EDITORIAL University bookstore is the place to order Textbooks will not bo available for this course at the University bookstore. Instead you need to walk three miles, turn loft, go two blocks, turn north ISO degrees, continue through the double doors, up the stairs for sev en flights, head to the last door on the right, give them the secret password, and the course books are available in a pile in the Inn k By the way. you can't sell them back. In an attempt to promote business at smaller privately owned bookstore'.. among other reasons, some professors require students to buy their < oursc books at store's off < ampus This is great fur the professors and esper ialh the store owners. The professors could optimally never even step foot in the store they are ordering from, but instead < hose their test. < all the store of their < h<>n e and the bookstore owner would, no doubt, be overjoyed to order the professor's books l i e books would be nearly guaranteed to be sold as in most c ases they are required texts. Certainly there are many jovial relationships form mg between private ■ tote owners and prnti-sso:s The University bookstore is a non profit (although some of I lie text pr it es make one wonder I store opera! ine is a serve e to the students Working cooperatively with the professors and the students, trook ■■■!'■ ordered by tht* professors anti sold to the students Students also cnjov a M pe;cent (list miirt on anv b< a s • mgiit ther Next time von go into a privately owned lx;< kslore. Pash your student I I) anti tell them you want a .discount, the most you’ll probably get is a chuckle, much like a l ugeno resident walking into the 1 hiivers.it> bookstore, flashing a drivers lit ense and demanding a student 0 percent of their new selling pric e for books that will be used next term, and they gen erally buy them back from mid-Oead Week through the end of Finals Week. Try taking a book hack to a private bookstore that has boon used, and most likely abused, for a term, and ask for your money back. Can I see your receipt please? If the politics of the University bookstore are too over whelming, then Smith Family Bookstore offers many of the same buying and selling servicos as the University bookstore and the walk is only a block down the road. Certainly the local bookstore economy yvon't crum ble without the support of professors requiring stu dents to buy books there. Time spent reading the course books certainly would be better than time spent wandering aimlessly around Eugene in search of a bookstore that is buried deep in the bowels of the city Emerald PO 00* 3»V4 fuGCNf 0«£GON&r*>3 Tb* i '? Di*iy f m«*.-Ud ttv-K^gh i •day Ounng Itv© ach.* year and Tuesday and Thursday dur-ng the summfl! by the Oregon Oa>iy Emerald Pubkshma Co . Inc at the University of Oregon t ugtme. Oregon The t metakJ opwalH ndapandartty of the University with offices at Suite 300 of the ( rb Mecvmai Unon and •» a member o» the Assoc >ated Press The t me/aki ts prrvate property The unlawful removal or use o* papers ts prosecutable by >flw Edltor-fn-Chief f 2 Berg Managing Editor Push-tv funs * vWson Sports Editor Editorial Editor Dav»d Blow my horn Editorial Editor Graphics Editor I’ apo** Pas ay Photo Editor Freelance Editor M**»'y Wmters Supplements Editor Night Editor Canny Push *n chans Andetson Associate Editors liera Jo Kiopfenstem. Sfuden/ Government Activity*. Rebecca tVgpanot. Community Heotherflea Pcfc my Hind. Higher fducehon Admtntstrwtion News Staff Marxty Barium, lor IV,*e f t« Bock halter Wilson Chan Dave Chart* okxl Any , ..n't' ( ,.t • f ,1 Keg Dedolph Amy Drrvenport. M.i a Play* the f 'elds Martin S ’ e. .1 I ishe* Sivah Mender**!. V l eng l eong, Manuft Matonhead, Tnsta Noel. I ii-wif'eth Keenst/o*•'•a Robbie IW«. Kate f Cha »• M.t \ M ' .i«* M Krrisey W'afceii Classified IVe.ii> M**' hant Mr.tger Vido* Mi*? i S=m T;n Ink Distribution K•!>e"y Bur tor John l ong. Ccaharr Stmpso Business: Kathy I irbcmo Supervise* j>,Sy Conn y Production Dee "C,< t Puv. i * C -m* -• Shown.) Abele Greg Desmond. T-v.i Mot Buns Gault >*ey Brad Joss Jar'’' In* Ro'.vxl. Natt Ja/Thank saving. Shacking up. boy Newsroom 34VS511 Display Advertising 34G-3712 Business Office 34*-M12 Classified Advertising 34*-4343 Sieve Pimps Jeff Pick harder Oskar Schindler Kafy Hiil Soto TH£ GOl/fRNMfA/r IS sJO&KisIG 7~0 REDOC£ 7VI£ PB\(jE OE AN ADD/CTivf DRUG THAT PQotWTSS l//OLENC£ AMO AMT]-SOCIAL BSuAV/oR, LOWERS TEST SCORES A^O WfAKEWS CAincAL-TUlMKiHO A£iL\Tl6S. HuH 7 TUB Fee. >5 CUTTING CABt-E TV R.ATE$. ^ f OH ' C.OOD. ; ■-/ f v ^ '* 8 Is amazing how times change A couple of weeks Aago. while flipping through the TV' < hannels early one morn mg, I (.ante across Novi me .Street Ah. what memories it brought hack Many parts of the show were tin1 same as when I watched it a little over It) years ago. Her! and I'.rnie are still on the show, and ()si ar still lives in a trash can. Vet, a lot has changed For example, loyal viewers of the show will reinomlHir the "In the Neighborhood song, in whit h people of different common occupations, sut h as a polite offit er or a letter carrier, are por trayed, and are described in tin* song as "the people that you meet whim you’re walking down the street the people that you meet eat h tiay Imagine my surprise at seeing t onsumer guru Ralph Nader and TV journalist Barbara Walters singing away on Sesame Street After all. I guess, every five-year old should know who Natler anil Walters art- Vet, at first I felt that young kids should have a little innocence on Sesame Street before they had to reati about exploding t ars and cru sading journalists like Barbara Walters But after thinking about it. I realized that this was totally wrong Sesame Street is designed to educate young chil dren about life Why not go all the way w ith this idea ' True, teaching kids the alpha bet and how to count in Spanish are useful skills, but what about teaching kids some things that might l>e a bit more, ah, relev ant and useful to their everyday lives/ ror «• \.impi»\ tor tnt* In in** Neighborhood' Mint.',- people in somii more common occupa tions c ould be portrayed like c arjac kerx and serial inunlerers Alter all. m mam c ities in Americ a kids are more likely to rim into a cln;v; deal on the street than into the arms of .1 mailman or a police offic er llveryone rementliers the (.ount. the 1 harac ter who extolls the virtues of counting, and then demonstrates the art to all who wall listen Hi- could st.irt count mg objects that are a hit more common than apples and oranges 'One, one pound of heroin. Two, two dead bodies on the corner Three, three bul lets in each body and so 011 Kids can relate Murders and drugs aren't the only topic s than c an 1m- touched on with this new .Sexrime Street Kids should be able to hear about some more "adult" con troversies in a format suited to the younger viewer Seeming that he has been everywhere else. Joey Buttafuo c o could go on Sesame Street While the current show has .1 magic ian on every one t* in a while to impress kids with his act. Huttufuoco 1 011 Id show kids a few trie kx" of his own. Mind you. 1 don’t advocate what he did. but 1 acknowledge th.it a lot goes on in lug e ities Kids could learn about the Tonya Harding scandal by hav ing Oscar the Grouch club Big Bird's knee. Oscar c an then deny everything and go to court, lust like Tonya did The lesson for kids Violence solves more problems than your parents will admit (The Count will sav Uni' imc i.luli in (In■ s1UM' Two, two i luiis to the knee i hrue three i lulls ami the \ n tun goes down, ha ha ha "I ()k I'll admit that I'm a cvnii A really big cynic. to sav the least However, sin iet\ has jj i hanged a lot over the past 20 years that Se.su/ne ,Stree! and other t.hildren's shows have been on the air Violence and drugs are now major problems m six let\. Init you would never know bv watching Sesame .Street In lai t, kids might learn a lot more about life from the evening news than bv watching Big Bird. kids need to be able to learn about life somewhere Given that it has Ivoen an extraordinar ilv popular show during its life time, Sesame Street might lx* the place for kids to learn about problems that they might encounter. I'm not advocating drive-by shootings on Sesame Street, but I do suggest that top ii s such as divorce and child abuse, things thut children may very well encounter during their i hildhood. be covered in some sort of a kid-friendiv format f ifty years from now. we might look bai k and say that Sesame Street was pretty tame jus! because Oscar shows kids how to put on a condom or because Krnie died of a crai k overdose Then, the show will probably need to show kids how to shoot burglars at home or how to launder drug money, just to keep pace with so< iety around it. lust give the show some time Robbie Rees es is a columnist for the Kmerald COMMENTARY The Oregoii Daily Emerald nt'li.diurs commentaries from the public: com erning topic s of interest to the I iniversity i ontmu nitv. Commentaries should be between BOO and 800 words, legi ble, signed and the identific ation of the writer must lie verified when the letter is submitted The Emerald reserves the right to edit any letter lor length or style.