Steven Conliff (November 24, 1949 – June 1, 2006) was a Midwestern-based Native American writer, historian, social satirist, alternative-media publisher and political activist in the 1960s and 1970s.
Conliff is chiefly remembered for throwing a banana cream pie at James A. Rhodes, the governor of Ohio, in 1977, at the opening of the Ohio State Fair in Columbus, Ohio. Rhodes Opens Fair, gets 'creamed' by KSU Group, Associated Press, The Daily Reporter, 17 August 1977
In the summer of 1970, Steve Conliff started his first Yippie publication, Purple Berries—which later morphed into the publication Sour Grapes. SOUR GRAPES cover Youth International Party, Columbus, OH, 1974 Conliff was also one of the founders of the Columbus Free Press (to which he contributed up until his passing) and the public-education-critical Subversive Scholastic (1978–84).
[https://i.pinimg.com/originals/3e/ff/b5/3effb583acf8037a52866330235640e3.jpg SUBVERSIVE SCHOLASTIC cover : May/June 1980]
He regularly wrote for ''YIPster Times''Yipsky, Leon, ''March to Disband the DEA'', Yipster Times, June 1975 [http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-D_JfK47xhRI/WgMoojylMxI/AAAAAAAANco/qqInyS-UCE0YpArrqNSG_Ji63-TQzmjogCLcBGAs/s1600/yipstertimes.jpg Illustration : YIPSTER TIMES cover, June 1975] (1972–78), ''HVPTA / Bite Magazine'' (1978-80), and ''Overthrow'' (1979–98).*[https://pictures.abebooks.com/BOLERIUM/md/md10407089401.jpg OVERTHROW cover : Fall 1985] *** [https://pictures.abebooks.com/BLOLBC/md/md22649082438.jpg OVERTHROW cover : Spring 1986] credit: ''Bolerium Books'' In addition, Conliff's work also appeared in ''[[High Times]]'', ''News From Indian Country'', ''Akwesasne Notes'', ''Open Road'', ''Take Over'', ''Fifth Estate'', ''In These Times'' and ''The Mohican News''—among numerous other zines and underground newspapers, frequently writing under the pseudonym "Leon Yipsky." He helped launch countless other publications, and published the local magazine ''Columbus Entertainment'' (which focused on cultural diversity before it was fashionable) from 1986 to 1988. A tribal descendant, Conliff presented papers detailing [[Mohican]] Indian history on the Stockbridge-Munsee Reservation (2001) at the New York State Museum in Albany (2004).[https://archive.today/20130222161116/http://www.stevenconliff.net/about.html Steven E. Conliff (1949 - 2006)] He also contributed American Indian ethnography to ''Notable Native Americans'' (Gale 1995) and ''Volume 1 of the Gale Encyclopedia of Native American Tribes'' (Gale 1998).
Steve Conliff was an important leader of the Yippies' second wave, which included well-known activists such as Tom Forcade, Ben Masel,(obituary of Yippie Ben Masel humorously describes Conliff's appearance on Missouri talk radio to get him out of jail) A.J. Weberman, Aron Kay (another famous pie thrower), A comprehensive history of political pie-throwing; cites the Yippies at some length, mentions Conliff and interviews Kay. David Peel, and Dana Beal. He was also the transatlantic coordinator of the Rock Against Racism USA campaign of 1979, helping to organize concerts in Columbus, Dayton, Madison, Detroit, Chicago, and New York City.Alice Torbush, Daisy Deadhead, Rock Against Racism USA - Tour Dates & Concert Calender, Overthrow/Yipster Times, p. 12-14, April 1979 Illustration : Overthrow cover: ROCK AGAINST RACISM issue, April 1979
Like Neal Cassady and similar charismatic personalities of the counterculture, it is hard to quantify the nearly-metaphysical impact Steve Conliff had on activists around him; besides storytelling and history-keeping, his great gifts were to inspire, encourage and engage.
After pieing Rhodes and the generally-positive reaction, Conliff decided to run for governor against Rhodes, as a Republican. Rhodes Only Major Officeholder Facing Primary Foe, editorial, Akron Beacon Journal, 26 March 1978 This campaign was not treated very seriously by Ohio media, but gave Conliff access to various conservative venues in which he delivered anti-war, anti-capitalist and pro-marijuana speeches to decidedly-unfriendly audiences with aplomb, which he seemed to enjoy:
Steve Conliff died of lung cancer on June 1, 2006.
The Pie and the Gubernatorial Campaign
We have seen here at the City of Kent especially, probably the most vicious form of campus-oriented violence yet perpetrated by dissident groups and their allies in the State of Ohio ... these people just move from one campus to the other and terrorize a community. They're worse than the Brown Shirts and the communist element and also the Night Riders and the vigilantes. They're the worst type of people that we harbor in America. And I want to say that they're not going to take over the campus. And the campus now is going to be part of the County and the State of Ohio.
In 1977, the Kent State University Administration decided to build a gymnasium on the exact site of the Kent State shootings, where there was already a small but respectful memorial to the four slain students erected by B'nai B'rith. This provoked a series of protests: there were numerous demonstrations and an infamous "Tent City" erected on the site that eventually had to be bulldozed down, its 193 inhabitants forcibly removed and arrested. It was in this carnival atmosphere that the pieing of Governor Jim Rhodes took place. Kent State: Remembering the Tragedy, editorial, The Michigan Daily, p. 4, 11 May 1978.
Yippie Conliff says he's too young to serve as governor even if elected, but sees no problem with the state not having a governor.Wilson, Steve, Field Pared As Primary Deadline Passes, Cincinnati Enquirer, 24 March 1978
When his Lieutenant Governor candidate, yippie Leatrice Urbanowicz, was thrown off the GOP ballot for being a registered Democrat, that was also an occasion for more Yippie hoopla.Call, Michael, Security is Heavy as State Fair Opens, Akron Beacon Journal, 15 August 1978
Zorba the Freak
In journalism, historically, columnists have created alter egos who they supposedly interview but who speak for them. Finley Peter Dunne did Mr. Dooley. Mike Royko did Slats Grobnik. And William Raspberry always had the taxicab driver in Washington. Conliff had someone called Zorba the Freak—incredibly funny, incredibly well-written pieces that combine satire and commentary.
'' reporter during his gubernatorial campaign, 1978]]
Blacklisted News
Personal life
He was selling Purple Berries, and he would come by E.G. Leather on Pearl Alley trying to get ads. It was one of the old hippie shops. I worked there at the time, so I would sit on the porch and talk to him, and we got to know each other fairly well just sitting and chatting.
The two married in 1973 and had three sons. Bird's art work often accompanied Conliff's written pieces, especially in Purple Berries and Sour Grapes.
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