WHERE TO OET AN BOOB N o w & J T h e n FROM THE LOWER LEU CORNER Continued -fcom p y e We’ve got some 'real news' for our readers this month, 'real' meaning stuf f you won't read anywhere else. The subject in this case is Leonard Peltier. Our regular readers know him well, but new folks might be reminded. Leonard is a Sioux prisoner of war in the ongoing fight against the first folks. Those folks who owned the land we now live on. He was convicted of killing an FBI agent while trying to defend his people. He is, of course, in prison. He has been in prison for over twenty-five years. The news is that every once in a while they go through a ritual at the prison where he has been held and talk about whether he has paid his 'debt to society'. We were informed that the folks who denied him his freedom, once again, told him that the widow of the FBI agent who was killed said that she wanted him to die in prison. They also said that though there was no actual proof that he committed the enme, someone had to pay. No, his lawyer, Ramsey Clark, former Attorney General, was not permitted to be there, and no, he wasn't really surprised at the decision. Some are people, some are not. If the people of Indonesia can change things, and the people of South Africa, Ireland, and Bosnia, and hopefully Israel, can find ways to peace, understanding, and forgiveness, why can't America? Just a thought. ) : OREGON New Location 425 Coast Hwy SW Newport, Oregon 97365 541-574-6004 * 800-668-6105 Events • Authors • D eli Espresso • Wine ¡£ ) The Writers' Block on KMUN 91.9 FM/ÄÄwät 'U/eehuaelatfi a t 1 fun X* I have made mistakes but I have never made the mistake of claiming that I never made one. - James Gordon Bennett Bitter Struggle, Sweet Harvest Victoria Stoppiello Straw berry picking was my first paid employment when I was a kid growing up in western Oregon. Sometimes we were wet and muddy, sometimes sun­ drenched and warm, but always (here was the least at hand, the big one that I couldn't resist. As a l()-ycar-old, deferred gratification wasn’ t my forte. Besides, I wasn’ t desperate for money M y family provided all my basic needs. The one straw berry patch near our tow n on the lower Columbia was the only place we kids could get work, so we rose early, caught the stake-sided flatbed truck at daw n and rode to the fields, clutching our lunches in brow n paper bags. We received 27 cents a carrier for our w ork, six one-pint boxes. Wc would have accepted this with good grace except that the field bosses were always grouchy and the farm cheated us. At least that’s what we thought. Wc weren’t paid by weight, but by the earner and their policy w as no credit for our boxes unless they w ere overflowing. Then they’d punch our ticket, but as wc walked away, the lady in the booth would scrape ihc lops o ff our boxes into empty flats. It made sense, o f course, because when the flats were stacked for transport, the overflow would have been smashed Wc saw this, commented to each other, and resentment grew. It just didn’t seem lair. Even as kids wc were astute enough to figure out the farmer would be paid by weight and the only reason for this behavior was to pay us less, 20 or 25 percent less. Then another farmer opened a new field, farther away, but w ith sev eral enticements: 30 cents a carrier, a bonus for pickers w ho stayed throughout the harvest, and an end- ol-the-season parly. The people were nice, itx>. It was a pleasure to w ork for them, and poetic justice to leav e the other farmer in the lurch. In fact, soon no one went to work at the old place. Rumors moved through the grapev ine that they were scraping bottom to get pickers, calling in all their relatives, even matching the new farmer's pay . But still nobody went. The following year, they tried again, but soon they were out o f business. We pickers, mostly kids and a few deft old ladies, had laid them in the weeds. Now kiifc aren’t allowed to pick bemes The law purports to protect kick from child labor, but I believe i t ’s because the authorities don’t want kick exposed to the pesticides that arc pul on crops novvadiys. Others, far more desperate than we were, older and much harder working, arc bnnging in the strawberries. Mostly Mexican immigiants, they, like immigrant groups before, attempt to pry open the d x ir o f Amcncan opportunity w ith back-breaking labor. In the Pacific Northwest, berry pickers have been try ing to organize to improve pay and working conditions, including things like toilet facilities in the fields. (When I was a kid at least there were outhouses.) Last year, one o f the growers tixvk an extreme measure in response to organizing efforts. Police were brought in to remove a union organizer unless a written inv nation could be produced. The intention was to lire the picker who had sent the inv nation; instead the pickers as a group look responsibility. In retaliation, the growci plowed under the field of ripe berries and turned the workers out o f their temporary homes. The strawberry industry is being polarized into big farms in California and small, select berry farms in the Northwest. The Northwest berries arc supenor in flavor, but the California berries have been bred to travel and hold up better in the stores. Soon the only really tasty berries you’ll be able to gel w ill be front your ovv n yard or from a few specialty growers. It isn’ t easy for a small farmer Io operate in this context. But, it alsodiKsn’ l seem right to take it out on the pickers. Maybe it’ s easier because they look different and speak a foreign language. There is a ray o f hope, however. This March 31, Scott Frost, the owner o f Nature's Fountain Farm, a transitional organic berry farm in the Willamette Valley, signed a contract with the Oregon farmvv orkcr union, PCUN. Frost was quoted as hoping to create a working mcxicl o f labor and ownership working together for change and grow th. One more reason to buy organically grown berries. When we kids harvested the crops, our work touched every part o f the community. A ll the kids in town, well o ff or not, picked bemes. When w c w ere disgruntled w ith our working conditions, our families knew it. The justice o f our cause seeped like w ater through every inch o f the community . Boycotting a grower was easy because the community as a whole understood and supported us. My grandmother was also a berry picker. She immigrated here at the age o f five and was bilingual in English and Finnish. I have photos o f her and other women out in the bogs with old-fashioned cranberry scoops. My dad mentioned once that she used to “ talk for the cranberry ladies.” I wonder, what would she say now? Cannon Beach Jupiter's Rare and Used Books. Osburn's Grocery. The Cookie Co.. Coffee Cabana. Bill's Tavern. Cannon Beach Book Co.. Hanes Bakerie. The Bistro. Midtown Cafe. Once Upon a Breeze Copies & Fax. Heather's. The Homegrown Café. Haystack Video. Mariner Market. Espresso Bean. Exo la Square A Cleanline Surf Manzanita Mother Natures Juice Bar. Bavside Gardens. Cassandra's. Manzanita News A Espresso. A Nehalem Bay Video Nehalem Mermaid Cale Rockaway Sharkey's Tillamook. Rainy Day Books Bay C ity Art Space Yachats By-the Sea Books Pacific C ity The River House. Far Country Books. A Village Merchants Ooeanslde Ocean Side Espresso Lincoln C ity Trillium Natural Foods. Driftwood Library. A Lighthouse Brewpub Depoe Bay Oregon Books Newport Oceana Natural Foods. Café DIVA. Cosmo Café. Bookmark Café. Newport Bay Coffee Co.. Cuppatunes. Bay Latté. Ocean Pulse Surf Shop. 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Key Largo. La Pattlsaerle. Lewis A Clark College. Locals Only. Marco's Pizza. Marylhurst College. Mt. Hood Cc. Music Millenium. Nature's (two locational. NW Natural Gas. OHSU Medical School. Old Wives Tales. Ozone Records. Papa Haydn. PCC (four locations!. PSU (two locational. Reed College. Third Eye. TranaCentral Library. A YWCA Cornelius: The Weekend Garden Market The Dalles Kllndts Bookseller Hood R iver Purple Rocks Art Bar A Café Ashland: Garo's Java House. The Black Sheep, Blue Mt. Café. A Rogue River Brewery Cave Junction. Coffee Heaven A Kerby Community Market Grants Psss: The Book Shop (Out o f Oregon) Vancouver, WA: The Den Longview. WA. The Broadway Gallery. A Carat Patch Long Beach. WA: Pacific Picnics Naselle, W A Rainy Day Artistry Nahcotta. WA Moby Dick Hotel Duvall. WA Duvall Books Bainbridge Island, WA Eagle Harbor Book Co Seattle, WA Elliot Bay B ook Co.. Honey Bear Bakery. New Orleans Restaurant. Still Life In Fremont. Allegro Coffeehouse. The Last Exit Coffee House. A Bulldog News San Francisco, C A City Lights Bookstore Denver, Co: Denver Folklore Center New York, NY The Strand Book Company I Washington, D.C.: Hotel Tabard Inn_______________________ What this country needs is more free speech worth listening to. - Hansell B. Duckett Edito r/P u blish er/Jan ito r: The Beloved Reverend Billy Lloyd Hulls Graphics Editor: The Humble Ms. Sally Louise Lackaff Copy Editor/Science E ditor/Volce of Reason/Uncle Mike/etc.: Michael Burgess W ild life In fo rm an t/M u sic Reporter at Large: Peter "Spud" Siegel Education E d ito r Peter Lindsey Im p ro visatio nal Engineer: Dr. Karkeys Paste/ProductionZProof Reader: Myma Uhlig Bass P lay er Bill Uhlig Poetry Editor: John Buckley Political Consultant: Kathleen Krushas History E d ito r Douglas Deur Environm ental News: Kim BossC Lower Left Beat: Victoria Stoppiello M r. Baseball: Jeff Larson Local C o lo u r Ron Logan June's G arden: June Kroft W E B Builder: L iz Lynch W E B Ad Sales: Virginia Bruce Essential Services: Ginni Callahan Ad Sales: Katherine Mace M a jo r Distribution: Ambling Bear Distribution Assistant W h ite Space C oordinator: Karen Brown And A Cast O f Thousands!! Advertising rates: Business Card Size Ad $30. 1/16th approx. 3 x 5 S35. l/8th approx 4 x 7 $50. 1 A4th approx. 6 1/2 x 9 $100. 1/2 page $L50. Full page $300. Back page $400. . .. per month. Payment is due the 15th of the month prior to the issue in which the ad is to appear. Camera ready art is requested. We are usually on the streets by the first weekend of the month. P A C IF IC M E D IA T IO N A S S O C IA T E S • P A C IF IC M E D IA T IO N D is p u te s ? C o n flic ts ? C o m m u n ic a tio n P ro b le m s ? T R Y M E D IA T IO N • E conom ical • C ooperative C onstructive • C onfidential P acific M ediation A ssociates (5 0 3 ) 7 17 -1 1 72 P A C IF IC M E D IA T IO N A S S O C IA T E S > o o s o J> > to in O O • P A C IF IC M E D IA T IO N Nine-tenths of the people were created so you would want to be with the other tenth. - Horace Walpole DUANt JOHNSOM KLM ESTATE „ ... U Í' •- a F ",//i F or A ll V our R eal E state N eeds Victoria Stoppiello is a writer and thinker living in Ilwaco, at the lower left corner o f Washington state. J M oby H otel & Oi ter F arm IT'S DINNERTIME! mm lut ldg , .¿ H T ’"Si fiftT-ïoUKNALISn floMTHW IN SURFONT OF v T he A m > LMVIKONMENT AMD K.ATI0ML DlAkO&UU I AOBo« I2Z2 C annon B each , OR 777/0 50J-*3i- 1115 6lLU1 HULTS, LOtTOA. kkulti iSFK.R«r tom J$fSp M a t u r in g - ^ T e a UITIOWAL < E clectic 1 GRAPHIC A \ T t, I L L U S T R A T I O N m ™ O A v v i L. L a c k a f f po 6«. 1012 A jtoma , OR 77703 50J-33»-03ii Jiie. U PPER. L I F T L O & L is now offering , C- nail Access, .W i TH A BLACH C oaputerless web S ite C onstruction , ano B anner A rts FAdENOt?/ATTITUDE. wjw ua^leftalae com July I - L abor Day Thursday - Monday 5:30 - 8:30 PM Moby Dick will be cookin' this summer with a rising young star o f a chef, A llen Routl Between July I*1 and / f t s UPPE-R. LEFT Eb&E. 7 UNE 4 ? « i U Labor Day experience C h e f Routt’s personal style with the freshest o f our local and regional ingredients With a career that has taken him through some o f the U S A ’s best restaurants and his ambition, this w ill be a culinary experience you'll never forget' ( neither w ill M ob y') limited »eating reservation« only (3 6 0 >665-4543 Located in Nahcotta. W A On Sandridgc Road just south of Bay Ave •i iCtf K LM I STREET, folÛVANA W K P.O. 2 é BOX CANNON BEACH OR’-