NEWSROOM: (541)346-5511 E-MAIL: cde@oregon. uoregon.edu ON-LINE EDITION: www.dailyemerald.com EDITOR IN CHIEF Ryan Frank EDITORIAL EDITORS Kameron Cole Stefanie Knowlton Registration Frustration As' a new term approaches, students throw themselves on the mercy of Duck Ca.ll The rage started Friday morning af ter the first two classes I tried to register for were full and the third class number I punched into the phone responded with the monotonous “ding-dong” and the computerized Duck Call lady saying, “CRN number blah blah blah blah blah is full.” I sat frozen, thinking, “You’ve got to be kidding me.” It was only four days into registration, __ and I held plenty of credits to place me Giovanni Salimena/Emerald early in the registration countdown. But alas, no luck. Oh no, instead of ac tually taking the classes I want to take, the ones my University dollars should be pay ing for, I will now spend spring term in a last-on-my-list lecture. Now don’t get me wrong, I tried to keep an open mind and register for my second and even third choice classes. But, yep, you guessed it — I bonded with the Duck Call class-is-full lady again! So after I an grily filled my empty schedule with ran dom classes that I don’t need, I threw the phone across my room, cursing at Duck Call. Everyone in my living room stood with skeptical, worried looks on their faces and tried to reassure me that the three-hour lecture smack in the middle of the day wasn’t going to be that bad. Right. Just yesterday, a friend of mine who has suffered through what seems to be enough organic chemistry classes for the en j\ tire school brought to my at tention the “ridiculous se ries classes” that some students take. Appar entiy, many classes only allow you to take, say, 301 fall \term, 302 winter and 303 spring, each only of fered during that term. i Therefore, if you went abroad for a , term or \ two, or switched a major mid-year, you might have to wait an entire year for the first l class in the sequence to come around again. Yeah, we’ll be graduating on time. And what’s with the suddenly popular instructor approval. A journalism profes sor of mine explained that it was to keep the people Opinion who weren’t supposed to be in a particular class from registering for it. I can see the future. Not only is instructor approval required, but each student must get 42 signatures, a wet noodle, two pairs ot mismatched socks and a flowered paper plate with an Alumni Association sticker on it just to get into a class. So professors, when you are wondering why your students are overly cranky and annoyed as this winter term draws to a close, keep in mind it’s not the surprise nine-page paper you assigned but the fact that instead of taking your class next term they might be sitting in a class they didn’t want. How awful is it when a professor tells you he or she wants you in a particular class he or she is teaching and you can't get into it? Why do the scheduling problems al ways come up during the term you finally decide to take urban farm? How come the class you promised to take with your new friend is at its capacity when it’s time to register? Why is it just your luck, you finally find two classes you could be happy with and one starts 20 minutes before the other ends? No, you can’t sneak into the later one af ter it’s started or leave the early before it’s over. Trust me, it doesn’t work. But to leave you on a positive note, give the random classes a chance. You never know what you’ll discover in that weird science or dusty history class. Amy Goldhammer So my fellow students, I wish you luck in final registration days and spring term, in hopes that you make the best of your predicament, whatever it may be. And to the people who got into that class I want ed to take: #@$%*A&%$!!! Amy Goldhammer is a columnist for the Emerald. Her inews do not necessarily repre sent those of the newspaper. Letters to the Editor Ex-Senator not missed I am writing in regard to Tamir Kriegel’s ridiculous resignation from the Student Senate. I wish to be the first to commend him for resigning. He has brought nothing to the ASUO but a consistent level of tom foolery, ballyhoo, and back door shenani gans. From his first campaign in 1997, I knew that if elected he would bring nothing but contempt for the ASUO. He has been an inadequate student senator and conse quently has caused dissension amongst the student body government. Tamir Kriegel's resignation from the Stu dent Senate ultimately will only improve the aptitude of the Student Senate. Tamir and his "men wearing face paint, masks and other costumes," (ODE, Feb. 25) a metaphor for his entire disservice to the Student Sen -ate, have struck their final and most painful blow on the ASUO. I can only hope that Tamir Kriegel, for his obtrusive desecration of our sacred institution, apologizes or that the ASUO reprimands him accordingly. Ryan John Begley Humanities Respect student voice In response to the conclusion of the 9th District Circuit Court of Appeals decision to allow student funding to go toward groups such as OSPIRG (ODE, Feb. 25), I am over joyed. But I find this joy only due to the fact that the students have the right to choose what their money should support. As ASUO President Geneva Wortman said in the Feb. 25 issue of the Emerald, “Today is a victory for students. It’s a victo ry for student control of student fees.” So if students vote to not support an organization such as OSPIRG, shouldn’t their wishes be validated and not undermined by a special election process and ‘special circum stances’? When the Oregon Legislature tried to negate a law passed by Oregon voters con cerning assisted suicide, the voters were outraged. So are we, the students at the Uni versity of Oregon, outraged at having our voices smothered by ASUO and OSPIRG. Leah Rosin Undeclared Shedding light While “good” lighting may contribute to improving perceptions of safety on campus (’’Students feel less than safe on campus” ODE, Feb. 26), “bad” lighting can make campus less safe. High intensity, unshield ed lights are bad. They result in glare, wast ed illumination of the night sky and provide for poor contrast. When an area is overly il luminated, objects that are outside of the area or are shaded appear darker. In other words, when it comes to lighting brighter is not better. Unfortunately we tend to value the aesthetic of the light fixture more than the quality of light. The two can work to gether quite nicely. It is particularly dis heartening to see bad lighting with new construction. The lighting in the new down town parking garage is painful. While not nearly as painful but still offensive are the street lights by the new Law School. David Niles Office of Public Safety CORRECTION In the Feb. 28 story of “Safety In the Dorms," the cost of an emergency call box should have read $1,250. The Emerald regrets this error. LETTERS POLICY The Oregon Daily Emerald will attempt to print all letters containing comments on topics of interest to the University community. Letters must be limited to 250 words. The Emerald re serves the right to edit any letter for length, clarity, grammar, style and libel. Letters may be dropped off at EMU Suite 300.