NEWSROOM: (541)346-5511 E-MAIL odeCd'oregon. uoregon.edu ON-LINE EDITION: www.uoregon.edu/~ode EDITOR IN CHIEF Ryan Frank EDITORIAL EDITORS Kameron Cole Stefanie Knowlton Faith falters on campus Av college students, we're losing our religion, but does it need to be this way? It’s so quiet, you can almost hear a pin drop. Apartment com plexes are silent, and the dorms dormant as young families and older couples make the trek in their ties or frilly dresses. Forget Dead Week. The real dead time on cam pus is Sunday morning. As we lay in bed, recovering from hangovers or just catching up on sleep, a large part of the city goes to church. And throughout the week, many religious organizations on and around campus meet regularly, eager for new members. Most stu dents, on the other hand, are either happily or tenuously oblivious. In the collegiate world, where (i \ the hottest bands are embraced, the latest i fashion * con i'1 sumed and the best books read, reli gion is hopelessly out of style. Going to church is passe, wor shipping anything is misguided. And faith? That’s a phenomenon re served for nuns and monks. We, on the other hand, are col lege students, steeped in knowl edge, secure in the fact that believ ing in anything unseen and living by a set of values not our own is purely delusional. It’s strange how this works, though. For so many of us, going to church was part of our childhood. Our parents dragged us, kicking and screaming, to Sunday school, Mass or Shabbat. We may have ac tually enjoyed it, at times, and a belief in a higher power was cer tainly important to us. Alter college, many ot us get married, have kids, grow older and start to question our own mortality and that of our kids. Pretty soon, we’re faithful attenders again, giv ing money every month and going to church picnics each summer. It’s as if we never left. But we do leave. We take a step backward. But why? What is it about college that makes us forget our faith, or if we never went to church, deny any thoughts of a higher power? Part of the cause, as alluded to earlier, is any belief in the super natural is scoffed at by professors and staff. The academic world, at least in Eugene, has no room for silly notions of a god and, further, any type of personal faith. We’re conditioned, from the time we step on campus, to seek knowledge from the material realm and down play anything that’s not of this world. Also, we have some societal mountains to climb as young peo ple. Everyone expects us to toe the moral line, drinking heavily, en gaging in rampant sex, while we come to grips with our place in the world. We’re supposed to be so busy trying to find ourselves that we surely would have no time to follow any type of god. And we joyously oblige both stereotypes. Political correct ness and faux tolerance become our gods, and we relegate religion to the shadows, going so far as to give the few religious organiza tions in the EMU microscopic workspaces. And, of course, we have no problem fitting the mold of tormented collegians, forced to drown our existential dilemmas in alcohol and empty love. But if we just put the can of Mil waukee’s Best and our PC dictio nary down for a minute, we could see that college is the perfect place to have religion. A college campus, for one, should be a place for di verse people with a wide range of ideas. Religion could easily be tol erated and made more available to students. More important, Opinion Ashley Bach college students are searching for their niche in greater so ciety and wondering about an uncertain future. This part of the stereotype is true. But is it possi ble, ever so slightly, that religion pro vides many of the answers, that it’s ex actly what per plexed college stu dents do need? Our late teens and early 20s are the dark ages of religion, no doubt, and if that’s because we need to make sense of a childhood inheri tance, OK. But despite what so many people say, there is value in religion, and it needs to be evaluat ed internally without the influ ences of a world that can’t associ ate college with faith. In the end, some of us may choose to go our own way in the world. But in the meantime, we should consider catching some thing like that sunrise on a Sunday morning; it’s seldom seen, but it can be beautiful. Ashley Bach is a columnist for the Emerald. His views do not necessarily represent those of the neivspaper. Letters to the Editor Campus cash warnings Thank you for the editorial on “Going Cashless” (ODE Dec. 1), which features the new debit system called Cam pus Cash. The headline "Charge It” is somewhat mislead ing because Campus Cash is not a charge card. Instead, the cardholder prepays by making a deposit into the account, then has the convenience of speedier service and reduces the need to carry cash on campus. Many students have mentioned that it could help them stay within their budgets because it is not a buy-now-pay-later account. As your edi torial correctly cautions, it is up to each person to manage his/her money and make prudent choices. Campus Cash of fers students a convenient way to budget their funds wisely. Dusty Miller Director, EMU Book smarts I am so sick of getting ripped off the by bookstore. 1 sell my books back to them, and they only give me 40 percent of what 1 paid for the book. Yet, they turn around and sell my book for $20 more than they paid me for it. That’s why I’m so excited for the book swap. The book swap is an event that is sponsored by the ASUO. It starts the week of finals and continues through the first week of the second term. During the week of finals you take your old books to the EMU Fishbowl and put a price on your books that is cheaper than what the bookstore sells them for. In return you will get more money by swapping books with students rather than selling it back to the book store. Also, it will cheaper for students to buy the books they will need for the next term at the book swap rather than at the bookstore. It is a definite win-win situation. I am really looking forward to making money as well as helping out my fellow students. Jessica Giordani Undeclared Tolerance I was struck that reporter Eric Mortenson seemed sur prised that a homeless Hispanic man “moved off to the right, making way like he thought he shouldn’t be standing there” (“Side streets,” Register-Guard Nov.29). It’s a fact of life on some of our streets that poor folks had better make way or pay the price. No-loitering signs have been posted on East 13th for over a year. I have seen indigents ticketed for the crime of being on a public sidewalk with no place to go. The worse crime: They have no money to spend. Non-consuming riff-raff simply isn’t good for business. Though it was over a year ago when I overheard a city councilperson s comments to an East 13th businessperson, I remain as saddened over the council person’s words today as then. She expressed how much “better things are now on East 13th and how unpleasant it was when she “sometimes had to step out in the mud to get around those people.’’ How many hundreds of people, those who can afford it the least, have been given stiff loitering fines because this woman couldn’t wend her way or couldn’t bear the sight of poor folks? I’ve had no problem with other humans on E. 13th. If congested, a simple, courteous, ‘Excuse me, may I pass,” never fails. But I have a decided problem with the moneyed interests there who have pressured city council to institute draconian puni tive regulations against the poor and homeless. , human beings making way for the gentry, huddling wherever they can find shelter is simply a fact of life for many in our town. Merry Christmas. Carol Berg Eugene