Cat Has Had the Time of His Life

    thin line

    Our Daily Bleed...



--
According to the tonalpohualli, the sacred Aztec calendar, this is the


http://www.azteccalendar.com/


-- CALENDARS

check 9/33 for other entries — The Daily Bleed; On this day, October

http://hometown.aol.com/nfwriters/authorbirth.html
http://english.yasuda-u.ac.jp/lc/modules.php?op=modload&name=NS-Ephemera&file=index&func=Ephemeridsshow

http://perso.club-internet.fr/ytak/
http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/heinakuu.htm

-- Dave, No card yet, but here is the cat

bestcat2b.jpg Name: bestcat2b.jpg Type: JPEG Image (image/jpeg) Encoding: base64




-- - Seattle, KUOW-FM 94.9 The Writer's Almanac is produced by Minnesota Public Radio and distributed to radio audiences by Public Radio International Not done July 25?, 26 27, skipped all of august, sept 1-6 http://almanac.mpr.org/docs/99_07_19.htm -- boynton Not done July 25?, 26 27, http://www.global-image.com/boynton/calendar/archives/july_archive.html -- SPUNK ARCHIVE UPDATES http://www.spunk.org/new.html -- INFOSHOP EVENTS Not done July 25?, 26 27, http://www.infoshop.org/news98_1.html -- timeline calendar of the counterculture.... http://www.well.com/user/mareev/TIMELINE/index.html http://almanac.mpr.org/docs/99_07_19.htm


-- Rebel Moon: Anarchist Rants And Poems Nawrocki, Norman Paperback Publication Date: October 1996 Publisher: A K Press


?
-- Chapter 9 Anarchist Mountain School: 1896 to 1954

Anarchist Mountain Lookout

Located East of Osoyoos on Hwy. 3. From here, you can see the Okanagan Valley, as well as part of Washington State. A short trip by car takes you from 910 feet to 4045 feet. A must see for all Visitors!


Anarchist Mountain is named for a mysterious anarchist said to be either a renegade rancher or a lonely hermit with radical ideas.



?


While coming down Anarchist mountain, the view of Osoyoos Lake was beautiful.
http://wolfe.vsb.bc.ca/autotour/10-8.htm

DAY 7 Rossland - Manning Park (400 km). Follow the old trade route, the Dewdney Trail, to Manning Park. A steep descent down Anarchist Mountain brings you to Osoyoos, the warmest spot in Canada.


Site Name: Anarchist Elevation Launch 4200"asl LZ 910'asl Direction of Launch: SW
Site Suitable For: PG&HG

Location: Osoyoos BC at the summit of the hill heading East out of town. Region 2 Okanagan Valley in South Central British Columbia, Canada.
Type of Site: Mountain. Type of Flying: Thermal. Cross Country Potential: Excellent.
Description of Launch: There is a new road in on Long Joe Road. (Last road off on long hill heading East out of Osoyoos...or the first road if your coming down the hill from the West.) A small crude grassy slope. A short steep hike in. Thermals can be booming
Description Of LZ: Note: The campground below the Mountain is Reserve Property and is Closed unless asking permission beforehand. You can land on the public beach during non-populated hrs. RATED:Int. PG & Adv. HG as the LZ is difficult.

HPAC Requirements: Student, Intermediate, Advanced.
Mild Conditions: Int.PG Adv.HG Moderate conditions: Int.PG Adv.HG Strong Conditions: Adv. HG/PG
Skill Level Verification Requirements:HPAC Rating and Log Book
Site Regulation: None. Insurance: HPAC Or Local Club or Home Club Day Use.

Other Information: Great paragliding site. Great Scenery. House Thermal is to the left of launch in the bowl near to the vehicle parking area....or work back right to the North face. Red Rock often does not work. Not a wise idea to fly over the USA Border without following protocol.

Vehicle Requirements:Any vehicle rugged 2WD.
Radio Frquency:123.4MhzWHITE LAKE RADIO TELESCOPE OBSERVATORY AREA IS RADIO RESTRICTED (Aircraft) & 173.640Mhz (Local Club).
FSS Penticton: 250-493-6238 Fax: 250-493-5453.
Launch Road Name and Directions: Hyw.3 heading East from Osoyoos. Turn North on Long Joe Road. Landing Road Name and Direction.:The Beach during off hours!
Flying Season: Assign value 0 1 2 3 4 Best is 4:
Spring: 4 Summer: 2 Fall: 3 Winter: 1+
http://www.junction.net/osa/osg1.htm

Launch and Landing Area Maps are available in the printed version of the Site Guide which maybe obtained from fwilson@junction.net

There's an "Anarchist Mountain," named for an anarchist bureaucrat.

Columnists - Dan Gardner -Ottawa Citizen Online


For a memorable stay with a difference try the Observatory Bed and Breakfast on Anarchist Mountain, just east of Osoyoos.

Hosts, Jack and Alice Newton own an astronomy-theme B&B and their three rooms reflect this style—choose the Moon Room, the Saturn Suite or the galaxy-sized Eclipse Suite. All suites are self-contained with a level entrance and two have full kitchens.

Alice says they wanted to prove tourism doesn’t stop at 6 p.m., and states their 16-inch telescope housed in the rooftop observatory shows the area can be just as exciting after dark.

"Kids are blown away to see spiral arms in a galaxy and when they view the rings of Saturn they are hooked," she commented, adding she notices just as much delight on the faces of adults too.

Guests can also enjoy an in-home theatre with surround sound and a well-stocked video library, or they can arrange for expert instruction in astronomy, with Jack.

Sample some of the nearby attractions such as golfing, wine tasting, swimming, gold panning and touring the Osoyoos Desert Centre too.

Their season runs from May 10 to October 15. No children under age five and no pets. Phone 1-250-495-6745, e-mail jack@jacknewton.com or check their website at www.jacknewton.com


http://www.sonotek.com/sob-det1.html
http://www.osoyooschamber.bc.ca/visitor/outdoors.htm
http://www.magma.ca/~jppicard/album/timinougarag.html


Cordillera Anarchist Mountain Chardonnay 1999 (CSPC# 574103; BC VQA, $12)

Nice buttery textures and satisfying flavours of apple, citrus and tropical fruit. Moderate oak. I enjoyed this with chicken and ? on another occasion (guilty pleasure) with popcorn. Who knew?
http://www2.alberta.com/food/columns/displayone.cfm?articleid=533



?Beekeeper, self-portrait, Anarchist Mountain


Randy Johnson introduced the speaker, long-time SAS member Tom Calwell. In the summer of l976, Tom was off riding his BMW road bike up to Canada. He stopped to rest in Oroville at "The Anarchist Mountain Estates," which was just a gated field.

Anarchist Mountain Chardonnay ‘99: Some oak with dominant citrus. Clean and uncomplicated but not as exciting as the drive down to Osoyoos.




-- spain game 1936 http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~broszies/generalstab/archiv/fwtbt02/fwtbt02_07.html


?
3 -- El 22 de marzo de este año murió Julián Pacheco, un pintor del que ya hablamos en el número 8 de esta publicación y al que desde estas páginas queremos rendir un merecido homenaje.

Es la dimensión universal de su obra, profundamente enraizada en los problemas sociales de la humanidad, lo más destacable de este artista. La búsqueda de la libertad es una preocupación que late en el corazón de Pacheco desde su más tierna infancia y que le acompañará a lo largo de toda su vida. Libertad, igualdad y fraternidad son valores que le

http://www.cnt.es/fal/1/bi10.jpg

pota9.jpg (73571 bytes)

Conpor.jpg
Obra del fallecido Julian Pacheco

(Fotografía tomada durante la exposición del artista en Cuenca el 14 de marzo de 1998)

Sumario:

Oferta de inscripción y boletín de suscripción a todas las publicacionesJoseph Labadie y el movimiento obrero
La ecología humana en el anarqismo ibérico, Eduard Masjuan BraconsLa moral anarquista; Ética. P. Kropotkin
El anarquismo en Cuba, Frank FernándezLa geografía al servicio de la vida. Eliseo Reclus.
La eterna vigencia de Durruti.La mujer de Sade
Críticas y respuestas a Anarquismo básicoCrimen y poesía contra la escuela en El irresponsable.
Suplemento del catálogo 2000.Filosofía y acción. A, Fernández-Savater.
Boletín de inscripción. Boletín de pedido.Los justos, Albert Camus.
Una donación más para enrriquecer el ya importante fondo de la F.A.LLos otros
Breves:Las mil caras del mimo - estudio sobre el naturismo libertario - Centro Ascaso-DurrutiCabaret anarquista, una lúdica lucha social
Eugenio Granell. El surrealismo: «el más irreductible oponente de toda claudicación artística».El drama cultural del anarquismo / 1.
Las aventuras de Nono, Jean Grave.Estado y hombre.  
Los sucesos de Casas ViejasMuere Julian Pacheco.
Al pie del muro, Abel Paz

Organo difusor de la
Fundación de Estudios Libertarios Anselmo Lorenzo.
Paseo Alberto Palacios nº 2, 28021 Madrid. Tel: 91-797 04 24.
Fax: 91-505 21 83.
Silencio.jpg (7264 bytes)

Oferta de suscripción a todas las publicaciones

Oferta especial para los que deseen hacerse socios de la Fundación:
Los dos volúmenes de una de las más apasionantes biografías del siglo, Viviendo mi vida, de Emma Goldman, con un 40% de descuento y libre de gastos de envío.



Con esta modalidad lo que pretendemos es ofrecer la posibilidad de que aquellos compañeros que deseen ir recibiendo las publicaciones que vaya editando la FAL, las tengan con puntualidad, sin perder ninguna de ellas porque se haya agotado la edición o por cualquier otro motivo. Además se consiguen los libros de forma más económica.

Deseo recibir todas las publicaciones que vaya editando la Fundación Anselmo Lorenzo a partir de la recepción de esta suscripción y que pagaré contra reembolso con un 35% de descuento sobre su precio de venta al público y libre de gastos de envío.

Boletín de suscripción a todas las
publicaciones

Nombre y apellidos:
Calle
CP
Ciudad
Provincia
Teléfono


Fecha y firma:

LA ECOLOGÍA HUMANA EN EL ANARQUISMO IBÉRICO Eduard Masjuan Bracons
http://www.ecn.org/a.reus/cntreus/fal/bicel10.htm#6


4 -- RESUB?

ellaguru@eircom.net please unsubscribe me for a while Date: Sat, 14 Jul 2001 13:49:20 +0100 From: "ella guru" To: "Bleed"

dear David Brown: I'll be living on the road for the next few months, and checking emails infrequently in cyber cafés, so can you please take my address (ellaguru@eircom.net) out of your list? The Bleed received in massive fortnightly instalments wouldn't be much use to me. I'll be in contact again when I'm sedentary once more. Thanks very much. - Rob Farren in Dublin.


?
4 --



6 -- Communist Party leader, radio commentator on WPFW, & activist for six decades. See: HEALEY, Dorothy Ray & Maurice ISSERMAN. California Red: A Life in the American Communist Party. 288 pages. Illus. Paper. 1993., & Dorothy Healey Remembers: A Life in the American Communist Party (1990).

1960-1963 The House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), and the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee (SISS) investigate Pacifica programming for "subversion." Broadcasts of writings by Bertolt Brecht, Norman Cousins, Carey McWilliams, Dorothy Healey, and W.E.B. DuBois were cited.

1962 KPFK broadcasts women's history profiles of Dorothy Healey and Elizabeth Gurley Flynn--programs that are later used in SISS Hearings charging Pacifica is communist infiltrated.

Carey McWilliams healey http://www.weisbroth.com/blacklisted/bibliog.html


7 -- Approximately 125 years before Europe produced a book using movable type, the 1323 Paris census listed 28 bookstores.

Source: Gies, Joseph and Frances. Life in a Medieval City. Harper Colophon edition, 1981.


8 -- http://www.potatoland.org/
http://www.topica.com/lists/oddweb/

9 -- Re: Daily Bleed: 6/23 I'll spit on your graves Date: Sun, 25 Jun 2000 19:04:37 +0200 From: "Jeffrey Raffo und Silke Schrimpf" To: "Dave, Recollection Books"

I wasn`t sure how to cancel this mailing list, I went on the website, but I didn`t see anything. We`re out of here for three months, so I will renew it when we get back. Thanks a lot for your work. subbed since 7/99


9 -- unsubscribe Date: 6 Jul 2000 05:18:47 -0000 From: "a la n b am f o rd" To: recall@eskimo.com

Hi .. Im subbed from : alanb@lavalink.com.au Im travelling.. can you unsub me for a while til Im ho :) alan _____________________________________________________________ Email your boss can't read - sign up for free disinfo.net email at http://www.disinfo.com, your gateway to the underground


50 -- Story of a Labor Agitator - by Joseph R. Buchanan Buchanan, Joseph R. THE STORY OF A LABOR AGITATOR. Light wear, Very Good Condition, Frontis photo w/ tissue, Radical. Outlook New York. 1903. 1st Edition, Cloth 8vo, 461 pages. Buchanan published the Western labor paper, the LABOR ENQUIRER and led its supporting group, the Rocky Mountain Social League. He was also an anarchist who affiliated with the Black International and led one of the first American divisions (Rocky Mountain). (001120) $50.00. Marlatt, Gene Ronald. "Joseph R. Buchanan: Spokesman for Labor during the Populist and Progressive Eras." 429 p. Ph.D. dissertation, U of Colorado, 1975.

The Kights of Labor...though the Knights' central office denounced socialists and anarchists, the Order spawned them; Victor Drury, Joseph Buchanan, Daniel DeLeon, and two of the Haymarket martyrs sharpened their radical teeth in KOL locals. The KOL denounced strikes, but grew when they were won; it called for an end to the wage system, but accepted employers into its ranks.

Powderly denounced Joseph R. Buchanan as an anarchist in 1888, but apologized four years later when he needed allies to fight Hayes. The fact that Buchanan was an anarchist was secondary to Powderly's quest to maintain personal power.(pg. xviii-xix)

http://www.crocker.com/~acacia/kol_cult.html
http://www.antiqbook.com/danwymanbooks/cat7.html

Labor Enquirer (Chicago) 120p.5, 121 p.1, 125p.5, 129p.1, 135p.1. See also Buchanan, Joseph R. (editor).

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1920 -- ?





?
1938 -- http://images.anarchosyndicalism.org/subversion/


?
1949 --


1962 -- add blood Salzman Years of Protest Date: Fri, 08 Dec 2000 14:25:52 -0800

Canabalize:

Collects various literary radicals, anarchists, socialists, Marxists, etc. Alfred Hayes, Ernest Hemingway, John Dos Passos, Erkine Caldwell, Kenneth Patchen, James Agee, Edward Dahlberg, Michale Gold, Nathanael West, William Carlos Williams, Ezra Pound, Henry Miller, Henry Roth, Lola Ridge, Muriel Rukeyser, Sol Funaroff, Nelson Algren, Wallace Stevens, Kenneth Fearing, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Grace Lumpkin, Robert Cantwell, Josephine Herbst, Woody guthrie, Mary Heaton Vorse, Albert Halper, Meridel Le Sueur, John Steinbeck, etc. A broad range of stories, songs, poems, & plays, as well as photographs, cartoons & paintings of the period. Patchen Joe Hill

Where Have All the Songwriters Gone? By Bob Hulteen

Music has many functions, worship included. But one of its primary roles is its ability to move people. It’s not surprising that many of the great social movements of this century have included memorable songs—tunes with a beat and a message that drawfolks into a broader vision and a confidence to work for change.

Think enough and you won't know anything. - Kenneth Patchen


1963 -- http://www.patriagrande.net/uruguay/eduardo.galeano/memoria.del.fuego/index.php?mes=Septiembre


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1966 --



2000 -- http://freespeechseattle.org/
http://freespeechseattle.org/
http://freespeechseattle.org/posters/

2001 -- Saturday 29th September All Anarkie Gorge & Nelsons Lookout Anarkie Gorge is in the northern section of the Brisbane Ranges National Park, west of Melbourne. The main feature of the walk is the old tunnels and pipelines built over 100 years ago for Geelong's water supply. After the walk up the valley we head up to Nelsons lookout with views to Port Philip Bay, Geelong and the Anakie Gorge itself.

Celebrations covering four shires as follows: 18.4.01 Anarkie Bush Sports Day and mini gem fest from 10am to 5pm at the state school; Lighting of the virgin rock, opera in the outback and a dinner at Springsure golf club 6-12pm Venue address various covering four shires/Anarkie State School, Sprigsure Golf Club, Emerald Town Hall,Capella Civic centre (a bit scary, this one: Anarkie State School (!)) Town/City EMERALD Region QLD Fitzroy State/Territory Queensland

http://www.centenary.gov.au/cgi-bin/events/D=calendar/V=event/R=qld1244/EV_OWNER=cof




3000 -- Calendar of SubGenius Saints —

October 3 St. Gomer 4 St. Sawney Beane 5 St. Pope Benedict IX 6 St. Ghengis 7 St. Odin 8 9 St. Attila 10 St. Madeline Murray O'Hair 11 St. Lt. Columbo/Bitterness Day (Can.) 12 St. Frank Sinatra 13 St. Alan Turing (Geek Orthodox) 14 St. Judge Isaac Parker (approximate) 15 St. Richard Speck 16 St. Pamela Anderson 17 St. Dean Martin/St. Jerry Lewis 18 19 St. Barbarella 20 St. Francis Bacon 21 22 St. Catherine di Medici 23 24 St. Janis Joplin 25 26 St. Onan 27 28 St. Gumby 29 30 St. Country Joe 31 St. Bob Crane (Night of a Thousand Screams)

November 1 St. Albert Camus 2 Erection Day (approximate)/St. Viagra 3 St. Ambrose Bierce 4 St. Boccaccio 5 6 St. Burroughs (either) 7 8 St. Mae West 9 St. Harold "Doc" Edgerton 10 St. Cthulu 11 St. Sid Vicious/St. NENSLO/Victory over Pinks Day 12 St. L. Ron Hubbard 13 St. Otis Campbell 14 St. Sappho 15 16 St. Herschell Gordon Lewis 17 18 St. Charles Fort 19 20 St. Abdul Aziz 21 22 23 St. Frederick Nietzsche 24 St. Krisfaluchi 25 Bitterness Day (U.S.) 26 27 28 29 30

December 1 St. Mothra 2 St. Rodan 3 St. Godzilla 4 St. Mechagodzilla 5 St. Ghidra/St. Mechaghidra 6 St. Gamera 7 Feast of All Monsters 8 St. Chesty Puller 9 10 Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms Day 11 St. Roddenberry 12 St. John Wayne Gacy 13 St. John Wayne 14 15 16 St. Crispin Glover 17 18 19 St. Lorenzo di Medici 20 21 22 St. Bootsie Collins 23 St. John Belushi 24 St. Krishna 25 26 St. John Calvin 27 St. Loki 28 St. Mike (The Bike) Hailwood 29 St. Vanessa del Rio 30 Boxing the Jesuit Day (Can.) 31 St. Lucifer (Look Good Until You Die Day) From: nu-monet Newsgroups: alt.slack Reply-To: like.excess@sex.org Date: Tue, Nov 16, 1999 4:37 PM Message-ID: <3831DC96.18A4@succeeds.com> SubGenius Spice wrote:

> > > I need a little help getting the names and dates > > > right. We certainly don't want to offend "Bob" > > > by groveling before the wrong saint on the wrong > > > day. Comments and suggestions, please.

> > > > St. Barbarella isn't there, but then, I don't know her day.

> > > > don't forget st. dymphna.

> > http://saints.catholic.org/saints/dymphna.html >

You should mention that St. Dymphna (mental illness) was raped and murdered by her father. But that's it, except insane people got better after visiting her crypt. Think Jon-Benet, except she makes sane people really bored.

She faces serious competition, like:

St. Denis (syphilis, Paris) Beheaded, carried head about with him.
St. Fiacre (non-specific venereal disease, hemorrhoids) Left impression of his buttocks on rock, which now heals the latter condition.

St. Agatha (Malta, bell-makers, diseases of the breast, earthquakes,fire, sterility) Breasts cut off--grew back, virginity grew back after forced to work in a brothel, burned at the stake--failed to ignite, beheaded. Sicilians carry the image of her tits through the streets once a year.

St. Lawrence (rotisseurs) Roasted alive on spit, and criticized the cook for not turning him enough. Blessed William of Fenoli, a 13th century monk who tore the leg off a mule to beat a group of hostiles, then restored the leg to the mule because he didn't want to walk home.
St. Nicholas (Russia, pawnbrokers, perfumiers, sailors, etc. (interesting combination, that)) restored to health three children who had been decapitated, to see if he could do it.

St. Swithun liked to sleep between two beautiful virgins, to see if he could do it. Should be the patron saint of boxing gloves. St. Catherine of Sienna. Eww. She overcame her fear of bubonic plague by drinking a whole bowl of pus. Eww. St. Simeon the Stylite lived on top of a pillar for 30 years, stood on one leg for a year, tied a rope around his waist to make his lower body putrify and become infested, afterwhich he ate the maggots. He should be the patron saint of Internet chat. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- popeblack@my-deja.com wrote: > > > http://saints.catholic.org/saints/dymphna.html > >

> > Don't forget Saint Otis Campbell Day(Gambrinus), I think it's the > 11th of Nov.or whatever day coincides with "National Drug and Alcohol > Awarness Day" in the US.

> Adds: St. Otis Campbell 11 Nov

St. Barbarella 19 Oct

St. Dymphna 3 Aug

----------------------------------------------------------------------

The days are filling up fast. Please submit names of your SubGenius saints and holy days as soon as possible.

The latest revisions to the calendar:

January 1 St. Jesus Christ (Feast of the Human Sacrifice) 2 St. Charlie Manson 3 4 St. Charles Darwin 5 St. Ludwig II 6 St. William McGonagall 7 St. Russ Meyers 8 St. Jimi Hendrix 9 St. Sigmund Freud 10 St. Mao Tse Tung 11 St. Al Capone 12 St. Peter Sellers 13 St. Werner von Braun 14 St. Gort 15 St. Niccolo Machiavelli 16 17 St. Thingfish 18 St. Martin Luther 19 St. Harlan Ellison 20 21 St. Fatty Arbuckle 22 Annual $1 Contribution 23 24 St. Klaatu 25 26 St. Steve Jackson 27 St. Michael Jackson 28 29 30 31

February 1 2 3 St. Pokemon 4 5 St. Benedict Arnold 6 7 8 St. Teletubbie 9 10 St. Marilyn Monroe 11 12 Confiscation of Property Day 13 14 Aztec Day 15 16 Cremation Wednesday (approximate) 17 St. Isaac Asimov 18 19 20 St. I.G. Farben 21 St. Boris Karloff 22 23 St. Monty Python 24 25 St. Burke and St. Hare 26 27 28 29

March 1 Obeisance before the Blessed Coney Day 2 3 4 St. Bulwer-Lytton 5 6 St. Quisling/Treachery Day 7 St. Barbara Eden 8 9 St. Millard Fillmore 10 St. Mussolini 11 St. Bela Lugosi 12 13 St. Firesign 14 St. Archimedes and Pi approximation 15 St. Edward G. Wood 16 St. Hercules 17 Feast of the Blessed Leprechaun/All Snakes' Day 18 St. Barney 19 St. Maxwell Smart 20 St. Xena 21 St. Jack Slade 22 St. Keef Richards 23 24 St. Baghwan Shree Rajneesh 25 St. Brian Michael Bendis 26 St. Nero 27 28 Palmistry Sunday (approximate) 29 St. Erik Satie 30 31

April 1 St. Eris 2 Passouter 3 Goof Friday (approximate) 4 St. Porfirio Diaz 5 Ether Sunday (approximate) 6 7 St. Columbus 8 St. Geronimo 9 10 April 10th Day 11 12 St. Print Olive 13 14 St. Adolph Hitler 15 St. Vlad Tepis 16 St. Messalina/All Hookers' Day 17 St. Tinkerbell 18 St. Lady Macbeth 19 20 21 St. Space Angel 22 23 Day of the Glorious Fuckup 24 St. Commodus 25 St. T 26 27 St. Shemp 28 St. Palmer 29 30 St. Elvis Costello

May 1 St. Catherine I (The Great) 2 3 St. Frank Zappa 4 5 St. Tiberius 6 St. Guiness (The Stout) 7 St. Peter Lorre 8 St. Buddha 9 St. Medea/St. Black Widow (approximate) 10 St. John Holmes 11 12 St. Lewinski 13 14 St. Wonder Warthog 15 St. Jagger 16 St. Bismarck 17 18 St. Leonard Nimoy 19 St. Fats Waller 20 St. Edward II 21 Free Money Day 22 St. Elphinstone 23 St. Slim Pickens 24 Victory over the U.S. Day (Can.) 25 St. Stalin 26 27 St. Edward Teach 28 29 30 St. Winnie Ruth Judd 31 Desecration Day

June 1 St. Daniel Boone 2 3 St. Smurf 4 St. Werner Klemperer 5 6 St. Santa Anna 7 Edtors' Day 8 St. Iggy Pop 9 St. Jim Jones 10 11 Day of the One Hit Wonders 12 St. Sparky 13 St. Annie Sprinkle 14 Fag Day 15 St. Howard Hughes 16 St. Steppenwolf 17 St. Zontar of Venus 18 St. Elvis 19 20 St. Joseph Smith 21 St. Sam Kinnison 22 St. Kali 23 St. Bob Marley 24 St. Anton LaVey 25 26 St. Archie McPhee 27 28 St. Carlos Castaneda 29 St. Elizabeth Claire Chapel 30 St. "Papa Doc" Duvalier

July 1 Oh! Canada Day (B.C.) 2 St. Phil Spector 3 St. Alec Guiness 4 St. Elizabeth Montgomery 5 6 St. Arthur C. Clark 7 St. James Dean 8 St. Zorak 9 St. MojoDick Nixon 10 St. Ed Gein 11 St. Poncho Villa 12 St. Lenny Bruce 13 St. Macarena 14 15 16 17 St. Caligula 18 19 St. Doom 20 St. Pope John XII 21 22 St. Karl Marx and 1/Pi approximation 23 St. Groucho Marx 24 St. Sylvester Graham 25 St. Shylock 26 St. Humphrey Bogart 27 St. Madonna 28 St. Marty Feldman 29 St. Brigham Young 30 St. Timothy Leary 31 St. Bill Gates

August 1 2 St. Robert Goddard 3 St. Dymphna 4 5 St. Lucretia Borgia 6 7 St. Idi Amin 8 St. Rosencranz/St. Gilderstern 9 10 St. Irwin Corey 11 St. Clare 12 St. Francisco Franco 13 St. Prospero 14 St. Buck Dharma 15 St. Marilyn Chambers 16 Solarinite Day 17 18 St. Richard Wagner 19 St. Brian Mulrooney 20 St. Harpo 21 St. Broaderick Crawford 22 23 24 Nuclear Accident Day ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Subject: !Calendar Update 11/21! Possibly LAST! From: nu-monet Newsgroups: alt.slack Reply-To: like.excess@sex.org Date: Sun, Nov 21, 1999 10:00 AM Message-ID: <3838171B.146@succeeds.com>

(The only unfilled dates remaining are: November 15 November 26 November 28 December 15 December 20 After these, saints will have to be double occupancy. Or kill them.)

January 1 St. Jesus Christ (Feast of the Human Sacrifice) 2 Failure of Will Day 3 St. Harryhausen 4 St. Charles Darwin 5 St. Ludwig II 6 St. William McGonagall 7 St. Russ Meyers 8 St. Jimi Hendrix 9 St. Sigmund Freud 10 St. Mao Tse Tung 11 St. Al Capone 12 St. Peter Sellers 13 St. Werner von Braun 14 St. Gort 15 St. Niccolo Machiavelli 16 Night of the Lemur 17 St. Thingfish 18 St. Martin Luther 19 St. Harlan Ellison 20 St. Tiny Tim 21 St. Fatty Arbuckle 22 Annual $1 Contribution 23 St. Sergei Eisenstein 24 St. Klaatu 25 St. Keith Moon 26 St. Steve Jackson 27 St. Michael Jackson 28 St. Alan Funt 29 St. Willy Wonka 30 St. Ice T 31 St. Theodore Kaczinski February 1 St. Chronos 2 St. Roger Corman 3 St. Pokemon 4 St. Zeus 5 St. Benedict Arnold 6 St. Tlaloc 7 St. Alfred E. Newman 8 St. Teletubbie 9 St. Lewinsky 10 St. Marilyn Monroe 11 Overindulgence Festival 12 High Confiscation of Property 13 St. Snuffleupagus 14 Aztec Day/St. Seka 15 St. Grigori Rasputin 16 Cremation Wednesday/Hash Wednesday (approximate) 17 St. Isaac Asimov 18 St. Frank Miller 19 St. Senor Wenches 20 St. I.G. Farben 21 St. Boris Karloff 22 St. Hunter S. Thompson 23 St. Monty Python 24 St. Huey Newton 25 St. Burke/St. Hare 26 St. Emo Phillips 27 St. Carl Sagan 28 St. Ken Kesey 29 St. Jack Kervorkian

March 1 Obeisance before the Blessed Coney Day 2 St. Wonder Woman 3 St. Newmar 4 St. Bulwer-Lytton 5 St. George Carlin 6 St. Quisling/Treachery Day 7 St. Barbara Eden 8 St. Weird Al 9 St. Millard Fillmore 10 St. Mussolini 11 St. Bela Lugosi 12 St. Houdini 13 St. Firesign 14 St. Archimedes and Pi approximation 15 St. Edward G. Wood 16 St. Hercules 17 Feast of the Blessed Leprechaun/All Snakes' Day 18 St. Barney 19 St. Maxwell Smart 20 St. Xena 21 St. Jack Slade 22 St. Keef Richards 23 St. Charles Ponzi 24 St. Baghwan Shree Rajneesh 25 St. Brian Michael Bendis 26 St. Nero 27 St. John Ramsey/St. Patsy Ramsey 28 Palmistry Sunday (approximate) 29 St. Erik Satie 30 St. Dana Plato 31 St. John Dillinger April 1 St. Eris/Night of the Evil Clown 2 Passouter 3 Goof Friday (approximate) 4 St. Porfirio Diaz 5 St. Robert Bloch 6 Ether Sunday (approximate) 7 St. Columbus 8 St. Geronimo 9 St. Tommy Georgiarides 10 April 10th Day/Chocolate Overindulgence 11 Annual $30 Donation 12 St. Print Olive 13 St. Bill Hicks (The Great) 14 St. Adolph Hitler 15 St. Vlad Tepes 16 St. Messalina/All Hookers' Day 17 St. Tinkerbell 18 St. Lady Macbeth 19 St. David Koresh 20 St. R. Bud Dwyer 21 St. Space Angel 22 St. R. Crumb (The Great) 23 Day of the Glorious Fuckup 24 St. Commodus 25 St. T 26 St. Jethro Tull 27 St. Shemp 28 St. Palmer 29 St. Tito Jackson 30 St. Elvis Costello May 1 St. Catherine I (The Great) 2 St. Nina Hartley 3 St. Frank Zappa 4 St. Rodney Allen Rippey 5 St. Tiberius 6 St. Guiness (The Stout) 7 St. Peter Lorre 8 St. Buddha 9 St. Medea/St. Oedipus (approximate) 10 St. John Holmes 11 St. Salvador Dali 12 St. Hugh Hefner 13 St. Judy Tenuta 14 St. Wonder Warthog 15 St. Jagger 16 St. Bismarck 17 St. Laval homeboy 18 St. Leonard Nimoy 19 St. Fats Waller 20 St. Edward II 21 Free Money Day 22 St. Elphinstone 23 St. Slim Pickens 24 Victory over the U.S. Day (Can.) 25 St. Stalin 26 St. Lenny Bruce (The Great) 27 St. Edward Teach/Pillage Festival 28 St. Pere Ubu (Roi) 29 St. Spike Jones 30 St. Winnie Ruth Judd 31 Desecration Day June 1 St. Daniel Boone 2 St. Marquis de Sade 3 St. Smurf 4 St. Werner Klemperer 5 St. Wild Man Fischer 6 St. Santa Anna 7 Edtors' Day 8 St. Iggy Pop 9 St. Jim Jones 10 St. Wacky Wall Walker 11 Day of the One Hit Wonders 12 St. Sparky 13 St. Annie Sprinkle 14 Fag Day (approximate) 15 St. Howard Hughes 16 St. das Steppenwolf 17 St. Zontar of Venus 18 St. Elvis 19 St. Robert Heinlein 20 St. Joseph Smith 21 St. Sam Kinnison 22 St. Kali 23 St. Bob Marley 24 St. Anton LaVey 25 St. Ed Gein 26 St. Archie McPhee 27 St. James Dean 28 St. Carlos Castaneda 29 St. Elizabeth Claire Chapel 30 St. "Papa Doc" Duvalier July 1 Oh! Canada Day (B.C.) 2 St. Phil Spector 3 St. Alec Guiness 4 St. Elizabeth Montgomery 5 nX-Day (traditional) 6 St. Arthur C. Clarke 7 nX-Day (celebrated) 8 St. Zorak 9 St. MojoDick Nixon 10 St. Mel Blanc 11 St. Poncho Villa 12 St. Pam Grier 13 St. Macarena 14 St. Humphrey Bogart 15 St. Neil Gaiman 16 Display of the Embarrassing Swimsuits 17 St. Caligula 18 St. Thomas Morton 19 St. Dr. Doom/St. Thulsa Doom 20 St. Pope John XII 21 St. Alan Moore 22 St. Karl Marx/St. James Whale and 1/Pi approximation 23 St. Groucho Marx 24 St. Sylvester Graham 25 St. Shylock 26 St. Stanley Kubrick 27 St. Madonna 28 St. Marty Feldman 29 St. Brigham Young 30 St. Demento 31 St. Bill Gates August 1 Drug Side-effects Day (St. Lobster Boy's Day) 2 St. Robert Goddard 3 St. Dymphna 4 St. Charles Addams 5 St. Lucretia Borgia 6 Dance of the Insensitive Bastards 7 St. Idi Amin 8 St. Britishthermalunit, inventor of AC 9 St. Rosencranz/St. Gilderstern 10 St. Irwin Corey 11 St. Clare 12 St. Francisco Franco 13 St. Prospero 14 St. Buck Dharma 15 St. Marilyn Chambers 16 Solarinite Day 17 St. Sharon Mitchell 18 St. Richard Wagner 19 St. Brian Mulrooney 20 St. Harpo 21 St. Broaderick Crawford 22 St. Ignatius Reilly 23 Nuclear Accident Day 24 St. Aubrey Beardsley 25 St. Heliogabalus 26 St. Lizzie Borden 27 St. Harris/St. Klebold 28 St. Frank Gorshin 29 St. Gahan Wilson 30 St. Thor 31 St. Paul Reubens September 1 Begins the month of Ramalamadingdong 2 St. Benny Hill 3 St. Wendy O. Williams/St. Lawrence Welk 4 St. Chester Brown/St. Ed the Happy Clown 5 St. Henry Louis Mencken 6 Cesarean Section Day (approximate) 7 St. Susan St. James 8 St. Jill St. John 9 St. Dean Corll 10 St. Chico 11 St. Werewolf 12 Rush to Judgement Day 13 St. Livia 14 St. Vaughn Bode 15 St. Gilles de Rais 16 The Day That Shall Not Be Named 17 St. William Shatner 18 St. John Harvey Kellogg 19 March of the Reanimated Corpses 20 Yummy Kippers Day 21 St. Jerry Garcia 22 Brother Dave Gardner 23 St. la Cicclioni 24 St. Teddy Ruxpin 25 St. Captain Beefheart 26 St. Franz Liszt 27 St. Hieronymous Bosch 28 St. Hazelwood (Beer Day) 29 The Daily Double 30 St. John Waters October 1 Descension of the Lawyers Day 2 St. Redd Foxx 3 St. Gomer 4 St. Buster Keaton 5 St. Pope Benedict IX 6 St. Ghengis 7 St. Odin 8 St. Sawney Beane 9 St. Attila 10 St. Madeline Murray O'Hair 11 St. Sid Vicious/St. NENSLO/St. Lt. Columbo/Bitterness Day (Can.) 12 St. Frank Sinatra 13 St. Alan Turing (Geek Orthodox) 14 St. Judge Isaac Parker (approximate) 15 St. Richard Speck 16 St. Pamela Anderson 17 St. Dean Martin/St. Jerry Lewis 18 St. Richelieu 19 St. Barbarella 20 St. Francis Bacon 21 St. Bruno Hauptmann 22 St. Catherine di Medici/St. Timothy Leary 23 St. Bobby London 24 St. Janis Joplin 25 The Day To Be Named Later 26 St. Onan 27 Festival of the Conspiracies (3.3 days) 28 St. Gumby 29 St. Lazarus Long 30 St. Country Joe 31 St. Bob Crane (Night of a Thousand Screams) November 1 St. Bozo (approximate, the first Tuesday after first Monday) 2 Erection Day (approximate)/St. Viagra 3 St. Ambrose Bierce 4 St. Boccaccio 5 St. Albert Camus 6 St. Burroughs (either) 7 St. Charles Baudelaire 8 St. Mae West 9 St. Harold "Doc" Edgerton 10 St. Cthulu 11 St. Charlie Manson/Victory over Pinks VP Day 12 St. L. Ron Hubbard 13 St. Otis Campbell 14 St. Sappho 15 16 St. Herschell Gordon Lewis 17 Smoke Someone Out Day (approximate) 18 St. Charles Fort/ St. Aleister Crowley 19 Hate for the sake of Hating 20 St. Abdul Aziz 21 Clone Day 22 Clone Day 23 St. Frederick Nietzsche 24 St. Krisfaluchi 25 Bitterness Day (U.S.) 26 27 St. Eugene V. Debs 28 29 Ummm.Bacon Day/Vegetarian Remission Day 30 St. Samuel Clemens December 1 St. Mothra/Feast of Saints Kyle, Stan, Cartman and Kenny 2 St. Rodan 3 St. Godzilla 4 St. Mechagodzilla 5 St. Ghidra/St. Mechaghidra 6 St. Gamera 7 Feast of All Monsters 8 St. Chesty Puller 9 The Martyrdom of St. Kenny 10 Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms Day 11 St. Roddenberry 12 St. John Wayne Gacy 13 St. John Wayne 14 Whiny Victimization/Co-Dependency Day 15 16 St. Crispin Glover/St. Philip K. Dick 17 St. Sacco/St. Vanzetti 18 Running of the Roboderos 19 St. Lorenzo di Medici 20 21 Feelings of Gnawing Guilt Minute(04:00-04:01) 22 St. Bootsie Collins 23 St. John Belushi 24 St. Krishna 25 Robert "Bob" Leroy Ripley /Festival of Fish-Fighting, Fisting and Felching 26 St. John Calvin 27 St. Loki 28 St. Mike (The Bike) Hailwood 29 St. Vanessa del Rio 30 Boxing the Jesuit Day (Can.) 31 St. Lucifer (Look Good Until You Die Day) September 1 Begins the month of Ramalamadingdong 6 Cesarean Section Day (approximate) 9 St. Dean Corll 10 St. Chico 11 St. Werewolf 12 Rush to Judgement Day 13 St. Livia 14 15 St. Gilles de Rais 16 17 St. William Shatner 18 St. John Harvey Kellogg 19 20 Yummy Kippers Day 21 St. Jerry Garcia 22 Brother Dave Gardner 23 St. la Cicclioni 24 St. Teddy Ruxpin 25 St. David Koresh 26 St. Franz Liszt 27 St. Hieronymous Bosch 28 St. Hazelwood (Beer Day) Back to document index Original file name: Calendar of SubGeniuSaints ?


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3500 -- sue coe dead meat animal liberation http://www.graphicwitness.org/coe/prntsale.htm


4000 -- IS EINSTEIN AN ANARCHIST? The FBI has been forced to release hundreds of documents on Albert Einstein under the 'Freedom of Information Act'. These can be found as PDF files at http://foia.fbi.gov/einstein.htm The opening document includes a letter arguing that Einstein should be excluded from the USA because of his affiliation with the War Resisters League which the document describes as 'Anarcho-communist'. It further argues that Einstein's own beliefs are anarchist although the writers seem more then a little confused in writing that "Not even Stalin himself is affiliated with so many anarcho-communist international groups ... as ALBERT EINSTEIN" http://foia.fbi.gov/einstein.htm
http://www.ainfos.ca/ainfos00271.html

4000 -- 1939 ¶Kerouac graduates high school. ¶Sept 22: Kerouac begins a post-graduate year at Horace Mann Prep school in New York. ¶November 22: Lowell Sun newspaper prints an article about Kerouac's football achievements at Horace Mann. ¶Kerouac's short story "The Brothers" is published in the Horace Mann Quarterly. ¶Kerouac exposed to and influenced by jazz he hears at Harlem clubs.. ¶Smokes marijuana for the first time. ¶December: Kerouac loses his virginity with a Manhattan prostitute. 1940 ¶March: Kerouac has a second story, "Une Veille de Noel" published at Horace Mann. ¶April: Takes Mary Carney to Horace Mann Spring Prom. ¶Summer: Re-establishes friendship with Sammy Sampas who recommends he read Thomas Wolfe's novels. ¶September: Kerouac starts attending Columbia University on a football scholarship. ¶October: Kerouac breaks his leg during a football game 1941 ¶January: Kerouac joins the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. ¶May: Kerouac is elected vice-president of the next Columbia sophomore class. ¶Summer: Kerouax is in Lowell with his friends Sammy Sampas and G.J. Apostolos. Reads James Joyce's Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. ¶Fall: Kerouac leaves Columbia. 1942 ¶Kerouac joins Merchant Marines and sails to Greenland aboard the S.S. Dorchester. ¶Kerouac creates the "Duluoz" pseudonym. 1943 ¶Kerouac joins the Navy in February. ¶September: Kerouac is discharged from the Navy. ¶Sails to Liverpool on the S.S. George Weems. ¶Returns to New York and starts hanging out at 421 West 118th Street, Apartment No. 15, home to Joan Vollmer and Edie Parker. ¶Kerouac meets Lucien Carr. 1944 ¶February: Kerouac meets William Burroughs. ¶Burroughs gives Kerouac a copy of Spengler's Decline of the West. ¶Lucien Carr invokes the "New Vision" concept. ¶Spring: Lucien Carr introduces Kerouac to Ginsberg. ¶August 14: Lucien Carr kills David Kammerer, Kerouac is arrested for helping Carr dispose of evidence. ¶Aug 22: Kerouac marries Edie Parker to raise bail money. ¶December: Edie Parker and Joan Vollmer move into communal apartment at 419 West 115th Street. Kerouac, Ginsberg and Burroughs will live at the apartment. Herbert Huncke will be a frequent visitor. 1945 ¶Kerouac co-writes with Burroughs And the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks¶May 1: Kerouac conceives idea for first novel that will examine the differences between Lowell and New York City. [image: Kerouac self-portrait] 1946 ¶Leo Kerouac (father) dies of stomach cancer. ¶Kerouac begins writing The Town and the City. ¶Huncke introduces the word "beat" to Kerouac, et. al .¶Kerouac begins using the drug Benzedrine regularly.¶Summer: communal group begins to disband. ¶December: Kerouac meets Neal Cassady. ¶ Kerouac's marriage to Edie Parker is annulled. [Edie Parker] 1947 ¶March 4: Cassady leaves New York after his first visit. ¶July 17: Kerouac takes a bus to Denver. (This begins his first trip on the road. He takes busses and hitchhikes to the West coast via Denver. ¶October: Kerouac returns to New York. 1948 ¶May: Kerouac completes The Town and the City. ¶July: Meets John Clellon Holmes. ¶November: Kerouac completes early version of On The Road. about his 1947 trip across the country. ¶December 29: Cassady, his wife Luanne Henderson and Al Hinkle arrive at Kerouac's sister's home, where he is living with his mother, in North Carolina. [photo: Neal Cassady & Jack Kerouac] 1949 ¶January 28: Kerouac's departs New York with Cassady, Henderson and Al Hinkle. (This begins the second cross country trip which will be incorporated into a later draft of On the Road. ¶February: Kerouac, in San Francisco, takes a bus back to his sister's home in North Carolina. completing the second cross country trip. ¶March 29: The Town and the City is accepted for publication by Harcourt Brace. Kerouac will receive a $1,000 advance in monthly installments. ¶May: Kerouac moves to Denver. His mother will join him in Denver. ¶July: Kerouac's mother returns east; she didn't like living in Denver. ¶Fall: Kerouac uses the term "beat generation" for the first time. 1950 ¶March 2:The Town and the City is published. ¶May: Kerouac takes a book publicity trip to Denver. Stays with Ed White. Romance with Beverly Burford. ¶June: Neal Cassady arrives in Denver and Kerouac drives to Mexico with Neal. Visits Bill and Joan Burroughs in Mexico. Kerouac is now a frequent user of marijuana and Benzedrine. While in Mexico, Kerouac gets dysentery. ¶July: Kerouac hitchhikes from Mexico back to mother's apartment in Richmond Hill (New York). ¶November 3: Meets Joan Haverty. ¶November 17:Marries Joan Haverty in Greenwich Village. ¶December 27: Kerouac receives Neal Cassady's "Joan Anderson Letter." [photo: Joan Haverty] 1951 ¶January: Kerouac and his new wife move to 454 West 20th Street. ¶Friend Ed White suggests Kerouac try writing the way artists sketch. ¶March: John Clellon Holmes shows Kerouac his completed draft of his novel about the Beat Generation (published as Go.) ¶April: Kerouac writes a new version On the Road on a paper scroll. ¶April: Kerouac and Joan Haverty separate. Kerouac goes to North Carolina to his sister's home. ¶May: Kerouac learns that his estranged wife is pregnant. ¶October 25: Kerouac discovers his "writing soul" and begins writing "sketches" using "wild form" called "spontaneous bop prose." ¶Recasts the "horizontal" On the Road into the "vertical" Visions of Cody using the "modern spontaneous method." ¶December 18: Kerouac arrives at San Francisco home of Neal and Carolyn Cassady. ¶December: Ace Books gives Kerouac $250 advance for On the Road. 1952 ¶January-April: Kerouac is living with Neal and Carolyn Cassady in California. ¶February 16: Janet Michelle Kerouac born in Albany. She is Jack's daughter with Joan Haverty. ¶February: Jack and Carolyn Cassady are intimate. ¶Kerouac has first psychedelic experience when Philip Lamantia gives him peyote.¶April: In Mexico, Kerouac writes Dr. Sax using "spontaneous prose" method and marijuana. ¶Fall: John Clellon Holmes' novel, Go is published. ¶November 16: "This is the Beat Generation" an essay by John Clellon Holmes is published in the New York Times Magazine. ¶Kerouac works as student brakeman for railroad in California. ¶Book of Dreams project begun. ¶December: In New York, Kerouac is living with his mother at her Richmond Hill home. [Carolyn Cassady and Kerouac] 1953 ¶January-February: In Long Island, Kerouac writes Maggie Cassidy. ¶May-June: In San Jose, California working for the Southern Pacific railroad. ¶June: Kerouac signs up as a waiter on the S.S. William Carruth bound for Korea but quits in New Orleans ¶July-October: Kerouac meets and has a love affair with "Mardou Fox" in New York. ¶October: Kerouac writesThe Subterraneans. ¶Fall: Kerouac writes "Essentials of Spontaneous Prose." ["Mardou Fox"] 1954 ¶January 27: Kerouac hitchhikes to California from New York. ¶February 8: Kerouac visits the Cassady's in Los Gatos, California. ¶February: Interest in Buddhism begins as Kerouac reads Dwight Goddard's A Buddhist Bible; begins writing "Some of the Dharma." ¶March: Kerouac moves into the Cameo Hotel in San Francisco; friends with Al Sublette. Begins writing San Francisco Blues poems. Begins Book of Dreams. ¶April: Kerouac takes a bus back to his mother's house in Richmond Hill (New York). Works briefly on the Brooklyn waterfront but quits because of phlebitis condition. ¶April-August: Starts writing science fiction story "cityCityCITY". ¶Summer: Sterling Lord becomes Kerouac's literary agent. ¶August 21: Malcolm Cowley in a Saturday Review article refers to Kerouac's unpublished novel On The Road and calls Kerouac the man who invented the Beat generation. ¶September: Kerouac takes a trip to Lowell and stays at the Depot Chambers Hotel. During this visit Kerouac a mystical experience in his childhood church and sees a new religious meaning for the word "beat"- beatitude. ¶Winter: Kerouac's dependence on alcohol, Benzedrine, and cigarettes is intensifying. ¶December: Arrested for non-support of his daughter Janet. ¶December 19: Kerouac writes in his journal, "At the lowest beatest ebb of my life." [William Burroughs & Kerouac] 1955 ¶January 18: Kerouac at Domestic Relations Court hearing regarding child support for his daughter. Judge suspends case for 1 year because Kerouac is unable to work due to phlebitis condition. ¶February: Kerouac goes to Rocky Mount, North Carolina to live with his sister's family. Begins writing Buddhist handbook "Wake Up" (also called "Buddha Tells Us"). Writes "Bowery Blues" poems. ¶April: Kerouac's "Jazz of the Beat Generation" is published in New World Writing. ¶May 20: Completes "cityCityCITY" science fiction story. ¶June: Kerouac, in New York City visiting Lucien Carr and other friends, writes "MacDougal Street Blues" poems. ¶Summer: Kerouac receives $200 award from Academy of Arts & Letters. ¶August: Kerouac hitchhikes to Mexico City and takes a room at 212 Orizaba Street, above his friend Bill Garver's apartment. Kerouac falls in love with Esperanza Villanueva, an Indian prostitute addicted to drugs. ¶August-September: Writes Part 1 ("Trembling and Chaste") of Tristessa; writes Mexico City Blues (244 choruses). ¶September 9: Kerouac leaves Mexico and travels to California to see Allen Ginsberg who is living in a cottage at 1624 Milvia Street in Berkeley. ¶December 22: Kerouac returns to Rocky Mount, North Carolina and begins writing Visions of Gerard. [Allen Ginsberg & Kerouac] 1956 ¶January 16: Kerouac completes Visions of Gerard. ¶January: Kerouac's "The Mexican Girl" (from On the Road) is published in the Paris Review; Kerouac writes "Brooklyn Bridge Blues" poems. Takes trip to New York City. ¶February: Returns to Rocky Mount, North Carolina. ¶March 17: Hitchhikes from North Carolina to California. ¶April: In California, shares cabin with Gary Snyder in Marin County. ¶Spring: Writes The Scripture of the Golden Eternity; writes Old Angel Midnight. Kerouac meets Alan Watts, Robert Creeley. ¶June 18: Kerouac hitchhikes to Washington State for job on a mountain watching for fires. ¶June 25: Begins job training as a mountain firewatcher. ¶July-September: Alone on Desolation Peak in the Cascade Mountains working as a firewatcher. ¶September: After 60+ days of solitude on Desolation Peak, Kerouac comes down from the mountain and travels to Seattle. ¶Late September: Travels to Mexico City, rents same one-room apartment above Bill Garver on Orizaba Street. . ¶September-November: In Mexico City, completes Tristessa; begins Desolation Angels. ¶November: Travels from Mexico to New York City with Allen Ginsberg and Peter Orlovsky, stops in Washington D.C. to see Gregory Corso. In New York begins romance with Helen Weaver. ¶December: Meets Salvador Dali. ¶Mid-December: Viking Press accepts On The Road for publication. ¶Late December: Kerouac travels to his sister's new home in Orlando, Florida. 1957 ¶January 11: Kerouac signs book contract with Viking Press. ¶January 19: With Ginsberg and Peter Orlovsky, Kerouac spends a weekend at the Connecticut home of John Clellon Holmes. ¶January: Relationship with Helen Weaver ends; Kerouac takes a room at the Marlton Hotel and types up the manuscript for The Subterraneans; Kerouac meets and starts romance with Joyce Glassman; with Allen Ginsberg and Gregory Corso, Kerouac meets William Carlos Williams in New Jersey. ¶February 15: Kerouac departs New York on the S.S. Slovenia en route for Tangier to see William Burroughs. ¶February-March: In Tangier, Kerouac stays in a room above Burroughs at the Villa Muniria; types Burroughs' Naked Lunch manuscript (Kerouac has provided the title for the novel which Burroughs originally called Word Hoard.) ¶March: Ginsberg and Orlovsky arrive in Tangier to visit Kerouac and Burroughs. ¶April 5: Kerouac leaves Tangier and travels to France. ¶ April: Travels in Paris; goes to the Louvre Museum; travels to England. ¶Late April: Kerouac returns to New York aboard the S.S. New Amsterdam. ¶May 6: Kerouac and his mother move, via Greyhound Bus from Orlando, Florida to Berkeley, California; rents a small house at 1943 Berkeley Way. ¶Spring: Kerouac writes more of his Book of Dreams; writes "A Dharma Bum in Europe"; types up "Book of Sketches" (from his notebooks); begins writing the novel "Avalokitesvara"; meets LuAnne Henderson for an afternoon in Golden Gate Park. ¶June: "Neal and the Three Stooges" (from Visions of Cody) is published in New Editions 2. ¶Mid-July: Kerouac moves his mother, by bus, back to Orlando, Florida. ¶July: "A Billowy Trip in the World" is published in New Directions 16. ¶July 23: Kerouac departs Orlando, Florida for Mexico. ¶Late-July: unsettled by an earthquake while staying at a downtown Mexico City hotel, Kerouac stays in his room for two weeks except to go out to procure prostitutes. ¶Mid-August: Kerouac returns to Florida. ¶September 5: On The Road is published; Kerouac is in New York with his girlfriend, Joyce Glassman. ¶September 6: Kerouac dreams his head is bandaged and he's being chased by the police. He hides inside a parade of children chanting his name. ¶Late September: Kerouac appears on John Wingate's Nightbeat television show. ¶Fall: Evergreen No. 2 is published featuring Kerouac and other Beat Generation/San Francisco poets. ¶October: returns to mother's home in Orlando, Florida. ¶November: In Florida, Kerouac starts writing the Dharma Bums. ¶December 9: In Florida, Kerouac finishes writing Dharma Bums. ¶December: Kerouac's "The Rumbling Rambling Blues" story is published in the December issue of Playboy magazine; Kerouac does the first jazz/poetry reading session with David Amram in New York; writes the play "Beat Generation" for Lillian Hellman (she rejects it but the third act will be used for the film Pull My Daisy.) [Joyce Glassman] 1958 ¶Fame begins as "father of the Beat Generation." ¶January: In Florida, with mother; retypes Dharma Bums manuscript; begins work on Memory Babe. ¶February: Kerouac's The Subterraneans is published by Grove Press. ¶Late February: Kerouac travels to New York from Florida to look for a house to buy. ¶March: Kerouac purchases a house on 34 Gilbert Street, Northport (Long Island), New York. ¶Spring: MGM Studios buys film rights to The Subterraneans for $15,000. On The Road movie rights sold to Tri-Way Productions for $25,000 (Kerouac will only receive $2500 before Tri-Way goes out of business.); Partisan Review publishes article by Norman Podhoretz called "The Know-Nothing Bohemians" which criticizes Kerouac and the Beat Generation; Kerouac records a music/reading session with Steve Allen on piano. ¶April: Kerouac is beaten up by three men outside the Kettle of Fish bar on McDougal Street in New York. ¶April 2: San Francisco Chronicle newspaper columnist Herb Caen coins the term "beatnik" (a pun on "sputnik.") ¶April 10: Kerouac, with photographer Robert Frank departs New York to pick up mother in Florida and move her to Northport, Long Island home. ¶July 5: Kerouac does an interview about the Beat Generation with Lucien Carr for the UPI wire service. ¶August: Life Magazine article called "The Bored, The Bearded and the Beat" is published. ¶October 15: Kerouac's Dharma Bums is published; Kerouac, with Allen Ginsberg meets D.T. Suzuki. ¶Late October: Kerouac ends relationship with Joyce Glassman and begins affair with Dody Müller. ¶November 8: Kerouac participates in a Brandeis University-sponsored forum called "Is There A Beat Generation?". ¶December 1: New York Post publishes "Mike Wallace Asks Jack Kerouac: What is the Beat Generation?" (based on a CBS news story). 1959 ¶January 2: Filming of Pull My Daisy based on part of a play Kerouac wrote begins in New York. ¶January 29: Kerouac participates in a benefit reading for Big Table magazine in Chicago. ¶January: Kerouac spends time in New York with Dody Müller. ¶February: Kerouac records narration for Pull My Daisy. ¶Late February: Kerouac's affair with Dody Müller ends. ¶Spring: Big Table magazine publishes Kerouac's "Old Angel Midnight."; Alfred Aronowitz begins series of articles on Kerouac and the Beat Generation published in the New York Post; Kerouac meets Anaïs Nin; Truman Capote, on the David Susskind television program condescends and calls Kerouac's writing, "typewriting"; Kerouac is reportedly drinking up to a quart of alcohol a day. ¶April: Begins writing column for Escapade magazine. ¶June: Pull My Daisy film by Alfred Leslie and Robert Frank starring Allen Ginsberg, Peter Orlovsky and Gregory Corso, with music by David Amram and narration by Jack Kerouac is completed. ¶April 30: Kerouac's Doctor Sax is published by Grove Press. ¶June: Kerouac sells house on Gilbert Street in Northport, Long Island and moves with his mother to Orlando, Florida. ¶July: Kerouac's Maggie Cassidy is published by Avon as a paperback original. ¶Summer: Kerouac begins romance with Lois Sorrell; Albert Zugsmith's B-grade film The Beat Generation is released; the television situation comedy Dobie Gillis features a "beatnik" character, Maynard G. Krebs (played by Bob Denver, the future Gilligan). ¶October: Kerouac buys a house at 49 Earl Avenue in Northport and moves his mother, who is unhappy in Florida, back to Long Island. ¶November 16: Kerouac appears on the Steve Allen Show in Hollywood. After the show he has dinner with Mamie Van Doren. ¶November 17: Kerouac travels to San Francisco to attend a screening of Pull My Daisy at the San Francisco Film Festival. ¶November: Grove Press publishes Mexico City Blues; Kerouac meets Lew Welch and Albert Saijo in San Francisco. ¶November 20: Kerouac drives back to New York with Welch and Saijo. ¶November 29: Kenneth Rexroth in his New York Times Book Review article on Mexico City Blues attacks Kerouac and his writing. 1960 ¶February 6: John Ciardi in the Saturday Review publishes the critical "Epitaph for the Dead Beats" which accuses the Beats of being anti-intellectual.¶April: While drunk, Kerouac falls an injures his elbow in New York's Penn Station. ¶May: While drunk in the Bowery, Kerouac falls and injures his head; Kerouac experiences first bout of delirium tremens. ¶June: Avon publishes Tristessa; Hollywood's movie version of The Subterraneans is released. ¶Spring: Kerouac's poem "Rimbaud" published in Leroi Jones' magazine Yugen; Jones' Totem Press publishes Kerouac's Scripture of the Golden Eternity; New Directions publishes a limited edition of Visions of Cody. ¶July: Travels by train to San Francisco en route to Lawrence Ferlinghetti's Bixby Canyon cabin. ¶July-August: in Bixby Canyon cabin Kerouac reviews galley's of Book of Dreams; reads Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde; has a reunion with Neal and Carolyn Cassady at their Los Gatos home; starts a week-long romance with Jackie Gibson in San Francisco. ¶September 3: after a party at the Bixby Canyon cabin Kerouac suffers a breakdown. ¶September 7: Kerouac flies back to New York and returns to live in Northport with his mother. ¶September 27: McGraw-Hill publishes Lonesome Traveler, a collection of travel pieces and other work. ¶December: City Lights publishes Kerouac's Book of Dreams. 1961 ¶January: With Allen Ginsberg in Newton Center, Massachusetts Kerouac takes psilocycbin provided by Timothy Leary. ¶March: Joan Haverty starts new effort to collect child support from Kerouac for their daughter Janet. ¶Spring: Meets painter Stanley Twardowicz in Northport; Bernice Lemire, a student at Boston College, writes Jack Kerouac: Early Influences. ¶April: Kerouac sells the house in Northport and he and his mother move to a ranch house at 1309 Alfred Drive in Orlando, Florida. ¶June: Kerouac flies to Mexico City. ¶June-August: In Mexico City, Kerouac completes part two of Desolation Angels; write "Cerrada Medellin Blues" poems; has a brief affair with a liquor store clerk, Guillermo; Kerouac's suitcase containing his baseball game, and Buddhist prayer beads is stolen. ¶August: Confidential magazine publishes a ghost-written story by Joan Haverty called "My Ex-Husband Jack Kerouac Is An Ingrate."; Kerouac returns to Orlando from Mexico City. ¶September: In Orlando, in ten nights, Kerouac writes Big Sur. ¶November: Kerouac goes to New York and drinks and parties with Lucien Carr and friends; has brief romance with a teenager named Yseult. ¶December: In Florida, retypes Big Sur manuscript. [Jan Kerouac] 1962 ¶January: Kerouac endures a "30 day drunk" during visit to New York. ¶February 20: meets for the first time his daughter Janet in Brooklyn. ¶March: Agrees to $52 weekly child support for his daughter. ¶April: Returns to Orlando, spends time with his teenage nephew Paul, who's own father is frequently absent. ¶Spring: Visions of Gerard accepted for publication by Farrar, Straus and Cudahy. ¶July: Travels to New York, Old Orchard Beach in Maine and to Cape Cod in Massachusetts. Returns to Florida. ¶Summer: Lois Sorrell visits Kerouac in Florida; Kerouac reads Nabokov's Lolita. ¶September 9: Kerouac begins one-week visit to John Clellon Holmes in Old Saybrook, Connecticut. ¶September 15: Takes a taxi cab from Connecticut to Lowell, Massachusetts. ¶September 15-24: In Lowell, meets and befriends Paul Bourgeois; sees Mary Carney; drinks at the SAC Club; Kerouac is interviewed on a local Lowell radio station. ¶September: Big Sur published by Farrar, Straus, and Cudahy. ¶September 24: Kerouac leaves Lowell with Paul Bourgeois en route to Florida through New York. ¶September 24-30: In New York, drinking and visiting friends. Flies back to Orlando with Paul Bourgeois. ¶December 24: Moves with mother by train from Orlando to new ranch house at 7 Judyann Court in Northport, New York. ¶December: Kerouac begins work on Vanity of Duluoz. 1963 ¶Winter-Spring: In Northport living with mother Kerouac is friends with Stanley Twardowicz and Matsumi Kanemitsu; drinks and plays pool at Gunther's Bar. ¶August: Neal Cassady visits Northport. ¶September 6: Visions of Gerard is published by Farrar, Straus and Cudahy. ¶November: Kerouac has a reunion with Helen Weaver; sees "Mardou Fox"; sees Joyce Glassman (now married); gets close to Anne Twardowicz. ¶December: Kerouac visits with Allen Ginsberg who has just returned from India and Japan; Kerouac's daughter Jan calls him on the telephone. 1964 ¶March: Kerouac gives a reading to students at Harvard University. ¶April 14: Kerouac gives Northport library an interview, later published in the magazine Athanor. ¶May: Ed White visits Kerouac in Northport. ¶July: Neal Cassady drives Kerouac to New York City to meet the "Merry Pranksters" at a party in a Park Avenue apartment; in an interview with Val Duncan for the newspaper Newsday, Kerouac claims he is a Republican and supports Barry Goldwater for president.¶August: Kerouac sells Northport home. ¶August 26: Kerouac has a farewell party at his Northport house; after party he has a brief vacation on Fire Island. ¶Late August: Kerouac and his mother move to St. Petersburg, Florida (their new home at 5155 10th Avenue North is not finished, they stay temporarily in an apartment); Kerouac drinks and plays pool at the Tic Tac Club. ¶September 19: Kerouac's sister Nin dies. ¶Fall: Meets and befriends Cliff Anderson; reads a biography of James Joyce. ¶Winter: Kerouac is arrested in St. Petersburg for urinating in public. 1965 ¶January: Put off by Allen Ginsberg's political activity, Kerouac breaks off communication. ¶May 3: Coward-McCann publishes Kerouac's Desolation Angels with an introduction by Seymour Krim. ¶Spring: Kerouac reads Voltaire and Chauteaubriand. ¶June 1: Kerouac flies to Paris, France. ¶June 8: Kerouac returns to Florida. ¶July: In seven nights Kerouac writes Satori In Pais. ¶Fall: Kerouac hangs out at the Wild Boar Tavern near the University of South Florida campus in Tampa and becomes friends with Gerard Wagner, the tavern's owner. ¶November: Kerouac drives north with Cliff Anderson and Paddy Mitchell through Chapel Hill in North Carolina, to Connecticut to see John Clellon Holmes and to Lowell to see Tony and Stella Sampas and other Lowell friends; Kerouac takes a trip to Albany, New York with Tony Sampas. 1966 ¶March: Kerouac sells St. Petersburg home and buys a house on Cape Cod at 20 Bristol Avenue in Hyannis. ¶May: Kerouac and his mother move to Cape Cod. ¶Spring: Satori in Paris is published by Grove Press. ¶August: Kerouac works on Vanity of Duluoz; Ann Charters, compiling a bibliography for the Phoenix Book Store visits Kerouac in Hyannis. ¶September 9: Kerouac's mother, Gabrielle, has a stroke. ¶September 27: Kerouac in Italy to promote Italian edition of Big Sur. ¶November 18: Kerouac marries Stella Sampas in Hyannis. ¶December: Kerouac is twice arrested for being drunk in public. [Stella Sampas] 1967 ¶January: Kerouac moves to 271 Sanders Avenue in Lowell with his mother and wife Stella. ¶Winter: Kerouac hangs out drinking at Nicky's Bar, owned by his brother-in-law Nicky Sampas; Kerouac makes friends with Joe Chaput. ¶March-May: Kerouac completes Vanity of Duluoz. ¶June: Stan Twardowicz and Bill Crabtree visit Kerouac in Lowell. ¶Summer: Allen Ginsberg visits Kerouac in Lowell; Kerouac goes to Montreal and appears on television program Sel de la Semaine; Kerouac visits with Mary Carney and gets into a fight with her; with Joe Chaput Kerouac visits Riviere du Loup and Expo '67 in Montreal; when drunk Kerouac is now prone to anti-semitic invective. ¶October: Interviewed for Partisan Review by Ted Berrigan, Aram Saroyan and Duncan McNaughton. ¶Fall: Kerouac reads Moby Dick to a Lowell High School English class. ¶November: Kerouac's daughter Jan visits her father in Lowell. 1968 ¶January: Kerouac is interviewed by Bruce Cook who is writing a book on the Beat Generation. ¶February 5: Carolyn Cassady calls Kerouac with news of Neal Cassady's death. ¶February 6: Vanity of Duluoz published. ¶March: Kerouac travels to Europe with Tony and Nick Sampas, Kerouac visits Lisbon, Madrid, Geneva, Munich, Stuttgart. ¶May: Kerouac jailed for carrying and open bottle of beer on the street, spends night in jail. ¶August 11: Article by writer Gregory McDonald entitled "Off the Road...the Celtic Twilight of Jack Kerouac" in the Boston Sunday Globe. ¶August: Kerouac visits Charles Olson in Gloucester, Massachusetts; Kerouac appears on William F. Buckley's television show The Firing Line; Kerouac, in New York, has a reunion with William Burroughs and Lucien Carr; Kerouac sells letter from Ginsberg and Cassady to the University of Texas; sells letters from William Burroughs to Columbia University. ¶September: Kerouac's friend Joe Chaput drives Kerouac and his mother to St. Petersburg to their new home at 5169 10th Avenue North. ¶Fall: In Florida at Cliff Anderson's cabin in the woods, Kerouac takes large dose of LSD. 1969 ¶May: Kerouac is dependent on dexedrine; begins work on Pic. ¶September 4: Signs a new will leaving everything to his mother and names his nephew Paul as the second beneficiary. ¶September 28: Kerouac's article "After Me, the Deluge" appears in the Chicago Tribune. ¶Fall: gets beaten up in the Cactus Bar in St. Petersburg. 1971 ¶Pic published posthumously. 1972 ¶Visions of Cody published posthumously. 1973 ¶Ann Charters' Kerouac: A Biography is published. ¶Gabrielle Kerouac, Jack's mother, dies. 1974 Allen Ginsberg and Anne Waldman create the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics at the Naropa Institute in Boulder, Colorado. 1978 ¶Jack's Book edited by Barry Gifford and Lawrence Lee is published. 1979 ¶Dennis McNally's Desolate Angel: Jack Kerouac, the Beat Generation, and America is published. 1983 ¶Gerald Nicosia's biography of Kerouac, Memory Babe is published; ¶Joyce Glassman Johnson's memoir, Minor Characters is published. ¶Spring: Jack Kerouac joins the Cosmic Baseball Association. 1984 Tom Clark's biography Jack Kerouac is published. 1987 ¶International Jack Kerouac Gathering in Quebec, Canada. 1988 ¶January 25: Jack Kerouac Street is dedicated in San Francisco, California. ¶June 25: Jack Kerouac Park is dedicated in Lowell, Massachusetts. 1990 ¶Off the Road, memoir by Carolyn Cassady is published. ¶Joan Haverty, Kerouac's second wife dies. ¶Stella Sampas, Kerouac's third wife dies. 1992 ¶Pomes All Sizes posthumously published. 1993 ¶Old Angel Midnight and Good Blonde and Others posthumously published. ¶Edie Parker, Kerouac's first wife dies. 1995 ¶Writings of Jack Kerouac Conference held at New York University. ¶The Portable Jack Kerouac and Jack Kerouac: Selected Letters 1940-1956 are published by Viking Press. 1996 ¶June 5: Kerouac's daughter, Jan, dies. ¶Jack Kerouac ROMnibus CD published.


4500 -- Philadelphia
Clothespeg
Claes Oldenburg, Philadelphia
http://ds.dial.pipex.com/edwards.family/nathan/co/page6.html
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5000 -- Bleed code ESKIMO DIRECTORY SMALL TORCH/FIRE/FLAMES Ooops...
BULLET HOLE:Ooopsie!
SMILEY FACE LITTLE: Hey, hey!
BAD DAY: Dang!
FLAGS RED & BLACK
TNT GIF Dang!
YUK Dang!
OLD BOOK oldbook
CLIPBOARD Cliff Notes

exlposionstage coach
UNAMERICAN
BOOKS GIF BOOKS
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UPDATE NEW LINK SPAIN 1936 ?
http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Senate/5602/scwar4.html

ZERZAN ANARCHO PRIMITIVE ?


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5000 --


5000 -- I'm in the same boat you are. Online I find mostly bibliographical reference.

But here are some useful links:

On a film site, Biography for Panait Istrati , AKA (Boris Souvarine)

Page 4 of 4 Mini biography

Panait Istrate was born in the Danube port Braila in Romania, on 11 August 1884 to Joita Istrate, an unmarried house cleaner. It seams that a Greek smuggler named Valsamis, partner to Joita's father, was his father. At age of 12 leaves home, drifts and works in Braila port, living with his grandmother in Lacul Sarat (Salt Lake). In March 1916 leaves Romania and starts a long trip through Mediterranean area, living in Suisse, Greece, France, Italy, and passing through Egypt, Lebanon, Syria. On 4 January 1921 tried suicide; by chance his situation coming to attention of French writer Romaine Rolland, they start a long relationship and a productive letter exchange. He start publishing some short stories and novels, written in French, which were appreciated by the critics, which start calling him "Gorky of Balkan". Coming from a working class background, he was very supportive of new social system experience in Russia, (probable influenced by his communist friend Romaine Rolland), but later, after the real situation of repressions in Russia became generally known, he start being very critical of Stalin and communism. His life is described in one of his novels by the Greek writer Nikos Kazantzakis. Died in 1935.

IMDb mini-biography by Alex Darie

Errors and omissions on this page may be reported to the IMDb editors by pressing the button below where they will be examined and, if accepted, included in a future update.

http://www.imdb.com/Bio?Istrati,+Panait

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1. "Folklore Motifs in Panait Istrati's Fiction", Yearbook of Romanian Studies, 1 (1976), 6-12.

2. "The Mythical and Legendary Dimensions of Panait Istrati's Characters in the Tales of Adrian Zograffi (with J. Wilburn) Miorita, A Journal of Romanian Studies, V, no. 1, Jan. 1978, pp. 60-72.

"The Mythical and Legendary Dimensions of Panait Istrati's characters in the Tales of Adrian Zograffi, Modern Languages Association, 1975.

http://slavic.ohio-state.edu/people/botoman/botoman.htm

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(Badly translated, but includes photo of him).: http://www.dumitrescu.com/me/countries/romania/encyclopedia/romania/culture/literatura/l_istrate.html

Yahoo: http://fr.encyclopedia.yahoo.com/articles/ma/ma_2126_p0.html

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MEMORIA LUI PANAIT ISTRATI INTINATA DE CONSATENII SAI http://www.vlg.sisnet.ro/arhiva/an2001/3436/cultura.htm Panait Istrati Memorial House (both in Braila and Baldovinesti)

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Istrati, Panait. Kyra Kyralina. New York : A. A. Knopf, 1926. Freeport, N.Y. : Books for Libraries Press, 1971. "A kidnapped Roumanian boy tells of his sexual enslavement by a Turkish potentate."

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IONESCU, MARIANA CARMEN.

Titlu : La metamorphose de la narration orale dans les recits de Panait Istrati / Mariana C. Ionescu. Editura : [S.l. : s.n.], 1994. Descriere : 4 microfise. Note : Teza de doctorat -- University of Western Ontario, 1994. Subiecte : Istrati, Panait, 1884-1935.

http://www.bibnat.ro/r000054/r053529.htm

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Bandits / by Panait Istrati, translated by William A. Drake

ISBN: 0836934601 Ayer Company Publishers, Incorporated 06/01/1977 User Rating: (Unrated) Hardcover Trade Cloth Short Story Index Reprint Series Orig. Lang: French List Price: $21.95 ___________________

PANAIT ISTRATI LES CHARDONS DU BARAGAN AUX 4 COINS DU MONDE . 1928. Grand In-8 Broché. 30 compositions orig. couleur de SCREPEL . EX. Numéroté sur Vélin de TORPES 1534/2100 . 149 pages . TBE . http://www.le-livre.com/istrati.htm ________________

Romanians on stamps ISTRATI, Panait (1881-1938) Franco-Romanian author, journalist - Romania 3241 http://www.marinel.net/romania/rom_stamps.html

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Cea mai importanta biblioteca publica a judetului Braila, Biblioteca Judeteana "Panait Istrati",

http://cibnet.flex.ro/cultural/biblio/info.htm

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Long article in Spanish, Luis Francisco Acosta De una confesión invicta

Dice Luis Francisco Acosta que la vida del gran escritor rumano Panait Istrati fue "fustigada por el azar y el amor, el infortunio y la esperanza". http://www.jornada.unam.mx/2001/may01/010506/sem-acosta.html

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Panaït Istrati

< (1884 - 1935) Né en Roumanie, Panaït Istrati fit ses débuts à vingt ans comme rédacteur à Roumanie ouvrière puis se lança dans une vie de voyages et d'errances sur les rives méditerranéennes et à travers l'Europe. Après avoir découvert l'œuvre de Romain Rolland en 1919, il se lia d'une intense amitié épistolaire avec l'écrivain qui ne cessa de l'encourager à écrire. Panaït Istrati publia Kyra-Kyralina (1923) dans la revue Europe et il écrivit la plus grande partie de son œuvre, notamment Les Récits d'Adrien Zograffi (1924-1935), pendant les dix années qui suivirent. En 1927, Panaït Istrati découvrit l'URSS et publia dès son retour en France Vers l'autre flamme (1929) qui dénonçait les abus du pouvoir soviétique. En 1930, il retourna en Roumanie où il publia de nombreux articles dans la presse roumaine ainsi que des traductions de ses propres textes dans sa langue d'origine. Partenariat : Association des Amis de Panaït Istrati, Cahiers Panaït Istrati. http://www.imec-archives.com/fonds/ficheauteur1.asp?num=86

Best page I came across, Panaït Istrati: un génie de la bohème roumaine

http://www.bucarest-matin.ro/ARHIVA/2000AUG/1011info.html

You can run this through an online translator such as Babel fish, at http://babelfish.altavista.com/, for some rough English language translation.

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Excerpt from My Farewells by Panaït Istrati translation by Ina Pfitzner

Translator's Note:

Panaït Istrati, the Gorky of the Balkans, was born in the Romanian port city of Braila in 1884. His young years of vagabondage through the Mediterranean and Middle East served as the subject matter for many of his works. Istrati worked as a socialist journalist in Bucharest and traveled to the Soviet Union, a trip from which he returned disappointed. While living in southern France, doing odd jobs, he attempted suicide. A passionate letter addressed to French writer Romain Rolland provoked his idol not only to encourage him to keep on living but also to start writing. Most of Istrati's novels were written in France between 1920 and 1929, and in the self-taught French language, including his international successes Kyra Kyralina and The Thistles of Baragan. Istrati later returned to Romania to become a hog farmer, and died there in poverty in 1934. His novels and autobiographical texts are largely based on folk tales from his homeland as well as on personal experiences. Istrati's series of autobiographical accounts of Adrien Zograffi includes My Farewells (Mes départs), written in 1928. It is now being translated into English for the first time. My Farewells consists of three sections, of which the first two are reprinted here.

http://www.corpse.org/issue_9/ficciones/istrati.htm

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"Kyra Kyralina" de Panaït Istrati

Panaït Istrati est né à Braîla, en 1884. Il part à 12 ans du domicile familiale pour vivre une vie de vagabondage en parcourant nombre de pays. Il nous conte dans ce livre la vie de Stavro, un personnage "peu fréquentable" certainement parce qu'il n'a pas eu la même vie que les autres. Stavro, qui fut d'abord Dragomir partage son enfance entre la méchanceté de son père et l'amour de sa mère et de sa soeur Kyra. Séparé de sa famille par les évenements trés tôt, Dragomir fait la pénible découverte de la bassesse de l'homme...

Mon avis : Un superbe livre, où l'on se passionne rapidement pour la vie de Dragomir (Stavro). Au delà du conte trés bien écrit (ce qui d'autant plus remarquable, car ce ne n'est pas une traduction, Panaït Istrati a appris seul le français), il ressort des leçons philosophiques trés judicieuses.

Cover image of this book, http://perso.wanadoo.fr/sylvain.laborie/images/kyra.jpg

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"Panaït Istrati : aventure et exil"

Aujourd'hui à 18h30, dans la salle Elvire Popesco de l'Institut français, Jeanne-Marie Santraud donnera une conférence : "Panaït Istrati : aventure et exil".

Dana Aldea

(Bucarest Matin)

Professeur émérite de l'Université Paris IV Sorbonne, directrice de la revue Américaine (Sorbonne) et membre de l'Association "Les amis de Panaït Istrati", Jeanne-Marie Santraud abordera lors de la conférence d'aujourd'hui le thème de l'aventure et de l'exil dans l'oeuvre et la vie de Panaït Istrati.

Exilé dans un pays étranger, la France, exilé dans une langue étrangère, Istrati proclame dans tout son oeuvre, qui abonde en expressions roumaines, la nostalgie du pays. Aujourd'hui, son oeuvre continue d'exercer sa magie sur ses lecteurs, dont la plupart cherchent à expliquer cette fascination.

Quand il vient au monde, Panaït Istrati naît "exilé", père grec, enfant renié. Par la suite, exilé au monde "extérieur" de la cité (à Braila, on est au courant des circonstances de sa naissance), il va grandir exilé du "dedans" ce qui fait de lui un personnage type des temps modernes.

Le rôle joué auprès de lui par sa mère va accentuer cet aspect. Elle veut faire de lui un petit garçon bien convenable. Elle en fait, inconsciemment, un être à part qui sera attiré par les marginaux. Premier départ en compagnie de Mikhaîl. Istrati n'est jusque là qu'un fugueur.

Une fois déclenché, le processus va néanmoins s'accélérer. Tournant décisif : en France, rencontre de Romain Rolland. C'est là que l'aventure à proprement parler commence : elle est d'ordre linguistique. C'est dans une langue étrangère qu'Istrati s'épanouira ; il se jette dans le français, sa "terra incognito", comme on se jette à l'eau, sans formation préalable, il prend tous les risques. Ce faisant, il reste pourtant l'étranger (L'exilé) : ses thèmes sont roumains et ils abondent en mots roumains.

C'est à travers eux que l'enfant illégitime proclame son "dor", son mal du pays. Grâce à l'exil de la langue française, dont l'acquisition lui permettra de prendre du recul par rapport à son enfance, il retourne en terre roumaine et il y trouve (sans dieu) son royaume.

EXPOSITION - Les galeries Étage 3/4 du Théâtre national

http://www.bucarest-matin.ro/ARHIVA/99tr2/710info.html

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TRIPTYQUE MÉDITERRANÉEN

Le spectacle Méditerranée fait partie d'un programme de mise en scène par lequel Catalina Buzoianu désire de mettre en valeur la synthèse Orient-Occident dans l'espace des interférences culturelles du bassin méditerranéen, un lieu particulier qui se trouve aux portes de l'Orient, à une mythologie profondément troublante qui peut constituer la base des motifs et des moyens théâtraux modernes.

Les premiers projets réalisés ont été Kyra Kyralina au Théâtre "Maria Filotti" de Braïla et Le Lévant d'après Mircea Cartarescu, une coproduction du Théâtre "L. S. Bulandra" avec Theatrum Mundi. Comme le spectacle Kyra Kyralina se référait au port de départ, (la ville de Braïla) et au Danube, "bras de l'Hellespont et de la Méditerranée", le metteur en scène a imaginé une suite de ce pèlerinage: Méditerranée, la dramatisation étant inspirée par l'œuvre de Panaït Istrati, prolongeant ainsi la série de ces recherches anthropologiques.

Le roman a été écrit en français, en 1934 et il est formé par deux parties: Lever du soleil et Coucher du soleil. C'est l'histoire du voyage d'Adrien Zograffi, alter-égo de l'écrivain, "en aval du Danube", à partir de Braïla et en passant par Constantinople, aux bords de la Méditerranée, longeant les côtes de la Grèce, puis à l'Alexandrie et au Caire et enfin, son débarquement à Marseille. Panaït Istrati disait sur lui-même: "Je suis entré dans la littérature française avec une sensibilité toute roumaine, mais il m'a fallu lui coller un visage français". En illustrant cette confession, Méditerranée est une coproduction du Théâtre "Maria Filotti" et du Théâtre Toursky de Marseille. L'inédit de la mise en scène est donné par la collaboration avec les acteurs français Tania Sourseva et Richard Martin - le directeur du Théâtre Toursky de Marseille et le vice-président de l'Institut International de Théâtre Méditerranéen. Les deux artistes ont interpreté les personnages du Madame Adèle et Panaït Istati dans le première du spectacle qui a eu lieu au Théâtre Toursky, le 28 mai 1999.

Catalina Buzoianu désire que les spectacles qui composent ce triptyque - ayant des sujets roumains, mais aussi méditerranéens - donnent de l'identité au Centre de Recherche et Anthropologie Théâtrale qu'elle dirige et au Festival International "Le Danube - Bras de la Méditerranée", qui aura lieu à Braïla, en 2001. http://www.moshu.braila.net/triptic_f.html ____________________ ANATOMY OF AN ILLUSION - Producer: Doina BUNESCU 1994 Version: Roumaine. Production: TVR Script: FRANCAIS Timing: 28'00

An experimental film on the life and work of Panaït Istrati, Rumanian author writing in French, who died in 1935. A revolutionary militant and intellectual, fascinated by the October Revolution, he was also one of the first to denounce the communist dictatorship.

http://www.mediaport.net/Urti/Cat97/1293.en.html

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Men and forces of our time

Author: Marcu, Valeriu, 1899-1942. Title: Men and forces of our time, translated by Eden and Cedar Paul. Physical description: 5 p. L., 3-244 p. 21 cm. Publisher: New York, The Viking press, 1931. Subject, geographic name: Europe --Biography. Contents:

Biography and biographers.--Georges Clemenceau between action and Nirvana.--Dogma and dialectic in Lenin.--Marshal Foch's ideas and the republic of civilians.--Kemal Pasha; or, From national farce to national revolution.--One head is more than three hundred voices, or, Benedetto Croce in the Senate.--The "moderns" and their adversary, G. K. Chesterton.--Panaït Istrati; or, Romance about Byzantium.--Hans Delbrück; or, The historian conquers the specialist.--Advertisement; or, Farewell to Europe.--Mythology of dictatorship (Georges Sorel)

http://liber.ithaca.edu/MARION/AAE-4352 __

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TELEVISION

France 3. Un siècle d'écrivain, mercredi 21 avril, 23 h 30. " Panaït Istrati, écrivain vagabond ".

http://www.humanite.presse.fr/journal/1999/1999-04/1999-04-15/1999-04-15-077.html

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À la recherche du "Fordisme" With highly mechanised production, moving assembly line, high wages, and low prices on products, "Fordism" was born.

( David A. Hounshell, From American System to Mass Production, 1984, p. 11)

Le nouveau mode de production apparu dans les usines Ford avant la Première Guerre mondiale n'est pas passé inaperçu; dès le début des années 1920 il prend le nom de "fordisme" en Allemagne puis dans d'autres pays européens (v. Gottl-Ottlilienfeld, Fordismus .., 3deg. éd., Iéna, 1926). En France, la première attestation du terme est repérée en 1929 (Datations et documents lexicographiques, dir. B. Quemada, ndeg. 26, C.N.R.S., Paris, 1985). Panaït Istrati évoque les "automates du fordisme et de l'américanisation" qui l'ont déçu au cours de son voyage en U.R.S.S. (Vers l'autre flamme..., Paris, 1929 p. 45 et 276). Dans sa thèse de 1930, Paul Weinberger préfère utiliser le mot "fordisation car il y a certains auteurs qui distinguent entre fordisme et fordisation. Le premier est la doctrine de Ford, la deuxième ses procédés "(L'industrie automobile en France et à l'étranger, Paris, 1931, p. 68). Le mot "fordisme" était donc bien utilisé à la fin des années 1920.

http://www.univ-evry.fr/labos/gerpisa/lettre/numeros/92/histoire.html

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In his letters to Panaït Istrati, Serge twice refers to Nikolayenko. On 14/2/30 he replies from Leningrad to a postcard which Istrati had sent from Venice http://users.skynet.be/johneden/fiction/whitesea.htm

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Istrati, cf. Panaït Istrati. Izvestia des marins, soldats rouges et ouvriers de la ville de Kronstadt (1921), trad. de Régis Gayraud, éd. Ressouvenances, 1988, 144 p.

Istrati, Panaït. - La Russie nue. - Paris : Rieder, 1929. - 334 p. - (Témoignages). Vers l'autre flamme : tome 3 [écrit par Boris Souvarine ?]. - L0444, L3674 (Tampon : Cercle d'études sociales et philosophiques, Vincennes)

Istrati, Panaït. - Le Bureau de placement : vie d'Adrien Zograffi. - Paris : Rieder, 1933. - 260 p. - L0443

Istrati, Panaït. - Le Refrain de la fosse : nerrantsoula. - Paris : éd. de France, 1927. - B.ML162 (L0447)

Istrati, Panaït. - Oncle Anghel. - Paris : Rieder, 1924. - 231 p. - L0448

Istrati, Panaït. - Soviets 1929. - Paris : Rieder, 1929. - 213 p. - (Témoignages). Vers l'autre flamme : tome 2. - L0445, L3675 (Tampon : Cercle d'études sociales et philosophiques, Vincennes)

Istrati, Panaït. - Vers l'autre flamme : après 16 mois dans l'URSS. - Paris : Rieder, 1929. - 284 p. - (Témoignages). - L0446

http://cda.cybertaria.org/l_ijk.html

Auteur(s) Bonenfant, Jean-Charles (1912-1977) Titre Panaït Istrati Notes In: Revue Dominicaine, no LI, juin 1945, p.363-368

http://www2.biblinat.gouv.qc.ca/rfq/notices/00014433.htm

ISTRATI (Panaït) Braila, 1884 - Bucarest, 1935

Les Amis de Panaït Istrati Statut : Loi 1901 Création : 1969 Cotisation annuelle : 200 à 250 FF Nombre d'adhérents : 200 Siège : BP 811 26008 Valence cedex

Personne à contacter M. Christian Golfetto B.P. 5027 69602 Villeurbanne cedex Tél. : 04.78.85.36.26

Bureau Président : Jean Hormière Vice-présidente : Dominique Foufelle Trésorier : Christian Golfetto Membres fondateurs : Édouard Raydon, Jean Stanesco

Périodiques Cahiers Panaït Istrati Descriptif : édité par l'association, annuel, créé en 1985, 10 numéros (dont un numéro triple), tiré à 800 ex. Directeur de publication : Christian Golfetto Rédactrice en chef : Dominique Foufelle Administration : BP 811 - 26008 Valence cedex Vente au numéro : auprès de l'association. Disponibles : numéros 9 et 10 (150 FF), 11 et 12 (200 FF)

Les Amis de Panaït Istrati Descriptif : trimestriel, 48 numéros (48-printemps/été 1999)

Activités / manifestations Colloques, Nice, 1978 à 1984 Panaït Istrati et les révolutions, colloque, Valence, 1989 [Actes publiés] Colloque, Bucarest, organisé par l'Association roumaine, 1991 [Actes publiés] Colloque, Chij, organisé par l'Association roumaine, 1994 Lectures-débats en bibliothèques, librairies et autres lieux culturels

Archives et documentation Fonds divers, venant de France, de Roumanie et de l'ex-U.R.S.S. La vocation des cahiers est de publier ces documents, après leur classement préalable, et de leur adjoindre des études contemporaines

http://www.amis-auteurs-nicaise.gallimard.fr/html/autgall/01293.htm Bibliographie d'auteur Panaït Istrati Kyra Kyralina Folio (1981) - 29.00 FF Le choix de Gilles de la Porte Né en 1884 d’un contrebandier grec et d’une paysanne roumaine, découvert par Romain Rolland, Panaït Istrati est un conteur né. Un précurseur de Gabriel Garcia Marquez. http://www.lagalerne.fr/decouvrir/auteur/970

Used books listed online in Europe:

ISTRATI Panait Codine. Enfance d'Adrien Zograffi. Paris, Le Quadrige d'Apollon/PUF 1964; in-12 broché 136 pages. Annotations. Jaquette défraichie. 50 FRF - 7,62 € Référence : 451-BCR Librairie Bouccara

ISTRATI Panait Domnitza de Snagov, les Haidoucs. F. Rieder Editeur, Paris 1926, in-12 broché. Edition originale, 1 des 400 sur Hollande des Papeteries Montgolfier. 350 FRF - 53,36 € Référence : 23316aaf Harteveld Rare Books Ltd.

ISTRATI, Panait: Ensemble de 3 livres. in-8 , 45 CHF 1) Domnitza de Snagov. 10. éd., 1926. 270 p., non rogné. / 2) Les Haidoucs. Présentation des Haidoucs. 17. éd., 1925. 224 p., non rogné. / 3) Les Chardons du Baragan Kyra Kyralina. Préface de Pierre-André Rieben. Lausanne, 1923. 328 p. Référence : 1649-PAG Librairie Pages Volantes

ISTRATI (Panait). Kir Nicolas. Codine. Bois en couleurs dessinés et gravés par Picart Ledoux. Edition originale. P., Edition du Sablier, 1926, In-8, br., 157 pp. 400 FRF - 60,98 € Tirée à 750 exemplaires; celui-ci numéroté sur Vélin. Référence : 838-k * Librairie Ancienne K Livres ISTRATI Panait Kir Nicolas, Codine; P., éd. du Sablier, 1926; in-8 , couv. ill.; 1 front. & dix bois en couleurs in-t. dessinés et gravés par Picart le doux; tir. lim. à 750 ex.; ex. sur vélin Montgolfier; rel. demi-chagrin grenat, dos à nerfs, titre doré, couv. cons.; E. O. 450 FRF - 68,6 € Référence : 452-BCR Librairie Bouccara ISTRATI Panait Kyra Kyralina, Oncle Angel. Club des Libraires de France, Paris 1958, in-8 cartonnage éditeur. Maquette de Pierre Faucheux. Tirage à 4000 Ex. sur Bouffant Blanc. 150 FRF - 22,87 € Référence : 3921-VOY * Librairie Voyelles ISTRATI Panait. KYRA KYRALINA - ONCLE ANGHEL. Edition groupant les deux premiers récits d'Adrien Zograffi avec une présentation par Romain Rolland suivie d'une postface d'Hubert Juin. Paris, Club des libraire de France, 1958, In-8 relié pleine toile verte de l'éditeur, premier plat illustré de trois images collées, 343 pages. 100 FRF - 15,25 € Edition numérotée. Référence : 1650-PAG Librairie Pages Volantes ISTRATI (Panait). Kyra Kyralina. Oncle Anghel. P., Club des Libraires de France, 1958, In-8, reliure toile éditeur. 130 FRF - 19,82 € Référence : 6729-AAZ * Librairie AaZbooks.com

ISTRATI PANAIT KYRA KYRALINA Paris Le quadrige d'apollon 1961 IN 8 BROCHE 187 PP BON ETAT BON ETAT Le quadrige d'apollon 1961 60 FRF - 9,15 € 187 PP Référence : 95616-BAT Librairie du Bât d'Argent

ISTRATI Panait Kyra Kyralina. Préface de Romain Rolland. Paris, Le Quadrige d'Apollon, PUF 1961; in-12 broché. 187 pages. Annotations sur la préface et l'avant propos. 70 FRF - 10,67 € Référence : 540-FEU Librairie Feuille à Feuille ISTRATI Panait La jeunesse d'Adrien Zografi Gallimard. 1977. in8 reliure éditeur d'aprés la maquette de Massin 60 FRF - 9,15 € Référence : 12458aaf Harteveld Rare Books Ltd. ISTRATI, Panait: La vie d'Adrien Zograffi (Codine - Mikhail). Ill. par D. Varbanesco. Lausanne, Guilde du Livre, 1938, in-8 , toile. 30 CHF Référence : JDL277 Au Jardin des Livres

Istrati Panait La Vie d'Adrien Zograffi La Guilde du Livre, Lausanne, s.d., in-8, 288 p., rel. d'éd. Photo de l'auteur en frontispice 10 CHF Référence : 453-BCR Librairie Bouccara

ISTRATI Panait Le pêcheur d'éponge. Les Editions Rieder, Paris 1930, in-12 broché. Edition originale, 1 des 200 sur vélin pur fil. Non coupé. 350 FRF - 53,36 € Référence : 2604-SOL Librairie Solstices

ISTRATI (Panait). Le Pêcheur d'éponges. Pages autobiographiques. P. , Prosateurs français contemporains , Sequana , Editions Rieder , 1930. 19 x 12 cm , 217 p. Broché , mouillure , dos tâché. 150 FRF - 22,87 € Référence : 739-PAR * Librairie Paroles ISTRATI (Panait) Le Pêcheur d'éponges. Paris, Les Editions Rieder, 1930. In-8, 221p. Broché, non coupé, couverture jaune à encadrement rouge sur le 1er plat, bon état. 350 FRF - 53,36 € Edition originale, 1 des 200 exemplaires sur papier vélin pur fil. Référence : br768 Bouquinerie de la Reppe ISTRATI PANAIT LE PECHEUR D'EPONGES- RIEDER 1930- E.O-Num./alfa-br. 120 FRF - 18,29 € Référence : 454-BCR Librairie Bouccara ISTRATI Panait Le refrain de la fosse, Nerrantsoula Les Editions de France, Paris 1927, in-12 broché. Edition originale, 1 des 700 sur papier Alfa. 300 FRF - 45,74 € Référence : -39811-BAT Librairie du Bât d'Argent

ISTRATI (Panait) Les Chardons du Baragan. Coll. Les Ecrits. P., Grasset 1928; in-12 br. 245 pp. Papier jauni. Ex. num. 60 FRF - 9,15 € Référence : 96523-BAT Librairie du Bât d'Argent ISTRATI (Panait) Les Chardons du Baragan. Lausanne, La Petite Ourse (1958); in-12 broché. 117 pages. 70 FRF - 10,67 € Référence : 24201-TRA * Librairie Le Trait d'Union

ISTRATI (Panait) Les chardons du baragan. P. , Aux quatre coins du monde à la société d'éditions françaises et internationales , (1947). Petit in-4 br. , couverture rempliée , 149pp. , [3]ff. , 30 compositions originales de L. Screpel reproduites en couleurs , édition tirée à 2100 ex. , un des 2000 ex. numérotés sur vélin de Torpes. Couverture légèrement défraîchie , intérieur très frais. (Monod , I-876) 200 FRF - 30,49 € Référence : 152-SOL Librairie Solstices ISTRATI (Panait). Les récits d'Adrien Zograffi : Les Haidoucs : présentation des Haidoucs. P. , Prosateurs français contemporains , F. Rieder , 1925. 19 x 13 cm , 222 p. Broché. Edition originale , ex. num. , un des 400 sur Hollande Montgolfier (après 65 Hollande van Gelder). 150 FRF - 22,87 € Référence : 151-SOL Librairie Solstices ISTRATI (Panait). Les Récits d'Adrien Zograffi : Oncle Anghel. P. , Prosateurs français contemporains , F. Rieder & Cie , 1924. 19 x 13 cm , 232 p. Broché. Edition originale , ex. num. , un des 300 sur vergé pur fil (après 40 Hollande). 150 FRF - 22,87 € Référence : VE-3058 Librairie Ancienne Nicole Nicolas ISTRATI Panait - Méditerranée, avec 30 bois originaux de Jean LEBEDEFF - A. Fayard Le livre de demain 1939, grand in-8 , broché, 123 pages. Très bon état. 120 FRF - 18,29 € Egypte. Syrie. Référence : 5390-VAG * L'Histoire Vagabonde

ISTRATI Panait Méditerranée - Coucher de soleil. Ed. Rieder 1935 br. 211 50 FRF - 7,62 € Référence : 455-BCR Librairie Bouccara

ISTRATI Panait Mes départs, pages autobiographiques. NRF, Paris 1928, in-8 couronne broché. Edition originale, 1 des 796 ex. sur vélin pur fil Lafuma-Navarre. Non coupé. 500 FRF - 76,23 €

Référence : 753-BRO * Brocante et Livres Istrati Panait Mikhail Rieder.Ed 1927.In 12.256 pp.Dos endommagé. 50 FRF - 7,62 €

Référence : 15467-PAL * Bouquinerie du Palais ISTRATI PanaìT Oncle Anghel, Tsatsa-Minnka Editions. Rencontre Société copérative. Lausanne. 1962. In 12. Reliure éditeur blanche , introduction de Louis Bovey , 211 pages.

46 FRF - 7,01 € Référence : 456-BCR Librairie Bouccara

ISTRATI Panait Pour avoir aimé la terre . . . Editions Denoel & Steele, Paris 1930, in-8 broché. Frontispice de Jean Texcier. Edition originale, 1 des 1200 sur papier Chesterfield. 300 FRF - 45,74 €

Référence : 3506-LAR * Lardanchet Livres Istrati, Panait (1884-1935). Les Chardons du Baragan, Kyra Kyralina. société Coopérative, Edition Rencontre, Fine, 30 CHF

Référence : 369-FEU Librairie Feuille à Feuille ISTRATI Panaît - JEHOUDA Joshué La famille Perlmutter. Gallimard. 1927. in12 broché Edition originale numéroté 226/850 sur vélin 180 FRF - 27,44 €

Istrati, Panaït: Die Haiduken. Köln 1990, S.:359, Ü:aus dem Französischen von Boldt, Heike, (=KiWi 233) 12x19cm --------------- Istrati, Panaït [R] (Roumain, 1884-1935) : la Vie d'Adrien Zografi, Kyra Kyralina (1924), Oncle Anghel (1925), Vers l'autre flamme (1927), les Chardons du Baragan (1928), la Maison Thüringer (1933), Mes départs.

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CIRA:

Istrati, PanaÏt

La Maison Thüringer Rieder, 1933

Istrati, PanaÏt La Russie nue sn, sd

Istrati, PanaÏt Vers l'autre flamme : après seize mois dans l'URSS

http://www.multimania.com/lanarcho/ciraauti.htm

Sous titre : - La Russie nue (Tome 3)

Auteur : ISTRATI Panaït (Boris Souvarine) Lieu d'édition : Paris Editeur : Rieder Collection : Témoignages Année d'édition : 1929 Nombre de pages : 334 p

___________________ Boris Souvarine: One of the leaders of the Comité de la Troisième Internationale and a PCF delegate to the Communist International. He backed Trotsky in 1924 and was excluded from the PCF. Author of a major critical work on Stalin. http://www.socialistaction.ca/fi-doc_lnoir-notes.html ___________________

Sous titre : - Soviets 1929 (Tome 2) Auteur : ISTRATI Panaït Lieu d'édition : Paris Editeur : Rieder Collection : Témoignages Année d'édition : 1929 Nombre de pages : 213 p

Sous titre : - Après seize mois dans l'URSS (Tome 1) Auteur : ISTRATI Panaït Lieu d'édition : Paris Editeur : Rieder Collection : Témoignages Année d'édition : 1929 Nombre de pages : 284 p

Liste par auteur : ISTRATI Panaït

Le bureau de placement (- Vie d'Adrien Zograffi) Le refrain de la fosse (- Nerrantsoula) Oncle Anghel Vers l'autre flamme (- Après seize mois dans l'URSS (Tome 1)) Vers l'autre flamme (- Soviets 1929 (Tome 2))

http://palissy.humana.univ-nantes.fr/labos/cht/biblio/ouvrages/livre4805.htm

http://palissy.humana.univ-nantes.fr/labos/cht/biblio/auteurs/auteur3063.htm

Istrati, Panaït

Istrati, Panaït

1.Car la bonté d'un seul homme est plus puissante que la méchanceté de mille ; le mal meurt en même temps que celui qui l'a exercé ; le bien continue à rayonner après la disparition du juste. 2.Il y a partout des égarés, mais l'intelligence fait tomber les barrières car seul le genre humain, de toutes les créatures de la terre, peut se dégrader à ce point. (dans Kyra Kyralina)

3.La vie même nous la payons avec la mort.

http://perso.wanadoo.fr/of/Ilsontdit/ilsontditi.htm

Istrati, Panaït - Onkel Anghel

Uindb.1udg.( " Adrien Zograffis beretning " ) Pænt eksempl. Årstal: 1942, Forlag: C. Andersen http://www.antikvariat.dk/bogkatalog/default.asp?page=2&keyword=i

Panaït Istrati

Cahiers Panaït Istrati

1985, annuel Éditeur : Cercle Panaït Istrati Autre activité éditoriale : Bulletin trimestriel Directeur : Christian Golfetto Rédactrice en chef : Dominique Foufelle Rédaction : Les Amis de Panaït Istrati 175, avenue Victor-Hugo F-92140 Clamart Administration : Les Amis de Panaït Istrati Boîte postale 811 F-26008 Valence cedex 800 ex., 300 p., ill. Prix au numéro : 200 F Diffusion : Les Amis de Panaït Istrati ISSN : 0767-791 X

http://www.france.diplomatie.fr/culture/france/ressources/revues/amis/f-amis/f-arts65.htm

ISTRATI, Panaït, Codine : infancia de Adrian Zograffi / Panait Istrati ; traducción de Manuel Pumarega, 1930

ISTRATI, Panaït. Mijail: Mocedades de Adrian Zograffi. Trad. de E. Díez-Canedo, 1930

ISTRATI, Panaït. Rusia al desnudo. Trad. del francés por Francisco Altamira, 1930




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6000 --


6000 -- Subject: Richard Dick Ellington IWW Industrial Workers of the World

Re: About Dick Ellington Date: Mon, 04 Sep 2000 09:03:03 -0700 From: "Dave, Recollection Books" To: Robby Barnes

Robby, Thanks very much, very helpful.

Russell Blackwell is another name of interest, & interestingly there is more information about him at one of the Trotskyist pages than any of the anarchist pages.

---Dave http://www.eskimo.com/~recall/bleed/today.htm Robby Barnes wrote:

> Hi Dave,

> > I saw your request for information about Dick Ellington on the Research on Anarchism List.

> Here are some things I remember about Dick Ellington:

> > Sylvie and I met Dick and his companion Pat in Oakland during the early 1970s. They were both very outgoing and friendly, and not at all cliquish.

> He helped us with some typesetting and printing projects we did during the 1970s in New York.

> Dick told us he was born and grew up in Seattle.

> He lived in New York during the 1950s and early 1960s. In 1959, he worked with Dave Van Ronk to write and self-publish THE BOSS'S SONGBOOK, the subtitle of which was Songs To Stifle the flames of discontent. It was supposed to be a humorous collection, consciously modeled on the IWW Little > Red Songbook. >

Dick had a Multilith 1250 and did some movement printing in New York City during the 1950s, including VIEWS AND COMMENTS, which was published by the Libertarian League. It was either a weekly or b