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the little strike that grew to la causa

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APGRAPE STRIKERS MARCHING FROM DELANO TO SACRAMENTOPICKETS OUTSIDE MARKET IN BROOKLYNTHE LITTLE STRIKE THAT GREW TO LA CAUSAITEM: At a dinner party in NewYork's Westchester County, <strong>the</strong> dessertincludes grapes. The hostess notices tha<strong>the</strong>r fellow suburbanites fall <strong>to</strong> with gus<strong>to</strong>;<strong>the</strong> guests from Manhattan unanimouslyabstain.ITEM: At St. Paul's, a fashionableNew Hampshire prep school, grapes are<strong>the</strong> only part of <strong>the</strong> meal invariablyleft un<strong>to</strong>uched.ITEM: In San Francisco, a Safewayofficial observes: "We have cus<strong>to</strong>merswho come <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> s<strong>to</strong>re for no o<strong>the</strong>r reasonthan <strong>to</strong> buy grapes. They'll load up<strong>the</strong>ir car with grapes and nothing else."ITEM: In Oak<strong>la</strong>nd, a conscience-riddenhousewife exp<strong>la</strong>ins apologetically<strong>to</strong> her dinner companions: "I reallywanted <strong>to</strong> have this dessert, and I just decided<strong>that</strong> one <strong>little</strong> bunch of grapeswouldn't make <strong>that</strong> much difference."ITEM: In Honolulu, <strong>the</strong> YoungAmericans for Freedom organizes an."emergency grape lift" by jet from <strong>the</strong>main<strong>la</strong>nd, inviting "all of those starvedfor <strong>the</strong> sight of a California grape <strong>to</strong>come <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> airport."WHY all <strong>the</strong> excitement about thissmooth, sweet and innocent fruit?The answer is <strong>that</strong> <strong>the</strong> table grape,Vitis vinifera, has become <strong>the</strong> symbolof <strong>the</strong> four-year-old <strong>strike</strong> of California'spredominantly Mexican-American farmworkers. For more than a year now,table grapes have been <strong>the</strong> object of a nationalboycott <strong>that</strong> has won <strong>the</strong> sympathyand support of many Americans-and <strong>the</strong> ire of many o<strong>the</strong>rs. The <strong>strike</strong>is widely known as <strong>la</strong> <strong>causa</strong>, which hascome <strong>to</strong> represent not only a protestagainst working conditions among Californiagrape pickers but <strong>the</strong> wider aspirationsof <strong>the</strong> nation's Mexican-Americanminority as well. La <strong>causa</strong>'s magneticchampion and <strong>the</strong> country's mostprominent Mexican-American leader isCesar Estrada Chavez, 42, a onetimegrape picker who combines a mysticalmien with peasant earthiness. La <strong>causa</strong>is Chavez's whole life; for it, he has impoverishedhimself and endangered hishealth by fasting. In soft, slow speech,he urges his people-nearly 5,000,000of <strong>the</strong>m in <strong>the</strong> U.S.-<strong>to</strong> rescue <strong>the</strong>mselvesfrom society's cel<strong>la</strong>r. As he seesit, <strong>the</strong> first step is <strong>to</strong> win <strong>the</strong> battle of<strong>the</strong> grapes.Magnified MovementTo enter <strong>the</strong> public consciousness, a<strong>la</strong>bor conflict must ordinarily threaten<strong>the</strong> supply of essential goods and services,like steel or transportation. Pol- ­iticians and <strong>the</strong> public take notice onlywhen <strong>the</strong>re is great impact on <strong>the</strong> economy,when spectacu<strong>la</strong>r bloodshed occursor when well-recognized issues are atstake. The grape <strong>strike</strong> seems <strong>to</strong> meetnone of <strong>the</strong>se criteria. Americans couldeasily live without <strong>the</strong> table grape if<strong>the</strong>y had <strong>to</strong>, and even <strong>that</strong> minor sacrificehas been unnecessary. The disputehas been re<strong>la</strong>tively free of violence.Nei<strong>the</strong>r great numbers of mennor billions of dol<strong>la</strong>rs are involved. Thewelfare of agricultural workers has rarelycaptured U.S. attention in <strong>the</strong> past,but <strong>the</strong> grape <strong>strike</strong>-Ia huelga-and<strong>the</strong> boycott accompanying it have clearlyengaged a <strong>la</strong>rge part of <strong>the</strong> nation.The issue has divided husband andwife, inspired countless heated argumentsat social occasions and engenderedpublic controversy from coast <strong>to</strong> coast.As if on a holy crusade, <strong>the</strong> <strong>strike</strong>rsstage marches <strong>that</strong> resemble religious pilgrimages,bearing aloft <strong>the</strong>ir own stylizedb<strong>la</strong>ck Aztec eagle on a red fieldalong with images of <strong>the</strong> Virgin of Guadalupe,patroness of Mexicans and particu<strong>la</strong>rlyof those who work <strong>the</strong> soil.As <strong>the</strong> workers and <strong>the</strong>ir sympathizersmarch, supermarket chains, middle-c<strong>la</strong>ssconsumers, and even <strong>the</strong> grape growersare choosing sides. Some supermarketsare leaving <strong>the</strong> choice <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> shopper.O<strong>the</strong>rs sell only grapes imported fromAfrica or Israel, and make a point of advertising<strong>that</strong> <strong>the</strong>y do not carry <strong>the</strong> Californiaproduct. On Capi<strong>to</strong>l Hill, dinersin <strong>the</strong> House restaurants have not seena grape for months, while <strong>the</strong> Senate refec<strong>to</strong>ryhas been using 15 lbs. <strong>to</strong> 20lbs. a week. When one California Congressmansent <strong>la</strong>rge bags of grapes <strong>to</strong>each of his colleagues, many of <strong>the</strong> recipientsreturned <strong>the</strong>m. Within a fewhours, <strong>the</strong> corridor outside <strong>the</strong> Congressman'soffice was asquish with troduponfruit. .Governor Ronald Reagan calls <strong>the</strong><strong>strike</strong> and boycott "immoral" and "attemptedb<strong>la</strong>ckmaiL" Sena<strong>to</strong>r GeorgeMurphy, like Reagan an old Hollywoodunion man-turned-conservative, terms<strong>the</strong> movement "dishonest." The NixonAdministration has seemed ambivalent,putting forward legis<strong>la</strong>ti.on <strong>that</strong> wouldostensibly give farm workers organizationrights but would also limit <strong>the</strong>iruse of <strong>strike</strong>s and boycotts. The Pentagonhas substantially increased itsgrape orders for mess-hall tables, a move<strong>that</strong> Chavez and his followers countered<strong>la</strong>st week by preparing a <strong>la</strong>wsuit <strong>to</strong> preventsuch purchases on <strong>the</strong> ground <strong>that</strong>grapes are <strong>the</strong> subject of a <strong>la</strong>bor dispute.Some au<strong>to</strong>-bumper stickers read:NIXON EATS GRAPES. The growers' answeringslogan: EAT CALIFORNIA GRAPES,THE FORBIDDEN FRUIT.Edward and E<strong>the</strong>l Kennedy, following<strong>the</strong> <strong>la</strong>te Robert Kennedy's example, haveembraced Cesar Chavez as a bro<strong>the</strong>r.The so-called Beautiful People, fromPeter, Paul and Mary <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Ford sisters,Anne Uzielli and Charlotte Ni-16TIME, JULY -4, 1969


archos, are helping <strong>to</strong> raise funds for<strong>the</strong> <strong>strike</strong>rs. That support is one of <strong>the</strong>few issues <strong>that</strong> find Chicago Mayor RichardDaley, iconoc<strong>la</strong>stic Writer GloriaSteinem, and liberal Sena<strong>to</strong>rs Jacob Javitsand George McGovern in <strong>to</strong>ta<strong>la</strong>greement. Ralph Abernathy lends b<strong>la</strong>ckhelp <strong>to</strong> what is becoming <strong>the</strong> BrownPower movement.The fact <strong>that</strong> it is a movement hasmagnified <strong>la</strong> huelga far beyond its economicand geographic confines. At stakeare not only <strong>the</strong> interests of 384,100 agriculturalworkers in California but potentiallythose of more than 4,000,000in <strong>the</strong> U.S. Such workers have neverwon collective bargaining rights, partiallybecause <strong>the</strong>y have not been highlymotivated <strong>to</strong> organize and partiallybecause <strong>the</strong>ir often itinerant lives havemade <strong>the</strong>m difficult <strong>to</strong> weld in<strong>to</strong> a group<strong>that</strong> would have <strong>the</strong> clout of an industrialunion. By trying <strong>to</strong> organize<strong>the</strong> grape pickers, Chavez hopes <strong>to</strong> inspiremilitancy among all farm <strong>la</strong>borers.Because most of <strong>the</strong> grape pickers areMexican Americans, he also believes<strong>that</strong> he is fighting a battle on behalf of<strong>the</strong> entire Mexican-American community,which as a group constitutes <strong>the</strong> nation'ssecond biggest deprived minority.Unlettered and UnshodLike <strong>the</strong> b<strong>la</strong>cks, Mexican Americans,who are known as Chicanos, are a variedand diverse people. Only recentlyhave <strong>the</strong>y emerged from a stereotype:<strong>the</strong> <strong>la</strong>zy, p<strong>la</strong>cid peasant lost in a centuries-longsiesta under a sombrero. Unlike<strong>the</strong> b<strong>la</strong>cks, who were brought <strong>to</strong><strong>the</strong> U.S. involuntarily, <strong>the</strong> Chicanoshave flocked <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> U.S. over <strong>the</strong> past30 years, legally and illegally, in an attempt<strong>to</strong> escape <strong>the</strong> poverty of <strong>the</strong>ir nativeMexico and find a better life. Whatever<strong>the</strong>ir present condition may be.many obviously find it better than <strong>the</strong>irformer one, as evidenced by <strong>the</strong> fact<strong>that</strong> re<strong>la</strong>tives have often followed familiesin<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> U.S. The Chicanos donot speak in one voice but many, followno one leader or strategy. Theirlevel of ambition and militance variesgreatly from barrio <strong>to</strong> barrio betweenTexas and California.No man, however, personifies <strong>the</strong> Chicanos'bleak past, restless present andpossible future in quite <strong>the</strong> manner ofCesar Chavez. He was <strong>the</strong> unshod, unletteredchild of migrant workers. He attendeddozens of schools but never got<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> eighth grade. He was a street-corner<strong>to</strong>ugh who now c<strong>la</strong>ims as his modelsEmiliano Zapata, Gandhi, Nehruand Martin Lu<strong>the</strong>r King. He tells hispeople: "We make a solemn promise:<strong>to</strong> enjoy our rightful part of <strong>the</strong> richesof this <strong>la</strong>nd, <strong>to</strong> throw off <strong>the</strong> yoke ofbeing considered as agricultural implementsor s<strong>la</strong>ves. We are free men andwe demand justice."The dawning of Chavez's socia<strong>la</strong>wareness came in a seamy San Jose,Calif., barrio called Sal Si Puedes-"Get out if you can." Through FredRoss, a tall, quiet organizer for SaulAlinsky's Community Service Organi-TIME, JULY 4, 1969zation, Cesar began <strong>to</strong> act on Alinsky'sprecept <strong>that</strong> concerted action is <strong>the</strong> onlymeans through which <strong>the</strong> poor can gainpolitical and economic power. Chavez,a Roman Catholic, has delved deeplyin<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> papal social encyclicals, especiallyRerum Novarum and QuadragesimoAnno. ':' "What Cesar wanted <strong>to</strong>reform was <strong>the</strong> way he was treated asa man," recalls his bro<strong>the</strong>r Richard."We always talked about change, buthow could we go about it?" Cesar Chavezwent about it by working with <strong>the</strong>c.s.O. among Mexican Americans forten years. Then, in 1962, he left <strong>to</strong>form a farm workers' union.The conditions under which farm <strong>la</strong>borers<strong>to</strong>il have improved somewhatsince <strong>the</strong> squalid Depression era so wellevoked by John Steinbeck in The Grapesof Wrath and In Dubious Battle; yetfield work remains one of <strong>the</strong> most unpleasan<strong>to</strong>f human occupations. It demandslong hours of back-breaking<strong>la</strong>bor, often in choking dust amid insectsand under a f<strong>la</strong>ming sun. The harvest-timewage for grape pickers averages$1.65 an hour, plus a 25¢ bonusfor each box picked, while <strong>the</strong> currentfederal minimum wage is $1.60.Despite this, <strong>the</strong> seasonal and sporadicnature of <strong>the</strong> work keeps <strong>to</strong>tal incomefar below <strong>the</strong> poverty level. Averagefamily income is less than $1,600a year. There is no job security, andfringe benefits are few. If <strong>the</strong>y are migrants,<strong>the</strong> workers must frequently livein fetid shacks without light or plumbing(though housing, bad as it is, is frequentlyfree or very cheap.) As a result,many have moved <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> cities,where even unskilled <strong>la</strong>bor can findwork at decent wages.Chavez was not <strong>the</strong> first <strong>to</strong> try <strong>to</strong> 01'-':' Rerum Noval'llm, published by Leo XITIin 1891, contended <strong>that</strong> <strong>the</strong> rich had in effect ens<strong>la</strong>ved<strong>the</strong> poor, and <strong>that</strong> every man has aright <strong>to</strong> a decent wage and reasonable comfort.Pius X1, in Quadragesil1lo Anno (1931),criticized <strong>the</strong> economic despotism <strong>that</strong> resultsfrom "limitless free competition" and reiterated<strong>the</strong> principle of a just wage.'00 25% <strong>to</strong> 50%5% <strong>to</strong> 25%247,000 { Popu<strong>la</strong>tion i150/0 having Spaganize farm workers. Ineffective efforts<strong>to</strong> found agricultural unions date back<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> turn of <strong>the</strong> century. But only inHawaii, where Harry Bridges' <strong>to</strong>ughlongshoremen's union used its muscle<strong>to</strong> win <strong>the</strong> first farm-<strong>la</strong>bor contract forsugar-cane workers in 1945, did unionizationtake hold. Agriculture is outside<strong>the</strong> jurisdiction of <strong>the</strong> National LaborRe<strong>la</strong>tions Board, which has providedfederal ground rules for industrial workers'unions since 1935; on a nationallevel, <strong>the</strong>re is no simi<strong>la</strong>r mechanismfor farm workers. In May <strong>the</strong> Nixon Administrationproposed an independentFarm Labor Re<strong>la</strong>tions Board, butchances for passage of such a <strong>la</strong>w thisyear are small. Without NLRB protection,and with farm <strong>la</strong>bor normally transientand seasonal, <strong>the</strong> difficulties of organizingare enormous.Rose Grafts and Table GrapesUndeterred by <strong>the</strong>se obstacles, Chavez<strong>to</strong>ok his $1,200 in savings and started<strong>the</strong> National Farm Workers' Associationseven years ago, setting up its headquartersin <strong>the</strong> San Joaquin Valley agricultural<strong>to</strong>wn of De<strong>la</strong>no. He clickedoff 300,000 miles in a battered 1953Mercury station wagon, crisscrossing <strong>the</strong>San Joaquin and talking <strong>to</strong> more than50,000 workers in <strong>the</strong> first six months.His money was soon gone, but he foundpeople who were willing <strong>to</strong> give himfood. The N.F.W.A. had its first formalmeeting in Fresno in September 1962;287 people showed up. Chavez soonstarted a death-benefits p<strong>la</strong>n for hismembers, a curious echo of <strong>the</strong> burial societiesorganized decades ago by EasternEuropean immigrants on <strong>the</strong>ir arrivalin <strong>the</strong> U.S. He also set up acredit union with $35 in assets (it nowhas more than $50,000). By August1964, he had 1,000 members, each paying$3.50 a month in dues-no smallsum for a farm worker's family. Soonhe began publishing a union newspapercalled El Malcriado (The Misfit), whosecircu<strong>la</strong>tion is 18,000.At <strong>la</strong>st <strong>the</strong> union felt strong enough17


<strong>to</strong> tackle <strong>the</strong> growers on a substantiveissue. In 1964, <strong>the</strong> N.F.W.A. <strong>to</strong>ok one employer<strong>to</strong> court for paying less than <strong>the</strong><strong>the</strong>n minimum wage of $1.25 per hour,and after months of wrangling, won<strong>the</strong> case. The amounts of money gainedwere small but <strong>the</strong> point was made: aboss could be beaten. Then <strong>the</strong> associationsued <strong>the</strong> Tu<strong>la</strong>re County housingauthority over <strong>the</strong> rents and conditionsat two <strong>la</strong>bor camps, built in <strong>the</strong> <strong>la</strong>te1930s and intended <strong>to</strong> be used for onlya few years. The camps were a hideouscollection of 9-ft. by II-ft. tin shacks,boiling in <strong>the</strong> summer sun and <strong>la</strong>ckingboth indoor plumbing and heat for <strong>the</strong>chill nights. Tu<strong>la</strong>re officials subsequentlybuilt modern accommodations.In May 1965, Chavez signed up agroup of rose grafters and won a <strong>strike</strong>vote for higher wages. Everyone pledgednot <strong>to</strong> go <strong>to</strong> work, but just <strong>to</strong> makesure <strong>that</strong> no one did, Chavez and DoloresHuerta, his tiny, <strong>to</strong>ugh assistant,made <strong>the</strong> rounds early on <strong>the</strong> <strong>strike</strong>'sfirst morning. Mrs. Huerta saw a lightin one house where four of <strong>the</strong> workerslived. She reminded <strong>the</strong>m of <strong>the</strong>irpledge, but <strong>the</strong>y had changed <strong>the</strong>irminds. Mrs. Huerta moved her truckso <strong>that</strong> it blocked <strong>the</strong>ir driveway andAn Anglo-Chicano LexiconAs with o<strong>the</strong>r minority groups,<strong>the</strong>re is a special vocabu<strong>la</strong>ry usedby and about Mexican Americans.The words, naturally, are mainlySpanish. Among <strong>the</strong>m:Anglo: white, non-Mexican American.Though normally used simplyin a neutral, descriptive manner, <strong>the</strong>term sometimes has pejorative over<strong>to</strong>nes.It has <strong>to</strong> some extent rep<strong>la</strong>cedgringo. Agringada describes a MexicanAmerican who has gone completelyAnglo in his way of life.Barrio: literally "district," <strong>the</strong>Spanish-speaking quarter of a U.S.city; also, colonia.Bracero: Mexican citizen brought" in<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> U.S. temporarily and usuallyin groups <strong>to</strong> add <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> existing<strong>la</strong>bor force at times of peak activity.The program, begun during WorldWar II <strong>to</strong> relieve manpower shortages,was ended-over farmers' protests-in1964. However. individualsknown as "green-carders" (for <strong>the</strong>permits <strong>the</strong>y hold) can work as aliens.La Causa: literally, "<strong>the</strong> cause."Cesar Chavez's farm-<strong>la</strong>bor movement;also, more broadly, <strong>the</strong> advancemen<strong>to</strong>f Mexican Americans.Chicano: Mexican American. Ashortened, corrupted form of Mexicano,with <strong>the</strong> first syl<strong>la</strong>ble droppedand <strong>the</strong> "x" pronounced like ch incheese, in <strong>the</strong> fashion of Mexico'sChihuahua Indians.Hispano: descendant of <strong>the</strong> originalSpanish settlers of areas now part18put <strong>the</strong> key in her purse. The incident illustrated<strong>the</strong> charge <strong>that</strong> Chavez andhis aides sometimes coerce those whowould ra<strong>the</strong>r work than <strong>strike</strong>. Afteronly four days of <strong>the</strong> <strong>strike</strong>, <strong>the</strong> groweragreed <strong>to</strong> give <strong>the</strong> workers a 120%wage increase.That same spring, in <strong>the</strong> Coachel<strong>la</strong>Valley east of Los Angeles, <strong>the</strong> <strong>la</strong>rgelyFilipino grape pickers of <strong>the</strong> A.F.L.­c.I.O.'s fledgling Agricultural WorkersOrganizing Committee won a brief <strong>strike</strong>for pay equal <strong>to</strong> <strong>that</strong> given field handsimported from Mexico. When <strong>the</strong> workersmoved north <strong>to</strong> De<strong>la</strong>no at <strong>the</strong> endof <strong>the</strong> summer, grape growers <strong>the</strong>re refused<strong>to</strong> make a simi<strong>la</strong>r agreement, andA.W.O.C. once more went on <strong>strike</strong>. OnSept. 16, which just happened <strong>to</strong> beMexican Independence Day, Chavez'sgroup held a tumultuous meeting andvoted unanimously <strong>to</strong> join <strong>the</strong> walkout.The hall of <strong>the</strong> Roman Catholic churchon De<strong>la</strong>no's west side resounded withcries of "Viva <strong>la</strong> huelga!" "Viva <strong>la</strong><strong>causa</strong>! Viva <strong>la</strong> union!" The N.F.W.A.and <strong>the</strong> A.W.O.C. merged two years <strong>la</strong>ter<strong>to</strong> form <strong>the</strong> United Farm Workers OrganizingCommittee, headed by Chavez.Table-grape growers are particu<strong>la</strong>rlyvulnerable <strong>to</strong> <strong>strike</strong>s because <strong>the</strong>ir prodof<strong>the</strong> U.S. Used chiefly in New Mexicoand Colorado <strong>to</strong> distinguish suchSpanish-speaking Americans from<strong>la</strong>ter immigrants of Indian descent.La Huelga: <strong>the</strong> <strong>strike</strong>.Malinchista: trai<strong>to</strong>r <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Mexican-Americancause. From Malinche,<strong>the</strong> daughter of a Mexicannobleman, who became Cortes' mistressand aided <strong>the</strong> Spanish in <strong>the</strong>irconquest of Mexico.Mestizo: person of mixed Spanishand Indian blood, as are most MexicanAmericans. Gueros have re<strong>la</strong>tivelylight skins; triguefios are somewhatdarker.Pachuco: <strong>to</strong>ugh guy. Used of teenageMexican-American boys in gangs.During World War II, dressed ingaudy zoot suits, <strong>the</strong>y were <strong>the</strong> targe<strong>to</strong>f racial violence in Los Angelesand elsewhere.La Raza: <strong>the</strong> race, meaning allMexicans and Mexican Americans,and derived from <strong>the</strong> mystical <strong>the</strong>oryof <strong>the</strong> 19th century philosopher,Jose Vasconcelos. <strong>that</strong> people ofmixed race will inherit <strong>the</strong> earth. Atbest, it is a rallying cry be<strong>to</strong>kening amild form of cultural nationalism; atworst, it connotes outright racism.Tio Taco: literally "Uncle Taco,"<strong>the</strong> Mexican-American equivalent ofan Uncle Tom. An equally contemptuoussynonym is vendido, sellout.Wetback: illegal immigrant fromMexico, so called because a commonmeans of entry was <strong>to</strong> swim <strong>the</strong> RioGrande.uct requires continual attention throughmuch of <strong>the</strong> year. Since <strong>the</strong> appearanceof <strong>the</strong> fruit affects its value-unlike <strong>the</strong>case of wine grapes-<strong>the</strong> bunches mustbe carefully picked by hand. Becauseof <strong>the</strong>ir vulnerability, Chavez picked<strong>the</strong> table-grape growers as his first target.In 1966, after a <strong>strike</strong>, he got hisfirst contract when Schenley Industriescapitu<strong>la</strong>ted because it had a nationallyknown name at stake. Later <strong>that</strong> yearhe won <strong>the</strong> right <strong>to</strong> represent workersat <strong>the</strong> mammoth Di Giorgio ranch inan election moni<strong>to</strong>red by <strong>the</strong> AmericanArbitration Association. Both Di Giorgioand Schenley have since sold <strong>the</strong>ir tablegrapeholdings, however, and Chavez'sonly contracts now are with wine producers:Gallo, Christian Bro<strong>the</strong>rs, Masson,Almaden, Franzia Bro<strong>the</strong>rs andNovitiate.Boycott and BreakthroughChavez has never been able <strong>to</strong> get<strong>la</strong>rge numbers of <strong>la</strong>borers <strong>to</strong> join <strong>the</strong><strong>strike</strong>. Many of those who do followhim are fanatic in <strong>the</strong>ir loyalty, but a<strong>la</strong>rge segment of <strong>the</strong> shifting, transientwork force continues <strong>to</strong> be indifferent<strong>to</strong> unionism. Wages have been risingeven in <strong>the</strong> absence of contracts, andfew farm workers can afford <strong>to</strong> go unpaidfor long. Although federal regu<strong>la</strong>tions<strong>the</strong>oretically prohibit <strong>the</strong> hiringof aliens, or "green-carders," as <strong>strike</strong>breakers, <strong>the</strong> owners have never<strong>the</strong>lesscontinued <strong>to</strong> use imported workers ofMexican citizenship.Chavez decided <strong>to</strong> resort <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> boycott<strong>to</strong> keep pressure on <strong>the</strong> tablegrapegrowers. He applied it first in1967 <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Giumarra Vineyards Corp.,<strong>the</strong> <strong>la</strong>rgest U.S. table-grape producer.Giumarra started using <strong>the</strong> <strong>la</strong>bels ofo<strong>the</strong>r growers-in vio<strong>la</strong>tion of Foodand Drug Administration rules-<strong>to</strong> circumvent<strong>the</strong> boycott. In retaliation, <strong>the</strong>Chavez people began <strong>to</strong> appeal <strong>to</strong> s<strong>to</strong>resand consumers not <strong>to</strong> buy any Californiatable grapes at all. The boycotthas been extended overseas <strong>to</strong> Britainand Scandinavia.Chavez has now finally achieved abreakthrough: nationwide grape saleswere off 12% in 1968, and prices forthis year's first California grapes aredown as much as 15%. Last monthten growers representing about 12% of<strong>the</strong> state's table-grape production announced<strong>that</strong> <strong>the</strong>y would sit down withChavez <strong>to</strong> write a contract. If negotiationswith Chavez succeed, some o<strong>the</strong>rvineyards may also sign contracts, buta determined majority still barely acknowledgehis existence and remain adamantlyopposed <strong>to</strong> union recognition.If <strong>the</strong> union does begin <strong>to</strong> win contractswith an increasing number ofgrowers, a new difficulty could arise:How is <strong>the</strong> consumer <strong>to</strong> tell <strong>the</strong> differencebetween union and nonuniongrapes? Boxes can be <strong>la</strong>beled easily,but not loose bunches of grapes in a market.The union c<strong>la</strong>ims <strong>that</strong> existing boycottmachinery can be turned around<strong>to</strong> promote <strong>the</strong> produce of those whoTIME, JULY 4, 1969


CHAVEZ UNDER PHOTO OF GANDHIAlso Zapata, Nehru and King.have signed; <strong>the</strong>y could be marketedthrough <strong>the</strong> chain s<strong>to</strong>res <strong>that</strong> have refused<strong>to</strong> handle <strong>the</strong> produce of struckgrowers. However, any such confusingprocedure is bound <strong>to</strong> dilute <strong>the</strong> boycott'seffectiveness.Most of <strong>the</strong> growers bitterly disputeChavez's contentions. His c<strong>la</strong>im <strong>to</strong> represent<strong>the</strong> workers is false, <strong>the</strong>y say;only 3% of California's grape pickershave joined his union. Chavez has notbeen able <strong>to</strong> strip <strong>the</strong> fields of workersand, <strong>the</strong>y argue, even if he personallypreaches nonviolence, his followers donot practice it. Packing sheds have beenset afire, foremen threatened, tiress<strong>la</strong>shed. Chavez also has outside help.Long-haired pickets came down fromBerkeley in <strong>the</strong> early days of /a hue/ga,and <strong>the</strong> union gets $14,500 a month ingrants from <strong>the</strong> A.F.L.-C.I.O. and WalterReu<strong>the</strong>r's United Au<strong>to</strong>mobile Workers.By insisting <strong>that</strong> all workers joinhis union, moreover, Chavez wants whatamounts <strong>to</strong> a closed shop (which is illegalunder <strong>the</strong> Taft-Hartley Act, but<strong>the</strong> act does not apply <strong>to</strong> agriculturalworkers). This means <strong>that</strong>, for now atleast, Chavez's goal, however unpa<strong>la</strong>table,is a legal one. Chavez opposes p<strong>la</strong>cingfarm workers under <strong>the</strong> NationalLabor Re<strong>la</strong>tions Board precisely because<strong>that</strong> would make <strong>the</strong> closed shop heseeks un<strong>la</strong>wful.The growers of De<strong>la</strong>no are difficult<strong>to</strong> cast as vil<strong>la</strong>ins. Many are self-mademen, Yugos<strong>la</strong>vs and Italians who came<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> valley between 1900 and 1940with nothing and worked hard <strong>to</strong> amassTIME, JULY 4, 1969enough capital <strong>to</strong> practice <strong>the</strong> grapegrowingarts <strong>the</strong>y learned in Europe.Most of <strong>the</strong> De<strong>la</strong>no spreads are familyenterprises, and many of <strong>the</strong>m havehad rough going. Costs have risen sharplyover <strong>the</strong> past decade, and grape priceshave now begun <strong>to</strong> decline.The California growers also pay <strong>the</strong>second highest agricultural wages in <strong>the</strong>U.S. (after Hawaii, where unionizedworkers average $3 an hour).While <strong>the</strong>y generally be<strong>little</strong> <strong>the</strong> exten<strong>to</strong>f his support, however, <strong>the</strong> growershave gone <strong>to</strong> some lengths <strong>to</strong> counterChavez's moves. The anti-U.F.W.O.C.campaign even included for a time agroup called Mo<strong>the</strong>rs Against Chavez.The growers are using <strong>the</strong> J. WalterThompson agency <strong>to</strong> p<strong>la</strong>ce $400,000worth of ads ex<strong>to</strong>lling <strong>the</strong> benefits oftable grapes. The California public re<strong>la</strong>tionsfirm of Whitaker & Baxter hasbeen retained <strong>to</strong> advise <strong>the</strong> growers abouthow <strong>to</strong> counter <strong>the</strong> boycott. Whitaker& Baxter helped <strong>to</strong> manage Richard Nixon'sunsuccessful campaign for governorof California in 1962, and masterminded<strong>the</strong> American Medical Association's attempt<strong>to</strong> defeat Medicare.On $10 a WeekOne reason for <strong>the</strong> <strong>la</strong>ck of comprehensionbetween Chavez and <strong>the</strong>growers is <strong>that</strong> each has different conceptsof <strong>the</strong> fundamental issue. Thegrowers see <strong>the</strong>mselves as managementin a c<strong>la</strong>ssic <strong>la</strong>bor dispute, while Chavezand his followers believe <strong>that</strong> <strong>the</strong> causeof all Mexican Americans is at stake.That is what inspires Chavez's devotion<strong>to</strong> /a <strong>causa</strong>. For years he andhis wife and eight children have livedjammed in<strong>to</strong> a tiny two-bedroom housein De<strong>la</strong>no, subsisting on $10 a weekfrom <strong>the</strong> union and on food from <strong>the</strong>communal kitchen in nearby union headquarters.Chavez has grown increasinglyascetic. He has given up casual socializingas well as liquor and cigarettes;his idea of a real treat is aneclectic meal of Chinese food, matzohsand diet soda. The fight has becomehis life. "The days and weeks and monthsrun <strong>to</strong>ge<strong>the</strong>r," he <strong>to</strong>ld TrME CorrespondentRobert Anson. "I can't think back<strong>to</strong> a time when we were not on <strong>strike</strong>."Nor does he contemp<strong>la</strong>te surrender <strong>to</strong><strong>the</strong> growers. "Ei<strong>the</strong>r <strong>the</strong> union will be destroyed,"he says, "or <strong>the</strong>y will sign acontract. There's no o<strong>the</strong>r alternative."The use of only peaceful means hasbeen central <strong>to</strong> his thinking since a1953 showdown in <strong>the</strong> San Joaquin Valleybetween his Mexican-AmericanC.S.O. pickets and a public official. Suddenly,he realized <strong>that</strong> if <strong>the</strong>re wereany violence or serious disorder it wouldbe his responsibility. He began readingGandhi, and he says now: "If <strong>the</strong> <strong>strike</strong>means <strong>the</strong> blood of one grower or onegrower's son, or one worker or one worker'sson, <strong>the</strong>n it isn't worth it."In February 1968, Chavez began a 25­day fast "as an act of penance, recallingworkers <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> nonviolent rootsof <strong>the</strong>ir movement." Although he insisted<strong>that</strong> his decision was essentiallya private one, <strong>the</strong> fast <strong>to</strong>ok on a certaincircus aura and raised suspicions<strong>that</strong> its motivation was more <strong>the</strong>atricalthan <strong>the</strong>ological. During <strong>the</strong> fast, Chavezhad <strong>to</strong> make a court appearance inBakersfield, on charges of improper picketing,in a case <strong>that</strong> has yet <strong>to</strong> come <strong>to</strong>trial. As he did so, 2,000 farm workersknelt outside in prayer. One woman solemnlyasked him if he were indeed asaint. When <strong>the</strong> fast ended, Sena<strong>to</strong>r RobertKennedy knelt next <strong>to</strong> him <strong>to</strong> receiveCommunion. Some 8,000 o<strong>the</strong>rsjoined <strong>the</strong>m in De<strong>la</strong>no's MemorialPark for a bread-breaking ceremony.The fast, and Chavez's years of 12­<strong>to</strong> 16-hour days, <strong>to</strong>ok <strong>the</strong>ir <strong>to</strong>ll. Last Septemberhe suffered a muscu<strong>la</strong>r breakdownin his back-he had been in painfor years before <strong>that</strong>-and found hislegs nearly paralyzed. After spendingmore than two months in traction, hehas now substantially recovered, but isstill bedridden much of <strong>the</strong> time. Insteadof spending long hours drivingaround <strong>the</strong> state, he receives a constantstream of subordinates at his bedside.Chavez's religious conviction mingleswith <strong>the</strong> exigencies of <strong>the</strong> movement.He opposes birth control for his people,but only partly out of conventionalCatholicism; he argues <strong>that</strong> smaller familieswould diminish <strong>the</strong> numerical powerof <strong>the</strong> poor. A priest brings him Communiondaily. To Correspondent Ansonhe exp<strong>la</strong>ined: "God prepares those whohave <strong>to</strong> suffer and take punishment. O<strong>the</strong>rwise,how could we exist? How could<strong>the</strong> b<strong>la</strong>ck man exist? There must besomething special. I really think <strong>that</strong>He looks after us."Cesar Chavez came <strong>to</strong> his missionfrom a background of poverty and prejudice<strong>that</strong> is a paradigm of <strong>that</strong> ofmany Chicanos. Like most MexicanCHAVEZ ENDING FAST AT MASSIdeas mainly from <strong>the</strong> encyclicals.19


GRAPE WORKERS NEAR DElANOAmong <strong>the</strong> most unpleasant of human occupations.Americans, he is of mixed Spanish andIndian blood, with liquid brown eyes,deeply bronze skin and thick, jet-b<strong>la</strong>ckhair. He was born on an 80-acre farmin Arizona's Gi<strong>la</strong> Valley near Yuma,where his parents tried <strong>to</strong> scratch a livingfrom <strong>the</strong> arid desert earth. Chavezmet racial hostility early in daily rockfights between Anglo and Chicano kidsat <strong>the</strong> vil<strong>la</strong>ge school.The farm failed in <strong>the</strong> Depression,and when Chavez was ten, <strong>the</strong> familypacked everything it owned in<strong>to</strong> a decrepitau<strong>to</strong>mobile and headed across<strong>the</strong> Colorado River in<strong>to</strong> California. InOxnard, Chavez's fa<strong>the</strong>r found workthreshing lima beans; when all <strong>the</strong> beanswere harvested, <strong>the</strong> family <strong>to</strong>ok off, lookingfor o<strong>the</strong>r jobs and often turning upjust a few days after a crop was in.Anglos on <strong>the</strong> Left'. That first winter back in Oxnard,with <strong>the</strong> <strong>little</strong> money earned in <strong>the</strong>fields already gone, was <strong>the</strong> family'sworst time. Cesar's bro<strong>the</strong>r Richard remembers:"There was this nice <strong>la</strong>dy<strong>the</strong>re, and she had a vacant lot <strong>that</strong>she let us use. So we put up a tent. Itwas a very small tent-I guess about 8by 10. That's all we had. All <strong>the</strong> familystayed <strong>the</strong>re. And it rained <strong>that</strong> winter.Oh, it rained. Rain, rain, rain. Wehad <strong>to</strong> go <strong>to</strong> school barefoot. We hadno shoes. I can't forget it."The family lived <strong>that</strong> winter on beans,<strong>to</strong>rtil<strong>la</strong>s and an occasional pota<strong>to</strong>. Chavez'sfa<strong>the</strong>r sometimes picked peas for50¢ a day, half of which went <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> contrac<strong>to</strong>rwho drove <strong>the</strong> workers <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong>fields in <strong>the</strong> back of a f<strong>la</strong>tbed truck.There was nothing else <strong>to</strong> do. By <strong>the</strong>next spring, <strong>the</strong> family had learned moreof <strong>the</strong> harvest schedule, and it set offfor <strong>the</strong> first of many years on <strong>the</strong> cir-20J.R. EYERMANcuit familiar <strong>to</strong> every migrant workerin California. Starting in <strong>the</strong> Imperia<strong>la</strong>nd Coachel<strong>la</strong> valleys of <strong>the</strong> south,through <strong>the</strong> state's bulging middle, <strong>the</strong>San Joaquin Valley, on up north ofSan Francisco and in<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> Napa Valley,<strong>the</strong>y worked each crop in its turn: asparagus,grapes, beets, pota<strong>to</strong>es, beans,plums, apricots-anything <strong>that</strong> neededpicking, hoeing, thinning, leafing, tipping,girdling, digging or pruning.In 1941, <strong>the</strong> family moved <strong>to</strong> De<strong>la</strong>no,where Chavez met his future wife,Helen Fabe<strong>la</strong>. At <strong>the</strong> movies with herone night, he had a jarring brush withdiscrimination. He refused <strong>to</strong> stay on<strong>the</strong> right side of <strong>the</strong> <strong>the</strong>ater, which wasreserved for Mexicans, and sat insteadwith <strong>the</strong> Anglos on <strong>the</strong> left. "The assistantmanager came," Chavez recalls."The girl who sold <strong>the</strong> popcorn came.And <strong>the</strong> girl with <strong>the</strong> tickets came.Then <strong>the</strong> manager came. They tried <strong>to</strong>pull me up, and I said, 'No, you have<strong>to</strong> break my arms before I get up.' " Chavez,<strong>the</strong>n 16, was hustled off <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> stationhouse for a lecture from <strong>the</strong> chiefof police, but he would not promisenot <strong>to</strong> do <strong>the</strong> same thing again.Like many o<strong>the</strong>r teen-age MexicanAmericans, Chavez became a pachaco,affecting a zoot suit with pegged pants,a broad fiat hat and a ducktail haircut.Some sociologists now see <strong>the</strong> pachacomovement as <strong>the</strong> first example of militantseparatism among Chicanos, an assertionof a distinct identity hostile <strong>to</strong>Anglo culture. The Anglos <strong>to</strong>ok it <strong>that</strong>way, in any case, and reacted violently:during a series of riots in <strong>the</strong> Southwestduring <strong>the</strong> summer of 1943, severalthousand soldiers, sailors and Marinesbeat up hundreds of Chicanoyouths. Police promptly arrested someof <strong>the</strong> victims.Because of his own experience of povertyand acquaintance with prejudice,Cesar Chavez has made <strong>la</strong> caasa morethan a <strong>la</strong>bor movement. He is determined<strong>to</strong> better <strong>the</strong> lot of all MexicanAmericans. There is much room for improvement.There have never been JimCrow <strong>la</strong>ws against <strong>the</strong>m, like thoseagainst b<strong>la</strong>cks, but overt discriminationundeniably exists. Chicanos still find ithard <strong>to</strong> get in<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> barbershops and publicswimming pools of south Texas. Still,though <strong>the</strong> Chicano is set apart by <strong>la</strong>nguage,assimi<strong>la</strong>tion is often easier forhim than for <strong>the</strong> Negro. For this reason,and because most of <strong>the</strong> Chicanopopu<strong>la</strong>tion lives in re<strong>la</strong>tive obscurity in<strong>the</strong> barrios or rural areas, <strong>the</strong> Mexican­American community has been slow <strong>to</strong>develop aggressive leadership.Now, because <strong>the</strong>y have seen <strong>that</strong> organizedb<strong>la</strong>ck action gets results, <strong>the</strong> Chicanoshave begun <strong>to</strong> stir with a newmilitancy. They have formed <strong>the</strong> BrownBerets, modeled on <strong>the</strong> B<strong>la</strong>ck Pan<strong>the</strong>rs,and set up a $2,200,000 Mexican-AmericanLegal Defense and EducationalFund, financed by <strong>the</strong> Ford Foundation."We are about ten years behind <strong>the</strong> Negroes,and we must catch up," says Dr.Daniel Valdes, a Denver behavioral scientist."But I think we will do it withoutextreme violence." Lawyer DonaldPacheco puts <strong>the</strong> plight of <strong>the</strong> MexicanAmerican more bluntly: "We're <strong>the</strong> 'nigger'of ten years ago."If he is a migrant farm worker, <strong>the</strong>Mexican American has a life expectancyof about 48 years v. 70 for <strong>the</strong> averageU.S. resident. The Chicano birth rateis double <strong>the</strong> U.S. average-but so is<strong>the</strong> rate of infant mortality. More thanone-third live below <strong>the</strong> $3,000-a-yearlevel of family income <strong>that</strong> federal statisticiansdefine as poverty. Eighty percen<strong>to</strong>f <strong>the</strong> Mexican-American popu<strong>la</strong>tionis now urban, and most live in<strong>the</strong> barrio.Forbidden LanguageThe overwhelming majority work asunskilled or semiskilled <strong>la</strong>bor in fac<strong>to</strong>riesand packing p<strong>la</strong>nts, or in service jobs asmaids, waitresses, yard boys and deliverymen.Particu<strong>la</strong>rly in Texas, MexicanAmericans sometimes get less pay thano<strong>the</strong>rs for <strong>the</strong> same work. Even <strong>the</strong> fewwho have some education do not escapediscrimination. Chicano women find <strong>that</strong>jobs as public contacts at airline ticketcounters are rarely open; <strong>the</strong>y are welcomeas switchboard opera<strong>to</strong>rs out of <strong>the</strong>public eye. Mexican-American men whowork in banks are assigned <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> lessfashionable branches. Promotions comeslowly, responsibility hardly ever.One major impediment <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> MexicanAmerican is his Spanish <strong>la</strong>nguage,because it holds him back in U.S.schools. Mexican Americans averageeight years of schooling, two years lessthan Negroes and a full four years lessthan whites. Often <strong>the</strong>y are forced <strong>to</strong>learn English from scratch in <strong>the</strong> firstgrade, and <strong>the</strong> frequent result is <strong>that</strong><strong>the</strong>y become not bilingual but nearlyTIME, JULY 4, 1969


nonlingual. In Texas, 40% of Chicanosare considered functionally illiterate. InLos Angeles, only an estimated 25%can speak English fluently. Chicano childrenin some rural areas are still punishedfor speaking Spanish in school.Only this year, Chicano students at BowieHigh School in El Paso-in a predominantlyMexican-American section-managed <strong>to</strong> get a rule abolished <strong>that</strong>forbade <strong>the</strong> speaking of Spanish on<strong>the</strong> school grounds.The Chicano is as vulnerable <strong>to</strong> mistreatmentat <strong>the</strong> hands of <strong>the</strong> <strong>la</strong>w as <strong>the</strong>b<strong>la</strong>ck. Seven Mexicans were beaten bydrunken policemen at a Los Angeles policestation on Christmas Eve, 1952; sixof <strong>the</strong> officers were eventually given jailterms. During an 18-month period ending<strong>la</strong>st April, <strong>the</strong> American Civil LibertiesUnion received 174 comp<strong>la</strong>ints ofpolice abuses from Los Angeles MexicanAmericans. Two of <strong>the</strong> recent <strong>la</strong>ndmarkSupreme Court decisions limiting policequestioning of suspects involved MexicanAmericans-Escobedo v. Illinoisand Miranda v. Arizona. Many Mexicansstill look on <strong>the</strong> Texas Rangers andU.S. border patrols with terror.Pluralism v. <strong>the</strong> Melting PotThat Chavez has dramatized <strong>the</strong> problemsof Mexican Americans in <strong>the</strong> cityas well as on <strong>the</strong> farm seems beyond dispute.Fa<strong>the</strong>r Bernardo Kenny, a Sacramen<strong>to</strong>priest with a sizable Mexican­American congregation, believes <strong>that</strong>even if Chavez never wins his <strong>strike</strong> hewill have made a "tremendous contribution."Says Kenny: "He focused attentionon <strong>the</strong> problem of <strong>the</strong> farmworkers, and he made <strong>the</strong> MexicanAmericans proud <strong>to</strong> be Mexican Americans.Chavez must be given credit, Ithink, for really starting <strong>the</strong> Mexican­American civil rights movement." Ironically,mechanization hastened by unionizationmay eventually diminish Chavez'sfarm-<strong>la</strong>bor base-but it will notslow <strong>the</strong> momentum of <strong>la</strong> <strong>causa</strong>.The new Mexican-American militancyhas turned up a mixed pinata of leaders,some of <strong>the</strong>m significantly morestrident than Chavez. In Los Angeles, 20­year-old David Sanchez is "prime minister"of <strong>the</strong> well-disciplined Brown Berets,who help keep intramural peacein <strong>the</strong> barrio and are setting up a freemedical clinic. Some of <strong>the</strong>m also carrymachetes and talk <strong>to</strong>ugh about <strong>the</strong>Anglo. Reies Lopez Tijerina, 45, is trying<strong>to</strong> establish a "Free City State ofSan Joaquin" for Chicanos on his<strong>to</strong>ricSpanish <strong>la</strong>nd grants in New Mexico; at<strong>the</strong> moment, while his appeal on an assaultconviction is being adjudicated,he is in jail for burning a sign in <strong>the</strong> CarsonNational Forest. Denver's Rudolfo("Corky") Gonzales, 40, an ex-prizefighter,has started a "Crusade for Justice"<strong>to</strong> make <strong>the</strong> city's 85,000 MexicanAmericans <strong>la</strong> <strong>causa</strong>-conscious.As with <strong>the</strong> b<strong>la</strong>cks, <strong>the</strong> question forthose who lead <strong>the</strong> Chicanos is whe<strong>the</strong>rprogress means separatism or assimi<strong>la</strong>tion.Cal State Professor RafaelGuzman, who helped carry out a fouryearFord Foundation study of MexicanAmericans, warns <strong>that</strong> <strong>the</strong> barrio is potentiallyas explosive as <strong>the</strong> b<strong>la</strong>ck ghet<strong>to</strong>.He argues for a new pluralism in<strong>the</strong> U.S. <strong>that</strong> means something o<strong>the</strong>rthan forcing minorities in<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> establishedAnglo-Saxon mold; each groupshould be free <strong>to</strong> develop its own culturewhile contributing <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> whole.Yet <strong>the</strong>re is no real consensus in <strong>the</strong>barrio. The forces for assimi<strong>la</strong>tion arepowerful. A young Tucson militant, SalomonBaldenegro, contends: "Our valuesare just like any Manhattan executive's,but we have a ceiling on oursocial mobility." While federal programsfor bilingual instruction in Mexican­American areas are still inadequate, <strong>that</strong>kind of approach-if made readily avai<strong>la</strong>ble<strong>to</strong> all who want it-leaves <strong>the</strong>choice between separatism and assimi<strong>la</strong>tionultimately <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> individual Chicanohimself. He learns in his fa<strong>the</strong>r's<strong>to</strong>ngue, but he also learns in Englishwell enough so <strong>that</strong> <strong>la</strong>nguage is no longera barrier; he retains his own culture,but he also knows enough of <strong>the</strong> majority'srules and ways <strong>to</strong> compete successfullyif he chooses <strong>to</strong>.Cesar Chavez has made <strong>the</strong> Chicano'scause well enough known <strong>to</strong> make <strong>that</strong>goal possible. While La hueLga is insome respects a limited battle, it is alsosymbolic of <strong>the</strong> Mexican-American'squest for a full role in U.S. society.What happens <strong>to</strong> Chavez's farm workerswill be an omen, for good or ill, of<strong>the</strong> Mexican-American's future. For <strong>the</strong>short term, Chavez's most tangible aspirationis <strong>to</strong> win <strong>the</strong> fight with <strong>the</strong>grape growers. If he can succeed in<strong>that</strong> difficult and uncertain battle, hewill doubtless try <strong>to</strong> expand <strong>the</strong> movementbeyond <strong>the</strong> vineyards in<strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> entireMexican-American community.THENiXON AT GAME WITH SON·iN·LAW & SHORTStimu<strong>la</strong>ting and clears <strong>the</strong> mind.PRESIDENCYSporting LifeAmericans are one of <strong>the</strong> world'smost sports-conscious people, yet foryears <strong>the</strong>y have not had a Presidentwho shared <strong>that</strong> enthusiasm. PresidentEisenhower's interest was <strong>la</strong>rgely confined<strong>to</strong> golf and John Kennedy's <strong>to</strong>swimming and sailing. In <strong>the</strong> Johnsonyears, <strong>the</strong> principal sport was huntingranch deer from a Lincoln Continental.Richard Nixon, by contrast, is an allroundsports enthusiast who not only follows<strong>the</strong> sports pages with <strong>the</strong> attentionof a Monday morning quarterback, buthas learned <strong>to</strong> re<strong>la</strong>x by attending sportsevents and by participating in sports aswell.Nixon has already watched <strong>the</strong> Washing<strong>to</strong>nSena<strong>to</strong>rs lose three times thisyear, which sets some kind of attendancerecord for modern Presidents.He enjoys chatting with <strong>the</strong> p<strong>la</strong>yers,which has led a few wags <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> conclusion<strong>that</strong> <strong>the</strong> White House has betterre<strong>la</strong>tions with Sena<strong>to</strong>rs on <strong>the</strong> fieldthan with Sena<strong>to</strong>rs on <strong>the</strong> Hill. BobShort, owner of <strong>the</strong> Sena<strong>to</strong>rs, marvels<strong>that</strong> Nixon "knows more about baseballthan I do. I was amazed <strong>to</strong> hear himsay he'd been following <strong>the</strong> Sena<strong>to</strong>rson his trip <strong>to</strong> Midway." Nixon andDavid Eisenhower attend games <strong>to</strong>ge<strong>the</strong>rand frequently talk baseball. One recentevening, <strong>the</strong> duo sped out <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong> stadium,Nixon rushing away from a pressconference, David forsaking his bride.The Sena<strong>to</strong>rs lost, but Nixon was still optimisticabout <strong>the</strong>ir future.No Dumb Questions. As Vice President,Nixon once said: "Baseball is a diversion<strong>that</strong> both stimu<strong>la</strong>tes and clears<strong>the</strong> mind." Yet his interest in <strong>the</strong> arenadoes not fade when <strong>the</strong> World Seriesends. He likes hockey, and is <strong>the</strong> kindPICTOR IAL PARADETIME, JULY 4, 1969 21

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