Let's Blow
Submitted by hecate on Sun, 05/05/2019 - 4:29amTime's cover story the weekend of October 15, 1965 was "The Turning Point In Vietnam." The Berkeley Barb counter-headlined: "VDC Shatters War 'Consensus,' Greatest Antiwar Protest Ever, UC Center Of Worldwide Action." A proposal from the Berkeley chapter of the Vietnam Day Committee had grown into a coordinated event in twenty countries. Of the two American demonstrations, one was going to be in Berkeley.
As it was planned, there would be speakers and antiwar folksingers all day Friday, then an afternoon march on the army induction center in Oakland, followed by an all-night vigil and more speakers on Saturday. Some 14,000 people came for the event from scores of western cities, whole busloads from Los Angeles and Portland. Some of them had sat since morning in a vacant lot on the University of California campus hearing the war denounced by student and labor radicals and a slate of antiwar writers. Ken Kesey was scheduled in a superstar time slot, just a speaker or two before the march was to start.
The VDC organizers who put together the anitwar cheerleader lineup could not have been up-to-date on Kesey's recent interests.