ACCURATE) STATEMENTS BY COBAIN'S WIFE, COURTNEY LOVE, TO CROWD AT CANDLELIGHT VIGIL Oh, he's such an asshole. I want you all to chant asshole. (Note: the crowd eagerly complied.) STUPID POLICE REPORT FILED BY COBAIN'S MOTHER Several days prior to the discovery of his body, Cobain': mother had filed a missing persons report with me Seattle police department. The report described Cobain as ''not dangerous, armed with a shotgun, and may be suicidal." —Los Angeles Times. PAGE 14 STUPIDITY EXHIBITED BY POLICE INVESTIGATORS Three weeks prior to his death, police had been called to Cobain's household by his wife, Courtney Love, who said her husband was locked in a room with his guns and threatening to kill himself. Police confiscated four guns, 25 rounds of ammo, and an undisclosed substance. Cobain, however, was allowed to keep possession of his shotgun. ~L.A. Weekly APRIL 1994 on the fruit, tender reds and blues...From "In Bloom" on Nevermind. STUPID PC LINER NOTES WRITTEN BY KURT UNFORTUNATE BIT OF PR ABOUT THE FUTURE COBAIN OF NIRVANA RELEASED SHORTLY BEFORE If any of you in any way hate homosexuals, people of a COBAIN'S DEATH different color, or women, please do us one favor. LEAVE The beauty of Nirvana is that no one—least of all the US THE FUCK ALONE! band themselves—knows what will happen next. STUPID ATTEMPTS TO WAX POETIC BY WRITERS PORTION OF STUPID SUICIDE NOTE FOUND NEXT COVERING COBAIN'S SUICIDE TO COBAIN'S BODY Friday Night April 8...the evening of the day that Kurt I thank all of you from the pit of my burning nauseous Cobain's body was found...the very first night of the rest of stomach for your letters and concern during the last years. our lives. —Gina Arnold They inhabit a strange pantheon of the suicidal, prowled STUPID CROWD ANTICS AT CANDLELIGHT VIGIL by brilliant troubled ghosts. Some came to grief in the nightfall of acclaimed careers, some in the withering highFOR COBAIN And then, a beautiful thing happened—some 5,000 noon glare of public adulation. There are Hemingway and people, mostly between the ages of 18 and 21, dressed in Plath, Monroe and Garland, Presley, Morrison, Hendrix requisite plaid flannel over Nirvana T-shirts and carrying andJoplin.. .and now there is Kurt Cobain. —David Gelman, flowers and candles, broke ranks. Instead of crowding Newsweek These children, with their pagan hearts, had somehow round the flag pavilion as they had been told to do, they ran over to the fountain where the music was playing louder and spontaneously captured the very essence of Kurt's spirit: the suddenly...they jumped in the water, danced and moshed big fuck you to life itself that had clearly raged through his and flung one another around until city officials turned the very being. And then shirtless boys and wet haired girls, fountain off. But the crowd refused to budge. Instead they oblivious to the weather, held their candles aloft and chanted, sang Lithium and Polly and Rape Me and Milk It They Asshole, asshole, asshole. You could hear their gleeful spelled out words like Kurt and fuck with candle wax on voices all the way up on the Space Needle. They sounded like a prayer. —Gina Arnold their bodies. —Gina Arnold reporting from Seattle ROCK CRITIC AS MEDICAL EXAMINER Though his condition has not been diagnosed, he had begun to show signs of narcolepsy, an incomprehensible illness which strikes its victims asleep as they stand. Working for a few weeks as a hotel janitor, Cobain spent more hours asleep in the unoccupied rooms than he did in the sweeping and cleaning that was supposed to be his vocation. —Suzi Black Maybe he just liked to sleep on the job? ,; suicide found only one difference: a loaded gun in the house. —Jeanne Gordon, Newsweek GLOOMY SEATTLE WEATHER AS METAPHOR FOR DEATH Ominously dark rain clouds were lowering themselves over the far off Olympic Peninsula, an area often noted for having the highest suicide rate in the United States. —Gina Arnold. A steady drizzle fell from chilly grey skies. —John Balzar, Los Angeles Times Lighten up, it's always raining in Seattle. STUPID STATEMENTS FROM SYCOPHANTS AT COBAIN WAKE You guys are our family. Being here tonight is the best possible way for celebrating Kurt's life and his true spirit. — STUPID STATEMENTS FROM KURT COBAIN We were afraid to play pop music because we were Jonathan Poneman of SubPop, Cobain's first label. afraid people couldn't accept it. If they could, you would have been playing "My Blue STUPID ATTEMPTS AT SOCIOLOGICAL EXPLANATION OF THE POPULARITY OF NIRVANA Heaven," etc.? Cobain put to music not simply the anti-establishment We break things all the time. But that's just us compenrage of the 90s generation, many of them products of broken sating for the frustration of being on the road. homes who were denied the promise of a better life and who Charles Kuralt didn't. People just don't do things very often anymore. I'm like found themselves questioning the meaning of life itself... kind of disturbed by it. Nirvana, with their stringy hair, plaid work shirts and torn Say WHAT! jeans, appealed to a mass of young fans who were tired of false idols like Madonna and Michael Jackson. DESCRIPTION OF A STUPID NIRVANA PERFORMANCE STUPID RHETORIC BY NIRVANA PEDDLERS Nirvana ended a devastating performance as Cobain I kind of feel it's in bad taste to encourage or glamorize leaped into the crowd, Novoselic threw his bass at Grohl the fact that someone shot themselves.—Virgin Megastore and then Cobain returned to the stage and leaped into the floor manager Jon Nelson, after refusing to play Nirvana middle of Grohl's drumkit—Chris Charlesworth records over the store's sound system following Cobain's Yawn. death. But Virgin did stock up on Nirvana CDs to meet the expected rush following the suicide. "We ordered as many copies as we could," Nelson admitted. "Hey, that's business." LITTLE KNOWN FACT ABOUT NIRVANA The group originally called themselves Fecal Matter. POSSIBLE CONTROVERSY REGARDING CAUSE OF SUICIDE No one dies of depression. If snot a tenable entry on the death certificate. —Dr. Edwin Shneidman, Emeritus Professor of Thanatology at UCLA Clinically depressed people are at a 50% greater risk. Unfortunately, doctors can't agree on whether suicidal depression itself is a state of mind or a result of chemical deficiency. —David Gelman, Newsweek. PEOPLE SEEKING THE BOTTOM LINE ' All we really know about the subject is that we really don't know. —-Dr; Irving Zane, Suicide Prevention Hotline So don't do it! —Kurt Loder, Rolling Stone writertumed-MTV host A BONE THROWN TO THE ANTI-GUN FOLKS A study comparing adolescent suicide victims who had no apparent mental disorders with kids who didn't commit STUPID RESPONSE BY CLINTON DURING HIS TOWN HALL MEETING TO 17-YEAR-OLD'S QUESTION OF HOW HER GENERATION CAN ESCAPE EMPTINESS EXEMPLIFIED BY COBAIN SUICIDE If you can keep your eye on the future, then suicide doesn't become an option, because you know there can always be a better tomorrow. AMUSING BUT NONETHELESS STUPID INTERNET POSTINGS FOLLOWING COBAIN SUICIDE Topic $997 Kurt Cobain is Dead April 10, 19:24 Internet alt. music, nirvana <looloo> Did you ever see them live? They suck! <blue> they don't suck <looloo> and they can't write for shit <blue> neither can you <looloo> Maybe not but I don't go parading around on mtv do I? <blue> how do I know? maybe you do <Orkmork> did you know the cops came to his house 3 weeks ago to try to stop him from killing himself <blue> You're not serious? <Orkmork> yep <Bristol> does anybody have any idea where they'll bury him? <kcobain> this hole in my head is really hurting <chowder> he created something no one else did or could have <hecubus> he had a lot of beard stubble and was a greaseball <cyan> he's a guy that died <looloo> I still think axl is better <chowder> you're an idiot! <otis> mtv is going to show Nirvana unplugged every day for the next 6 months <looloo> yucko <chowder> his music is valuable <shiemp> he's a famous guy who died <otis> he had bad hair <rio> Kurt Cobain is really dead? <chowder> Sadly it is true <cyan2> NIRVANA IS OVER!! <shiemp> cool REFRESHING COMMENT BY A COBAIN PEER PROVING THAT NOT EVERYONE IN GENERATION X ASPIRES TO MEMBERSHIP IN THE STUPID CLUB Being 24 years old, I am tired of Cobain being held up as a spokesman for my generation. I am embarrassed to be coupled with a selfish individual who could take his own life, leaving behind his wife and his child. It is time for this generation to reintroduce the concepts of virtue, family commitment and life, and end this selfish soulsearching that has been attributed to us.—Jeff LePere. Amen. STUART GOLDMAN is a former music critic for the Los Angeles Times and music editor of the L.A. Weekly. HETERODOXY PAGE 15 Law Firm Head Faces Ouster; Associate Charges Sex Harassment O by JUDITH SCHUMANN WEIZNER liver "Bud" Kilkenny, one of the founding partners of Kilkenny and Katz, has been removed from his firm's letterhead and restricted to writing briefs pending final disposition of a complaint brought before the State Office of Gender Affairs following charges of sexual harassment made by Heather Harris, a thirtytwo-year-old associate at the firm. Harris alleges that Kilkenny's fifteen-year-old son, Oliver "Buddy" Kilkenny Jr., made offensive remarks about her while making a telephone call from his father's office several months ago. The alleged incident occurred when young Kilkenny, a freshman at Dolley Madison High School who has no sister, was permitted to skip classes and accompany his father to work on "Take Your Daughter to Work Day" on the condition that he write a report on activities at the firm from a female point of view. His notes for this report have been cited as corroborating Harris's charges. Young Kilkenny began the day by observing his father in court. After lunch, in a phone conversation with a friend who was at home suffering from an attack of the flu, Buddy was overheard by Harris to say, "She's got Rolls Royce headlights on a Volkswagon chassis." Although Buddy had thought he was alone in his father's office, Harris had entered the room to place a brief on the senior Kilkenny's desk and had thus heard the automotivereference. As she is the only woman in the firm, she concluded that the remark referred to her and approached the firm's harassment coordinator to lodge a complaint. No stranger to sexual harassment, Heather Harris has creatively weathered significant challenges to her sex. Determined to make the high school football team despite her relatively small stature, and denied the right to try out for the team because of her gender, she signed up for scrimmage as "Harry" Harris. "Harry" was chosen for the team on the basis of "his" speed and uncanny ability to squeeze into and out of extremely tight spots. When "Harry's" true nature was discovered she was sidelined, but she appealed the coach's decision and won the right to participate fully after threatening a discrimination suit that would have cost the high school funding for its after-school abortion clinic. After breaking both shoulders during her first varsity game, Harris quit the team and began to take her schoolwork more seriously. Accepted by Stimpson-MacKinnon College for Womyn, she received excellent marks. By the time she graduated Harris had far exceeded the number of discrimination and rape complaints applicants must file to be considered for acceptance by the college's law school. Once in law school, Harris earned perfect grades, making law review at the end of her first semester. Although she had interned during summer vacations only in women's law firms, upon graduation she determined to plunge into the wider world and, turning down a chance to clerk for Superior Court Judge Penelope Loveless, went to work at Kilkenny and Katz. She had been there only two months when she was OLIVER "BUDDY" KILKENNY, JR. written by a young female attorney, had received the grade of C-plus. Buddy's teacher had noted that she gave him this mediocre mark because, while she thought the diary was a well-written, accurate portrayal of a typical day in the life of a female attorney, she also felt that his descriptions of this attorney's repeated humiliations at the hands of male colleagues and of her attempted rape by a judge in chambers did not convey a sufficient sense of victimization. The state *s investigator concluded that although the report showed that Buddy had only a limited understanding of the problems faced by women in today's society, there were insufficient grounds for stripping his father of his right to practice law. Charges against the elder Kilkenny were dropped. Harris then appealed to the Federal Office of Gender Affairs, which has broader powers than the State Office of Civil Rights. This agency's investigation into Buddy's background revealed that three of his friends had been in trouble at school for low-level sexual harassment on several occasions. This evidence of association with persons known to be insensitive provided a Gender Affairs investigator with the necessary grounds for a warrant to search Buddy's bedroom for the notes he had made for his report. The notes, in the form of a drawing made in the courtroom on the morning in question, show a roomful of men cowering before a stylishly dressed, shapely attorney in high heels who is holding a chair and a whip as if training a lion. The judge sits on his haunches atop a barrel licking the back of his right hand while the court stenographer is poking at the bailiff with a nail file. An expert on women's issues subpoenaed by the Office of Gender Affairs for the trial testified that the drawing revealed a general willingness to ridicule women, a lack of respect for the professional accomplishments of women, and a personality prone to rape. Under the new federal guidelines for Gender Respect, the elder Kilkenny can be held responsible for his son's attitudes since Buddy is under 16. And, since the incident occurred in the father's law office, Kilkenny senior is liable for dismissal just as if he had committed the harassment. Stopped by reporters this morning as she entered her office, Harris was asked whether she had considered the impact Kilkenny's dismissal mighthaveonherfuture at the firm. "I don't see a problem here," she said. "Any attempt at retaliation would be pretty obvious, and when it comes time forme to be considered for a partnership, the Reprisal Provision of the Glass Ceiling Act will prevent any untoward actions on their part. Actually, I think this will prove to have been an excellent career move." victimized by young Kilkenny. Testifying before investigators for the State Office of Civil Rights, he swore that the remark had nothing at all to do with Harris or any other woman, but that he and his friend had been discussing a customized car belonging to a mutual friend. The teenager also indicated that if Harris had knocked before entering the room, she wouldn't have overheard anything. He noted that on several occasions that day he had seen men leave the area of the water cooler when Harris approached and suggested that perhaps she had deliberately entered the office without knocking so as to avoid a further blow to her ego. This remark was ordered stricken from the record when Harris burst into tears. In an effort to discover the young man's general Ms.Weizner's last piece appeared in the March issue of attitude toward women, the State Office of Civil Rights Heterodoxy. subpoenaed Buddy's "Take Your Daughter to Work Day" report. The report, in the form of a diary purportedly