The Youth International Party quickly spread beyond Rubin, Hoffman and the other founders. YIP had chapters all over the US and in other countries, with particularly active groups in New York City,
Vancouver,
Washington, D.C., Detroit,
Milwaukee, Los Angeles,
Tucson,
Houston,
Austin,
Columbus,
Dayton, Chicago,
Berkeley,
San Francisco and
Madison. There were YIP conferences through the 1970s, beginning with a "New Nation Conference" in Madison, Wisconsin in 1971. On the final day of the Madison conference, April 4, 1971, hundreds of riot police broke up a block party organized by local Yippies to cap the event, resulting in a street clash between Yippies and police.
Street protests During an anti-war protest in Washington, D.C., on November 15, 1969, East Coast Yippies led thousands of youths in the storming of the
Justice Department building. On August 6, 1970, L.A. Yippies invaded
Disneyland, hoisting the New Nation flag at City Hall and taking over
Tom Sawyer's Island. While riot police confronted the Yippies, the theme park was closed early for only the second time in the park's history (the first being shortly after the
assassination of President Kennedy.). As many as 23 of the 200 Yippies attending were arrested. Vancouver Yippies invaded the US border town of
Blaine, Washington, on May 9, 1970, to protest
Richard Nixon's
invasion of Cambodia and
the shooting of students at
Kent State. Columbus Yippies were charged with inciting the rioting that occurred in the city on May 11, 1972, in response to
Nixon's mining of North Vietnam's Haiphong harbor. They were acquitted. YIP was a member of the coalition of anti-Vietnam War activists A frequent 'national' complaint among Yippies was that the New York 'central HQ' chapter acted as if other chapters did not exist and kept them out of the decision-making process. At one point, at a YIP conference in Ohio in 1972, Yippies voted to 'exclude' Abbie and Jerry as official spokespersons from the party, since they had become too famous and rich. In 1972, Yippies and
Zippies (a younger YIP radical breakaway faction whose "guiding spirit" was
Tom Forcade) staged protests at the
Republican and
Democratic Conventions in
Miami Beach. Some of the Miami protests were larger and more militant than the ones in Chicago in 1968. After Miami, the Zippies evolved back into Yippies. , April 29, 1978. In 1973, Yippies marched on the Manhattan home of
Watergate conspirator
John Mitchell: ... five hundred die-hard Yippies staged one last march on the Mitchell home, no longer the Watergate but a grand apartment building on Manhattan's
Fifth Avenue. "Free
Martha Mitchell!" they chanted. "Fuck John!" When the Mitchells finally appeared at the window to see what all the commotion was about, the stoners cherished their last "eye-to-eyeball confrontation with Mr. Law 'n' Order." To commemorate the moment, they placed a giant marijuana joint on the Mitchells' doorstep. Yippies regularly protested at
US presidential inaugurations, with a particularly strong presence at the 1973 inauguration of
Richard Nixon. as well as the subsequent
1984 Republican National Convention in Dallas, where 99 Yippies were arrested:
Smoke-ins Smoke-In,
Schenley Park, July 2, 1977 Yippies organized
marijuana "smoke-ins" across North America through the 1970s and into the 1980s. The first YIP smoke-in was attended by 25,000 in Washington, D.C. on July 4, 1970. There was a culture clash when many of the hippie protesters strolled en masse into the nearby "Honor America Day" festivities with
Billy Graham and
Bob Hope. On August 7, 1971, a Yippie smoke-in in Vancouver was attacked by police, resulting in the
Gastown Riot, one of the most famous protests in Canadian history. The annual July 4 Yippie smoke-in in Washington, D.C., became a counterculture tradition. Smoke-In, July 4, 1977. , Washington, D.C., 1977.
Alternative culture Yippies organized alternative institutions in their counterculture communities. In
Tucson, Yippies operated a free store; in
Vancouver, Yippies established the People's Defense Fund to provide legal help for the often-harassed hippie community; in
Milwaukee, Yippies helped launch the city's first
food co-op. Many Yippies were involved in the underground press. Some were the editors of major underground newspapers or alternative magazines, including Yippies
Abe Peck (
Chicago Seed), Jeff Shero Nightbyrd (New York's
Rat and
Austin Sun),
Paul Krassner (
The Realist), Robin Morgan (
Ms. magazine), Steve Conliff (
Purple Berries,
Sour Grapes and
Columbus Free Press), Bob Mercer (
The Georgia Straight and
Yellow Journal), Henry Weissborn (
ULTRA), James Retherford (
The Rag), Mayer Vishner (
LA Weekly), Matthew Landy Steen and Stew Albert (
Berkeley Barb and
Berkeley Tribe),
Tom Forcade (
Underground Press Syndicate and
High Times) and Gabrielle Schang (
Alternative Media). New York Yippie
Coca Crystal hosted the popular cable TV program ''If I Can't Dance You Can Keep Your Revolution.'' Yippies were active in alternative music and movies. Singer-songwriters
Phil Ochs and
David Peel were Yippies. "I helped design the party, formulate the idea of what Yippie was going to be, in the early part of 1968," Ochs testified at the Chicago Eight trial. The strange, legendary cult film
Medicine Ball Caravan (partly financed by
Tom Forcade), chronicled Yippie drop-outs and a variety of other fascinating and dynamic characters of the era. The movie title was later controversially changed to "We Have Come for your Daughters". Radical musicians usually found enthusiastic audiences at Yippie-sponsored events and frequently offered to play. YIP-affiliated
John Sinclair managed
Detroit's proto-punk band the
MC5, who played in
Lincoln Park during protests at the
1968 Democratic National Convention. In 1970,
Pete Seeger played a
Vancouver Yippie rally against construction of a highway through
Jericho Beach Park. The first-ever concert by the influential and iconic proto-punk band the
New York Dolls, was a Yippie benefit to raise funds to pay legal fees for one of
Dana Beal's marijuana arrests in the 1970s. The Youth International Party founded the US branch of the
Rock Against Racism movement in 1979. Well-known bands on the tour included
Michelle Shocked, the
Dead Kennedys, the
Crucifucks,
MDC, Cause for Alarm,
Toxic Reasons and Static Disruptors. A young
Whoopi Goldberg performed
stand-up comedy (as did
Will Durst) at the San Francisco R-A-R show., Chicago, June 9, 1979 Vancouver Yippies Ken Lester and David Spaner were the managers of Canada's two most notorious political punk bands,
D.O.A. (Lester) and
The Subhumans (Spaner). New York Yippie/
High Times publisher
Tom Forcade financed one of the first movies about punk rock,
D.O.A., featuring footage of the
Sex Pistols' 1978 tour of America. Infamous
Baltimore Yippie
John Waters became a renowned independent filmmaker (
Pink Flamingos,
Polyester,
Hairspray), once claiming in an interview that the Yippies influenced his irreverent sense of style: "I was a Yippie agitator, and I wanted to look like
Little Richard. I dressed like a hippie pimp back then, because punk wasn't around yet."
Pranking the system Yippies mocked the system and its authority. The Youth International Party, having nominated a pig (
Pigasus) for US president in 1968, famously ran
Nobody for President as its 'official' candidate in 1976.
Vancouver Yippie Betty "Zaria" Andrew ran as the Youth International Party's candidate for mayor in 1970. In 1970,
Detroit Yippies went to city hall and applied for a permit to blow up the
General Motors building. After the permit was denied, the Yippies said that it just goes to show you can't work within the system to change the system. "This destroys my last hope for legal channels," said Detroit Yippie Jumpin' Jack Flash. Some Yippies, including
Robin Morgan,
Nancy Kurshan,
Sharon Krebs and
Judy Gumbo, were active in the
Guerilla theatre feminist group W.I.T.C.H. (
Women's International Terrorist Conspiracy from Hell), which combined "theatricality, humor, and activism." On November 7, 1970, Jerry Rubin and
London Yippies took over
The Frost Programme when he was the guest on the popular British host's TV program. In all the chaos, a Yippie fired a water pistol into host
David Frost's open mouth, the broadcaster called for a commercial break and the show was over.
The Daily Mirror's banner headline: "THE FROST FREAKOUT."
Pie-throwing Pie-throwing as a political act was invented by Yippies. The first political pie throwing was carried out in Bloomington, Indiana, October 14, 1969, when Jim Retherford, former underground newspaper editor and ghost writer of Jerry Rubin's Do It!, landed a cream pie in the face of former UC Berkeley president Clark Kerr. Retherford was also the first to be arrested. The next pie was thrown by Tom Forcade, who nailed a member of the
President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography in 1970. Columbus Yippie Steve Conliff pied Ohio Governor James Rhodes in 1977 to protest the Kent State shootings. Aron "The Pieman" Kay became the best-known Yippie pie-thrower. Kay's many targets included Sen.
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, New York City Mayor
Abe Beame, conservative activist
Phyllis Schlafly,
Watergate burglar
Frank Sturgis, ex-
CIA head
William Colby,
National Review publisher/editor
William F. Buckley, and the owner of disco
Studio 54,
Steve Rubell.
Nobody for President and "None of the Above" Perhaps one of the swan songs of Yippies was a groundbreaking effort to place a new voting option, "None of the Above", on the election ballot in
Santa Barbara County, in California, by the
Isla Vista Municipal Advisory Council in 1976. This represented an incipient libertarian impulse of Yippies and the first example in the United States of this election ballot alternative, in what one of the resolution's two co-sponsors,
Matthew Steen, described as an "anti-institutional Yippie
up-yours." Years earlier Steen had been a Yippie activist with
Stew Albert, as a reporter with the
Berkeley Tribe. This novel motion was adopted unanimously by the council, having a ripple effect across the country, with voters in
Nevada approving this option in a change to state election laws in 1986. In 1976, national Yippies took a cue from
Isla Vistans, backing
Nobody for President, a campaign that took on a life of its own in the post-Watergate malaise of the mid-70s. (Meanwhile, in a strange twist of Yippie fate,
Matthew Steen had become treasurer of a student-led campaign to elect
Jerry Brown for president, competing against both "Nobody for President" and
Jimmy Carter during the presidential primary campaign of that year.) From the experimental combination of Isla Vista local politics, presidential campaigns and the Yippies, the name and spirit of this unexpected ballot initiative spread quickly—in the form of None of the Above music festivals, radio and television shows, rock bands, T-shirts, buttons, (decades later) countless websites and other related social phenomena. The die-hard dedication to the 'option' of Nobody for President and None of the Above has not abated since the counter-cultural 70s, but has only grown, unexpectedly taking the Yippie legacy into a new century and succeeding generations., Ohio, 1978 == Writings ==