CONTACTING OS NEWSROOM: (541)346-5511 E-MAIL: ode@oregon. uoregon.edi ADDRESS: Oregon Daily Emerald P.O. Box3159 Eugene, Oregon 97403 uNLiNt tui i iun: www.uoregon.edu/~ode Perspectives Summer in Eugene rewards students with boredom s summer. Ana iorsome reason, a large majority of students find them selves in Eugene. Instead of taking the opportunity to break away from the city of neo-fiowerchildren and street fairs, we have chosen to enlighten our lives with cram courses of organic-multicultural-so cio-economic 347 classes or, for instance, the exciting world of house painting. Now, this is not to say the choice of staying in Eugene was a bad one. In the lone run. Amy Goldhammer we’ll be thanking our selves when graduation rolls around and we have enough credits to march our overlystuffed brains down the aisle. But sum mertime in Eugene is so uneventful that mosqui toes have chosen to mi grate elsewhere. We have limited opportunity to buy 'The Funniest Joke Books me vvoria nas uver tcnown until tall be cause even Frog doesn’t seem to tie around as much. Out of pure boredom, my friend decided to get her nose pierced. When asked why she did it, her response was plain and simple. "I was bored,” she said. Not to say the bands that come through Eugene and play at local bars and dubs don’t fulfill our endless nights, but if I see one more fluorescent flyer for a band with a name like "Chocolate Milk Balls," I’ll scream. And how many times can you go to Satur day Market before people start asking you where your booth is? For a while, the beautiful Oregon coast was a prospect, but for anyone who has ever left sunny Eugene and ended up sitting un der the overhang of Driftwood Shores watch ing the water while torrents of rain come crashing down will understand how the sandy beach slowly loses its appeal. So that leaves us sitting around in the hot sun, trying to figure out something to do, while our friend—who we really don't want to hang out with, but there’s no one else around—stares at an empty refrigerator and proposes the idea of barbecuing the baked ziti left over from last week. You find it’s actually not bad charbroiled witn barbecue sauce. But, cn the upside of pure boredom, you find yourself hanging out with people you really weren’t friends with during the year and you do your homework because it pass es time. Summer in Eugene allows you to discover you actually like the taste of beer at 9 a.m. on a camping trip, and going to bed before 3 in the morning gives you more ener gy the next day. You may find out the girl’s name down the street is Jenna and not "the weird chick with funny hair." Summertime parties don’t compare with school year 200-plus capacity shin-digs. However, you go because you secretly hope something exciting might happen. Or, maybe that cute guy in your lab will venture away from his volumizer experiment. OK, so his shorts are half an inch too short and he wears white athletic socks with sandals, but you end up holding his drink while he plays darts with yourbuddies. The Blockbuster employees know our names, and not because we have fines. Eu gene summers present you with a great op portunity to rent "Spice World." Boredom has led a handful of us to watching the Eu gene Emeralds minor league baseball games. My friend commented it reminded him of games at Wrigley Field. Right. Pure boredom has driven us to find out that the "My So Called Life" marathon I have taped doesn’t include the Halloween episode and that the Glenwood closes early in the summer. We have observed breathtaking sunsets from atop Spencer Butte, driven aimlessly around town and spent countless hours peo ple-watching from our front porches. Spending a summer in Eugene allows us to grow, to appreciate the simple things in life and to learn how to spell the word “ornery.” So, maybe our job leaves us cov ered in primer and we spend our days star ing at chalkboards, but we took the risk of staying in our home away from home. And we’re bored. A my Goldhammer is a reporterfor the Emer ald and will be a columnist in the fall. Her views do not necessarily represent those of the newspaper. |. n*p z. * whjfc nothing 3, lie in the Sun y. more nothing &. deep'COnoh'HOn the dog Ip- n*p AMY GOLDHAMMER/Emerald UTTERS POLICY The Oregon Daily Emerald will attempt to print all letters containing comments on top ics of interest to the University community. Letters must be limited to 250 words or less. The Emerald reserves the right to edit letters for length, clarity, grammar and style. Letters can be e-mailed to ode@ore gon.uoregon.edu. CORRECTION The Aug. 4 story “Kent seeks to avoid sophomore slump” in the Oregon Daily Emerald should have said that men’s bas ketball recruit Frederick Jones graduated from Barlow High School in Gresham. The Emerald regrets the error. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR KWVA not at fault On Aug. 1, the WOW Hall hosted a concert by Seattle-based band jTchkung! After the show, band members held an im promptu drum circle that blocked the intersection at 8th Avenue and Charnelton Street. Following the drum circle, rem nants of the crowd that had gath ered committed acts of vandal ism. News stories in The Register Guard and an editorial in the Oregon Daily Emerald (Aug. 4) identified University of Oregon campus radio station KWVA as sponsor of the concert. KWVA welcomes many shows to the WOW Hall. What this entails is the station does radio announce ments about the shows. They do this for free — out of the good ness of their hearts and an inter est in promoting new music. However, KWVA has no role in determining which acts perform. That is our responsibility alone. jTchkung!, which is well known for political and environ mental activism, had performed several times previously without incident. The Board of Directors and staff of the Community Center for the Performing Arts, which operates the WOW Hall, con demn the acts of vandalism and misconduct. It is our policy that all performances occur inside the building with suitable sound dampening and volunteer secu rity. We are especially saddened that these actions have hurt our neighbors. Legitimate concerns over the loss of urban trees and national forests are ill-served by acts of destruction. Bob Fennessy Community Center for the Performing Arts Autzen event harmful The year is 2048. A pall of de spair blankets an impoverished nation that — because of its dis mal human rights record — has been barred by the major powers from participation in a robust global economy. The stars that once spangled Old Glory’s blue field have been replaced by a single white cross, and a banner of sectarian oppression now waves o’er the land of the van quished and the home of the slave. The old U.S. Constitution and its Bill of Rights have been de clared blasphemous and void. The supreme law of the land is a fundamentalist scripture titles “The 700 Club Version.” The government’s official dai ly electropaper is called The Register-God. The Christian Broadcasting Network’s Family Channel offers the only ap proved television programming. All unauthorized communi cations are subject to laser zap ping by federal jammers known as Talibaners. Twice each day, every vassal of the theocracy must face the holy city of Vir ginia Beach and genuflect in homage to a deified evangelical clergy. As heavily armed soldiers force a ragtag crowd to kneel in prayer, you awaken and experi ence a rush of relief. The whole thing was a nightmarish reverie! Over coffee, you peruse a 1998 diurnal. For the third time in less than a week, the front page of Eugene’s anti-secularist daily newspaper heralds a male supremacy rally staged by a Christian Reconstructionist cadre of born-again homo phobes called the Promise Keepers. The University of Ore gon made its dormitories and football stadium available for the theatrical production that was produced and directed by the recruiting arm of the reli gious right. The only justification offered for all of the extraordinary hype and accommodation extended to “Coach" Bill McCartney’s fa natical army is the notion that any event which pumps dollars into the community is worthy of beatification. When you’ve finished read ing The Register-Guard’s latest Promise Keepers promo, your eyes fall on a nearby bookshelf where you observe paperback editions of “1984” and “Fahrenheit 451.” You begin to wonder if George Orwell and Ray Bradbury didn’t get it right after all. 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