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Show 12 at establishing an argument favoring GI civil rights. of the military to several GI papers denial of civil 'rights to service are cited examples as Four GI persohnel. The reactions of the undergrounds briefly discussed, including Aboveground, Bragg Briefs, Gigline, are and The Bond. Larry G. Waterhouse and Mariann G. Wizard, in their Turning the Guns Around: Notes on the GI Movement (1971), quote extensively from the GI underground papers while giving a very rough, somewhat disorganized overview of This book is ment exactly what its title implies: (taken mostly from The Bond, in New York City) ter historical Adam can of the movement in and a nothing more. notes general. the GI on Marxist oriented paper It indicates a Yarmolinsky's The Military Establishment: Society (1973) mentions several GI Its undergrounds published need for account of the anti-war movement within the Impacts move a bet military. on Ameri in his account military justice and its relationship to individual liberties denied members of the services. A third category of published articles written underground The on specifically press movement. sources includes books and to document the Among these is Robert J. of the Glessing's Underground Press in America (1971), which includes a chapter anti-war newspapers. Although Glessing identifies a better known GI papers and discusses what he the development political alignments within the GI duces little information papers. lack of on few of the perceives as a few of anti-war movement, the historical he pro development of GI Generally, Glessing's historical approach is limited by a access to primary sources within the moyement itself. Laurence Leamer, in The Paper Revolutionaries: the Rise of the |