®regonSK€meratti NEWSROOM: (541)346-5511 E-MAIL odeCa'oregoa uorcgon.edu ON-LINE EDITION: www.uorcgon.edu/--ode EDITOR IN CHIEF Ryan Frank EDITORIAL EDITORS Kameron Cole Stefanie Knowlton One low payment of only $200 Contrary to the University’s claims, the new matriculation fee will do little to ease college students' financial burden. It’s new. It’s fast. It’s easy. But few students will actually save money with the new matriculation fee. The fee is designed to combine fees such as the $100 Intro-DUCKtion fee, the $5 official transcript fee, the $15 re enrollment fee, the $25 graduation fee and the $10 add/drop fee. The fee requires returning students to pay $45 and new undergraduates to pay $150. After a two-year phase-in to even out the costs between returning and new students, entering undergrad uate students will pay a $200 fee start ing in the year 2000. However, the harsh reality is that not everyone graduates, needs an official transcript, re-enrolls or adds or drops a class. By using a one-time fee instead of charging for each item separately, the University will inevitably over-charge some students for services they don’t use. Transfer students may suffer the most because they will be forced to pay the same amount as students who have been at the University for their entire education. However, students who make adding and dropping classes a personal hobby will make out nicely with the new fee because they will not be required to pay for each add/drop. But should the rest of the student body end up paying for it? The administration claims it institut ed the fee because students complained that the University was “nickel and diming” them to death. But we believe the objection students have is that they pay tuition, incidental fees, Intro DUCKtion fees and various other fees, and that services such as graduation, transcripts, add/drop and re-enroll ment should be covered by the fees that they already pay. It is not that students simply object to paying separate fees and that a one-time fee makes every thing better. f 4E So Bucks fofl a ' Permit to hsb THE TXdtf/jf You Have O Or TO Be. i h tDt>/*jo,r Theadministra tion, however, likes fees. They ensure a lump sum of money that goes unchecked when you consider that most of the student body has no idea what each in dividual fee is for. When you have a separate fee for each service, students can decide to use it or not. Take adding aim dropping classes ior example: it there is a specific fee for adding or drop ping, students will take care not to over use this service. Therefore, they have a choice to use the service or not. Under the new matriculation fee, use of these services will rise because stu- / dents will have no financial incen ti ve for restraint. The University will take this as an opportunity to raise the matriculation fee to account for in creased use. And students will have lit tle say in the matter. Students need to see where their money is going, and payment up-front for services allows them to do that. It also allows students to monitor in creases in the costs of particular ser vices. In contrast, students are not like ly to question blanket fees when they know little about how they are spent. In addition, the whole act of creating all the fees in order to keep the tuition low is deceptive to prospective stu dents. The cost of education is not just tuition when you continue to add fee after fee. Although most students may be se duced by the sound of one easy, low payment, they need to consider the cost of convenience. For most students it’s not worth it. n is editorial represents the opinion of the Emerald editorial hoard. Responses may Ik sent to ode@oregon.uoregon.edu. Said &Done "I think It's impor tant we not overre act” —President Clin ton alter Iraq again refused to hand over weapons doc uments requested by the UN “I hear laughter from the left. But I often hear laughter from the left.” —David Ship pers, the Republi can's chief inves tigative counsel, on the laughtertbat re sulted from his praise of the inde pendent counsels' treatment of Moni ca Lewinsky “Few have ventured that the president told the truth, the whole truth and no thing butthe truth.” —Kenneth Starr, independent coun sel, during his opening statement before the Judicia ry Committee “Mr. Starr has cros sed the line into ob session." —Rep. John Cony ers, D-Mieh., on Starr's tour year in vestigation of Pres ident Clinton “Ifyourmission is to entertain ratherthan inform, then I hope you’ll goto Holly wood ratherthan into journalism." —Charles Kaiser, Wall Street Journal reporter, discussing the Clinton scandal in his speech to stu dents interested in journalism THESE MINORITY 6POUPS/ ALWAYS , WHININ6! I THFy WANT SPectA*. pi6HTS PROTECTION... / W»-M can’t iwev jujr LIVt under OUR (/kW$ 7 f ITS never ENOU6H WITH TWf PEOPLE / f .THE $V$TE/SA WORKS. < THEY’RE TOUGH ON THESE NEW RECRUITS... I HE’S TALKING TO CLINTON.. i