Editorial Legalize marijuana safely, responsibly We support the intent of the Oregon Marijuana in itiative. Ballot Measure 5. but we cannot support this measure. The measure would not legalize selling marijuana or driving under its influence. It would legalize what hundreds of thousands of Oregonians practice, harmlessly, today. However, we do have concerns with this measure. Marijuana was legalized under Alaskan state law when the Alaskan Supreme Court ruled that an individual’s right to privacy outweighs the state’s interest in prosecution. We agree. However, the Alaska Legislature followed up by defin ing personal possesion and use very specifically. Any measure or bill that would legalize this drug in Oregon must define legal ambiguities such as "personal use" and "intent to sell.” Oregon, with a climate that supports marijuana plants and an already large marijuna trade, must be particularly cautious of potential for abuse of this law. We are also concerned that legalization might lead to in creased use among IB- to 20-year-olds, who would be able to smoke marijuana, but not drink. Oregon must be careful about what drugs minors have access to. If the measure would lead to a drop in marijuana prices, as many supporters feel it would, the increase in use among minors could be doubly bad. Oregonians can make responsible, adult decisions about marijuana use, just as they make this decision about alchohol. Most marijuana users do make responsible, recrea tional use of marijuana. Measure 5 makes an important statement, but it should resolve any legal problems before they arise and maintain consistency in what drugs minors have access to. Oregon has a unique climate in which good, innovative ideas abound about how to govern the state. Measure 5 is one such idea, but Oregon must legalize marijuana safely and responsibly. Lab break-in, destruction only discredits intention If the people responsible for the break-in and destruc tion of animal research laboratories on campus are afraid the intent of their action has been lost in media reports, they are wrong. The intent of the action was lost in the action itself. It was a mindless, irrational effort to make a point that had already been made in the community. The University implemented an extensive policy last fall that demands that the animals be treated humanely; the policy covers the treatment of animals in research, stressing the health and comfort of the animals and that research only use animals where necessary. Thus the University had committed itself formally to the "humane and ethical care and use of laboratory animals." as University President Paul Olum put it. Animal rights advocates were pleased with the new rules, but as time wore on it became clear they wanted nothing less than an absolute moratorium on animal research. Such a stand ignores how essential animal research is to medical and biological understanding. Animal research was. and is. used in the fights against polio, bubonic plague, diabetes and cancer. Sometimes the point of research is not clear to laymen, but the research is critical. There is no un necessary animal research going on at the University. The animal lab raid was perhaps intended as a blow against all animal research, but with damages estimated at $50,000. the University and its researchers will pay the price. The University has better things to spend $50,000 on than mopping up after a small, irrational group of people. We also wonder how those who broke in will be able to care for so many animals, most of whom had been raised in a laboratory environment. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals was very concerned about the animals' well-being in the labs; we hope the members of PKTA who endorsed the action will now try to ensure that the animals are safe. The researchers, who cared for the animals, are certain that many of the animals are already dead. The research community has rallied around the resear chers. and the response to animal rights activists has not been favorable, as they would have liked. Thus the result was exactly what the result of any destruction should be — the victims have been strengthened and the perpetrators discredited. HOW MSSNPORMKnON WWKS... omcomwMNr IIS THGM Letters Real abusers If the anti-vivisectionists have a problem with animal research, why don't they go after the real abusers: the third-rate scien tists running product-testing labs where sanitation is non existent. animals die from ex posure, hunger, dehydration, aijd self-mutilation; where animats disappear during ex periments. and data is falsified. invented or suppressed accor ding to the requirements of the contracting company that wants to prove its product is ‘'safe.’' Huge numbers of animals are abused and destroyed in product-testing labs. Most of what goes on there has no legitimate scientific value, only commercial value. The "results" of product-testing on animals, doctored or manufac tured according to need, are us ed to justify registration with federal agencies of all manner of dangerous and often worthless products. The usual practice is to register anything on which cer tain animal tests are reported to have been done. The regulators rarely read the reports. If they look at them at all, they only read the conclusions, which of course claim the product is "safe." Never mind the data — if there is any. Do the antl-vivisectionists care? I don’t think so. Like the clinic bombers, they are mainly concerned with suppressing thought — not with saving lives. Ann Tattersall Post-Bac, geology Constitution What's next — lie detector tests to verify athletes' class at tendence? You say that would constitute a clear violation of 4th Amendment rights? We want to point out that the athletic department's drug testing policy represents a similar violation. Athletic department: "Athletes sign contracts, and thus consent to testing." Fact: If the student body were subject to this loss of rights we know what would happen. No one would enroll at Oregon and there would be no University. Relocation by an athlete is dif frcult and costly (NCAA policy). Thus the athletes have much less power over their situation. It is our opinion that the athlete’s high visibility and vulnerability are being ex ploited by the athletic depart ment in an effort to clean up the image of college athletics. Athletic department: "Not only was the fact that we tested for drugs well-received by student-athletes. . .we received full support,” Bill Byrne. Fact: Picture this; you are stripped to the knees, shirt above your chest — you are closely observed by athletic department staff while you urinate into a cup. This test was a surprise (athleteshave 12 hours notice). According to every athlete we spoke to. the process is “humiliating," and "degrading.” These are hardly words of complete support. Finally, we want to note that no U.S. citizen can "sign away” his/her constitutional rights. Hence, Mr. Byrne and Ms. Voelz. a signature on a release form implies neither consent nor support. )ust ask. Bryon Robertson Eugene A solution For a solution to the current campus parking crisis I suggest the University hire Sacred Heart Hospital as they seem quite adept at creating parking lots in the campus area. Steve Orosz History Oregon Daily Emerald The Oregon Dally Emerald la published Monday through Friday except during exam weak and vacations by the Oregon Dally Emerald Publishing Co, at the University of Oregon. Eugene. 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