Charles Radcliffewas editor of
Heatwave[?], a radical magazine produced in
London in
1966. It was cited in
On the Poverty of Student Life[?] as an example of one of the "profoundly revolutionary tendencies in the critique of all aspects of the prevailing way of life". It was closely linked with
Rebel Worker[?], a
Chicago magazine published by
Franklin Rosemont,
Penelope Rosemont[?] and
Bernard Marszalek[?]. They had links with bothe
Industrial Workers of the World and American
Surrealism.Radcliffe became a member of the British Section of the
Situationist International in December
1966, but resigned by November
1967. (The British Section was then dissolved with the expulsion of
Christopher Gray[?],
Donald Nicholson-Smith[?] and
Timothy Clark[?].)