EDITORIAL Time to just say yes to a state sales tax The budget crunch of Measure 5 has caused pro gram reductions and closures at the University. De spite administrators' attempts to convince the public that only the size of the University will be affected and not the quality, education is bound to suffer. Along with University program cuts, many human service agencies are going to be reduced and eliminat ed as well. While assistance for the disadvantaged de teriorates, large businesses, mostly property manage ment companies, will be stuffing their wallets. Consid ering that about 60 percent of all property taxes were paid by businesses and landlords who made up a small percentage of the par-capita tax base, the average prop erty owner now receives few benefits compared to the windfall profits big business takes in. • , State government will not be able to operate nor mally and budget cuts will continue to grow unless some form of alternative revenue is found. That alter native revenue should come in the form of a sales tax. Oregonians have traditionally bucked the call to implement a sales tax. But now that voters have backed themselves into a corner, they may see the light the next time a sales-tax initiative is placed on the ballot. That's why it is important for students and others af fected by budget cuts to be as vocal as possible in the coming months. Letting citizens know about the hard ships caused by Measure 5 may convince them to look serioualy at adopting the long-avoided sales tax. The Legislature should quickly present a well-writ ten sales tax to voters. So far. the politicians in Salem have adopted a wait-and-see attitude for solving the budget mess. But people on the losing end of Measure 5 don't want to find out what the budget ax is going to cut next. They want a solution before more cuts have to be made. A sales tax on non-essential items — everything but food and utilities — would be an equitable tax sys tem. People who buy luxury items, or expensive ba sics, would be taxed according to what they can afford. It is time for Oregon to adopt a tax system resem bling that of other states. Education and human ser vices should not be paid for by one system, whether that Is a property tax, an income tax or a sales tax. A combination of different revenue sources should fund these important agencies. Satisfy the ABA by June or forget the law school The University's last-minute proposed law schotol cutbacks are unfortunate, but reasonable under the cir cumstances. University President Myles Brand received a letter last Thursday from the American Bar Association threatening to remove law school accreditation unless specific requirements are met. Two important improve ments include student-to-teacher ratio and funding sources. The law school will reduce freshman enrollment next year by up to one-half. Between 90 and 125 stu dents will be admitted to the law school next year, down from the normal 180. This will enable the law school to have an ABA standard ratio of 25 students for every instructor. The law school has been under the accreditation cloud for some time. According to the letter Brand re ceived. the law school has until June to make progress. Since the University has the only public law school in the state, it would be foolish to cut it com pletely. However, it is hard to see the logic in cutting well-respected athletic and teaching programs while hanging on to a law school that is barely surviving. The University must make an absolute commit ment to the law school for it to remain open. With the Measure 5 cuts and the accreditation problems, the University has until June to satisfy the ABA. We hope the law school can be saved. But if the University can't meet the ABA's June deadline, then it should get rid of the law school and put money into programs that are more respected and will remain ac credited. _ OPINION Thanks for the reminder, George One of tin1 saddest ironies of war is that 1“ people who fight the battles don't get to make decisions concerning their own wel fare Those moves am left to bureaucrats who wear expensive suits and silk ties. When Se< rotary of Defense Dick Cheney and Gen Colin Powell, chairman of the H Joint Chiefs of Staff, traveled to the Persian I Gulf "theater" this week, they already had "use ground forces" stamped on their ticket stubs The ground-forces rhetoric was voiced the loudest by the non-military man, Cheney The two politicians went to the Middle Hast to assess the situation and get advice from commanders in the field The Fine Print by PAT MALACH Children draw lines in the sand and refuse to speak with each other; mature leaders always fa vor dialogue over bullets Hush and Hussein nev er once spoke to each other. They didn’t even dis cuss the possibility of communicating through emissaries until a month before the proclaimed writ'll tney re turned. it was obvious that talking to the men who everyday see the faces of the kids doing the fighting had changed their minds President Hush emerged from his brief ing with Powell and Cheney saying the air attacks would continue and the use of ground forces would wait. It is no surprise that Army commanders in the desert mostly combat veterans •r'M THE /MOST (POVJHKFUL "" [WORLD A< I (leadline tor war. Imagine, the lives of tens of thousands of people are at stake, and the two leaders in volved won't allow talks to take place be cause they are in a power struggle over who will set the date for the meeting. One way to appear tough is to argue with your ad versary about it and re fuse discussions in or der to show him that he can't dictate to you. Another wav to wen* nol so anxious to use American soldiers as bait to lure the Iraqis out of their foxholes The bureaucrats wanted to shell out a few lives to get the war rolling; the soldiers talked them out of it. Of course, all of this assumes we can take what the "highest authority in the country" says at face value — a giant leap of faith during a war Hush did use the opportunity to remind us all of the position he holds and its importance. He said when the time comes to employ ground forces, he "will make that decision because that is a decision for the president of the United States." He picked an odd time to flaunt his pow er. but what can you expect from a man who wanted to be president so he wouldn't have to eat broccoli. War. and especially committing the lives of people who choose the military because it is the i>est of limited options, should always be a last resort There is a lot to be said for compromise. If giving Saddam Hussein one small concession so he could retain his dignity could prevent so much destruction, why not give it a chance? At least talk to the man before you begin to destroy his country and its people. handle the situation is to rise above that adver sary's pettiness and tell him you will talk to him anywhere at anytime about resolving the issue peacefully It doesn't matter if the person thinks it is a Sinn of weakness as long as you are secure about your own strength. Now that our president has decided that throwing a war tantrum is the only prudent alter native for getting his way, let's hope the advice from commanders who truly understand the na ture of war can keep his ego in check. A Y'ietnam vet once told me if middle-aged men were sent to fight, wars would never take place He reasoned that older men develop more compassion and would ask themselves why they were in a foreign land killing people they had never met. • True. Bush is a veteran of World War II. But as a pilot did he ever see the faces of the people he may have killed? Did he ever sit in a foxhole and watch a friend's head get torn off by an en emy bullet? Did he ever have to hunker in a trench for months at a time while bombs are dropped by some ominous force from above, his only crime being born in a country with a leader who does not value life? Did George Bush ever witness, up close and personal, the faces of chil dren in a war-torn country? His actions say he has not