by Ron Jacobs
While I was at the University of Maryland during the 1974-1975 academic
year one of the projects among the leftist counterculture community was
supporting a group of students who wanted to start a food co-op on
campus. These folks were constantly being threatened by an
administration that had sold its soul to big business years before. In
this particular instance, the co-op workers had been arrested twice for
selling food in front of the student union without a permit.
Of course the reason they were selling without a permit was because the
school wouldn't give them one because it violated the standard
exclusive contract that the Marriot Corporation had with the
University. So, the University sent its cops out to cuff a bunch of
hippies selling sandwiches. Such obvious corporate buttkissing
eventually worked against the school and, after a spring of
demonstrations and arrests, the trustees changed the food service
contract, and allowed the co-op to operate legally, even giving it a
room in the Student Union building and some money to bring their
operation up to code.
Later on that year while the co-op struggle languished in officialdom,
our cadre of the Revolutionary Student Brigade (RSB) set up a human
blockade around a pair of Marines who were attempting to recruit a few
good men from the campus. This was the first time since before the
Cambodia/Kent State riots in 1970 that any type of military recruitment
had been attempted on the University of Maryland campus. Our goal was
to make them leave. Every day at noon a bunch of antiwar types would
sit down in front of the Marines' table in front of the Student Union
building and link arms. Eventually there would be between fifty and a
hundred folks completely surrounding the table. The Marines just stood
there at attention, but occasionally right wing students, usually big
white guys, would charge through the crowd. It wasn't that they wanted
to join the Marines --they just wanted to kick some commie butt. From
what I remember, the only butt they kicked belonged to a woman with
real long hair who attended RSB meetings. One afternoon, she threw her
ninety-pound body in front of some guy who thought he was running
through the defensive front line of the Washington Redskins football
team and he trampled her. She ended up with some badly bruised ribs and
a charge of assault. He ended up feeling like a man.
After this incident the University had the Marines move inside the
Student Union building to a room that was towards the back of the
building. They left the campus when nobody cared enough to find them.
Before that occurred, however, two of our cadre members from off-campus
were arrested on trespassing charges for sitting inside the room where
the Marines were. The rest of our cadre and some supporters took over
one of the dean's offices and held it until they were released.
One of our other projects was helping to bring down the Shah of Iran- a
brutal dictator who was owned lock, stock and barrel by the CIA and the
oil companies. His secret police ñ the SAVAK ñ were notorious for the
regime of fear they had created in Iran and amongst Iranians around the
globe. Lots of Iranian youth studied in the United States, and the DC
area certainly had its share. I was one of the liaisons to the Iranian
Students Organization (ISA). We spent several afternoons together at a
crowded office in downtown DC taking part in meetings planning for the
upcoming visit to DC by the shah. In return for our support, local ISA
members attending the University of Maryland helped us out as much as
possible. Once when we were picketing the Administration building over
a planned budget cut aimed at the Ethnic Studies department, two
Iranian guys driving a black Mercedes pulled up on the sidewalk, jumped
out of the car and attacked our Iranian friend whom I'll call Rashif.
They almost had him in the car before we realized that they were
probably part of the Shah's secret police (SAVAK) and trying to kidnap
him.
After a bit of a struggle, we managed to rescue him. Rashif was a very
dedicated Marxist revolutionary and took it all in stride. It was his
instruction that helped me to understand some of the finer nuances of
Lenin's treatise on imperialism. After the attack, he disappeared for a
couple weeks and then reappeared. After the Iranian revolution I heard
that he had returned to Iran. For all I know, Khomeini's soldiers
killed him.
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