NEWSROOM: (541)346-5511 E-MAIL cxleCg) Oregon uoregon.edu ON-LINE EDITION: www.uoregon.edu/-ode Alumni weekend Homecoming weekend is, and hasti 7 been, an event for students years since I graduated. I’ve gotten older, wiser and wrin kled, but the University is largely the same. There is still no parking with in walking distance, still crime and poor housing options in the West University neighborhood, and the football team is still trying to piay it self into the upper half of the confer ence. As I stand with a few hundred other former University students near Autzen Stadium before this rainy homecoming football game, I realize one change here that seems to come with age: an interest in homecoming. As a student in 1998, homecom ing weekend was a non-event. It may as well have been a week of Thursday night Must See TV. I had no idea what events were going on, where they were or how I was sup omecoming football game, Oct. 23,2023 Not much has changed on this campus in the 25 posed to get involved. Or maybe it was just that I didn’t care. Either way, homecoming was not important in my life or the lives of most students I knew. Instead, it was, if anything, an event for alumni still closely connected to the Univer sity and for contributors. At the time, part of me was won dering if that was the way it should be. In the early ’60s there was a bon fire and jazz musician Duke Elling ton played on campus. Homecoming was big — for students. Some local officials said stu dents’ apathy to homecoming and other University events started in the late 1960s and early 1970s and may have been spurred during the Vietnam War. In fact, a 1967 Emerald editorial proclaimed, "Abolish home coming." Whatever the cause, stu dents were more or less non-existent at the home coming festivities when I was here. Today, that all makes sense. Students were, and still are, most ly apathetic to University involve ment. But for the alumni it is often the opposite. We have been away from the school for years and the University is new again. Some of us haven’t seen our college friends since we left school, so it’s a time for us to remi nisce and visit the foot of the Pio neer man where we passed out one night, the breeze way that was new when we were here or the changes in the 13th Avenue area. There’s nothing new for students this weekend. Why should they care? This is a weekend for us, the alumni and the donors, and has been for some time. The Alumni Association tent is starting to empty and the stadium is beginning to fill up. It's funny how things change, when in reality they are actually the same. This editorial represents the opinion of the Emerald editorial hoard. Responses may be sent to ode®Oregon uoregon. edu. 1 student tent \ Chris Hutchinson/Emerald Letters to the Editor No on measure 64 The debate over how to manage Oregon’s forests has reached a critical point with ballot measure 64. In short, measure 64 is an act that would prohibit clear cutting and pesticide use in all of Oregon's forests. I am not necessarily trying to endorse a yes or no vote, rather I would like to point out a very real and serious problem. I would personally be very pleased if clear cutting in the world's forests was a thing of the past. It is undeniable that sustainable forest manage ment must be part of our fu ture, and perhaps this mea sure is a solid first step in that direction. Unfortunately, harvesting trees is a neces sary part of our lives, and even those people who detest clear cutting the most de pend on wood products on a daily basis. Given our current situa tion, the effectiveness of passing measure 64 will be nullified for the following reason: The state estimates that if measure 64 passes Oregon’s logging output will be reduced by around 60 per cent. However, our demand for paper and other wood products will remain un changed. If the state’s figures correct it will mean that the lack of timber coming from Oregon must be made up elsewhere. Unsustainable forestry practices will continue in other states and other coun tries that do not prohibit clear cutting. The hypocrisy of.our consumption is self evident. We cannot continue to consume forest products at our current rate and imple ment sustainable forestry practices at the same time. If we don’t bring our use of for est products under control, laws to selfishly protect our forests will only endanger forests in other parts of the world. Eric Colbeck EDITOR IN CHIEF Ryan Frank EDITORIAL EDITOR Kameron Cole Thumbs /i THUMBS UP To being held ac countable The United Na tions is threaten ing to take away the United States' vote if its $197 million bill is not paid. To animal freedom Twenty-four rhe sus monkeys broke out of a cageafTulane University, the world’s largest pri mate research center, and two are still at-large. So, if the animals are found, does that mean the re searchers will have to punish the escapees, and thus spank their monkeys? THUMBS DOWN To bureaucratic B.S. The U.S. spending bill the Senate ap proved on Wednesdays 4,00Qpages, 16 Inches tall and 40 pounds. The tall got one represen tative's vote bbthe “faith" of its con tents. To reported HIV case* on the rise The Eugene HIV Alliance has seen a 277 percent rise in the number clients in the last three months. CORRECTION The Oct. 19 story, “HIV Alliance sees increase in clients,” should have said the organization gets an average of nine new clients per quarter with a July September in crease of 277 per cent. The Emerald regrets this error.