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DQU will train its students in leadership, community development and legislative processes, he outlined. It will have programs for persons at all levels of previous education and for all age groups.

Community college, vocation school and academic curricula will be offered, Risling stated.

The new interim board will become official at the next meeting, slated for the evening of March 5 and all day March 6 at DQU, Risling said.

ONE-YEAR TERMS

The new interim board of directors will serve no more than a year and includes 16 Chicanos and 16 Indians.

The Chicanos are: Louis Flores, UCD director of Chicano Studies; Jesus Jenera, and Arturo Apodoca, UCD law students; Elena Marquez, UCD pre-vet student;Gonzalo Rucobo, an employee of the State Dept. of Human Resources Development in Berkeley and board president of the United Council of Spanish-Speaking; Eduardo Rosas, Yuba College and Colusa High Teacher; Rafael Guerrero of San Louis Obispo, historian, poet and writer, and Robert Guiterrez, Diablo Valley college (Pleasant Hill) student.

Al Negretto, Sacramento elementary school principal; Jose Zamora, Antioch teacher; Randall Gonzales, Chico State College student; Abel Villareal, president of the Mexican-American Concilio for Yuba and Sutter Counties; Crestin Alcazar, of Livingston, Merced county, representative of Casa Campesina, Ricardo Garcia, UCD pre-med student; Jovita Alvarez, Livingston community action agency worker, and Rudy Cuellar, employee of the Roseville Mexican-American Concilio.

Indian board members and their tribes are: David Risling, Hupa; Alex Corpus, Pit River Indian, of Sacramento; Morgan Otis, Kiowa, coordinator of Native American Studies at Sacramento State College and president — California Indian Education Assn.; Jack Forbes, Rappahannock, UCD professor and Indian historian; Sarah Hutchinson, Cherokee, Sacramento psychotherapist; Alfred Hicks, Navajo, Richmond school teacher; Tom Campbell of Sacramento, Pomo, investigator for California Indian Legal Services; Abby Abinanti, Yurok, UCD law student, and Alice Williams, Paiute — Shoshone-Bannock from Reno, active worker in Nevada Indian affairs; Grace Thorpe, Sac-Fox publicist from Hawthorne; Jenny Joe, Navajo-Seneca, Berkeley public health service nurse; Wilfred Wasson, Coos, from Washington State; Vivian Hailstone, Hoopa-Karok, Yurok, from Hoopa, Humboldt County; Mahlon Marshall, Hoopa, Indian special consultant to the State Dept. of Education, Sacramento; Dr. Frank Clark, Hualpai, Woodlake, Tulare County physician, and Dick Luna, Jemez-Pueblo Indian and a Davis jeweler.

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