NATTY DREAD NOV. 3, 1975 VOL.1, NO.2

I "WE WANT NATTY DREAD MANIFESTO

JUSTICE" NATTY DREAD WAS BORN WITH A is the responsibilityof the readersas PURPOSE well as the staff.It is very important LUIS RIVERA Thatpurpose is to promoterevolu.. for the readersto send in suggestions tionarytheory and practice,which is, and writebrief letters and articlesin- Approximately200 NationalCity(N.C) the study and resolutionof the basic dicatingwhat they like and what they Citizan.~inert’bed on thpNC. contradictionsand the radicaltransfor- CouncilChambers, two weeks ago to vozce dislike~for thisis theonly way to make ::~mationof the dynamicsof the socio- a journala success." theirfrustration with the NC administra- economicprocess. Natty Dread will promotethe cul- tive bureacracyand it’s refusalto re- ’ ~’- A primarystep in generatingcri- turalrevolution. The NattyDread spondto citizenoutrage over the murder N.C. police from arrestingthem for ticaltheory is wide scale information Collectiverealizes that part of the of Luis "Tato" Rivera by NC police loitering.The march proceededbackto access.Natty Drea~realizes that free Americanmyth involvesdistortion of theprevious week. Rivera was shot and kil- the meetinghall, stopped at the siteof press accessto all peopleis a basic UnitedStates history to perpetuatesta- led by the policeas he fled from them. Rivera’smurder and chantsof songs of right, and thus Natty Dread is com- tus quo consciousness.(This distor- Apparently,his only crime was fleeing "We Want Justice" and "The People mittedto thedissolution of classprive- tion takes the form of manifestimper- fromthe poilce officers. United Will Never Be Defeated"were iage in media use tad controlboth at ialism,institutional racism and sexism. Luis Rivera’smurder has activated hearddown the 25 blockline. UCSD and in the greaterSan Diegoarea° structuralelitism, and a generallyupper communitydemandsfor a responsivecity As scheduled,the crowdof about700 No partof societyis independentof classbiased and falsehistorical atti- administration.To aid the presentation marchersreturned to St. Anthony’sHall another.Realizing this, the NattyDread tude.) As such, Natty Dread is com- of these demands, an ad hoe commit- to hearorganizers demand the dissolution Collectivecomm’ts itself to recruitme~R mittedto the raisingof historicalcon- tee on ChicanoRights were formedaf- of the NationalCity Council. Threestand- of membersof non-privehtgedsocial sciousness,and shalldo this through ter the murder.On October14, a series ingovations from the crowd proved beyond groupsand classesin the regionalcorn= its own analysis,sharing analyses of of demands were l~ssed by the group. a doubt the intensityof the community other groupsengaged in progressive They are : l) grand jury investigation m~,lity In this ~my, we can inform movement. and educateeach otherto seeminglyin- struggle,and other forms of informa~ intothe murder;2) federalcivil rights Futuremarches are beingplanned by tionalexchange. committeeinvestigation ; 3)establish= dependentstruggles and to put theseis- organizersto focusfurther protest at the suesinto a largersocial context. In thisspirit we willcombat sectar- mentof an independentcitizen’s investiga- inactionof cityofficials. A plea was made We m,Jst learn as a revolutionary ianismand furtherthe task of build- tion committee,and 4)dismissalif the fordonations due to thefact that it will ing internationalistrevolutionary unity, NationalCity Chief of Police. organizationfrom those we #ishto serve, cost $3000- $4000 to "BringDown City whilerespecting the rightof oppressed A latermarch on October38 was called whetherwe areme,~.ting their needs ef- Hall."Registrars of Votersare also need- nationalitiesand peoplesto self-deter~ by the leaderof the ad hoc group and fectively.Only in this way can we dev- ed beginrecall drives in thecity council ruination.The variouspeoples a~lJ cul= variouscommu.lity organizations to pro- elop our practice accordingly.We and mayor.For more informationcall must followa mass line which e’npsa- turesare likethe fluwersin a bouquet; test the City Council’srefusal to in- 477-3800. sizesthe creationof the concretework- thereis diversityin uaity~ vestigatethe police department or suspend Aboveanything else,it was a beautiful ingbasis for unity. the officerwho killedRivera. Before.- and humane demonstarion,Chicanos, To do this, Natty Dread asks for hand,nearly 600 citizensmet at St. An- commitme,~tsin returm We encourage thony’sHall at 18th and Hardingin Na blacks, and ~vhites were unified as tionalCity where discussion on the pu: brothersand sistersof all age groups workingpeople at the University"lnd posed and strategyof the marchto t.~ werereflected at thedemonstration. This in the commonaltyto activelycritique NationalCity CivicCenter. Organizer.¢ is not simplya minorityproblem , but and participatein developingthe ide,~ ,~alledcitizens to actin a unitedpeace- a communityproblem, and the community logicalfoundation and purposeof Natty from throughtall of San Diego -- in- ful effort.The marchersleft the halla Dread. Theory and practicem~st be cluding a good number from UCSD .- 7 p.m., and when the demonstratorsar- utilizedto reflectthe commitme.~t collec- participatedin this evening of unity,bmd- rivedat the CivicCenter some 13 blocks tiveme:nhers and readers.~tve tow,,rds ed togetherin a strongpolitical and Natty Dread. As a revolutionaryhas away the crowd numberedbetween 1,000 emotionalcause. stated:"Once startedja jo,Jrnalmust and 1,500 marchers. be run conscientiouslyand well. This Once at City Hall,citizens marched Marco Li~mdrifor the Natty Dread for about20 minutes,all the whilebeing urgedto keep movinginorder to prevent MUSICIANS T.T. BOYCOTT .GUILD The shortdescription of the ongoing boycottof the TritonTimes in the last On October25, the UCSD Musicians NattyDread issue (formerly called Some- Guildheld their second community concert timeswas just an introductionto make WHAT IS A NATTy DREAD? at SeagrovePark in Del Mar. Onceagain peopleaware of the issue.Also inclu- Californiadolphins showed upand re- ded wasa partiallist of variousstudent NattyDread is a serf-descriptionof the Ras Tafarian politico-religious sect flectedtheirappreciationof jazz. For those organizationsat UCSD that are in sup- of Jamaica. who were able to attend the concert, Theyhave, for forty-four years, been consistent in theirrejection of the portof theboycott. thankvou. profit-orientedideals of the Jamaicansocial system. This social system cannot Currently,research is being done The M,sician’sGuild is a UCSD stu- in orderto presenta definitiveand doc- be understoodwithout referring to thesimilarly ctass-bound and inegalitarian dentorganization which exists to provide umentedarticle expressing strong rea- societiesthat characterize the Third World nations that participate in the glo- freemusic, free food and hightimes for soningfor peopleto stop recognizing balcapitalist system dominated by theUnited States. students.The MusiciansGuild is a cul- a single"official campus print media" TheR as Tafzrianstotal rejection of thesystem arises from the fact that turalcollective dedicated to allowingar- as representinga channelof communi- theyexist as marginalto theirsociety. A"marginal person=can be definedas tiststo reflecttheir talents to their cation. Uponit’s completion, that sta- onewho cannotprovide the needs required by society;and ; consequently;is peers,while sima, itaneously providing tementwill be printe! by NattyDread. an unemployableperson. A portionof the Jamaicanrural masses migrated to culturalevents fo: thestudents and wor- theurban areas seeking employment in the 1930’s.Out of thisdisplacement kers at UCSD. The MusiciansGuild is and poverty,The Ras Tafariansect was formed. They lived, and stilllive, seekingsingles, duos, and groups to per- togetherin communalgroups on the fringesof thecities and in themore i- form at our monthlyconcerts. I-atinop MERGER solatedrural areas. Theirexistence is characterized by perpetual unemploy- rock,jazz, , bluegrass, classical, ment,hunger, malnutrition, disease, and the total lack of theamenities such and soul music can most honestlyand democratic~allyreflect our campusta- "NorthStar" and "Sometimes",two as waterand light. Out of thisexistence, they have created a religiousand socialdoctrine whose ultimate aim is a concretehe,,ven -- onethat should lent. UCSDfundedjournals, have mergedinto To jointhe MusiciansGuild, simply a singleentity called "Natty Dread". existon earthand provide for the full development of the potentiality for call 453-4450,ask for Sandy or Marco, This merger is an attemptto broaden every man and woman. Continued on paoe 12 and leave your name and phone number, the media base on campus in order to (inorder to compilea listof musicians), reach segmentsof the communitylong or stopby thesecond floor of theStudent neglectedby the officialcampus media, Centerand sign up yourself.Ma~ic is Operationof "Natty Dread"is direc- the ultimateutilization of time.Please ted by a collectivecomposed of the come and toast out at the next UCSD combinedcollectives of "North Star" INSIDE- MusiciansGuild Concert, and "Sometime,;"as well as a substan- In CollectiveThanks tial numberof people previouslyun- BOA/MURPHY RESPONSE The UCSD MusiciansGuild affiliatedwith eithernewspaper. The CommunicationsBoard recognized "Natty THIRD COLLEGE LUMUMBA ZAPATA Dread" as a campus .journalat its recent meeting on October 24. Funds PROPAGANDA COLLECTIVE and facilitiesof bothpapers were mot- fed, allowing"Natty Dread" to come SDG&E STRUGGLE out 03 a weekly basis, This merger ,~as an action unprecedentedin Com- municationsBoard history.The "Natty CHICANO STUDIES Dread" collective,having gone through the bureaucraticprocess of merging COMMUNITY PLANNING has recentlycompleted a statementof politicalprinciples which is printed AFFIRMATIVE ACTION herein full. 8LA COMMUNIQUE CALENDAR ’age2 concertsscheduled simultaneously foro- Page3 It is assumedthat your office, since A VIEW F ’()Mtherareas on the campus.Such mis- BOA it ismr,st closely tied to thenon- aca- hapscould de largelyavoided by taking WOMEN & T t- STRUGGLE demicstudent life on campus,would be advantageof theCollective’s coordina- morethan willing to seeincreased stu- INSIDE THE tingrole. RESPONDS dentresponsibility inthe running of a fa- Organizations,including the Co-op cilitythat is so uniquely student-orleatted. PROPAGANI) A itself,needing assistance in publicizing We feel,however, that direct account- To our sistersand brothers: ly, the "home,"the realmof the per- activities,can 1raw upon the Propaganda soaaland emotional.The fact that abilityof thestudents on theboard to Collective’scontacts and experience with The followingpaper contains the the administratorsas proposed is~ in COLLECTIVE preliminaryideas of a m~achlonger thousandsof womenare able to s,arvive DEAR the formsof massmedia, from leaf- theoreticalstatement concerning our in a hostile,unjust job marketand fact,a rathersuperfluous set-up. There letsto television.People interested in raisechildren alone, Is eitherignored shouldbe no conflictsbetween students EachWednesday at 10 a.m.the Pro- doingthis kind of mediawork are en- positionon womenand armedstruggle. GEORGE... andthe administration on this board ff pagandaCollective of the UCSDUnder- We plana.=d:o continuewriting the state- or simplylziven no respect.We are couragedto attendthe Wednesdaymeet- ment In an ongoingmanner over a strong.We can survive.In building StudentAffairs is pe.rformingits tune- graduateStudent Cooperative meets at ingsand ’)ecome part of thePropaganda tioncorrectly since student needs and de- the StudentOrganizations Center. The periodof time,but the arrestsof Sep- for re~olution,we willtear dew’, the siresshould be met in any case.It Co-opis the ’Ne~tEngland Town Meet- ActionCent,~.~o By working ia toni.ruction tember18 havemade thisprocess Im- b.undariessurrounding our territory TO: VICE-CHANCELLORAND DEAN OF wouldseem a fax moreresponsive and ing’form of studeatgovernment which witht~e Cn-up’:; b~,’,ai E~,,,’,~.; Affairs possibleto carryon at thistime. andapply emotional exp.,’essio’~ to our STUDENT AFFAr.RS, GEORGE MURPHY instructionalsituation to haveadministra- has beenin practicefor a littleover (SanDiav, re~)u) an:l StatewideE×.’ernai Still,we believeit is importantthat politicalstrategy. We arem,.,re honest torsas advisorsto such a boardand one year.Meetings of the Co-opare MfalrsActi.~l C*.a’or’;, herang,., a’." #p- thispaper receive as widea circula- emutio%allywith ourselves than our FROM: THE STUDENT CENTER BOARD notvice-versa. In this manner, students opento all-.-studentsandnon-students tionsfor people interested ia informatiaq tionas possiblein an effortto combat brothers.We can teachthem that we OF AUTHORITY COLLECTIVE wouldbe ableto formulatedirectly the canaddress issues---and any undergra- workare broad. the attemptsof the pig mediato de- all m~stadmit oar re’stakesand recog- decisionswhich affected them the most duatecan vote on nonbudgetaryquestions Butwhy is it called’Propaganda’, politicizethe SLA and portraythe wo- nizeour weaknesses.In so ~oing,we TheBoard of Authorityproposal as sub- as wellas beingapprised of issuesout- (thatIs, whenquestions aren’t decided one may ask.The reasonis straight- men involvedas emptyheade.:l’ gun- will more quicklyovercome 9roblems mittedto youroffice was, and is not sidethe realm of theirexpertise (i.e. by consensus).Budgetary questions are forward.This type of institutionalin- carressingautomatons. and forgea tasterpath to revolution. merelya "tacticalstatement." I was Budgetarymatters, official re~dations, votedon only by thosemembers that formationwork is never’value free’. Thoughwe maynot be ableto devote The wom}nof tbe SymbioneseLib- a sincere and honest attempt by etc.within the administrative structures haveattended one out of two of the Thevery fact that it is organizational ourcollective energies to furtherwrit- eratio~Army ire revolutio.aary temi-. a groupof interestedstudents to re- of the University).Within the thrustpreviousmeetings. inlormationmakes it propaganda.Terms ingsconcerning wome~ an1 zrmeI strag- nists,We believewe must fightfor structurethe admittedly ineffective Stu- of thisproposal, however, (as a major Itsfirst controversial year has been suchas ’publicity’are but euphemisms. gle,we knoweach individual sister will economicand political chart :es that of- dentCenter Adivsory Committee in the policymaking vs. day to day decisionmarkedby steadyrise in the members Propaganda,still, must be un:lerstood continueto contributeto th~. ~tru~le ferjustice an~ fair opportunities forall absenceof any concretealternatives makingbody), it is feltthat a situationof peopleparticipating (averaging about as a scientific,non-perjorative term. and levelop=ne~tare:rod this important people°Wa are workingto elimh~ate fromthe Administration°It was with- as outlinedabove would be a morework- 50 or 60 peopleat eachmeeting)and It doesnot automaticallymean Mach- question. thewurld#ide system of UoS.im!:=.rial- in this administrativevacuum and in ablealternative the the StutentCenter an expandingfield of projectsand act- iavellianmanipulation of people’s minds. We believefeedback on thispaper, ism w,thall its inherentforms of op- goodfaith that the B.O.A. Collective sub- Directormaking these decisions arbitra- ivities.The Co-opfunctions basically It canalso mean the generation of the especiallyfrom feminist organizations pressionan~ its white, male. ruling mittedthis proposal to youroffice for rilyas he isnow forced to do. as a coordinatingbody for thediverse ofteninaccessible information which con- and otherwomen involved in th arme5 perpetrator~oWe consider all levels of a sincereevaluation. We are extremely areasof socialand political work which tributesto people’sability to freelyev- struggle,is absolutelyessential for the struggleimportant. There is much How much of U C S D.’s dismayedat theleisurely pace at which In conclusion,we are resubmittingthe stulentsengage in, called ’Action aluatethe complexityand depthof both the abovegroundand underground workto be doneoa a community,nat- youroffice dealt with responding to the B.O.A.proposal to youroffice along with Centers’.As new projectsarise, people issues.Thus, propaganda, when solidly to moveforward. ional,and international basis. proposal.We mustalso strongly object a statementof rationale which will hope- workthrough existing Action Centers or in thehands of peoplewho are held res- As wome~we have our ow,, parti- budget comes from the andcannot accept your terming the only fullyallow you to betterunderstand our createnew ones.Propaganda is one ponsibleto theircommunity, can function cularoppression to eliminate,Sexism alternativeyet offeredto thissitua- position.We lookforward to speakingcreatenew ones.Propagandais one such as a weaponnot of domination,but 11 is all-pervasivein our society.We tion"...an ill c’.mceived notion, at best, with you furtheron this matterand, center. ofliberation. believetrue liberation can ne~er be a Federal Government? and a blatentpower play (for pay) in lightof ourprevious response, DE- The PropagandaCollective is a reaIRyfor womenunless we particlpate worst."W~ are rather amazedthat MANDthat this proposal be reconsideredfive-personcoordinatorship :orhandling --MontgomeryReed fullyin everyaspect of therevolution- our intentionscould have been so in a seriousmanner this timz, without muchof the Co-op’sexternal awl, to Member,Propaganda Collective ary struggleand make our demands abusivelymisconstrued and are most anyunjustified delay someextent, internal flow of organiza- knownto all ~ople.We are willingto concernedthat the above statement might SincerelyOURS, workwith all people who .havesincere, be inticativeof the Administration’s opi- tionaland institutional (hence~ political) progressivealtitudes and goals.We A 107. nionof studentsin general.It would publicityand general information. Most TheStudent Center studentorganizations and Co-op Action seeour liberationintimately tied in read the seemthat there are far less tiring w:ays Boardof Authority withall otherliberation struggles. We for studentsto usurppow~zr ant the Centershave not yet begunto effect- understandand agreewith the premise B 25% Collective ivelyutilize the Collective.For in- Counter-Catalog "exhorbitant"sumof $10.OOper m,=eting cc: W.D.McElroy stance,in at leasttwocases recently, thatwomen, as withany oppressed group, -workingat thelocal gas station would IVlark Bookman noonrallies #ere planned in inadvertent mustdevelop their analyses and strate- be a far easierway to get richquick. TheStudent Cooperative giesapart from and without the interrup- C 40Z corfflictwith other rallies or out-door tionof theiroppressors. While #o need # to organizeseparately, we must consis- tentlystrive to givethe revolutionary movementthe inputof our ideasand LET’S DEVELOP IT! DEATHTO THE FASCISttNSEC’r ’tHAT conclusions.We must i~ce rather ! PREYS UPON THE LIFE OF THE PEO- thandetract from the overallstruggle. I PLE COMMUNICATIONS BOARD Thisis the secondin a seriesof storeclose enough to be consideredcon- In the longprocess toward revolution, developmentsin the vicinityof UCSD. venient.Clark was "inspired"to plan N The uRimateenemy of allstruggling we willnever take a comp~.etelysepara- a quickdevelopment on a smallparcel peopleat thistime is U.S.imperial= tiststance. We believethat our free- 4 Ism.Under this system, earle’as cate.- dom and the freedomof all oppressed UPDATE As UCSD’sCommunity Planning Admin- of landwhich was not originallyzoned fol"this xind of development. goriesof oppression;sexism, racism. peopledepends on cooperation,mutual istration/StudentIntern, my majorconcern classism~and widespreadpoverty; all assistance,and otherwomen are justi- At theadministration’s descretlon, is withdeveloping a malted peoples front fiablywary of the patronizinghabit of A representativefrom the Young Cali- to rivalthe developers who pride them-. VA ii ¯ serveto keepre,altitudes of people in thefirst meeting of theCommunications forniansfor Freedomrequested funding Thisdevelopme ~t proposalhas passed bondage.Physical and psychological many groupsto rate sexism as an Boardwas held under quasi-official sta- selveson innovativeexploitation of land theSan Diego CRy Planning Com~aission. "honorablemention" oppression, last fora newsubsidiary journal which would and people.The firstcommercial dev- survivalbecome our imraedlate,univer- tus.Basically, this meant that controver- be named"The Free Triton". The board TheTwo buildingsof theproject are to /¢ose,’&.i sal goals,neither of whichare easily on thelist of all themore Important sialdecisions made by the Boardwere elopmeltI will discuss in depthis the be againstthe high hanks on the south rejectedthis proposal on thegrounds that proposedHollday Court. attainableIn an individualistic,class/ ones.The liberationof womenis not subiectto Chancellorialawroval.Des- theFree Triton would merely serve as a endof theproperty. These will be two. caste-conscioussociety. These con,li- secondaryto anyoneelse’s freedom. pilethis ambiguity, the Board made se- The HolidayCourt under proposal storybuildings with the second floor op.. We willnever accept a tokenisticposi- mouthpiecefor the statevide Young Cali- is an approximatelyone-acre commercial t’one,Jeman,~ radical changes. The veraldecisions. The first of thesein- forniansfor Freedom, and thatit would eningon to thetop of the southbank. methodfor change is revolution. tionin any organizationor party plat- clude"the electionof Marc Faunon conveniencecenter to be locatedwithin Thefloor plans of thebuildings indicate be inappropriateto use student funds in walkingdistance of campus.The exact The liberationof womenand revo- form. (StudentCo-operative Representatvle) this manner. officesfor the second floors with ~om- lutionare inextricablyintertwined. Womenmust participate in the armed locationof thedevelooment can be des- mercialspace below, The retailspace CommunicationsBoard Co-ordinator. cribedin relation tothe tra/flc light sonar Withouta freesociety, women cannot struggleand be fighters.Fighting arm- The mostimmediate issue the Board indicatedso farin:ludes: a finan,:lal hopeto attainpersonal or collective ed is not "macho/’Fighting for revo-dealt with was the proposedmerger of In the Wednesdaymeeting with George of the VA Hospital.There is a corner organiz~ttioathrough which Clark will Gulfstation on the sameblock as the freedom.Since the freedomof women lutioawith gun In haitits notjust a thestaff and funding of twocollectives, Murphy the Board asked for clarlfination financethe development;a7-dl/delicatessen as a groupis not alwaysa foremost man’s game. Armed struggleIs an (Sometimesand North Star.). This merger of thedirective from the Chancellor which CrockerBank. Across the La Jolla typesto~’e (Luigi’s), anlprobably Villagedrivew,ty from the bank is *,he focusin earlyrevolutionary periodsa wo- importantand totally necessary element resultedIn theformation of a newsub- called for the restructuring of the "in. a pharma:y.The other cetail stores are men have and must continueto come of our revolutionarystrategy. Armed sldlaryjournal, entitled "Natty Dread." active" Communications Board.* During plotintenL~1 to be the HolidayCourt. as yetu~determine,i. CraigClark, the developer, intenls this togetherto collectivelyanalyze our par- propagandais our main focusnow. TheNatty Dread collective seeks to servethis meetingGeorge Murphy expressed If youwant to giveCraigClark sug~ tic*alarcoMitions and plan our strategies. It is an effectiveweapon that should be the needsof the UCSDand surrounding~llingnessto allowtheBoard to assist smalldevelopment to servethe imme- gestionsabout what students w:.,nt in his in thisrestructuring= if there is to be diateneeds of the comtnzaity.Clark, Our battleagainst sexism, the total utilizedto thefullest extent. Ours is communitieshistorically neglected by the comm~,rcialcenter, he saysne is open necessityof ourfight for liberation, is a countryof media-consciouspeople. "officialcampus media". This approval anyrestructuring at all. Although recep- a La JollaFarm~ resident, stated :hat to them.We suggestedhousing above his#ire conat, laine:t that there was no predicatedoa our strengthand leader- As revolutionaries,we can use the necessitatedthereplacement ofthe sliding tive to the Board’scomments, Murphy thestore ,hich would com;:ly with ori- shipin revolution.Our oppressionIs mediato our advantageto educatethe budgetscale (funding based on yearof ginalzoning. We alsoasked about solar peopleby exposing,through armed ac- perclevedthis changeover as a "positive ~lr I~ notonly political but cultural as well. publication)with a reviewprocess, move" and warnedthe Board not to orotherinnovative power sources~ These We havea difficult,twofold struggle. tions,the decadent, bloodthirsty, im- wherebyfunding will he allocatedaccord- suggestionswere quickly dismissed as Cruder8,(.Z Jr,.,.,V,’/l=q¢.., perialisticnature of theruling class "rejectout of hand"his proposal.The Not only mustwe builda new so-Aety ingto thequality of journalismexhibit- Board’srecommendations to George beingeconomically unfeasable, and 1 was and itsgovernment. Armed actions also el by theindividual newspapers. This will show;,their venting and skylight ideas. thatoffers viable alternatives for all helpprepare people for theday whenbe a year-longprocess,culminating in an Murphywill be publishedat a laterdate. A developer’sidea of innovative developing people,we m~st destroya deeplyen- revolutionarymasses will be armedto evaluationsession in theSpring quarter. FannyWooden -- Muir Communi- seemsto be littlemore than liberal re- trenchedcultural system of sexismthat fighta people’swar. They remind us A set of criteriawill be formulatedand cationsBoard representative fore~ relegateseach woman, no matterw!,st thatwe mustbe readyto defendour- Marc Fannon-= Communications ~~ .] distributedby the Board,in the fall Themajor reaso,~s people should be raceor classshe is from,to a secon- selvesfrom any type of attackand quarter,toinsure that the subsidiary jour- beardCo-ordinator awareof th!stype o’ dece~opmentare: COL),. dary,dependent position. mountoffensives to win. Wome:~in Womenhave recently, since the nalsbe awareof the basisof their* ed.note :: seeletter and analysis in (1)so so thatthey can take firth action armedstruggle are rousingexamples evaluation.Again we emphasizethat this to ensurethat the only developments built decadeof the sixties,discovered that of strengthto othersisters and brot- the Oct.2, 1975issue of ’Sometimes’. we havea loagosuppressedhistory of evaluationwill be an on-goingprocess, areones which reflect and utilize the hers.Women guerrillas strike fear notand ad hoc"trial" at theend of each uniquecharacteristics of the area, and femaleorganizers, artists, authors, and Intothe heartsof the oppressorsand year.On Wednesday,October 29, the (2)to enablethem to evaluatehow much soldiers.The originsof our movement datehack over 120 yearsto the pre- bringjoy to thefaces of theircomrades. Board mot withVice-Chancellor George strictcom’nereial development is needed Everywoman freedom fighter will not Murphy,and officialapproval was grant- in thisarea which may entail a revision CivilWar Abolitionist cami.~aigns. Dur- be a guerrilla.We willstruggle on ed for the abolitionof the slidingscale of theUniversity Community Plan. ingthe past ten years, w=. have vh,’or- alllevels° But all feminist revolution- andthe Natty Dread merger was adminis- Oncewe realizethe full potential ouslycarried on ourfighting tradition. ariesmust support armed stru~le and trativelysanctioned. we haveas a unitedpeoples force to Womt,n havecontin,,allv ort, anized in theirsister soldiers because we fight KSDT,the campus radio station, asked influenceand stop "levelopments, we m~st r.z= J. //,,. countlesscorn,unities for daycare cen- to freeourselves. theBoard to approvean $800.00expen- workon expandingour power to determine t,,’,’//,,,3... ters,widespread birth control, for eqt,l- LOVE-POWER-STRUGGLE diturefor renovation of their equipment thedestiny of our ow;ienvironment in tablewelfare benefits, an .andto forced $**’I, in orderto broadentheir range of re- the interestsof thePEOPL, E, notthe sterilization,ant_aunaae abortion laws distributedoy: Bay Area Radical Coal,- Capitalistsociety marks a wom~.n’s coition.Since this was included In their developers. tlon(burr), p~o box 4344,Berkeley, workingbudget, the Board gave unanimous *$.4t* valueby the valueot her m."n;boy- Calif.,94704 approval. friead,h~sband, son, or father.Our territoryks supposed!y the:~ Jclear lami., i Page4

Anotherfactor is the failure of theentire suytem to develophi-lingual, Page5 hi-culturaleducation as laid down by theFederal Bilingual Education Act, U.C. ADMINISTRATION whichdefines such an educationas the "use of twolanguages, one of which "THE MURDER OF FRED HAMPTON ’j isEnglish, asmediums of instruction."It also calls for the use of curri- FREE CLASSIFIEDS culumthat includes the "hisory and cultural heritage which reflect the valuesystems of speakersof bothlanguages." If youhave anything you need to buy~or wantto sell, Whilesome 225,000 California youngsters suffer from a deprivationof or if youhave a serviceto offer,NATTY DREAD Is /ITHHOLDS C.T.F. REPORT suchprograms, colleges and universities shamefully neglected their respon- ~C. ~’;_.,~ ~-w,. willinvgand able to runyour classified ad FREE. sibilityof producingteachers through bilingual-bicultural programs. For the Thisis a communityservice for non-profit members Universityof California, such programs were spelled out to theletter in of theUCSD community and surroundingcommunities E1 Plande SantaBarbara of 1969. whoneed to publicizetheir wants, needs, and services. Thethird criticism is directed at UC admissionsthat demands of Chi- You canrun an ad in NATTYDREAD absolutely free. (F’ora prefaceto thisarticle, refer to October 75 S¢)ME’I’IMES: "Affirmative canos"something they are not offered and do notobtain in publicschools." It mustbe twenty-fivewords or less,typedor printed Actionat UC") Admissions,which is basedon criteriavirtually unrevised since 1033, re- neatly,enclosedin an envelopemarked "classified", quireof freshmena 3.0 grade point average in specified"college prep" andmailed to: "Increating a president’s task force to investigateandevaluate its relation- programs.While there are "special admissions slots" available that waive CLASSIFIEDS shipto Chicanos,the University of California demonstrates its~tature as an minorrequirements, they are of limitedaccess to Chicanos,who by more B-023PO Box 109 institutionof higher learning. A great University is unafraid of lookingat itself La Jolla,Ca. 92037 critically,to acknovcledge itsresponsibilities, to change if necessary.’ thabtwo-thirds enter as regularadmits. Furtheralong, the Report cites the Educational Opportunity Program Or,if you prefer, bring it to SandySterling in Student "A taskforce may not be a panaceafor a complexsocial issue, but there is (EOP)as a majorsource of increasingthe Chicano enrollment through Organizations,on the second floor of the Student Center. certainlyno better way to begin a searchfor solutions.., andllook forward to recruitement,tutorial services, career counseling, andother areas such Makesure it getsintto the Natty Dread box by Wednes- somesolid programs." -ascultural reinforcement. Thisbeing the case, it is then difficult tocom- dayat four o’clock. Theforegiong statements were made in 1971by a Chicanospokesman and UC prehendwhy the University has been involved in a Statewideeffort to main- We hopethat this service will help meet the needs of PresidentCharles Hitch, respectively, as an historicaleffort ~s underway ourreaders, and we encourageyou to takeadvantage of it. to createthe major report (230 pages) on thePresident’s Task Force on Chi- stream,or rather,dismantle the programs down to nothingness.It is no canosand the University of California that was to be presentedin the Spring of secretthat the few campuses that have retained their EOP’s intact and 1972tv tileUC Presidentand Board of Regents. productive,have done so throughmass political action in their defense. In spiteof theeloquent remarks above, Hitch was adamantly opposed to tile Thepicture is sadderyet, for faculty who first of allmust overcome formationof an ’allChicano" task force that was proposed and lobbied for by theabove-mentioned student conditions before entering the "academic theUC ChicanoSteering Committee since 1969. The resultwas a compromise arena"with barriers that are more complex and have received less as A LETTER thatled t() the taskforce being composed of fiveChicanos: students(ONE Chi- attention. cana),faculty and staff, and five UC topmanagement officials. In termsof overallacademic employees, October ’73 figures indicate Thislast factor, plus the failure to hirea researchteam on a full-time that433 (2.03%) of the21,298 academic personnel were "Mexican/Spanish To the Comm Board and Natty Dread basis(all Chicanos had full responsibilities elswhere in theUniversity), and American"°In April of 1974,the University had 5762 ladder rank faculty basiclack of Universitycommitment, were the primary causes of theReport of which87 (L5%)were"Mexican/Spanish American" I was completelyamazed and dis- no t beingcompleted on time. In factit waspresented four-and-a-half years gustedat thelow levels the Triton Times late,last spring. has stoopedl~ina last ditch effort to bisregzrdingtheunfortunate delay, the report reveals invaluable information "relate"to studentsat UCSD. withrespect to Chicano’sand the ITniversity inwhat is called"conditions anti In the Monday,October 27 issue barriers"as they relate to students, faculty and staff. directlybelow the statementSUPPORT Thestudent porti(m out-shines the other sectors as it successfullyexplores TT ADVERTISERS,was a blatentlysexist, thelink of discriminationthatis mostcrucial to the entire question of Chicanosand absurdad for a "stimulaCondom" which and oducati(ffh picturesa "satisfied" (?) nurse holding Priorto quoting any statistics, itmust be pointed out that the Task Force a condom"anatomically shaped to cling foun,la great deal to bedesired of datasources like the University’s useof the to THE penls",whichts "likehundreds category"Mexican/Spanish American". For staff, the above stated method of tinyfingers urging a womanto let alongwith the 1970 Census’ "Mexican~Spanish surname," are used; which, com. go." bined,(’ai~ encompass some twenty-five different ethnic groups. The student statisticsareequally tmreliable as they are based on voluntary self identifica- Doesthe TT reallyrepresent a bunch tion,"which takes place during the registration process. of ignorantfrigid and impotentpeople whoneed some clinical synthetic device TheTask Force, "(in analyzing information it felt was inflated), estimates that I I :’:w~,- ?--:oo probablyonly 3,000 of UC’s90,467 undergraduates ~ 1973-74 were Chicanos." in orderto even hope to enjoysex? TheUniversity method showed 3’309 for that period, while EOP reported 2,275. When17 outof every100 Californians areChicanos, the above figures indicate An approximate40%of the87 arenot ladder rank faculty, and cannot ¯ .u.E;1% AT.~ I thinkthis ad is an irresponsible thatonly 3 outof every100 undergraduates areChicanos (by 1980 Chicanos will remainat theUniversity longer than two years unless they are appointed "1"~e~’5. ,Iv~:O - insultto anyo:~e~vho might mistakenly comprise20% of tilepopulation, and25% by theend of thatdecade). to assistantprofessorships thatcould lead to tenure.The only two UCSD r~o,R pick up a TritonTimes and read it. In addition,while Chicanos have increased numerically from the 100-200 of Chicanosthat have gone through this arbitrary process were denied tenure 1960to the "3,000" of 1973-74,the rate of increasehas declined drastically andwent elsewhere toaccept equal or higherpositions. Sincerelyyours, overthe past six years, from 172% in 1968-69down to 8% in 1973-74. Generally,itwas found that Chicano and Chicana faculty, being so few Ann B. Crane Withthis in mind, and realizing that tim questionable datasources do notin- in number,are burdenedwith "minority" commitment work while "spend- jurethe Report’s ability to demonstratea gross under-representation of Chi- ingproportionately moretime on studentaffairs, administration, andpub- canosin the University, following, is a closerlook at causes. licservice." Consequently, thisleads to lessconcentration on researching, Thecost of UC attendanceis cited as a barriersince the average Chicano publishing,and going about the business of "academicadvancement." familywould spend one-third of its income - $8,791(1970 Census) - on thestu- TheChicano staff employee finds the situation hardly any different from dent’sschooling. thatof his student or faculty counterpart. TheUniversity provided Califor- TheReport also states t~t Chicano students receive tess grants and scholar- nianswith approximately 45,000 staff positions in 1973-74. The Report shipsthan student aid recipients as a whole(47% vs .55%), anti must rely more assertsthat "Chicanos are employed by theUniversity at less than one- loans(15~ vs 7.5%). halfthe percentage they are employed throughout the State." The 6.4% Thesecond area addressed was that of publicschools that provide an anode- of "Mexican/SpanishAmerican" persons are not concentrated in the deci- quiteand inferior education resulting in a 40%high school "push out" rate. sionmaking levels, but in theblue collar jobs such as "craftsworkers, "...nearlyhalf the Chicano students attended segregated, under-financed, and operatives,laborers, and service workers." poorlyequipped schools," says the Report in citinga five-yearstudy by theU.S. Fromthe points made thus far, surely one can visualize the forthcoming Commissionon Civil Rights. Other criticisms were that Chicano youth are nut recommendations.1heone most stressed by theReport is theestablishment encouraged,andare victims of beingrepeatedly "tracked" in low ability clas- of a systemto collectreliable information on the Chi,:,~.;o presence and ex- sesby counselorsand teachers who do notexpect those students to go on to col- perience.Some points concerning students are: a Universitywide program lege."In plainterms, "college prep" courses are substituted for"industrial ofundergraduate scholarships andgraduate fellowships; a five year bilingual ,~h~’~Hv~. ~o.,,~,~ ~ ~’~. arts"such as crafts,mechanics, wood shops, etc., that in thelong run guarantee biculturaladmissions program; the development of professional training for a lastingsupply of Chicanolaborers rather than "professionals". studentsto service the Chicano population, andso forth. Thefaculty section calls for the University to reaffirm its affirmative actionresponsibilities, "inparticular to Chicanos"; andbasically the re- lievingof non-academic pressures inconiunction with an investigationof the Universitywide status of Chicanoand Chicano faculty.

Therecommendations forstaff personnel are that the University simply applyto Chicanosits mandate of yearsago, that is, implementing affirma- tiveaction guidelines that spell out how to attract, recruit, anti promote historicallydiscriminated groups. Withrespect to studentsand staff of other ethnic minorities, theUni.- versitycan claim to beless discriminatory. "Blacks have r-: ,ched 71% ot thegoal, Native Americans are over the goal, and Asian Americans havesurpassed the goal by morethan three times. However, Chicanos areonly 22% of theway..." says the Report in termsof studentparity. ’t,Irow,, Ilia/ no ,m’com’crned wilh ,’ducati,,n ,’an ignore. " Tilestaff figures only differ from the above s~’udent’ percentag,: in thatBlacks are more present than Asian Americans. -JonathanKozol Again,in restateing thefacts, we find that 3.5% of the students, 2’,~ of That’s what JonathanKozol said about EDCENTRIC thefaculty, 6.4% of thestaff, and 17% of the State are Chicanq.; thus, the MAGAZINE. Reportclearly demonstrates that California’s largest ethnic minority EDCENTRICis a journal of educationalchange, a is theleast represented atthe University, andis. !,-clining in a waythat willcontinue unless measures are taken such as implementingtheTask collectionof articlesyou may not see anywhereelse, Force’srecommendations. by peopleinvolved in the movementfor educational Manyof thepoints raised in theReport have, on numerousoccasions, and social alternatives.... coveringtopics like beenstated by Chicanostothe University, butwith zero resttlts, Indochinatoday; sexism in attitudeand education; Presidentsaid he was"going to takeit veryseriously", andRegent the Americanworking class; attempts at open class- Forbessaid it wasthe best one he hadread, Chicano scepticism was rooms,free and non-campusuniversities, and other echoedby Lt.Governor Dymally, who urged Chicanos to remain" vl- formsof innovativeeducation... Plus regular sections . gtlaator the report will just be shelved."To this day, the copies of the listingactive groups working for change,and useful Reporthave not even been circulated to Chicanos in thecampuses and the resourcepublications. comm,mities. It is quiteevident that Chicanos continue tobe victimsof theUniversity’s lackof commitment,seeing as howit hasthe responsibility .. being in a uniquesituation .-. to shatterthe discrimination cyclethat the Chicano and Chicanaare placed in. Doesthe University in general, and UCSD in particular,intend to seriously acton theTask F-,.~e’s results? Or, as a camaradaput it," will someone get’their nalga off that report and do somethingwith it?!" ,\zx ,a h cpf Page7 Page6 THIRD COLLEGE LUMUM BA ZAPATA 8. CulturalHeritage MIRROR REJECTION CHICANO STUDIES Thisarea will emphasize the rich Standingbefore a mirror WELCOMETO THIRD COLLEGE culturalheritage of allpeople of color. to seethe image, Explorationwill be madeinto the tradi- thereflection cast to tionalroots of cultureto uncovertht ...... o.o...... o..... theouter world, whichwas buriedunder European as- thefake Wellhere we are,Fall ’75 at UCSDand Togetherwith our American brothers in Provost 3. Scienceand Technology slmflation.Each culture will be studied NEWS thesaga of theThird College continues. struggle--onthe campusesand in elusiveinterpretation and appraisedin its own frameof re- of innerdreams, Forthe benefit of thosestudents new to the streets--andwith our comrades 1) The provostwill be the adminis- in thisfield, emphasis will be placed ference. UCSD(and also those asleep)we present on thebasic sciences as preparationfor plannedby who? throughoutthe Tldrd World who are in- trativehead of Lumumba-ZapataCollege. The maskis drawn in fullthe Lumumba-Zapatademandspre- volvedin warsof liberation,we reject 2) Thetwo students and one faculty re.. rese¯rchin ¯reasrelated to thesatis- 9. WhiteStudies factionof humanneeds. This obviously by ¯ smile, On Sunday,Oct. 26th, Chicano faculty, sentedon March14, 1969, to theChancellor a systemwhich thrives on militarytech- presentatlveshall make the final decision friendliness and subsequentlyapproved by the Board nologyand imperialistprofit. At the concerningtheselection of the provost and excludesthe theoretical inanities t¯ught Coursesin thisfield will emphasize staffand students gathered at a day=long ¯ t RevelleCollege as wellas themili- in an up-sidedown frown retreatto discussrecent Issues and de= of Regentsestablishing theThird College Universityof California,San Diego, ve shallhave the power of recallover him. thenegative as wellas positiveelements afterthrowing up...... willno longerinsure the undisturbed ex- taryrese¯rch conducted ¯t ScrippsIn- of thehistory of Westerncivilization. velopments¯ffecting Chicanos ¯t theUni- stitute. Rejectthe image versity. istenc0of a falseinstitution which con- of ¯ mirrorthat is foreigh, Contradictionswhich sustained Ameri- sistentlyfails to respondto theneeds In orderto compensatefor past and ***** Whatprompted the meeting was the ca in the pastare now thre¯teningto of ourpeople. presentinjustices and to servethose most 4. HealthSciences and Public Health it lieswhen there Is truth; recognizedneed by allconcerned Chi- Acceptit, annihilatetheentire societal edifice. Black Despitethe Chicano rebellions in the affectedby whiteracism and economic If youare a ThirdCollege student, need- canosto focuson specificproblem areas Minoritypeople in theUnRed St¯tes truthcan be a lie, suchas thelack of Chicanorepresentation slavelabor laid the basis of theAmerican Southwestand the Blackrevolts in the exploitation,Lumumha=Zapata College lessto say ¯ majortransformation has maskedphrases of facevalue economy.Mexican-Americans in the cities,the University of California, San musthave an enrollmentof 35% Blackshavea farshorter life-span than whites takenplace in thefive years since then. throughoutUCSD. Southwestand Black people in theindus- Diego,which is partof the oppressive andsuffer diseases peculiar to oppres- leadingsacrificial lambs t Thefirst couple of hourswere devoted and 35% Mexican-Americans.Students Indeeda verycomplex chain of events to thepromised beyond trialcities and the agrarian South con- system,has not changed Its institutional mustbe selectedon thebasis of theirsedpeole. In tropicalcountries where hasled to thepresent day situation. How- to a historyof ThirdCollege: from its tinueto performthe dirty but necessary role.The puny reformsmade so far potentialby an admissionscommittee ~ooleof colorlive. research into the whilegazing inceptionin 1969 as a progressivecol- eversome verysimple attitudes were uponthemselves legewhere third world students were to tasksof buildinga society of abundance,are aimedat pacifyingthe revoltsand controledby minoritystudents. The Uni- diseasespeculiar to thegeographical areas the catalysts.Quite frankly, the UCSD whilesystematically beingdenied the bene- sappingour strength. We thereforenot versityof Californiaadmission require- havebeen extremely inadequate. Courses witha foreignmirror. haveplayed a majorrole in theCollege’s fitsof thatsociety. Therefore, we must onlyemphatically demand that radical ¯ dministrationnever has and never will Theystink. decision-m~ingprocess. One crisis mentsmust not be usedas an instrumentshouldemphasize this long overdue re- supporta collegeas designedin Lu- AlbertoPeter Conzales C¯stelo rejectthe entire oppressive structure of changesbe made,we proposeto execute forexcluding minority students from or search,as wellas thesocial application ¯v -. afteranother showed that student par- mumba-Zapata,or even an approximation ticipationwassuppressed to the det= America.Racism runs rampantin the thesechanges ourselves! limiqngtheir numbers in Lumumba=Zapa=of thisresearch. thereof.Only the pressures of thetimes educationalsystem, while America, in a ta College. rimentof theCollege which soon de- pseudo-humanitarianstance. Proudly Dr,- causedthe acceptanceof the demands. clinedto theold traditional structure. We demandthat the ThirdCollege be Allminority students attending Lu- 5. Urbanand RuralDevelopment Thisshould be understoodfirst and fore- claimsthat it is thekey to equalop- devotedto relevanteducation for minority mumba-Zap¯taCollege must be fullysup- Thefew concessions made ¯t thebeginning youthand to thestudy.f the contemvorary most.The reasonsfor their non-support Thefew concessions made at thebegin- portunityfor all. This is thehypocrisy portedwith funds supplied by theUni- M:noritypeople have suffered mdch ar~ ,hal.us,as the simpleparable of ourgeneration mus~ now destroy. socialproblems of all people.To do versityto theextent that they will not morethan whites in the Americantrano ninghave by nowbeen retracted. So divideand conquer motivates their dis- whatis the significance ofth~s history Havingbeen admitted to theUniversity, thisauthentically, thiscollege m~st ra- haveto workor takeout loans. sitionfrom a producingagrarian to a con- dainfor a collegegeared toward bringing someof us thoughtwe hadcrashed through dicallydepart from the usual role as the The followingis a generaloutline sumingindustrial society. The migration forChicanos at UCSD? thebarriers of racismand economic op- ideologicalbackbone of thesocial system togetherlarge numbers of peopleof color It waspointed out that during the ini- pression.Instead, we foundthat we were andmust instead subject every part of the in an acdemicsetting. Secondly, the Pro- tialgrowth of ThirdCollege, Chicano accidentlythe chosen ones, the privileged systemto ruthlesscriticism. To reflect vostof thecollege was duped into be- faculty,staff and students worked hand fewwho, according to thepowers that be, theseaims of thecollege, itwill be colic3 lievingthat adm’_’tting large numbers of in handwhich accounted for the early pro- arethe exceptions that challenge therule-= Lumumba-ZapataCollege. Toenh¯ncethe whitesinto the college would assure the gres&Their struggle was based on pol- theexistence of White racism. beautyof thename, we demandthat the attainmentof permanent facilities for the iticaldemonstrations anddemands that This,however, is notthe crux of the architecturebe of Mexicanand African college.Such a prostitutionof principles weremet. problem.The seifindictmentofthe Ameri~ style:an d thatits landscape be of the hasonly resulted in thefurther decay of Butthe past several years have seen ¯ caneducational system lies not so much samenature. the originalconcept. Furthermore ad= diminishedsolidarity among Chicanos and in thequantitative exclusion of people of Sincethere has been and contiues to ministrativesources indicate that Third- a generalpassive attitude with regards to coloras in thequality of what is taught-= be an overridingtradition of exclusion Fourthcollege merger may soonbe in "activism."as well ¯s seekingto change to theWhite as wellas to theBrown and of minoritypersonnel from the work force the making.And so thepages of history things. Blackstudent. If thehigh schools and involvedin planningand building of In- hookscan be filledwith the saga of Third Eventhough some will be quickto dis- collegesare not devising more efficient stitutions,except on themost menial level, College. agree,it wasmade obvious that we are techniquesof mystifying the students with it is our demandthat the architects, rightback where we startedfrom years irrelevantinanities, then they are con- generalcontractors, sub-contractors, and ThusThird College may wellbe in it’s ago.Specific topics of discussioncon- sciouslysubjecting them to a cold-bloodedallsupervisory personnel must be from eleventhhour° Third College students cerningthe recruitment andretention of andcalculated indoctrination into a de= theminority community. shouldall realize, that unless we raise studentsand faculty ¯rid the lack of prom- humanizedand unfreesociety. This is ourvoices in protest,the on-going pro- Peopleof theearth otionalopportunities forstaff clearly sub- theperversion calle:i mind-raping. In In orderto guaranteeadequate funding cesswill continue. We mustnot allow Tillingthe soil stantiatethis. Basic¯lly from the state- thecase of minoritystudents, it is a mis= of Lumum0a-ZapataCollege: the isolationof ourCollege at theNew MountainSpin’t, a shieM mentsmade at theretreat, one can de¢luce educationwhich has caused us to uncon- Mesa Apartmentsto destroyour SENSE thatChicanos are viewed by theadministra= sciouslysever ourselves from our corn= 1) The provostand/or his represen- I :all of communlty.We must take over the Peopleand Spirit tionas ¯ ooliticalh,andsocially exoend¯ble mulland culturalroots, if not to he tativeshall have review power over the newfacilRies to insure our right to them. In rhythmwith the mother populationat UCSD. seducedinto the systemwhich exploits budgetof allthe college and institutes. We mustreturn to the mandatesofLu- Turningand re-turning as be]ore. So theChicano Retreat of lastSun= our own community.Black capitalism, 2) The yearly budget for Lumumba- mumba=Zapataand seekto increasethe - Tse-waa daywas a successfulattempt to begin ZapataCollege will be finalizedbefore :o changethe existing conditions. There thatof all other colleges. ¯ "juntadirectly¯" was formed in which CENTERSOF THIS UNIVERSE /, L q"’ representativesfromthe medical scho= ¯ it ¯ ~ ’i,i j el,staff, faculty, undergraduate and The governingbody of Lumumba- HereI stand graduatestudents will participate. The ZapataCollege shall be theBoard of Di= enmasseof minoritypeople from country Alonein my universe juntawill be ¯ politicallyactive exten- rectorsand shall consist of twostudents, Yet,you exist with me one facultymember and the provost. to cityprovides the most important key tionof MEChAand welcomesand needs of areasto be studiedat Lumumba= to understandingtheacute contradictions Butdivided by ourown inputfrom ¯ll concerned Chicanos. ZapataCollege. So far,what education todaybetween urban and rural life. I holdideas Thefirst meeting has been set for Boardof Directors thefew minority students have received In thenear future s6me fifty American foryou to understand Nov.4th at 6:30pm at theStudent Cen- has beenfrom a colonialperspective. citieswill have a Blackpopulation ofover But¯re not the same ter NorthConference Room so we hope 1) The Boardof Directorsshall make We now seek to learn¯bout ourselves 51%of theirtotal an-! in theSouthwest ¯ s thoseof others to seeyou ¯11 there! thefinal ruling on allgeneral college froma minorityperspective. somefive million Chicanos Will reside. Ourrelationship exists policy.It shalldispense and fill all Thesepeople live in theso-called inner WithLoving & Understanding F.T.E.’sand approveall administrative 1. Revolutions city,the area of greatestexploitation and tothis I hold appointments.It shall have the authority thereforeof greatest explosive potential. forus to see to initiateany action or delegate that res- In theUnited States, m~orities have The problemsof the innercity are so thatwithout it ponsibilityto any group it deem~appro- beenexcluded from government decision= deepthat only revolutionary change will Thereis no you& me. priate. makingand must now develop an original createa just solution. ArthurG. Corpus 2) Eachmember of the Boardof Direc- systemof self-governmentand the means Amongthe topics to be coveredare torsshall have one vote. of actualizingthem. Black and Brown housing,transportation , environment¯l peoplehave become the vanguard of socialcontrol,nutrient procurement and elimi- numbersof studentsof colorat Third. StudentRepresentation changebecause they constitute the most nationof wastes,and fair government. Andfinally we mustcall on theCollege oppressedsector of Americansociety. It councilto assertour views and to re- 1) The studentswho serveon the Board is withinthis framework that Black and 6. CommunicationArts structurethe college governance scheme. of Directorsshall be chosenin a generalBrownpeople must thoroughly comprehend Ouronly weapon against destructive at- electionof thestudent body of Lum:,mba-thetheory and practice of thesuccessful BlackArts have flourished in spite titudesis to applypressure on alllevels ZapataCollege, toserve for a twelvemonth as wellas unsuccessfulrevolutions around of protractedoppression. Depreived of to makethese people ulderstand that we term. theworld. Reading material in thisarea nativelanguages, Black people have de= havethe right to determineour destinies. 2) Thestudent representative canbe re- will includesuch authorsas Lenin, yclepednew waysof communicatingwith Otherwise,our silence will loudly concede EL SENTIMIENTO calledat anytime by a majorityvote of Nkrumah, Marx, Malcolm, Fan.n, words,gestures, and music,employing oarloss of anotherpiece of groundgained thestudent body of thecollege. Padre.re,Che Guevar¯,and Marian. the mostdiverse art forms.This area inthe previous years of struggle. Whilesentencing a Mexican Ameri- Estadentro de mi aim¯ 3) The studentrepresentatives shall be Azuela. shouldencompass all theperforming ¯s canyouth who had pleaded guilty to in- comede lashuenas ideas compensatedat the rateof 25% of the wellas thefine arts including such me= The SupremeCourt has pendingbefore cest,Judge Chagrin, in SanJose, Calif- Resplracon mislagrlmas averageyearly income requirement of a 2. Analysisof EconomicSystems dernarts as film-makingand being aware it a caseof so-called"reverse discri= ornia,said that Mexican people after lloracon mi sangre collegestudent at U.C.S.K.U.C.S.D ruination"against whites by institutions 13years of agethink it’s perfectly al- Hablacon mis dolores 4) The studentrepresentative shall be of thebeautiful creativeness of our Bro~ Theunterstanding of the economic ex- forefathers,we demand that lndo-Hlspano seekingto alleviatedisparities In repre= rightto goout and act like an animal. Es el sentimlento givencredit for one normalcourse per ploitationofminority peoples inthe United artbe includedwithin the Communication sentationof peoplesof color.We all He thenadded, "Maybe Hitler was quarterfor each quarter of service,which Stateswill entail in depthanalysis of the Artsprogram. knowthat to b¯lancea 400year long Im- right.The animals in oursociety En tlemposse va shallbe appliedtowards graduation. historicaland contemporary development balancesomebody will have to giveway oughtto be destroyed." En otrosregresa of capitalismin theWestern world, in- 7. ForeigoLanguages toaccomplish thegreater goal of equality. Theonly action taken in Chagrin’s Lo tengosl 1o busco FacultyRepresentation cludingthe crucial roles played by colo- However,if theabove case is won,then ¯ ssaulton Chicanoswas his transfer Grltaen alegrla nialism,imperialism, slavery, and geno- Of the Europeanlanguages, we regard we willreturn to thedays of openlydenied fromthe Superior Court circuit in San Y lloraen tristeza 1) The facultyrepresentative shall be cide.Only in thiscontext will it be pos= Joseto theJuvenile Court in Pal.Alto, Es el sentimlento electedby thefaculty of Lumumba-Zapata Spanishand French as themost important accessto thosemost in need.And be- sibleto arriveat the reasonswhy mi- sincethey are thesecond langt~age of lieveme, if Blacksand Brownsare si- a predominantlyBlack area. Hoy1o tendre especiallyas formulatedby the Nixon College.He maybe recalledat anytime noritypeople serve as a spoclallabor mostpeople of Africandescent. The Chi= lent,it willbe won.The parallel with Per.manana io buscare administration,divides the minority people by a m¯jorityvote of thefaculty of the reserveor "fill",dlsttnct from the white intoexploiters andexploited, theexpoiting can.people have suffered a great cultural ThirdCollege should be morethan ob- Es la fuerza college. workingclass. Statistical research is deprivationby thedown-grading of the vious.Either we muststand up andfight de mi r¯zonde vtviren un mundo classbeing the college-trainedbour- 2) Thefaculty representative’s service neededto determinethe economiccon. Spanishlanguage by the Angloteachers so thatwe may makeknown our position ....tan? geoisie.Each new Chicanoor Black on theBoard of Directorsshall be equi- ditlonof theminority community and also on ourstate of affairsor sadlyface the Es ii sentlmlento businessmanhasalready been enlisted into valentto andtake the place of hisnorm¯l researchapplication to guarantee sound and administrators.We would, of course thewar army of exploiters. teachingand committee responsibilities. urgestrong emphasis on African,Indian, painfulthoughts of whatwe havedone for communityeconomy. andAsian languages. r ourchildren. ArthurG. Corpuz Page9 Page8 U C S D M,,oo., o ,~’7’ y15 oF THEE... SATSANG

In ourfirst article we explainedsome of ourgoals and ideas We canno longerfantasize odrselves as thegen- thatalo,lg ,yah french fries and a Coke?... aboutapplied ecology. This week we willdeal with the cri- erousproviders for the hungry world. In Ge,)rg~ We feelthat the most important thing that people COOP _ ticalissue of landuse for food production. Ourfocus will Borgstrom’sbook, ’The Food a,3d People Dil~mna’ cando now is to lear~to g-7owthezr own food. The The UCSD UndergraduateStudent.... ~) cco,9 beon thepresent use of land in theU.S. for food production :r.,;::ates, ’Through oilseeds [peanuts, palm ker~ls, garL,n becomes a rational alt~r ~:tive to agribusiness Cooperativemeeting of October27 cov- on a nationallevel as wellas a personallevel. Not only is copr;t,etc.), o/lseed products, andfish meal, the whilethe impact of tam ::=tivity creates a multitu.!o ereda widerange of informationandbus- itimportant to have a personaleffect on thefood one eats, Wester:~Wo,-ll is currently ~t’l tiring from tile hurl- ~f beneficialchang~; ~, :. selvesand in ouren- iness.One majoremphasis was that nom- onemust be consciousof ournational agricultural system and gr/worldo:a metri= ton mor.~ protein tha~ i~ Jeti~- vlro:~m~at.To begin a garden,fi~ ,me needs to inationsfor coordinatorships willremain SAN DIEGO GAS & ELECTRIC howIt directly relates to the rest of theworld’s economic ec:~lto the hungy world taroug’l .grains. Inother findsome soil. Lgok for vacant lots in youruc~gh- opento allstudents desiring to parti- problemsand world hunger. words,theWester,t World is exchanginga;)oro,:; n~’~,i] borhoodand try to cont.~c~the owner for permissio.: cipateIn Co-opAction Centers. (see 3 millionmetric tons of cerealprotein for 4 mil_,ion t~ .lanta garden.Maybe yd, "a.- :din an already NattyDread note.) In thepast, one person metri: tons of ..,l~.r proteins whi:h are a:l supe, :or existingcommunity gar,le.~ ".,,.~re you live. One wouldbe an adeq,Jateenergy reserve to In nutbiveaspect’. hasbeen elected by theCo-op to co- The sagaof the San DiegoGas and aid San Diegoin timesof blackouts. In orderto enablecapitalist growth, SDG&E’s beganlas: year in DelMar and needs we :. Theor- ordinatea particular action center. It ElectricCompany is a longand inte- r a t e structuressubsidize l a r g e Notonly are Third World countries suffering as ganicGardening So:Aety at UCSDis alsoan exc~.lent is theCo-op’s hope that, in thefuture, restingone. The greaterpart of this SDC-&Edid not even consider present- a resultof worldtrade policies, but Americans suf- alternativeifyou wou]tl like to do something prac’.i.. any groupof studentsinterested in a privatelocal corporation’s history is one commercialand industrialusers. Resi- ferfrom the misuse of ourown farmland. With the al on thiscampus. (Call 75~-:025) If youknow particularposition will seek a collectiveof capitalistinvestment interests, con- Ignthis proposal to thePUC, which leads dentusers (working people) allow SDG& economicpolicy of seek otherc~m,nunity gardens, please tell is so we can workingrelationship rather than choose us to questiononce again the motives for to subsidizethese people because we pay spreadthe word. tinuousexpansion, and constant rate In- theprice hike. It SDC~Ewas truly con- economicpolicy of sellingto thosewho can pay more to eliminatethe energies of allbut one creasesfor residential users of gasand thedifference! ratherthan those who need, many in ourcountry are individualthrough an electionprocess. eleetrietiy. cernedabout supplying adequate energy inadequatelyfed,to thepoint of malnutrition.The Studentswere also invited to help forthis m~ssive populatio.a boom they Recently,the situation hacame intensi- foresee,and mostimportantly, tf they resuRsfrom the National Nutrition Survey wh organizea compact one-hour meettngbet- fied,when SDG&Erequested $105 mU- Certainly, ~_..._ -- First,we wouldlike everyone to seriouslyconsider and resultsfrom the National Nutrition Survey showed weenstudents an1 UC PresidentSaxon lionin rateincreases. This was proposed weresincerely concerned with providing thisenergy at a reasonablecost,why understandthelimits of theearth’s agricultural capacity. thatkwashiorkor and marasmus, both serious nutri- duringhis brief visit to UCSDon Nov. to thePublic UtllRies Commission(PUC) An excellentbook called Diet for a SmallP, lan~tby tionaldiseases, were identified in Tennessee, Texas, 25.To makemaximum use of the minimal wouldthey demade such high prices for and spurreda massiveprotest by con- the"improvement for thepublic’sgood"? FrancesMoore Lappe deals with-al~ :acets of thisimpor- Louisiana,¯nd on an Indianreservation in Arizona° meetingtime, a listof questionsfrom cernedcitizens of SanDiego. thecoutradic I=~.e~ tantand basic fact--the earth’s resources for food pro- Thedoctor who directed the survey stated, "We did studentsto be addressedto Saxonmust Whatfollows is a briefhistory of the Willtheir new plants lower prices in the tlonsin the longrun~ ff at all?All this is appax- ductionare as limitedas itsother energy resources notexpect to find such cases in the United States." be composed. strugglebewteen the citizens of SanDi- situationare apparent""k suchas naturalgas or petroleum.Most of theinforma- Thesurvey was curtailed in 1970, before an analysis A statusreport on thefir.~t m~tlnt~ ego and SDG~E.This articlewill be entlyIrrelevant in the price hike issue, tionpresented here is fromthis book, as wellas from ofeven the first ten-state study could be completed. of theUCSD Student Communications Board presentedin three consecutive parts; this ¯ ccordingto the managerof Resources Thesecontrad- thesources that Ms. Lappe used, all of whichare aaknow- Itwould appear that the early results of thesurvey were ictionsled to questioning,andchalten- was presentedby MarcFannon, coordin- isthe first of that series. ledgedin herbook. "politicallyembarrassing" to the Nixon Administration. atorof the Comm.Board. At the Comm. ~)_..4- t t ~ .a_ging, from manYDiego,OrganizatiOnresultingand indlvld- In theU.S. the main concern of agribusinessis the pro- Boardmeeting, the mergerof the Some- ductlonand exportation of grain. In 1972world agricnl- Onewonders where our great abundance of grainsis times/NorthStar was recognizedand a publicprotest. Thepressure put on the going,if not to poor countries orto ourown people. v~,..-,,t k;llzv,,,~ --I’....~,~ ,t, .~-.t.t"-I Ia ,j. tureproduction dropped for the first time since W W II. proposalby theYoung Californians for PUCas a resultof thisprotest led the Worldgrain supply dropped again in 1974-1975.The Throughthe use of heavyfertilization andpesticides, the Freedomto funda newspaper,"The Free I." ~. ’. ..-I-[,,,a~" r~ rateincrease to be (forthe time being) U.S.has experienced a "Green Revolution" from the t&/~. tA~l I’-~’I~~" "1/ worldgrain reserve is downto lessthan 10% of allgrain periodof 1940to 1970.It becameimpossible to sell Triton"was turneddown on grounds ,~ / oenze~- ....in Its entiretyto SDG&E.(They consumed. Nowthat you have found some ,~nd you have to that it was "toofishy". * The Co-op ~) were cut from $105 millionto $27.5 theabundance of food being produced at a profit,so a checkout yot:~: soil. Is tt without rocks, ..asy to dig, Inearly April the Public ~" I Todayonly two areas are exporting grain, North Amer- was requestedto, and overwhelmingly :~C) t~t p ~Cx.~ E~ ~"~’ million)This mass organizing and strong systemof surplusdisposal had to be devised.Enter the andfull of worms?:’hat would be idealfor pla;~ing. UtilitiesCommission met icaand Australia; the U.S. has reached its maximnm Americansteer. supportedthe following statement of en- coalitionof citizenswas able to largely levelof production. In1972 the U.S, changed its policy If not,you have to get;,) york hauling organic mat- dorsementof the Comm.Board: "We, and heldhearings about influencenot only the PUC’sdecision~ terLo yourplot. Get lots of man~r~,vegetable and theundersigned student organization of proposedchanges in utility butalso keep their gas bills from sky- of holding60 millionacres of farmlandout of produc- fruitgarbage, some seawe-,l, and any other organ- UCSD,support the view of theSometines/ ratesin SanDiego. In this rocketingfor the next five years. tionand paying farmers 3.6 billion dollars a year for it, i,:,na ter (.please noeucalypt L.:: ayes)and pile NorthStar Collective concerning any res- hearing,SDG&E filed a Thestruggle ,however is not over. to thepolicy of usingalmost all farmland that is pro- up allover your plot, M~,: it in to thetop sou ~t tructuringof the Comm. Board.We requestfor a $105million fitablycultivatable. Itis interesting tonote that the help-:to chopthe seaweed) and st ~.’twatering. Ad- rateincrease-- SDG&Eplans to go beforethe PUC again demandthat any previous action taken by in thenear future, and onceagain try earthis losing its ability tohandle heavy fertilizing, ditionalo,’~nic matter can be usedto starta com- theChancellor be declaredInvalid, and foranother massive increase approval. andthat more fertilizer is now required per foot of postheap, which w~.:l provide the soil nutrie:,ts later thatany action(s) currently in progressthisconstltues the largest request in the landto producethe same yield. This heavy use of ni- on.After a shorte.;:le you should notice some Thereare frightenIng signs that the PUC trogenin the soil along with livestock waste is causing be discontinued.Further, we demand company’shistory. If approved,this would a is weakening,and will allow this increase. i~ nges.Weeds may sprout ap iv yourplot and the thatthe Chancellorsubmit a publica- haveraised an averageresident~s uti~y Withoutmore public pressure, this in- dangerouslevels of nitratecompounds in Midwest garbage,manure and seaweed will become harder to pologyfor tampering with the student’s billby 40 per cent.SDG&E maintaIned creasecould go through.But concentra- groundwater.When the new areaswere released for findin Its orig~v,l state. Start pl¯nting ztthis freedomof the dressin thismanner." thatthe rate increase was necessary due tedorganizing is still being formslted, cultivation,inadequate erosion control caused the loss point.Try to getorg~a,c seeds as commercialseeds ¯ Not,:See "Communications Board Up.. andthe actions and results of pastpublic of 60 milliontons of topsoilfrom the added ¯eres in a~eoften hybrids and are co~ed with strychnine. tothe lack of facilities they carry. They 1974¯lone. Clearly, the present methods of agricul- o. date",this issue. feelthat these laciltles aren’t adequate actionand present demands will be cov- Checko:, of themany books on organi,: gardening at In addition,it waspointed out that Planningfor SDG&E."The realques- eredIn thenext two parts of thisart- turewill not be ableto meetour current levels of mosthealth fo~, ’. ~-tores orthe library tofind out the a newrepresentative from the Co-op to to -.~etthe needsof the yearlyin- tion",he stated,"is not if w~ meet productionin the very near future. piaJ~tingtimes and growth condlt-ons youwill need. creasein eaerudemand. In orderto cle.I cannotstress enough the import- the Comm.Board is neededto replace certainload levels.but when."SDG&E ~nce of publicpressure on the POC. Whileproduction has dropped, world demand for Be sure:) pressthe moist soil down wel: a~out the Fannon. keepup witht~i~ i~crea.se(the statistics contendsthat in orderto be ableto sup* grainhas lncre¯sed--driving theprice of grain seedsto Insureco~aet for germination. Keep ~ao of whichwere formulated bySDC~E them- SDG&E SHOULD NOT CONTROL PUBLIC A memberof the StudentCoalition plySan Diego’s mushrooming population, UrlLITIES--SEN DIEGA.NS SHOULD beyondthe re¯eh of thosecountries with ~.eal food :;ollmoist and thin the sm;,.ler plants when they seem AgainstRacism who was fundedby the selves)thecorporation wants to doubleIts theyneed the capttal to startbuilding needs.These conntrles have to relyon cashcrops c~owded.Pull weeks only it ta.~),are interfering with currentgenerating capacity, and dollars, HAVE THE RIGHT TO DECIDE WHAT Co-opto attend the 2rid annual Conference ¯ s quicklyas possible.When the money THEIRMONEY SI-IOULD PROVIDE. Sup- to competein theworld market. The cash crop your,ogetables, otherwise leave them be. When In Boston,reported on theconference. over the ned decadeby more than $2 is securedby SDC~E for these new t .’l weedingorthL~ ling, always trim the plan: elf at soil blUic~~ proposedplan was for "En- plants,is whenSan Dleganswill find portis absolutelynecessary in thissit- systemwas start 300 years ago by wealthyWest- Blacks,Chicanos and SCAR were repre- uatlon,If we areto seeour money pro- ernpowers who colonized lands and established level,leaving th, :" ,ots, and throw the plant i,~ yq~,.Ir sentedat the conference.A central outif their needs will be met. compostpile. cina5", a plant,which was to "save" SDG&E’scapitalist interests, like videa fairand adequateenergy supply piant¯tions.Even after Third World countries strug- focalpoint was an existingtendency to 600,000barrels of oil a year--about at a reasonablecost. gledto rele¯sethemselves from colonial control, they Ignore racismas a majorconcern and 6 percent of currentconsumption. This any othercorporation, are the most ln- wereeconomically dependent on thecash crops for problemwithin the society. fluenctalfactors in thissituation. SDC~E, one p~ntwould replace all olderones in thetradition of allother companies survival.It is estimatedthat 1 of every10 cropped Finally,Bob Simon,co-chairperson in orderto "conserve"energy. This acresis plantedwith non-nutritional cashcrops such of the StudentFee ProgramsCommittee wouldhappen within one decade~ The next seeksto maximizeprofits. This Is a as tobacco,coffee, and tea. It Isextremely hard for requestedinput from students interested necessityfor themto survive--sorate SDG&E seriesof energyplants would be cen- redu,’ttonwas totally out of thequestion a countryto shiftto foodcrops because any change inthe allotment of$100 of their $212 structedinthe late 1980’s. quarterlyfees. forSDC,&E. Profits do notgo directly takesa largeamouut of capital which they do nothave. Mondaynight’s meeting ended with The mainreson SDG&E presented for backInto plants for better efficiency; UPDATE It isthe people of the rich minority who :~c~ making a briefperiod of verystraightforward wantingto sinkthe capital it wouldgain rather,out of the $40 millionmaJe by Recentiay-offs of employeesand profitsoff of thepresent system and can then afford self-criticismof the participation and fromthe $105million increase was be- SDG&Ein 1974,nine cents out of every ,"atehikes were the maintopics of sp- theluxury of importedfood. If a countrytries to causeof thetremendous increase in the dollarwent into stockholders dividends. eakersat a demonstrationin front of shiRaway from exporting agricultural g,.~)ds, the inter-actionof Co-op members. SanDiego population that they prophe- the San DiegoGas and ElectricCompany Tonight’smeeting will begin at 6:30 Thetop ten stockholdersare all large alternativeis manufactured goods or theproces;i=g sizedfor the nextdecade. The fallacy financialcorporations -- among these, on Friday,October 3ist. This demon- 9f itsown raw agricultural products. Howe;at, rich in the northStuSent Center Conference of thisstatement was pointedout In a strationwas sponsored by theSan Diego room.Everyone’s welcome. FirstNational B a n k ,SecurityPacific :ou,~t:-i~splace high tariffs and barriers onmanufac- ¯ *** (= commentfrom ConsumerPower, one of Bank, andBankofA merica. EntreeCn=zlttinn. The mostarticulate turedor processedgoods keeping Thic~ Woc:l co,u- themany organizatlons which opposed the of thespeakers, Frotjof Thygeson emp’msized passthis on $28.5million went into payments on cap- triesfrom ~ecuring a world market. In fact,there has NattyDread Collective Note :An action pricehike : They(SDG&E)are predicting thenecessity of changingthe statusof beena decisivedecl;.ne ,,f worldtraSe wtth ThirJ World populationgrowth of 50% by 1985 and italloaned by thesesame stockholder SDC,&Efrom that of a privateto a public countriessince 1955. centeris a projector severalprojects, thatsimply is uot~[ng to happ~.a."This I suchas a groupstulying low cost hou- corporahons.Thus, this is a convenientcorporation.This organizational scheme Ifyou use lo~s of organicmatter to begirt,and keep stateme,,t~nts oacked up by a populationset-up-- profitsgo intothe same bank wouldencorporate community groups into singfor students or anotherdealing wRh- expertfrom Zero Population Growth, who as dividends,and payments of loansalsc up withwatering, y)u can begin to enjoyfood you grew affairsin San DiegoCounty, each of the decisionmaking process. The rally withnature in abouttwo morths. ted the POC thatthe actualrate of failsin the handsof the samehank. wasattended by 50-75participants, In- whichwas in the pastcoordinated by populationgrowth will be about2.2%. Formore detailel .,formation about the organi:: a singleperson. Withsuch concentrated interests, SDG&E cludingmembers of the Centerfor RAD- nethod,check The Orean|q M¢,h,xl Primer by ~.a_r~ll Clearly,such a blatantdifference in fig- buildsup thebasis for continual growth, icalEducation (CRE), New American urescalls SDG&E’s motives into ques- expansion,an~ profit-making. ¢~J-, and G~,:verRateaver at the CluslezUndergradnate~ I Mgvement(NAM~, an~ otherorganizations Thesteer ls theleast efficient among ruminants as a Libraryo~ T. Enc~lopediaof OrganicQtrdeningand [ tion.An alternative,anl mu-h=heaper Thissaga is notone that Is uncom- thathave formed a coalitionto struggle converterofplant proteIn to ¯nimalprotein, yet It is proposalfor inuring aleq,mte energy sup. corporationssuch as SDG&Eto survive againstSDG@E’s proposals to the PUC. an Itemof highdemand (or has been turned Into a high FJx.zala~fromRodale Pres:: i:. :he reference collec- theymast continually Increase their cap- tionat ".h:- Central University Llbra:.¢. Anddon’t ply wasproposed by apnyslcsprofessor The demonstrationwas seriousand in- demanditem through multi-million dollar hussllng forgetto start~me sprouts! fromSan Diego State University. Instead italthrough irrowth and profit-making.formative,and was highlighted by a song andinvesting). Today an ¯veragesteer is ableto Forworking people, this growth is not Global|grlbustnes:; eorpocations have gre¯tly com- o~ the.zos.’ly bu~ldmg of atditionalgeae.- from CRE whicheveryone parttcpated reduce16 lbs.of grain and soy to 1 lb.of edible meat. BetseyFarra,~,: raters,s,t, ficie at transmission linescould 0nlydestructive of environmental quality in.Throughtout thegathering, the scenery poundedtlae world hunger problem. In a recentstudy by Or,of the140 million tons of grainand soY fed to be establishedbetween Los Angelesanq throughmore building, but alsomeans wascolored by thepresence ofnumb~.rous Barnetand Mu:ler they point oul,’It is goodbusiness to :~.1Gill growhigh profit crops for export rather than to raise beefcattle, poultry, ¯rid hogs in 1971-1972, 20 million SanDiego. Wlth lines such as this,there higherenergy rates for resident users. "juniorexcutlves". The messageof the tonswere returned In meat.The other 118 mil- rallywas clearly stated: corn,whe¯t and rice to supportan indigentlocal pop- uiation.An e.x~mpleof thisIs ~olumbltwhere ’a liontons of grainand soy bec¯me inaccessible for hectaredevoted to c¯rnatL,)nsbrings a millionpeso humanconsumption. Who ¯re we kidding?Who is I I "Whenthe publicowns the company, profitingfrom this incredible andinsane use of an ¯g- Thank~to Doug Landon,from t h e Grey Panthers,a n d m a n y It willbe run by pepplewho care. a year,while w~at or cornbrings only 12,500 peses rlculturalsystem tlmt will soon collapse? In 1974 we IheEnergy Coalition, an~ Chris Barrett othersformed a strongcoalition to op.- We’llhire back all the workers, As z resul,Columbia must use scarce foreign ex- exported¯ total of over 60 mllllon tons of grain, while from the New AmericanMovement for poseSDG~E’s rate Increase.Not only Becausethe profits won’t be there. clmageto Importlmslc foodstuffs.’ Another example ourfood aid was down to 3.3million tons of grain~ providingme withthe information pre- werethey lnfiuencial in thePJC’s re- Wellthe people will get geo~ service, is CostaRlca, where meat production Lq : t~ !960’s whichIs one-sixththe level of tenyears ago. The sentedin this artlc le, Their organizations, fusalof theproposal, but they are still ’Cuzthey’ll be sittingtn Zitlau’s* increased92% but per capit¯ con:~umptton of meat amountthe U.S. spent on foodaid in 1974was less than alongwith CALPARG,the Coalitionof at worknow to combatfurther increases chair.’ ventdown 26%. A largeamouut of thismeat was’ halfof whatwe profitedthat year in higher-priced Elders,Consumer Power, Common Ground SDG~Emight propose. Withthe profits and old man Zitlau gone soldto the U.S., the world leading Importer :~f beef. grainsales to thepoor world. And to bringit all Thepower will be shared!" Al)azBerg, nutrition expert says that the meat ts ’endingupnot In l.,atin Amez; :’t.: r )mr:as but In home,,~. he 1974World Food Confero.,:e It was esti- matedthat only "-11 million tons of grater-~,~ Ad meet *editor’snote: Zltlau is presidentof franchisedrestaur~.r, l’,n., .-; "~ in theU.S.’ thestarvation gap . Asiaand Africa. Can you s~/~ flow SDG~E l Hmmm’n. ***** PageI 0 ’""" COMMUNITY CALENDAR SATURDAY : 0 0 AthleticEvent, The UCSO rdgbyteam "v’llparticip~:e in the All-CatTou"- name,#’.Ut 2iA.,Los Angelus,CA,

9,~mWurks!~°PThe UCSD ECensionOffice #ill offer a physicaledu::aqon pro- gram."Joggiag/Raming. Is It for Me?" Me.lical,pi~ysiulagica! and dietary MONDAY considerations.The pcogra.nwi;I lastutdil 3:00 pro. Ca!ltheExte,.’~st)n ] ] : 0(),,mMeeting. Propaganda Collective Meeting P&L 1117. Office,432-3400, for a lmi::~doqfee aa,i other info:malion.The pragram #~_11take place in theRe;reaqon Gy,n. 1 2 : 00 Meeting.Conditioning Club Meeting. Wrestling Room, MY, in Gym. 9 am.Le,cture. The UCSI)E.~eusi)u Office w.:ll offer a psyclm’.ogyprogram. "Un- 12:00 Art Exhibition.The M~MevilleArt Gallerywill sponsora snowingof "Tne der~taadiagthe theoryand techni]ue.or GestaltTherapy." The programw:.l{ UCSD Collection".The collectionfeatures paintings from Monet and P~casso last until4:00 pro. For admissiontee a-ldother information call 452-3400. andother renowned artists of thelate ninteenth ant early twentieth ce.aturleso Thelecture will take place i.n the Interttationai Center Lounge. The Galleryis openfrom Noon to 5:pro,Suaday through Friday The ez,hibition willcontinue through November 250 THURSDAY 10amMeeling. Me.~=ing (ff the KarateClub. Muin Gym. Fair and Flea M~.rket.An IsraeliFair and Flea M~rketwill be sponsor 10 am MeRing.Alkldo Club Meeting.Wrestling Room, Ma!n Gym. PoetryReading. New Yorkpoet, Jackson M~cLaw, #ill be the @Jestpoet in the i2:00 4 :(}Opm by theUnion of JewishStudents. There will be food,entertainment, and secondprogram o: the New PoetrySeries ReveIIe Com,no,|s Forma I Lounge. 1 0 ~m AthleticE,,eat. Wa~er polo team versus San DiegoState University,. San Diego me~’chandiseon sale.The fair will feature a Sheabesh(backgammon) 4:00 M,~eting.Table Tennis Club Meeting° Recreation Conference Room, Reco Gym, Tournameqtand Israeli singers and dancers.Revelle Plaza. &ateUniversity, San Dieoma, California. (Unlessroom is previouslyschedualed)o noon t FourthCollege #illsponsor a concert featuring the Ginger Keah~ Allen 7 : 30 Films The CampusProgram Board will presentthe films "Such a Gorgeous Meetina.Gym:,astics Club Meeting.South Balcony, Main Gym° PolynesianDancers. M’,:the~s Caf~eria Patio. Free. pm K,d Like M(:", 7:30 pro, "Mi:~siss~ppiMeYn~tL-l," 9:15 pine Direeledby FrancoisTrurfaut, both films:]eel withthe "fem,neferule": in the ~tter r noon 5:00 Con,:ertoThe M,sic Departmentwill sponsora programo mudc presented Peter Cameio sPeakson the SocialistAnswer to raelsmand the economic CatherineDeaeave; in the former,Berna~e.tte La Font. Truffautsbo’vs his by UCSD m siclans,Art Gallery,ManJeville Center° crisis,Muir Plaza. talentsfor both suspence and comely in thesetess ,~i,Jely seen films. noon Meetingof ConditioningClub. Wreslling Room, Mum Gym. LMee:ing.Science Fiction and FantasyClub meeting.I.~uage Co~’erence Rode IoI~Dance°The Asian American Stu.lents Alliance ’#ill sponsor a de.ace.Admission StudentCeatero noon Concert.EDNA, rhe UCSD InformationCenter, will presenton concert"Aura" is $2.00in aq eaace,$2.5,’)at the door, Revelle Cafeteria. a jazz and soul band. Tile bead featuresJim Nau. Free. Frout Gym ~eps. 3 : O0pm Worksnap.Career optloxs #orkshop : a focusingin the processof defining 8pro Drama Production.The S.in Dingo R~.pertoryCompany will presentBettor 6 : ~Opm Meeting.UCSD StudentCooperative Meeting. North Conference Room, S1,udenl possiblecareee,: directions and assessingcareer factors important to youo Bre,:l#’s"Du:he3s o( Multi".General admission is $2.00and aclm~ssionfor Center. It is necessaryto sign up aaeal ot time. CareerPiaanlng and Piacemeqt, UCSDs[u lou~s is $I.00.M’,q.leville Recital Rail. 412 MC, rm 15 3 : O0pm } : 0(}p:nMeeting. S.I.M,q. (Students International Meditation Society) Meeting. Meeting.Me }ring,ff Mq.r Students seeking information about graduate 8 pm ~Ince.Fourth Co’.lege ~¢fll sponsor a 50’sDance .featuring the ban] "Grease formalLounge, Revelle Com~onso WEDNESDAY schoolsThe meeting’#ill be ledby CarmelMyers, Muir College Assis- City",M:~:hews Cafe[eria~ Opeq to FourthCollege reside.R and ,:.ommu:ing tant Dean.Conference Room 21~;~ H&S8 stutents.Free. Noon Lecture.S.[.M.S lecture on traascendenialmeditation ,,: "{()pro AthleticEvent. Water Polo Team "~s. WhittierCollege. Whittier College, 7 : 00pm Meeting.Student Dance Coop Meeting.West Balcony, Mkin Gym. ~t_~mSo~ataRecital. Scholarship Benefit Concert with RefuelDruian, violin, llse NorthConfere:~ce Room, Stulent Center. Whittier,California von Alpenheim,piano Worksby Bartok, Franck, M,~zart. Mandeville Auditorium. 4:00 AthleticEveul. Badmiton Team w, Gr,assmonlCollege, Maa Gym. N(,onMeeting.Conditioning Club Me.,ting.Wrestling Room, M-flu Gym. 7:45 Meeting.Aikido Club Meeting.Wrestling Room, Main Gym. 4:00 Meeting.Fourth College Career Pianning Meeting. Formal l_~m~ge, Ravelle 8 pm Cuba ProgramSlides and Spea,~erou Cuba. Left Bank, 4t%1 NewportAve., N~onConcert. The UJS ~,illsponsur a concertfeaturing Israeli dancers Corn’.nuns. OceanBelch, 4:30 Meeting.Gy,nna ~!ics Club. South Balcony, Main Gym. Freeballons. Front Gym Steps. 8 p.m.Asian=American Studies course; the fund-raising dance for the course,,in the 7 : 30pro Meeting.Graduate Student Union Meeting. US8 2622 ,5:30 Meeting.Belly Da.l,.eClub. RecreationConference Room, RecreationGym. 4 : O0pmLand Use Workshopin the ,_qa~ren Auditorium.Matthe#<_ &tmpus - 1 a.m RevelleCafeteria ~3 bands:Power~ Devotion, anu ~ew Elites)for $2.60advance, 5 : ~0mn Meeting.Yo~ Club.Adaptive R~)om, Ma n Gym. BasicScience Bui!d.qL Room If00.Workshop wi: iealwith tlae 6 :OOpm $2.50door; and a presentationon the UFW movementand the 8:00pro Meeting.Israeli Dance Club Meeting.Recreation Coherence Room, Recre.. Meeting.M,.,tr Outing CiuB~ APM 2~02, Mu r Campu’L ationGym. Knoll/bluff.’/ae point overlooking Black’s Beach aa, l:a, stables/ 6:00 Meeting.Drama Club. Cutmc Conference Roo:n. ~udent Center. ,tgoayanIVlJlage trip.. racetrackprol :, ties.Present will be rep’.’-~,m’tativesfromvarious I 6:30 Meeting.Youug Socialisl Alltaace. Formal lmuuge, Revelle Commons. c~ 5:00 Meeting.Page 1 Staff.lower M’fir Comm.ns. La ]ellagr’mps; ihe sub-:.,nmittee of theBoard of Overseers, Meeting.The B~J will have a combinedmeeting and social/culturalevent. I V’t 7:00 studentsamong interest: a ~oups. APM 3113.M:Jlr Campus. I An eveningof Israelifolkdanclng to be taughtby a professionalIsraeli dancer. 7:00 FencingClub. West Balcony,Mo}r Gym. 8 : 00pm 4 : 00pmMeetinv.Table Tennis Club Meeting.Recreatlo~ Coherence ’ This dancingextravaganza will be held in the Rec. Gym. Refreshments. Room,Recreation Gym. (unless room is predo:Jsly~cneduled) 8 :OOpm Lecture°Dr, Rue Blumberg, Department of Sociolog’v,will discuss Ihe ~: ~.:::::::i:...... I changingrole o: womenin theIsraeli Kibbutz, "From L~beratlon to ~,:s,,-.. ,.:: 4:00 AthleticEvent. Wome~Ys volleyball team versus San Diego City Laun.lry."North Conference Room~ Student Center. :":;:: I 5:00-7:00 UCSDS:udents for Tom l-leyden,Game Room CorfferenceRoom. Student Center. College. 7:00 meeting.Black Student’s Union. APM 2113M, dr Campus. # I 4:00 Meeting.Musician’s Guild meeting.Student Organizations, StuleatCenter

4:00 Meeting.Meeting of thoseMuir studentsseeking i[fformatlon FRIDAY about graduatescnools~ The meetingwill be led by Carmel noonMeeting. Stu, leat Dance Coop. North Balcony, Ma’n Gym. 10 : 00:~m Graduateand ProfessionalSchool Recruitment. University Graduate repre- Myers,Muir College Assistant Dean. Conference Room, 2143 h&g’L "I" I sentativeswill rn~ke short presentations at i0:00am in the NorthConference 9 : 30 A Chicanorecruiter from UC Berkeley’sBoar HallLaw schoolwill be ¯ Room, StudentCenter, on theircampus programs, a:lmissions policies and 4:30 Meeting.Gymnastics Club M~.eting. South Balcony, MMn Gym. financialassistance, Afterwards, tables #111 be setupoutside the Student -I 1:00at ChicauoStudies, Q ’;-3 Centerfor individual consultations. Representatives for all U.C. campuses a.ad 5:00,I,,~ehlr~.The UC~9 FRnessClub will spensera lectureby StaMordUniversity will be present.Minority and low Incomes~de.uts are Debo.-’ahWoerschlng on nutrition.P~L III0, M::ir Campus. 7:00 ,Mime: TheSan FraaciscoMi~ae Troup, Comedy for the Revolution,GymS:epso S [J N especiallyinvited to attend. v v ~ DAYL...... !0:00Meeting.Administrxtive Intern’s Meeting. ~udent Organizations, Stude ’~ ,":.enter 6:00 Meeting.Me,fine of SA.T.C.H.(StudentsActive Towards 11:30r. ,~ CommunityHealth) ReveRe Forma’ Lounge. :,’,~on Seminar.Music Department Seminar. Cecil Lytle,Piano performance. Meeting.Fourth CollegeProgram Board M~,eting.Mathews Camp~s Recre- ll:00Seminart. Japanese Flower Arranging. I:

’~i , I , I ¯ I I I , i 11I I i i ¯ I i ¯ , ¢ I i , * ] ...... Page12

People’s Bicentennial

’The American War is over,

but this is far from the

case with the American Revolution.

On the contrary, only the

first act of the great

drama is at a close.’

BenjaminRush, 1783

Natty Dread...

TheRas Tafarlans focus on Africaas theplace in whichsuch a vzsm, couldbe madea reality: having analyzed their present condition (a con- tinuedexploitation bythe forces that brought them to Jamaicain slavery), lifein Africansociety was seen as stable and self-fulffillin.~ --a society in whichthe ~as Tafarians would have had a share.Several attempts at repa- triationto Ethiopiahave been made unsuccessfully -- many Ras Tafarians re-

THE PEOPLE IN STRUGGLE