Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, May 06, 1981, Section A, Page 3, Image 3

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    Lieuallen sings new tune;
now fighting further cuts
By GREG WASSON
Ol the Emerald
SALEM — Every two years,
they do a dance in Salem known
as the Higher Education Shuf
fle. And the only group that can
play the right kind of music is
the Ways and Means Subcom
mittee Three.
For the past few sessions,
Chancellor Roy Lieuallen has
done most of the calling, but
one member of the band, Sen
Frank Roberts, D-Portland, says
the budget squeeze has
changed the roles.
"The Legislature, and more
specifically the Ways and
Means Committee, has got to do
a more vigorous job of inves
tigating," said Roberts. "It's got
to demand a real analysis from
higher education.
"This time I think we’re going
to have to lay down some dic
tates to tell them to get their
house in order."
And. in fact, it would appear
the committee already has
caused Lieuallen and the state
higher education board to move
from the offense to the defense.
In a January interview,
Lieuallen talked about the
governor’s proposed budget
being insufficient. He proposed
finding additional revenue by
cutting the level of property tax
relief and said he was deter
mined to plead his case in spite
of the obvious question: How
can the pleading be effective?
“I don't know,” Lieuallen
said, "but I do know somebody
had damn well better try. I'm not
willing to say because it's a dif
ficult job we had ought to ac
cept the reality of 30-percent tax
relief and let everything else go
to hell.”
A month later, Edward Harms
Jr., president of the state board,
listed for the House Education
Committee the inadequacies of
the governor’s recommenda
tion. He warned the committee
that the appropriations for the
library acquisitions, building
maintenance and equipment
replacement were insufficient.
"These are only examples of
serious problems that have
been with us for at least five
years,” Harms said. "We have
not been able to approach a
solution. Rather, our position
continues to deteriorate.”
However, in the four months
Architecture dept,
prepares for review
The architecture department
is preparing for an accreditation
visit May 10-13.
A four-member team from the
National Architecture
Accreditation Board, composed
of architects from outside
Oregon, will conduct the review.
Review team members in
clude Bill McMinn, dean of Mis
sissippi State's architecture
school, Joseph Esherick,
chairer of the University of
California at Berkeley’s archi
tecture department, Gerald
Weisbach. San Francisco ar
chitect and attorney, and Daniel
Freidman, architect and Univer
sity of Wisconsin at Milwaukee
professor.
In addition, Eugene architect
Richard Williams and Portland
architecture student Bill Church
will observe the review.
The team will meet Sunday
with architecture and allied arts
dean Robert Harris and archi
tecture department head Jerry
Finrow for an overview of the
department.
Throughout the visit, the team
will evaluate curriculum revision
plans, meet with students in
dividually and in studio settings
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The school is reviewed for
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and Finrow says he forsees no
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review.
An educational development
plan, sent to the NAAB a year
ago, has been approved. Finrow
says the accreditation visit is a
confirmation of that plan.
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J
that have passed, both Harms
and Lieuallen have come to
support the governor's recom
mendation. And when the sub
committee began hearings
Thursday, the two were told that
even the governor's proposal
might be unattainable.
For Gov. Atiyeh’s budget to
balance, a constitutional
requirement in Oregon, some
$240 million in additional taxes
must be approved.
"In my honest opinion," said
Sen. Ed Fadely, D-Eugene, "the
most you’re going to get is
about half of the additional
taxes the governor has
proposed."
No longer is Lieuallen talking
about additional money for
higher education.
"My concern now is for the
governor's budget," he said.
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Supplies 686-4331
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