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Today's Top News
Lina Newhouser, Common Dreams Co-Founder, 1951-2008
CAPE ELIZABETH, Maine -- Lina Jeanne Newhouser, 56, died Friday evening, July 18th, from complications following an April 'mini-allo' stem-cell transplant as part of the long treatment in her defiant 3-year stand against non-Hodgkins lymphoma. Lina wrote of her long struggle on her blog - www.tellthebees.org
Lina was an artist, political activist, organic farmer, businesswoman and proud, loving mom.
Lina was born in Grand Junction, Colorado -- the daughter of John and Charlotte Newhouser. But she considered her beloved New Orleans home - where she was raised and went to high school. Lina graduated from Southwestern College in Memphis, Tenn. She also lived and studied at the University of Munich, Germany for two years.
After college Lina became a lead community organizer for ACORN: the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, working stints in Texas, Little Rock, Ark., and Bridgeport, Conn. In 1980 she worked on the national staff of the Citizens' Party, trying to elect Barry Commoner President as a vehicle for starting a new progressive third party in the US -- here she met and worked with both of her future husbands on the Citizens' Party staff. Lina then was off to New York City for a job as co-director of The Media Network -- combining her two passions, art and politics, in a project using independently produced films as organizing and educational tools in NYC's working class neighborhoods.
In 1984, Lina and her first husband Bert DeLeeuw moved to Belize where Lina focused on her painting for a year. Then Lina and Bert moved back to the US and bought a 200-acre old farm in Huntingdon, PA - in the mountains of central Pennsylvania. Over 5 seasons Lina & Bert turned their 'Blue Moon Farm' into a hugely successful organic vegetable and flower farm. Chloe was born in 1989. In May of 1990 Bert was killed by a neighbor when Chloe was just 6-months old -- and Lina soon sold the farm.
In 1991 Chloe and Lina moved to Kentucky for Lina to work at Appalshop, an arts and education center based in the eastern coal region of the state. Lina was the Assistant Director of The American Festival Project at Appalshop, work she continued after her 1993 move to Maine when she and Craig married. Moriah was born in 1995.
Since 1996 Lina has worked as International Program Director for Transformit, a small, extraordinary Maine-based firm that designs, builds, rents and sells sculptural structures made out of fabric for the special event, trade show, architectural and retail markets. She loved her work (and her co-workers) at Transformit which combined her skills at art, organizing and working with people - and allowed her to travel to Europe a lot - putting her German, French and Italian language skills to good use.
In the 1980's Lina served for a time as the national president of the Alliance for Cultural Democracy, a national activist arts organization that flourished from 1982 to 1994. In recent years Lina served on the Cape Elizabeth Arts Commission.
In 1997, Lina, and her husband, Craig Brown, co-founded Common Dreams, the popular online news & views website for the progressive community.
Lina is survived by her husband, Craig Brown; daughters Chloe May DeLeeuw Brown,18, and Moriah Brown,13, all of Cape Elizabeth; her brother John Newhouser and his wife, Teri of Houston, Texas; her brother Mark Newhouser and his wife Joan MacDonald of Glen Ellen, Calif. And her mothers-in-law Evelyn DeLeeuw of Green Pond, New Jersey; and Ruth Brown of Cape Elizabeth; and many in-laws, nieces and nephews and a wide circle of friends all over the world.
* * *
A celebration of Lina's life was held on September 7th, 2008 at the Inn by the Sea across the road from her home in Cape Elizabeth. Over 200 friends and family came together to toast Lina - her work, her art, her family and her life. Warm sunshine, loud zydeco music, good food & drink and so many great friends. Lina would have loved it!
In lieu of flowers, Lina's family requested that memorial donations in her honor be made to the work of CODEPINK: Women for Peace.
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205 Comments so far
Show AllI've tuned into this website on and off for about 8 years or so. Can't say that I've been that committed to have seen the link to this notice before now, but I'm taking the time to write because this notice made me take the time to register, too. It made me take the time to register so I could say something, thank you, Lina. God bless Common Dreams and the good people like Lina that keep me informed and in touch with a perspective born from motivations that are good and decent.
Lady in Blue - Your presence is felt everyday. And what a site this has become!!!
A powerful energy for good. - namaste to all, cm
A most moving biography.
What an incredibly dynamic human being!
I feel like I knew Lina through getting on board Commondreams during the lead-up to the invasion. An old veteran (older than this one) turned me on to her site while we were freezing our asses off on a windy corner that winter of early protests.
Thank you, Common Dreams, for keeping this page alive!
Erik Molbach
Hudson, NY
This is a great loss.
There has been an epidemic of movers and shakers on the left coming down with cancer. There has also been an epidemic of people coming down with it who were Republican, but ran afoul with the Republican party Novak, Atwater, Specter for example. Please, People, hire an actuary. Sue for information about gov. programs that are able to assassinate people without anybody even knowing about it. This has been going on for a long time. I may be wrong about this case, but I don't believe I am wrong about it in general.
I apologize for the disturbing content of this message. This woman is truly a hero for the ages.
J
What I have to say may sound hackneyed to the cynical self-pampering American couch potatoes whizzing as their lungs fight for space to expand with their abdominal fat. Fact is, Lina should not have died, even Howard Zinn was too young to die. We are so close to keeping man alive and able—I know it both as scientists and healthcare giver—that it could only be our distraction from that quest that could allow these deaths to occur. All these people are precious gems of intellect, of caring good will that pointed humanity towards building rather than destroying, problem solving rather than problem making. Yet they’re dead, their tombstones remaining as monuments to how little us, this animal species, managed to civilize ourselves. We all dared dream COMMON DREAMS, yet we are all distracted by our animal nature, commonly contributing to waste and distraction form the real challenges and opportunities life gives us as societies. Ms. Newhouser’s is such a lovely smile, radiating such zest for life and hope in the future. No wonders she dared to quest for COMMON DREAMS. Our generation, give or take a decade, was that way. We of the 60s were not hippies who just got stoned and dressed weird. Rather we thought: I'm not a Christmas tree so why spend on decorating myself. Better a life well devoted to knowing, doing and advancing rather than buy, buy, buy. Cancer today is an enigma that takes us deeper and deeper into a hole no matter how much and how fast we researchers dig. We're still so ignorant but not for want of trying. And yet, Ms. Newhouser, I would say, died of neglect: OUR NEGLECT OF EDUCATING THE NATION'S CHILDREN. AMONG THOSE CHILDREN LEFT IGNORANT BECAUSE WE AS A NATION CHOSE WAR, CARS AND SELF-DECORATION MIGHT HAVE BEEN THE ONCOLOGIST THAT KEEPS HER ALIVE LONG ENOUGH FOR SOME YOUNG SCIENTIST TO FIND THE KEY TO CANCER THAT COULD HAVE EFFECTIVELY CURED HER. But no, it's easier to send that kid to step on a boobytrap in Vietnam or to send some mom and dad soldier into the neocons' infernal "World War IV" against Islam to come home a disabled basket case that will forever be a millstone around his/her family's neck-- it's members forever more having to choose between giving loving care to their disabled vet or investing time and effort in their own futures. Americans have become such criminals driven by greed. Our national security intel chief, Admiral Mike McConnell let us know that getting cheaply the oil of others is OUR "primary national security issue." So that obese self-abuser our age suffering from "ain't my kid going to war" disconnect syndrome can fill-er-up his/her SUVs is in the end paying for self-centeredness because the life WE DIDN'T save by stopping war will not be there to save his/her life when becoming that inevitable victim of that avarice. Save a future saver of the earth, of mankind by bringing our mom&dad soldiers home so they can raise their kids rather than kill those of others. Ms. Newhouser would love you for it even if she didn't make it.