Editor in chief: Laura Cadiz Editorial Editors: Bret Jacobson, Laura Lucas Newsroom: (541)346-5511 Room 300, Erb Memorial Union P.O. Box 3159, Eugene, OR 97403 E-mail: ode@oregon.uoregon.edu Thursday April 27,2000 Volume 101, Issue 140 Effierald Bryan Dixon Emerald r Those of you set to leave these hallowed halls and emerge into the world of employment, student loan payments and adulthood face a particular dilemma. An opportuni ty, really. You’ll either set out on the path of amassing a lifestyle or living a rewarding life. The choice is yours. But I thought I’d give you a little information that might prove helpful. We live in a culture that increas ingly prizes lifestyle at the expense of having a life, resulting in 70 hour workweeks, growing wealth concentration in the hands of the rich and surges in addiction, social isolation and depression. The top 1 percent of U.S. households owns 39 percent of the nation’s mar ketable wealth, according to Eco nomic Policy Institute figures, up from 22 percent in the late 1970s. But what a glorious lifestyle so many Americans have cobbled to gether. The need for a second home has evolved into the necessi ty of third homes, and $2,000 courtside seats are de riguer in Los Angeles and New York. The peo ple we tend to put on pedestals are the Bill Gateses and Phil Knights of the world, who write $20 million checks like we write $10 checks to the corner market. They’ve earned their money and have the right to spend it as they wish — just like you and I do. I am not advocating communism or railing against the capitalist system. The results are already in on that count. When you leave the cozy con fines of campus life you’ll be bom barded with messages pushing lifestyle over quality of life. Those free T-shirts you received for filling out credit card applications will morph into even greater induce ments to sign on the dotted line. Companies will line up to sell you things you don’t want and extend you credit you 1’t really need. You need more of this to be cool, trendy and hip, they say with their glitzy mar keting campaigns. Job-wise, you’ll have a choice to do what you really want to do or perhaps settle for something lesser that might pro vide the job security and benefits parents often crave for their kids. Lifestyle is sold to us through advertising and peer behavior. It’s “keep ing up with the Joneses,” being who others want you to be instead of be ing who you are. It em phasizes how it looks, not how it feels. It’s about accumulating and stockpiling things, rather than sharing and living simply. It’s about what I have, what I own, not who I am. It values out side appearances more than inter nal qualities: integrity, serenity and character, to name a few. Life to me is the excitement of living it, not being ruled by the fear of losing what you have. It’s deeply, internally satisfying, whereas lifestyle is a bit like eating cotton candy — it never fills you up and leaves you hungry for more. Life is authentic and natural, not refined, packaged and glossy on the outside. It’s having your pri orities in line, not putting the cart before the horse. Lire is an inside job rather than about outside appear ances. It has a spiritual as well as a material component. It’s great to have nice clothes, to drive a car that works and to be able to do the things you I- want. My thoughts are not fueled by some Puri tan streak but rather by the desire to be a voice that many of you won’t ~ hear, a cry in the bliz zard of lifestyle-first messages you’ve been hearing since you first turned on the TV or picked up a magazine. Financial security is a welcome thing, and a reachable goal, espe cially for the college-educated. Life Whit Sheppard and Lifestyle are not mutually ex clusive concepts. They can co-ex ist quite peaceably. The pursuit of lifestyle at the ex pense of a satisfying life is short sighted and ultimately unfulfilling. We have a lot to learn from other cultures that value family time and mentoring their young far better than we do in our headlong dash for cash. “It takes a village to raise a child” has become “It takes 500 channels to raise a child.” The re sults are plain to see. I’m proposing that you rethink contemporary ideas of what “suc cess” means. Emerson’s notion of success: “... To laugh often and love much... to know even one life has breathed easier because you have lived...” is not as hopelessly outdated as it may seem. Besides, have you ever heard someone say, “Hey pal, get a lifestyle”? Good luck out there, you’ll need it. Buyer beware. Whit Sheppard is a columnist for the Ore gon Daily Emerald. His views do not nec essarily represent those of the Emerald. He can be reached via e-mail at whitneys@darkwing.uoregon.edu. Letters to the editor To each his own I sincerely hope University President Dave Frohnmayer sticks to his guns. Brown is no longer the only university in the country to make a moral choice and stick to it regardless of the fi nancial cost of those decisions. The Worker Rights Consortium may not be an industrial watch dog, but I ask’you: Is the industry in question likely to promote an organization which may pull sur prise visits? Perhaps the WRC should have industry representa tives on its board so that fairness to the companies involved may be assured. However, such ad vance notification that an inspec tion is coming allows such com panies to clean up their act before the inspection occurs, and then go back to business as usual when the inspection is done. Nike CEO Phil Knight’s deoi- * sion to pull his own personal con tributions to the University is his right, and I applaud him for fol lowing his feelings. I hope he does not expect the University to cave in and turn its back on what may well become an industrial watchdog group. That (group) may find issues that need to be re solved by individual companies for the health and welfare of their employees. I hope the Nike com pany does in fact work hard to promote and resolve these issues. The University’s athletic de partments are sure to miss the support received in the past from Nike and from Knight, but that does not mean our athletes cannot overcome these issues. Good luck folks, and congratu lations to Frohnmayer. I only hope I can do so well. Cheryl Fitzgerald FAA, fibers undergraduate No more handouts Kudos to University President Dave Frohnmayer for respecting student wishes and not bowing down to corporate demands! Af ter all, why should Nike CEO Phil Knight be consulted before the University president honors a stu dent vote? Where was he during election time to express his views? Shame on the students who voted to join the Worker Rights Consortium and then de nounced their positions once cash was waived beneath their > . Tum.to'Letters, page3A V