Members of the UCLA Department of Education Support, “Occupy LA Movement”
Go Bruins
Submitted by occupationblog on Sun, 10/16/2011 – 2:20pm
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October 14, 2011
We, members of the UCLA department of education, gathering in retreat today, want to express our personal support for the “Occupy LA Movement” as it represents a tangible effort to give voices to the vast majority of Americans who believe the current inequities in our economic system are part and parcel of the systematic undermining of equal educational opportunity for all students from pre-K through university.
Rae Jeane Williams, Faye Peitzman, Jeff Share, Sheila Lane, Robert Rhoads, Nancy Parachini, Darlene Lee, Noreen Webb, Jose Felipe Martinez, William Sandoval, John Rogers, Jackie Goldberg, Noel Enyeny, Marjorie Faulstitch Orellana, Carlos Alberto Torres, Federico Reina, Imelda L. Nava, Louis Gomez, Concepcion M. Valdez, Daniel G. Solorzano, Reynaldo F. Macias, Kimberly Gomez, Eloise Lopez Metcalfe, Alison Bailey, Anthony Quan, Helen M. Davis, Annamarie Francois, Robert Cooper, Jaime Park, Jay Prisilan, Megan Frank
See Full Article at Occupy Los Anegeles.com - http://occupylosangeles.org/?q=node/74
Here at Occupy Colleges we support UCLA teachers’ involvement in Occupy Los Angeles. They are educators whose career it is to educate. The college students need education now.
We are currently discussing a teach-in for the next event on November 2nd or 3rd.
If you are an educator who would
like to lead a teach-in at your college or university, please contact us at info@occupycolleges.org or call us at 323-642-8102
Category: #OccupyColleges, Professors, Teach In, Teachers






When you experience injustice as an individual and as a nation you are concerned about the future of this great country. The state of Louisiana in conjucnction with BP and the fossil fuel industry are destroying the environment, culture and the constitutional rights of its citizens. The state of Louisiana has provided censorship on the great culture of my native state. This information may interest your history majors at all colleges and universities in the United States. The main history of the Cajun, Creole and multi cultural legacy began at the Cheniere Ronquillo Spanish Settlement located in Plaquemine Parish, Louisiana long before the Louisiana purchase.The mineral rich land of this settlement was expropriated for the the lands vast mineral wealth. My Louisiana ancestry and culture reverts back to the Cheniere Ronquillo Spanish settlement. http://www.legacyofinjustice.blogspot.com