Table of Contents.

In early May, an article ran trashing the smoke-in and heralding the death
of the marijuana movement. The next week this poster went up advertising
a new issue, showing a fashionable female snorting smack. Message: the new
wave distinguish themselves from hippies by doing dope. And on the newstand,
emblazoned with the headline "NOW HEROIN," was an angelic blond
peering from the cover of the SOHO over a mirror with lines of what appeared
to be cocaine, but was intended to represent heroin. The lead feature, with
the picture on the inside continued of a beautiful male torso injecting
heroin, began with the story of Scott, driven, workaholic, trendy gallery
owner, cooling out on weekends on smack.
The message was cleverly bracketed with pro forma warnings that heroin,
like alcohol and cigarettes, could kill you. But that only added to the
romance. The writers clearly felt they had to balance their personal misgivings
with the pervasive acceptance of heroin on their immediate scene. The overwhelming
thrust was that everyone was doing it. You could do it and not get addicted.
They even told you where to cop the best stuff, and how to do up (mix it
with lemon juice).
Not a word about clean needles or serum hepatitis. (We didn't know yet about
AIDS, although it's now clear that this very scene, including Studio 10,
was at the epicenter of the early epidemic.) It was the same damnable article
we'd axed from HIGH TIMES. We'd kept it from going out across the country;
but by putting the physical survival of the local scene at risk, especially
by influencing the bands of ROCK AGAINST RACISM and Studio 10, it challenged
New York's traditional role as trend-setter for the country.
Once again, there was a furious brouhaha. The SOHO received numerous complaints,
calls, etc. RAR picketed. But the SOHO staff, who considered the article
"balanced," never acknowledged the central objection to its subliminal
thrust--especially the graphics. Most people don't read, they look at pictures.
Consequently, the editors refused to print RAR's letters objecting to putting
heroin on the same footing as pot.
Now all the ugly rumors about RAR/YIP came back: that YIPSTER TIMES was
not a "real" newspaper deserving of journalistic courtesy; that
it was a top-down, violence-prone group; most of all, that we were mere
pot advocates with no right to criticize other drugs based on the bitterly
learned lessons of our collective experience.
But the nature of YIPPIE! is to thrive on symbiosis with the media. Such
was the depth of upset amongst the junkie celebs of the interlocking Art
Department, that even though YIP did one of its best-ever rounds of protest
during the 1980 Demcon, not a word of it appeared in the VOICE and the SOHO
WEEKLY NEWS. (To be fair, this also had something to do with the fact that
Abbie--with friends on both papers--was in the process of surfacing from
underground. His close partisans always disdained the generation who came
after him and succeeded, after the collapse of the Antiwar movement, where
he could not: in keeping the revolution alive thorugh the Smoke-Ins. Smoke-ins
were never P.C. for them.)
On the neighborhood level most of the best bands playing Studio 10, through
their management, were tied into Sunset Studios and the SOHO scene. They
were dabbling also, so that the example flowing out to the fans undermined
the YIP leadership. And into the scene came those willing to supply heroin
together with the cheapest pot prices imaginable--freebooters like Bruce
Brown, black sheep son of Liberty and David (producer of "Jaws")
Brown. Bruce had the authority of a degree in Marxist economics, the prestige
of a show on WBAI ("Psychomimetic Radio"), and instant access
to the dealing world due to the theory (untrue) that his dad would pay off
his dealing debts as a last resort. With his bag of tricks, he made the
rounds at the VOICE, HIGH TIMES and the SOHO with the greatest of ease.
At first, he seemed a loyal friend. But gradually it became clear that to
compen-sate for a feeling he was a mere academic without a genuine background
as '60's organizer, he tended to disparage the self-discipline necessary
for long-term accomplishment. Like all those who undermine freedom in the
name of freedom, he instilled not genuine autonomy but self- destructive
license, telling the kids the whole point of the revolution was to get as
fucked up as possible. (Later he died of AIDS, after sharing needles with
almost everyone he turned on to smack.)
The YIP organization at the time was a direct successor of the "new"
YOUTH INTERNATIONAL PARTY formed December 1969 to replace SDS, by merging
YIPPIE! and the WHITE PANTHERS. The Zippies had taken it over from Abbie
and Jerry in '72-'73 on the strength of the WHITE PANTHER PARTY organizers
in New York, Ohio and Wisconsin. As former Field Marshall of the W.P.P.,
Dana was one of four or five recognized YIP leaders in the '70's. Ultimately
YIP derived its legiti-macy from the charter granted by the Oakland Black
Panthers to John Sinclair.
Complicating matters, YIP (Zippie!) sympathized with the New York Panthers
in their split with Oakland. So to the original White Panther dichotomy
of life drugs (pot, psychedelics) versus death drugs (addictive white powders),
the YIP-ster TIMES had added occasional articles all during the '70's on
the movement against methadone, the use of accupuncture to treat addiction,
and so-on. Pot was the only substance considered acceptable for heroin de-tox.
They did not start a smoke-in movement seeking to legalize pot explicitely
to separate it from hard drugs--they did not build Studio 10 to give this
movement a place to get together weekly instead of semi-annually--to turn
kids on to smack.
So when they discovered kids were coming in from all over the country for
our Demcon protests, only to be turned on to heroin, they freaked. And in
retrospect, introducing heroin (whose dose/tolerance curve, unless you have
a $500-a-day, quickly leads from smoking to shooting) into a scene where
passing the joint was a ritual (and without info on clean needles!) was
the same as handing out smallpox- infected blankets along with the firewater.
(This was actually done to the Sioux.)
Yet YIP itself had been fatally weakened when Forcade and Peter Bourne convinced
them to make an exception for cocaine. So, a week after Carter's re-nomination,
when a novice writer at the SOHO WEEKLY NEWS wrote a review (actually, positive)
of an anti-Reagan comedy skit at Studio 10, instead of it seeming like the
first step in breaking the media boycott, what grated was that they got
Dana Beal mixed up with Dean Tuckerman. It seemed typical of a process where
YIP would always be deliberately consigned to the blurry periphery of the
picture instead of the focused foreground, "because they're only a
bunch of publicity seekers."
Maybe it was the crash from coke done during the preceding week. Maybe it
was just too much coffee and sugar. But all the frustration of watching
the internal authority of the group ebb away so that he was powerless to
stop the infiltration of heroin came to a head. Dana got on the phone to
the SOHO, reached Paul Slansky, and demanded a correction.
Slansky said: "Write a letter, " and slammed the phone in Dana's
right ear, the one with the painful earache.
Flashing on the fate of the never-publicized letter of protest against the
"NOW HEROIN" issue, knowing for a fact that half the staff was
"dabbling" and that Marsha Resnick was selling smack out of the
back-alley door, some of which was reaching Studio 10....Dana picked up
a firecracker (not a bomb as later reported by the SOHO WEEKLY NEWS, but
a short M-80 called a "M-60"), hopped on his bike, and went peddling
over to the SOHO WEEKLY NEWS, three blocks away.
On the way he met David, who offered to accompany him, and Alice Torbush,
who told him it was the dumbest idea she'd ever heard. Disregarding her
to his own detriment, he alighted on Broadway in front of the SOHO and had
David hold his bike. He went inside and told the receptionist he wanted
to talk to Paul Slansky. Slansky wouldn't come out; and sent word for him
to get lost.
Dana took out a match, lit it, and held it to the firecracker. "You're
not going to light that in here?!" said the horrified receptionist.
"Oh yes, I am," said he. The fuse caught fire. Dana turned toward
the door, and carelessly tossed it back over his shoulder.
As he was passing out through the door cubicle, he glanced back through
the intervening glass panel to see the innocent niece of some honcho at
TIME magazine (breaking her media teeth at the second most prestigious weekly
in Manhattan) walk out from the back, just as the firecracker exploded next
to a wastepaper basket.
The staff felt like they'd been bombed. The concussion stopped the clock
on the back wall. It shut down production for the day. The niece (or maybe
it was the daughter) of the TIME exec was cut by a teeny, tiny bit of paper
wrap from the firecracker, giving rise to the canard, later disproved before
a jury, that it was a schrapnel-bearing device.
And Dana was plunged into the deepest shit of his life. On the SOHO staff
were good friends of Ed Koch. Charges were filed, which seemed especially
unfair, coming just a month and a half after another set of junkies connected
to the Sunset/Soho heroin scene had blown up the front door of 9 Bleecker
with their own M-80, which detonated as Alice T. was anwering their knock.
But as a rule Yippies don't file charges.
Dana bided his time and planned how to turn himself in with maximum public
support. The next time that could be was Halloween. The rank-and-file from
the smoke-ins was still supportive, but much of the core organization had
rotted out, and fell away. In the end, the only crew that would organize
a protest on Dana's behalf was Howard and Norma Lotsof.