Newsroom: (541) 346-5511 Room 300, Erb Memorial Union PO. Box 3159, Eugene, OR 97403 E-mail: editor@dailyemerald.com Online Edition: www' dailyemerald.com Tuesday, October 30, 2001 Oregon Daily Emerald Editor in Chief: Jessica Blanchard Managing Editor: Michael J. Kleckner Editorial Editor: Julie Lauderbaugh Assistant Editorial Editor: Jacquelyn Lewis Editorial Let ethics regulate decisions How are a tuxedo rental, plane tickets to the Aloha Bowl and a car insurance deductible classified as appropriate “work-related expenses”? We’re still wondering the same thing. However, a state ethics panel last week dismissed complaints filed earlier this year against seven University employees, voting that the University Foundation money they received was legitimately spent. The panel went on to note that the expenses may have been unusual, but they weren’t illegal, driving home the old adage that following the letter of the law may not indicate the most ethi cal behavior. Illegal or not, we still think the spending was unnecessary and unethical. It seems wrong somehow that it is OK for the University to foot the bill for luxuries such as catering for office par ties, while students at the University are forced to pay for the most basic items, such as Scantrons and even class schedules. It just doesn’t add up. At a University where countless courses teach us that ethical behavior and acting within the boundaries of the law aren’t always one and the same, and at a University that tries to instill a secular sense of ethical behavior, it is disheartening, if not surprising, that the case was dismissed. Choices should be based on what is right, regardless of whether the law deems it legitimate. Editorial Policy These editorials represent the opinion of the Emerald editorial board. Responses WELCOME TO THE DEPARTMENT OF INEBRIATE LICENSING A journalism class research project on the first American drug epi demic got me thinking about how to solve the drug problem while maintaining an individual’s right to get blitzed. Here’s what I came up with. It’s a bit impractical given our current po litical/cultural cli mate, so I will call this ■ column “If I Ruled the World.” If I ruled the world, I would commission a panel of doctors, chemists, textbook writers and hard-core drug users to create I authoritative manuals on each and every drug that is used recre ationally. Each manual would contain every thing there is to know about the given sub stance, and I don’t mean the D.A.R.E., scare-you-straight propaganda they feed us in school. These manuals would con tain facts; facts on positive and negative side effects, facts on addictive properties, facts on the correct dosages for different desired effects with body weight factored in, and so on and so forth. Upon comple tion, I would sell the manuals to book stores where they could be purchased, for a modest price, by any curious individual over the age of 18. I would also repeal drug regulations and allow the major pharmaceutical companies, with the correct licensing, to traffic in “street drugs” once again. Because Bayer, Lilly and Pfizer can pay marijuana, coca and opium producers much more than drug cartels and crooked governments do now, the black market for these drugs would dis appear and many third-world countries would get a major boost to their economies at the same time. Amphetamines, Ecstasy and LSD would still be cheap enough to make locally, but I can’t see many people buying a sack of crank made in Bubba Ray’s bathtub when legal, better quality stuff is available at Walgreens. I would then set up offices for the newly Aaron Rorick Columnist created Department of Inebriate Licensing, or DIL for short, in every county, province and district. In the United States, I figure the easiest way to go would be to wall off a section of the DMV, which already has of fices in every county in the nation. Anyone who wants to use a narcotic for non-medic inal purposes and has thoroughly studied the corresponding manual would then go to the local DIL office and take a test. The test would be long and difficult, but if a person is able to pass it, he or she would be declared an expert on the substance in question and be issued a license to pur chase and consume that substance in any way they see fit. To pay for all this, I would tax the hell out of everyone, every step of the way. Any narcotic purchased with a DIL card (as opposed to a prescription) would be considered a luxury item and taxed as such. The profits from the manuals and Steve Baggs Emerald licenses, when combined with the taxes paid by the pharmaceutical companies, the pharmacists and finally John Q. Junkie himself, would be more than enough to pay for the entire project. Eventually I would regulate all drugs this way, from alcohol to angel dust, earn ing my government untold amounts of money. Or maybe people wrould be turned off by the manuals and the warn ing labels and the stigma surrounding drug use for pleasure, and the number of drug users would decline. Either way the problem is solved. No more crime and vi olence surrounding the drug trade. No more people overdosing on meth cut with Ajax, or on Ecstasy that’s not really Ecsta sy. I know it will never happen, but “If I ruled the world ...” Aaron Rorick is a columnist for the Oregon Daily Emerald. His views do not necessarily reflect those of the Emerald. He can be reached at aaronrorick@dailyemerald.com. Letters to the editor Vote ‘No’ on Measure 20-54 Some politicians say, “The mon ey is there,” for the West Eugene Parkway, but show us the money! Although TransPlan includes $17 million for the first phase of the Parkway, it doesn’t include the $71 million needed for the other three phases, as is clear from the text of Measure 20-54. Because funds for roads are se verely limited, we must set priori ties. After 10 years of planning and public involvement, the conclu sion of TransPlan is that making our existing roads safer is more im portant than building new roads. TransPlan directs funding to high er priority projects, such as needed safety improvements at the Belt line/I-5 and Beltline/Delta inter changes. TransPlan doesn’t fund lower priority projects, such as the other three phases of the Parkway. Because these phases ranked 15th, 20th and dead last out of 28 major projects, they failed to make the funding cut. So why do some politicians say we can have our cake and eat it, too? Are they willing to forgo need ed safety improvements to build the Parkway? If voters approve the Parkway, will they then ask for higher taxes to pay for it? I don’t know, but if the money was there for the Parkway, it would be in TransPlan. The money is not there! Join me in voting “No” on Measure 20-54, and hold on to your wallet! Robert Zako Eugene Statistics show marijuana is not a highway risk I want to call to your attention an error in Tara Debenham’s column (“There’s no hope with dope,” ODE, 10/15). She wrote, “I’ve heard the drug hinders short term memory and makes coordination difficult, increasing car accidents.” Marijuana intoxication’s effect on the rate of auto accidents has been studied by professional high way safety statisticians for the last 15 years. At least five studies have been published in different coun tries that reached the same conclu sion: The adjusted statistical risk in dex for drivers on marijuana is roughly the same as drivers who are sober. Drivers on pot seem to cause accidents at the same adjusted rate as sober drivers. Marijuana doesn’t increase the risk of accidents. A study in America a few years ago showed while marijuana intoxi cation does cause a small impair ment in reflexes and tracking, it also causes users to perceive the impair ment and drive conservatively. Drivers on marijuana were less likely than sober drivers to engage in aggressive, risky driving, such as passing other cars, excessive lane changing and tailgating. The effects cancel each other out, leaving the average driver on pot as statistically safe on the road as the av erage driver not stoned on anything. This explains why auto safety statisticians in four countries found marijuana is not an identifi able highway safety risk in their statistics. The error needs to be corrected, because highway safety involves life and death. We need to pay at tention to facts, even when they seem to go against our social and political instincts. Patricia Schwarz Pasadena, Calif. Students should question ‘shady energy fee’ During the presidential cam paign of 2000, many of us were in troduced to the term “fuzzy math.” Time for another lesson. This one is “shady” math. Last summer, the Oregon Uni versity System instituted an ener gy surcharge in order to compen sate for rising energy costs. Over the next two years students will shell out $30 per term towards what the Associated Students of the University of Oregon have termed the “Shady Energy Fee.” While OUS has estimated the es calation in energy costs at about $7 million to $12 million, statewide the fee is expected to rake in $24 mil lion. The coming 6.6 percent tuition increase will surely be too great for some students to keep up with. Most aggravating about the new fee is that it was imposed during the summer, keeping the student voice out of debate. Fortunately, fall has arrived, and it is time for students to act. Adam Petkun freshman ASUO Intern