Editorial Even with changes, conduct bill flawed After a small chorus of voices expressed concern over a proposed student conduct code amendment reg ulating cases of academic dishonesty and mental insta bility earlier this week (ODE. "Mental evaluation must be independent." May 24). the reaction was swift. The proposal’s language has now been changed to explicitly deal with (hose concerns. This is good, but are we entirely happy with the bill now? Well, no. Under the proposal (in both its original form and the amended version), students charged with any con duct code violation would be required to submit a writ ten document from a University Student Health Center psychiatrist if they are to claim mental instability dur ing the hearings process. We had two problems with this proposal. First, students and their rights wouldn’t be adequately served if limited to one team of counselors. Under the new bill, students are expressly allowed to submit statements from outside psychiatrists. The new lan guage does fix our original concern, but we still have a problem that students are required to visit the Univer sity’s health center. The reasoning behind the requirement is that, with the large number of psychiatrists out there, it would be too easy for students to find a “quack" to sign whatev er the student desired Supposedly, the ethics of health center counselors would prevent this from happening to students. We think it is naive to automatically as sume there is a higher standard at the health center. This is not an indictment of the health center. The psychiatric community, both here and as a whole, is well-regulated enough so that respectable counselors can In; separated from shady ones. But to ease stu dents' consciences, if nothing else, the evaluation should be entirely separate from the University Our other concern was that such a code process re quired the student to make the decision that he or she? was mentally ill literally a case of "Physician, heal thyself!" This concern has been addressed, hut again, less than satisfactorily. Students facing cotie charges meet with the con dut t code coordinator, who informs the students of his or her rights, including the requirement to seek a state ment if lie or she wants to claim mental instability. So the student's decision to seek a statement is not one that comes out of left field; he or she is guided in the process. Hut it is still the student that must make the decision, and again, we point out that it the student truly is ill, then he or she shouldn't he the one making that decision. ALL CLEAN If you must vacation, be careful at least It's time once again for the Emerald’s holiday admonition to be careful while driv ing out there this Memorial Day weekend. Wanting the juicy, hard-hitting facts that would shake people into exercising proper caution on the highways and to see if any one actually heeds these announcements, we called the Lane County Public Safety De partment for last year's driving fatality sta tistics, but there was nobody there for us to talk to when we called at 4:30 p.m. Thurs day. They had all gone home. Clearly, they are more excited about Memorial Day than we are. We re having a hard time getting enthu siastic. about the three-day weekend, what with term papers due next week and finals just around the corner Remember, next week is Dead Week, even if it is shorter by a day. All in all. we decided you'd probably be better off staying home this weekend. The weather isn't going to be that great. The rain is going to stay until Monday, and the temperature may eventually rise to the oh-so-balmy 70s by then. You won't run into highway construe tion crews this weekend, because the state s construction contracts prohibit work that in terferes with holiday traffic. But you are likely to run into long lines of campers in the mountains and boaters on the coast, overbooked hotels and motels, and the ubiq uitous stupid drunk driver. Does this sound like fun? Also, the price of gasoline has risen as tronomically since that darn Valdez oil spill, so why bother driving anywhere? After a year of stable gas prices, the latest figures from the American Automobile Association have identified a price increase at the pumps of 17 cents a gallon over the last nine weeks. Ouch! That's the steepest price increase in nine years. Around here, the average price of a gallon of gas was about $1.06; this year you can expect to pork out $1.27 a gal lon. That’s a 20 percent increase. Wouldn't you rather stay home and play Fictionary? Or maybe actually try studying? We realize that this whining isn’t likely to deter too many people from getting out of town, so here, at last, is our warning; tf you do decide to go out, please be careful. And also be smart — don’t drink and drive yourself. Have fun. _Letters Justice Now Ihul the Palestinians have culled for exact rotrilnition against those who have system uticallv killed and tortured them for ve.irs (the current up rising being only the latest epi sode). "sound advice" for "cooler heads to prevail" is suddenly echoing in the U S media (ODK. May 22) Kveryone is entitled to self defense but the Palestinians can only die for the world to of fer sympathy Mow heavy a price do the Palestinians have to pay before it is deemed nec essary th.it Zionist brutality should stop? It is a fact that without direct U S money ($-1 billion a year) the Israelis would not be able to continue their latest inhumane and ruthless practices The is sue is clear 1'he Palestinians have been wronged and wronged again So instead ol simply passing advice, maybe the editor should encourage his fellow students to even ise their democratic right by writing their senators to check the money flow (their taxes) that is financing the latest Zionist atrocities <)nl\ In redressing u rongs i an violent e be halted The Palestinians am not ask • mu tor sympathy; what they want is instil c And as long as tin* world only remains inter ested in aiding the arm that is oppressing thorn they then re serve the right to defend them selves hv whichever means nei essary Ali Atoui TCK Safe channels 1 read with disgust a letter supporting the defamation ol our campus from Teresa Reeves and baurdl Sharp and (ODM. Mai 23) In response to the nar row-minded views presented in the letter. I ask these writers to consider whether others' opin ions (ini hiding anti ga\ beliefs) are equally deserving of a space on University buildings, or would they feel that anti-gay sentiments expressed with spray paint were eyesores and acts of vandalism? A serious i ontradii tion is ex posed among those in the gay and lesbian community who feel the need to commit illegal arts in order to let the rest of us "know you exist." It is possi ble and healthy for people with different sexual preferences to exist without heating each oth er over the head. If acceptance and equality are truly your goals, I suggest you begin by considering yourselves equals who are not above the laws re spected and upheld by the rest of society. These acts of vandal ism are promoting the message that you don't want equal rights; what you really want are special rights which permit you to act as you please, regardless of rules others must abide by. Thus, far from fostering a positive image, far from gain ing acceptance, support and re spec I through positive and ben eficial activities, the vandals only succeeded in belittling their cause and alienating peo ple in the mainstream commu nity whose acceptance they say they most want. Any cause which cannot find or create more productive "safe chan nels" for expression than van dalism doesn't appear to be a cause very deserving of sup port . Melissa I.undstedt Eugene Gonzo image 1 heartily agree with the arti cle you printed stating the need for increased awareness of trail etiquette among mountain bike riders (ODE, May 1). The possi bilities of trail damage ow'ing to poor technique are tremendous. Most of us try to be conscien tious in our riding, realizing that there are other people who wish to enjoy the trails. We're working on improving our im age as our trail consciousness increases. Ninety percent of us are interested in a compromise between ourselves and hikers. Knowing these things, it bothers me that you would ac company your article with a picture of a mountain biker who is apparently of the 10 per cent who don't really care about the future of mountain biking. Screaming, bone-head. kick-out-the-back-wheel-at-lTv miles-an-hour-while-off-of-the marked-trail tactics are the realm of a small group of shortsighted riders, and they are making trouble for all of us 1 don’t do this. My friends don't do this. If 1 see anyone doing this 1 attempt to educate them in as friendly a means as possible. Used properly, a mountain bike creates little trail damage Used improperly, it can gouge six inch furrows into a fragile trail. We don’t want the "gon zo" image to spread any further than it has. Please don't judge us all by the actions of a minor ity. Steve Close English literature -Letters Policy-— Letters to the editor must be limited to no more than 250 words, legible, signed and the identification of the writer must be verified.