-$ A reason to rejoice PACE 18 Oregon daily emerald Monday, September 26, 1983 Eugene, Oregon Volume 85, Number 16 Higher education walks funding tightrope By Doug Nash Of the Emnild As has been the case in the recent past, the dollar sign remains both the big pro blem and necessary solution in the minds of higher education officials this year. And the quality of Oregon’s university system hinges directly on the Legislature's attempts to find an answer to the property tax dilemma, they say. "The thing that affects the University right now is the funding,” says John Altucker, a State Board of Higher Education member and a Eugene resident. "These are difficult and troubled times because the resources have shrunk and the need is still there." Alltucker, who heads the board's sub committee on planning, instructed his col leagues Friday to contemplate "why we have public-supported higher education at all.” The board can devise a flexible plan when those reasons are agreed upon, he said. Until then, Alltucker urges decision makers to "keep their imaginations open." Educators this year will have to walk a fine line between tightening their belts and maintaining quality education. Some facilities in poor condition at the University and Oregon State University are an example of needing to maintain quality, says Board President Robert Ingalls. "Some of the buildings are more than 50 years old and in need of repair," Ingalls says. Further, "we've received some money but not enough," for university libraries around the state, he says. On the budget-trimming side, Ingalls says the board will try to pinpoint weak courses that could be eliminated from the state system. He would not elaborate on which courses. In addition, the board's information systems subcommittee currently is resear ching a centralized computer system that would integrate student information on both the campus and state level. Such a plan would drastically streamline the university information process. Vice Chancellor Bill Lemman says. "The technology is here to support that kind of integration," Lemman says. Though he is not prepared to forecast the future system's cost, Lemman estimates a "seven-figure savings" when it is implemented. He emphasized, however, that any such system would have to conform to each in stitution's needs. “We're not trying to design one rigid system that everyone is squeezed into." The plan would end the University's arena scheduling process, Lemman adds. "We would hope that the University would be the first institution that would be able to implement the (centralized) com puter registration." Otherwise, the semester system con troversy, which was one of the biggest questions the state board decided last year, does not promise to continue into this school. Biology Prof. Sanford Tepfer, whose proposal for a University semester system proved unsuccessful last winter, says the state board is unwilling to allow one institu tion to leave the quarter system. "It isn't going to happen unless the whole system goes to the semester system," •* A country struggles to find its reality By Debbie Howlett Of the Emerald Emerald editor Debbie Howlett recently returned from an 11-day trip to Nicaragua. This is the first in a five part series. Nicaragua is a country of struggle. It is a country struggling to end a long history of guerilla wars. It is a country struggling to heal and educate its population. But most of all, Nicaragua is a country struggling to rid itself of the United State's influence. The endless rhetoric coming from Nicaragua's San dinista leadership contains two wishes: a softly spoken plea for peace, and tucked within the softness, a growling demand for the United States to disentangle itself from anti-Sandinista attacks. If Nicaragua is a country in struggle, its capital, Managua, is a city without a center. The buildings that formed the city's center crumbled in the earthquake of 1972, and aside from a spray of tall grasses here and there, The only building left undamaged from the 1972 ear thquake, the 17-story Bank of America dwarfs every other building in Managua. Several people have claimed the building's obtrusiveness is a metaphor for U.S. presence in Nicaragua and all of Central America, in addition to the United States' seemingly unshakeable power. That the Bank of America is an American bank is sym bolic of the U.S. dollar's power in Nicaragua. With a legal exchange rate of 28 Cordobas to the dollar, the desire for U.S. dollars has driven the black market rates as high as 87 to one. The Bank of America sits next to the newly rebuilt, heavily guarded Council of State. But the proximity of the state buildings is not a metaphor of close relations with the United States, more than anything, it may stand as a challenge. Challenges between the United States and the San dinistas are nothing new. The two governments have been battling each other's influence in Nicaragua for most of the buildings look as they did immediately after the tremor. Former Nicaragua Pres. Anastasio Somoza, in what seems typical of his regime, refused to rebuild Managua's shaken center. And despite Sandinista efforts to reconstruct what Somoza left, Somoza's rule still permeates the city — especially what was once the center. Somoza’s oppressive government policies still emanate from the remain ing rubble of the buildings, now oc cupied by squatters. His mark still touches a great number of the city streets, which are paved with interlock ing bricks known as "Somoza Stones." nearly 6U years. POLITICS IN PERSPECTIVE In the late 1920s, Augusto Sandino led a small force of followers in guerilla attacks against U.S. Marines stationed in Nicaragua. From dense jungle out posts, Sandino vowed to stop his at tacks only when the Marines left Nicaragua. When the Marines cleared out in 1933, Sandino came out of the jungle to meet with General Anastasio Somoza. Somoza had Sandino ex ecuted. Following the execution, Somoza took control of Nicaragua and received support from the United States. The Somoza rule, handed down to Somoza is a slow-healing cut in the Sandinista government. U.S. INVOLVEMENT The United State's influence was, and still is, at least as visible as Somoza's influence. Gunboats off the Atlantic and Pacific Coasts are cons tant reminders of U.S. influence. Nicaraguans, understan dably, are not receptive to the U.S. government, although they distinguish U.S. citizens, with whom they are friend ly, from the U.S. government. An example of Nicaragua's opposition to U.S. actions is contained in a line from their national anthem: We re fighting against the Yankee, the enemy ot humanity." But past U.S. influences are less tenable. Somoza s sons and then his grandson, held Nicaragua un til July 1979, when the Sandinistas overthrew Anastasio Somoza II. The Somoza reign had been one of terror and brutality. The United States has dealt with ail of the Somozas in much the same philosophical manner Franklin D. Roosevelt had. “He's a son of a bitch, but he's our son of a bitch," said Roosevelt of Anastasio Somoza I. VOICES OF SUPPORT What has happened in Nicaragua has been hailed by most Nicaraguans as a revolution of political in dependence and social growth. Social growth is apparent in Nicaragua. There have been advances in educating Nicaraguans. A commonly quoted statistic cites a prerev olution literacy rate of 20 percent, which increased to 80 percent through a massive literacy campaign started a year after the revolution. There have been advances in health care for the ma jority of the population. The government has nationalized some health care, providing public clinics without charge. Because of that, 70 percent of the babies born in Nicaragua now are delivered in hospitals. Before 1979, the figure was 30 percent. Despite the crowded, sometimes unhealthy looking conditions in the public clinics, doctors and facilities are at least available. Political independence is not as easy to define. While the Sandinista government says they are non-aligned politically, allegations that they are aligned with the Soviet Union, largely through Cuba, still are accepted in a number of sectors. The Sandinistas also have promised to hold elections before the end of 1985 (although the Sandinistas reneged on a promise to hold elections two years after the revolution). VOICES OF OPPOSITION But there are other voices: an upper-middle class, which is slowly shrinking in size; a number of Nicaraguan Roman Catholics, who have joined dissenters in the Catholic Church and Nicaraguan Archbishop Obando y Bravo; and the counter-revolutionaries, "contras," one group is led by a former, and popular, Sandinista leader. While most Nicaraguans who support the current regime eloquently voice Sandinista philosophy, some anti-Sandinista citizens struggle with thoughts of opposition. A cab driver in a Managua market says he is not satisfied with what his government calls progress. He is worried that hir. young son will end up in the military fighting a seemingly endless war. He also is concerned because his food is rationed, and, even though he has enough money, he can no longer purchase some goods. The cab driver commends the United States' "covert" aid, while in the same breath, he condemns Somoza. He is not sure what type of government he wants, but he is Continued on Page 5 Somoza stones.