LETTERS For the record In the July 8 Emerald. Shan ta Kamath and Eileen Taylor object to the fact that rents for the University Amazon Family Housing will increase from $20 to $40 per month, depending on unit size. In their commentary, they also express their displea sure that these increases are being used for purposes other than housing First, let me say that the Uni versity empathizes with the plight of many students whose often limited resources are being outpaced by escalating costs for tuition, housing and other edu i ationnl expenses This situation is an unfortunate fact of life for many peoplo as state institu tions realign the costs they must charge for services with the real costs of providing them. Second. I want to assure your readers that providing low-cost facilities for our students remains of prime importance to the Universitv At the same time, however, we must provide adequately for improvements, maintenance and programming for current residents and those who will be residents for years to come. Then, let me set the record straight. Three-quarters of the rent increase is needed for the increased costs of operation of student family housing. The remainder is to reimburse the Universitv for the first time for centralized administrative ser vices that have benefited family housing student residents dur ing the years. In the past, general University funds were used to subsidize student housing on campus by absorbing these costs. In the post-Mensure 5 environment, that is no longer possible. Good business management requires that the University utilize its total resources for its primary purpose of instruction and directly related activities. As the state removes funding from higher education, the cost to students, including those tak ing advantage of University fam ily housing, will, by necessity, increase No group at the Uni versity is exempt from the pain of diminished state resourc es This is a difficult time for the University community, both staff and students, as we attempt to manage the effects of Measure 5. We do understand the signif icant impact higher costs have on limited student budgets Dan Williams Vice President for Adminis tration Now recycling In response to the article "Dis carded books find way from dumpster to library." we have been in contact with Karyn Kaplan, recyc ling coordinator for the University. Kaplan has been of great help in the past in assist ing us to further our already extensive recycling program — a program that has received recog nition for excellence in the col* lego bookstore industry Kaplan has made us aware that the Weyerhauser Co will accept lrooks for recycling. Prior to this source, the only local means for disposal, aside from the few books requested bv area libraries, was to throw the luroks away It is somewhat ironic that the bookstore was caught (list aiding books when it works extra hard to he n model env ironmental enterprise For years, we have been aggn*s sive in promoting recyi ling, ener gy efficiency, and the use of the "earth-friendly" pixtducts that we sell We believe strongly that the college bookstore should be a leader on campus in promoting environmental awareness As hard as we try to do our lies!, we stumble. We appreciate the fact that a concerned individual brought the issue of these discarded course books to the attention of the cam pus community and the book store. Because of her concent, an answer has been found that will result in out-of-print Ixxiks being recycled rather than taking space in a landfill. Jim Williams (•eneral Manager University Bookstore, ln< Kuwaiti plot? To the cheers of se< ond-rate academics. myopic newspaper editors. and svi ophantu advis ers and cronies, the Clinton regime came out of the closet to bomb and terrorize innocent civilians in Iraq. Among those who were missiied to death were a highly accomplished Iraqi artist. Levin al-Attar, and her husband. They were hit while asleep. President Saddam Hussein is a horrific man who should be removed from tho presidency by the Iraqi people. He will t>e removed if and when Washing ton stops Iwing meddlesome. Washington's currant Middle Eastern policy is bereft of cre ative diplomatic energy and is reduced to when in doubt, bomb Iraq. Prior to the Persian Gulf War. a voting Kuwaiti woman testi fied before the U S Congress that invading Iraqi soldiers had thrown babies from incubators in a Kuwaiti hospital Middle East Watch, u human rights organization based in New York, after on-site investi gation, found the story fictitious. We also found out later that this same young woman was the daughter of one of the most prominent members of the Kuwaiti al-Sabah ruling family Her father continues as Kuwait 's ambassador to Washington. While hi* daughter testified, the ambassador was present in the hearing room; at no time during this hearing was her identity revealed Could it tw that once again the al-Sabah family manufactured another tale — this time a plot against former President George Hush — to prod the American administration to bomb Iraq' M. Re/a Hrhnam Kugenr Such progress It used to he homosexuality was in the closet, prai ticed hi some but not det hired openly Then gays came out of the clos et. Some thought it a good thing, as it added to our diversity (>th ers i onsidered it had. as it was another (Hirversity The former declared their approval loudly l he latter felt shame to even mention it Legislators responded to the loudest voices by starting to pass i ivil rights laws for homosexu als The Oregon Citizens Alliance marshalled the silent majority to pass its own laws in some com munities. and nearly to do so statewide As the debate heated up. the House came up with a bill. tS(X). to. temporarily at least, rest the issue from open legislation in our Oregon communities in other words, it is buck in the closet Such progress! I bis reads like .1 si one in Alii e in Wonderland. where one must run as hard as he can just to slay in the some place The same thing happened with Clinton's plans for gays in the military Karl (iiisnell Eugene Grim irony While watching '‘Indepen dence" Day firework*, the grim irony hit homo that six Oregon rural areas recently passed anti independence, discriminatory measures against Oregon homo sexual citizens. Look up the word "fascism" a "political movement that stand* fur social regimentation and forcible suppression of any oppo sition." Sound familiar? The June TO Albany lk-moi rut llrruld quotes Oregon Citizens Alliam u ring leader Lon Matron "Judges who overturn (XiA measures will be turned out of office as well as any legislator who supports Senate dill 34 (a bill to prohibit dis crimination in employment or housing for sexual orientation ‘reasons’)." Mahon further intoned that "any city or county official who Opposed the (XiA will lie turned out of office " Mahon's threats spewed forth just four days after "Second OCA Thug" Scott Live tv wa* brought up short by Republican Rep Del Parks. House Judiciary Committee Chairman. Mahon wa* present when Parks told Lively that bis threats against legislator* who hu< k the (H A were out of line Hut did that stop Mahon's same churl ishness just four day * Inter ' ( Itxir lv fast ist stv le intimidation is what the OCA is all about and has been all along Wake up. Oregon The brow n shirts are bai k The same bunch who regard it their "sjms ml right" to "fort iblv suppress any who oppose them " in their self-right eous, zealous pursuit of "six ial regimentation " (IVrbxfer's Yon Co//egmfe Diflinniir> . page -tit) (land tfrrg Fugene Federal tyranny The Constitution vs .is designed to limit the federal government from intruding into the lives of its citizens, fmt the recent Wat o siege emphasizes the estenl to which we have ignored the prill t iples of the law of our land As one female surv ivor pul it. Who would have thought the t ’niter! States government would attar k Ainerii an • iliz.ens on their own land'" Hut the truth is that the standing armies' so feared and rejis led by the wise Found ing Fathers are firmly entrem lied hi the myriad unconstitutional government bureaus from the IRS to the I.PA to the HATF. and everything in lietween The Waco fiasco was the largest of a long r*x ord of small er. unpublici/ed abuses against individual families across the i ountrv since the 1970*. The only reason the American public was "priviledged" to see tins atrix ily is because of the scope of the attack — and probably to test publii opinion, lest we "normal" people think we will come out unscathed, think again With fed oral ttgem les increasingly usurp ing the authority of Congress by making tfieir own abusive lows, eventually we all will have our showdowns with Big Brother ■ Thomas Jefferson put it sm cinctly "Single acts of tv ranny may tie the ai cidentol opinion of the day. but a series of oppres sions too plainly prove a delib erate, systematical plan of redui - ing us to slavery." Have Amerii alls lost it' Will we tie slave* or free' II free, then a return to the (^institution is our only hope Any freedom-lovers out there' Sharon II. Gulden Oxford. Miss. Former staff member U.S. Sen. 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