Oregon Daily_ _ Emerald Monday. Mav 15. 1989 Eugene. Oregon Volume ‘H), Number 154 _Inside_ ■ Chavez comes to campus. Page 3 ■ Celebration for Mayfest, Page 5 ■ Women seal NCAA bids, Page 7 ■ Men’s Twilight stellar, Page 9 Pair of Moccasins Michael Moccasin and his father. Don. display their Assimiboime tribal dress Friday night in McAr thur Court as part of the 21st annual Pow Wow spon sored by the Native American Student Union. Photo by lames Marks Goldschmidt lobbies for schools Urges 'yes' on measure for Tuesday's election By Don Peters Emerald Asset iate Editor (Im Neil (ioldschmidl anti other stale and local political leaders met at Kugene's Roosevelt Middle School Friday to lobby support for Ballot Measure 1 joining the governor at his old alma mater were Oregon Attorney (ieneral Dave tTohnmaver. House Speaker Vera hat/ |l> Portland), Senate President |ohn Kilzhaher (D Roseburg), Senate Republican leader (' T 'Hub” Houck. and l u gene and Springfield mayors left Miller and Bill Morrisette t he visit t ante as part of a statewide barn storming campaign Measure 1. which goes in front of voters Tuesuav. would establish new tax bases for roughly one third of the til t Oregon public school distrii Is The measure would en able finani ially strapper! districts to escape the so-called "safety net'' "This (Measure I) is a real commitment to the kills and the taxpayers. (loldsc hmidt said "This will set us on a course to assure children the future they want In addition to setting new tax liases. Measure 1 would provide almost $T>0 million in direr I and indirect property tax relief, and allocate $ I t 7 million for handicapped student programs "Education is a state, not a lo< at issue, katz said "Education is a tool kids need to have katz added Measure 1 is part of "a series of steps" to bring about improvements in the state education system "We’re sending a message to the voters that they need to support Measure 1 she said "This imMsure will help, hut not solve the problem," Goldschmidt added, Frohnmayer tailed the state education 'O tem "disruptive" and saitl the government has not lived up to taxpayer’s expectations "We have a moral and constitutional oblige lion to keep up the tpaalitv of education in this state.” he said Kep Curl Hosticke. chairman of the House Revenue and School Finance Committee that drafted Measure t. also showed up at the rull\ I lost u ka said he hoped voters could look past their own school distru Is and see the rest of the stale. "We need to emphasize that Measure I is lor alt of Oregon, and not tust individual districts I lostii ka said Goldschmidt had originally opposed the measure’s predecessor. House )oint Resolution l At first, the governor had wanted (with si hold fi nance reform and property tax relief to be linked under one bill. Hut Hosticka made the decision to separate the two issues and deal with them one at a time !t|Rl t amo nut of committee with no proper ty tax relief plan contained in it. anti Gold schmidt went .is far as to publicly announce his opposition to the measure l-ater. when a tax re lief package was tal ked on. the governor reversed his stand and has supported Measure 1 since In related news. Kugene's 4) School District has a tax base request before the voters in Tues day's election If approved, the request would add a port out increase in tax dollars abovu the normal t> percent growth in the tax base. Kugene has not had .1 new tax base suit e !*IK4 The base would raise the tax per $ 1.000 ol as sessed property 4t> t cuts to $ IH 40 Study reveals University's funding at bottom of Pac-10 Oregon receives fewest state dollars per student By Michael Drummond Emerald Associate Editor Generally, the lower the state! funding for public universities, the lower the academic quality — and the University and Ore gon State University are at or near the bottom in the f’acific 10 Conference. According to a recent report conducted by Duncan Lindsey, a University human services as sociate professor, the Universi ly and OSU art; in trouble ns far as the sciences are concerned Lindsey's study compared state funding of Pac-10 schools against their "production of science." or number of articles their faculty had published in major scientific journals, and found the University and OSU have slipped in terms of state funding since 1970 compared with their Pac-10 brethren The report offers a mixed bag of conclusions It puts the Uni Photo by H«II lUmm The llniversity is at the bottom of the Pac-tO in stale funding per student, says Duncan Lindsey, associate professor of human services, who conducted a funding study of Pac-10 schools. versitv at tin* bottom of the I'm III in terms of state funding per student and in the number of published si ientifh artu les Nonetheless, Lindsey’s re [>ort also indicated the t'nicer sity was getting more for each state dollar invested in terms of published research an indi cation that the school does well with the money it has Other findings included • Since 1 ‘170. the University has moved from ninth to tilth in terms of state funding per student. • In per student funding, the University's closest neighbor on the list is ninth ranked Ari zona State University. ASU was spending 12 percent less than the University per student in 1970 and is now spending about 10 percent more. • The University now pub lishes fewer scientific works than any other school in the I’ai 10. something that could not be said in 1070 • I he University produces the greatest return (of published scientifit work) on oat It dollar invested " • 1 he University is not lundetl as well as four other schools w ithin the Oregon Stale System of Higher Education, ranking behind Portland State Universi ty (fourth place). Oregon Insti tute of Technology (third). Ore gon State University (second) and Faster Oregon State Col Funding for Public Colleges and Universities in Oregon fattrrn College Mile funds Enrollment $ per student Portland State State Funds Enrollment S per student Orrgon Inst It Tech State funds Enrollment S per student State funds Enrollment S per student U«i» of Oregon State funds Enrollment $ per student Southern Oregon State funds Enrollment S per student Western Oregon State funds Enrollment S per student 1970 1,787.89 s 1.536 1.164 10,753.137 9.206 1.168 4,645.823 1,452 3,200 21,346,566 9,739 2,192 1987 7,264.824 1.414 5,138 34,803,340 9.707 3,585 2,208,682 6.377,087 10,626.246 U84 1,823 2,519 1,720 3,498 4,218 16897,000 14,772 38,983,400 14,985 61,685,000 13,559 4,549 53,237,000 15,366 3,465 124S3444 3891 3430 3,326,549 7,067.718 10,130,924 ' 3,415 2,781 3,428 974 2441 2,955 Source; Competing In the Academic Pic-10 lege (first) "1 really truly was surprised .it the results that there was such .1 differential (in fund ing)," Lindsey said. "1 thought we'd all be within the same band. ’' The study only measured the level of state funding and did not include outside sources of revenue, such as federal re search grants. Nor did the study include the Pac-1()'s two Turn to Funding, Page 4