NEWSROOM: (541)546-5511 E-MAIL ixle@oregon. uotegon.edu ON-LINE EDITION: www.uoregon.edu/~ode EDITOR IN CHIEF Ryan Frank EDITORIAL EDITOR Kameron Cole Adoptees should gain access to family roots .W. State Ballot Measure 58 would allow adult j adoptees access to I original birth || certificates ‘fc V >oPPOp. T* Measure ^3 mation. The advances made in medical technolo gy make it imperative that medical history be available to anyone and everyone. It could save my life or even N my future child’s life. J Disclosure could only be inappropriate and It’s true. I am not my par ents’ daughter — at least not bio logically. And though my adoptive par ents have provided a good life and a loving home, they cannot answer those nagging questions that insist on lingering in the back of my mind. What is my mother’s name? What is my father’s race and nationality? Why did they give me away? What kind of medical history do I have? Do I need to worry about breast un \ til you have to fill out a medical questionnaire or register for classes at a new school or explain to a friend why your siblings ih Giovanni Salimena/Emerald look nothing like you. Not lotow ing leaves me watching Opinion Tricia Schwennesen cancer, and are my chronic allergies something I inherited? I believe that 1 am en titled to the answers to these questions. I have earned that right by striving to get ahead, moving forward in life and becoming my own person. I have success fully reached adult hood, and now I want some answers. Oregonians have a chance to answer these questions for hundreds of adoptees by voting yes on Measure 58. Measure 58 could abolish the 1957 law that sealed away original birth certifi cates leaving adoptees to forever won der about the possibilities. The lack of family information leaves many adoptees with a huge gaping inner wound that can some times lead to feelings of shame and insecurity. Being adopted never bothered me until I had to make a family tree in ele mentary school. The assignment was torture on my little girl heart because naming my family members seemed to me to be a bloodline of lies. I was ashamed that I didn’t have my moth er’s smile or my grandmother’s eyes. I didn’t have my father’s height or my grandfather’s nose. But my parents were smart. They never hid my adop tiveness from me or anyone else. They taught me that family was mote than biology and genetics. You would think that coming to terms with being adopted and accept ing your adoptive family as your one and only would ease the doubt that comes with not knowing the biology of your existence. It doesn’t. It’s easy to set the questions aside strangers in the grocery store, in the mall or at work, wonder ing if the woman with the dark curly hair might be my mother or the man peppered with freckles across his nose might be my father. It doesn’t matter that I’m not a native Oregon ian. My biological family could be from anywhere and might currently live right here in Eugene. Who knows? I know I don’t. I understand that there was once a time when illegitimate children left a permanent black mark against unwed mothers. But that time has passed. Today, if a woman accidentally gets pregnant, it’s more acceptable to give the baby up for adoption because the only other alternative is abortion. And no one likes the idea of killing a child. Birth parents have a moral obliga tion to provide family history and more importantly, vital medical in harmful for both parties in volved if the birth mother was sexual ly assaulted. In this situation the cir cumstances of the birth should be revealed as an explanation for the lack of information available. No identify ing information should be divulged. Oregon is one of 43 states where birth records are available by court or der only. In the last decade, state law revisions have given adoptees new ways to get crucial information. Adoption agencies are required by an Oregon statute to keep voluntary registries for birth parents and adoptees. Agencies must also conduct searches if requested by either party. Unfortunately there are no guarantees for a thorough search, registries are in convenient and the alternatives can be expensive. Before I have children of my own, I should be able to provide them with an accurate medical history based on biology as well as family history based on life and love. Accidental parents need to quit being selfish and the law needs to recognize that adoptees have the same right to build a life based on truth not a fabricated birth certificate. Tricia Schwennesen covers the College of Arts and Sciences, the University Foundation and the Oregon Public Em ployees Union for the Emerald. She can be reached via e-mail at tschwenn@ gladstone. uoregon edu. Letters to the Editor Students must vote All of the sudden half the term is fin ished. Mid-terms are the subject of our nightmares. Some of us are wondering if we will get through our classes, how little sleep we can survive on, how long the sun will last and even more students are won dering how they will vote on Nov. 3 Stu dents are proving that we want to be recog nized. We no longer think politics are frivolous, that propositions are pointless or that our vote doesn’t matter. As of the vot ing registration deadline, 3,500 University students registered with ASUO. This num ber doesn’t take into account those stu dents who are already registered. In other words, the students are ready to be heard. Students have made the connection. The only way the government will work for us is if we hold them accountable. Yes, we have registered to vote. Yes, we are educat ing ourselves about the issues at hand, but it’s that last step we need to take. We need to make intelligent decisions and get to the polls and vote. We must strive to under stand what issuers will impact students and our state. Last session, students voted and legisla tors saw that we not only care, we matter. Legislators saw that some progress on the tuition freeze was necessary. This year we have the opportunity to do the same and af firm a tuition freeze. As student voters we have taken that step. As a fellow student, I thank you for caring. Janette Sherman ASUO Intern Escaped animals a hazard I am disappointed that the Emerald gave a thumbs up to the monkey breakout at Tu lane University Primate Center (ODE, Oct. 22). This poor attempt at journalistic hu mor did not recognize the seriousness of escaped research animals and how their lives and the research they aid are affected. The escape of these animals does not corre late to a gain of freedom, but rather results in stress to the creature and possibly pre mature death. Released research animals often die in new, unfamiliar surroundings from starvation, trauma caused by cars, an imal attacks and fear. These monkeys are extremely valued creatures used in the study of cancer, malaria, leprosy and AIDS. Their escape is not a matter to be taken lightly, nor is it to be summed up as a gain of freedom for these animals. Jocelyn McAuley Institute of Neuroscience CORRECTION In the "Private dona tions, grants on the rise" story (ODE, Oct.23),astate mentattributedto Paula Burkhart, as sistant vice provost for research and tac ulty development should have said federal research dol lars have declined in the last 10 years na tionally, but the amount of federal research dollars at the University dur ing the same time has risen due to its quality faculty. Said &Done “People see it more asafamily tragedy there." —Bob Huff, Viti Fualaau’s lawyer, on France's reac tion to Fualaau's tour to promote the book, “Only One Crime, Love” “it’s not just a place to come and sit and be sad or worried. It's a place that at tempts to dignify the life of the peo ple.” —Carlos Mar rentes, director of Centro deTraba jadores Agricolas Fronterizas, in El Paso, Texas. The center provides free shelter nightly forfarm workers who work in West Texas and New Mexico during the picking season. “I'm not one to gloat overthese things, ifs just part of doing our busi ness.” —Eureka Police Chief AmieNHI sap, on a federal judge dismissing a lawsuit Monday by anti-logging pro testers whose eyes were swabbed "I do think if s a great sadness that the Oxford dictio nary isdotng this. Hearing split infini tives is like listening to Mozart when the pianist keeps hit ting all the wrong notes." — Lottos Jestin, head ol the English departmental Central Connecti cut State Universi ty, on Oxford die tionaries ending its centuries-old ban on splitting in finitives. “I don’t like to kill things. I like tools and problem-solv ing." —Allen ingling, University of Maryland veteri narian who is in Neah Bay, Wash., to help the Makah Indian Tribe with their first whale hunt in more than 70 years.