_Editorial_ Law school should heed ABA's threat lust when you think things can't gut any worse, along comes something else to kick you right in the teeth. Hy now, most people know the Oregon State Sys tem of Higher Education is in dire financial straits caused by inadequate funding from the state legisla ture. But last Friday, the issue took on a new twist when it was learned the University’s Sc hool ot I .a w has been threatened with the retraction of its accredit ation. Law School Dean Maurice Holland recently re ceived a letter from the American ll.tr Assoc iation. which certifies all law schools, detailing ways in which the school is deficient. To summarize' some of the ABA’s concerns the law library budget, poor faculty-to-student ratios, no "externship" program and low fac ulty salaries Boiling all of these things down, money or the la< k of it is the root of the law sc bool's problems In adequate funding is damaging the* reputation of what is considered one of the best law sc bools on the West (Iciiist. Holland said the letter amounts to a hollow threat, and only a slim chance remains that the1 law sc hool will ac tually lose its accreditation. The AHA rarel\ re moves its stamp of approval and has never done so to an Oregon school. The University's law school is not the; place' to start. The AHA first came to the law school three years ago Apparently, it was not happy with what it saw. The letter is just another step in hounding the law school into cleaning up its act or c learing out of town Even if the* accreditation is left intact, the warning should not bo taken lightly. Reputation is an extremely important part of any school. If prospective students feed the University's law school is going downhill, they'll take their studies — and their tuition — else where. To his credit. Holland has taken the warning seri ously lie called a meeting with the law school faculty and administration to discuss the problem and is hon est enough to admit there are problems. However, admitting mistakes and actually doing something about them are two different things. The ABA is not going to make idle threats forever. Push it far enough, and the ABA may turn the unthinkable into reality. If it seems we’re harping on the lack of money in the higher education system, it’s because we are. We don't think the law school deserves to lose its accredit ation. but even the threat of it cannot be ignored. High er education and legislators are receiving a pretty clear message: The University, along with the rest of the OSSHE schools, needs money. Fast. HANG IN TUERE, KID... I THINK YOU'RE WEARING HIM OUT.. Noriega Oregon is ahead of the game in recycling This wee*h is Onion's Km y< ling Aware ness Week (lov Neil Goldschmidt initiated (lie event four \ears ago when c urbside re i v< ling was implemented around the state. The purpose of the event is to help cre ate awareness of various recyc ling programs in the state, to help preserve the heautv of thi‘ st.ite. and to send out a clear message that Oregonians are concerned about their state* and environment. The name of this year's event is "Recycl ing: It s the Oregon Way.” And it's true — Oregon is a national leader in recycling. Uurbside recycling is offered to almost 75 percent of all Oregonians Residents here re t vc h* 05 percent of their newspapers as com pared with a national figure* of 54 percent. So what's the* big deal about recycling anyway? Some people think it takes too much time and trouble to tie up their news papers and crush all the*ir tin cans. Well, in some respects they are right — it does take some extra time and energy. Hut. it also saves a lot of energy. Department of Environmental Quality statistics show that recycling one ton of office paper saves the* equivalent of 480 gallons of oil. The* amount of garbage that is produced in this country or even just in this state is as tounding. 'flu* United States makes up about five percent of the* world’s population hut produces 15 to 38 percent of the garbage. Recycling is vital to our survival on the earth. Millions of trees are cut down every year to fulfill our paper needs. A vast major ity of this paper can be recycled. Sunday pa pers are a gooil example; 88 percent of them art; not recycled, and it takes 500,000 trees to product; (lit; nation’s Sunday papers Creating awareness about how, what and when to recycle is important, but more im portant is making it easier for people to recy cle. Recycling on campus has been on the upswing these days. Recycling bins on cam pus have increased. This is due largely to tin; efforts of the people at Pearl Buck Re cycling. who run the on-campus recycling program. One person picks up recyclable pa per from over 180 different spots on campus every week — truly a superhuman effort. The Survival Center is also working to enlarge the campus recycling program and to encourage students to take more responsi bility when it comes to recycling. Recycling creates continually renewable resources, which are rare commodities in an age of quickly deteriorating natural resources. Re member, all those products that are so easily disposed of can often be recycled, and it they can't, we probably won’t be able to dis pose of them for hundreds of years. _Forum_ Civil liberties latest victim in war on drugs B> Mit had Colson Politic s makes strange bedfol lows, but so. it turns out. do drugs In a Supreme Court opinion involving the court's arc libber al. Thurgood Marshall, and its arc hconservative. Antonin Sc a _Commentary_ ha. a similar warning was sounded: In the war on drugs, civil liberties mas turn out to lie the latest victim Sc .ilia thundered down from the right in a case invoh ing the government program to admin ister drug tests to .ill emplovees of the U.S Customs service, whir h tin- court upheld Safetv is not an issue here The government wants some thing called a drug-tree work plat e, .mtl while that is .1 wor thy goal, the question is at what cost'? Is it worth a t lear invasion of privacy' St alia, on the losing suit1 of a 5-4 decision, said it is not And he is right In the first place, he has the fat ts on his side There is no indication that drug use is a problem among Customs workers. Some t.tiuo workers have been tested and only five tested positive, hardly a cause to humiliate a whole group of federal employees by marching them into the nathroom. paper t up in hand. As with other federal workers slated for drug testing, the gov ernment wanted to make a point Drugs will not be tolerat ed Hut St alia also wanted to make a point “I think it is oh viuiis that this justification is unacceptable: that the impair ment if civil liberties cannot he the means of making .1 point." When the left (Marshall) and the right (Sealia) combine, the rest of the court ought to pay heed and so should the na tion. The war on drugs is not. tor all the rhetoric . a real war The drug problem is different It is a tragii social malaise and an urgent criminal-justice mat ter. but not all proposed rem edies are apt Take, for instance, the Dis trict of Columbia's attempt to impose curfew on teenagers This was proposed as part of the war on drugs an attempt to appease the public that something was being done. It hardh mattered that the rights of a whole class of people would he restricted bei ause a few of them pose a danger Recently, k ite President Dan Quayle raised the spe< tor of McCarthy ism in condemning the Senate's rejection of John Tower (Juayle had his analo gies all wrong If it is a latter day McCarthy ism that he seeks. Quayle ought to turn his atten tion to drugs. Here, as with communism in the 1950s, we have a public panic, a willingness to condone violations of c ivil liberties, be cause another threat is per ceived to la> much greater Drugs remain a serious prob lem Hut not so serious that we have to engage in w holesale in fringements on civil liberties and a loss of perspective es pecially when the "remedies are more symbolic than real Wholesale drug testing, cur few, and the death penalty these are all placebos, not panaceas. Scalia on the right and Mar shall on the left have sounded a warning that should not go un heeded. The shots being fired in the war on drugs are rico cheting. riddling our civil lib erties and endangering us all Michael Colson is a political science student at the l 'niversi tv. --—Commentary Policy_— Commentaries should be between 750 and 1.000 words, legible and signed, and the identifica tion of the writer must be verified upon submission. Writers may only submit one commentary a month.