EDITORIAL Bush is going home; the ordeal has ended It's over. George Rush is on a piano to Houston and with him will go 12 years of basically bungled bureau cracy. Looking back, we are left wondering what happened. The Bush administration will probably be best remem bered for having done nothing, and even that was done in piecemeal fashion. There was no progress in health care, education, deficit reduction, environmental protection or civil rights. At best, a shaky and misguided status quo was maintained. Roth Rush and Ronald Reagan are responsible for the looting of the national treasury to pay for the savings and loan crises they presided over. Roth are responsible for creating an environment of deregulation that has led iq uneimcai Business practices. including tins loss of American jobs to foreign competitors. The list goes on and on. There have been some positive aspects to the Hush administra tion. Huge reductions in the world's nuclear arsenals have been achieved, Arab nations are at least talking to Israel and relations The Bush administration will probably bo best remembered for having done nothing, and even that was done in piecemeal fashion. between tho Unitoti States and Russia are improving daily. Perhaps Bush's greatest flaw is his loss of communi cation with the American people. Ho has failed to come to grips with the potpourri that is American society, and it has cost him dearly. Hut in the end. it should be remembered that Bush devoted his life to the service of his country, and. for better or worse, it's more than most of his critics will ever be able to say. Top 10 reasons to miss George Bush 10. 9. 8. 7. 6. 5. 4. 3. 2. 1. No more impressions by Dana Carvey. Oregon Daily Emerald Editor Editorial Editor Graphic* Editor Entart**omaot Editor PO BO* .ms fUGCNf OHfGO»i*?rOJ IN® Or agon Dai'y i mar aid ■% pubttshad dai'y Monday through Friday during th© schoo* year and Tuaaday and Thursday during tna summar by tha G»agon Da»>y E mar aid Publish ioq Co Irv a? th« Un vamfy ol Oagon Eugan*. CVagon Th© { m«r aid operates ndapaodantly of tha Untvarsty with oNk as at Su ta 300 of th© {rb Maovoriai LM*on and is a mam bar of th« Associated Pres* Th© | mar aid n pnval* proparty TH© urVawfui removal or usa of paper* i prosacutab*© by «w Editor: Pat Matach J«**e Barg Fraaianca Editor Hopa Naaiaoo Martin Fisha» Editorial Editor R.v©rs Janssen .Jeff Posiay Sport* Editor Oava Charbonnaau f ray* Horn Supplements Editor CasMy Anderson Night Editor Martin I .she* Associate Editors Tammy Ba<©> Shxtort Go*&rvr*mlActrvittm Darafyn Trappa. Commu > fy Coftrxw' Poh**g Mghar fcducahoa Ai)rr>ir»*trmboo News Staft Chaatar *■«’ Ma’Xty Baucom M.ttt Bandar. 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Anna Stephenson News/oom 346-5511 Display AdverUsing 346-3712 8usJn**s Office 346*5512 Classified Advertising 346-4343 Def/cit out of control-. Tax cut shelved - #» ' Ointorv backpedal/ng on promises • Everythmg behind schedule.. Dissension growing... Hints of paralysis, chaos.. ANfV CDWtNT OH TWS STOPS’, MR. CLIMTON? fcu*nvNs failed /PfttS*0€NCV f :Q1 / COMMENTARY Cartoon gives buses bad image By Chuck Fisher w ’ell. I guess tilt1 fears about tuition increases making the University an elitist institution were well founded Clearly. Ku k Ball’s "Off Line" cartoon in the fan 8 Emit raid is both elitist and in extremely poor taste I guess Ball "just didn't get it " I have to wonder the last time he rode the bus Bus pa tronage t russes all et onomu and sot nil strata I know that for the two years I have been riding LTD buses. I’ve experienced nothing but courtesy from pas sengers and drivers alike I have had passengers make a special effort to return something of value I dropped or left behind LTD bus drivers are the most courteous of any transit system I've ever ridden on One time a driver, noticing I had a very heavy load of groceries, put the brake on and assisted me On another m i avion, I need ed to transfer to the bus dirts tlx in front of us Hie driver t ailed the station ami asked for that bus to wait at the next stop Fi nally, have you ever noticed how people say "thank you" to the drivers when getting off the bus? You may think that hokey but I find it refreshing Perhaps Ball's parents bought him that icon of Arnerit an suc cess — an automobile — for managing to graduate from high school. And probably the insur ance. gasoline, maintenance and parking permit to go with it 1 choose not to own a car. vet through inv taxes I must subsi dize his extravagance Lane County drivers pay only about $676 in taxes per person per year to operate their t ars Yet hidden costs — including highway const met ion, mainten ance and services; "free park ing"; t digestion; military seen ritv; and motor vehicle acci dents — amount to between $2,356 to $3.1 16 per person per year. Lven with these subsidies, operating an automobile costs car owners, on average, more than $4,100 a year Given tin* current fis« al climate, such sub sidies an* (mmDining increasing ly difficult to justif \. I'll bet if I asked Ball, he would admit to being at least sympathetM to environmental < noses (this is. alter all. the l !ni versity.) Does he realize that driving causes more of (Iregon's —- and the world's - pollution than am other single activity7 For every 25 miles driven, a pound of pollution is spewed into the air That's twice as nun h pollution as slash burn ing and si\ times as much in dustry Our dependence on di minishing fossil fuels with 5 percent of the world's popula tion. the I nited States uses lit percent of the world’s oil contributes to the need for oil tankers to deliver their prei tous commodity in all kinds ol weather, as tin* recent ground ing in the Shetland Islands demonstrates But most of all, it is simply inoffident to continue using our cars as the primary mode of transportation, and therefore al lows a broader spectrum of the population modal equity Since the 1950s. cities have been designed and transformed to at commodate the use of the automobile There is a large body of ev idem e th.it i orrelates the loss of community with the increased dependence on the automobile Suourbs grew pop ular because of the mobility af forded by the i ar We were free' We no longer had to communi cate with others when perform ing our daily chores. In fact, today we no longer have to go outside but merely walk into the garage, start the engine and drive to the garage at work under our of fit e tower. Cities grew, spread out and yvere not serviceable from a transit perspective This sprawl also inhibits walking and hi< y • cling. When fewer people use the streets, the ratio of bad people vs. good becomes skewed, thereby encouraging even fewer The activity and people using the bus, including the radio and bus driver, often make riding the bus a much safer choice than returning to one’s car in a darkened parking lot. people to list' thu streets The stri'fts then truls bei onto (ian gerous lor all concerned The activits and people using the bus, including the radio and Inis driver, often make ruling the tins a much sater i hon e than returning to one's i ,tr in a dark ened parking lot Sim e the ini option of the bus pass in the 1988-89 academic Sear, tins ridership by students has more than tripled More over. the 1 1 1) bus pass affords l nisi i*ils students mans more choices on plai es to work and live ss hile attending school. In fact, the large numbers ol i ommuting bus riders and bu s clists saved the I'niversits from building a parking garage near the Si bool of Music And, as many who regularly drive or bit si le found out las! weekend, the bus runs during mi lenient weather I'he bus was pai ked on Monday morning, with peo ple greeting one another and catching up on each other's weekend. I'm not proposing we give up our curs, or even that we ail ride the bus every day. However, if we rode the bus just one day a week, it would make a tremen dous difference and go a long way toward keeping Eugene Springfield a great place to live. Chuck Fisher is a graduate student in urban planning