Page 2 Portland Observer, May 9, 1964 American's view progress and problems in Nicaragua fey Robert Lothian This is the second article In a series about the experiences o j a group o j Portlanders who were in Nicaragua in February helping har­ vest cotton in an international brigade. W e spent our first night in Managua in a stuffy, windowless room behind an open-air "chicken shack" restaurant. The room had a single neon light and a fan that didn't work. We weren’t there ten minutes when a large cockroach jumped down the back o f one of us. We caught it and put it out for the night. It was hot and sunny when we went for a walk the next morning. Pedestrians crowded the street. Some carried things on their heads. Trucks and busses with bad m uf­ flers filled the air with noise and fumes. Taxis honked. W alking along, we noticed a Four-H our M artinizing laundry with a revolutionary banner draped across the front. Nearby was the Mercado O riental— an exotic old market, sprawling for blocks, where everything under the sun is bought and sold. We breakfasted on fried cheese and bananas with gallo pinto (small red beans and rice, the national breakfast dish), served up by a woman cooking over a charcoal fire on the sidewalk. Central Managua is still a wasteland of vacant lots, overgrown streets and shells of old buildings left over from the 1972 earthquake which killed 20.000. Families oc­ cupy ruined buildings, haul water in buckets, burn trash in the vacant lots, and hang their wash out to dry over the rubble. Scrap lumber and thin plywood shacks with rusty tin roofing take up block after block. Resources which could go toward alleviating poverty must go into defense against the CIA-financed contras. In spite o f economic problems caused by the border war and US trade embargo, the revolutionary government has in­ stituted reading, innoculations, sub­ sidized food, free health care and education programs. Nicaragua remains poor, but we were told the poor have it better there than in the other Central American countries. We passed a several-block-long mural depicting the history of Nicaragua in bright colors. Slogans decorated the walls and banners flew over the streets patrolled by guards toting the ever present AK -47. East German troop trucks with San­ dinista drivers roared by. We noticed man> slit trench bomb shelters and sandbagged guard posts. The next night, we met for orien­ tation at a conference center outside Managua. We learned that we would be going to a 4,000-acre state-owned cotton plantation on the northwest coast, called Apascali. In the three days remaining in Managua, we surrection as bullets whizzed through the thin walls o f their house. We were told that plans for Ciudad Sandino include paved roads, a new hospital, more telephones, a bean and corn cultivators' cooperative, and a cultural center. We arrived at Apascali after dark. O ur First impressions were formed in the revolutionary greetings o f­ fered by farm leaders, who led the crowd of workers, soldiers, children and Americans in revolutionary chants. Then, with a lot o f feeling, the Nicaraguans sang the Sandinista Hymn for us, which we were to hear many times during our stay. Singing with the campesinos under the stars in Nicaragua Libre— a moving ex­ We were up at 5 a m. for break­ fast and our First daylight views o f this wild and adventurous place. W e discovered a small village with several dozen farm buildings, workers' row houses, a store with minimal supplies and a baseball Field arranged around a dusty open area bordered by a row o f dusty trees. The cotton processing plant droned nearby. Crop dusters buzzed the Fields down toward the ocean, which stretched away to the west. Trucks and tractors raised clouds o f dust. It was early, but already young girls were washing clothes by hand Women patted ground corn into tortillas. A large group of Nicaraguans took o ff for the Fields, riding on a traitor. Looking north over the Fields and across the G u lf of Fonseca, we could sec the mountains o f H on­ duras and a huge volcanoe in El Salvador. We learned that on the day o f our arrival, contra airplanes had attacked a Sandinista military post near the road to Apascali. The Nicaraguans told us that sinister planes flew over the farm , and that Select your public servants carefully— Insist on proven leadership and experience! Elect JOE LANE COUNTY CLERK Nlcaraguan children w ith thair pupplaa. listened to lectures, visited markets and talked to Americans from New York, Georgia and many other states. We also took a day trip to Ciudad Sandino, a former shantytown on the outskirts of Managua which is becoming a showcase o f the revolution. We toured a free health clinic there, organized and built by neighborhood women ("w h ile the men played baseball," said (he head nurse). We also talked to a family who had spent three days in their tile-lined shower during the 1979 in­ (Photo: Kria Ahuchar) perience. We had our First meal on the farm — salty Fish, beans, rice, tor­ tillas and coffee. Then, dog tired, we claimed our bunks in the dusty old wooden bunkhouse with a naked bulb hanging from the ceiling. Some o f us soon found that large mice inhabited (his bunkhouse. They scratch on the walls and run over faces. Also, by now, many o f us had diarrhea and must take trips to the latrine throughout the night. We didn't get ft PROVEN COMPETENCE AS A BUSINESSMAN AND ADMINISTRATOR i, MOST QUALIFIED BY EXPERIENCE Cr TRAINING ft ONE OF OREGON'S OUTSTANDING COMMUNITY LEADERS JOE LANE’a bualnaaa and management experience are your best assurance that a department with a budget in excess of a •M illion is run the way you would operate your own business. JOE LANE knows minorities —a Native American w ith a Chinese-American w ife, he successfully led the S ileti Restoration M ovam ant in tha 1970's. JOE LANE HAS THE LEADERSHIP AND BUSINESS EXPERIENCE YOU NEEDI VOTE FOR JOE LANEI FORGET M E NOTI P a id n n litic a l a d v.. Jo e L a n e 3335 SE 43rd. P ortland much sleep. Re-Elect Senator McCoy v State Representative. 1973-1975. ▼ Democratic Precinct Committeeman, 1952 to present. State Senator. 1975 to present. v they could see the lights o f US w ar­ ships o ff the coast at night. They had built several bomb shelters and we helped them build another. The farm was guarded by a militia detachment. The Nicaraguans seemed more than happy to have us. Aside from the spectacle o f having 150 North Americans in their midst, with their fancy paraphenalia from the wealthy north, we seemed to offer them some protection from contra attacks. Next: We pick cotton. President pro-tempore of the Senate, 1983 to present. Democratic National Committeeman, 1976-1980. ▼ Chairman, Multnomah County Central Committee, 1968-1972. Bill McCoy has become one of the most experienced and respected members of the Oregon State Senate. That's why his colleagues selected him President Pro Tempore and why he serves on the important Legislative Emergency Board. His experience as Chair of the Human Resources Committee and on the Ways and Means, Labor, Trade and Economic Develop­ ment, Education, Banking and Public Finance and Revenue Committees means that he can get the job done for his people.