May, '^1992 The Broncos' Voice Page 5 Another Notch in the Gun by Sam Silva It’s been a few years since the second democratic election in Nicaragua’s recent history catapulted a rather young and ide alistic widow into the center of that country’s poUtical arena and into a sur prising victory at the polls. When pollsters that the US government hired indicated a victory by Sandinista leader Daniel Ortega by a margin of about three percentage points, George Bush began intimating that the elections were a certain fraud; apoliti cal faux pas that the American people, true to their calling, ignored when it turned out that after the votes were counted Chamoro and her coalition had won. A friend of mine with his own politi cal bailiwick to defend called Chamoro a fascist Then as now, publicly or other wise, I begged to differ. I admitted that sooner or later no one other than an elitist dictator would satisfy the business inter ests of our country and intentions of our State Department, but I could not for the life of me believe that she was that person. And I still think I’m right. I told my friend that she wasn’t the devil at all but an idiot, for all of her ludicrous comparisons of herself with Margaret Thatcher and a whole series of “of-the-age” euphemisms about decentralization which had nothing to do with any kind of Nicaragua other than the one she must have fantasized about at rich dinner parties she attended with her friends. I said that for a year or two she would be immensely popular because a slew of bread and circus US foreign aid would be temporarily available as an interim part of our plans but that after that she would deal with a population which was, in spite of things such as rationing, used to thinking of itself under the Sandinistas as a popula tion of citizens and not your typical tongue for the Patron’s boot, and that because, in essence, her campaign promises were as ludicrous as those of one of our own politicians, when the aid dried up, they would be that much more annoyed. In desperately trying to deal with a newly organized indep>endent labor move ment, Chamoro has begun to adopt a num ber of Contra style thug policies, breaking the heads of marching demonstrators and so on, and has even appointed a former Contra to head labor affairs at cabinet level. The Sandinistas in the assembly have been rather critical of these tactics, but on most other levels have been cooperative in making the best of the president’s bad policies, a fact which both Chamoro and the US State Department are willing to admit. I don’t think that given their mar ginal level of activism these days the FSLN can conceivably be the people’s choice, but whether it is them or someone else the next time around it will almost certainly be a socialist of some sort, and someone who our own dear government is not too likely to tolerate — that is, assum ing the elections are clean. And this was, in essence, the basis of my prediction: while Chamoro is willing to bust the heads of a few union demon strators, I don’t believe that she would be in the business of stuffing ballots. Will she OEMOCRfflC i-OGilC AT WOffK I HOPE IM£ I!I/M0)!5 ,«8ounHf OOdBeR SWI5E" TU*N our TO betwe. sm, r woutp RviN The pREsipy*:y si/r ir W5l'U» FINISH BUiH HinmRi IF THE RECESSION 6ETS EVEN worse, WE'Pe IN! WHO CARES IF TWt cmitl IS PIUN6£0 INTO AN tCONOMC NienifMK? ]OE;lUy THE JUPREME COUkT Will ovEKrytN “Roe vs. ¥ak' Die WAe trwtiN the sexes win SWRED OUP foCMl M!RIC roREvtt! PERSONALLY, I'H H0LDN6 Ol/T FOU HuaEAi Wlid Kmcidom By Anthony Rubino, Jr. Stuff We Think When The Alarm Goes Off Sleeping 15 no mean art: for its sake one must stay owake all 6Qy. "—Nietzsche Only 16 more i J Alright. I hav class in about 33 seconds (and this clock is fast so that's probably more like 37 seconds). So, I'll hit the snooz button, and if I don't take a shower or brush my teetli or put on shoes... or sox. There must ^ ^ No wait... be some mistake, you see. Because I just wenf O.K., to O.K., O.K.. Where am I? Well, I'm already late, and I hate walking in after class has started. So... Nitey-nite! me hours till bed-time think we re seeing a film If I don't eat breakfast, or take a shower, and if I run as fast as I can when I get outside, then I can sleep an extra 15 seconds... No wait... today anyway WHAT'S THAT NOIS WHAT'S THAT NOISE?! HAT'S THAT NOISE?! onna put my head down for one eentsie- weentsie minute. sw m 1. "A distant relative died, and 1 hod to go to the funeral.'—GOOD (But, be sure you make up the relative, t>ecause If you use a real person and ttiat person dies ttian you'll feel really bad.) 1.1 died —BAD (Not only will this create immediote suspicion, but it is very difficult to prove.) 2. "1 was very very ill."—OOOD 2, "1 was very very ill because 1 washed down a bottle of tequila with a bottle of vodka, and spent most of the night projectile vomiting. —BAD (Too much detail.) 3. "While off campus visiting my sick grandmother, 1 got a flat tire."—«OOD 3. Your lectures are so boring they make me want fo run from your classroom, screaming, and slit my wrists."—BAD (Honest, but bad.) run with a vice president who is some kind of Contra deputy? If so, there may be a solution to the puzzle. Perhaps he can claim a fraudulent electoral victory that leads to the glorious Somosista presidency for life . . . after putting a bullet in this naive woman’s skull ... and for good measure, why not blame it on the Commu nists.