Q. As we publish our third issue, it might be useful to ask
how the first two were received.
A. The response has been for the most part positive -
enthusiastic, in fact. We've received a lot of favorable
comments, with some dissensions. Our last issue produced
the strongest reactions, both pro and con.
Q. What have readers liked?
A. Our censorship update, which often contains material
that received little or no mainstream press coverage, and
our reports on the NEA. Much of the NEA-related information
that appears in these pages has been covered sketchily or
not at all by the Boston press.
Q. What aspects haven't they liked?
A. There were scattered complaints that the last issue was
"too negative." One reader groused that our front-page
piece on the NEA "leaves you with nothing to believe in."
Q. Didn't we intend to leave people clinically
depressed?
A. Not quite. In the overlapping areas of censorship and
public funding, there's no avoiding some authentically
disturbing situations. We last went to press before the
104th Congress went into session, which meant there weren't
as yet any relevant bills to fight or support. We also
remained in the dark regarding committee assignments. Now
that the Gingrich Congress has indeed hit the fan, there are
things we can do. Some people will no doubt complain that
we're portraying the political situation as too overwhelming
to deal with meaningfully. To those people we can only say,
You're right, it is overwhelming. Let's grapple
with it anyway.
Q. What can be done?
A. The NEA and the NEH may be beyond redemption, but people
who still support these agencies should be making sure, now
more than ever, that their voices are heard by members of
Congress. Rep. Joseph Kennedy of Massachusetts, whose
Congressional district is filled with arts and educational
institutions that benefit from federal funding, has been
startlingly weak on cultural issues, even echoing some of
Newt Gingrich's sentiments concerning public television.
Massachusetts residents should also be aware that while
Senators Ted Kennedy and John Kerry can both be counted on
to support the arts and humanities, both have a less than
perfect record on free speech issues. Kerry's support of
Senator Exon's bill to censor the Internet is especially
disturbing. Some appalling legislation is looming on the
horizon, including a Constitutional amendment against flag
desecration. And since the Oklahoma bombing, censorship is
being proposed as an anti-terrorism measure by voices across
the political spectrum. It is essential that artists and
defenders of civil liberties get used to expressing their
opinions to people in government. Congressional offices can
be reached through the Congressional Switchboard, 202/224-3121. Mail can be directed to members of the House of
Representatives, Washington, DC 20515, or to members of the
United States Senate, Washington, DC 20510. Letters or
brief messages to President Clinton can be emailed to
president@whitehouse.gov or sent to the White House, 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington, DC 20500. The White House
citizens' comment line is 202/456-1111. As for the NEA, it
is important that Jane Alexander hear from those of us who
do not find blacklisting, acquiescence to restrictions,
abandonment of artists, and chilling oversight measures
acceptable means of defending the agency against right-wing
attacks. The NEA Chair-man's office can be reached by mail
at the National Endowment for the Arts, Nancy Hanks Center,
1100 Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington, DC 20506; by FAX at
202/682-5630; or by phone at 202/682-5414.
Q. Since the press isn't doing its job, how can people stay
informed?
A. Through publications like Dissent, The
Nation, High Performance, the New Art
Examiner, and Art in America. Watch for C.
Carr's pieces in the Village Voice. Don't trust
newspapers like the Boston Globe or the Boston
Phoenix to tell you what you need to know, and don't
waste your time watching news on tv. If you own a computer,
subscribe to ArtsWire (email artswire@tmn.com). Join
organizations that defend the arts and free speech. We
especially recommend the American Library Association
(312/944-6780), the National Coalition Against Censorship
(212/807-6222), and the National Campaign for Freedom of
Expression (206/340-9301). A detailed list of these and
other worthwhile groups will appear in our next issue. If
you live in the Boston area, join the BCFE. Come to one of
our monthly meetings on Congress Street. Visit the BCFE
home page now under construction on the World Wide Web at
http://world.std.com/~kip/bcfe.html or call Jim D'Entremont
at 617/497-7193 for more information. We are now discussing
a guerilla theater action in July, an event series in the
fall, and our 1995 Banned Book Vigil scheduled for October 1
and 2 at the Boston Center for the Arts. Having just lost
one of our most dedicated members, who cheerfully did the
work of several people, we need all the help we can get.
Newt World
In Czech satirist Karel Capek's 1937 novel War with the
Newts, a new species of large, aggressive, clever,
motormouthed, crass, abrasive, insatiable and rapidly
multiplying salamander conquers the world. As the Gingrich
era entered its second hundred days, Capek's utopian
fantasy, whose targets are unfettered capitalist greed and
the rise of fascism, began to have a prophetic ring.
For the conservative Republicans who dominate both houses,
the 104th Congress is a dream come true -- or, in the case of
those who owe their 1994 electoral triumph to the theocratic
right, an answered prayer. "This is a chance for us to
rewrite and re-route government. This is a precious
opportunity," Rep. John Kasich, the Ohio Republican who
heads the House Budget Committee told the Wall Street
Journal in January. The rewriting and rerouting are
objectives of the Contract with America, the legislative
agenda House Speaker Gingrich described in the February 2
New York Times as "a program to renew American
civilization and to build a true civil society" and to
replace the "liberal welfare state" with "some-thing much
stronger... a conservative opportunity society."
This apparently means a society where opportunity is
restricted to the already privileged. "This is the New Deal
and the Great Society in reverse," wrote Jackie Calmes in
the January 27 Wall Street Journal. "Rep. Kasich
and his budget allies are considering killing, consolidating
or privatizing numerous federal offices, among them the
departments of Energy, Education, Transportation, Commerce,
Human Services, and Housing. They want to turn over Welfare
to the states and remake Medicare."
Toward these ends, and in the name of fiscal responsibility,
Republicans are seeking to eradicate entirely the $1.3
billion budget of the Low Income Assistance program, which
has been helping thousands of indigent citizens pay their
utility bills; to eliminate summer jobs for more than 1.2
million low-income youth; to cut Job Corps programs to the
bone; to make a nationwide shambles of public housing
through a $7 billion rescission; to gut public education; to
cancel some programs offering student aid to higher
education and abridge the rest; to scale back or drop all
programs offering aid to the homeless; to eviscerate child-care assistance for working mothers while forcing more
mothers to find one or more jobs; to cut $3 billion out of
the food stamps program over the next five years; to defund
school lunch programs while relaxing nutritional standards;
to block all efforts at health care reform; to lower
standards both for product safety and for product liability;
to defang the Environmental Protection Agency as well as the
Food and Drug Administration; to ease restrictions on
industrial polluters; to dilute protections for endangered
species while opening more land for exploitation; and, in
short, to end or curtail whatever fails to help the wealthy
obtain more money.
In late February, Congressional subcommittees hacked away
$17.5 billion, $14.9 billion of which was drawn from
programs that fall under Education, Labor, Health and Human
Services, HUD, and Veterans' Affairs. The Center on Budget
and Policy Priorities, a private research firm in
Washington, notes that while discretionary programs for the
poor make up only 12% of the Federal Government's
discretionary spending, they constitute 63% of the cuts
proposed. Most of these cuts made it into Rep. Kasich's
final budget -- which, despite pieties about belt-tightening
toward a balanced budget by 2002, actually
increases spending for defense. While some
elements are likely to be restored by the Senate, the damage
will still be profound.
This comes at a time when the Census Bureau reports that
while aggregate economic growth is expanding, the income of
the average American household is declining steadily, having
dropped 7% since 1989. Per capita income has
actually had a slight statistical increase overall, but that
includes a disproportionate rise in benefits to the rich.
In 1993, the number of Americans below the poverty line
increased by more than a million. According to the New
York Times, a U.S. Census report released in October
1994 "showed record levels of inequality, with the top fifth
of American households earning 48.2% of the nation's income,
while the bottom fifth earned just 3.6%."
Gingrich and his legislative clones are seeking to widen the
gulf between rich and poor even further. If the Newts go on
unchecked, the United States could have, by 2002, the best-balanced budget in hell.
Books
Required Reading in the Aftermath of the Oklahoma Bombing:
The Politics of Righteousness: Idaho Christian
Patriotism by James A. Aho. University of Washington
Press, 1990. $24.95. An alarming look at the growing far-
right "Christian patriot" movement.
Religion and the Racist Right: The Origins of the
Christian Identity Movement by Michael Barkun.
University of North Carolina Press, 1994. $39.95, $15.95
paper. A scholarly historical perspective on the religious
underpinnings of the white supremacist phenomenon.
Armed and Dangerous: The Rise of the Survivalist
Right by James Coates. Noonday Press, 1987. $8.95
paper. This frightening book is timelier now than when it
was new.
Bitter Harvest: Gordon Kahl and the Posse Comitatus;
Murder in the Heartland by James Corcoran. Viking,
1990. $18.95. An account of the 1983 showdown between
Federal authorities and right-wing tax protester Gordon
Kahl.
The Silent Brotherhood: Inside America's Racist
Underground. by Kevin Flynn and Gary Gerhardt. The Free
Press, 1989. $22.95. An exploration of the secretive
violent extremist group known as The Order.
Naming the Antichrist: The History of an American
Myth by Robert Fuller. Oxford University Press, 1995.
$25. As the millenium approaches, a look at apocalyptic
myths and their impact on American culture.
Warrior Dreams: Violence and Manhood in Post-Vietnam
America by James William Gibson. Hill and Wang, 1994.
$12 paper. A disturbing investigation of the paramilitary
subculture.
Blood in the Face: The Ku Klux Klan, Aryan Nations, Nazi
Skinheads, and the Rise of a New White Culture by James
Ridgeway. Thunder's Mouth Press, 1991. $18.95 paper. A
field guide to American fascist groups.
Required Reading, Period:
The Way We Never Were: American Families and the
Nostalgia Trip by Stephanie Coontz. BasicBooks, 1992.
$14 paper. The Ozzie and Harriet myth definitively
deflated.
The New Victorians: A Young Woman's Challenge to the Old
Feminist Order by Rene Denfeld. Warner Books, 1995.
$21.95. A welcome antidote to Catharine MacKinnon.
Speaking of Race, Speaking of Sex: Hate Speech, Civil
Rights, and Civil Liberties by Henry Louis Gates, Jr.,
Anthony P. Griffin, Donald E. Lively, Robert C. Post,
William B. Rubinstein, and Nadine Strossen. New York
University Press, 1994. $26.95. First-rate essays opposing
promotion of equality through abridgement of speech.
Fighting Words: Individuals, Communities, and Liberties
of Speech by Kent Greenawalt. Princeton University
Press, 1995. $24.95. A brief but well-delineated look at
free speech controversies, including a sharp analysis of the
differences between U.S. and Canadian approaches to those
issues.
Whose Art Is It? by Jane Kramer. Duke University
Press, 1994. $10.95 paper. An important New
Yorker essay on public art, now in book form.
Victims of Memory by Mark Pendergrast. Upper
Access Books, 1995. $24.95 paper. A comprehensive look at
the witch hunts spawned by the pop-psych "recovered memory"
cult.
Defending Pornography: Free Speech, Sex, and the Fight
for Women's Rights by Nadine Strossen. Scribner, 1995.
$22. The president of the ACLU presents forceful arguments
against the banning of sexually explicit forms of
expression.
You Can't Stay Neutral on a Moving Train by Howard
Zinn. Beacon Press, 1994. $22. This memoir by a dedicated
activist, historian, and teacher is a heartening reminder
that civilized, compassionate and truthful people still
exist.
Books We Urge You to Lob at the Wall,
but Only After You've Read Them.
Pat Robertson: The Authorized Biography by John B.
Donovan. Macmillan, 1988. $14.95. The horror! The
horror!
The De-Moralization of Society: From Victorian Virtues
to Modern Values by Gertrude Himmelfarb. Alfred A.
Knopf, 1995. $24. This distortion of history by an
imperious reactionary has been highly recommended by Newt
Gingrich.
A Nation without a Conscience by Tim and Beverly
LaHaye. Tyndale House, 1994. $16.99. A book without
conscious thought by the former head of the Moral Majority
and his spouse, the founder and president of Concerned Women
for America.
The Things That Matter Most by Cal Thomas.
Zondervan, 1994. $22, $11 paper. If the priorities of
former Moral Majority media director Cal Thomas ever become
universal, we may jump off the Tobin Bridge.
Censors Never Sleep
Space limitations force us to be selective in
summarizing recent censorship incidents. Sources for this
brief overview include various publications, organizations
and individuals, especially the New York Times, the
Washington Post, the Detroit News and Free
Press, the Baltimore Sun, the San
Francisco Chronicle, The Guide, Associated Press Wire
Service reports, the American Library Association, the
National Campaign for Freedom of Expression, the National
Coalition Against Censorship, People for the American Way,
the ACLU Arts Censorship Project, and persons involved in
many of the incidents described.
California:
- On February 28 in San Jose, California Superior Court
Judge Peter Stone struck down Stanford University's hate
speech code in response to a challenge by nine students and
alumni. Although Stanford, a private university, had
traditionally applied First Amendment principles to on-
campus speech as rigorously as if it were a state
institution, in 1990 its administration adopted a code
intended to curb harassing or discriminatory speech. The
code banned "personal vilification of students on the basis
of their sex, race, color, handicap, religion, sexual
orientation, or national or ethnic origin." Stone
maintained that this was overly broad and went beyond a
"fighting words" rationale. The challenge was based on
California's "Leonard Law," the work of conservative state
Senator Bill Leonard (R.-Orange County). This 1992 statute
says that private institutions of higher learning cannot
discipline students because of speech or any other
expression that has off-campus First Amendment protection.
The Leonard Law was previously used to strike down the
speech code at Occidental College in Los Angeles. [Note:
The Leonard Law notwithstanding, speech codes remain
widespread in California colleges and universities. The
First Amendment seems not to deter state-supported
California schools from clamping down on forms of speech.
Recently, in one typical incident at the University of
California at Santa Cruz, senior Scott Smith was threatened
with seven counts of sexual harassment last December for
writing and distributing a satirical essay, "Where Are the
Women?," in which he jokingly called for a "Miss Nude Santa
Cruz" contest.]
Illinois:
- Illinois House Bill 1102, which would give local
communities broad powers to define "obscenity," was
introduced in February by conservative legislators, while
its counterpart, SB 1036, was filed in the Illinois Senate.
Chris Finan of the Media Coalition points out that these
bills contain language clearly intended to blunt two out of
three prongs of the obscenity test established under
Miller v. California. They counter "serious value"
arguments by stating that if the material in question is
"commercially exploited for the sake of its prurient
appeal," then the material must lack any serious literary,
artistic, educational or scientific value. Furthermore,
they narrow the scope of "community standards" by stressing
what the community "accepts" rather than what it tolerates.
Both bills were favorably reported out of committee. As we
go to press, HB 1102 remains on the House floor awaiting a
vote. Following fiery speeches decrying "freedom gone
wild," SB 1036 passed on May 3 by a 40-14 vote.
Massachusetts:
- Formally charged with malicious destruction of personal
property after his attack on a city-sponsored exhibit of
work by artist Hans Evers, former Cambridge City Councilor
William Walsh opted for a trial by jury. Six hours of
testimony was heard at Middlesex District Court on April 7.
The large wooden boxes out of which Walsh had ripped two
mounted latex dildos were wheeled into a corridor adjacent
to the courtroom for examination by the six-juror panel and
designated alternates. (The piece places an allusion to the
work of sculptor Donald Judd in the service of a wry comment
on the male obsession with penis size. In the context of a
show that explored issues of masculine identity, it was
neither bizarre nor obscure.) One female alternate juror
found the sight of the dildos so disturbing that she asked
to be dismissed. "This isn't about Mr. Evers's artwork or
First Amendment rights or freedom of expression," said James
Rafferty, Walsh's attorney. "This is about whether a crime
occurred." Three days later, the jury decided that Walsh's
vigilante action, supposedly intended to protect his
constituents from publicly supported "porno-graphy," was not
"malicious" and not a crime. Walsh was acquitted. The
implications of a city councilor taking the law into his own
hands seem not to have occurred to Judge Mark Kovan or this
jury. Meanwhile Walsh, who has long been a law unto
himself, remains at liberty while appealing his conviction
on 41 counts of bank fraud.
- Last December 29, U.S. District Court Judge Richard G.
Stearns dismissed wire fraud charges against MIT student
David LaMacchia, whose computer bulletin board, Cynosure,
had been used as a kind of trading post where copyrighted
software was exchanged for free. Describing LaMacchia's
actions as "irresponsible," Stearns pointed out that
LaMacchia might more properly have been prosecuted under
copyright law. Since the U.S. Copyright Act, as currently
worded, does not criminalize such behavior, Stearns
suggested that Congress consider revising its copyright
legislation. The judge also observed that to prosecute
LaMacchia under the Federal wire fraud statute would be to
open the floodgates for criminal charges against thousands
of home computer owners. While some computer rights
advocates, like Richard Stallman of the Free Software
Foundation, hailed the decision as a victory for freedom in
cyberspace, others complained that it lent encouragement to
software piracy, and representatives of the software
industry urged an appeal.
- When her 12-year-old daughter bought Butt Trumpet's debut
album Primitive Enema at a local Strawberries
record outlet, Julie Bauman petitioned the Leominster City
Council to outlaw sales of records with Parental Advisory
labels to minors. While Bauman won the support of 23-year-
old City Councilor Kevin Cormier, a proposed ban was
defeated 8 to 1 at a City Council meeting early in March.
Although Bauman and her supporters vowed to return with a
reworded bill, the Strawberries chain has vowed to fight
whatever local censorship ordinance may eventually pass.
Community opposition is being organized by another
Leominster parent, Nina Crowley, who helped found the newly
established Massachusetts Music Industry Coalition. [Note:
Primitive Enema has also run afoul of the Recording
Industry Association of America (RIAA), which maintains that
the album's cover art, whose Parental Advisory label
replaces the words Explicit Lyrics with
Lighten Up, makes a mockery of the RIAA warning label
system. EMI records, which produced the album, has thus far
ignored RIAA demands to recall all copies of Primitive
Enema and reissue the record with a standard warning
sticker.]
- On February 27, entrepreneurs sought Town Meeting
approval for a plan to zone a 75-acre tract of land in
Norwood, a commuter town southwest of Boston, for adult
entertainment. The proposal resulted, however, in a two-
thirds majority of Town Meeting members passing a motion to
ban adult fare in all media from Norwood entirely. The
adult entertainment zone would have been sited in a non-
residential area off Route 1. The ban has been little noted
by the press outside the immediate area, although the
Boston Herald editorialized that "The good people
of Norwood should be congratulated for putting decency and
values above zoning practicalities."
- Early in 1995, teachers' unions led the opposition to an
education bill filed in the Massachusetts House by House
Minority Leader Edward Teague (R.-Yarmouth) and in the
Senate by Marian Walsh (D.-Boston). The bill would have
required public schools to give parents 10 days' notice
prior to any lesson dealing with "human sexuality, sexual
orientation, contraception, abortion, sexually transmitted
diseases, sexual or physical abuse, alcohol or drug use,
marriage, divorce or family life, gender or sexual
relationships, moral decision-making methods, suicide,
euthanasia, coping with or understanding death or other
forms of personal loss or grief, self-esteem, emotional
health, religious practice or belief." Parents would be
given the option of taking their children out of class
before any of these topics could be touched upon. Teachers
and school officials complained that such legislation would
stifle class discussion. Accordingly, the legislation was
rewritten to narrow its scope down to "heterosexuality,
homosexuality, lesbianism, bisexuality, transvestism,
contraception, abortion, or sexually transmitted diseases."
As gay organizations, the AIDS Action Committee, and
advocates for health and sexuality education were quick to
point out, this new version still addressed the primary
purpose of the original, which had been crafted by anti-sex-
education crusader Brian Camenker of Newton, head of the
Interfaith Coalition, with input from the Christian
Coalition and Pat Robertson's American Center for Law and
Justice. (This legal arm of the Robertson empire is also
involved in challenging condom distribution in Massachusetts
public schools.) The bill was especially intended to chill
the Safe Schools Program, instituted as a means of
discouraging violence against gay and lesbian youth.
Nevertheless, the amended version was voted out of committee
March 9, and passed by the full Senate in an April 3 voice
vote. Governor Weld refused to say whether or not he would
veto the bill once it appeared on his desk.
- The senior class at Bradford College, a small 4-year
liberal arts college in Haverhill, has traditionally
selected its own commencement speaker. This year Bradford
students picked Leslie Feinberg, a labor activist and author
of the award-winning novel Stone Butch Blues. Their
second choice was Socialist Congressman Bernard Sanders of
Vermont. Both selections were vetoed by Bradford president
Joseph Short, who said that an appearance by Feinberg, a
self-identified transgendered lesbian, would be inconsistent
with the dignity of the occasion. On April 5, about 100
students responded to this decision by occupying Academy
Hall, the school administration building. At a general
faculty meeting the next day, an overwhelming majority of
faculty members voted in solidarity with the students. When
the administration asked Peggy Walsh, the faculty member
whose Humanities course included Feinberg's novel on its
required reading list, to serve as substitute commencement
speaker, Walsh declined. Expressions of support for the
students came from the National Writers Union, the BCFE, and
other organizations. While controversy raged around this
issue on campus, the reactionary Haverhill Gazette
entered the fray with an editorial entitled "A Tip of the
Cap to President Short." Congratulating Short on his
rejection of a choice by "off-beat radicals" and deploring
"the lack of moral direction in today's youth," the
editorial maintained that Feinberg was on a moral par with
neo-Nazis and the Ku Klux Klan. This tactic only increased
the outpouring of support for Feinberg. On April 20, having
at last actually read Stone Butch Blues, President
Short relented, and Feinberg was invited to speak. In an
attempt to turn the situation around, local right-wing
activists sought aid from such organizations as Accuracy in
Academia, whose executive director Peter LaBarbera is best
known as the perpetrator of an anti-gay monthly screed
called The Lambda Report. Nevertheless, the May 12
commencement proceeded without incident, and Feinberg's
address received a standing ovation.
Michigan:
- Early in December, 20-year-old University of Michigan
sophomore Jake Baker wrote three violent, sexually explicit
fantasies and posted them on alt.sex.stories, an
unmoderated Internet newsgroup devoted to erotic fiction. A
few weeks later, Robert DuVal, a University of Michigan
alumnus residing in Moscow, discovered the stories and on
January 19 placed an angry transatlantic call to the
university administration. Baker's on-campus computer
privileges were quickly suspended. A subsequent
investigation by campus police and the FBI revealed that the
female character who is abducted and tortured in one of
Baker's stories bore the name of one of his classmates, and
that Baker had also been discussing methods of abducting
women with an email correspondent in Canada. On February 2,
after Baker resisted a request to withdraw from the
university, the short, slight linguistics major was
suspended and marched off campus by armed officers. On
February 9, Baker was brought into custody by the FBI and
charged with interstate transmission of threatening
messages, despite his insistence that his postings, which
carried disclaimers, were fiction. U.S. District Court
Magistrate Thomas A, Carlson ordered him held without bail.
In defense of this action, Carlson said, "The allegations,
if true, reflect a profoundly disturbed individual... who
probably should not be walking the streets." Baker, who had
never previously been arrested, was imprisoned for 29 days
until Federal Judge Avern Cohn intervened and freed him on
his own recognizance. When Baker is finally brought to
trial, a conviction could return him to prison for up to
five years. Meanwhile, controversy rages on the Internet
and on campus over whether the Baker incident was just a
case of "college gross-out" bravado gone awry, or the kind
of unequivocal threat perceived by University of Michigan
law professor Catharine MacKinnon, who considers rape and
torture fantasies acts of violence in themselves. Baker's
injudicious use of an actual person's name gave many free-
speech advocates grave reservations about coming to his
defense.
- Pam O'Leary, an Ann Arbor resident, drives her red Toyota
Corolla daily to and from Toledo, Ohio, where she runs the
Center for Choice II, a family planning clinic where
abortions are performed. (The original Center for Choice
was firebombed in 1987.) For the past four years, her car
has carried a customized license plate that reads 4
RU486, referring to the French abortion pill. Last
November, however, Candace Miller, an anti-choice right-wing
Republican, became Michigan's Secretary of State, ousting
liberal Democrat Richard Austin. A few weeks after Miller
took charge, O'Leary received official notification from the
secretary of state's office, which exercises oversight in
the issuance of license plates, that her 4 RU486
plate must have been "issued in error." The letter
explained that since it was state policy not to permit any
license plate to hold a "letter combination which might
carry a connotation offensive to good taste and decency,"
O'Leary must return the plate and replace it. The Michigan
motorist whose license plate reads PROLIFE was not
contacted. O'Leary has enlisted the aid of the ACLU, and
court action is being contemplated.
Montana:
- The ACLU Arts Censorship Project reports that Debbie
Denzer, the school librarian's assistant who was fired for
lending "satanic" and "feminist" books to two students, has
won a $38,000 settlement from the West Valley School
District in Kalispell. In December 1993, two seventh-grade
girls approached Denzer for help in preparing a report on
witchcraft in the Middle Ages. When she could find no
appropriate source materials in the library itself, Denzer
reached into her personal collection and lent the students
two books: The Devil and All His Works by Dennis
Wheatley, and Not in God's Image: Women in History from
the Greeks to the Victorians by Julia O'Faolain and
Lauro Matines. After the Christian fundamentalist parents
of one of the girls expressed outrage over the books, West
Valley School principal Frank deKort suspended Denzer and
recommended her dismissal. At a January 1994 meeting of the
school board, the books were attacked for "vulgarity" and
Denzer's employment was terminated. She then appealed the
decision to the county superintendent, who decided in her
favor last June. When the school board sought to have this
administrative move reversed, Denzer filed a federal lawsuit
with the aid of the ACLU. While the out-of-court settlement
effectively vindicates Denzer, the terms do not, however,
include reinstatement.
- In March, the judiciary committee of the Montana State
Senate turned thumbs down on the Senate counterpart of House
Bill 83, which Republicans had successfully rammed through
the Montana House. The bill, ostensibly aimed at hard-core
pornography, would have given local communities broad powers
to prosecute whatever offended some segment of the
population. With help from the Media Coalition, the
American Library Association, and other sources, booksellers
across the state worked diligently to prevent the bill from
passing. Bookselling This Week reports, "In
accordance with the State Senate judiciary committee's
recommendation, 13 Republicans joined 19 Democrats to defeat
the bill on a 32-18 vote. All senators voting in favor of
the bill were Republican."
New Jersey:
- On January 31, 1994, Bernardsville furniture manufacturer
Ejlat Feuer took 110 nude photographs of his 6-year-old
daughter for a course assignment at the International Center
of Photography (ICP) in New York, where he was a student.
Feuer's wife of 18 years and the Feuer children's nanny were
present during the 15-minute photo session in which Feuer
shot pictures of the girl through a glass tabletop on which
she was seated. Employees at the Kodalux Processing Service
in Fairlawn, where the Feuers sent the film to be developed,
examined the resulting contact sheets and reported their
existence to the police. (New Jersey law bans depictions of
child nudity "for the purpose of sexual stimulation or
gratification," and requires photo processing labs to report
suspected kiddie porn to the authorities.) "These were not
typical pictures of a young child with bubbles around them,"
Kodalux manager David Chipkin later told the New York
Times. When Feuer stopped at a local photo store to
collect the contact sheets, he was arrested. Detectives
then conducted a search of Feuer's home, business offices,
and car; grilled Feuer's wife about such topics as whether
or not she believed in God; and took the pajama-clad Feuer
children to the police station for medical examination and
intensive questioning about sexual abuse. Feuer was finally
released on $2500 bail, on condition that he cease living
with his family and avoid all contact with his youngest
daughter. A grand jury agreed with the prosecutor that the
photographs were "graphically explicit" child pornography,
and Feuer was indicted despite solid support from the ICP
and art experts. Anti-censorship groups and arts advocates
came to Feuer's defense. Therapists and the Feuer family
pediatrician offered testimony to the effect that the Feuer
children had indeed been traumatized, but only by their
treatment by the police, and that they were under emotional
stress from their father's forced absence. After two
months, Feuer was allowed to return home as the case dragged
on. Efforts were made by the ACLU Arts Censorship Project
and others to have the case dismissed, but Somerset County
Superior Court Judge Leonard Arnold ruled in favor of the
prosecution early in 1995. Finally, however, as prosecutors
realized their case was weakening, they struck an agreement
with the defense that would enable them to save face. Feuer
is now enrolled in a pretrial intervention program that is
expected to clear his name by this summer.
New York:
- Without considering the First Amendment implications of
the case, the U.S. Supreme Court decided that artist Michael
Lebron had the right to sue the National RR Passenger
Corporation, or Amtrak. In an 8-to-1 decision, with Justice
Sandra Day O'Connor dissenting, the high court ruled that
the company is indeed, for legal purposes, an agency of the
Federal government. This ruling supersedes a 1993 appeals
court decision to the effect that Amtrak is a private
corporation and not subject to constitutional free-speech
protections. Amtrak had refused to allow the artist to
install a political poster critical of the right-wing Coors
dynasty on the "Special," the giant wraparound billboard in
Penn Station. Lebron's case will now return to the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the Second District for a final ruling
on its First Amendment merits.
- Waging the most energetic anti-smut campaign since the
1940s, when Fiorello LaGuardia chased burlesque across the
Hudson to New Jersey, conservative Republican Mayor Rudolph
Giuliani has won strong City Council support for a scheme to
run the majority of New York City's sex-related businesses
out of town. The present plan is a slightly more lenient
version of an earlier proposal that would have pushed
sexually explicit entertainment out of Manhattan altogether
and into selected remote industrial sections of Brooklyn,
Queens, the Bronx, and Staten Island. While permitting some
sex-related establishments to occupy space in "commercial
zones of high density" as well as manufacturing districts,
the regulations forbid adult businesses in all locations to
operate within 500 feet of houses of worship, schools,
residences, or one another. Approved by the City Council in
March and now under review by the City Planning Commission
and community boards in the five boroughs, this draconian
measure is certain to affect constitutionally protected
speech. In addition to reducing adult businesses in the
Times Square area from 47 to half a dozen at most, the
ordinance is expected to shut down many legal businesses
serving sexual minorities. Gay Pleasures, for example, a
store on Hudson Street that sells rare back issues of gay
publications of all kinds, will probably be forced to close
its doors. City officials are expected to put the
regulations into effect before November, when a one-year
moratorium on new sex-related businesses will terminate.
- From its national headquarters on First Avenue in New
York City, the Catholic League for Religious and Civil
Rights, a right-wing movement of lay Catholics, greeted the
U.S. release of the British film Priest with cold
fury. On March 23, the Catholic League called a press
conference at which its current president, sociologist
William A. Donohue, delivered a scathing ten-page statement
calling the film "an invidious portrait of Catholic priests
and the religion to which they belong" and claiming that
"This in-your-face movie is intended to put salt in the
wounds of Catholics." A theatrical production of the BBC,
Priest is the work of screenwriter Jimmy McGovern
and director Antonia Bird. It tells the story of a morally
conflicted young gay priest assigned to an inner-city parish
in Liverpool. Affecting and well-acted though melodramatic,
Priest has been well received on the festival
circuit and in Europe. The film, which opened in New York
and Los Angeles March 24, was awkwardly scheduled to have
gone into wide release on April 14, Good Friday. Donohue
demanded that the Disney organization, whose subsidiary
Miramax owns the U.S. distribution rights, withdraw the film
altogether. Disney/Miramax declined to do more than to
change the national opening date to April 7 in some cities
and April 21 in others. This failed to appease the Catholic
League. "We are calling for a boycott of all Disney
products," Donohue announced on March 29, "a boycott of
vacations to Disney World and Disneyland, and a boycott of
the Disney cable television channel. We are also asking the
public to call Disney and tie up the lines.... We will call
on all Catholic organizations to sell Disney stock." While
some theaters showing the film have been subject to crude
forms of harassment, the Catholic League's anti-
Priest campaign shows greater sophistication than
its previous blitzes against Godard's Hail Mary and
Scorsese's Last Temptation of Christ. In late
April, Disney retail stores were targeted for
demonstrations, and Payne Webber reported that more than
$800,000 worth of Disney stock had been sold by irate
Catholics. [Note: Ironically, U.S. audiences who see
Priest are attending a censored film. Before its 1994
acquisition by Disney, Miramax had a tradition of buying
first-rate European films and hacking them up for American
release, shortening movies like Cinema Paradiso in
order to ensure more screenings per day and to accommodate
the allegedly feeble attention span of American moviegoers.
The company did, however, stand by filmmakers like Pedro
Almodovar when the MPAA proposed cuts to avoid the dreaded
NC17 rating, and did not practice censorship per se. But
since Disney, home of Mickey Mouse, cannot as a matter of
policy release an NC17 film even indirectly, Miramax now
routinely cuts films like The Advocate, Queen Margot,
and Priest for content. The American version
of Priest is 10 minutes shorter than the director's
cut seen in the rest of the world, and some of the changes
are intended to keep a mildly explicit gay sex scene within
the parameters of an R rating. Because of Disney's
ownership, the original versions of Miramax films are
unlikely ever to become available even on videocassette, at
least in the U.S.]
Pennsylvania:
- In mid-February, someone entered the office of the
Red and Blue, a conservative student publication at
the University of Pennsylvania, and carried the magazine's
files to a nearby Dumpster. Since the Red and Blue
is the oldest publication in the Ivy League, its archives
included material dating back to 1889, including the only
known copies of some issues. By the time the removal of the
publication's property was discovered, much of the discarded
material had already been pulped in a trash compactor. The
wholesale destruction of the Red and Blue's files
seems, whether intentionally or unintentionally, to have
been the end result of a controversy that began last
November when the magazine published a sophomoric satirical
piece by Jeremy Hildreth, a finance major. Hildreth's
column, called "One Man's Haiti," derided concern for a
nation whose chief exports "are exiled dictators and cab
drivers." The ensuing furor led to efforts by the Black
Student League and others to shut down the magazine. "The
university should not support, in any way, publications that
irresponsibly print anything that is detrimental to the
public's image or outlook of any ethnic group," said Black
Student League representative LaShanta Johnson. In February
the Student Activities Council voted (47-21, with 35 members
abstaining) to withdraw official recognition from the
Red and Blue and to terminate its funding. Red
and Blue editor Christopher Robbins condemned this move
as "censorship in the worst possible way," not anticipating
the subsequent trashing of his files. University President
Judith Rodin ordered an investigation of the situation,
requested that the Student Activities Council make its
guidelines more specific, and condemned funding decisions
based on content. Following a second denial of funding to
the Red and Blue, a private donor stepped in to
make the magazine's May issue possible.
Virginia:
- In Fairfax County, the library system remains under siege
by Christian activists led by Karen Jo Gounaud, who has
dedicated herself to stamping out expressions of the "gay
agenda." Ongoing crises have included militant efforts to
stop distribution of the D.C. gay paper the Washington
Blade, a campaign to restrict children's access to a
broad range of material, and a successful drive to force the
system's 22 libraries to stock a list of obscure anti-gay
titles. The most recent incident was the cancellation early
in May of a Gay Pride exhibit planned for June at the
Tysons-Pimmit Regional Library. Reference librarian Charles
Keener has presented such a display at the library every
year since 1985. This year, bowing to pressure, Fairfax
library Director Edwin S. Clay III ruled that Gay Pride
displays would no longer be allowed. [Note: In a future
issue, we still hope to run a detailed account of the
Byzantine and increasingly successful maneuvers of Gounaud
and friends, as well as efforts by Northern Virginia
Citizens Against Censorship to oppose them.]
- On February 27, the Loudon County Library Board excised
the anti-censorship provisions in the American Library
Association's Library Bill of Rights before
renewing its status as policy for the local public library
system. By a 4-3 vote, the following statements were
removed: (1) "Materials should not be proscribed or removed
because of partisan or doctrinal disapproval;" (2)
"Libraries should challenge censorship in the fulfillment of
their responsibility to provide information and
enlightenment;" (3) "Libraries should cooperate with all
persons and groups concerned with resisting abridgement of
free expression and free access to ideas." "These policies
have nothing to do with Loudon," said John Nicholas, the
board member who proposed the changes on behalf of a new
right-wing majority. The vote produced a firestorm of
controversy, with citizens crowding into a contentious March
15 meeting to demand that the board reconsider its vote. On
March 20, however, the board dropped the Library Bill of
Rights altogether, adopting its own watered-down policy
statement in an effort, according to Nicholas, to create a
"more concise" version of the ALA's document.
Washington:
- An attempt by the state legislature to enact a broad and
unconstitutional "harmful to minors" statute failed early in
May when the Washington State Senate upheld a veto by
Governor Mike Lowry. The bill, ESSB 5466 ("An Act Relating
to the Well-Being of Children"), was designed by the House
and Senate Committees on Law and Justice to replace
Washington's "erotic music" law, struck down last year by
the state supreme court. It would have expanded the scope
of the law to include among potentially harmful matter "a
motion picture film, a publication, a sexual device, or any
combination thereof," defining publication as "any
book, magazine, article, pamphlet, writing, printing,
illustration, picture, sound recording, telephonic
communication, or coin-operated machine." The bill would
have also applied to live performance, which it defined as
"any play, show, skit, dance, or other exhibition performed
or presented to or before an audience of one or more, in
person or by electronic transmission, or by telephonic
communication, with or without consideration." The proposed
"harmfulness" test was a vaguer version of the Miller
obscenity test, allowing "the average adult person" to
determine what might appeal to the "prurient interest" of
minors. In his veto message, Governor Lowry cited the
potential chilling effect of this legislation and stated
that "The well-being of children is not promoted by banning
them from art galleries, barring them from a world of
instant communication, or hiding them from accurate health
care education and information that may save their lives."
- In January, newsdealers Ira Stohl and Kristina Hjelsand
were threatened with prosecution for selling Answer
Me!, a 'zine produced annually in Portland, Oregon by
satirists Jim and Debbie Goad. Having previously devoted
issues of Answer Me! to suicide and serial killers,
the Goads devoted the 1995 issue to rape, combining a sendup
of the politics of Catharine MacKinnon and Andrea Dworkin
with a graphic look at "the rapist's psychic landscape."
Acting on a complaint from a Western Washington University
student, Whatcom County Prosecutor David McEachran sent a
police inspector to examine the publication. Deciding that
Answer Me! was pornographic, McEachran ordered
Stohl and Hjelsand to stop selling it. The newsdealers
responded by creating a display in which a stack of the
magazines, bound in chains and padlocked, was propped up on
a black-draped table. In February, McEachran demanded that
Stohl and Hjelsand stop selling or displaying Answer
Me! or any "similar material." When they refused to
comply, the pair were formally charged with "promoting
pornography." Stohl and Hjelsand are now receiving aid from
the ACLU Arts Censorship Project, the American Booksellers
Association, and other groups. [Note: Answer Me!
figured in a second recent free-expression fracas when
Jim Goad was subpoenaed by the defense team representing
Francisco Martin Duran, the Colorado military veteran
charged with firing an automatic weapon at the White House.
Because a copy of the serial killer issue of Answer Me!
was found in Duran's pickup truck, lawyers assigned to
Duran seem to have entertained an "Answer Me! made
me do it" defense. Fortunately this tactic was abandoned,
and Goad was not required to testify at Duran's trial.]
Washington, D.C.:
- In early February, Senator James Exon (D.-NE) filed
S.314, the Communications Decency Act, an anti-smut bill
aimed at cleaning up the Internet (in whose vast reaches,
contrary to legend, only a small percentage of material is
sexually explicit). Opposition to S.314 from the Electronic
Frontier Foundation, the Internet Business Association and
other groups quickly gathered momentum. An on-line petition
to stop the bill pulled in signatures from 108,000
individuals and organizations. In March, however, Senator
Larry Pressler (R.-ND) and the Senate Commerce Committee
approved the bill with minor changes intended to placate
large commercial Internet access providers like America On-
Line and Compuserve. Committee chairman Pressler then
submerged the Exon legislation in the omnibus
telecommunications package he sent to the floor of the
Senate. The Exon bill would exclude materials that are
"obscene, lewd, lascivious, filthy or indecent" from
electronic transmission. Exon says it is designed "to keep
the information superhighway from resembling a red light
district." He also expressed the fear that children like
his 8-year-old granddaughter could stumble upon flagrant
obscenity, thereby betraying some degree of ignorance about
the ease with which certain corners of cyberspace can be
accessed. Free speech advocates warn that such legislation
is a first step toward commercial exploitation of the
Internet, and toward regulating into submission a forum that
still manages to be a free marketplace of ideas.
- On April 4, the Sexual Crimes Against Children Act sailed
through the House of Representatives, winning approval by a
vote of 417 to 0. The bill would require the U.S.
Sentencing Commission to change its guidelines to insure
stiffer sentences for those convicted in federal court of
child prostitution or child pornography charges. The bill's
Senate counterpart passed unanimously two days later.
- In May, the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum will unveil
the restored front fuselage of the Enola Gay. This first
public exhibition of the B-29 Superfortress that dropped the
atomic bomb on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945 will mark the
50th anniversary of the end of the Second World War. The
Enola Gay was to have been surrounded by material placing it
in historical context and depicting the nuclear devastation
of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Last August, however, after the
American Legion and other veterans' groups complained that
the Smithsonian was planning a "politically correct"
interpretation of the victory over Japan, two dozen members
of Congress, led by archconservative Massachusetts
Republican Peter Blute, sent a letter of protest to
Smithsonian Secretary Robert McC. Adams. The letter
denounced "anti-American prejudice and imbalance" in the
proposed exhibit, which was to have been called "The Last
Act: The Atomic Bomb and the End of World War II." As the
New York Times noted in an editorial condemning
Congressional tampering with the work of historians and
curators, conservative critics appeared to be demanding
"complete vilification of the Japanese and uncritical
glorification of the American war effort." By the end of
September, however, Air and Space Museum Director Martin
Harwit and his colleagues caved in to veterans' demands and
promised to work toward an exhibit they would find more
palatable. This aroused the ire of anti-war activists. By
January, the exhibit had been through at least six revisions
as museum officials struggled to appease both sides. The
struggle was exacerbated by downsizing provisions in the
Contract with America and Republican threats to slash
funding for cultural institutions that failed support a
conservative world view. Confronted with increasing right-
wing agitation, demands for Harwit's resignation, and
Representative Blute's call for oversight hearings on the
conduct of the Smithsonian, I. Michael Heyman, who replaced
outgoing Secretary Adams, met with the museum's Board of
Regents on January 30 and announced that the exhibit would
be scrapped except for the Enola Gay's fuselage, which would
be displayed with minimal commentary. This saga
nevertheless dominated Congressional discussions about the
institution's funding, and at the end of February, a House
panel recommended a 9% recission in the Smithsonian's $371
million budget for FY 1995. Early in May, Harwit finally
turned in his resignation, stating that "nothing less than
my stepping down from the directorship will satisfy the
museum's critics and allow the museum to move forward with
important new projects."
- In March, People for the American Way released the annual
report of its artsave project, now headed by
lobbyist Jill Bond. Artistic Freedom under Attack,
Volume 3: 1995 includes 104 case studies of attacks on
artistic expression in 33 states and the District of
Columbia. Its preface notes that "Although art has always
been a political target, the current attack is unprecedented
and unrelenting.... [T]his year's findings reflect a
dramatic jump in the overall censorship success rate, from
63 percent in the last report to an alarming 78 percent in
1994.... In a clear measure of the escalating threats, the
rate at which artists turned to the courts to defend their
work, or faced legal challenges, has almost doubled since
1992-'93, to one out of every six (17 percent) such
incidents." [To obtain a copy of Artistic Freedom Under
Attack, send $14.95 ($12.95 if you are a member of PFAW) to
artsave, People for the American Way, 2000 M Street N.W.,
Suite 400, Washington DC 20036.]
International:
- The Algerian bloodbath that has claimed at least 30,000
lives in the past three years continues, with artists,
educators, and members of the press being singled out for
assassination. In February, during the holy month of
Ramadan, attacks on civilians intensified. Rai
singer Rachid Baba Ahmed was machine-gunned to death in
Oran, and the director of Algeria's National Theater was
killed. Other recent casualties include feminists, student
leaders, and university professors. More than thirty
journalists have been killed in the past two years. The
turmoil began when the Algerian army voided elections in
order to prevent a fundamentalist takeover of the
government. With the insurgency being led by the illegal
Islamic Salvation Front, atrocities and repressive actions
are being perpetrated by both sides.
- In Dhaka, Bangladesh, the on-again off-again in
absentia blasphemy trial of writer Taslima Nasrin, who
in August 1994 fled to Sweden to escape death at the hands
of militant fundamentalist vigilantes, has been postponed
for the seventh time and is now set for June 3. On March
11, when prosecutors failed to supply written government
approval to proceed with the case, Assistant Metropolitan
Magistrate A.K.M. Kamluddin scheduled April 15 as the new
trial date, and threatened to postpone the case
"indefinitely" if the prosecution failed to provide the
necessary documents at that time. (Since the offense
occurred outside Bangladesh, government permission was
needed to validate the trial.) On April 15, despite a Home
Ministry directive that the trial could proceed, Nasrin's
lawyers managed to have it delayed an additional month. In
May, Kamluddin ruled that the Home Ministry's directive was
"appropriate and good in law." The blasphemy charge, filed
after Nasrin allegedly told an Indian newspaper that the
Koran "should be thoroughly revised," could carry a two-year
prison sentence if she is convicted. Conservative Muslims,
however, are demanding her death and have placed a $5000
price on her head. Since Bangladeshi authorities cannot
guarantee Nasrin's safety in or out of prison, she is
expected to remain in exile for the foreseeable future. The
32-year-old feminist author continues to provoke right-wing
Islamic factions through her outspoken advocacy of women's
rights. Early in March, she told a delegation of Tunisian
women at the Copenhagen U.N. social summit, "I don't know
that Islam allows any freedom for women. I have not seen
any equality and justice in Islam." Recently awarded a
grant by the German government, Nasrin will spend the summer
writing in Berlin.
- On April 20, in a ruling that civil libertarians hope
will curb the power of police to seize "offensive" works of
art, Ontario Provincial Court Justice David McCombs
determined that five paintings and 35 drawings seized in
December 1993 are not child pornography and may be returned
to Canadian artist Eli Langer. Child pornography charges
filed against Langer and Sharon Brooks, director of
Toronto's Mercer Union gallery where Langer's work had been
exhibited, were dropped last year following an outcry by
arts groups and free-speech advocates. The paintings and
drawings themselves, which are stylized depictions of adults
and children in sexual situations, were placed on trial. If
they had been found "guilty," they were to have been
destroyed. In acquitting the artwork, Justice McCombs
recommended that the law be altered to give judges
discretionary power to turn down police requests for
warrants to impound allegedly obscene or offensive material.
While Langer welcomed the outcome of the case, he told
reporters, "I've spent a year and a half of my life dealing
with this very difficult and painful time and process. This
kind of notoriety... creates just a situation of pressure
for me." At the end of April, prosecutors were considering
an appeal.
- Brought before a military court in Cairo, two Islamic
militants were sentenced in January to be hanged for the
attempted assassination of novelist Naguib Mahfouz. In late
February, the sentences were reaffirmed by Egyptian
president Hosni Mubarak. On March 28, Mohamed Nagi Mohamed,
who stabbed the Egyptian Nobel laureate, was executed along
with his accomplice Mohamed al-Mahlawi. Mahfouz had long
been targeted by fundamentalists angered by writings,
especially his treatment of religious themes in the novel
Children of Gebelawi. The 83-year-old author, who
was hospitalized for seven weeks with multiple stab wounds
in his neck, has suffered neurological damage that impairs
his ability to hold a pen.
- Alexei Kostin, publisher of the erotic journal
Yeshcho ("More"), was released in February
after more than a year's incarceration while awaiting trial
in post-Soviet Russia's first pornography case. Kostin's
trial finally began on February 22. Judge Andrei Kalmeyev,
who seemed to agree with Kostin's contention that the
charges made no sense, sent the case back to the prosecutor
for further study, and allowed Kostin to go free on a
technicality. Early in 1994, the openly gay writer and
publisher had been arrested on charges of pornography and
conspiracy, although Yeshcho was a legally
registered literary periodical, and Russian law does not
normally hold publishers legally liable for the content of a
publication. Booker Prize nominee Zufur Gareyev, who had
been a regular contributor, was also arrested, but released
after PEN International and other groups applied pressure.
The editor of Yeshcho escaped prosecution by
fleeing to Latvia. Kostin's case remains to be decided.
Its eventual outcome may determine the limits of free speech
in Russia, and define what constitutes pornography there.
Meanwhile, Yeshcho has ceased publication.
- In Istanbul, Turkish author Yasar Kamal, best known in
the West for his novel Memed, My Hawk, was charged
with advocating separatism under Article 8 of the Anti-
Terror Law following the January 10 publication in Der
Spiegel, the German newsmagazine, of an essay called
"Campaign of Lies." The article was sharply critical of
government policies toward Turkey's Kurdish minority. When
it resurfaced in revised form as Kemal's contribution to an
anthology of essays on freedom of thought, Turkish
authorities charged him, along with his publisher, with
racism as well. The entire press run of the book was
ordered confiscated. Since 1984, Kurdish insurgents in
southeast Turkey have been struggling to establish an
independent state. Kemal's essay indicted the Turkish
government for its ruthless treatment of the Kurds in a
conflict that during the past decade has cost over 14,000
lives. In a statement issued at his initial court hearing,
Kemal wrote, "Everybody should do their best... to stop this
horrifying, dirty war." His trial on the separatism charge,
which could carry a prison sentence of up to five years, has
been set for May 5. In late April, Prosecutor Cevat Ozel,
who specializes in seeking convictions for members of the
press accused of sedition, began grilling Kemal with the
intention of adding charges of "insulting the Turkish
Republic." Meanwhile, the government has shut down Turkey's
leading pro-Kurdish newspaper, and guerilla warfare
continues.