Monday Editor in chief: Jack Clifford Managing Editor: Jessica Blanchard Newsroom: (541) 346-5511 Room 300, Erb Memorial Union P.O. box 3159, Eugene, OR 97403 E-mail: ode@oregon.uoregon.edu EDITORIAL EDITOR: MICHAEL J. KLECKNER opededitor@journalist.com Innocent until proven guilty * Pacing the sidelines of the court, the coach grimaces and flashes looks of anger. Every play is punctuated with a shout to one player or another. The coach’s pointer finger is in the air, screaming direction to a player. After losing a game, the coach yells some more off the court. The players need to find the strength in side themselves. They need to not be so weak, so worthless. They need to prove what they yell back at the coach, that they have what it takes. Is there something inherently wrong with the above, fictional scenario? Not necessarily. Oregon women’s basketball coach Jody Runge has taken a lot of heat in the last week—in The Register-Guard, over the office water coolers and at bars all over town. In'some cases, it’s been i more than just heat Runge has re i ceived, it’s been the very fires of hell. The Emerald editorial board 'suggests that maybe not all the criticism is fair, at least not yet. Certainly, the stories — heard both publicly and privately — of player mistreat —- ment at the ^ hands of Runge is \j\ worri Giovanni Salimena Emerald Coaches need to push; athletes,-espe cially younger athletes learning what it is to play sports, need to have their lim its tested and their weaknesses ex posed so they can fight past it to excel lence. But it is plain wrong to suggest that coaching is somehow a license to treat someone as less than human. Simple human respect demands that athletes, no matter their age or their skill level, be treated with dignity. That doesn’t mean that a coach should be soft and yielding with players. It does mean that there is a line of love and decency that cannot be crossed, especially by someone in a position of authority and influence, such as a coach. The problem, though, is that no one except the players (and they’re not talking on the record) really knows whether or not that line has been crossed. Certainly, the fact that players felt the need to meet with Athletic Di rector Bill Moos to vent their frustra tions indicates that Runge is doing something wrong. But we don’t know which players went to Moos (as least not on the record), we don’t know how many of them had such strong feelings or how many of them were there sim ply present as a show of support. And we don’t know how reliable their testi mony is. Really, the public knows very little, yet a healthy chunk of that public seems to want to lynch Runge now, rather than wait for more information to be gathered. And that’s not treating her with respect. One can’t help but wonder if there aren’t other issues causing such immediate bad vibes to be thrown at Runge. No matter what it is she thinks she’s doing with her play ers, perhaps Runge is going about it the wrong way. Maybe her methods, not her pur pose, are what prompted sports columnist Ron Bellamy of The Regis ter-Guard to say Runge’s already as good as gone. Reading Bellamy’s col umn last week, there was a feeling that perhaps he hopes the Runge era is over more than it actually is over. On the other hand, Runge’s win-at all-costs approach to revitalizing the University’s women’s basketball pro gram may have led her to mistreat her players. And that may not be all her fault, but also the Athletic Depart ment’s and college sports’ fault more generally. So perhaps the next meeting that should take place is between the players and University President Dave Frohnmayer. Maybe they should complain to Frohnmayer that college athletics’s focus on winning above all else has resulted in mis treatment of them. This is a college, after all; where is the focus on devel oping these women into well-round ed human beings? In all of the discus sion of Runge, her ability to produce a winning team has been trumpeted above most everything else. What about her ability, or lack thereof, to nurture athletes and to develop young women into adults? And what of the pressure to perform or be fired? Surely Runge’s often-contentious re lationship with the Athletic Depart ment has upped the ante on winning. All of the information isn’t in yet, folks. The verdict on Runge should be stayed until more evidence can be pro duced. Unless there’s a total meltdown in the situation, the verdict is stayed through at least Saturday’s NCAA Tournament game against Iowa. On Wednesday, the Emerald will comment more on Runge’s position in the community and her role as a fe male coach, to examine some of the other issues that determine if she’s re ally so bad or if she deserves the bene fit of the doubt. Until we all know more, the University community should offer her some human under standing. This editorial represents the opinion of the Emerald editorial board. Responses can be sent to ode@oregon.uoregon.edu. Poll Results Every week, the Emerald prints the results of our online poll and the poll question for next week. The poll can be accessed from the main page of our Web site, www.dailyemerald.com. We encour age you to send us feedback about the poll questions and results. Last week's question Do you think the ASUO election process has been fair and equitable? Results: 102 total votes Yes—23 votes, or 22.5 percent No — 51 votes, or 50 percent Don’t know—7 votes, or 6.9 percent Don’t care — 21 votes, or 20.6 percent Well, exactly half the voters say “no fair.” It seems likely that way more than 50 percent of the key players in the election would scream out loud, “not stinkin’ fair!” Students need more focus on issues, less focus on scandal. This week's question How many copyrighted songs have you downloaded from Napster in the last month? The choices: 0-10 11-20 21-50 More than 50 Letters to the editor Oliver encourages knowing the facts A letter by Brian Carlson (“Bailey makes empty promises,” ODE, March 8) was printed which unfairly target ed my running mate, Eric Bailey, and I. Carlson asserted three unsubstanti ated points, all of which ignored the truth. Yes, Bailey did go to the Kappa Delta house and express the concern of immunizing all students who enter the University. Carlson says this is not within the power of the ASUO, but it is. This is our student govern ment, and we have the voice to make change. Sitting on your hands gets nothing done. Next, Carlson claims that both of us are resident assistants. First of all, I don’t even live in University housing, and Bailey is a programming assistant. We knew the rules of this election, and the people in the residence halls who have displayed our campaign signs made the choice to do so. Claiming that you don’t know the rules doesn’t give you the authority to break them. Finally, my grievance was not filed as a strategic tactic. It was filed because I felt someone broke the rules that are intended to make the ASUO election fair and equitable to all. I must also re mind you that my grievance wasn’t the only one claiming that Bret and Matt broke the rules. Throughout my time on this cam pus, and especially during this cam paign, I have been a strong advocate of increasing student debate on campus. I encourage any student to express their concerns, but it is important that you know the facts before you do so. Jeff Oliver ASUO Executive candidate junior journalism /political science Beware of OSPIRG’s McActivism OSPIRG is working feverishly to as sociate itself with environmental well being. The group has crafted the opin ion that a vote for OSPIRG is a vote for Mother Earth. I am compelled to ad dress you as an environmentalist who will vote not to subsidize OSPIRG. OSPIRG defines itself as a “grass roots,” community public-interest group, but an obscene amount of the group’s funding, totaling $144,426 of our incidental fee, leaves Eugene. The group, formally OSPIRG Foundation Inc., is a distant political action cor poration or, as I like to call it, McAc tivism. The McActivists use our mon ey to pay rent in the StatePIRG buildings, supply and decorate of fices and salary their lobbyists and lawyers. One of many problems with McAc tivism is that while technology blessed each McDonald’s drive-thru with a cost display of our purchase, we students receive no such convenience from the McActivists. It is simply not in OS PIRG’s interest that students are made aware of how this money is spent. Our money should be made avail able to campus organizations, not just the local McActivism franchise. The possibilities are endless for us to use our money in a way that directly af fects our environment and our lives, if we let the lawyers and lobbyists pur chase their own recycled paper. OSPIRG succeeded in appealing to our maternal emotions of environmen tal protection. Allow me to appeal to your logic. We can do better than McActivism. Do not “super-size it,” work to change the menu. Dayna Phillips senior history