Post office insanity brings rash solution Everyone has a bad day now and again. You spill your coffee, flunk a test, bomb an interview or twist an ankle. It becomes immediately clear you should never have left the security of your bedsheots. Most people adjust quite well to those predicaments. However, there Is a certain group that seems to havo bad days more frequently than others. And. unfortunately, they don’t always react positively to their misfortunes. The culprits: postal workers, of course. Therefore, in the spirit of Rep. Liz VanI.eouwon’s, R Halsey. quick-fix solutions to growing problems, the i'mi'raid has several suggestions to stem the bubbling postal-shooting volcano. First, the U N Constitution should add a 28th Amend ment: Postal workers and ex-postal workers should not bo allowed to own firearms Although the Second Amendment declares that people have a right to bear arms, certain postal workers have a tendency to shoot other people's arms off, which has got to be unconstitu tional in some way. Second, the bars that separate employees from the public at post offices should bo heavily roinfort ed, pos sibly with bullet-proof glass, so that citizens are safe from these armed menaces. You never know when a postal worker will her nine disgruntled. And finally, letter carriers should bo handcuffed at all times What if. perhaps, a mail person wore to stop in a mud puddle in front of City Hall ? He or she could go berserk and clear out the City Council. With people s hands clasped behind their bark, they won't be able to reach their holsters. To make up for their handcuffs, a small monkey should be allowed to sit on their shoul ders to put mail in the slots. Thesis nogtitivo suggestions are just a Few responses to post office shootings However, there is a silver lining — his name is Edward Egging of Tigard. Ho was recent ly honored bv the National Association of Latter Carriers for saving a life during an apartment (ire. as was Keith Wickham of Janesville, Wis.. who rescued a man whose vehicle had plunged through ice. In all seriousness, these latter individuals are just as representative of postal workers as those people who shot up post officos in Michigan and California last week. The behavior of a few bad postal eggs has a ten dency to smear the reputation of all. and. unfortunate ly, people across tho country are beginning to think of post offices as powder kegs waiting to explode. The most unfortunate result of tho shootings is that those employees that do represent the post office with pride will never get equal publicity. Postal workers don’t need handcuffs, reinforced bars or cockamamie amend ments to restrain them. They don't even need training to prevent tho frustration that leads to inane acts of vio lence. They simply need a little luck, so that the next few crazies to shoot up a neighborhood work for McDonald's instead. Oregon Doily Emerald News Editor Editor**) Editor Oraphict Editor Entertainment Editor In* Oregon Daily Emerald •» pu-V-ed daily Mjnday through F'Oay (Smog tne school year end Tuesday and Thursday during the iu**r by the Oregon Oeiiy Emerald Put5fcsh.iyg Co Inc at me University o< Oregon Eugene, Oegon The Emereid ope-a!ns independently ol the University mm othcws at SuAe 300 o! me trb Memorial Un»on and •* a member ol the Associated Pines The 1 mm aid a pr-vate property The uniewM removal or use ol paper* ‘S prosecutable bylaw Editor I’a! Mai am j.«k* Berg Freelance Editor Mandy Baucum Mwt n f isher Editorial Editor R vrvs Janssen J«rt Pasiay sports Editor Dave Crwbonneau f reya Mom Supplements Editor CeAey Anderson Night Editor Jake tier3 Associate Editors: Tammy Matey Student Government Act,. fie* Oa>a yn Trappe Ccvnmundy CoOeen Poh -3 Hgner Edurenon Admuvsnatirvt New* Staff Chester A e • Matt Bender Just-n Brown. Sarah Oar* Meg DeiXhph Amy Devenpod Jen i » son Amanda forme Anthony fomny Bern Hege Teresa Huntsrnger. RaPecca Merritt Steve Mens hjiy Moenw T Mower Tnsta Now f sen Shew fro Stude"«M Me- S„ tor Randy Theoen M-.nr»e Thompso Aguiar Amy Van Tuyi. Todd Au.vns Clayton Yen Oeneral Manager: Judy Red Production Manager Wcnm Ross Advertising Tom leech Sj e,i Wu-ago Shawn Merven Of*c* d.i vn Jane iicua Teresa isobene Prwp Johnson It. Chris Kanoh Jeremy Masor- van V OtVyan It. Gahar Oh, Rachael Tru*. Ang* W.ndhwm Classified Becsy Merchant Manager Barry L ogan Sharon Seuv* Distribution Brandon Andwson N«:k Mannnwg. Graham Srmpeon Business Kamy Carbon# Supervisor Judy Conno*y Production Ingrd W>- to fYcdUrfipn Coord iatiw Ki-ytm# Gianger Dee MrCobb Stacy Mtcheh. Jenoder Round Jennder Smith Newsroom... . 346-5511 Display Advertising 345-3T12 Business Oh ice 345-5512 Classified Advertising 346-A343 HaprfjNfcux < u K(l IMaiHtT) MW TO i ** TiUnXiMG IM **• If I DO ? WMUWJi' DriKfuSt \f i Don't"' PI« 6? M»D »»*« Bl*MP **>» *_i f>»ni TW^ A* M4DIH »or^t D»y*\»rnt> ftRTH if. t LETTERS Review review The Emerald. notorious for ils lack of insight, espec tally reflected in knee-)erk editorials, at least did something right with an exceptional ftIm review of Indecent Proposal (ODE. May 7). I) Loo Williams did not suo cumb to the usual hyperbole and glitz over an aging Holly wood brat (Demi Moore) and a fading star (Robert Radford). Instead, he provided a highly perceptive, analytical and time IV review I am very pleased that as a him critic for the c o I lege news paper. Williams exon iseti intel ligence with integrity and saw Indecent Proposal as nothing more than a "misogynistic mess" from a vapid director. As lie thoughtfully pointed out. it's got nothing to do with P.G. Perhaps best of all. he sent a much-needed message to local critics that what is good for peo ple who read The Village Voice had better tie |ust us good for us folks subscribing to The Hegis ter-Guard and The Oregonian. Do you think Passman and berry believed they could get away with such sloppy film reviews because they serve mostly a local constituency? At any rate, excellent work, and please keep it up. And whenever Williams would like to talk films, he should drop by my office hours. I could learn a lot from him. Clarence Spigner Assistant Professor Anthropology/Ethnic Studies Darwinism Khun Fodor's commentary (ODE. May 10) describes in great detail the perils of overpopula tion. only to list abortion, birth control (including voluntary sterilisation) and tax incentives for smaller families as the possi ble cure, Abortion, birth control and voluntary sterilization are already legal, although not free in general. I Indiese that an edu cated guess might suggest that if those things were free, it would still not keep the world popula tion from growing. I doubt tax incentives for large families is a cause for overpopulation. So what might tie another rea son the population is grow ing? On«> main cause may be that people are playing with Moth er Nature " We are not letting the natural selection process work The population now has an increasing percentage of elderly, probably larger than ever before. We are keeping people alive much longer than in the past; wo an? curing diseases and replacing vital parts of bodies to keep people alive If population control is so important, then we should let natural selection take its course The fit will survive, and the unfit will not Stop medical research — and how does a Dr Kevorkian retirement plan sound' Allen James Biology Insightful Congratulations on your insightful editorials of May 7 (on the fai ulty assembly meet ing) and May 10 (on the OCA's new initiative). It is to your credit that you took an editorial position on these issues. Your ability to cut through the clutter of both of these complex topics and exam ine the facts in a clear-headed manner does your paper proud. In my estimation, this is what good editorial journalism is about; separating the fai ls from the jumble of sensory percep tions and reaching an informed and informing opinion. Keep up the good work Thomas H. Bivins Associate Professor School of Journalism and Communication No on EWEB Please pay attention to the brown election envelop that you have recently received. This is a local ballot measure that would authorize our local electric util ity (EWEB) to spend $150 mil lion to buy new electric power supplies. The plan calls for spending a total of $300 million during the next few years You may be very busy and inclined to "recycle" this envel op. but every student is a rate payer and this is the single largest budget expenditure ever presented to the voters of Eugene. It amounts to an ulti mate debt of $4,400 per cus tomer Under the plan. $13 million will he spent on power trans mission lines so we can ship our cheap power to California We get the pollution and environ mental impact, and California gets clean electricity at only five cents a kilowatt-hour. Ask yourself some basic ques tions like Do we really need all of tins power' Are there other ways to pay for it? What are the environmental consequences? What are the risks' What art* the alternatives? Do we have to approve this all at once? Unfortunately, it is hard to get answers to these questions The voter pamphlet and EWEB information bulletin present only one option and do not car ry any dissenting viewpoints You may wish to call EWEB and ask directly at 484-2411 If you are not satisfied with the answers, join ine and vote "no" on the bond measure. Ebon Fodor Environmental Studio* Question basics Many opponents of the multi cultural curriculum requirement maintain that transforming the curriculum represents an attempt to introduce politically correct viewpoints into a "neu tral" curriculum. They claim that the propo nents of a transformed curricu lum seek to distort it with their own politically motivated reform agendas, yet transform ing the curriculum is no more political than the process that designates the existing "canon." As Professor Gates from Cor nell University has stated. "That people can . protest the erup tion of politics into something that has always been political from the very beginning says something about how remark ably successful official histories have been at disguising all link ages In-tween the canon, the lit erary past we remember, and those interests that maintain it." Essentially, we must In-gin to question what we have always considered the "basics." We must challenge the long-held certainties that we assume mir ror reality. Diana Collins Puente ASUO Vice President-Elect