Friday 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 Kudos to Ducks for preserving Bucks Well, proper congratu lations are in order. The Bucks for Ducks campaign was an un qualified success, at least in com parison to the usual student in volvement with the ASUO. Forty-one proposals were submit ted, suggesting ways to spend $100,000 of the overrealized fund on a project that would benefit all students. And the Ducks for Bucks committee, composed of ASUO Public Relations Director Jamie Gerlitz, ASUO Student Senate President Peter Watts, ASUO Presi dent Jay Breslow and Dean of Stu dents Anne Leavitt, sifted through the suggestions and made a fantas tic choice. So $100,000 of our incidental fee money will be used to mount solar panels on the roof of the EMU to generate electricity for the build ing. This idea, thanks to Ben Gates and Jocelyn Eisenberg at the Eco logical Design Center, was the best choice because it will pay off in the long run for every student — pres ent and future—by saving energy and shaving costs off the EMU budget. Some students may not be aware of this, but the EMU is the students. According to Susan Racette, the business manager for the EMU, the building was built with incidental fee money. The building might be owned by the state (as is all Univer sity property), but students are the major users of the building. And students’ incidental fees pay for roughly half the EMU’s operating budget, which includes nearly $250,000 for electricity for the next fiscal year. So by investing in an energy-gen erating technology, students are pay ing the $100,000 back to themselves again and again. The committee could have chosen a free concert or covered moving sidewalks on 13th Avenue, but those options would not have put money back into stu dents’ hands for years to come. There were other realistic and beneficial suggestions made dur ing the Bucks for Ducks campaign. One proposal suggested revamping the Pocket Playhouse. Last spring, the Emerald reported on a theatre arts department rally to earn public support for renovating and im proving Villard Hall’s theatre arts facilities. Nothing much has changed since then, and both the Pocket Playhouse and the Robin son Theatre most likely need sig nificant improvement. It upsets us, however, that stu dents felt the need to ask for inci dental fee money for departmental improvements. In order to teach ef fectively, departments need work ing equipment and decent build ings. The Athletic Department certainly isn’t hurting for facilities. But the University administration should raise the money and take care of departmental needs. Stu dents shouldn’t have to pay tuition and then also pay for maintaining buildings. But the winning proposal, for so lar panels, will earn students mon ey. If you haven’t done the math since hearing about the project (“Solar panel idea wins big ‘Bucks,’” ODE, May 22), don’t try now. Rates for industrial users are complicated. The Register-Guard reported that the solar panels will produce an average 8 kilowatt hours, but the story didn’t say if that’s per hour, per week or per year. In the Emerald story, Gerlitz said the project will save 79,000 kilowatts per year. How much money that amounts to is unclear. Dana Winitzky, facilities manager for the EMU, said that he’s support ive of the project and that it will save students money. EWEB has said it will pay the EMU a premi um for the wattage generated be cause it’s an alternative energy source. And Winitzky said that a rate hike, likely to be anywhere from 60 to 300 percent, is coming in October and will make the solar panels’ contribution even more valuable. Kudos should also go to EWEB itself for contributing to this proj ect. The utility will design the proj ect free of charge to once again help reduce the University’s energy use. Racette said the two public institu tions have long worked together to save energy and money, from giv ing the EMU a loan for an HVAC system a few years ago, to more re cently installing “vending mizers,” which are units installed by vend ing machines that turn off their mo tors when not in use. Whatever the dollar figure, it’s nice that the solar panels will save students money. The real point, though, and the reason this project deserves a standing ovation, is that the solar panels send a message of conservation at a time when many people are saying “energy crisis” more and more loudly. This is the Pacific Northwest, and more to the point, this is the University of Ore gon in Eugene, Ore. If this commu nity doesn’t lead the way toward responsible environmental poli cies, who will? This editorial represents the opinion of the Emerald editorial board. Responses can be sent to ode@oregon.uoregon.edu. CORRECTION In the story “Airport debate slows budget talks,” (ODE, May 24), the story should have read the Eugene City Council will vote on the proposed budget June 18. Also, the committee approved a recom- • mended budget of $296 million. The Emerald regrets the errors. Alternative fun for sun lovers DIARY MICHAEL J. KLECKNER The sun is shining. I usually write to y’all about issues close to my heart or things that piss me off. But the sun is shining, and what I want to do is play outside in the heat. Disrobed bodies are some of my favorite things, and the shining sun, which is expected to last through Tuesday, generally facilitates the shedding of clothes. So in the spirit of the sunshine and the long holiday weekend, here are a few alternative-minded suggestions for fun activities this Memorial Day. Bear in mind these are just my picks. I’m not trying to speak for a genera tion, plug anybody’s event or advance a particular notion of what’s “cool.” But I’ve had fun doing this stuff when it’s sunny and I’m trapped in Eugene (as I will be this weekend). Ride into the hills The bike trails at the end of West Amazon in South Eugene are a fan tastic place to get away and breathe some pine. Drive down Hilyard a few blocks past 3.0th Avenue. Make a left onto West Amazon Drive and keep going. The road will end at Pearl Buck Center, a support and em ployment facility for those with de velopmental disabilities (they al ways need volunteers, by the way). At the end of the road is a little trail winding into the woods. Bikes are al lowed here, and if you poke around enough in the bushes, you can ferret your way to the Ridgeline Trail. There are many open areas in here for flinging some disc, so bring a buddy and your Frisbee or Aerobie or other round thing. There are also plenty of hidden recesses in which to check out the local herbs, flowers and each other. Sun your nether parts For a little more daring and open activity, check out Eugene’s local nude beach. Finding it can be a lit tle tricky, but here’s the gist: Go out to Lane Community College and go down the hill past it. Cross the free way, make a left and then make a right at the Texaco station. Just around the bend is BRING Recy cling. You can park just off the road here, and then walk past BRING on the same side of the street. Just a lit tle way down is a trail through the forest-y stuff. Follow the trail to ... the river. OK, it’s on a river, so “beach” isn’t exactly the right term, but it works. Water, sandy areas to sun your buns and great people watching. Public nudity is legal in Oregon, but public sex is not, so be careful not to flagrantly enjoy your self. Most of the clientele here are men, so if you like to hang out with nude men, by all means go at once. If you’re a woman, please come on down and help balance the equa tion. Every time I’ve been here, the atmosphere is really relaxed and cool. Just don’t go digging into the deep, private recesses of the area’s foliage unless you already know what you’re getting into. Commune with the dead So this is the creepy-coolest thing about Eugene, in my opinion. Hope Abbey, a mausoleum adjacent to the Lane Masonic Cemetery at 25th Av enue and University Street, was put on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. It was finished in 1914 by Ellis F. Lawrence, who then became the first dean of archi tecture at the University. (Some of you alterna-kids might not know it yet, but history is way freakin’ cool.) Besides its campus connec tion, the mausoleum is insanely neat, and (scary music begins here) they only open its doors on Memor ial Day and Labor Day. My tradi tion here started in high school, when we were unwise kids and would take LSD and dress in black and trip out on the very old, very dead spirits in the room. Believe it or not, we meant no disrespect. Ac tually, we saw our activities as su per respectful because we were communing with the dead. Any way, I still go back every year to check out the names, the flowers and the cold feel of marble and granite. I have a few other suggestions, but I seem to have run out of room. If you like traditional BBQs or the kitsch ap peal of gawking at the locals, drive out to the Fern Ridge area to watch acres and acres of families with lots of pick ups and tons of pig to roast. If you want even more kitsch-Americana en joyment, attend Monday’s official Memorial Day service for veterans (last year it was held atthe Pioneer Cemetery on campus). This isn’t just kitsch, though, folks. I may be a cynic and I may have my own definition of patriotism, but standing, recognizing and listening to veterans who fought and killed for what they believe in brought tears to my eyes last year. Who knows what’s alternative anymore anyway? Michael J. Kleckner is the editorial editor for the Oregon Daily Emerald. His views do not necessarily represent those of the Emerald. He can be reached at opededitor@journal ist.com.