EDITORIAL Right to die needs strong safeguards When Washington citizens go to the voting booth Tuesday, they will be deciding on one of the most divi* live current issues. Although abortion is on the ballot, that issue is surprisingly being dwarfed by the measure supporting the right lor people to decide when their lives are over. Do people have the right to die when modem med icine runs out of options? Everybody has an opinion on the subject, and the proponants and the opponents are equally vehement. Backers of Initiative 119. or "Dignity with Death," have lined up terminally ill patients to show support for the measure. Opponents are countering with televi sion spots showing people who were diagnosed as ter minally ill but recovered. Both sides' media campaigns are designed to hit voters squarely in their morality. If the acrimonious debate Initiative 119 has sparked is any indication, the advertising agencies have succeed ed. The issue is not new. Living wills have been around for years, and there is even a how-to suicide book, Final Exit, on the stands. Rut Washington is the first state to offer such a hill .Specifically, initiative 119 would allow patients who have been diagnosed with having less than six months to live to commit doctor-assisted suicide. There is no residency requirement, which opens up a whole new problem Should the measure pass, tragic consequences are possible. Poverty-lad en patients might feel pressured to end their lives Seedy relatives look ing for inheritance money could persuade patients into the act. There are several po tential problems, but they do not come close to out weighing the importance of this bill. Washington voters need to pass Initia tive 119. lust as in the abortion debate, the issue is the definition of "life.' Life is precious, but so is mercy. Is it "life" to spend the lust six months of one's existence hooked up to machines, wired with electrodes and stuffed with tubes, in pain, with no hope for recovery? Obviously not Mercy and dignity are two very impor tant parts of life. To be stripped of both makes life not worth living. Rut there need to he steel-hawser safeguards at tached to Initiative 119. The decision will have to rest solely with the patient, to circumvent undue pressure. Patients need to be informed of their rights, their op tions and the consequences before deciding on the sui cide option. Even if initiative 119 fails (nobody is making any predictions), its importance will not diminish. A dia logue has been established where none has over exist ed. As long as people are talking about the subject, the possibility of a solution amenable to both sides exists. Is n “life” to spend the lest six months of one’s existence hooked up to machines, wired with electrodes end stuffed with tubes, In pain, with no hope for recovery? Obviously not LETTERS POLICY The Oregon Daily Emerald will attempt to print all letters containing comments on topics of interest to the University community. Letters to the editor must be limited to no more than 2r>() words, legible, signed and the identification of the writer must lie verified when the letter is submitted. The Emerald reserves the right to edit any letter tor length or style. *< C " ' ‘. Vwt «*.*"*■^ >W't* < .? « » *. •- > •; *.1 ^ *• LETTERS No business Some time ago the St««11? Hoard of Higher Fducation held a fake public hearing a! the University on its proposal to hurl out the more than $(i mil lion deficit run up by the Uni versity. Oregon St.ite Umversl tv ami Portland State athletic departments I attended the meeting to venture my opinion that the University hud no business in the business of subsidizing high-cost minor-league expert erne for National Football League and National basketball Association players at the ex pense of its primary education al mission 1 also wanted to ascertain il. as rumored, the hoard members had (leads filled with pressur ized air in the shape of foot balls and basketballs Alberto Salazar, local restau rateur. predictably spoke in fa vor of public welfare for the three athletic departments m e\< ess of S i million annually lie urged the hoard to dismiss as unrepresentative the opin ions of the "political" students and faculty who opposed this special funding at the expense of ai adeinic quality According to this view, of course, the gaggle of pampered athletes, the head of the ('.ham her ol Uuminerce, the hospital itv industry representatives, the purveyors of Fighting l)ui k paraphernalia, etc were not a w ellorganized, spec I.il-interest. politic al fore e Apparently il ynu're in it for the bucks rather than educational principle, then it's not "political Bs the way, when will athlet it dire* tor Hill B\ rue In- offi cially inaugurated as president of the University ' I'd like- to at tend the ceremony Jerome* (larger Fugene Yep The Cafe An oppressive ruin brats incessantly upon foggy window s Inside, an emancipat ed young woman sits at a cor ner table reading Burroughs' lanky to illustrate her misan thropic disposition. She holds the book high for all to see, occasionally scan rung the room for looks of ap proval A black cloak is rapped tightly around her shoulders like the confining foreskin of the great patriarch She jots macabre prose in a !altered journal- "I lament an existential existence of social misunderstanding in a bleak and absurd world. As I struggle lor diversity and peace in l-.'u gene, t' S companies harness mother earth with fences of in dustry across her gentle back. A guilty man sits at the next table He hasn't long, peaceful hair, nor does he don a blac k cloak But lic> is indulging In death! An animal's slam corpse he so euphemistically calls a hamburger lays whimpering and bleeding in his hairy, s io lating claws As the man thrusis his teeth into the inno c ent flesh, testosterone drips from the lips of Columbus 1 stare in horror ut the manifesta tion of evils past " Disconsolate and head hung low, she rubs feces all over her body to affirm her indepen dence A tear dri|is from her pale cheek and splashes vio lently into a pool of house cof fee She sees how quickly something so beautiful and unique as a iear will c onform to the bitter, homogeneous caf feine Once again the interaction of nature and humanity imitates art, resonating a metaphor of injustice against the alternative citizens w ithin our community. Ryan Blac ketler English Miss something? We have a question (or Lucas Gutman Which Other I'eojile's Money dill you watch? Your re view [ODE. Oct 25) could not possibly have (teen for the mov ie vve saw last weekend That one was a rental at best; the script was dull and predictable while the plot ended without a measurable climax I’he fairy-tale ending was so contrived and unbelievable one could only stare at the rolling credits and ask. "Did I just miss something really trig here?" As long time fans of Danny DeVito (Taxi, Ruthless I’eople. lewd ol the Nila, IV',ir of the Hoses), we were disappointed to see him accept such an un demanding role Penelope Ann Miller's performance was terri tile Her character never (level ops [last the tired "tough" and sexy" exterior that serves as a worthy opponent" to the shallow Larry (DeVito) Neither character is con vine mg m his or her forced attrae non (dare we say love affair7) DeVito's interest is purely physical lust while we never really see just what attracts Miller to DeVito Something physical? Doubtful. We agree that the Gregory Per k we saw was the same one you describe His performance was strong vet it does nothing to save the whole production You wrote that this is a "dial lengmg film to watch" VVu can only reply that it was challeng ing to enjoy. Three and a halt stars' NOD Maybe two (maybe) Eric J. Anctil English/History Tina M Peterman Human Services OLi NORTH C.WIv'W tvWTAmt r— I* I\fcT flATTO SCWtsCCl Tm