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Broadway • 344-1091 ‘(Close to Campus) UNIVERSITY Student arouD’s founder still learning By Christopher Blair t meiaid Managing Ediioi In ]'M>7. |t‘Mis Estrada would have been perfectly satisfied working as a mechanic ' W here I was coming from I had renc her! all my goals." said Estrada, now working on Ins doctorate in education at the University "I was working I t <>11 Id wear a uniform that they provided I wasn't working in the fields; that was a big deal When he was growing up in the 1 'Kills. Estrada's family worked as migrant farm lalmr ers. which kept them on the move from stale to state Along the way. school records got lost Estrada's parents could not speak English well enough to vouc h for his academic skills, and he was being held back at new schools In 1‘)ti7. tH years old and in the ninth grade. Estrada quit si hiKil He had worked in a gas station in his home of Weiser. Idaho, and wanted to get his (General Education Diploma to qualify for w ork on < ars Estrada came to I fie Universi tv that summer as a parti< ipanl in the firsi vear of the High School Equivalency program, still thinking of being a me chanic Hut by the time fie left the University in I‘i7l. Estrada had been elected to the Student Senate, founded the Chicano Student Union (now known as MEUhA). and helped Ins fellow HEP students as a student teai her "It was a radical thing lor me." he said "I had dropped out of school 1 hated teachers There was no one in the world I hated worse than teachers Estrada said that during his time at the University, he real ized that it wasn't all teachers Jesus Kstrada In- disagreed with, hut those who "weren't student-cen tered." or who came from rac ist or elitist backgrounds and couldn't understand the needs of individual students In the years since he first arrived in Kugene. Kstrada earned his master's in bilingual education from the University, and worker! as a teacher and counselor in Portland. Salem and Woodburn often with stu dents ol migrant families He also served on the st bool board in Salem HKP students in the pro gram's first \e.ir were given three terms to earn their UKI). something Kstrada accom plished m one It gave him the opportunity to take University classes and see the campus Hispanic and t'hicano stu dents were being asked as indi viduals about their opinions on social issues, making the CSU nee essar\ . Kstrada said "We found that we were go ing to have to get our thoughts together if we were going to represent the t'hicano commu nity." he said. Estrada went before the ln< i dental Foe Committee for mon ey for the group, and was granted not only operating funds, but an office, which now is occupied hv the Hree/.e vvny ('.afe In the CSU's first year, it brought farmworker advocate Cesar Chavez to campus and helped organized a Poor Peo ples' March from Eugene to Sa lem. In the early 70s, the group became a chapter in the nation al student group Movimiento Edstudiantil Chi can os de Aztlan. and remains a MKChA group today. Through his years as a teach er and a student. Estrada has worked on ways to better teach students who are floundering iti this country's educational system, lie said part of the problem is the use of and belief in the term "at-risk youth." "I think it's an at-risk insti tution.’ " he said. "They do not deal with student needs I think that's extended to the up per-middle class white student, too. now. because they're 'mak ing the decision to leave ' "It's tunny tor the minority student, because they 'drop out For upper-middle class students, they 'make the deci sion to leave ' The point is. the system is not meeting the needs of the students ' Estrada said his school was simply not meeting his needs, and that he's glad he dropped out H\ the time his ( lass had graduated high school. Estrada had two and a half years of col lege credit. "it was an opportunity I'm grateful for," he said. "The movement of ( hange in the 'GOs was real helpful in providing a lot of opportunities, a lot ol awareness, to everyone." The Class Act on Campus Bhflicniiock^ If you knew what they felt like, you’d be wearing them now. » h r I i r k r n « I u i k Arizona 342-6107 Mon-Sat 9-6 Sun 12-5 BUILD YOUR BODY! 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