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Grapes Bring Activism Back

NEWS ANALYSIS

For many members of the Harvard community, the most significant outcome of the controversy surrounding the grape referendum has nothing to do with the bite-size fruit.

Yesterday's vote, which will decide the fate of grapes in dining halls, followed weeks of debate between boycott advocates and those who oppose the moratorium on the fruit.

Adam R. Kovacevich '99, whose family owns a grape farm in Bakersfield, Calif., has been a leader of the pro-grape faction.

He founded the Grape Coalition, an ad hoc committee, to inform students about labor conditions and environmental standards in grape cultivation, issues which have been attacked by boycott supporters.

The boycott defenders included campus groups such as RAZA, a Mexican-American/Chicano/Latino student organization; the Progressive Student Labor Movement; and UNITE, an umbrella organization for undergraduate activists.

Students on both sides of the issue said they are amazed by the character of the grape debate. Many said they believe that the controversy may have set a precedent for activism by Harvard conservatives against liberal causes.

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"I was really surprised that [anti-boycott students] were out there writing to The Crimson, putting up posters and all the other things they did," said RAZA President Gonzalo Martinez '98. "I was taken aback by the loud advocacy of conservative grape-eaters."

Traditionally hushed conservatives on campus mobilized the Grape Coalition to end the boycott.

They rallied support for the pro-grape cause by postering and demonstrating--tactics generally associated with progressive activism, Martinez said.

"Conservatives are usually quiet," said Noah Z. Seton '00, president of the Harvard-Radcliffe Republican Alliance. "But the more acclimated people get to the idea of active conservatives, the more active conservatives they're going to see."

The desire to see their positions victorious spurred representatives from both the pro-and anti-boycott factions to conduct active campaigns.

Sergio J. Campos '00, a member of RAZA, said the emotional build-up-leading up to the referendum stood out in a climate that is biased "against blatant activism."

"Things like this don't happen very often here," Campos said. "I'd never picture those guys [in the Grape Coalition] as activist types."

Undergraduate Council President Lamelle D. Rawlins '99 said she endorsed the multi-sided nature of the grape discussion.

"This is a progressive campus," Rawlins said. "Conservative views are unpopular, so they tend to be more subtly expressed."

Kovacevich described his experience defending a cause that is considered anti-progressive.

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