EDITORIAL Hotair, no substance chamcterizac1 debate President Bush has received the OK from Congress. Saturday, after three days of debate, both the House and the Senate approved resolutions giving Bush per mission to use force to remove Saddam Hussein’s army from Kuwait. Although the votes were relatively close, reflecting the division and lack of consensus among Americans on the issue, the president has called this a clear and decisive victory. There are no longer any obstacles in the way of a Persian Gulf war. A “no force, give sanctions more time" resolution from Congress was the last card most peace supporters held to persuade Bush not to invade Kuwait and Iraq. However, anyone watching the debates that were broadcast on the public television station had to be dis illusioned with the decision-making process used in Washington. Each senator and representative had an opportuni ty to address other congressional colleagues. While a scant few people in the debate wore moving and en lightening, many of our leaders were long-winded and ; had nothing substantial to say, Alaska Rep. Don Young recognized this pattern and asked to have the time limit for speakers reduced to ten minutes. This was a good start, but that time limit probably could have been cut In half. It seemed that many of the speakers felt obliged to use all of their allotted time when they really had noth ing to say. More than once, viewers were forced to sit through 15- to 20-minute diatribes that went in circles, never making a point. When the orators of many of these fine speeches were finished, it still was not clear which po sition they favored. It appeared that they didn't want to take sides on national TV. One speaker spent the majority of his time comparing the debate to a decision made in Athens in 421 B.C. What's the point? There are more than 400.000 American men and women waiting to face death in a desert halfway around the world, and the “best minds in this coun try” are more worried about using up all of their televi sion time than they are about making a point. The old saying "If you don’t have anything nice to say don't say anything at all," should be changed to “If you don't have anything at all to say, don't waste our time." and painted on the walls of the Capitol. COTTAR ~reATt*»y^ $x m Co Walk out, attend rally, become involved t 'Diversity budget problems due to the passage of Measure 5 have students, faculty and staff worrying about tuition costs and job security. An ASUO- and University Democrat sponsored walkout of classes today at noon to oppose proposed tuition increases should encourage lawmakers to study alternative means for funding higher education. Students should, if they choose, walk out of class in protest, but not just to take a holiday. Students who walk out should at tend the rally in front of Johnson Hail to show the state of Oregon that they truly are concerned about the future costs of attend ing Oregon universities and colleges. Gover nor Barbara Roberts' proposed budget pat k age includes higher education cuts of about $7-1 million. Besides predictions of higher tuition costs, almost 500 jobs are scheduled to be cut. The University could become the most expensive public university in the i:t Western states. Oregon must find a source of revenue that does not come out of student pockets. Students can barely afford college at the cur rent costs. If the University and the state do not keep tuition costs reasonable, an exodus of students from the University is certain. The Legislature needs to study all possi bilities. A sales tax is acceptable if all the revenue is put into education. Hut we need to see what the Legislature proposes before the University increases tuition. Once an increase is in place, nothing will reduce it. If tuition is raised and then the legislature finds alternative funding, tu ition will not drop to reflect new revenue. It is up to students to keep the Legisla ture and the University honest. Walk out of class and attend the rally today But don’t stop there. Write letters to legislators and newspa pers. ('all your legislators and remind them that you vote as well as attend school. Oregon’s educational health is in our hands. Make today a start in the reassurance of Oregon's educational future. OPINION President Bush’s letter entertaining but incomplete Editor's Huh' The letter from President George Hush to college students is on Page 3. On Thursday. I found a letter in my message box from none other than the 41st president of the United States. George Herbert Walker Bush, faxed to me from the student newspaper at the University of Arizona. The letter is interesting, but incomplete. And before I pledge my support to Operation Desert Shield. I'd like President Hush to answer a few of my questions. Hush begins by setting up the Persian Gulf crisis as a clear-cut battle between the forces of good and evil. He then traipses through other familiar territory. He writes of the brutal Iraqi forces torturing Kuwaiti citi zens. He mentions the good-guy role of the United States, and why it's our job "to stop ruthless aggres sion.” We then get to read a passage from a Christinas card sent to Bush from a soldier somewhere in the Saudi desert. "We will do what must lx? done.” writes Sgt 1st Class Terry- Hatfield. "We stand ready and waiting (awl bless you and the U.S.A." Quick Somebody get me some Kleenex. An Associated Press story about the president's let ter said it was sent "urging college students to rally behind the effort to force Iraq from Kuwait." An inter esting word choice: Hally It brings to mind cheerlead ers and basketball games, flags and confetti. Someone who reads Mr. Hush's letter may sense a certain “rah Pans *» The Fine Print by CHRIS BLAIR rah" attitude in his writing "And so let us remember and support." he writes, all our fine servicemen and women as they stand ready on the frontier of freedom, willing to do their duty and do it well." I may be paranoid, but Hush sounds like a coach making a desperate pre-game speech in a lockerroom; “bench players" (college students) are being urged to get ready to "come off the bench" (go to war) if most of the "starters" (soldiers in the desert) happen to "foul out of the game" (get shot or gassed) Why else would he want the support of college students? Why else would he try to set up his little Arabian Nights ad venture as the ultimate battle between light and dark ness? Is a draft on the horizon? I would like to know, and. of course. Hush doesn't tell me. Then* are some questions, however, that Bush seems to answer on his own if Kuwait is worth thou sands of American lives, why isn't Liberia or Somalia? Hmv stupid of me. They have no oil. Why aren't Am nesty International reports from regimes in Central and South America worth our time? Oh, that’s right. Those "aggressors" are our friends, as was Saddam when he used chemical warfare on his own people includ ing children." Of course, all of this comes from a man who has giv en the II.N. sanctions five whole months to work, when less stringent sanctions in South Africa have Ihhui in place for years. This is the same man who con demns the invasion of Kuwait a year after he sends paratroopers into Panama. Perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised. A war with Iraq is a matter of absolutes to Hush, and when there are absolute problems, absolute solu tions seem to follow. Again, the letter is lacking in concrete, straightforward information. Do these solu tions include drafting more soldiers? Bombing civilian targets in Iraq? The use of nuclear weapons? Bush raises more questions than he answers in his letter, and if he wants our support, he should at least make an effort to tell us what's really going on. Then; s one last bit of information Mr. Bush left out: the opinions of soldiers who don’t want to lx; in the Middle Hast. "We’re being used.” said one reservist I saw interviewed on TV news report. “These people don t want us here." Of course, that serviceman prob ably didn't send the president a Christmas card.