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Women in Jail; U.S. Military Prisons + Teach-in, Live on KPFA: the Nubin Case; Inside Attica: Interview with Frank Smith (KPFA), 1972

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@ UC Berkeley, Ethnic Studies Library

Yuen, Hoh-Kun

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(9/26/71) Program on US prisons, and women in jail. Georgia Jackson, mother of Jonathan and George Jackson, speaks on prison abolition. Another speaker discusses the reality of women who are imprisoned, come in and out of jail, and on the struggles of imprisoned women with children. (1/24/72) Open hour: The U.S. Military prisons: ‚GI‚Äôs who refused to participate in the military machine‚ held in SPDs, Detox centers, the brig, or stockade; there‚Äôs no bail and horrible conditions in each. ‚You got to expect some kind of rebellion‚ -- on domestic POW‚Äôs. (1/28/72) Drugs and the Military. Prison teach-in at Pauley Ballroom, 10 pm live. (11/17/71) The Nubin Case: Mr. and Mrs. Nubin with their attorney. Two from Prisoners Unions Local 9. Inside Attica: An Interview with Frank Smith. A statement by one of the men singled out by the administration of Attica State Prisonas a leader of last year‚Äôs rebellion. Since September 1971, frank Smith has lived in a segregation cell 24 hours a day, cut off from his fellow inmates and the outside world. In this interview he talks about prison conditions, the massacre of September 13 and the days that followed, the effect of the revolt on the prison and its inmates and the inmates‚Äô need for outside support. Recorded in Attica State Prison by Bruce Soloway of Pacifica/New York, WBAI. Digitization made possible through a Recordings at Risk grant from the Council of Libraries and Information Resources.
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