Schools under siege Up have stirn tlw glory ol the burning of the '•t hool U'c haw tortured every teat her. we have broken even rule W e re gonna hang the principal tomorrow after school If vou wont to elementary school in Americ .1 i lumrcs are you oithor sang this song or at least hoard it. Ami what liltlo kid hasn't walked to class after not doing Ins or her homework and fantasized about seeing fire troi ks hosing down the si hool after a midnight blaze? When an arsonist actualh burns a school to the ground or vandals pulverize a third grade classroom, however, it's different And recent events in 1 ommuni ties surrounding Lugono have made l.ane Countv resi dents wondoi just what the world, and the attitude to ward the nation's si hoots, are coming to The huge color photo 011 the front page of I-ritl.«\ s Kugene Register-tiuaril says it all five first-graders and their teachei stand behind <1 yellow tape barrier, look ing on with grim fac es at the charred remains of their classroom and the lest ol an entire wing of Veneta Lie mentarv Si hool. tori lied by an arsonist the night of Oil 1 Lite Thursday night, the madness continued l' 11 - known suspects sneaked into 1 lassrooms at Dorena Lie mentarv Si.hool isist of (.'ottage drove and thrashed them, pulling posters and displays off walls, smearing the little desks with glue and scattering papers every where, {.‘lasses had to he canceled until the mess could be 1 leaned up. The past few years have been grim for Oregon's schools Teachers at the Veneta school, for example, had to do all the comforting in the week following their school's blaze, the counselor positions eliminated because of budget cuts. As it is. the cost of the fire will be about $750.1)00. the last thing a financially strapped sc hool district needs. It all makes one wonder about the altitudes people have about their educ ation system. Teac hers are under paid. Schools c lose for lack of sound funding. Student scores in the United States are falling against those of our international noighlxirs And now this. Sheesh. These c ases were not the work of a single person or group; the suspects in the Veneta case are 10. 11 and 1J. while the people who ransacked the Domna school were tall enough to steal a school bus and drive it a few miles before ditching it. Parents, teachers, students and law enforcement personnel in the area should be watchful of their schools in the next few weeks, and hope that altitudes — and ways of spending a slow evening — change. Editorial (■*> 1 fj/ fv *J» BCK-TD-SCHOOLI mew BOXES SUPPLIES flak JACKETS Eugene's sister city program is good idea The Soviets have come and gone, and Eugene is tlic better lor it This past weekend, five Soviet delegates from Kngene’s sister ( ity Irkutsk ( ame to dis c tiss and exchange opinions on various top ics In an informal quostiun-and answer ses sion Saturday, the University staged its own form of Uoid War thawing. The delegates shared their views with a group of 75 interested local residents. Through an interpreter, the Soviets told of the problems facing the Siberian communi ty. Among them; pollution and reduction of forest land. Sound familiar? Pollution appears to be a major problem in Irkutsk Apparently, a pulp and paper mill in the city dumps chemical waste into nearby hike Baikal. The solution? The delegates said the plant is being removed Seems like a pretty good idea. Well, the Soviet's have gone back home, and a little bit of them was left in Eugene. Their coming was just another step in the whole process of detente, glasnost and open DOSS. Eugene’s sister city program helps bring people of two diverse cultures together. The Soviets take this city exchange pro gram seriously enough to send a vice-mayor and .t local party official half way around the world to Eugene. Among the delegates was a riveter from an aircraft company. He said the leaders of both countries are here for only a short time, but the workers stay. In other words, if workers of both coun tries can make peace, so can the leaders. After the meeting, the Soviets showed pictures of their families, and Eugene resi dents gave them gifts. And for all the vari ous public posturing done by the U.S. and Soviet governments, this simple little cultur al exchange was probably the most benefi cial. We don’t know everything about the world and neither do the Soviets. But maybe if we get together and exchange ideas every once in a while, things will get done. And that's just what the sister city pro gram does. Forum Bush keeps rhetoric going on importance of drug issue By George Bush Summer is over and classes arc back in session. As we t>e gin the school year, our _Commentary thoughts turn to the future a future gravely threatened by drugs. Who is responsible? Every - one uses drugs Kveryone sells drugs Everyone looks the other way. Some people used to call drugs |ust a benign form of re< reation They're not Drugs are a real and extremely serious threat to our schools, our houses, our friends and our families It doesn't matter where you live or what school you attend No one is tree from the threat of drugs Inner i ilies. small towns, and college cam puses are under siege be i ause Amerii a is under siege On Sept 5. I announced the first comprehensive national strategy to end the siege to fight drugs with tougher laws and enforcement. and with im proved treatment, education and prevention The programs we've proposed are an all-out assault against the evil of drug use and drug traffir king We are aggressively attacking the? problem from every angle, and proposing a t‘t(10 drug budget totaling over $H billion the largest single increase! in histo ry. America is fighting a war against drugs Yet the most im portant weapons in the war on drugs are the least tangible: self-discipline, courage, char acter. support from one's fami ly. faith in God and in one's self. Fundamentally. the drug problem in America is not one of supply, but of demand. We are taking strong new action to stop the flow of drugs into this country and to stop the dealers themselves, but as long as Amerit ans are willing to buy il legal drugs, somebody, some where in the world will sell them Recently. I met with Mrs Kv erett Hatcher, the widow of a veteran L)EA (Drug Enforce nient Agency) agent who was killed by drug-using cowards A woman of considerable dig nity, she put responsibility for her husband's death squarely on "casual” users of cocaine She’s right — and there is now blood on their hands. Similarly, President Barco of Colombia recently made an ap peal to Americans to stop buy ing the cocaine causing the slaughter of innocent civilians in the drug wars there. Every student in America at some point — at a party, in a locker room, in a dorm room every student must choose to accept or reject drugs But there is another choice that college students, as responsible adults, must make — whether to get involved in a personal way to end drug use, or to look the other way. College campuses have long been centers of conscience and idealism in this country; places where students have raised their voices to protest oppres sion. injustice and human suf fering around the world. Yet, no one would deny that often drugs go hand and hand with injustice, suffering and even death. But where is the sound of protest? Innocent bystanders are killed at random on city streets Babies are born addict ed to crack and heroin. Young children are forced into the drug trade by addicts. What greater human rights violations exist? What greater injustices? Yet, recreational drug users on some college campuses are still ambivalent to the death and de struction they are financing We must appeal to the social conscience of every college stu dent on every college campus in America. The way to protest the misery and oppression brought about by drugs is to commit yourself to staying away from drugs — and work ing to keep them away from your friends. Drug use doesn't usually be gin the way most people would think, with young people get ting their first drugs from an addict or a dealer. Instead, they get them free from "friends" who think casual drug use hurts no one. Peer pressure is what spreads drug use, and peer pressure can help stop it You can help stop it — if you get involved. George Hush is President of the United States This column teas distributed by the Colle giate Network -Commentary Policy I he Oregon Daily Emerald welcomes commentaries from the public concerning topics of interest to the l 'diversity community.