EDITORIAL Officer on foot patrol good for community Hie Westgate/University business district now has its own Eugene police officer. Under e program funded by the University, the University Small Business Association and the Eugene Police Dept., Officer Ken Saxon will petrol the area be tween E. 11th and E. 15th. avenues, and Kinceid and Patterson streets, on foot. The idee is a great one. Every community should be patrolled by visible police officers. All too often they are considered the enemy, an unseen force hidden behind shades and steeling wheels. The aim erf the program is to ''discourage antiso cial and criminal behaviors” by having a visible officer patrolling the neighborhood. Business owners complain about street people blacking the doors to their businesses. Students com plain about the panhandlers. Everybody complains about party revelers. From a public relations standpoint, the police de partment needs to interact with everyday citizens. Peo ple can stop and ask police officers questions about policies and procedures, and it's always helpful to have a police officer around in a emergency situation. The next time an out-of-control party happens in the University area, one friendly and recognizable po liceman can do more than a battalion of SWAT teams to alleviate the situation. It s easier lor riot-geared pouce wun niaoen laces to overreact. A police officer will deal with a tense sit uation differently if he or she has to come back to the area and patrol the next day. Ideally, police officers should live in the neighbor hoods they patrol. It's more comfortable interacting with people we know. The same applies to the police. It’s good to know the names of officers patrolling the streets. Incidents of harassment should decrease fust by the presence of an officer. Some people feel more comfort able walking the University area knowing a patrol offi cer is near. The main job of the officer should be interacting with people. As long as the officer has the right atti tude. people will respond accordingly. An officer on a power trip wouldn't last very long. The patrols started on Sept. 20 and so far seem to he beneficial. Officer Saxon is taking a commendable low-key approach. Patrol officers have to have the right attitude. •rtrasrsas. / NOT ONLY DID YOU LOSE THE BELT. YOUR UPS TOOK A REAL POUNDING. \ Economic influences spur recycling move With National Recycling Awareness week upon us, it's time to notice some trends that have begun to develop in the world of recycling. Although there is still a lot that needs ta be done concerning education of the public, big business has begun to realize that the re cycling industry — as it can now be called — is a new way to make money. Instilling the profit motive in corporate America is one of the most important steps that needs to be taken to guarantee that the recycling trend does not turn out to be a fad inspired by Earthweek. Public demand for recycled paper has left some companies such as Weyerhauser, Boise Cascade and Daishowa American Inc. scrambling to expand or build new plants that that can satisfy the recycled paper de mand Recycling has now become economically viable. With the chances of more old-growth logging being closed down, the cost of the wood chips necessary for paper production inevitably will be rising. Recycled paper is no longer just environmentally correct, it is economically necessary. Profit-motivated companies would oe making this svvitcn re gardless of whether there was public de mand for it. But with the added pressure and marketplace of a public that wants to protect the planet, the economic and politi cal forces have worked together to make re cycling a real alternative. The construction of recycled paper plants should also slightly ease the number of jobs lost in the old-growth logging shut down. It is ironic that the answer to some of these lost jobs — the only remaining obsta cle that the timber industry has in its fight to save its old-growth operations — is being created by profit motive and not politicians or environmentalists. The move toward recycled paper will neither put an end to, nor close, current pa per-making facilities. There will always be a need for new paper. Paper can only be recy cled so many times before it begins to lose its integrity. Concerns raised by some that a switch to recycled paper will put people out of work are just not true. Now that recycling is seen as a money maker. it is here to stay. LETTERS Free ads Over the past 20 years there have linen many activist groups on various snhjet ts 1 write to suggest a new issue free classified advertising to the public. Price it — Classified ads cost money. $50 to a SUM) a week for ads I personally cannot afford to advertise I suggest you have free classifieds to private par ties in Oregon Arkansas does (Capitol Pa|>ers). You can set up a fund like the Social Security Administra tion to pay for the ads or up the cost of the papers several cents. As it is now. lots of people place short ads because they can’t afford to place what they want to pay. Ron Babine Kugene Not trusted l.ast Wednesday, the first three pages of the Emerald were filled with the news that the ODE board fired lean Ownbey As a former Emerald staff memtxir. I want In tell vou why you should tare The board ts the University students' trustee for the tain pus newspaper, and it has dem oust rated that it cannot In trusted last spring, the board assured the Emerald's news staff that Ms. Ownbey's job was safe Her 14 years of experience at the Emerald appeared to In- re spected Yet she was fired abruptly on Oct. 1. and the board's chairwoman wouldn't even make a statement to the newspaper explaining the ac tion This inconsistency brings up other concerns. The board has also stated that a student staff will always retain control over the paper's news content Hut what if the board changes its mind and decides the newsroom should be super vised and operated by non-stu dents' Chances art' the student body wouldn't read about it on the front of the Emerald After witnessing the board's dishonesty. I am convinced that it cannot In- a reliable trus tee of the students' paper If students care about keeping control of the Emerald. we must work to restructure the board and change how deci sions are made for the paper Please fight for your paper by contacting the Emerald, its board of directors and the ASUC) The Emerald is supposed to lie our paper; let's keep it that way. Denise Clifton lournalism Outraged I am outraged that the Emer ald lx card of directors has fired lean Ow nbey. For 1-1 years she was a loyal employee who defended a press controlled by students, last spring the board insisted th.it .i planned corporate re structure would not affect Ovvnbey's job Today, her of fice is empty. By rescinding on its word with no explanation, the board demonstrated that it cannot he trusted As a former staff member. 1 feel the hoard has betrayed Em erald journalists and. ultimate ly, everyone who pays inciden tal fees that fund the paper Only five of the to hoard members are students, and the appetite for profit has taken on dehumanizing proportions. What was once produced by students, for students, has moved a sad step closer to be ing produced by dollars, for dollars. Reject this trend. Write to the Enwrald. write to the ASUO, write to the board. To ensure that the Enwrald functions in the interest of stu dents. we must have a stronger student presence on the tmard of directors. Hon Walker journalism Slanted With so many women ami men working in our communi ty to create a rape free environ ment, including this week’s ’’Take Hack the Night" walk run, 1 find the Emerald's coverage of the trial of an ac cused rapist particularly ap palling. The articles have been se verely slanted toward the de fendant. Not only have they dealt primarily with the defen dant's perspective but they seem to suggest justification of this horrendous crime. Even if I were able to accept the Emerald's coverage at face value, the amount of alcohol a woman consumes or her man ner of dance have absolutely no bearing on whether she wants to have intercourse. Sexual as sault against a woman is never justified. Erika Joatad Eugene