Randy Carter is a member of the Director's Guild of America and has notched some significant credits during his Hollywood career. Administrative assistant on The Conversation. Part of the casting department for Apocalypse Now. Longtime first assistant director on Seinfeld. Work on The Blues Brothers, The Godfather II and more.
But the one project that Carter regrets never working on is a script he wrote that got optioned twice but was never produced. It's about the summer a then-17-year-old Carter and thousands of American teenage boys heeded the call of the federal government ... to work on farms.
The year was 1965. On Cinco de Mayo, newspapers across the country reported that Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz wanted to recruit 20,000 high schoolers to replace the hundreds of thousands of Mexican agricultural workers who had labored in the United States under the so-called Bracero Program. Started in World War II, the program was anagreement between the American and Mexican governments that brought Mexican men to pick harvests across the U.S. It ended in 1964, after years of accusations by civil rights activists like Cesar Chavez that migrants suffered wage theft and terrible working and living conditions.
But farmers complained — in words that echo today's headlines — that Mexican laborers did the jobs that Americans didn't want to do, and that the end of the Bracero Program meant that crops would rot in the fields.
Wirtz cited this labor shortage and a lack of summer jobs for high schoolers as reason enough for the program. But he didn't want just any band geek or nerd — he wanted jocks.
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"They can do the work," Wirtz said at a press conference in Washington, D.C., announcing the creation of the project, called A-TEAM — Athletes in Temporary Employment as Agricultural Manpower. "They are entitled to a chance at it." Standing besides him to lend gravitas were future Baseball Hall of Famers Stan Musial and Warren Spahn and future Pro Football Hall of Famer Jim Brown.
Over the ensuing weeks, the Department of Labor, the Department of Agriculture, and the President's Council on Physical Fitness bought ads on radio and in magazines to try to lure lettermen. "Farm Work Builds Men!" screamed one such promotion, which featured 1964 Heisman Trophy winner John Huarte.
Local newspapers across the country showcased their local A-TEAM with pride as they left for the summer. The Courier of Waterloo, Iowa, for instance, ran a photo of beaming, bespectacled but scrawny boys boarding a bus for Salinas, where strawberries and asparagus awaited their smooth hands. "A teacher-coach from [the nearby town of] Cresco will serve as adviser to all 31," students, the Courier reassured its readers.
But the national press was immediately skeptical. "Dealing with crops which grow close to the ground requires a good deal stronger motive" than money or the prospects of a good workout, argued a Detroit Free Press editorial. "Like, for instance, gnawing hunger."
Despite such skepticism,Wirtz's scheme seemed to work at first: About 18,100 teenagers signed up to join the A-TEAM. But only about 3,300 of them ever got to pick crops.
One of them was Carter.
He was a junior at the now-closed University of San Diego High School, an all-boys Catholic school in Southern California. About 25 of his classmates decided to sign up for the A-TEAM because, as he recalls with a laugh more than 50 years later, "We thought, 'I'm not doing anything else this summer, so why not?' "
Funny enough, Carter says none of the recruits from his school — himself included — were actually athletes:"The football coach told [the sportsters], 'You're not going. We've got two-a-day practices — you're not going to go pick strawberries."
Students from across the country began showing up on farms in Texas and California at the beginning of June. Carter and his classmates were assigned to pick cantaloupes near Blythe, a small town on the Colorado River in the middle of California's Colorado Desert.
He remembers the first day vividly. Work started before dawn, the better to avoid the unforgiving desert sun to come. "The wind is in your hair, and you don't think it's bad," Carter says. "Then you go out in the field, and the first ray of sun comes over the horizon. The first ray. Everyone looked at each other, and said, 'What did we do?' The thermometer went up like in a Bugs Bunny cartoon. By 9 a.m., it was 110 degrees."
The migrant labor barracks where Randy Carter and his high school classmates lived during the summer of 1965 were still standing in 1992, when Carter took this photo. Carter says the barracks had no insulation and no air conditioning, with "nighttime temperatures in the 90s." (Randy Carter)
Garden gloves that the farmers gave the students to help them harvest lasted onlyfour hours, because the cantaloupe's fine hairs made grabbing them feel like "picking up sandpaper." They got paid minimum wage — $1.40 an hour back then — plus 5 cents for every crate filled with about 30 to 36 fruits. Breakfast was "out of the Navy," Carter says — beans and eggs and bologna sandwiches that literally toasted in the heat, even in the shade.
The University High crew worked six days a week, with Sundays off, and theywere not allowed to return home during their stint. The farmers sheltered them in "any kind of defunct housing," according to Carter — old Army barracks, rooms made from discarded wood, and even buildings used to intern Japanese-Americans during World War II.
Problems arose immediately for the A-TEAM nationwide. In California's Salinas Valley, 200 teenagers from New Mexico, Kansas and Wyoming quit after just two weeks on the job. "We worked three days and all of us are broke," the Associated Press quoted one teen as saying. Students elsewhere staged strikes. At the end, the A-TEAM was considered a giant failure and was never tried again.
This experiment quickly disappeared into the proverbial dustbin of history. In fact, when Stony Brook University history professor Lori A. Flores did research for what became her award-winning 2016 book, Grounds for Dreaming: Mexican Americans, Mexican Immigrants, and the California Farmworker Movement, she discovered the controversy for the first time. Until then, the only time she had heard of any A-TEAM, she now says with a laugh, "was the TV show."
Flores thinks the program deserves more attention from historians and the public alike.
"These [high school students] had the words and whiteness to say what they were feeling and could act out in a way that Mexican-Americans who had been living this way for decades simply didn't have the power or space for the American public to listen to them," she says. "The students dropped out because the conditions were so atrocious, and the growers weren't able to mask that up."
She says the A-TEAM "reveals a very important reality: It's not about work ethic [for undocumented workers]. It's about [the fact] that this labor is not meant to be done under such bad conditions and bad wages."
Carter agrees.
"If we took a vote that first day, we would've left," he says of his friends. "But it literally became a thing of pride. We weren't going to be fired, and we weren't going to quit. We were going to finish it."
The students tried to make the most of their summer. On their Sundays off, they would swim in irrigation canals or hitchhike into downtown Blythe and try to get cowboys to buy them a six-pack of beer. Each high school team was supposed to have a college-age chaperone, but Carter said theirs would "be there for a day, and then disappear to go to Mexico or surfing."
Carter and his classmates still talk about their A-TEAM days at every class reunion. "We went through something that you can't explain to anyone, unless you were out there in that friggin' heat," the 70-year-old says. "It could only be lived."
But he says the experience also taught them empathy toward immigrant workersthat Carter says the rest of the country should learn, especially during these times.
"There's nothing you can say to us that [migrant laborers] are rapists or they're lazy," he says. "We know the work they do. And they do it all their lives, not just one summer for a couple of months. And they raise their families on it. Anyone ever talks bad on them, I always think, 'Keep talking, buddy, because I know what the real deal is.' "
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Gustavo Arellano is the author of Taco USA: How Mexican Food Conquered America, and a longtime guest on NPR's "Barbershop" segment on Weekend All Things Considered.
Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.
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"content": "\u003cp>Randy Carter is a member of the Director's Guild of America and has notched some significant credits during his Hollywood career. Administrative assistant on \u003cem>The Conversation. \u003c/em>Part of the casting department for \u003cem>Apocalypse Now\u003c/em>. Longtime first assistant director on \u003cem>Seinfeld\u003c/em>. Work on \u003cem>The Blues Brothers\u003c/em>, \u003cem>The Godfather II\u003c/em> and more.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>But the one project that Carter regrets never working on is a script he wrote that got optioned twice but was never produced. It's about the summer a then-17-year-old Carter and thousands of American teenage boys heeded the call of the federal government ... to work on farms.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>The year was 1965. On Cinco de Mayo, newspapers across the country reported that Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz wanted to recruit 20,000 high schoolers to replace the hundreds of thousands of Mexican agricultural workers who had labored in the United States under the so-called \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2018/07/31/634442195/when-the-u-s-government-tried-to-replace-migrant-farmworkers-with-high-schoolers?live=1\">Bracero Program\u003c/a>. Started in World War II, the program was an\u003cstrong> \u003c/strong>agreement between the American and Mexican governments that brought Mexican men to pick harvests across the U.S. It ended in 1964, after years of accusations by \u003ca href=\"https://ufw.org/Cesar-Chavez-and-UFW-longtime-champions-of-immigration-reform/\">civil rights activists like Cesar Chavez\u003c/a> that migrants suffered wage theft and terrible working and living conditions.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>But farmers complained — in words that echo today's headlines — that Mexican laborers did the jobs that Americans didn't want to do, and that the end of the Bracero Program meant that crops would rot in the fields.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Wirtz cited this labor shortage and a lack of summer jobs for high schoolers as reason enough for the program. But he didn't want just any band geek or nerd — he wanted jocks.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>[ad fullwidth]\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\"They can do the work,\" Wirtz said at a press conference in Washington, D.C., announcing the creation of the project, called A-TEAM — Athletes in Temporary Employment as Agricultural Manpower. \"They are entitled to a chance at it.\" Standing besides him to lend gravitas were future Baseball Hall of Famers Stan Musial and Warren Spahn and future Pro Football Hall of Famer Jim Brown.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Over the ensuing weeks, the Department of Labor, the Department of Agriculture, and the President's Council on Physical Fitness bought ads on radio and in magazines to try to lure lettermen. \"Farm Work Builds Men!\" screamed one such promotion, which featured 1964 Heisman Trophy winner John Huarte.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Local newspapers across the country showcased their local A-TEAM with pride as they left for the summer. \u003cem>The Courier\u003c/em> of Waterloo, Iowa, for instance, ran a photo of beaming, bespectacled but scrawny boys boarding a bus for Salinas, where strawberries and asparagus awaited their smooth hands. \"A teacher-coach from [the nearby town of] Cresco will serve as adviser to all 31,\" students, the \u003cem>Courier\u003c/em> reassured its readers.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>But the national press was immediately skeptical. \"Dealing with crops which grow close to the ground requires a good deal stronger motive\" than money or the prospects of a good workout, argued a \u003cem>Detroit Free Press\u003c/em> editorial. \"Like, for instance, gnawing hunger.\"\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Despite such skepticism,\u003cstrong> \u003c/strong>Wirtz's scheme seemed to work at first: About 18,100 teenagers signed up to join the A-TEAM. But only about 3,300 of them ever got to pick crops.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>One of them was Carter.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>He was a junior at the now-closed University of San Diego High School, an all-boys Catholic school in Southern California. About 25 of his classmates decided to sign up for the A-TEAM because, as he recalls with a laugh more than 50 years later, \"We thought, 'I'm not doing anything else this summer, so why not?' \"\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Funny enough, Carter says none of the recruits from his school — himself included — were actually athletes:\u003cstrong> \u003c/strong>\"The football coach told [the sportsters], 'You're not going. We've got two-a-day practices — you're not going to go pick strawberries.\"\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Students from across the country began showing up on farms in Texas and California at the beginning of June. Carter and his classmates were assigned to pick cantaloupes near Blythe, a small town on the Colorado River in the middle of California's Colorado Desert.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>He remembers the first day vividly. Work started before dawn, the better to avoid the unforgiving desert sun to come. \"The wind is in your hair, and you don't think it's bad,\" Carter says. \"Then you go out in the field, and the first ray of sun comes over the horizon. \u003cem>The first ray\u003c/em>. Everyone looked at each other, and said, 'What did we do?' The thermometer went up like in a Bugs Bunny cartoon. By 9 a.m., it was 110 degrees.\"\u003c/p>\n\u003cfigure id=\"attachment_130146\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\" style=\"max-width: 800px\">\u003cimg src=\"https://ww2.kqed.org/bayareabites/wp-content/uploads/sites/24/2018/08/migrant-labor-barracks.jpeg\" alt='The migrant labor barracks where Randy Carter and his high school classmates lived during the summer of 1965 were still standing in 1992, when Carter took this photo. Carter says the barracks had no insulation and no air conditioning, with \"nighttime temperatures in the 90s.\"' width=\"800\" height=\"549\" class=\"size-full wp-image-130146\" srcset=\"https://ww2.kqed.org/app/uploads/sites/24/2018/08/migrant-labor-barracks.jpeg 800w, https://ww2.kqed.org/app/uploads/sites/24/2018/08/migrant-labor-barracks-160x110.jpeg 160w, https://ww2.kqed.org/app/uploads/sites/24/2018/08/migrant-labor-barracks-768x527.jpeg 768w, https://ww2.kqed.org/app/uploads/sites/24/2018/08/migrant-labor-barracks-240x165.jpeg 240w, https://ww2.kqed.org/app/uploads/sites/24/2018/08/migrant-labor-barracks-375x257.jpeg 375w, https://ww2.kqed.org/app/uploads/sites/24/2018/08/migrant-labor-barracks-520x357.jpeg 520w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 800px) 100vw, 800px\">\u003cfigcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\">The migrant labor barracks where Randy Carter and his high school classmates lived during the summer of 1965 were still standing in 1992, when Carter took this photo. Carter says the barracks had no insulation and no air conditioning, with \"nighttime temperatures in the 90s.\" \u003ccite>(Randy Carter)\u003c/cite>\u003c/figcaption>\u003c/figure>\n\u003cp>Garden gloves that the farmers gave the students to help them harvest lasted only\u003cstrong> \u003c/strong>four hours\u003cstrong>,\u003c/strong> because the cantaloupe's fine hairs made grabbing them feel like \"picking up sandpaper.\" They got paid minimum wage — $1.40 an hour back then — plus 5 cents for every crate filled with about 30 to 36 fruits. Breakfast was \"out of the Navy,\" Carter says — beans and eggs and bologna sandwiches that literally toasted in the heat, even in the shade.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>The University High crew worked six days a week, with Sundays off, and they\u003cstrong> \u003c/strong>were not allowed to return home during their stint. The farmers sheltered them in \"any kind of defunct housing,\" according to Carter — old Army barracks, rooms made from discarded wood, and even buildings used to intern Japanese-Americans during World War II.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Problems arose immediately for the A-TEAM nationwide. In California's Salinas Valley, 200 teenagers from New Mexico, Kansas and Wyoming quit after just two weeks on the job. \"We worked three days and all of us are broke,\" the Associated Press quoted one teen as saying. Students elsewhere staged strikes. At the end, the A-TEAM was considered a giant failure and was never tried again.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>This experiment quickly disappeared into the proverbial dustbin of history. In fact, when Stony Brook University history professor \u003ca href=\"https://www.stonybrook.edu/commcms/history/people/faculty/flores.html\">Lori A. Flores\u003c/a> did research for what became her award-winning 2016 book, \u003ca href=\"https://www.amazon.com/Grounds-Dreaming-Immigrants-California-Farmworker/dp/0300196962\">\u003cem>Grounds for Dreaming: Mexican Americans, Mexican Immigrants, and the California Farmworker Movement\u003c/em>\u003c/a>, she discovered the controversy for the first time. Until then, the only time she had heard of any A-TEAM, she now says with a laugh, \"was the TV show.\"\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Flores thinks the program deserves more attention from historians and the public alike.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\"These [high school students] had the words and whiteness to say what they were feeling and could act out in a way that Mexican-Americans who had been living this way for decades simply didn't have the power or space for the American public to listen to them,\" she says. \"The students dropped out because the conditions were so atrocious, and the growers weren't able to mask that up.\"\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>She says the A-TEAM \"reveals a very important reality: It's not about work ethic [for undocumented workers]. It's about [the fact] that this labor is not meant to be done under such bad conditions and bad wages.\"\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Carter agrees.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\"If we took a vote that first day, we would've left,\" he says of his friends. \"But it literally became a thing of pride. We weren't going to be fired, and we weren't going to quit. We were going to finish it.\"\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>The students tried to make the most of their summer. On their Sundays off, they would swim in irrigation canals or hitchhike into downtown Blythe and try to get cowboys to buy them a six-pack of beer. Each high school team was supposed to have a college-age chaperone, but Carter said theirs would \"be there for a day, and then disappear to go to Mexico or surfing.\"\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Carter and his classmates still talk about their A-TEAM days at every class reunion. \"We went through something that you can't explain to anyone, unless you were out there in that friggin' heat,\" the 70-year-old says. \"It could only be lived.\"\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>But he says the experience also taught them empathy toward immigrant workers\u003cstrong> \u003c/strong>that Carter says the rest of the country should learn, especially during these times.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\"There's nothing you can say to us that [migrant laborers] are rapists or they're lazy,\" he says. \"We know the work they do. And they do it all their lives, not just one summer for a couple of months. And they raise their families on it. Anyone ever talks bad on them, I always think, 'Keep talking, buddy, because I know what the real deal is.' \"\u003c/p>\n\u003chr>\n\u003cp>[ad floatright]\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cem>Gustavo Arellano is the author of \u003c/em>Taco USA: How Mexican Food Conquered America\u003cem>, and a longtime guest on NPR's \"Barbershop\" segment on \u003c/em>Weekend All Things Considered. \u003c/p>\n\u003cdiv class=\"fullattribution\">Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.\u003cimg src=\"https://www.google-analytics.com/__utm.gif?utmac=UA-5828686-4&utmdt=When+The+U.S.+Government+Tried+To+Replace+Migrant+Farmworkers+With+High+Schoolers&utme=8(APIKey)9(MDAxOTAwOTE4MDEyMTkxMDAzNjczZDljZA004)\">\u003c/div>\n\n",
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"content": "\u003cdiv class=\"post-body\">\u003cp>\u003cp>Randy Carter is a member of the Director's Guild of America and has notched some significant credits during his Hollywood career. Administrative assistant on \u003cem>The Conversation. \u003c/em>Part of the casting department for \u003cem>Apocalypse Now\u003c/em>. Longtime first assistant director on \u003cem>Seinfeld\u003c/em>. Work on \u003cem>The Blues Brothers\u003c/em>, \u003cem>The Godfather II\u003c/em> and more.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>But the one project that Carter regrets never working on is a script he wrote that got optioned twice but was never produced. It's about the summer a then-17-year-old Carter and thousands of American teenage boys heeded the call of the federal government ... to work on farms.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>The year was 1965. On Cinco de Mayo, newspapers across the country reported that Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz wanted to recruit 20,000 high schoolers to replace the hundreds of thousands of Mexican agricultural workers who had labored in the United States under the so-called \u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2018/07/31/634442195/when-the-u-s-government-tried-to-replace-migrant-farmworkers-with-high-schoolers?live=1\">Bracero Program\u003c/a>. Started in World War II, the program was an\u003cstrong> \u003c/strong>agreement between the American and Mexican governments that brought Mexican men to pick harvests across the U.S. It ended in 1964, after years of accusations by \u003ca href=\"https://ufw.org/Cesar-Chavez-and-UFW-longtime-champions-of-immigration-reform/\">civil rights activists like Cesar Chavez\u003c/a> that migrants suffered wage theft and terrible working and living conditions.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>But farmers complained — in words that echo today's headlines — that Mexican laborers did the jobs that Americans didn't want to do, and that the end of the Bracero Program meant that crops would rot in the fields.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Wirtz cited this labor shortage and a lack of summer jobs for high schoolers as reason enough for the program. But he didn't want just any band geek or nerd — he wanted jocks.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003c/p>\u003c/div>",
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"content": "\u003cdiv class=\"post-body\">\u003cp>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\"They can do the work,\" Wirtz said at a press conference in Washington, D.C., announcing the creation of the project, called A-TEAM — Athletes in Temporary Employment as Agricultural Manpower. \"They are entitled to a chance at it.\" Standing besides him to lend gravitas were future Baseball Hall of Famers Stan Musial and Warren Spahn and future Pro Football Hall of Famer Jim Brown.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Over the ensuing weeks, the Department of Labor, the Department of Agriculture, and the President's Council on Physical Fitness bought ads on radio and in magazines to try to lure lettermen. \"Farm Work Builds Men!\" screamed one such promotion, which featured 1964 Heisman Trophy winner John Huarte.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Local newspapers across the country showcased their local A-TEAM with pride as they left for the summer. \u003cem>The Courier\u003c/em> of Waterloo, Iowa, for instance, ran a photo of beaming, bespectacled but scrawny boys boarding a bus for Salinas, where strawberries and asparagus awaited their smooth hands. \"A teacher-coach from [the nearby town of] Cresco will serve as adviser to all 31,\" students, the \u003cem>Courier\u003c/em> reassured its readers.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>But the national press was immediately skeptical. \"Dealing with crops which grow close to the ground requires a good deal stronger motive\" than money or the prospects of a good workout, argued a \u003cem>Detroit Free Press\u003c/em> editorial. \"Like, for instance, gnawing hunger.\"\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Despite such skepticism,\u003cstrong> \u003c/strong>Wirtz's scheme seemed to work at first: About 18,100 teenagers signed up to join the A-TEAM. But only about 3,300 of them ever got to pick crops.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>One of them was Carter.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>He was a junior at the now-closed University of San Diego High School, an all-boys Catholic school in Southern California. About 25 of his classmates decided to sign up for the A-TEAM because, as he recalls with a laugh more than 50 years later, \"We thought, 'I'm not doing anything else this summer, so why not?' \"\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Funny enough, Carter says none of the recruits from his school — himself included — were actually athletes:\u003cstrong> \u003c/strong>\"The football coach told [the sportsters], 'You're not going. We've got two-a-day practices — you're not going to go pick strawberries.\"\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Students from across the country began showing up on farms in Texas and California at the beginning of June. Carter and his classmates were assigned to pick cantaloupes near Blythe, a small town on the Colorado River in the middle of California's Colorado Desert.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>He remembers the first day vividly. Work started before dawn, the better to avoid the unforgiving desert sun to come. \"The wind is in your hair, and you don't think it's bad,\" Carter says. \"Then you go out in the field, and the first ray of sun comes over the horizon. \u003cem>The first ray\u003c/em>. Everyone looked at each other, and said, 'What did we do?' The thermometer went up like in a Bugs Bunny cartoon. By 9 a.m., it was 110 degrees.\"\u003c/p>\n\u003cfigure id=\"attachment_130146\" class=\"wp-caption aligncenter\" style=\"max-width: 800px\">\u003cimg src=\"https://ww2.kqed.org/bayareabites/wp-content/uploads/sites/24/2018/08/migrant-labor-barracks.jpeg\" alt='The migrant labor barracks where Randy Carter and his high school classmates lived during the summer of 1965 were still standing in 1992, when Carter took this photo. Carter says the barracks had no insulation and no air conditioning, with \"nighttime temperatures in the 90s.\"' width=\"800\" height=\"549\" class=\"size-full wp-image-130146\" srcset=\"https://ww2.kqed.org/app/uploads/sites/24/2018/08/migrant-labor-barracks.jpeg 800w, https://ww2.kqed.org/app/uploads/sites/24/2018/08/migrant-labor-barracks-160x110.jpeg 160w, https://ww2.kqed.org/app/uploads/sites/24/2018/08/migrant-labor-barracks-768x527.jpeg 768w, https://ww2.kqed.org/app/uploads/sites/24/2018/08/migrant-labor-barracks-240x165.jpeg 240w, https://ww2.kqed.org/app/uploads/sites/24/2018/08/migrant-labor-barracks-375x257.jpeg 375w, https://ww2.kqed.org/app/uploads/sites/24/2018/08/migrant-labor-barracks-520x357.jpeg 520w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 800px) 100vw, 800px\">\u003cfigcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\">The migrant labor barracks where Randy Carter and his high school classmates lived during the summer of 1965 were still standing in 1992, when Carter took this photo. Carter says the barracks had no insulation and no air conditioning, with \"nighttime temperatures in the 90s.\" \u003ccite>(Randy Carter)\u003c/cite>\u003c/figcaption>\u003c/figure>\n\u003cp>Garden gloves that the farmers gave the students to help them harvest lasted only\u003cstrong> \u003c/strong>four hours\u003cstrong>,\u003c/strong> because the cantaloupe's fine hairs made grabbing them feel like \"picking up sandpaper.\" They got paid minimum wage — $1.40 an hour back then — plus 5 cents for every crate filled with about 30 to 36 fruits. Breakfast was \"out of the Navy,\" Carter says — beans and eggs and bologna sandwiches that literally toasted in the heat, even in the shade.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>The University High crew worked six days a week, with Sundays off, and they\u003cstrong> \u003c/strong>were not allowed to return home during their stint. The farmers sheltered them in \"any kind of defunct housing,\" according to Carter — old Army barracks, rooms made from discarded wood, and even buildings used to intern Japanese-Americans during World War II.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Problems arose immediately for the A-TEAM nationwide. In California's Salinas Valley, 200 teenagers from New Mexico, Kansas and Wyoming quit after just two weeks on the job. \"We worked three days and all of us are broke,\" the Associated Press quoted one teen as saying. Students elsewhere staged strikes. At the end, the A-TEAM was considered a giant failure and was never tried again.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>This experiment quickly disappeared into the proverbial dustbin of history. In fact, when Stony Brook University history professor \u003ca href=\"https://www.stonybrook.edu/commcms/history/people/faculty/flores.html\">Lori A. Flores\u003c/a> did research for what became her award-winning 2016 book, \u003ca href=\"https://www.amazon.com/Grounds-Dreaming-Immigrants-California-Farmworker/dp/0300196962\">\u003cem>Grounds for Dreaming: Mexican Americans, Mexican Immigrants, and the California Farmworker Movement\u003c/em>\u003c/a>, she discovered the controversy for the first time. Until then, the only time she had heard of any A-TEAM, she now says with a laugh, \"was the TV show.\"\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Flores thinks the program deserves more attention from historians and the public alike.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\"These [high school students] had the words and whiteness to say what they were feeling and could act out in a way that Mexican-Americans who had been living this way for decades simply didn't have the power or space for the American public to listen to them,\" she says. \"The students dropped out because the conditions were so atrocious, and the growers weren't able to mask that up.\"\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>She says the A-TEAM \"reveals a very important reality: It's not about work ethic [for undocumented workers]. It's about [the fact] that this labor is not meant to be done under such bad conditions and bad wages.\"\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Carter agrees.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\"If we took a vote that first day, we would've left,\" he says of his friends. \"But it literally became a thing of pride. We weren't going to be fired, and we weren't going to quit. We were going to finish it.\"\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>The students tried to make the most of their summer. On their Sundays off, they would swim in irrigation canals or hitchhike into downtown Blythe and try to get cowboys to buy them a six-pack of beer. Each high school team was supposed to have a college-age chaperone, but Carter said theirs would \"be there for a day, and then disappear to go to Mexico or surfing.\"\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>Carter and his classmates still talk about their A-TEAM days at every class reunion. \"We went through something that you can't explain to anyone, unless you were out there in that friggin' heat,\" the 70-year-old says. \"It could only be lived.\"\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>But he says the experience also taught them empathy toward immigrant workers\u003cstrong> \u003c/strong>that Carter says the rest of the country should learn, especially during these times.\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\"There's nothing you can say to us that [migrant laborers] are rapists or they're lazy,\" he says. \"We know the work they do. And they do it all their lives, not just one summer for a couple of months. And they raise their families on it. Anyone ever talks bad on them, I always think, 'Keep talking, buddy, because I know what the real deal is.' \"\u003c/p>\n\u003chr>\n\u003cp>\u003c/p>\u003c/div>",
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"content": "\u003cdiv class=\"post-body\">\u003cp>\u003c/p>\n\u003cp>\u003cem>Gustavo Arellano is the author of \u003c/em>Taco USA: How Mexican Food Conquered America\u003cem>, and a longtime guest on NPR's \"Barbershop\" segment on \u003c/em>Weekend All Things Considered. \u003c/p>\n\u003cdiv class=\"fullattribution\">Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.\u003cimg src=\"https://www.google-analytics.com/__utm.gif?utmac=UA-5828686-4&utmdt=When+The+U.S.+Government+Tried+To+Replace+Migrant+Farmworkers+With+High+Schoolers&utme=8(APIKey)9(MDAxOTAwOTE4MDEyMTkxMDAzNjczZDljZA004)\">\u003c/div>\n\n\u003c/div>\u003c/p>",
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"tagline": "The flip side of gentrification, told through one town",
"info": "Gentrification is changing cities across America, forcing people from neighborhoods they have long called home. Call them the displaced. Now those priced out of the Bay Area are looking for a better life in an unlikely place. American Suburb follows this migration to one California town along the Delta, 45 miles from San Francisco. But is this once sleepy suburb ready for them?",
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"tagline": "Exploring the Bay Area, one question at a time",
"info": "KQED’s new podcast, Bay Curious, gets to the bottom of the mysteries — both profound and peculiar — that give the Bay Area its unique identity. And we’ll do it with your help! You ask the questions. You decide what Bay Curious investigates. And you join us on the journey to find the answers.",
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"info": "KQED’s statewide radio news program providing daily coverage of issues, trends and public policy decisions.",
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"order": 8
},
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},
"link": "https://www.cityarts.net",
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"order": 1
},
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"info": "\u003cem>Code Switch\u003c/em>, which listeners will hear in the first part of the hour, has fearless and much-needed conversations about race. Hosted by journalists of color, the show tackles the subject of race head-on, exploring how it impacts every part of society — from politics and pop culture to history, sports and more.\u003cbr />\u003cbr />\u003cem>Life Kit\u003c/em>, which will be in the second part of the hour, guides you through spaces and feelings no one prepares you for — from finances to mental health, from workplace microaggressions to imposter syndrome, from relationships to parenting. The show features experts with real world experience and shares their knowledge. Because everyone needs a little help being human.\u003cbr />\u003cbr />\u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/podcasts/510312/codeswitch\">\u003cem>Code Switch\u003c/em> offical site and podcast\u003c/a>\u003cbr />\u003ca href=\"https://www.npr.org/lifekit\">\u003cem>Life Kit\u003c/em> offical site and podcast\u003c/a>\u003cbr />",
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},
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"id": "commonwealth-club",
"title": "Commonwealth Club of California Podcast",
"info": "The Commonwealth Club of California is the nation's oldest and largest public affairs forum. As a non-partisan forum, The Club brings to the public airwaves diverse viewpoints on important topics. The Club's weekly radio broadcast - the oldest in the U.S., dating back to 1924 - is carried across the nation on public radio stations and is now podcasting. Our website archive features audio of our recent programs, as well as selected speeches from our long and distinguished history. This podcast feed is usually updated twice a week and is always un-edited.",
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"imageSrc": "https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Commonwealth-Club-Podcast-Tile-360x360-1.jpg",
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"source": "Commonwealth Club of California"
},
"link": "/radio/program/commonwealth-club",
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},
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"info": "KQED’s live call-in program discussing local, state, national and international issues, as well as in-depth interviews.",
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"imageSrc": "https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Forum-Podcast-Tile-703x703-1.jpg",
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"order": 9
},
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"meta": {
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},
"link": "/radio/program/freakonomics-radio",
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},
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"id": "fresh-air",
"title": "Fresh Air",
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},
"hidden-brain": {
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"airtime": "SUN 7pm-8pm",
"meta": {
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"source": "NPR"
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"how-i-built-this": {
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"airtime": "SUN 7:30pm-8pm",
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"link": "/radio/program/how-i-built-this",
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"hyphenacion": {
"id": "hyphenacion",
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"tagline": "Where conversation and cultura meet",
"info": "What kind of no sabo word is Hyphenación? For us, it’s about living within a hyphenation. Like being a third-gen Mexican-American from the Texas border now living that Bay Area Chicano life. Like Xorje! Each week we bring together a couple of hyphenated Latinos to talk all about personal life choices: family, careers, relationships, belonging … everything is on the table. ",
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"jerrybrown": {
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"title": "The Political Mind of Jerry Brown",
"tagline": "Lessons from a lifetime in politics",
"info": "The Political Mind of Jerry Brown brings listeners the wisdom of the former Governor, Mayor, and presidential candidate. Scott Shafer interviewed Brown for more than 40 hours, covering the former governor's life and half-century in the political game and Brown has some lessons he'd like to share. ",
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"order": 18
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},
"latino-usa": {
"id": "latino-usa",
"title": "Latino USA",
"airtime": "MON 1am-2am, SUN 6pm-7pm",
"info": "Latino USA, the radio journal of news and culture, is the only national, English-language radio program produced from a Latino perspective.",
"imageSrc": "https://ww2.kqed.org/radio/wp-content/uploads/sites/50/2018/04/latinoUsa.jpg",
"officialWebsiteLink": "http://latinousa.org/",
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},
"marketplace": {
"id": "marketplace",
"title": "Marketplace",
"info": "Our flagship program, helmed by Kai Ryssdal, examines what the day in money delivered, through stories, conversations, newsworthy numbers and more. Updated Monday through Friday at about 3:30 p.m. PT.",
"airtime": "MON-FRI 4pm-4:30pm, MON-WED 6:30pm-7pm",
"imageSrc": "https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Marketplace-Podcast-Tile-360x360-1.jpg",
"officialWebsiteLink": "https://www.marketplace.org/",
"meta": {
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"source": "American Public Media"
},
"link": "/radio/program/marketplace",
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},
"masters-of-scale": {
"id": "masters-of-scale",
"title": "Masters of Scale",
"info": "Masters of Scale is an original podcast in which LinkedIn co-founder and Greylock Partner Reid Hoffman sets out to describe and prove theories that explain how great entrepreneurs take their companies from zero to a gazillion in ingenious fashion.",
"airtime": "Every other Wednesday June 12 through October 16 at 8pm (repeats Thursdays at 2am)",
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"officialWebsiteLink": "https://mastersofscale.com/",
"meta": {
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"source": "WaitWhat"
},
"link": "/radio/program/masters-of-scale",
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"rss": "https://rss.art19.com/masters-of-scale"
}
},
"mindshift": {
"id": "mindshift",
"title": "MindShift",
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"info": "The MindShift podcast explores the innovations in education that are shaping how kids learn. Hosts Ki Sung and Katrina Schwartz introduce listeners to educators, researchers, parents and students who are developing effective ways to improve how kids learn. We cover topics like how fed-up administrators are developing surprising tactics to deal with classroom disruptions; how listening to podcasts are helping kids develop reading skills; the consequences of overparenting; and why interdisciplinary learning can engage students on all ends of the traditional achievement spectrum. This podcast is part of the MindShift education site, a division of KQED News. KQED is an NPR/PBS member station based in San Francisco. You can also visit the MindShift website for episodes and supplemental blog posts or tweet us \u003ca href=\"https://twitter.com/MindShiftKQED\">@MindShiftKQED\u003c/a> or visit us at \u003ca href=\"/mindshift\">MindShift.KQED.org\u003c/a>",
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