Works CitedMaterials from the Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential LibraryLetter, Beverly Wayne Akers to the President, 28 Oct. 1967. HU4, WHCF [White HouseCentral Files], Box 61, LBJ Library.Letter, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Berkun to the President, 29 Aug. 1968. HU4, WHCF, Box 66,LBJ Library.Letter, Meredith Burke to the President, 29 Aug. 1968. HU4, WHCF, Box 66, LBJLibrary.Letter, Dominick J. Cifrodelli to the President, 28 Aug. 1968. HU4, WHCF, Box 67, LBJLibrary.Letter, Mrs. Ferol M. Harvey to the President, 29 Aug. 1968. HU4, WHCF, Box 66, LBJLibrary.Letter, Chester E. Gallant to the President, no date [ca. 29 Aug. 1968]. HU4, WHCF, Box66, LBJ Library.Letter, Mrs. C. R. Gardner to the President, 29 Aug. 1968. HU4, WHCF, Box 67, LBJLibrary.Letter, E. Marshall Grinder to Joel Broyhill, 3 Oct. 1967. HU4, WHCF, Box 61, LBJLibrary.Letter, Mrs. John R. Hayden to the President, 7 Nov. 1967. HU4, WHCF, Box 61, LBJLibrary.Letter, J. Edgar Hoover to Mildred Stegall, 26 Oct. 1967. Files <strong>of</strong> Mildred Stegall, Box64C, LBJ Library.Letter, J. Edgar Hoover to Mildred Stegall, 31 Oct. 1967. Files <strong>of</strong> Mildred Stegall, Box64C, LBJ Library.Letter, Alfred Q. Jarrette to Marvin Watson, 21 Sept. 1967. HU 4, WHCF, Box 61, LBJLibrary.Letter, Bruce P. Lake to the President, no date [ca. 29 Aug. 1968]. HU4, WHCF, Box 66,LBJ Library.Letter, Judith E. Lieb to the President, 29 Aug. 1968. HU4, WHCF, Box 67, LBJ Library.226
Letter, Roger Light to the President, 30 Aug. 1968. HU4 WHCF, Box 66, LBJ Library.Letter, Rev. William H. Liljegren to the President, 29 Aug. 1968. HU4, WHCF, Box 66,LBJ Library.Letter, Ronald L. Minotto to the President, 28 Aug. 1968. HU4, WHCF, Box 66, LBJLibrary.Letter, Maston O’Neal to the President, 29 Sept. 1967. HU4, WHCF, Box 61, LBJLibrary.Letter, Walker Paine to the President, no date [ca. 29 Aug. 1968]. HU4, WHCF, Box 66,LBJ Library.Letter, Romney S. Philpott to the President, 29 Aug. 1968. HU4, WHCF, Box 67, LBJLibrary.Letter, Whitney Shoemaker to Joseph Noll, 22 Nov. 1967. HU4, WHCF, Box 61, LBJLibrary.Letter, Whitney Shoemaker to Susan Mondok, 25 Nov. 1967. HU4, WHCF, Box 61, LBJLibrary.Letter, Whitney Shoemaker to Paul J. Bleiler, 13 Dec. 1967. HU4, WHCF, Box 61, LBJLibrary.Letter, Whitney Shoemaker to Robert Johnson, 13 Dec. 1967. HU4, WHCF, Box 61, LBJLibrary.Letter, Whitney Shoemaker to Burck C. Saxton, 13 Dec. 1967. HU4, WHCF, Box 61,LBJ Library.Letter, Whitney Shoemaker to Patricia A. Herrity, 30 Aug. 1968. HU4, WHCF, Box 65,LBJ Library.Letter, Whitney Shoemaker to Mrs. C. R. Gardner, 9 Sept. 1968. HU4, WHCF, Box 67,LBJ Library.Memorandum, Joe Califano to the President, 24 Oct. 1967. No subject. EX HU 4,WHCF, Box 60, LBJ Library.Memorandum, Tom Johnson to George Christian, 21 Oct. 1967. No subject. EX HU4,WHCF, Box 60, LBJ Library.227
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CopyrightbySusanne Elizabeth Shawye
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Radical Street Theatre and the Yipp
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Kokai, Olivia Whitmer O’Hare, Tam
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organizational strategies of the an
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IntroductionThe Chicago Poster:Cont
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adical hipsters, or counterculture
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linguistic theory, the field of per
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The language of performance thus al
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protest from theatre. 8 Mass demons
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performative has the potential to e
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evolution using methodological and
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Realist, suddenly noticed that when
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Revolution for the Hell of It is a
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The Yippies’ politics are clear i
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2). They embraced a romantic notion
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made up of many separate organizati
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and a free store on the Lower East
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When they formed the Youth Internat
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Most of the dozen core Yippies were
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acknowledgment that her business sk
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The claim of millions of Yippies wa
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Man to tease out the New Left’s n
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eports from the popular press, test
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Image of Yippie Chicago poster.47
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surround the Pentagon are a long wa
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the Conference for New Politics in
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Washington was no stranger to mass
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uilding in acts of civil disobedien
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had a history of civil disobedience
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the crowd into affinity groups by m
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Like Abbie Hoffman, Rubin was aware
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Krishna” and “Om” to their re
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Pentagon began its work for the wee
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A respectable horde of respectable
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that time was still expected to see
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It didn’t matter if there was dis
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democratic political-economic and c
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social activist Malcolm X, Communis
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The aesthetic of the New Left now t
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straight-laced emphasis on communit
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Unlike the young student politician
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on the improvised actions of variou
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society” by changing, not ignorin
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similar to the very same ones used
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scenery falls. The Yippies loved th
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unrest by the lower ranks of societ
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Don’t rely on words. Words are th
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writing to President Johnson from V
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wasn’t just their situation that
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freshly-shorn young men in army uni
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I also argue that blurring of life
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Armed with a budget of just $15.00
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ounced through the air above the cr
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they ran into again in Chicago when
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Yip-In moved into an unexpected sec
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Yippies had been publishing manifes
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experimental works. Like other New
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not Broadway, was the venue for pla
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adicalism of Off-Off-Broadway conte
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theater, and including it on their
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environment that pays special atten
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meaning or appreciate the aesthetic
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Since Happenings emerged from New Y
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that contrasted visual peaceful pro
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prominence of ordinary actions and
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The costumes of the Yip-In particip
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ecruit, several blocks from the hip
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free stores, or crash pads. In 1969
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The hippies and Yippies also used m
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from their weekday Establishment re
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perform the power of authority and
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commuters the actions and dress tha
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emotion and hope, like the “utopi
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Chapter ThreeThe Festival of Life:
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Double (1938). The Yippies used the
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anti-war views, and movement leader
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Republican candidate Richard Nixon;
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death, it seemed like Humphrey was
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American politicians. We’ll infil
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named themselves the Youth Internat
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if necessary, Mobe was unable to ge
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ut the Yippies’ signs supported a
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craze, offering a special section o
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efforts to bring performances to th
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commentary in the East Village Othe
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which Hoffman designated as ‘medi
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already in Chicago, and prepared to
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