EDITORIAL The right to choose applies to everyone A woman needs the fundamental right to chooso what to do with her body She should be allowed to act and think for herself and to make important decisions without unnecessary criti cism from others. She should be able to got an abortion if she so chooses —- a right women have championed for years. She should also have the right to pose nude for mon ey without scorn. It is her body, and she needs to be respected enough to make her own decision If a person over 18 is allowed to vote and thereby Influence the direction of this country, that same person should be able to pose nude whenever she wants. The argument arises from Playboy’s visit to the Uni versity this past week From March 30 to April 1. repre sentatives from the magazine interviewed University women fora fall pictorial called "t .iris of t he Far • 10 Conference ” Kverv year the magazine fea tures a different college conference, and the Pat-lO’s number was c ailed for the first time si ne t At its worst, pornography may trigger a sexual crime, but so can almost any movie and television show. Opponent* of tin* magazine have raised lhe traditional pornography objec • lions l'hey claim pornography is largely responsible for sexual abuse and disrespei! toward women l hey sav it exploits women for profit The argument is partially true - women in the maga zines are rarelv respected for more than their bodies. Playboy representatives mav < burn they "like to know (their) people." but in reality, looks and a nice body will get you in the magazine, not a 1.400 on your SA'I s. 1 iowever. claiming that pornography and sexual abuse are connected is stretching the truth. No t redible study has ever proven a direct causal link, Fd Monse s com mission came down heavily against pornographers. but the data was largely insubstantial. Meeso is a conserva tive who dislikes anything not on the Family Channel. Reducing a complex psychological disorder to one cause is irresponsible. A rapist is a deeply disturbed individual with violent tendencies. Pornography doesn't cause a person to become disturbed. At its worst, pornography may trigger a sexual crime, but so can almost any movie and virtually any television show. A woman who wants to pose nude for Playboy should have every right to make that decision without undue criticism. Many women say they would pose nude for a photographer provided that the pictures wore used for an artistic purpose. But one person's filth is another's art. If a woman admires the pictures in Playboy, she shouldn't be attacked for choosing to pose. It all comes down to making adult decisions. A woman has a right to chooso, whether the topic is abor tion or posing nude. Oretam Ihuly £11^31(1 PO DO* 3«yj tuGtNC 0«tGON«*:*qj Th* Oregon 0* * l *e. aid 5 put. ^00 tut, Monday through Fnday during the achool ,94. arid Tuesday and Thursday durng the we**' by the Oregon 0*. y Eme'sna Put*stuog Co toe at th« un.»ers.!y 0! Oregon f ugene. Oregon Th* t ’.9.6k) operates .roependentiy ot th« University w*th once* at Suae 300 ot the Erp Memorial union and y a member ot the Associated Ptwi The ( me.aid <* py,*ate property The unlawful removal or u*e ot paper* t* prosecutable Editor Edttortel Edttot Graphics Edttot Entertainment Editor 0> Editor Pat Mensem Jake Beg Freelance Editor Hope Neeson Marie Fish#* Editorial Editor Rivet* Janssen Jett Patuay Sport* Editor Dave Ch*rt»orr#ej f *,a Hom Supplement* Editor Casey Anderson Night Editor Pat Maiach Associate Editors Tammy Bstey Student Government Act utes. Da'aiyn T.appe Commumfy. CoAeen Powg Jegner £ducahon Admm.s#ralion New* StafT: Scott Andre Cheviot Anon. Matt Bender Jusim Biown. Saish Clam Meg Dodopr- Amy Oevenport Jen EB-son Amanda feme Anttvony Forney. Teresa Runtsmger t.sa Mav Rebecca Me"rt. Steve HAm*. Title, Muet-er Tn»ta Noe. EJen Shew. Enca Studencsa Manon Su-tor SAcheie Thompson Agu-ar Amy vim Tuyt. 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NRPRESSWNt TOTUEOU>«**fN V COMMENTARY Courses will foster understanding By Sumi CfiO and Owniard Tay-' >t T~1 he Multu nltural t urn< u- 1 luni Committee's motion X going before the I on ersi t\ Assembly April ? to revise the existing Rate, Gender ami Non European requirement is an attempt to get our students to understand their contemporary world. We believe such discus sions prepare students for the increasingly multi-ethnic and multicultural societies both here and abroad. We in Oregon are not isolated from these global changes We at the University have the obliga tion not only to respond to these changes, but to provide leader ship — to generate a mode! — for others in the state who are grap pling with the realities of societal transformation. Although most on campus agree that the original require ment was set up with gocxl inten tions. we found few defenders of the requirement as it is i urrent ly written. In order to correc t the existing deficient; ies we are proposing a two course requirement instead of the present single course One course will focus on contempo rary rat e issues in the United States The other course seeks to provide an understanding of the variety of fai tors — gender, eth nicity. ( lass and race — that impa< t on sik ini identity global Racial oppression is a founda tional feature of American soc i ety. For example, for several dec ades following the ratifica tion of the Constitution, only landowning white males could vote People of color were sys tematically prevented from espial participation in American soc ial, political and economic life through race-based exclu sionary laws and practices. Closer to home. Oregon voters approved a state constitution in 1857 containing a c lause exclud ing people of color from the entire state Vigorous Klan activ ity in the state enforced the con stitutional exclusion. Klan sponsored legislation, aimed originally at Catholics and pre vented the wearing of religious garments by teachers, was used as recently as 1984 to dismiss a South Asian Sikh teacher in lv Eugene The University main* tinned a white* only polii.\ in its housing from 19^‘t until well , into tin* t'HOs, refusing to allow Afrii.dii-Arnerit .an women to live in the dorms Today. the pert entago of tenure and teiiurv trac.k fat ulty of color at the Uni versity is lower than even that of the slate's ? pert ent people-of - color population There are only eight tenured tenure track biat k faculty and two Native Ameri cans out of over 1,000 There is exactly one Latino and one Asian-American woman in the entire social si unices at the Uni versity The creation of a course on contemporary race issues is a recognition of student concerns that under the existing require ment. a person could graduate from the University without ever having learned anything about the history and culture of l5 percent of the ITS. popula tion. The Committee ret ognized that rat e has historic ally been, and continues to he, a great divider in our nation and is the most obvious line of social demarcation If we are ever to confront contemporary issues sm h as those relating to < rime and justice, poverty, public edu cation. health t are, immigration and welfare reform, then we cannot avoid an examination ol race. The second course to satisfy the revised requirement can focus on gender, rat e. ethnicity and/or t.lass as those shape iden tity. social relations or creative expression in either the United States or Europe, or in any non European society It is designed to augment and complement the first course. We believe a grounded under standing of our own country's problems is prerequisite to a credible treatment of the inter national situation. And. similar ly, we think the domestic U S. situation tan only Ik* accurately assessed within an international context. Our students are woe fully uninformed about the world outside our borders. They also generally lack the tools, concepts and bodies of informa tion with which they could approach the complexities of social identities that form along the multiple axes of gender, eth nicity and class, and in conjunc lion with other sot ia 1 determi nants To fulfill the second course requirement, students will have .1 wide variety of courses from which to choose in grappling with the complex is^pes ot cul tural diversity inter-ethnic cross-i ultural relations; gender and the challenges id changing constructs of gender and gender roles, and the varied social rela tions that are the foundations ol the many different cultures that form our global community We believe the 210 possible courses we have identified to date allow our students to exam ine these issues from the differ ing perspectives ol anthropolo gists. sociologists, economists, biologists and psychologists The point of tins requirement is not to get the students to think in one particular way about race, gen der, ethnicity or class Rather, our goal is to get them to think criti cally and from an informed posi tion about these subjects We know some will say it is naive to assume that two cours es at the University t ould help students solve the world's race, gender, ethnicity and class prob lems However, it may Ire equal ly naive to assume that just because we cannot unilaterally resolve these issues that we should not bother addressing them m our curriculum. We view this requirement as a start, lust like our other general edu cation requirements — a start, not a solution. We propose this revised requirement because we feel a sense of urgency, compelled by events as far away ns Somalia and the former Yugoslavia and as close to us as law Angeles and Kincaid Street We must begin an honest, constructive'dialogue on race, gender, ethnicity and international issues not because we want to divide our campus or our community or to inflame passions. Our role should be to provide for dialogue in the calm, deliberative atmosphere of the classroom as a first step toward bridging those divides and eas ing tensions. $umi Cho and Quintard Tay lor. members of the President's Multicultural Curriculum Com mittee, submitted this on behalf of the committee