C Amazing Grease Rutgers students give new meaning to the phrase "meals on wheels." Ev- ery morning at 6:30, a caravan of food trucks pulls up along College Avenue and begins to dish up everything from bur- gers to bagels. Affectionately known as "greasetrucks," the small vehicles boast their own ovens, grills and freezers. A favorite of off-campus res- idents and others unsatisfied by institutional food, the trucks offer variety on their mobile menus. Hot-dog lovers head for Willie's Wienie Wag- on; those with more exotic tastes prefer the Middle East- ern truck's gyros and falafel. The Cookie Truck bakes all day, and Greaseman's Grease- truck perpetrates its "Fat Cat"-a double burger topped with everything from fried on- ions to tuna-until 4 a.m. Mr. C's Munchmobile is the sole 24-hour mecca. "I used to go to Mr. C's all the time at 3 in the morning," says senior Rich- ard Newell, a former dormer who spent about $10 per week along the snack strip. Some schools might be heartburned up about the competition, but not Rutgers: the administra- tion even offers free reserved parking spots. JEAN DYKSTRA in New Brunswick RICHARD O'ROURKE-UCSB 'Sinking in this mass of whiteness': Screening a lesson of life Minority Views in California What's it like to be a mi- nority student at the University of Califor- nia, Santa Barbara? A majority would have no idea if it weren't for a series of innova- tive videos being produced by minority students. Four 20- minute videos will chronicle the views of black, Chicano, Asian-American and Native American students as they re- late their experiences with racism. "People don't under- stand what it's like to feel like you're sinking in this mass of whiteness," says Julia Yar- bough, a UCSB graduate inter- viewed in the black video. The first video, "To Be a Black Stu- dent," premidred in October, and more than 3,000 of the cam- pus's 21,000 students, staff' and faculty have seen it and taken part in the organized discussion that follows. Blacks, encouraged by the response, are pleased because the audi- ence is often mostly white. As students finish editing the Chicano tape and begin pro- duction of the Asian-Ameri- can video, the series has pro- voked controversy. Some PAT.PT-T ATSWAN(. students contend that UCSB should address racism by ad- mitting more minorities, not fi- nancing videos (fewer than 3 percent of undergraduates are black). "Regardless of the in- creased sensitivity, [the series] won't solve the problem," says sophomore Adam Moss. Others insist the series, to be complet- ed by summer, can be a step toward increased racial un- derstanding. Even with a price tag of $125,000 for production and salaries, administrators say the cost is insignificant compared to the value of an open mind. STEVEN ELZER in Santa Barbara Raleigh Law Suits NC State or North Carolina State students with legal trou- ble, lawyers Pamarah Gerace and Gilbert Jackson come to the rescue. Since Au- gust, the two have run Student Legal Services full time. Un- der the watchful eye of a Judge Wapner poster, they handle such problems as rent disputes and traffic violations-all for the $2 per semester built into every student's fees. "There was a definite need," says Gerace. "I had a stack of phone calls waiting before I even started." They cannot represent their stu- dent-clients against the state or in criminal cases (North Caro- lina law prohibits the use of state funds to sue the state), but the lawyers have won plane-ticket reimbursements and defended a student veteri- narian whose horse allegedly attacked a car. "Students don't feel they know the legal sys- tem," says student-body presi- dent Kevin Howell. "They need someone like Pam or Gil- bert to talk to." JOSEPH GALA RNEAU in Raleigh Culinary convoy: Grazing on Rutgers's snack strip I E MARCH 19884