" A OPINION Page 4 Thursday, March 23, 1989 The Michigan Daily Perspectives on osta Rica By the Coalition for and the public debt had reached the equiva- stricter yet. The sales tax was increased, loans and as its principle export market. In American country impoverishing itself to Democracy in Latin America lent of 234 percent of the nation's yearly the public sector was cut by 5,000 em- order to reduce economic dependence, ex- meet its foreign debt: the fact that recently Costa Rica has long been considered exports. Monge instituted "shock ther- ployees and large cash-crop farming was ports and export markets need to be diver- there were uprisings in Venezuela, a immune to the political and social insta- apy," consisting of harsh measures to de- encouraged at the expense of small tradi- sified, so Costa Rica is less vulnerable to country with a 30-year democratic tradi- bility that plague its neighbors. Decades crease public spending and increase rev- tional farms. Arias' policies, like those of the fluctuations of the international mar- tion, over IMF-imposed austerity pro- of economic growth, a non-interventionist enue, while opening up the external econ- Monge, met with some resistance. When ket. Import reduction would also benefit grams should clearly point out that no foreign policy, and the government's omy to international markets. Though grain subsidies were cut, farmers protested the economy while making Costa Rica country in Latin America is immune to commitment to a comprehensive health, critics claim Monge's policies were too with demonstrations and road blocks. more self-sufficient. Finally, debt repay- international economic forces. education and welfare system, led it to be drastic, Costa Rica's creditors, including Without subsidization, Costa Rican ments must be proportioned to the eco- called the "Switzerland of Central Amer- the International Monetary Fund, U.S. corn growers cannot compete with the nomic ability of the country. CDLA will be hosting the visit of ica." But in 1981, Costa Rica became the Agency for International Development and heavily subsidized corn imported from the first Latin American country to unilater- the World Bank, felt these programs were United States. Costa Rica is becoming ally suspend payment of its foreign debt. too lenient. In order to refinance debt re- increasingly dependent upon imported sta- After years of expansion, Costa Rica's payments, they called for even tighter ples, while its own land is devoted to non- economic growth slowed in the mid controls on public spending, a reduction of traditional exports such as cut flowers and 'In essence, Costa Rica's military polic now answered to the 1970s. International markets shrank in re- import tax, continued wage suppression, strawberries. sponse to the recession and the OPEC cri- and an increase in the price of public ser- Costa Rica has stabilized its economy, Reagan administration, while its economic policies were being sis, and agricultural expansion reached its vices. but at what cost? Wealth has been designed by foreign creditors.' limits as all available virgin arable land Monge was able to cushion the severity concentrated in the hands of multinationals was claimed. Assured this was a temporary of these reforms due to a substantial in- and large scale exporters. Small farmers economic crisis, Costa Rica planned to crease in funding from the U.S. Economic have been squeezed out, and as of 1985, weather it through increased borrowing. assistance from the U.S. AID more than real wages had not regained their 1979 The public debt tripled between 1974 and tripled from 1982 to 1983. It is generally levels. The price of these reforms is not 1978, and it had tripled again by 1982, acknowledged that this increase was solely economic. Education has become when President Luis Alberto Monge took "payment" for allowing contra bases to be inaccessible to many; malnutrition has Costa Rica will know social and eco- Leonel Gomez Vides, the former office. set up along the nation's Nicaraguan bor- increased, due to a decrease of money nomic improvement in the 1990s only if deputy director of the Salvadoran In- Monge realized that Costa Rica was not der. In essence, Costa Rica's military available for welfare programs, and union the United States and other international stitute for Agrarian Transformation simply facing an economic setback, but a policy now answered to the Reagan rights have been impinged upon through creditors provide it with attainable, realis- (ISTA), El Salvador's defunct insti- new economic reality. In 1981, annual in- administration, while its economic wage control and government intervention tic debt repayment plans that allow for tute for land reform, who has been in flation had topped 100 percent, unem- policies were being designed by foreign in strikes. some economic flexibility. If they do not, exile since late January 1981 after an ployment stood at 12 percent, the domes- creditors. Costa Rica's economic situation, Costa Rica may be forced to forfeit the attempt on his life on January 12, 1981, tic budget was running at a deficit equal to The economic reforms of President Os- though stable, is fragile. The country is gains it has made over the last few decades on Thursday, March 23, at 8 p.m. in 20 percent of the gross domestic product, car Arias, Monge's successor, were even overly dependent upon the U.S. both for and become another unstable Latin Rackham Ampitheatre. 6 S Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan 420 Maynard St. Vol. IC, No. 118 Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board. All ot' ar cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. Students fighting racism Nice timing, Bill MEN'S BASKETBALL coach Bill Frieder's sudden departure for Arizona 'State University could not have come at a worse time. To leave a team only a few days before the NCAA tournament is an action only someone of question- Sable character, and little concern for the team, could take. The players have depended on Frieder for instruction and guidance ever since he convinced them to come to Michigan. But he is leaving the players to their own devices at a critical juncture in the season: right when they are making their run for the national championship. Frieder's leaving is clearly something the players do not deserve. The fans, however, do. Since Michigan's second Big Ten title under Frieder and their subsequent second- round loss in the post-season tourna- ment, fans have booed Frieder at home games and have called for his ouster. Well, as fans we got our demand, but Frieder's timing stinks. There are probably many reasons while Frieder left: he stands to receive a $200,000 raise at ASU, he reportedly had a poor relationship with Athletic Director Bo Schembechler, and he thought he had accomplished all he could at Michigan. But another reason could be that we were just too tough on the guy. We, the fans and the media, underappreciated Frieder to the point of running him out of town right before post-season play. No one remembered that Frieder was a winner at Michigan. For the past six seasons, Frieder has averaged 25 wins and has guided the team to two Big Ten championships, an NIT championship, and five consecutive NCAA tourna- ment appearances. Granted, Frieder never coached the team to the Final Four despite the ex- cellent talent he recruited. But as fans we can only expect so much. We do have every right to expect a winner, but not every team can be a regular cham- pion. The whole episode smacks of the treatment the football fans at Ohio State gave coach Earle Bruce. Bruce consis- tently won nine games each season but could never capture a Rose Bowl win or a national championship. For this, the school fired Bruce in 1987 amidst fan and alumni pressure. It may be more than instructive to remember that Ohio State finished with a losing record last year under a new coach. Thankfully, we do not treat our football coach in such a way. Bo wins many regular season games and Big Ten championships, but he has a rather abysmal bowl record and has yet to win a national championship. That is a record similar to Frieder's (and to Bruce's), yet Bo is something of a de- ity on campus. Maybe, we should have given Frieder the same consideration we give Bo. However, the worst thing to come out of all of this has been the hoopla created by the tournament media around Frieder, who isn't even there, while the current work by the Michigan team and Coach Steve Fisher go unrec- ognized. Of course, we must remember that the mainstream sports press wouldn't even have batted an eye had the coach leaving been one of a women's athletic team, no matter how well the season had gone. Maybe, it would be good if the media forgot about Frieder for awhile and concen- By the United Coalition Against Racism The silence, which has been often mis- interpreted as complacency, has once again been broken. One of the most militant demonstrations against racism in the last few years took place only two weeks ago at a historically Black college, Howard University. Some might incorrectly as- sume that this would be one of the most unlikely places for a protest of this nature to occur. Those who have never been ex- posed to the atmosphere at predominately Black institutions might assume that they are a cultural haven, free from all the institutional inequities that we as students of color face on a predominantly white campus. Of course there are certain very concrete advantages, comforts and benefits to be gained by attending a Black college, however the students at Howard have put the country on notice that institutional racism, what ever its form or face, will not be tolerated. On Monday, March 6 over a thousand Black students occupied the central admin- istration building at Howard University demanding accountability from administrators on several important issues. One of the students' concerns was the seating of Republican National Commit- tee Chair Lee Atwater to the school's board of trustees. Students cited Atwater's management of the Bush campaign with its explicit racial overtones (particularly the misuse of the Willie Horton/furlough issue) as well as his positions on civil rights and apartheid as ample evidence that his presence on the board would be both symbolically and politically dangerous. Atwater expressed his interest (while on the Howard board) in continuing the Rea- gan/Bush agenda for higher education - we read this to mean further cuts in Fed- eral student aid and continued exclusion of the majority of African Americans from universities and colleges. As Michael Lewis, a student spokesperson said in a statement, Atwater is "regarded by students to be opposed to the Black agenda." The outrage over Atwater was not the only concern of student activists as the media would lead us to believe. The United Coalition of Student Leaders pre- sented a list of at least twelve demands to the Howard administration, including de- mands for improvements in financial aid, cancelling of proposed tuition increases, student input in university decision mak- ing and expansion of eurocentric curricu- lum. These demands bare a striking re- semblance to those presented by numerous student groups on campuses across the country, including our own. Financial aid and access are pressing concerns for the majority of students of color. Narrow curriculums dominated by euro/anglo-cen- tric paradigms must be challenged to in- clude the contributions of people of color and reflect the changing demographics of the U.S. and the world. Black students at Howard continued to occupy the main administration building and eventually two other buildings for four days despite several factors which could have ended the sit-in: 1)there was a court order requiring them to leave Monday night, 2) Atwater resigned on Tuesday, and 3)100 police in riot gear with tear gas and battering rams descended upon the building Tuesday to remove them. Support for the demonstration poured in locally, with D.C residents collecting food and blankets for the protestors, and nationally, with stu- dents from other Historically Black col- leges (Tuskegee Institute and Morgan State) driving to D.C. to show solidarity. Students who were on the outside of the building disrupted classes to encourage others boycott and join the demonstration with slogans like "Atwater is Finished, but the Struggle is Not. Continue to Fight for Our Rights." The Black student struggle at Howard represents a continuation of students of color taking the lead in the fight against institutional racism. These actions chal- lenged the media's images of Black stu- dents as victims of racist attacks and in- stead showed us as the true fighters we are -- in the tradition of our foreparents' struggles. As one student leader said, "We want this to send a message to Black col- leges across the country. This is just a beginning." Brown bag discussion BAKER- MANDELA U ' e P CENTER HowardUniversi Protest The Ella Baker-Nelson Mandela Center for Anti-Racist Education, a student organized and run alternative resource center is sponsoring a series of brown-bag discussions. This week's topic is "Fighting Instutionalized Racism on College Campuses." Bring lunch, drink coffee (free), and participate in the stimulating, informal discussion. Friday at 12 noon in the Baker-Mandela Center, first floor of East Engineering, room 3. 6 L".}tt.ers.?:: .......th.e,...ed:?:}. }}.... Defend abortion rights To the Daily: On March 24, 1989 the anti- choice group Operation Rescue (also known as Rescue Life) will hold a "national day of to Defend Abortion Rights (AACDAR) will conduct a clinic defense and counter- demonstration. This is a call for all women and men con- cerned about women's rights to join us in defending individual women and demonstrating for women's reproductive rights in general. Join AACDAR in saying "we will not go back." A woman's right to choose is a fundamental right that must not be denied. meet at 5:30 a.m. at the "Cube" in Regent's Plaza. We will car pool to the clinic. - Linda McFarlane March 20 0 Daily Opinion Page letter policy Due to the volume of mail, the Daily cannot print all the letters and columns it receives, although an effort is made to print the majority of the material on a wide range of views. The Daily cuts letters and columns for space in both the edi- torial process and in production. 0