Oregon daily emerald Monday, October 3, 1983 Eugene, Oregon Volume 85, Number 21 Celebration rekindles city businesses By Michele Matassa Of (he Emerald The barbecue smoke from the First Annual Eugene Celebration has cleared, and city officials and downtowrr merchants are hoping the three-day festival rekindled a flame that will continue to burn. Several people involved with the downtown area and the "Celebration" admit that business hasn't been so hot, lately. But business apparently improved during the event as several booths sold out their merchandise. Perry's on Pearl ran out of baked potatoes to stuff Saturday, after selling about 1,000 of them. They managed to find more for Sunday's crowd, however. A souvenir and information shop at the mail's center fountain kept reordering T-shirts and mugs, trying to meet the crowd's demands. Kathryn Cox, in charge of souvenir sales, says she had to reorder T-shirts Thursday before the event started because the shop almost sold out as clerks set up the shop. "The sales have been phenomenal. We re real pleased and now we wish we had more merchandise to sell," Cox says. The city will establish a time in about two weeks when people can order items they were unable to purchase at the Celebration, she says. Cynthia Wooten, a Eugene City Council member who coordinated the "53-hour weekend of fun," estimated Sun day that about 30,000 people already had wandered through the festival, seeing the sights, smelling and eating food and listening to music. "This has just been a huge success. It's bringing Eugene Downtown out of the mothballs," says Ray Moreland, part-owner of Rosewater Deli. Moreland's food booth sold "close to 1,500 pounds" of spare ribs during the weekend. Managers of the Danish Imports Center giftware and furniture store welcome the change of pace. "The traffic has been fantastic. This has been a wonder ful party for Downtown Eugene and for all of Eugene," says Charlie Fletcher, manager of the store's furniture department. Marilyn Priore, manager of the giftware section, says the store may do things differently next year because they'll "know more what to expect." They might stay open later or increase staff or advertising, the managers say. Celebration organizers and downtown merchants are Photo by Ken Kromer Red and jean Currie of Myrtle Creek compete in the double-bucking competition during the first annual Eugene Celebration. hoping the event wilt give new meaning to the jingle pro moting "a special place: Eugene Dowtown." Wooten says a major goal of the project was “demonstrating the traditional nature of cities." “For centuries, the heart of the city has been its downtown. Lively downtowns are essential to the develop ment of cities," she says. By providing an atmosphere comfortable for congrega tion, the celebration should help rebuild that liveliness, Wooten says. Some liveliness was evident Sunday as spectators pack ed the Eugene Conference Center at the Hilton Hotel for a cake-baking contest. The Excelsior Cafe took first prize with a sheet cake made of butter, eggs, coffee and (jhiradein cnocoiate wun whipped-cream frosting. Several cakes included the University as part of their themes. But food wasn't the the event's only attraction. The Celebration opened Friday night with a fireworks display at Skinner's Butte. There was music for every taste imaginable: rock, jazz, reggae, Big Band and Dixieland, to name a few. Several shows were part of a free day of entertainment at the Hult Center for the Performing Arts, celebrating its first anniversary. The University Children's Choir even performed on the mall, pleasing spectators as the choir sang "Eugene, Eugene, we celebrate you." Olum meets Salvadoran educator By Brooks Dareff Of the Emerald Thousands of students are lugging their own chairs to makeshift classrooms in buildings scattered through San Salvador. The students must contribute to the cost of rent, because the university's budget on ly covers teachers' salaries. Medical and engineering students look forward to using limited lab equipment — precious as gold here — much of which they have had to buy themselves. But these inconveniences and expenses pale beside what awaits many students at tending the University of El Salvador when they get to or out of class, said Manuel Parada, the university's president. Parada met with University Pres. Paul Olum, facul ty, student representatives and the press Saturday as part of a nationwide trip to universities to explain the university's crisis, solicit written support from the University and start discussions about ex change programs. A law school class doesn't start because the professor is one of three educators recently kidnapped and pronounced murdered by a paramilitary organization, Parada said. When another class breaks and students exit the building, several are grab bed by soldiers and detained at a prison as "subversives," he said. Thousands of students survive the daily ordeal and graduate, but the equipment shortages and severely curtailed registra tion (60,000 students are waiting to enroll) delay their graduation dates. And there is further delay for the latest graduating group because their degrees must be signed by the university's general secretary, who has been jailed since June. At the ceremony, the students are told, "You are receiving a diploma which itself has been jailed," Parada said. This is the current situation for students who have been denied access to their cam pus for more than three years, he says. The university has continued to function legally on a budget 25 percent of its former level since the university closed June 26, 1980. The army — with helicopters, tanks and 900 troops — invaded the campus after government officials complained that it was a center of subversive activity. The American Embassy estimates that almost 50 people were killed in the attack. Several people associated with the university were and continually are ar rested, Parada says. He was jailed February 10, 1981, less than a month after being nam ed university president. Parada says his U.S. visit is part of his two pronged program to obtain equipment and to achieve the reopening and general nor malization of his university. He estimated about $25 million in damages to equipment — independent of building destruction — in the looting, sack ing and burning that followed the takeover. Many volumes of books were sold — by weight — on the black market, Parada said. Olum, who commended Parada's bravery and wrote a support letter (as did ASUO Pres. Mary Hotchkiss), told Parada that he would explore the possibility of sending books to the university and that "we will write." Parada, who spoke in EMU Room 337 through interpreter Colette Craig of the linguistics department, acknowledged that the university opposes the government's policy to keep the university closed, but not the government. "We oppose ignorance, not the govern ment," he said. The government said rebel weapons were stored on the university campus. None were found by the army following the takeover, Parada said. In January, El Salvador's legislature voted to reopen the university, but the executive branch has failed to fulfill the directive, demanding a guarantee that no student organizations except for athletics be allow ed to exist for a period from six months to two years. Parada said it would be impossible and unrealistic to enforce such a condition. Latin American universities have a tradition of "critical thought" and a status in military dictatorship countries as "the only bastion of free thought," he said. Parada said an exchange of North American professors and students would have "an impact you could not imagine" on reopening the university. An agreement on an exchange of equipment, books, students and professors with a Los Angeles universi ty has been made, he said. The University of El Salvador recently received a six-ton shipment of books from Canada, which ironically looked like an ar maments shipment, Parada said. He said American faculty would be safe in the country because the government is "very careful with American officials." Parada remained cautiously optimistic about a gradual normalization of his univer sity. He said the university has graduated more than 2,700 professionals during the past three years and that the most recent registration was open, the first since the campus was occupied. Parada said he is "very surprised" by the support he has received around the United States. He said, "We never imagined the kind of welcome we have received on university campuses," adding wryly, "And we did not come to conquer Rome."