NEWSROOM: (541)346-5511 E-MAIL: ode@oregon. uoregon.edu ON-LINE EDITION: www.uoregon.edii/~ode - ©regon^£meraUr - EDITOR IN CHIEF Ryan Frank EDITORIAL EDITORS Jonas Allen, Kameron Cole Responsibility /< is the ^ key to credit Creditors offer free promotions, but sufficient funds are in students’ best interest There’s truth to the saying that college students will take anything they can get their hands on if it’s free: free posters, free CDs, free T shirts, even free beef, if the tire-buying opportunity pre sents itself. The first week of class provides prime exam ples of this behavior. Take a look at the EMU dur ing that week. Please. It’s free. Of course, so are half of the items offered during the five day business blizzard. Credit card, newspaper and long dis tance companies shower Uni versity students with free trin kets in return for students’ spending power. With as much promoting as those companies do, and as much as those students are ea ger to take, it would seem that businesses end up with the short end of the beefstick. At least, that’s how it would seem. But aside from the wash-it-once-and-then-it-fits Barbie fiasco, students often face more serious conse quences by taking free good ies. According to a study by OS PIRG’s “parent” public inter est research group, students who apply for a credit card to get the company’s promotion al items generally carry a higher balance than people who sign up for more pressing needs. As if students needed to worry about more than college loans, the interest rate on a credit card balance is high enough to make the most sea soned economics major shud der. Student loans can take years to pay off; a high credit balance can haunt people for a lifetime. And don’t think for a minute that credit companies don’t know it. For several years, credit card companies have run advertisements urg ing young people to spend their money and use their I ly. They have plead ed for pru dence with televi sions — items that many stu dents might indeed buy. Yet it is those same compa nies offering promotions, all the while knowing that many accepting students will be possessed by the power of plastic. Why would the companies seem so hypocritical? Because they also know the power of the most (in)famous acronym in business today: OAC. "On Approved Credit” is a term creditors are happy to throw in students’ faces. As soon as a student finishes pay ing off college loans, lo and behold, it’s time to think mena/Emeni^^/l about owning a house or car. Before being approved for the necessary loan, a student has to prove that the company will get its monthly payment. Enter the beloved credit check. Without a history of paying bills on time, the chances of getting a home or car loan are finer than the print at the bottom of the con tract. So having a credit card in college seems the perfect chance to build a history. But once the interest builds on a missed payment, credit be comes a revolving door. What once cost $100 to buy now costs up to $120. Next month it will be even higher. Those students who can’t afford to pay their balance more than compensate for those students who can. That’s why credit compa nies are in business. Their advertisements are not false; creditors don’t want students to go bankrupt. If stu dents went bankrupt there would be no one to pay the bills (in this case, to not pay them). But accepting a free gift does not automatically mean a student will carry a high bal ance. Creditors visit campus. They have goodies. Students sign up because they can’t do it anywhere else as conve niently. The gift is a bonus. Rather than accepting a gift, students need to accept that credit companies are in it for the money. They also need to accept responsibility when using their credit cards. Free bies are nice, but a healthy checking account will keep students happier than a pink corduroy halter top that does n’t fit in the first place. This editorial represents the opinion of the Emerald editori al board. Responses may be sent to ode®Oregon , uoregon.edu. Letters to the Edi tor A forum for safety In response to Janean Fossum’s letter (ODE, 10/5) about her experience at the Dylan/Morrison concert: The UO Cultural Forum is a group of students and staff that presents concerts, lectures, visual and performing arts and film to the campus and com munity. We are producing the Ani DiFranco concert at the Hult Center, the Paperboys in November, the Willamette Valley Folk Festival and Oregon Grind in the spring, a weekly campus film series, open mics, noon gigs and jazz cafes, art exhibits in the Adell McMillan and Aperture galleries and more. We are at our best when we are the sole producer of an event. At this point, the Cultural Forum is unable finan cially to independently produce a McArthur Court concert such as Bob Dylan/Van Morrison/Lucinda Williams. The concert you attended on September 24th was produced by Double T Promotions from Portland. Double T took the financial risk and made decisions regarding the event. It was Double T’s de cision to make this event general admission and de cide how many tickets to sell. I understand it was challenging for the security crew, student Events Crew, and events staff to keep aisles clear in the first balcony. They are most effec tive when they receive cooperation from partici pants. It is unclear to me from your letter that you pursued seating In the second and third balcony as alternatives to sitting in the aisles or the two rows behind the stage that were secured by barricade tape in the first balcony. The two rows behind the stage were secured to create separation between the audi ence and the stage. It was a safety precaution re quested by the performers. Some of your letter points to the challenges en countered at the event. The Cultural Forum's phi losophy of student development is to evaluate pro grams and make changes planning future events. Your comments will be included in our evaluation. As I review your letter and my response. I am compelled to share with you that our experiences are what we make of them. Linda Dievendorf Program Coordinator UO Cultural Forum and Student Activities Resource Office 'The difficulty now is trying to convince you... that what you are being told is the truth. You cannot believe you are be ing told the truth because for the last 20 years you prob ably haven’t been." — Prince An drew, telling the media that the British royal fami ly is trying to open itself to the public for better commu nication “Your cops can blow you away, but they’re not as good at giving kickings in the cells. Ours are the best at that" —Author Irvine Welsh, explaining why the British po lice in bis novels are portrayed as “bad" characters "(Mark Wahibergjwas.in his way, trying to give me a compli ment. He's a really nice guy. I didn't take offense at it. A lot of people talk about my butt and my body," -HWWWJM nlfer Lopez, re sponutny 10 Wahibefg’snot so-subtie stances at her body during the MTV video awards "Hiere’s a hu mility in me, or something, that makes me, like, not there, to feet charmed. You know, Hke 'Don't you dare.” —Stephan Jenkins, like, leader of Third Eye Blind, describing his, you know, un believable suc cess with the band “Just once in your lifeyou need to have thrown a TV out a window... or [been] called a freak. Every single decent rock star I've ever met has had this. —Courtney Love, musing about life in the public's eye