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----- Original Message ----- 
From: John Clancy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <overflow: ;>
Sent: Wednesday, May 16, 2001 8:57 PM
Subject: [Cuba SI] WW:Tent city never sleeps.Sit-in asks "What is to be done?"


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subject: WW:Tent City never sleeps.Sit in asks "What is to be done?
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Subject: [WW]  Tent City: Solidarity never sleeps
Date: Fri, 11 May 2001   Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the May 17, 2001 issue of Workers World newspaper
-------------------------

TENT CITY: SOLIDARITY NEVER SLEEPS
    By Leslie Feinberg -Tent City, Harvard Yard -Cambridge, Mass.
             [Day 17 of the occupation]

It's a solidarity squat. A militant bivouac. A bustling Tent  City
surrounded on all sides by towering brick edifices of  power and old
money.

When students took over Massachusetts Hall in Harvard Yard  to demand a
living wage for Harvard's lowest-paid workers,  10 tents sprouted like
mushrooms in support. Today more than  80 colorful tents, large and
small, are pitched all over  Harvard Yard.

The lawn is divided into geometric shapes by walkways.  Thousands of
protest leaflets hang from virtually every inch  of low twine fences
that border each patch of lawn. Pink  chalk identifies the asphalt
paths as Avenida Justicia,  Fairness Street, Unity Blvd., Public Alley
1025. The tents  are numbered, creating neighborhoods with street
addresses.

Huge protest banners hang between trees, blowing in the  breeze. The
nearby imposing buildings are plastered with  support posters.

Its inhabitants and visitors are from many nationalities and
 countries. They wear sandals, sneakers, lace-ups and heels-- or go
barefoot. Length of hair ranges from shaved heads to  long dreadlocks
and braids in every color from hard-earned  gray to rainbow hues.

Needs have shifted from extra blankets to sun block. Today  the
temperature is an unseasonable 90 degrees. Seminars are  being taught
in circles on the grass. Other students form  circles outside the
occupied administration building to  consult with protesters hanging
out Mass Hall windows.

Something new is being birthed here. It's a 24-hour-a-day
 demonstration that never goes home. It's a round-table  discussion
around the clock.

Sometimes those in front of the building grow from dozens to  hundreds.
Earlier this week the lunchtime crowd swelled to  almost 1,800 to hear
AFL-CIO leaders back the student  occupation.

Periodically everyone draws together for a rally or a march.  The
sounds of congas, poetry, story-telling, folk songs, rap  and salsa
fill the yard. The jingling and beeping of cell  phones can be heard in
every direction.

Food donated by individuals, groups and unions is always  available and
plentiful. "Please help us eat the donated  food," reads a hand-made
sign. "Even Harvard students can't  eat it all."

THE CITY THAT NEVER SLEEPS

At dusk people light candles and draw closer to the  protesters leaning
out the windows of the occupied building.  The evening vigil summarizes
the day's events.

An organizer reminds the crowd: "Poverty on this campus is  an eyesore,
just like this Tent City." Voices instantly rise  in disagreement:
"Tent City is beautiful!"

Wordsmiths, poets, musicians, storytellers have been urged  to "Come
reveille trumpeting and jerk the world-weary from  their slumber."

One poet reminds those gathered that today is the 31st  anniversary of
the killing of four Kent State student  protesters by the Ohio National
Guard. The 1970 firing on  students at Kent and at Jackson State
University in  Mississippi were attempts to silence the anti-war
movement  at its peak.

The moon is rising and street lamps are lit. To limit  support, cops
lock the entrance gates to the yard, check  student identification and
allow each person only one  "guest."

Crowds still mill about the yard in animated political  discussion.

Tent City has lasted so long it has a new "mayor" who  assigns tents
and keeps track of residents.

Tent City never sleeps, and neither do many of its  inhabitants.
Debate, laughter and music fill the night  hours.

A student road crew makes "municipal repairs" to a giant  banner that
was drooping between trees.

Every 20 minutes students with flashlights patrol the  neighborhood to
discourage anyone who might harass the  encampment. One hostile student
shouts during the night, "If  this is a serious protest, why aren't you
sleeping on the  ground?"

He is answered from a nearby tent, "You think we've got  Sealy Posture-
Pedic mattresses in here?"

At dawn a brief cold rain sends people scrambling for  shelter. But
after a short lull, activity resumes.

Day 18 of the occupation begins.

Tent City is the living proof of a pink-scrawled message on  Avenida
Justicia that the rain hasn't quite washed away:  "Solidarity is not a
word, but an action."

- END -

(Copyright Workers World Service: Everyone is permitted to  copy and
distribute verbatim copies of this document, but  changing it is not
allowed. For more information contact  Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY,
NY 10011; via e-mail:  [EMAIL PROTECTED] For subscription info send
message to:  [EMAIL PROTECTED] Web: http://www.workers.org) 

              ********
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From: "WW" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [WW]  Sit-in asks, What is to be done?
Date: Fri, 11 May 2001 Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the May 17, 2001issue of Workers World newspaper
-------------------------

ROONA RAY ON ORGANIZING: SIT-IN ASKS, WHAT IS TO BE DONE?
     By Leslie Feinber -  Harvard Yard Cambridge, Mass.

Roona Ray was the outside organizer for the Harvard students  who sat
in to demand a living wage for the lowest-paid  university workers.
While the occupation was still going on,  she explained to Workers
World that the apparatus functioned  "to make sure the kids inside are
getting enough food,  whatever they need."

"It is our job to make sure that the sit-in is visible to  the world,"
she stressed.

This student campaign is about three years old, said Ray, a  third-year
junior in biology and women's studies. When the  occupation began April
18, she recalled, "We anticipated  this being a week long, maybe." It
lasted for three weeks.

She described the disciplined organizational structure that  was built
from the ground up to support the sit-in.

The students who took over the administration building  divided
themselves into three affinity groups to make  decisions. Each group
had an outside liaison to keep in  touch and help meet the group's
needs.

A centralized group of four to six people was around full  time to
confer with three people at a time from inside the  occupied building.
"Three people are all that fits at one  time leaning through a window,"
she pointed out. They  discussed on a daily basis "the non-logistical
political  part of what's going on."

While decisions in many other areas of work were made by  consensus,
this group had to be more centralized. "It's hard  to get everyone on
the same page. And rumors start so easily  that it's hard to
disseminate information."

People inside took on "a lot of organizing and made a lot of  the phone
calls." A graphics designer inside made "the more  jazzy posters and e-
mailed them to us. And he makes artistic  banners and lettering."

One person inside and another outside worried about nothing  but food.
Everyone inside and hundreds of supporters outside  had plenty to eat.
So much food was donated that "We've been  giving some to the homeless
shelter across the street."

FROM PITCHING PRESS TO PITCHING TENTS

The outside apparatus was impressive.

Each of the 12 undergraduate residence houses had one or two  house
captains who organized postering and leafleting,  dinner discussions
and teach-ins. They scheduled house  vigils at 7:30 p.m. that then
marched to a larger end-of-day  vigil outside the sit-in.

Ray described a growing base among the Harvard graduate  schools. The
medical school and school of public health were  harder to reach
because they are on satellite campuses more  than half an hour away.
But, Ray added, "They have been  pulled in by their custodians, who are
due to be out-sourced  in July."

Groups on campus--from Chicanos in La Raza to Black law  students to
lesbian, gay, bi and trans youth--sponsored and  organized the daily
rallies outside the sit-in.

Two event organizers kept track of what was going on:  rallies, events,
schedules.

"Our rallies are in English, Spanish, Haitian Creole," she  said
proudly. "And it also gives us a way to talk through  the windows with
privacy. None of the cops or administrators  has knowledge of any of
the languages of Brown people."

Three to four people on the press team "pitch the highlights  to the
press. Now the press comes to us. Every day they cull  facts, set up
interviews, make press packets."

One on-campus publicity person made posters every day,  printed up the
daily schedule, reviewed all the literature  on the 24-hour-a-day
information table and decided what new  literature was needed.

One person checked the e-mail and sent out daily updates  every day.
"We've been getting e-mail from every corner of  the earth," Ray said.
About nine people worked with a  "webmaster" to update the occupation
Web site at  www.livingwagenow.org around the clock.

The tabling crew worked shifts day and night. The tables  were filled
with literature and staffed to answer questions.  Huge easels near the
table served as sign-up locations for  much-needed tasks. "At night,"
Ray stressed, "the tabling  crew serves as security. Especially early
on we were afraid  the police could bust us up in the middle of the
night."

Direct action teams dressed up to crash university events  with
informational leaflets.

The literature committee translated all the information into  Spanish,
Haitian Creole and Portuguese for the Harvard  workers.

The music people worried about the sound system and what  equipment the
many musicians who entertained all hours of  the day and evening
needed. Skits attracted crowds on  Cambridge streets and in the campus
dining halls.

The tent department scouted for more housing and equipment.

Who stepped forward to do all this work?

Ray thought about it for a moment. "We're heavy on women. It  has been
a lot of Jewish and South Asian students. I'd say  everyone is kind of
queer-identified. Maybe I'm  exaggerating; we have a strong contingent
of queer- identified people on the outside.

"It's honestly a diverse and talented community that's come  out of
this," Ray concluded.

- END -

(Copyright Workers World Service: Everyone is permitted to  copy and
distribute verbatim copies of this document, but  changing it is not
allowed. For more information contact  Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY,
NY 10011; via e-mail:  [EMAIL PROTECTED] For subscription info send
message to:  [EMAIL PROTECTED] Web: http://www.workers.org) " JC 



Cuba SI - Imperialism NO!
Socialism or death! Patria o muerte! Venceremos!
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