©regotf#©meraltJ NEWSROOM (541)546-5511 E-MAIL ade@oregoauoregon.edu ON-LINE EDITION: »w.uoregon.edu/-ode EDITOR IN CHIEF Ryan Frank EDITORIAL EDITORS Jonas Allen, Kameron Cole Partying students deserve to be left alone Authorities should treat parties as celebrations of youth, not self-destruction Picture this: A two-story, crumbling timber residence that lies near our jaunty campus finds itself inundat ed with people on a Friday or Saturday night. About 100 or so hap py, attractive guys and beautiful col lege girls jam the place and seem to be having a pretty classic time as the evening rolls by. In the middle of the liv ing-room-turned dance floor, a bevy of sweaty, writhing bodies gyrate with ecstasy as the boister ous music vibrates through their long, strong, supple limbs. A couple of feet from the ex hilarating dance deck, toward the back of the merry, lit tie hovel, a handful of boys hangs out, smoking cigarettes and sucking down the golden fluid that profuse Opinion Vince Medeiros l v oozes from the three kegs in the backyard right next to the corroding barbecue. Coming from a hazy room upstairs, a smoking device can barely be heard above the deafening din. And on the front porch, about 10 people hang out, cracking jokes, drinking and smoking and laughing at the incon gruities and ironies of life in Eugene. All in all, it’s a top social gathering. All the revelers having a great time at yet just another classic house party in the surroundings of our beloved Univer sity campus in Eugene. Until... Out in the distance, about a mile up the road, the unmistakable spinning blue lights of a patrol car trundle toward the house. Un easiness overwhelms all partygoers as the unfortunate news spreads like an Ebola orgy in a third-world slum. Busted. A well-armed cop car pulls up in front of the "law-violating” domicile, and two offi cers promptly jump out and march toward the house. Underage kids panic and flee through the back door faster than Banrbi try ing to escape a sanguinary leopard in the African Savannah. Others, in the imminence of having to submit themselves to a humiliating cavity search, take off like lightning. And the party veterans, who are sick of the same old ridiculous scene, attempt to keep the rage going but leave because no one else seems to be staying around. Everyone out. Party is over. Does this look familiar to you, dear read ers? The answer is yes, I’d wager. Dozens of classic parties like the one de scribed above go down every weekend in Eugene. Students merely gather in fun to un wind and enjoy a little bit of their youth be fore they marry, have children, embrace a boring corporate job and move into one of those tragic new suburbs. We all know there is nothing vile, crimi nal or depraved about having a little bit of fun. In fact, the whole world parties on the weekend. And the whole world drinks and smokes and dances and makes a little bit of noise on weekends. It’s basically an inher ent aspect of human nature. And we’re all human, aren't we? However, for some sinister, unknown rea son, local law enforcers entertain the idea that these gatherings represent a menace to society. Dangerous get-togethers, these are. But the fact is,'they’re wrong. Eugene po Chris Hutchinson Emerald lice should be more tol erant of these students and limit their use of cita tions, cuffs, coercion and terror. Let the kids make a bit of noise, suck down great amounts of beer and enjoy their transient lives while they’re young. Because, as most police officers in Eugene probably know, one minute you’re fit and ready for a run down the coast or up the slopes anytime of the day. One minute you’re surrounded by friends who are always pushing you to try new things and experience every little bit of the recreational side of life. One minute your body rages with adrenalin because you scored a top grade in a 400-level course and your hormones are as alive as a newborn in fant. always on the prowl for some new, wild, libidinous action. The next minute it’s all gone, baby. And life has flashed past vour eyes and you did n’t even notice. So let the kids party, sirs. Please, let the kids party. I ince Medeiros is a columnistfor the Emerald. His icorii appears on alternate Fridays. His i ieu s do not necessarily represent those of the newspaper. Dp. JUDICIARY Raos T* mo ,___ MR. HYDE I WAD AFFAIR H o\n tM IMPEACHMENT PROCESS WORKS... EviPfNCf 15 (ARfFUUY GATHfWD 91 TfAM Of HOU$£ INVt5n6AYOW. DRUDCf REPORT cuma «PORT The Eve*nee is pw«nted to TW HOUSE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE N A Plain Brown wrapper, -met vote to send a RECOMMENDATION TO ME FUtl HOUSE... LYNCH. CASTRATE^ MAW Him GO On "JERRY SPRINGER:’ Tm house vonE$ tvftN it's on to the Senate floor for a trial .IS "IS" X PIRSI, OR IS "IS" "WAS" OR "ARE?"